Study Shabbat folio 133B with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
Talmud: The Talmud asks: Since the Mishnah is teaching all of them, i.e., enumerated all the requirements of circumcision, when the Mishnah added: One performs all the requirements of circumcision even on Shabbat, what did it come to include?
The Talmud answers: It comes to include that which A baraita states: One who circumcises on Shabbat, as long as he is engaged in the circumcision, he may return and remove shreds of skin that were not cut properly. This is the ruling both for shreds of skin and flesh that invalidate the circumcision
With regard to this law, the Talmud asks: Who is the tanna who holds that if one has already withdrawn from a mitzva he may not return to engage in its performance? Which tanna asserts that as long as a person is involved in a mitzva whose performance overrides Shabbat, he may complete it; however,
The Talmud raises a difficulty: From where do you draw this comparison? Perhaps R' Yishmael, son of R' Yoḥanan ben Beroka, only stated his opinion that one may do no more than the minimum requirement there, with regard to the Paschal lamb, because we do not need to fulfill the mitzva of: “This is m
What is the source for the requirement of: “This is my God and I will glorify Him”? As it was taught in a baraita with regard to the verse: “This is my God and I will glorify Him [anveihu], YHWH of my father and I will raise Him up.” The rabbis interpreted anveihu homiletically as linguistically re