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The Mitzva of Sefirat HaOmer: Torah Law or Zecher L’Mikdash? By Rabbi Yitzchak Breitowitz
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Delivered 29 Nisan 5784 / May 7, 2024 Rabbi Breitowitz's Tuesday Shiur is sponsored for the 2024 academic year by Rabbi Refoel and Sharon Auman in memory of their parents, Edith and Reiner Auman, z”l, יונה בן צדוק ז״ל & אסתר ע״ה בת רפאל הי״ד and their son Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu Auman, z"l, הרב שמואל אליהו ז״ל בן הרב רפאל נ״י #sefira #sefirathaomer #shiur #torah #torahlectures #omer #ouisrael #halacha
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
okay good morning everyone hope you all
had a wonderful wonderful
PES you had a little raus on you last
week is that we didn't
have but now God willing we're back in a
regular a regular
session uh you know it's interesting
yesterday was of course uh y y we're
coming up with Y and then y so it's kind
of a very big mixture of happy occasions
joyous occasions and occasions of memory
occasions of sadness and of course
that's superimposed with the mat that
we're in right now which is a mat
of mat of people who are still in
captivity uh indeed one of the hostages
unfortunately uh passed away who um I
don't remember the name but one of them
is was say a relatively young person
like
48 how long no wasin the past few days
they just announced that the person had
uh had died in in
captivity so like life in general it's
really a mixture of of happiness and joy
together with with sadness and
confusion and uh we turn to our KES to
help us through uh this kind of moras of
conflicting feelings and beem may all of
the suffering both in the past and in
the present may it be the precursor to
uh the G that should
come you know it's interesting that it's
not maybe not the most comforting bit of
news that kazal do tell us that the days
before mashia are going to be very very
difficult times going to be very very
turbulent times in fact one of the
rabbis of the talmud said that he prays
for the coming of mashia but he also
prays he won't be alive when that time
comes he'd rather show up later with you
know and like because the immediate uh
period before the coming of mashiah will
be very very difficult this is the
famous Wars of go and
MOG that are described in in Sak and
just to add to our
consternation uh there's a famous
statement of the vnon which for 200
years no one understood what it meant
and he said the final apocalyptic Wars
of go and MOG will only last 12
minutes and no one understood what on
Earth what type of War will be over in
12 minutes nuclear war well that's the
end yeah listen when the Von said it
nobody nobody knew what he was talking
about but obviously a nuclear war could
indeed be of very very short duration
tremendously
destructive and or even that
electromagnetic thing that just wipes
out uh wipes out essentially the ability
of the world to function uh and and and
the like so you know you have to
understand that in some ways uh both
kazal and the Nim had to speak in a in a
language that would was contemporary in
other words you're not going to look at
a PK and talk about atom bombs or the
like it'll use figurative language it'll
talk about uh no fire pillars of smoke
you know and the like so you often don't
know what that means till you're you're
conversant with the present realities
that we face in fact even the prophets
themselves may not have known exactly
what the these things were referring to
but it is true that as history
progresses we can go back into the words
of the prophets and we can see all sorts
of hidden meanings that maybe were not
even known to earlier Generations that
sadly were able to understand so the uh
statement of the vagon that gooun MoGo
could last 12 minutes is fortunately
something that we are able to understand
today that for a number of centuries was
simply Beyond people's comprehension
however let me point out that the same
vnon that says that has another teaching
in which he points out that go and MOG
is only a worst case scenario meaning to
say there are different Pathways to
mashia there is the pathway via go and
MOG but there's also the pathway through
Chua and aat Isel in which all of the
Goen MoGo can be bypassed so that's the
good news and the bad news meaning to
say there is a way out of all of these
situations and even if we've already
started on the path of Goen MOG we can
kind of reverse and restart and reset
and kind of proceed on an alternative
path so uh if anything else that should
encourage us to try to work on what we
need to to work on uh basically Building
Bridges uh with with our fellow Jews so
that really brings us to the Mitzvah of
counting the OM and we're going to spend
again next few weeks on om we're kind of
a we're kind of a seasonal Shear uh in
that sense again I warn you that uh I
make no promises about inspiration
that's not the purpose of this year we
basically go through
analytical but if occasionally a thought
comes out I will not automatically
suppress it uh and and and and the like
uh the first thing I want to make a
point is a very very simple point it's a
very actually it's very obvious point
but sometimes it escapes people the
Mitzvah of counting the
OM and the various mourning restrictions
that we observe on the Omare are two
totally separate things there was a
Mitzvah of counting the OM before there
was morning restrictions of the OM so
don't confuse them I'm going to be
talking today about the Mitzvah of
counting the OM that has nothing to do
with haircuts that has nothing to do
with weddings that has nothing to do
with music historically it's not even
connected uh to that we'll talk about
the morning later but in your own mind
you have to be sure when we think of SP
we automatically think of the morning
restrictions but that's not what the
Mitzvah is the Mitzvah in the Torah is
in parasor that's going to be the para
we're going to read the chabas After
Next chabas
you shall count I'm going to translate
this very literally you shall
count from the day after
shabas now normally normally shabas is
Saturday and MIM shabas would be Sunday
okay we'll come back to that you should
count from the day after
shabas from the day that you bring or
you brought the OM now om is a measure a
measure like a bushel an Omare is
technically a tenth of an
AA right so the word om doesn't mean
barley and the word Omar doesn't mean
the period between p and om is a volume
of
grain equal to what's called a tenth of
an AA which is equal to the amount of
man that fell every day in the desert
which is equal to the amount of dough of
flour rather you have to have in order
to be so uh which which turns out to be
43 and a fifth eggs but there's a mlus
if the eggs are bigger or smaller today
so that translates into anything between
2 and2 pounds to 5 pounds of flour
that's an Omar so I'll go back to each
of these terms because there's a lot to
unpack here and again I I I apologize if
some of this is well known to you or
push it to you but I want to be sure
that people understand the words you
shall begin to count from the day after
chabas from the day that you
brought the Omare offering that is waved
we'll describe that Chev
shabas to mimos TI there shall be seven
complete
weeks that is 49 days then it seems to
repeat it
OD until now until means not including
until the day after the seventh week
meaning you don't count that day you
shall
count now this is already a little bit
of a contradiction you shall count 50
days
and then it said now which of course
that's the SH now of course we don't
count 50 days we only count 49 days but
okay well we'll come back to that too
now let's first focus on the
words you start counting the day after
chabas now here already record that
there was a huge
mlus that spans hundreds of
years between sadim the
sades and the pusim the
pH the Pharisees now the Pharisees are
maybe the bad guys in the Christian
Bible but they happen to be araz they
called the
Pim regarding the interpretation
ofab
theim took this very
literally and they said you begin
counting the OM on a Sunday and this
would be the Sunday after PES the first
Sunday after
PES every single year no matter what day
of the week p is you start
counting now let me digress for a
moment uh
theim so named sadis sadim is simply
because the founder of this movement was
a man called
sadok so his followers were called
called
sadim theim were a movements that lived
during the second temple
period theim more or less became
extinct around theban B sheny that
whatever it was they they ceased to
exist as a movement were there
individual sauses probably yes but they
no longer had any type of
movement
now don't confused that stuk
him with a much later movement that had
much of the same belief system called
the kites the
Kim now
theim Liv during the second temple
period and they were
extinct the Kim was a mo or were a
movement that began in around the 10th
Century or early 11th century the 900s
10 hundreds
and indeed we actually know the founder
it has it has a definitive founder a man
called Anan Ben David founded a new kind
of religion within Judaism and it's
interesting what was his motivation he
didn't claim to have some Revelation
from God rather he was born into regular
Judaism and he wanted a certain job he
wanted to be Ruta he wanted to be the
political head of the Jewish Community
he was passed over somebody else got it
so he started his own
religion and however what is interesting
is there are many
commonalities between Kim and St Kim
although they are not the same movement
historically and the commonality is they
rejected the
tal and they only regarded the T
as
Authority this was the position of the
sades during the second temple and this
later became the position of the
Karim now Kar there are no sases today
you're not going to find anyone who says
I'm a stuki but there are Kim today Kim
is a uh is a practice within Judaism
that still exists uh there is a kyite
synagogue in fact Kim have very
interesting Customs people often say oh
carites read the Torah overly
literally that's not quite true they do
read the Torah without the gar without
the talmud without the
T but they also have figurative
interpretations in fact one outstanding
example is
Fillin do
wear and they do wear a toilet because
after all that's pretty explicit in par
sh you shall make fringes on your
garments but but I think we mentioned a
few weeks ago they don't wear Fillin
because they understand that when the
Torah says you shall tie it upon your
arm and make it an adornment between
your eyes that is a symbolic expression
that means you commit your action to God
and you commit your mind to go now the
truth is we also understand that
symbolically but we take it literally as
well so it is interesting that the
common statement that theim or the kites
are over ly literal it's not quite true
sometimes they have a very symbolic
interpretation but it is not rooted in
the M of our they reject now there were
karite Scholars who knew the talud but
again a carite scholar who knows the
talmid is like a Jewish scholar who
happens to know the New Testament
meaning they didn't regard the talmid as
binding some of them knew it as a matter
of scholarly interest and uh and and and
and like another
example do not blow chaur and
R because it is very interesting if you
literally look at the Torah the Torah
does not use the word Chau for with
respect to rashash it talks about
Yer you blow the chauffer on rash it
says now we interpret tra to mean
blowing of the show for but they point
out that in other biblical contexts tra
is shouting out to God and therefore
they look at rashash which we also look
at as a day of shouting a day of prayer
in so they have a holiday called R but
they don't blow the chauffers right
right all right so be isn't May though
uh the K and earlier
theim took a very literalist position
regarding the Omare that you don't begin
counting the Omare till
Sunday and we find that this was a
dispute that's already recorded in the
mishna and this dispute went on for a
very very long time and the went to very
Great Lengths to dispel this erroneous
interpretation now it's interesting it's
been suggested why were people paying
attention to the stuk like why was I
mean the stum did plenty of stuff that
was wrong that that most people didn't
pay attention to why would people be
attracted to the notion that the Omare
is counted on a Sunday and the answer is
because it gives you extra vacation time
because here's the thing uh if you
always count s on
Sunday so what does that mean sh is
going to be on Sunday right you
understand this that the 50th day will
always be the same day of the week as
they were because 49 days is seven weeks
then you have an extra day so as a
result Shu you know was was not a uh it
was a rough holiday period for people
because is only one day there's
no uh so if shat was Friday so you have
a Friday in a Shabbat but otherwise you
only have one day but if you always make
it on if you always count the OM on
Sunday then shu will always be on Sunday
so you get a Shabbat and a Sunday so as
a result people's theology was defined
by the convenience of a two-day
vacation uh again we maybe maybe we
appreciate that less today Israel still
Sundays are work day even in Israel you
could appreciate that in America you
know you wouldn't appreciate it because
people generally have Sundays off anyway
uh and the like but be it as it may our
tradition is very different we interpret
the word shabas in that
P not to refer to
Saturday but shabat to refer to the
first
day of
p in other words when we
count that means we start counting the
second day of PES why would PES be
called
Shabbat so K say because even yov can be
called
Shabbat because it is a day of shita it
is a day where we refrain from doing M
albeit not to the same degree as
shabas I'm going to leave it as a
question for now and I'll address it
later why does the Torah use a confusing
term why doesn't it say you shall count
from the day after the PES or the second
day of pesak why you use the term
Shabbat to refer to P we will come back
to that but right now it's just very
important to note the idea that the Sim
and later the
Kim interpreted Shabbat to be Saturday
andat to be
Sunday
through understood Shabbat to be the
first day of PES therefore
Shabbat is the second day of P which is
what we do right which we do and we'll
discuss later why would the Tyra
employ the phrase Shabbat if it means
PES we we will come back to that
question okay so you should start
counting from the day after the first
day of PES okay that's one marker so we
have two markers here marker number one
is start your
count that's marker number one marker
number two is from the day that you
bring the
OM now these two markers are the same we
bring the OM on the second day of PES
but note that there are two markers and
you'll see why that's significant when
do you
start marker number
one marker number two the day that you
bring the Omare offering now what is the
Omare offering so in the time
where there was a mikash again this is
in on the second day of P which is of
course here in ER Isel we bring an
offering of barley flour barley flour
let see it's a coarse coarse meal really
it's not really flour that's mixed with
oil uh and part of it is burnt on the M
A Fistful or three fingers full is burnt
on the mbak the rest is eaten by the
kohanim it is baked uh in an unleavened
State now you might think oh that's
obvious it's PES that's not the reason
although that would also be a reason the
truth is virtually all meal
offerings have to be eaten in as
unleavened bread this is very
interesting even if you bring a corbon m
in the middle of the year it generally
has to be matah the bet mikdash is
largely a free zone
so the reason why the OM offering again
the
kamit is flour and oil and that's burnt
on the altar the shirim The Leftovers
are baked as barley matah never tasted
barley matah but baked as barley matah
and eaten by the kohanim and the reason
it's barley matah is not only because
it's PES but because the of the
leftovers of
after you're
mck the kamit the kamit is the finger
the the fistful have to be mat that is a
general general rule with only two
exceptions which we'll get to later
now because the Tyra gives two different
markers we have a very very fascinating
M sh
him is the Mitzvah of counting the OM
It's called counting the truth is if you
think about this count the
Omare is actually grammatically not not
even a sensible
sentence what do what do you mean you're
not counting the Omare you're counting
49 days starting from the bringing of
the
OM om is what you brought it's not what
you
count you see uh but so the idea of is
not used in the Torah it's simply the
colloquial expression that we use but
here is the
huge
toos and most weon him take the
position that when there's no B
mikash and there's
no there is no longer a to count the
OM because after all the Torah says at
least in the second marker you shall
count
from the day you bring the OM well last
time I checked we didn't bring an OM
this year if that's the case s today is
no longer obligatory on a Torah level
but we still do it
mik to
remember what was done when we had a bet
mikash so most say and I'll give you a
practical difference again in a minute
that the mitvah of counting
the is
mik because without a corbon om the
trigger of the
spa is
lacking now you may ask me a question
well if that is the case then how can
can I make
a blessed
you our God the king of the
universe who Sanctified us with his
Commandments and commanded
us but God didn't command us because
when there's no Corb it's only a not a
how can I say
but the answer is very simple if you're
asking the question here you can ask the
question on a gazillion Commandments we
make it before we light kanah
candles did God command you in the Torah
to light Kan candles no before we read
the
mill did God command you to read the
Milla no it's not in the Torah this this
happened after the Torah even n
Hashem commanded us to keep Shabbat hasm
did not command Us in the Torah to light
candles in honor of Shabbat so the gorah
says and the RAM elaborates on this that
since the Torah commands us to obey all
of the takot of
the because the Torah says
in do not depart from whatever they tell
you so every time the raban create a it
becomes a Torah not because it's
directly a there is no direct to count
the OM as far as the Torah is concerned
there is no direct to read Milla as far
as the Torah is concerned there is no
direct to light kanah candles as far as
the torah's concerned but if the
instructed me to do so and the Torah
said I must obey the decisions of the so
automatically Hashem commanded me to do
it in other words all I'm saying is this
is why we do make
the even on a
that's so even if I make
the okay this is the of toos and most we
shown him
that is
mid the
ran is a but it is the r so it's very
significant takes a different View and
he says it's not clear what his proof is
going to be but he says that the Torah
gives you two different markers the
Torah says you start counting the
OM Shabbat which is the second day of
pesak and it also says from the day you
bring the OM but the rambam learns these
are two independent markers either one
of which will trigger the
and therefore even though
today we don't have a bikash yet
unfortunately and we have we don't bring
the OM
today
but from the day after uh the first day
of P there is a and that's independent
of
the therefore according to the r the of
counting is a Torah commandment not a Dr
on now you may say well none of this is
a practical difference because like both
opinions you have to do
it like both opinions you make
a so is there any practical difference
whether is the Ora or D you got to be
careful sometimes you know sometimes
when you
teach and you even use the phrase which
you know I use all the time but
everybody does it's only drub
on that's that sends a that sends a
wrong message that's oh it's only drub I
don't have to keep it well if you're a
car rider
stooky uh that may be true well even
then you have to keep it but you don't
think you have to keep it uh but
certainly we have to keep dunans and
indeed as the rambam pointed the ramb I
just quoted pointed out every draan is
a but there are nafas there are
differences between draan and do say and
let me give you a very very practical
difference and that is the issue of
counting the
OM okay let let me uh describe what this
is we know that according
to uh night the day begins of course at
night right the new day begins at night
and that's based on
the it is the evening and it is morning
and that's Y and this is the
fundamental uh principle of Jewish time
that's the day begins from the preceding
night not from midnight but from the
preceding night now the question becomes
what is the halic definition of night
what is night right what is night so
have the following
tradition the definition of
night is when the darkness in the sky is
strong enough that you can see
three intermediate level
Stars that's
called now you have to understand
something it's a little complicated
today because of uh light pollution and
and and everything else you often don't
see any stars in fact I I remember
growing up as a kid I you know I read in
the Kish God says to abam you're seed
will be like the stars of the heaven and
I look up at the sky and like I see like
five things up there uh but then you go
to amuka you go to a valley there are
millions of things up there it's amazing
they're really there so in the olden
days they didn't go with uh you know 35
minutes 45 minutes 72 minutes that's not
how they ended chabas they would go out
side they would look at the sky and if
they saw three now technically it's
three middle level stars but but today
we're M has be three small Stars you
have to wait until the smaller stars are
visible just to be sure but they didn't
go with this automatic thing 42 or
whatever it is we go with that simply
because we can't always rely on what we
see because often we don't see
things okay but theic definition of
night it's cloud completely it's cloudy
yeah the definition of night
is the visibility of three intermediate
levels of stars which we translate to
three smaller Stars which maybe a little
longer than that it was a cloudy huh
what did they do in no no so then
situations no so so they then they did
like we did they would have to kind of
based on their
experience it would be how many minutes
would it be in other words you're you're
right I mean uh ultimately they
sometimes would have to
estimate well well no I don't mean they
never it's not like oh we have to wait
till the clouds go away I mean they
never did that but they they figured you
know uh what did say once said it's a
bit of a pun in Hebrew uh where yum
Kipper was already over but some people
were not sure and the like so they
wanted to wait longer and longer soer
pointed out the language of the is
that if you don't see the if you don't
see the stars you have to
wait until the doubt is no longer in
your
heart said it's a little bit of a joke
it doesn't it
says it doesn't
say it doesn't say you have to wait
until you lose your heart because of the
death meaning at some point you know you
could say garu uh and and and the like
okay so it is interesting to know that
all of these debates about minutes and
everything else are are
fundamentally second level
reconstructions
of
now what is I'm sorry what is the
status of what is called Twilight
Twilight is the period between
sunset in Hebrew
that
and we call that Twilight so Hala has a
term for the Twilight period And by the
way although this is a little
complicated but please rest assured I am
grossly oversimplifying right now this
is actually tremendously complicated
sugya in which many not just a book but
many many whole have been written on but
I'm going to keep it uh relatively
simple and that is the Twilight period
is called ban
has so that's the period again between
Sunset
and
before is definitively
daytime
after is it is definitively
nighttime the gamar gives us three
possibilities maybe it's still Day
meaning it's day until
SA or maybe it's night to
suff or maybe part of it is day and part
of it is night and at some point in the
darkness it switches we don't
know and you don't even know where theu
is going to be so Twilight is
suff once you hit sa night Twilight is
suff now this
explains very simply why shabbat and yum
Kipper is longer than 24
hours because here is the
thing I got to refrain from Mala on
Friday I mean normally I do it earlier
but at the I
the absolute end point for Mala is
Sunset and the reason is because maybe
BM is night if B Mas is night it's
chabas but I can't end chabas at Sunset
because maybe is day and I have to wait
until so I got to be to begin chabas no
later than
sh but I have to be not to end shabas no
earlier than and that's besides the
Mitzvah of adding onto shabas that's a
Mitzvah anyway but even without the
Mitzvah of adding onto chabas that could
even be a minute or two minutes but I
have to keep
Shas
because is a
suff
huh you talking about yeah yes so that's
that became a so again that became a
custom to kind of add from the to The
KES but it if you missed but for example
uh if you did not light 18 minutes
before Sunset you are still supposed to
light until sunset so shabas does not I
mean I mean if you accept shabas you
accept shabus but shabas does not begin
until and the 18 minutes is to make a
fence around that and you sh of course
we do 40 minutes uh but uh you know the
MS is uh if a person didn't Light Within
18 minutes I would tell them to light
until but we would probably say 3
minutes before sh because of a margin of
error uh we would say 3 to four minutes
before meaning do not light if you're
within 3 to four minutes of sunset
simply because clocks are not
accurate and uh and everything and
everything else yeah that you have to
make a
declaration that I am not taking shabus
until oh that yeah that's if you light
yeah yeah that's true because the
general issue is that when a when a
woman lights chabas
candles she is considered to have
accepted chabas with her lighting so if
she wants to do
until she must make a verbal declaration
at the time that she lights yeah uh but
if she didn't light then she hasn't
accepted so there's no verbal
declaration that she needs but if she
likes and does not say the
Declaration and and then something
happens well it depends if she clearly
had in her mind that she was not
accepting chabas so even without a
verbal declaration that's okay but on
the other hand if she didn't have that
in mind she is stuck she cannot do until
because the lighting is considered to be
an act of accepting shabas in fact as as
you know uh the woman should not even
blow out I mean some allow it but but
when you light shabas candles and you
didn't make a condition that you do you
don't even blow out the match you put it
down and let it go out by itself because
you're not allowed to blow out the uh
blow out the match uh this is a this is
an issue about the driving uh you know
to go to show after you like Etc you
know so again this is maybe unfair
discrimination men are not considered to
have accepted shabas just because their
wives have lit chabas
candles uh but the woman generally does
accept shabas unless she made a a
condition now somebody gave rosha it's
interesting people have the that they
noticed that R mosha would uh be driven
to mtj to his Yeshiva Bas medish Friday
night after Friday afternoon after Li
Bening so somebody said you know it
doesn't pass it's not fitting for a
great rashash Shiva that after his wife
lights the candles uh he's driven and he
wrote along chuba saying it's absolutely
mucher it's mucher but he said he's not
going to do it anymore he says if it's
something that people think is wrong he
doesn't want to do things that may take
away from the sanctity of chabas so
rosha was maab mus and rosha stopped
doing it uh another interesting just me
lean is laere and everyone knows that
one of things one of kad's big campaigns
is their Fillin campaign right I guess
women probably have not been stopped but
you know men have been stopped and say
did you put Onin are you je are you
Jewish uh do you put on Fillin or
whatever whatever whatever it would be
uh so you figure that the main audience
for that type of campaign are you know
non-religious Jews who know we it's
filling but the rabbi actually targeted
rosha Feinstein about its filling
question he asked Feinstein if rosha
Feinstein puts on
Ru and R mosha because as we spoke a few
weeks ago uh the normal F that people
wear are based on rashi's opinion R is
worn by and but most as do not wear
R so ra Moshe wrote The Following he
said he used to wear rabenu Fain in
Russia but since it was a that's not
required by Haka he only wore it because
there was a sof that was 100% 100 100%
reliable he says he has not found such a
Sofer in America so when it comes to
Rashi he's stuck he has to do the best
that he can but he's not going to wear
re without a Sofer that qualifies for
the highest standard so said to him I
will find you a Sofer that you will
approve even you will approve of and uh
he did find him a sof and rosha said he
will start wearing re I don't know how
many years rosha wore it but uh actually
was M Moshe to go back to a wearing of
thein of R all right so this is B now
this is why for example by a britz britz
Mila let's talk about a baby that is
born after
Sunset let's take a regular situation
the baby is born Monday
evening after
Sunset now is he a Monday baby because
if he's a Monday Baby he'll have a
Monday
bris if he's a Tuesday B Tuesday baby
he'll have a Tuesday bris so if he's
born before on Monday Monday bris if
he's born after say Monday night that's
Tuesday bris if he's born
B you got to go with the later date
meaning meaning the problem is this we
don't know if B is day or night if it's
day it would be a Monday if it's night
it would be a Tuesday but I can't do the
bris on Monday because if BM is night
he's a Tuesday baby and I did a bris on
the seventh day so I got to go with
Tuesday now if it's night Tuesday is the
eighth day and if it's day Tuesday is
the ninth day but better to do a bris on
day nine
than to do a bris on day seven because a
bris on day nine is
kosher a bris on day seven is not Kosher
so when you're
about you always have to go with the
later date okay know you got to assume B
might be the next day and push off the
bris now this raises a fascinating
problem when it's a Friday baby
because here you have a real problem the
baby is
born
Friday after Sunset now we know if a
baby is born on
chabas WE of course do the bris on
chabas a Brit La overrides the laws of
chabas but only if it's an eighth day
bris if you're doing the bris later uh
you got to wait right if a baby's bris
is delayed for whatever reason
a is
not so now here's the problem if the
baby is born
after when it's definitively chabas of
course we do the bris and chabas if the
baby is born
before it's a Friday baby so of course
we do the bris on Friday those are
simple but if the baby is born in the
Twilight period which can happen it
happens here's our problem
I I don't know if he's a Friday baby so
the bris is Friday or it's a shabas baby
so the bris is shabas so I can't do I
can't do the bris on
Friday because maybe he's a chabas baby
and it's day
seven but I can't do the bris on
chabas because maybe he's a Friday baby
and shabas is day nine
and you can't do a ninth day bris on
chabas so as a result you have to do it
Sunday now what's fascinating is Sunday
is the wrong day for sure Sunday is for
sure not the Eighth Day Sunday is either
the ninth day or Sunday is the 10th day
so for sure you're doing it the wrong
day but you have no choice
because you can't do it Friday you can't
do it chabas so you got to do it the
wrong day either 9 or or 10 all right
now all of this is just a little
digression about
B now here is the issue those of you who
remember the old country America you
know whatever it would be uh know that
generally speaking uh in most shs unless
it's a Yesa type
minion andv are D in close
proximity and the way they try to do it
is that they'll D in M hopefully and
finish before
Shia and they will dive in
arvit after Shia so so they'll they'll
they'll time it so to speak that they'll
D 10 or 15 minutes
before so they finished by Sunset and
then they'll davv
after in the period that is called B now
let me talk about that generally before
I get to Counting of the OM that is one
thing you need to know is this the
of and the of they can all be said after
that's actually true but
the which is
a has to be said after so if you're ding
before say you can D in all of your but
you have to remember to say shma over
again when you get home at night that's
very very important a lot of people may
not be aware of this but anyone that is
daving arvit
before they're y they're y they are y
but they must recite kishma over again
now what about the counting of the
OM can we count the
OM in The Bash
period so
see how this is connected this is
actually connected to the
m
toos and the ramb so it's been a long
while since to remind you again
according to the she of
toos the counting of the OM when you
don't have the Corbin of
om is only a
MRA according to the
the counting of
the is
of now one of the big
differences between a
and is how do you deal with a doubt when
you're not
sure any doubt with respect to a Torah
law you must Heir on the side of
stringency stringency
any doubt with respect to a d dban
obligation you may be
lenient
example if I don't remember if I
D since daving
isid
even any one of them I don't DAV
again I give myself the benefit of the
doubt if I don't remember if I said
Sha of the morning or the evening I have
to say it over
again
because
now is a
y so if the count of the
OM is
MRA I am allowed to be lenient and treat
b as the next
day so I could count the
BM according to the rambam however that
the counting of the OM is
AA I would have to treat as
a and not count
so the
shs that count the OM with
a
B right the new day the new day B
they're treating it like night are
following the view of the uh
toos that the counting of the OM is
midra and therefore
those who are not to count
the are are following the opinion of the
r that it's a
Mitzvah and
therefore you have to be and
treat
as the day and therefore it's not the
new time yet so the truth of the matter
is
schs are permitted to count with
a but the
individuals either no individuals want
to be more meticulous either don't count
with a braa at all till later or even if
they count with a braa now they will
count again without a without a you
don't say the again when it's so at a
minimum even if you counted in sh early
uh and even if you made a br and you
again there are grounds to permit making
the uh one should very definitely count
the Omar again in order to follow the
rambam's position right so this is
a sorry uh this is the Practical
difference whether the counting of the
OM
Isa or the counting of the OM is
Duran toos and the other Ron him uh
versus the ramban
now it's
interesting that this possibly might be
reflected in a another mlus which is a
very small M it's not that significant
but perhaps there's a deeper meaning
behind it there are two
texts when you count the OM right today
is the 14th day of the OM right uh I
counted last night so no problem right
uh you know the idea someone ask you
what day it is you didn't count yet you
you always have to say yesterday was
because otherwise you've counted you
can't make the bre So when you say let's
say the first day keep it
simple do you
say or do you say law what's the
difference in
meaning that's what I want to say right
so what's the difference now keep in
mind that your Yos say either way this
is nothing to go crazy about uh you said
B you said in fact maybe he didn't say
anything you just you know and you
intended to count this right so this is
not a a major Earth shattering issue of
am I yot you're yot but why are there
two
versions so here is the thing if you say
B this is the first day in the
Omare so you're using om in a
non-literal sense meaning there's a
period of time although grammatically it
doesn't make sense that's called the OM
period and this is the first day in the
OM period That's What B om means the
first day in the OM
period if on the other hand you
say this is the first day La om to the
Omare you're connecting it to an event
om means the BR bringing of The Barley
offering so I would suggest I didn't see
this but I would suggest that
laware fits the rambam's text that the
Mitzvah is connected to the bringing of
the OM and we do it today
Z is simply calling it a period of time
and it's not connected to the
Corban uh I'm sorry I meant the other
way around La would be um TOA opinion
that the Mitzvah is connected to the
bringing of the OM and therefore today
it's means it's not connected to the
bringing of the OM it's a d so the other
way so the ramb would say B the rambam
would say B uh toas would say la om
because it's connected to the bringing
of the OM but it could be again I did
not see a clear mcor uh and I'm not sure
if if the geara of B lines up with these
different we Shin them okay see is the
first in the OM
period means the OM period the OM period
LA right La Means to the bringing mean
it's connected to the bringing of the OM
okay as a Corin as a Corbin the Corbin
om yeah yeah you say both is that okay
yeah you say the thing the
counting and then no you you repeat some
do that I don't think it's necessary but
sure it just there's nothing wrong with
it nothing wrong with it okay now I just
want to bring in a third opinion and
I'll just mention it and uh we'll we'll
leave the elaboration for next week the
op the third opinion about om is the
opinion of a Reon who's very very very
very prominent in the history OFA but
largely unknown this is rabeno
yuran rabo
is quoted by the B and all the poim all
the time he was a tment of the rush he
wrote codes of Jewish law that were
earlier than the shul so a lot of the
incorporates
R there are some strange legendary
material about rabim that that it's hard
to make sense of uh the legendary
material is anyone who tries to reprint
his book has a curse that the Die
Young uh it's very mysterious on one
hand uh he's absolutely very very
authoritative and quoted all the time on
the other hand there's kind of a a curse
against reprinting his work and when
they came out with new additions they
wrote long introductions why the curse
didn't apply to them they really had to
spend like 20 Pages explaining why it
was permitted apparently it may have
something to do with the fact that the
manuscript this is before printing were
copied so many times precisely because
he was so popular that there were many
many many many Corruptions that were
introduced and as a result there was a
counter reaction can't use this book
anymore it's been tainted by too many
mistakes and that's why the person said
but since I'm printing a corrected
Edition it doesn't apply to me because
I've corrected all the mistakes okay uh
but be it as it may and I was a he was
aan he was aan helmet of the
rush but again anyone that learns to B I
mean sees R is quoted all the time a
great great great great authoritative
POS so says the following we know when
it comes to Counting of the
Omare you have to count both in
days and in
weeks so for example
last
night we
said this is the 14th
day right two weeks and the gor says
there's sorry there's a Mitzvah to count
days a Mitzvah to count weeks you got to
do both so says I'll leave this as a
brain teaser puzzle for you to think
about the whole week
there is a Mitzvah to count days and
weeks
yes but the weeks I'm sorry the
days are required by the Torah even when
there's no
om and the
weeks only apply when there's an OM so
unlike when there's a
carbon carbon om so yeah when I say om I
mean corbon om so
here here are our three opinions
to says the
Mitzvah
is M when there's no
B the r says the
Mitzvah
is even when there's no
B says the Mitzvah of counting
days is min Torah even when there's no B
Mikes but the Mitzvah of counting
weeks is
only
M when there's no again when there is a
bik they're both when there's no B
mikash it's the weeks that are D now
obviously Ra's
opinion needs some explanation I mean I
can understand that the Mitzvah is
linked to the
cor which make it raan today or I can
understand it's not linked to the carbon
om which would make
ITA but why would weeks be linked to the
carbon om and days not where do you get
that difference now I do want to say
though that although we don't
pass once again I have a little
speculation that this might explain a
certain that some spom have let's take
yesterday
we said
yesterday now some say like
this in other words let let me finish in
other words instead of putting the word
b or La I'm not dealing with that at the
end they put it after the
days and not after the weeks had you
heard that geara why would they put it
after the
days and not after the
weeks my speculative answer I didn't see
any source for this is that since
according
to it is the days count that's a Torah
requirement
today and the weeks count
is only
a they want to give prominence to the
count of the days by putting the word or
that's a separate thing after the Y
meaning in the time of the bikash they
would have said the word at the
end they move the OM to the Yim and not
to the okay so again we we'll uh we'll
have more I'm sorry we'll have more
detail about this but for now just be
aware of the three basic opinions
regarding the counting of the OM have a
good way