Study Pesachim folio 94A with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
According to Rav Yehuda’s opinion it is also not difficult, because in his opinion the Torah itself deferred the obligation of one who is ritually impure through contact with a dead creeping animal to the second Pesaḥ, as it is written: “If any man of you or of your generations shall be ritually im
A baraita states: If one was standing outside the city of Modi’im and was able to enter Jerusalem on horses or mules but not by walking, I might have thought he would be liable to receive karet for failing to come to Jerusalem and offer the Paschal lamb; therefore, the verse states: “And is not on
On the other hand, if one was standing closer to Jerusalem than Modi’im but was not able to enter due to the camels and carriages that are carrying his family and delaying him, I might have thought he would not be liable for failing to offer the Paschal lamb because he is trying to enter; therefore
The discussion above pertaining to the distance that an average person can walk in a day is based on the assumption that he walks 5 mil between dawn and sunrise. The Talmud brings support for this assumption. Rava said: The size of the world is 6,000 parasangs, and the thickness of the firmament is
The Talmud explains: Rava holds like that statement which Rabba bar bar Ḥana said that R' Yoḥanan said: How far can an average person walk in a day? One can walk 10 parasangs, which are 40 mil. This is explained: From dawn until sunrise one can walk a distance of 5 mil; from sunset until the emerg