Negative Commandment 135 (Digest)
An Uncircumcised Individual Eating of the Priestly Tithe
An uncircumcised male may not eat Terumah (the priestly tithe), as well as all other holy foods which he is precluded from eating.
Though there is no explicit verse stating this prohibition, our Sages extrapolated this precept from the verses, and asserted that this is counted as one of the 613 mitzvot.
The rabbis added to this prohibition, forbidding a circumcised individual who extended his foreskin so that it appears that he is uncircumcised from partaking of any of these holy foods.
The
135th prohibition is that an uncircumcised [Kohen] is forbidden from eating terumah. He is also forbidden from
eating any other sanctified foods.
This
prohibition is not explicitly stated, but learned through a gezera shava (the principle that, when
handed down by tradition, two laws can be compared because they share an
identical word). In passing this law down, our Sages explained that it counts
as a Biblical commandment rather than of Rabbinic origin.
In
the words of tractate Yevamos: "What is the source for the law that an
uncircumcised [Kohen] may not eat terumah?
Since the words toshav v'sachir are
written both by the Pesach offering and by terumah,
we can compare them — just as by the Pesach sacrifice, the uncircumcised man is
prohibited just like the toshav v'sachir,
so too regarding terumah, the
uncircumcised man is prohibited just like the toshav v'sachir." This applies [not only to terumah, but] to other sanctified things.
The
above passage is repeated in Sifra.
There
[in the Sifra], Rabbi Akiva explains
that the phrase, "Any man" comes to
include one who is uncircumcised.
In
Yevamos it is explained that a mashuch [i.e., one whose remaining foreskin was pulled down after
circumcision, making it appear as if he was not circumcised] is allowed to eat terumah by Biblical law. He is forbidden
only by Rabbinic law because he has the appearance of one who is uncircumcised.
It
has therefore been explained that it is a Biblical prohibition for an
uncircumcised man to eat terumah, and
it is the mashuch who is forbidden by
Rabbinic law. You should understand this.
It
is also explained there that a mashuch
must be circumcised [a second time] by Rabbinic law.
Negative Commandment 136 (Digest)
A Ritually Impure Priest Eating of the Priestly Tithe
"Any man of the seed of Aaron who is afflicted with tzaraat or is a zav shall not eat of the holy [food] until he is pure"—Leviticus 22:4.
A ritually impure priest is forbidden to consume Terumah (the priestly tithe).
The
136th prohibition is that a Kohen who is tameh
(ritually impure) is forbidden from eating terumah.
The
source of this prohibition is G‑d's statement, "Any descendant of Aharon who has a leprous
mark or a discharge may not eat any sacred offering until he has purified
himself."
In
tractate Makkos, our Sages say, "What is the source for the
prohibition of [a Kohen who is tameh]
eating terumah? From the verse, 'Any
descendant...' The only thing equal to all of Aharon's descendants is terumah."
The
meaning of this phrase "equal to all of Aharon's descendants" is that the
verse refers to something all his
descendants — male and female — are allowed to eat.
This
prohibition is repeated in the verse, "They [i.e., the Kohanim] shall keep My charge
[and not profane the sacred offering]."
One
who transgresses this prohibition is punished by misah bidei shamayim.
In
the 9th chapter of tractate Sanhedrin, our Sages enumerate those who receive misa bidei shamayim, and include among
them the Kohen who eats terumah t'hora
(which is ritually pure) when he is tameh.
They prove this from the verse "They [i.e., the Kohanim] shall keep My charge
[and not profane the sacred offering], which is a sin that can cause them to
die."
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