ב"ה

Daily Mitzvah (Rambam)

Day 128: Negative Commandment 133, 134

Show content in:

Negative Commandment 133 (Digest)
A Non-Priest Eating the Priestly Tithe

"No non-priest shall eat of the holy [food]"Leviticus 22:10.

An individual who is not a priest may not eat Terumah (the priestly tithe), nor any of the other holy foods whose consumption is restricted to priests [and certain of their family members and non-Jewish indentured workers].

This precept also includes the prohibition against deriving benefit from any object that belongs to the "holy" [i.e., sacrifices or items belonging to the Temple coffers].

Negative Commandment 134 (Digest)
A Priest's Servants Consuming of the Priestly Tithe

"A tenant of the priest or a hired servant may not eat the holy [food]"Leviticus 22:10.

The tenant [i.e., a Hebrew servant indentured until the Jubilee year] of a priest, as well as the priest's hired servant [i.e., a Hebrew servant serving for a six-year term] may not eat Terumah (the priestly tithe).

From Sefer Hamitzvot, published and copyright by Sichos in English. To purchase the Sefer Hamitzvot two-volume set, please click here.
The text on this page contains sacred literature. Please do not deface or discard.
Daily Quote
The etrog has both a taste and an aroma; so, too, do the people of Israel include individuals who have both Torah learning and good deeds.... The date (the fruit of the lulav) has a taste but does not have an aroma; so, too, do the people of Israel include individuals who have Torah but do not have good deeds.... The hadas (myrtle) has an aroma but not a taste; so, too, do the people of Israel include individuals who have good deeds but do not have Torah.... The aravah (willow) has no taste and no aroma; so, too, do the people of Israel include individuals who do not have Torah and do not have good deeds.... Says G-d: "Let them all bond together in one bundle and atone for each other."
  –Midrash Rabbah, Vayikra 30:11
The Parshah
This page in other languages