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On today’s pages, Menachot 68 and 69, the Talmud asks a question only the rabbis could devise: What happens to the ritual purity of a basket that has been swallowed—and then excreted—by an elephant? While it sounds like a 12-year-old boy's punchline, this debate about "poop-adjacent" utensils serves a serious purpose. It challenges us to look past the technical status of our "tools" and remember the actual goals of our service. When we become so obsessed with the purity of the object, how do we avoid losing the scent of the sacred? Listen and find out.
By Tablet Magazine4.8
541541 ratings
On today’s pages, Menachot 68 and 69, the Talmud asks a question only the rabbis could devise: What happens to the ritual purity of a basket that has been swallowed—and then excreted—by an elephant? While it sounds like a 12-year-old boy's punchline, this debate about "poop-adjacent" utensils serves a serious purpose. It challenges us to look past the technical status of our "tools" and remember the actual goals of our service. When we become so obsessed with the purity of the object, how do we avoid losing the scent of the sacred? Listen and find out.

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