Study Menachot folio 90B with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
If one committed to supply fine flour at 3 se’a for a sela, and its market price decreased until it stood at 4 se’a for a sela, he must supply fine flour at 4 se’a for a sela. The reason for this halakha is that the Temple treasury is at an advantage. In the latter case, the merchant ends up provid
The Talmud comments: It is taught in a baraita in accordance with the opinion of R' Ḥiyya bar Yosef, and it is taught in another baraita in accordance with the opinion of R' Yoḥanan.
The Talmud elaborates: It is taught in a baraita in accordance with the opinion of R' Ḥiyya bar Yosef: These overflows of measuring vessels, what would be done with them? They are gathered, and if there is another offering to be sacrificed that day, the priests sacrifice this liquid with it as part
It is taught in a baraita in accordance with the opinion of R' Yoḥanan: In the case of one who accepts upon himself to supply fine flour at 4 se’a for a sela, and its market price stood at 3 se’a for a sela, he is required to fulfill his commitment and supply fine flour at 4 se’a for a sela. If one
Mishnah: All offerings, whether communal or individual, require libations, i.e., a meal offering and a wine libation, except for the firstborn offering, the animal tithe offering, the Paschal offering, the sin offering, and the guilt offering, with which libations are not brought. But the except