Study Arakhin folio 28A with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
What are the circumstances of such an offer? It is in a case where the owner initially said he would purchase the field for 21 sela. In such an instance, the additional 1/5th amounts to 5 sela and one dinar, which means that the total payment of the owner is 26 sela and one dinar, greater than the o
Mishnah: A person may dedicate, for sacred or priestly use, some of his flock and some of his cattle, and some of his Canaanite slaves and female slaves, and some of his ancestral field. But if he dedicated all that he has of any type of property, they are not dedicated, i.e., the dedication does
Talmud: The Talmud asks: From where are these matters, stated in the Mishnah, derived? The Talmud explains that this is as A baraita states, with regard to the verse: “Notwithstanding, no dedicated thing that a man may dedicate to YHWH of all that he has, whether of man or animal, or of his ancest
It might have been thought that one may not dedicate all his properties ab initio, but if he did dedicate all of them, they should be dedicated. Therefore the verse states: “Notwithstanding,” to teach that they are not dedicated. This is the statement of R' Eliezer. R' Elazar ben Azarya said: If f
The Talmud notes: And it is necessary to derive this halakha with regard to all the categories in the verse. As, if God had written only: “Of all that he has,” I would say that one may not dedicate all that he has, but let him dedicate all of one type of property. Therefore, God writes “of man,” to