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Daily Mitzvah (Rambam)

Day 158: Positive Commandment 60; Negative Commandment 100, 98; Positive Commandment 62; Negative Commandment 99

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Positive Commandment 60 (Digest)
Minimum Age for Animal Sacrifices

"It shall remain under its mother for seven days, and from the eighth day onwards, it shall be accepted as a sacrifice"Leviticus 22:27.

When bringing an animal sacrifice, we are commanded to bring animals that are in the eighth day of their lives and onwards.

Negative Commandment 100 (Digest)
Sacrificing an Animal that has been Obtained through a Disrespectful Exchange

"You shall not bring the hire of a harlot or the price of a dog"Deuteronomy 23:19.

It is forbidden to bring as a sacrifice an animal that was given to a harlot as payment for services or an animal acquired in exchange for a dog.

Negative Commandment 98 (Digest)
Offering Honey or Leaven on the Altar

"For you shall not cause to [go up in] smoke any leavening or any honey, [as] a fire offering to G‑d"Leviticus 2:11.

It is forbidden to offer on the altar any honey or leavened item.

Positive Commandment 62 (Digest)
Offering Salt with Every Sacrifice

"With all your offerings you shall offer salt"—Leviticus 2:13.

We are commanded to offer a salt accompaniment together with every sacrifice.

Negative Commandment 99 (Digest)
Offering a Saltless Sacrifice

"Neither shall you omit salt, the covenant of your G‑d"Leviticus 2:13.

It is forbidden to offer any sacrifice – whether animal or of meal – without an accompaniment of salt.

From Sefer Hamitzvot, published and copyright by Sichos in English. To purchase the Sefer Hamitzvot two-volume set, please click here.
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Daily Quote
"I am a stranger and a resident amongst you" (Abraham to Ephron the Hittite, Genesis 23:4). The Jew is a "resident" in the world, for the Torah instructs us not escape the physical reality but to inhabit it and elevate it. At the same time, the Jew feels himself a "stranger" in the material world -- his true home is the world of spirituality, holiness and G-dliness from which his soul has been exiled and to which it yearns to return. Indeed, it is only because we remain a "stranger" that we can maintain the spiritual vision and integrity required to reside in the world and sanctify it as a "dwelling for G-d."
  –The Lubavitcher Rebbe
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