45 Results
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am haaretz trusted for holy things, Sin Offerings, and susceptibility to impurity, which are major Torah concepts
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animal that was designated got lost and a second animal was designated, the first was found, what is done with each animal?
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ate and drank liable for one Sin Offering, is drinking also considered eating?
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blood of Sin Offering, only valid if poured on west side of altar base? valid if done at night? need new sprinklings if new animal was slaughtered because the original animals blood spilled? do laws of piggul apply? poured only part of remaining blood?
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blood remaining from bull Sin Offering and goat offering poured on base of altar, sources
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brought Pesach offering or Sin Offering with improper intent, sources
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burned on part of altar closest to sanctuary, learned from blood of Sin Offerings poured on base of altar closest to sanctuary
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collected blood in four cups, used one for each sprinkling, which cups of remaining blood are poured on the base of the outside altar?
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early righteous ones wanted to bring a Sin Offering despite not having sinned, accepted nazir status on themselves which has a Sin Offering as part of the process
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five cases of Sin Offerings that animals are left to die and parallel cases of Pesach offerings that are brought as a shelamim offering, offspring of Sin Offering animal, temurah of the animal, owner died, Sin Offering obligation not fulfilled within a year, lost and later found with a blemish
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idolator, Cuthi, half shekel, bird offerings of zav or zavah, Sin Offering, guilt offering, not accepted, vowed or donated offerings accepted, olah offering, erech vow, construction or upkeep of the Temple
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intended (mistakingly) a Pesach offering on Shabbos, exempt form Sin Offering if the sacrifice resembled a Pesach, unblemished male, one year old, sacrificed at proper time
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intended (mistakingly) a Pesach offering on Shabbos, exempt form Sin Offering if the sacrifice resembled a Pesach, unblemished male, one year old, sacrificed at proper time
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intended (mistakingly) a Pesach offering on Shabbos, exempt form Sin Offering if the sacrifice resembled a Pesach, unblemished male, one year old, sacrificed at proper time
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intended (mistakingly) a Pesach offering on Shabbos, exempt from Sin Offering if the sacrifice resembled a Pesach, unblemished male, one year old, sacrificed at proper time
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intended to do a mitzvah exempt from Sin Offering, only if act contained an aspect of a mitzvah?
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intended to inflict a wound, remembered it was Shabbos prior to the wound, exempt from a Sin Offering
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invalidations not directly related to the offering, burn immediately?
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leftover communal Sin Offerings, what is done with them?
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meat found in Temple courtyard or in Jerusalem, are they assumed to be olos, Sin Offerings, shelamim, neveilah? are they burned, forbidden, or permitted to eat?
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money put aside for shekel obligation or Sin Offering, later discovered to be more than needed or not obligated
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money put aside for shekel obligation or Sin Offering, later discovered to be more than needed or not obligated
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no libations, Sin Offering should not be attractive (except for metzorah, who is totally absolved after his humiliation)
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only applies when the person would not have done the act if all facts were known
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pouring the remaining blood of the Yom Kippur Sin Offering on the base of the outside altar, is this essential for atonement?
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rules of eating terumah inadvertently or deliberately and the difference in regard to the obligation of the Sin Offering
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saved up money for the shekel obligation or a Sin Offering, later realized that he wasn’t obligated or had already given
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saved up money to use for the half shekel or a Sin Offering, saved up more than he needed, what is done with the extra?
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Shilo - Sin Offering of nazir
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Sin Offering and olah offering done in same location to shield the sinner from embarrassment
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Sin Offering liability, beginning and end of act must be in a state of inadvertence
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Sin Offering liability, beginning and end of act must be in a state of inadvertence
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sins of eating eating forbidden fats or engaging in illicit relations will obligate a Sin Offering even if partly done inadvertlenty
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situations when one act can cause obligations for multiple Sin Offerings
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slaughtered externally blemished animal or a calf as a Pesach offering on Shabbos, Sin Offering required?
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slaughtered Pesach offering, then heard the owners had withdrawn or died, offering shelamim? valid? Sin Offering required?
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that was not known to be stolen, offering effects atonement
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the animals in certain situations are left to die, bais din can cancel that ruling
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two boys, Shabbos boy circumcised on Shabbos, if mohel later on Shabbos circumcised the other boy which should have been on Friday, is he considered still involved in a mitzvah, therefore not liable for a Sin Offering?
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two boys, wrong boy circumcised on Shabbos, liable for a Sin Offering?
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two boys, wrong boy circumcised on Shabbos, liable for a Sin Offering?
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were there collection boxes for bird pair sacrifices? concerns for mixtures of money for Sin Offerings that must be left to die and olos offerings which may be brought even if the donor died
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what to do with leftover funds that had been designated for shekalim, tenth of ephah measurement for a flour offering, bird offerings for zav, zavah, women who gave birth, Sin Offerings, guilt offerings, olah offerings, flour offerings, shelamim offerings, nazar offerings, offerings with wrong intentions
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why the Sin Offering of Rosh Chodesh of Leviticus 10:16-17 was burned and not eaten by Aaron, Elazar, or Itamar, due to being an onein. or it being impure?