West Deal Torah Center

Rabbi Ike Hanon – Pesahim 45b-46a | Weekday Gemara

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episode Rabbi Ike Hanon – Pesahim 45b-46a | Weekday Gemara cover

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Rabbi Ike Hanon hosts classes Monday through Friday at 6:10 AM at West Deal Shul. The class focuses on Pesachim 45b-46a, examining the Mishnah's phrase v'chen l'inyan tuma and why the Gemara finds it problematic. The difficulty is that the first part of the Mishnah sets a size-based criterion for chametz on Pesach, while the second part introduces a subjective criterion of whether a person objects to the dough being there, making the connecting word v'chen seem out of place. Four Amoraic explanations are presented: Rav Yehuda reads v'chen as introducing a contrast rather than a comparison; Abaye explains it refers to combining small amounts of food to reach the shiur for tumah; Rava explains it addresses whether leftover dough creates a blockage during immersion of a vessel; and Rapapa explains it addresses whether dough on a bowl prevents a sheretz from rendering the bowl tameh. The class concludes by introducing the next Mishnah discussing batzek ha-cheresh, a dough ball whose status is uncertain, and how we determine its chametz status by comparing it to another dough ball kneaded at the same time. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (0:00) Mishnah: V'chen L'inyan Tuma (0:49) Gemara's Problem with V'chen (2:30) Rav Yehuda: V'chen as Contrast (3:43) Abaye's Explanation: Tziruf Tuma (8:21) Rava's Explanation: Dipping the Bowl (11:06) Rapapa's Question on Rava (12:48) Rapapa: Sheretz on the Dough (14:49) Bartenura and Rambam on Mishnah (17:22) New Mishnah: Batzek HaCheresh - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Visit: westdealshul.org Sponsorships: west.deal.classes@gmail.com

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Rabbi Ike Hanon hosts classes Monday through Friday at 6:10 AM at West Deal Shul. The class opens on Pesachim 46a, exploring how to identify ambiguous dough that may have become chametz, including the Rambam's unique sound-test explanation. Rabbi Hanon then discusses the famous 18-minute rule, tracing its source to the walking distance between Migdal Nunya and Tiberias, and addresses the debate among commentaries about whether active kneading pauses the chametz clock. The Gemara then pivots to a broader halachic principle about how far a person must go out of their way for mitzvot such as tefilah and netilat yadayim, concluding that up to four mil forward is required but less than one mil backward is the threshold. Turning to the double parasha of Matot-Masei, Rabbi Hanon presents the Sefer HaChinuch's insight that the cities of refuge were Levite cities by design, so that accidental killers could find both atonement through Torah and a non-judgmental community. The class concludes with a teaching from Rav Asher Weiss connecting the two destructions of the Beit HaMikdash to the twin remedies of Emet and Shalom, emphasizing that genuine Torah learning must produce greater love and less judgment of others. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (0:00) Intro: Betzekeh Dough Explained (0:31) Rambam's Sound Test for Chametz (1:13) Comparing Dough to Detect Chametz (2:01) 18-Minute Rule: Migdal Nunya (3:35) Does Kneading Pause the Clock? (5:48) Three Mitzvot: How Far Must You Go? (9:43) Four Mil Rule for Hired Kneader (13:29) Tanning Leather & Tahara (14:57) Going Forward vs. Backward Rule (17:51) No Excuse to Miss Davening (18:08) Parasha: Arei Miklat Overview (19:11) Sefer HaChinuch on Cities of Refuge (20:50) Torah + Shalom = Redemption (21:46) Rav Asher Weiss: How to Rebuild - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Visit: westdealshul.org Sponsorships: west.deal.classes@gmail.com

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I går11 min
episode Rabbi Ike Hanon – Pesahim 45b-46a | Weekday Gemara cover

Rabbi Ike Hanon – Pesahim 45b-46a | Weekday Gemara

Rabbi Ike Hanon hosts classes Monday through Friday at 6:10 AM at West Deal Shul. The class focuses on Pesachim 45b-46a, examining the Mishnah's phrase v'chen l'inyan tuma and why the Gemara finds it problematic. The difficulty is that the first part of the Mishnah sets a size-based criterion for chametz on Pesach, while the second part introduces a subjective criterion of whether a person objects to the dough being there, making the connecting word v'chen seem out of place. Four Amoraic explanations are presented: Rav Yehuda reads v'chen as introducing a contrast rather than a comparison; Abaye explains it refers to combining small amounts of food to reach the shiur for tumah; Rava explains it addresses whether leftover dough creates a blockage during immersion of a vessel; and Rapapa explains it addresses whether dough on a bowl prevents a sheretz from rendering the bowl tameh. The class concludes by introducing the next Mishnah discussing batzek ha-cheresh, a dough ball whose status is uncertain, and how we determine its chametz status by comparing it to another dough ball kneaded at the same time. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (0:00) Mishnah: V'chen L'inyan Tuma (0:49) Gemara's Problem with V'chen (2:30) Rav Yehuda: V'chen as Contrast (3:43) Abaye's Explanation: Tziruf Tuma (8:21) Rava's Explanation: Dipping the Bowl (11:06) Rapapa's Question on Rava (12:48) Rapapa: Sheretz on the Dough (14:49) Bartenura and Rambam on Mishnah (17:22) New Mishnah: Batzek HaCheresh - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Visit: westdealshul.org Sponsorships: west.deal.classes@gmail.com

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