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YESHIVAT HAR ETZION ISRAEL KOSCHITZKY VIRTUAL
BEIT MIDRASH (VBM)
Introduction to the Study of Talmud by Rav
Michael Siev
Kiddushin 16 - Daf 79a continued
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Within the quoted texts, my explanations and additions are also noted
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Last week, we began to discuss the machloket
(dispute) between Rav and Shemuel regarding the case of a father who accepted
kiddushin (betrothal) on his daughter's behalf early in the day,
following which the girl herself accepted kiddushin on that same day.
The case hinges on the status of the girl at that time. A father has the right
to accept kiddushin on his daughter's behalf until she reaches the
stage of bagrut, at which time the daughter becomes independent in this
area. Bagrut is the stage at which a girl reaches full adulthood, and
it comes when she develops certain signs of physical maturity (see
Niddah 47a). The expected time at which she will reach this stage is
six months after the onset of na'arut, the first stage of adulthood,
which generally commenses when a girl turns twelve. The dispute between Rav and
Shemuel pertains to a case in which the father and daughter accepted
kiddushin from two different men on the very day that we anticipate the
girl will become a bogeret. At the end of the day, the girl is examined
and found to be a bogeret. Rav assumes that just as she is a
bogeret at the end of the day, she presumably was a bogeret
earlier that day as well; therefore, the kiddushin accepted by the
father is invalid, as he no longer had the authority to accept
kiddushin on his daughter's behalf, and the kiddushin that the
daughter accepted is valid. Shemuel argues that we should consider it
a safek (doubt) as to whether or not the girl had already produced
the signs that indicate bagrut at the time her father accepted
kiddushin; therefore, it is unclear which of the two
kiddushins is valid. (Even if we assume she was definitely a
bogeret when she accepted kiddushin, if her father's
kiddushin was valid, she would be a married woman
and not eligibile to accept another kiddushin.) This
would necessitate following our mishna's guidelines for a case of doubt
as to which of two possible men are married to a particular woman: she may not
complete the marriage process with either one of the men until the other
gives a get (document of divorce), and if she wants to marry a third
party, both of the men would have to give a get.
Our gemara's discussion may be used to illustrate a
phenomenon very common to the study of Talmud. The Talmud teaches its principles
through case law; what is the halakha in such-and-such a case, or in a different
case, etc. However, the principles expressed may be general in nature and
applicable to a wide range of situations not mentioned explicitly in the
Talmudic discussion. Thus, the discussion may have great practical importance
irrespective of the frequency with which the specific case discussed in the
gemara actually occurs. Our sugya is a case in
point. The particular case discussed in our gemara is rather
uncommon, to say the least. Nevertheless, the sugya is critical for the
principle of chazaka, which is the focal point of the debate.
The concept of chazaka posits that we assume that a
particular reality, whether physical or halakhic in nature, remains in
effect until we know otherwise. The most common application of chazaka
is to a case in which we do not know if the reality has changed;
chazaka tells us that we may assume it has not. But what if
we know that it has changed or that it will change in the near future? In
such circumstances do we still maintain that the previous reality exists
until the point in time at which we find out for certain that it has
changed? That is the essential principle at stake in the dispute
between Rav and Shemuel. Rav claims that since we know that the girl was a
bogeret in the evening, it is illogical to assume that the signs of her
physical maturity sprouted on that very day after her father accepted
kiddushin, and we can be confident that she was a bogeret in
the earlier part of the day as well. Essentially, we extend her bogeret
status backward and assume that she was a bogeret earlier in the day as
well. Shemuel disagrees and maintains that since the girl was presumed to
be a na'ara until now, we cannot confidently assume that her status
changed until that change has been clearly documented. Thus, the
possibility that she was a na'ara even at the beginning of that
very day must be taken into account.
The Gemara
A few words of introduction must be added before we can jump into
the continuation of the Gemara's discussion of this issue. There
are several diffirent types of tuma (ritual impurity) that exist
according to halakha (see, for example, Vayikra ch. 11-15). The process
of purification differs depending on the type of tuma, but there is a
requirement of immersing in a mikveh (ritual bath). Among the many
halakhic specifications regarding a mikveh is the fact that it must
have at least forty se'ah of water. (There is a dispute as to the
modern equivalent of the se'ah. The range of opinions of the
volume of 40 se'ah is from 332 to 576 liters.) Our gemara
will quote a discussion about a case of a mikveh that had just over
forty se'ah when it was first measured, and when it was next measured
it had less than forty se'ah; the question thus arises as to when the
mikveh should be assumed to have become invalid.
One of the most common and practical ramifications of ritual
purity in earlier times pertained to food items that had various degrees of
sanctity. Every Israelite farmer is required to give some of his crop (usually,
about 2%) to a kohen as teruma. This food may only be eaten by
kohanim and is considered sacred; it therefore must be kept pure and
must be eaten in a state of purity. If the kohen is tamei
(impure) or the food itself has become tamei, it may not be eaten.
Similarly, parts of certain korbanot (sacrifices) may be eaten by
kohanim or by the person who brought the korban. This type of
food must also be kept pure and eaten in a state of purity.
Sometimes, there may be doubt as to whether or not a person or
item has become tamei. In that case, the operative principle is that it
depends on the location in which the safek (doubt) has
arisen (see, for example, Rambam, She'ar Avot Ha-tuma cb.
16). If the doubt arises in a private domain (reshut ha-yachid), we
assume that the item is tamei; if the doubt arises in a public domain,
we assume that it is tahor (pure).
With all of this this in mind, we can continue with the
Gemara's discussion. We begin eight lines from the end of the
short lines on 79a.
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And [according to Shemuel], why
is it different than a mikveh?
For we learned in a mishna: "A mikveh that
was measured and found to be missing [water],
all the sanctified foods that were prepared through it are
retroactively -
whether in a private domain or a public domain -
impure!"
It is different there, for it is possible to say:
the impure [item] retains its
status, and say that it did not immerse.
On the contrary, keep the mikveh in its previous
status and say that it was not missing [water]!
It is missing [water] in front of
you.
Here too, she is a bogeret in front of you!
It is [only] now that she has
become a bogeret.
There too, it is [now] that it is
missing [water]!
There, there are two negative [considerations],
here there is one negative [consideration]. |
ושמואל, מאי שנא ממקוה?
דתנן: מקוה שנמדד ונמצא חסר,
כל טהרות שנעשו על גביו למפרע -
בין ברשות היחיד בין ברשות הרבים - טמאות!
שאני התם, דאיכא למימר:
העמד טמא על חזקתו ואימר לא טבל.
אדרבה,
העמד מקוה על חזקתו ואימר לא חסר!
הרי חסר לפניך.
הכא נמי הרי בוגרת לפניך!
השתא הוא דבגרה.
התם נמי השתא הוא דחסר!
התם תרתי לריעותא,
הכא חדא לריעותא. |
Based on the fact that Shemuel's ruling in our sugya relates to the
general issue of chazaka, the gemara questions how Shemuel
justifies his stance in light of the mishna in Mikva'ot (2:2)
which apparently implies the opposite. What if a mikveh originally
had a bit more than 40 se'ah, but the next time it was measured it was
found to have a bit less than 40 se'ah? Obviously, the mikveh
has become deficient sometime between the two measurings, but it is unclear
when. The mishna rules that we must assume that any person who used
that mikveh to achieve tahara (spiritual purity) between the
two measurings must be considered as though he has not left his status of
tuma. Therefore, any sanctified food that he may have handled must also
be presumed to be tamei, in which case it must be burned. (The same
ruling would apply to a utensil that was tamei and
was immersed in the mikveh, and then came into contact with
sanctified food.)
This case represents a challenge to the opinion of Shemuel. In the case of
the mikveh, we know that it had enough water at the time it was
initially measured and that it was missing water the next time it was measured.
By saying that anyone who has used the mikveh between those times is to
be considered tamei, the mishna teaches that we do not assume
that a particular reality continues on until we know for sure it has
changed. Rather, we assume that the mikveh became deficient immediately
after the initial measuring. And this assumption is not even a safek;
if it was, we would have to apply the procedures for cases of doubt in
tuma and tahara. Those procedures dictate that in a reshut
ha-rabbim we are lenient while in a reshut ha-yachid we are
stringent. But in this case the mishna rules that we are always
stringent, even in a reshut ha-rabbim. This ruling seems to match the
opinion of Rav in our gemara: he rules that we assume the girl was
definitely a bogeret at the time her father accepted
kiddushin for her, just as she is a bogeret now. How
does Shemuel reconcile his opinion with this mishna?
The gemara responds that we may not be able to compare the case of
the mikva with Shemuel's ruling regarding the na'ara-bogeret.
In the case of the mikveh, there is an alternate chazaka that
contradicts the chazaka regarding the mikveh: that of the
person (or utensil) who used the mikveh. That person was tamei
and went to the mikveh in order to change his status. Since there is a
doubt regarding the mikveh, we should continue to consider him
tamei until we know otherwise! From that perspective, the
mishna's ruling actually parallels Shemuel's ruling in our
gemara.
The gemara counters that it is not enough to emphasize the
forward-extending chazaka of the tamei person or utensil and
to thus justify Shemuel's consideration of the forward-extending
chazaka of the na'ara. In the case of the mikveh,
there is also a forward-extending chazaka of the mikveh as
full, which would lead us to conclude that the person or utensil that used it is
now tahor; but the mishna rules that the sanctified
food is tamei! The implication is that we discount forward
chazakot in favor of current realities, in which case Shemuel's
opinion is difficult: he takes into account the forward-extending
chazaka of the girl as a na'ara even though there is also
a backward-extending chazaka that she is a bogeret.
The argument could be made that this chazaka (that the
mikveh was full) has clearly come to an end while the
chazaka of the person or utensil as tamei has not. This would
explain why we follow the chazaka of the person or utensil rather than
the original chazaka of the mikveh. But this line of
reasoning does not make Shemuel's opinion any easier to swallow:
the chazaka that the girl is a na'ara has also come
to an end, yet Shemuel does not discount it!
Finally, the gemara explains that in the case of the
mikveh there are two reasons to assume that the sanctified food is
tamei: the original chazaka of the person or utensil as
tamei and the current reality that the mikveh is deficient. In
Shemuel's case, there is only one consideration that would invalidate the
father's kiddushin; the fact that now, at the end of the day, the girl
is found to be a bogeret. Therefore, Shemuel argues, although we
may be certain in the case of the mikveh, we remain uncertain in the
case of kiddushin, and must take both possible outcomes into account.
The sugya we have studied today is complex in that it assumes
familiarity with several areas of halakha, and because the back and forth
revolves around subtle points which can nevertheless make a difference in the
final halakha. It would be wise to review the sugya in order to make
sure that you understand each step: how the gemara challenges Shemuel's
opinion based upon the mishna in Mikva'ot, the different
attempts to resolve the question and their rejection, and the final distinction
between the two sugyot. We will continue the sugya next week.
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