Friday, August 31, 2012

Solitary Sanctuary - Brakhot 30

"Although there were thirteen synagogues in Tiberias, R. Ammi and R. Assi prayed only between the pillars, the place where they studied."

This line stood out to me today. The rabbis seem comfortable affirming the value of individual prayer, and the mindset of an individual while in prayer. Why would these two rabbis choose to pray between two pillars where they were studying rather than going to one of the 13 synagogues? Do you ever find yourself choosing to pray alone, in an unusual place, rather than with the congregation?

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Fear of God vs Fear of Man - Brakhot 28b

"May it be [God's] will that the fear of heaven shall be upon you like the fear of flesh and blood."

On his deathbed, Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakkai is visited by his students and begins to cry, explaining that if he were only going to see a human king then he would certainly cry - but he is in fact goign to stand before the King of Kings whose judgements last forever.

But when asked for a blessing, he offers the above blessing, that the fear of heaven should be to his students like the fear of human beings.

So which is primary? Fear of God or fear of mortals? In this story, Rabbi Yochanan seems to switch between the two.

It seems that perhaps we are seeing two perspectives, one when close to death, and one as a way to live one's life. Rabbi Yochanan is on his deathbed, and so from his perspective it's the intangible, wrath of the divine that he most fears.

But for his students, he offers them a more tangible basis for their faith and for their future good behaviour, to be at least as afraid of God as you are of human beings. For earthly life, earthly fear is the proper foundation on which to build ethical action.


Tuesday, August 28, 2012

If the Talmud Could Vote for President... -- Brakhot 27b

In this season of political fervor, it is inspiring to see the Gemara offer its own take on how to pick the best candidate:

נוקמיה לר' אלעזר בן עזריה דהוא חכם והוא עשיר והוא עשירי לעזרא הוא חכם דאי מקשי ליה מפרק ליה והוא עשיר דאי אית ליה לפלוחי לבי קיסר אף הוא אזל ופלח והוא עשירי לעזרא דאית ליה זכות אבות ולא מצי עניש ליה

When they overthrew the authority of Rabban Gamliel, the community elected R' Elazar ben Azariyah to replace him because he possessed three qualities:

1. He was wise
2. He was rich
3. He was the tenth descendant of Ezra

We know Obama is quite smart, and that Romney's finances are stable, so shall we start checking their pedigrees?

In all seriousness though, what does this advise us? It advises us that:

1. Wisdom is key when making difficult decisions,
2. An effective leader needs sufficient resources for recourse, and
3. Where a person comes from says a lot about where they can  go.

If these and no other principles were guiding our electoral choices, what sort of government would we see?

Monday, August 27, 2012

Let your WHOLE body worship God -- Brakhot 25a

I really am quite surprised by how much talk of bodily fluids there is in such a holy collection of writings. Several pages devoted to different looks and smells of feces and how we should behave around it vis-a-vis saying the Shema. At its core, this is reminding us that holy pursuits carry with them the reality of unholy facts of life. We simply can't ignore the mundane – and even repulsive – in our search for the divine spark in life.

And then I saw this: if a man has feces on his harm, is he still permitted to say the Shema? Rav Huna says yes, because of the pasuk כל הנשמה תהלל יה, all of the soul praises God. Even our bowels – literally, not emotionally – praise God.

A little poo-poo-pride from our punctilious preachers of the past.

Sunday, August 26, 2012

קול באשה ערוה

Well, I now know the sources of why some Jewish women cover their hair and skin, as well as the source of "kol isha." However, I'm not convinced that these restrictions are blanket statements about all women. It's not entirely clear, but it could be argued that these statements are contextual, referring only to a man's wife at the time he needs to say the shema. In other words, hearing the voice of a woman is not a problem because it may be seductive. Rather, if I hear my wife's seductive voice while I am trying to say the shema, that may distract me. An even strong example – if my wife's hair, legs, or full naked body is right before me, then clearly I would be distracted from saying the shema. But seeing a random woman's hair uncovered while walking down Broadway, not during davening? Maybe that's not what they're referring to.

Where the boundary is, however, is not terribly clear. For more investigation...

More Suspicions of Prostitution – Brakhot 23a

Early in Brakhot, we learned that we shouldn't enter ruins because, among other reasons, we may be suspected of engaging in prostitution. And here we have it again! You can' wear tefillin in the bathroom, and if you need to relieve yourself, one suggestion is to leave it on the side of the road. But beware! Don't leave it on the side closer to the public pass-way, lest a prostitute picks it and goes to the Beit Midrash and says "hey! here's so-and-so's tefillin, which he gave to me as a wage for my work."

I wonder why our rabbis were so worried about the suspicion of prostitution. Was this an epidemic problem among the medieval Jews? It's so interesting when you think about this in light of the allegations of sexual misconduct among religious leaders in today's world.

Toilet Talk - Brakhot 25

"Abaye said: A little excrement may be neutralized with spittle; to which Raba added: It must be thick spittle. Raba said: If the excrement is in a hole, he may put his shoe over it and recite the Shema'. Mar the son of Rabina inquired: What is the rule if there is some dung sticking to his shoe? — This was left unanswered."

Although most of the dilemmas raised by today's daf are solved by modern plumbing, this one remains - what to do with poop on your shoe. Coincidentally, that's the only feces-related scenario not answered by the daf! Metaphorically or otherwise, how can we separate ourselves from the unclean long enough to honor the Infinite?

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Finding Identity in Diaspora - Brakhot 24

"R. Abba kept away from Rab Judah because he wanted to go up to Eretz Israel; for Rab Judah said, Whoever goes up from Babylon to Eretz Israel transgresses a positive precept, since it says, They shall be carried to Babylon and there shall they be, until the day that I remember them, saith the Lord."

Obviously operating under a pre-Zionism framework, what does Rav Yehuda's statement mean for us?Are we still in Bavel? Should we still be waiting for God to remember us? How can we reconcile this lovely sentiment of affirming diasporic identity with a world that has demonstrated the strength of Zionism both politically and ideologically?

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Speaking with the Spirits - Brakhot 18

Today's daf has several stories relating the frailty of the divide between the world of the living and the world of the dead. The following story attempt to show that the dead know, and can communicate, who will join them next:

"Come and hear; for Ze'iri deposited some money with his landlady, and while he was away visiting Rav she died. So he went after her to the cemetery and said to her, Where is my money? She replied to him: Go and take it from under the ground, in the hole of the doorpost, in such and such a place, and tell my mother to send me my comb and my tube of eye-paint by the hand of So-and-so who is coming here tomorrow. Does not this show that they know? — Perhaps Dumah announces to them beforehand."

The conversation continues on tomorrow's daf, but I doubt the rabbis, like ourselves, ever truly resolve it. We, like them, seem to have pretty good evidence for some level of interaction between the living and the dead, but we still lack any proof that such a thing is possible.

Friday, August 17, 2012

Concluding Prayers - Brakhot 16

Towards the end of today's Daf we see a whole series of different prayers that different rabbis would say after they finished the Tefila. It seems to allow for an individual voice in a place where the liturgy is almost totally prescriptive. What would be your concluding prayer? Do you have something you always say?

One I picked up is this: "May it be Your Will, that I be able to distinguish between those things which emanate your light, and those which are illuminated by it."

How about you guys?

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

I've started so I'll finish - Brakhot 14b

Excuse the (possibly obscure) English reference in the title.

Rav Kahana has said in the name of Rav: One need not begin, but if he begins he should finish.

I found this statement of Rav Kahana in the name of Rav to be rather profound and to have much broader applications than the context of the discussion, about whether one should read the whole of the third paragraph of the shema or not.

There are so many things that we don't have to start - we may feel nervous about beginning a new thing, an awkward conversation, making a new friend, starting a new blog or religious practice. And we don't necessarily have to start these things, or open these doors.

However, if we do start, Rav Kahana advises us to see everything through to its end, not to give up half way through but to do a thorough, complete job in any task we undertake.

"I [didn't] dream a dream" - Brakhot 14

"R. Yonah further said in the name of R. Zera: Whoever goes seven days without a dream is called evil, as it says, And he that has it shall dwell satisfied; he shall not be visited with evil. (Prov. 19:23) Read not sabea', [satisfied] but sheba' [seven]. "

So if you go seven nights without dreaming, it implies evil. Hmm....I think I may be in trouble. But seriously, this does have a really important implication. To me, this shows how connected the rabbis saw the realm of the Divine with the human. Dreams being one of the few potent connections between the supernatural and the natural, they were suspicious of anyone who lacked the ability to forge that connection. How can we read this into modernity? How can we encourage people to build that connection for themselves, to make sure that they're 'dreaming' at least once a week?

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

First Perek Down!

Only 524 left!

Draw Yomi

I know I am already behind with my daf a day but I thought this blog (created by a fellow Paideia alum) would be inspiring - it is definitely helping me catch up!

http://www.drawyomi.blogspot.com/

Sunday, August 12, 2012

God Who Creates Evil - Brakhot 11


"'[Blessed art Thou] who formest light and createst darkness'. Let him say rather: 'Who formest light and createst brightness'? — We keep the language of the Scripture. If that is so, [what of the next words in the text], Who makest peace and createst evil: do we repeat them as they are written? It is written 'evil' and we say 'all things' as a euphemism."

Isaiah 45:7, which 'Yotzer Or' is based on, is irrevocably altered in the Matbea T'fila. Isaiah says:  "I form the light, and create darkness; I make peace, and create evil; I am the LORD, that doeth all these things." Why are the rabbis uncomfortable with both good and evil coming from God? Why, as the Talmud says, do we change it to a 'euphemism?'

Saturday, August 11, 2012

God : World :: Soul : Body - Brakhot 10

"Just as the Holy One, blessed be He, fills the whole world, so the soul fills the body. Just as the Holy One, blessed be He, sees, but is not seen, so the soul sees but is not itself seen. Just as the Holy One, blessed be He, feeds the whole world, so the soul feeds the whole body. Just as the Holy One, blessed be He, is pure, so the soul is pure. Just as the Holy One, blessed be He, abides in the innermost precincts, so the soul abides in the innermost precincts."

I just thought this was really beautiful. It's also a great way of affirming the distance of God. It's not that God is so far away that we can't feel God - its that God is so far in everything.

Friday, August 10, 2012

With Us in Servitude - Brakhot 9b

"I am that I am. The Holy One, blessed be He, said to Moses: Go and say to Israel: I was with you in this servitude, and I shall be with you in the servitude of the [other] kingdoms. He said to Him: Lord of the Universe, sufficient is the evil in the time thereof! Thereupon the Holy One, blessed be He, said to him: Go and tell them: I AM has sent me unto you."
Is this empowering or disturbing? I think its a beautiful image that God is with those in servitude, but I'm concerned that the concept might prevent people from protesting agianst their servitude. How can we affirm God in people's oppression without affirming the oppression itself?

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Toilet Talk - Brakhot 8

"Thus should every hasid pray to You (God), at a time that You may be found."

The Amoraim debate poetically about when this time of great need is, when God's presence is so necessary to us. Perhaps when we find our true love, or when we discover Torah. Maybe it's when we approach our death. But of course, the interpretation most favored by the Amoraim is that of Mar Zutra, who said that this "time You may be found" is most definitely referring to the toilet. Rashi helps us understand: we hope God will be with us to provide us with a home with indoor plumbing (well, I guess then it was more a trench not too far away from the house) so that we don't have to walk too far when that "time of great need" hits us.

What might the appropriate prayer be for such an occasion? In the words of Rabbi Bill Cosby, "Oh thank you toilet, oh thank you toilet."

Quantifying Death

תניא נמי הכי תשע מאות ושלשה מיני מיתה נבראו בעולם שנאמר למות תוצאות תוצאות בגימטריא הכי הוו קשה שבכלן אסכרא ניחא שבכלן נשיקה אסכרא דמיא כחיזרא בגבבא דעמרא דלאחורי נשרא ואיכא דאמרי כפיטורי בפי ושט נשיקה דמיא כמשחל בניתא מחלבא

It has been taught: 903 types of death were created in the world, as its said, the issue of death and the numerical value of 'Tozaot' are so. The most difficult among them is Diptheria, and the easiest is a Kiss. Diptheria is like a thorn in a ball of wool being pulled out backwards, and some people say: its like pulling rope through the holes [of a ship]. [a] Kiss is like drawing a hair out of milk. 

This stuck out to me. Why 903 (aside from the Gematria)? In our experience do we think that's an approximately close number - and why would God bother to create such a variety of deaths, especially when we recognize that some are much worse than others?

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

What's in a Name - Brakhot 7

With my rabbinical student hat on, I feel like there is a great passage here to be used at baby namings. The naming of Judah and Reuven illustrate the very Jewish idea that a name carries with it the essence of a person. The idea is based on a clever reading of a verse in Psalms: "Come and see the acts of God, who places destruction (שמות) throughout the land" (Psalms 46:9). Instead, Rabbi Eliezer reads שמות (with a vowel switch), meaning names. So, come and see the acts of God, who places names throughout the land," as if every name truly is God given and comes to fill a void in the world. While the proximity in the midrash of naming to destruction seems dark, perhaps consider a world in which there are no names - a sort of universalistic, death camp environment where nothing comes to identify each person as the unique soul he/she is. Oh, to know that God's hand in the world is to bless each child with the will and vision to live up to his/her name: Come and see the acts of God, who bestows names in the land.

---
On a slightly different note, in the case of Judah, I was surprised to read the understanding of his name. Rashi helps in explaining that his name indicates Leah's thankfulness to God (having in it the roots for "thanks" and for "God") because of the fact that Leah was thankful for the conception and birth of Judah. But, she had had three sons already before Judah. And NOW, on the fourth, she decides to thank God!? As Rashi explains it, she even says "this time, I will thank God." No wonder Rachel felt so desperate for a child. Not only was her sister much more fertile than she, but to not offer thanks until the fourth one in, and yet Rachel would have been thankful for the very first child.

God and Moshe: The Odd Couple - Brakhot 7

There is a rather comical vision of God and Moses in what seems like the argument of what we often call "an old married couple." On 7a we find Moses asking God why God won't show him God's face, and God replies "I wanted to show you, back at the burning bush, but you didn't want to see it. You hid your face. Now, you are ready for me to show you? Well, now I don't want to!"

I am finding these early pages of Brakhot to show many characteristics of God, as considered by the Amoraic authors, that resemble characteristics of people, often to a degree of humor - or disappointment. After all, this is the God that created the whole world?

Brakhot 7 - Ⓐnarchy

There was one point at which I wrote an extensive paper on the role that anarchism plays in Jewish texts. It focused less on any particular political expression of 'anarchism' per se, but rather on the fact that many Jewish thinkers have rejected the idea of human government as deeply flawed, and wanted to  live in a society in which the only King was God. This quote from today's daf is further great evidence of this underlying distrust/dislike of human authority:


At the time when the sun rises and all the kings of the East and West put their crowns upon their heads and bow down to the sun, the Holy One, blessed be He, becomes at once angry.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Joke time!

Where on Brakhot 6b do we learn that public expressions of religion aren't favorable for an NFL draft pick?

מה טיבו של פלוני למה לא בא

Anyone else stand at back of WLSS and look on Broadway?

Evidently its a problem. Watch out for Eliyahu and his sword.
R. Huna says: Whosoever prays at the rear of a Synagogue is called wicked. For it is said: The wicked walk round about. Abaye says: This only applies where he does not turn his face towards the Synagogue, but if he does turn his face towards the Synagogue there is no objection to it. There was once a man who prayed at the rear of a Synagogue and did not turn his face towards the Synagogue. Elijah passed by and appeared to him in the guise of an Arabian merchant. He said to him: Are you standing with your back to your Master? and drew his sword and slew him.

Mazikin Party

It has been taught: Abba Benjamin says, If the eye had the power to see them, no creature could endure the demons. Abaye says: They are more numerous than we are and they surround us like the ridge round a field. R. Huna says: Every one among us has a thousand on his left hand and ten thousand on his right hand.  Raba says: The crushing in the Kallah  lectures comes from them. Fatigue in the knees comes from them. The wearing out of the clothes of the scholars is due to their rubbing against them. The bruising of the feet comes from them. If one wants to discover them,  let him take sifted ashes and sprinkle around his bed, and in the morning he will see something like the footprints of a cock. If one wishes to see them, let him take the after-birth of a black she-cat, the offspring of a black she-cat, the first-born of a first-born, let him roast it in fire and grind it to powder, and then let him put some into his eye, and he will see them. Let him also pour it into an iron tube and seal it with an iron signet that they  should not steal it from him. Let him also close his mouth, lest he come to harm. R. Bibi b. Abaye did so,  saw them and came to harm. The scholars, however, prayed for him and he recovered

Demons! I love it. I love that the rabbis are able to conceive of a world in which the Sitra Achra appears and interacts with us. 

I don't know about you, but I think I'm going to try the trick with the ashes. 

A few lines I enjoyed today - Berachot 6

Abba Benjamin says, If the eye had the power to see them, no creature could endure the demons.

I find it fascinating how seriously this passage takes the existence of demons - as physical realities that cause damage to the physical world.

Justice is also torah.

An important point to remember - there is torah in maintaining justice, not just in studying. Creating a just world is a kind of torah study.

Rabbi Yochanan says: Whenever the Holy One, blessed be He, comes into a Synagogue and does not find ten persons there, He becomes angry at once. For it is said: Wherefore, when I came, was there no man? When I called, was there no answer?

This text always hits me hard, as someone who finds it really hard to get myself to shul for shacharit. The idea that God is there wondering where everyone is is both evocative and moving.

The merit of a fast day lies in the charity.

I always try to teach that fast days like the 9th of Av are only meaningful if we do something for justice, and this brief line (in a powerful section) is a punchy quote to the same effect.

Monday, August 6, 2012

The early bird IS the worm - brakhot 5

As someone who often davens and then leaves Shul early out of impatience for a long service, I was ashamed to see the following: if two people enter a beit kinesset to pray and one finishes first and he doesn't wait for his friend before leaving, his prayer is torn up in his face.

Oh boy - I'm in trouble.

Prisoners to Our Afflictions - Brakhot 5

רבי חייא בר אבא חלש על לגביה ר' יוחנן א"ל חביבין עליך יסורין א"ל לא הן ולא שכרן א"ל הב לי ידך יהב ליה ידיה ואוקמיה.  ר' יוחנן חלש על לגביה ר' חנינא א"ל חביבין עליך יסורין א"ל לא הן ולא שכרן א"ל הב לי ידך יהב ליה ידיה ואוקמיה אמאי לוקים ר' יוחנן לנפשיה אמרי אין חבוש מתיר עצמו מבית האסורים
R' Hiyya bar Abba fell ill and R' Johanan went in to visit him. He said to him: Are your sufferings welcome to you? He replied: Neither they nor their reward. He said to him: Give me your hand. He gave him his hand and he raised him. R' Johanan once fell ill and R' Hanina went in to visit him. He said to him: Are your sufferings welcome to you? He replied: Neither they nor their reward. He said to him: Give me your hand. He gave him his hand and he raised him. Why could not R' Johanan raise himself? They replied: The prisoner cannot free himself from jail.
While this passage seems to intend to illustrate the dangerous theology of "afflictions of love" or afflictions that atone for our sins, to me this speaks volumes about the way we conceptualize mental health issues like depression, anxiety, even addiction, and perhaps offers therapeutic suggestions.


Let's take it apart. R' Yohanan, allegedly a friend of R' Hiyya bar Abba, sees his friend in pain and asks him in what I read as frustration and anger "you're enjoying this, aren't you?" as if to say there is a part of his dear friend that feeds off of being sick in this way. Perhaps that rings true for many of us, or perhaps it makes us angry to think someone might actually accuse the sick of enjoying their sickness. What this phrase is telling us, though, is that the part of us that is enjoying our sickness is in fact the sickness itself. Sometimes we are such prisoners to our afflictions that it is as if ,חביבין עליך יסורין, as if we are enjoying being sick, or rather, that the sickness has trapped us so much that we can't get out, that it leeches onto our will and emotions so much that it appears we love our condition. But of course, how could we actually love our suffering? It is like Kierkagaard's famous concept of "the sickness unto death," the sickness so strong and consuming that even death is not a cure. Somehow the sickness wants so badly to live that it appears we are enjoying it.

And then there is the incredible statement of collaborative therapy. We can't pull ourselves out from our own travails, but we can do it hand in hand with our fellows. It seems like the message of any Anonymous support group, fighting addictions with a larger army than just oneself.


This phrase חביבין עליך יסורין, essentially, "are you enjoying your grievances? are you enjoying being sick?" and the thrust of the narrative to its final point, that a prisoner cannot free himself from jail, offer us a Jewish framework to think about mental illness. It is all too easy for anyone who does not struggle with mental illness (afflictions like depression, anxiety, OCD, ED, etc.) to fall impatient through ignorance, wondering why the afflicted can't simply "snap out of it" and will themselves to health. Maybe the Gemara here is a cry our for therapeutic patience.

Brakhot 5 - Theodicy of 'testing'


"Raba, in the name of R. Sahorah, in the name of R. Huna, says: If the Holy One, blessed be He, is pleased with a man, he crushes him with painful sufferings."

To be honest, I was a bit surprised to see this one in today's Daf. I was always aware that rabbinic theodicies spanned the range from post-creation chaos, to the Sitra Achra, to a divine court of judgement, etc. I was never aware that the rabbis embraced 'purifying suffering' as a compatible theodicy. Now on one hand, its terribly disturbing that this reflects so much Gevura without the requisite Chesed. On the other hand, this could be terrifically comforting to someone who feels their afflictions are invested with value because of their indication of a more superior relationship to God. 

What do you guys think? How do we divide what's an effective theology to believe and what's an effective theology to preach (particularly to those who are ill)?

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Technical Question - Brakhot 4

I didn't understand what the difference is between the שפיר and the שליא. Sadly, clarification from the Gemara might not come for another 7 years when we reach Niddah. Any thoughts?

Angelic Speed Limits

תנא מיכאל באחת גבריאל בשתים אליהו בארבע ומלאך המות בשמנה ובשעת המגפה באחת:
A tanna taught: Mikael [reaches his goal] in one [trip], Gavriel in two, Eliyahu in four, and the Angel of Death in eight - except in a time of plague, when it takes one.


This line really stuck out to me from today. Why these divisions? What different roles do each of these 'angelic' figures play that causes this Baraita to teach these "speed limits?" In particular, why does the Angel of Death have to make eight trips normally?


Saturday, August 4, 2012

Even God Has Insomnia - Brakhot 3

Particularly poignant was the image of God staying up all night, crying out three times a night about how miserable it was that he destroyed his own palace. Reading this on the day we hear נחמו נחמו עמי in the haftarah, a week after Tisha B'Av offered me a powerful way to think about remorse.  I find it easy to be angry at God - and to encourage others to do the same - when catastrophes plague our lives. Yet perhaps God reacts to God's own actions with the same amount of reflection as we do to our mistakes: facing many sleepless nights in "timeout," thinking about what we've done.

This was never the God I envisioned...

Danger, danger!

The rather peculiar story of Elijah struck me today, as he turns up to tell Rabbi Yossi that he shouldn't have gone in to a ruin to pray but should have stayed on the road and prayed an abbreviated amidah. We are then told that there are 3 reasons not to go into a ruin - falling masonry, suspicion that one might be meeting a woman there, and demons.

It seemed strange to me that Elijah comes to teach something so apparently mundane - there are no enormous revelations here - so I started thinking about a possible deeper understanding. I came to the idea that the three dangers listed might cover more than just entering a ruin - that these three dangers, representing the physical, spiritual and social dangers, run the gamut of what threatens us as people living in society.

With the Talmud's short discussion afterwards, we know that no single one of these categories cover all of human experience, but all three are separate and necessary to explain the things that threaten who we are. Physical, spiritual and social dangers may come at any time, but we might think that we are particularly vulnerable at night, when the world is dark, and we don't know what's out there.

So perhaps we've learnt something more than why we should be careful about entering a ruin - for the world is dark and full of terrors.

Friday, August 3, 2012

Whose time is it anyway?

A quick thought on Brachot 2 in between my chaplaincy visits....

Who gets to set communal time?  The societal elites, the poorest among us, or the beinoniim?  If we all need to be on the same daily schedule, whose needs and priorities dictate how our time is structured?

Ten Times Two, as Fleeting as a Blink - Brakhot 2

Somewhat of a soft start, I feel like I've seen this daf many times. One of the challenges I see is being able to be mehadesh badavar and find something new and exciting, in old material and material that can be very technical. I'm reminded of the Harvard Education School's "Project Zero," which included a principle called "Ten Times Two." Go through a piece of artwork or a page of a text and find ten things you notice. Right as you get to ten, start over and find ten new things. So, something new I noticed was at the end of the daf, the description of "bein hashmashot":
דאמר רבי יוסי בין השמשות כהרף עין זה נכנס וזה יוצא ואי אפשר לעמוד עליו
 That contentious time of "twilight" is like the fluttering of an eye -- one time starts as the other begins.

I feel like this is an incredibly powerful way to begin a document about laws and cultural norms. We may spend considerable time debating details emphatically, but perhaps we require the humility to recognize that exact precision is as fleeting -- and as hard to pinpoint-- as the blinking of an eye.

In the Beginning....

Resources: 

(Kol haKavod for the compilation of this list by R. Dov Linzer)


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  • Koren Talmud Bavli – Steinsaltz
  • Artscroll Talmud – Schottenstein Edition
  • Steinsaltz Talmud – Hebrew
  • The Talmud, the Steinsaltz Edition: A Reference Guide
  • The Complete Idiot’s Guide to the Talmud, Parry 
Scholarly Works and Essays