Talmud Jerusalem
Talmud Jerusalem

Talmud for Orlah 1:1

משנה הנוטע לסייג ולקורות פטור מן הערלה. רבי יוסי אומר אפילו אמר הפנימי למאכל והחיצון לסייג הפנימי חייב והחיצון פטור:

From when may one recite Shema in the evening? From the time the Kohanim go in to eat their Terumah (produce consecrated for priestly consumption). Until the end of the first watch, says Rabbi Eliezer. And the Sages say: Until [astronomical] midnight. Rabban Gamliel says: Until the break of dawn. It once happened that his [Rabban Gamliel’s] sons came from a house of feasting. They said to him: We have not recited Shema. He to them: If dawn has not broken, you are obligated to recite it. And it is not only in this case that they said it! Rather, in all cases where the Sages said "only until midnight," the obligation remains until the break of dawn. [e.g.] Burning the fats and limbs [of the sacrifices, on the Temple altar] — the obligation is until the break of dawn. [e.g.:] All [sacrifices] which may be eaten for one day — the obligation is until the break of dawn. If that is so, why did the Sages say, "until midnight?" To distance a person from transgression.

Jerusalem Talmud Terumot

It was stated: “One may mill from the start to permit109If one has dema‘ and after milling, following the rule of Note 106, it would be possible to lift the heave, one tells the owner to go ahead and mill even though the Mishnah is formulated only as a statement after the fact, if the owner milled it and now comes to ask a rabbinic authority on how to proceed..” The baraita is Rebbi Yose’s, since “Rebbi Yose said, one may collect to lift one in two hundred”110Mishnah Orlah 1:6. Since this is a minority opinion, it cannot be practice to be followed.. Rebbi Zeїra said111In Orlah 1:5, the statement is more complete: “R. Zeїra said, it is the opinion of everybody since Cohanim are used to mill dema‘ in their houses.” Since this is a required process, one cannot object to its use., Cohanim are used to mill dema‘ in their houses. What is the difference between them? Kilaim in a vineyard. In the opinion of Rebbi Yose, one mills to permit; in the opinion of the rabbis, one may not mill to permit.
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