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On today’s pages, Menachot 40 and 41, we explore the delicate laws surrounding burial garments and the symbolism of the tallit. While the Talmud wrestles with whether burying someone in tzitzit constitutes "mocking the dead"—reminding them of commandments they can no longer keep—Rabbi David Bashevkin argues that this sensitivity actually reveals the true purpose of the mitzvot. Unlike negative prohibitions that merely maintain a status quo, positive commandments are the tools we use to build a relationship with God. This daf challenges us to stop viewing ritual as a burden and start seeing it as a way to insert eternity into every passing moment. How can we make our daily actions matter as much as our final ones? Listen and find out.
By Tablet Magazine4.8
541541 ratings
On today’s pages, Menachot 40 and 41, we explore the delicate laws surrounding burial garments and the symbolism of the tallit. While the Talmud wrestles with whether burying someone in tzitzit constitutes "mocking the dead"—reminding them of commandments they can no longer keep—Rabbi David Bashevkin argues that this sensitivity actually reveals the true purpose of the mitzvot. Unlike negative prohibitions that merely maintain a status quo, positive commandments are the tools we use to build a relationship with God. This daf challenges us to stop viewing ritual as a burden and start seeing it as a way to insert eternity into every passing moment. How can we make our daily actions matter as much as our final ones? Listen and find out.

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