Work - Keritot 6b Page 78 Jebhammoth 61
How can you include a "missing ingredient" in your community this week? Yevamot 61 - Hadran
In the small, mystical town of Ashwood, nestled between hills that sang ancient melodies, there lived a young scholar named Ezra. Ezra was known throughout the town for his profound knowledge of sacred texts, particularly those as enigmatic as "Keritot 6b" and the seemingly arcane references found within "Jebhammoth 61." For Ezra, these weren't just texts; they were maps to understanding the complex dance between the spiritual and the mundane. keritot 6b page 78 jebhammoth 61 work
It describes how the incense must be ground "extra fine" specifically for Yom Kippur and notes that speaking while grinding (saying "grind well, well grind") is beneficial for the fragrance. Yevamot 61 (Jebhammoth) How can you include a "missing ingredient" in
The text you are referring to comes from the Babylonian Talmud It describes how the incense must be ground
Why? learns from Leviticus 23:30: “Any person who does any work on this same day, I will destroy from among his people” — except the work of the mishkan (Temple), because that is the service of God. Keritot 6b adds that even if the priest inadvertently performed an extra act not required (e.g., added a second handful of incense), he would bring a sin offering. The boundaries are precise.
A private individual who blends this incense in "halves" (even a smaller portion than the full Temple recipe) for personal use is liable for Karet (divine severance) because the Torah prohibits preparing it for personal enjoyment.