Ta'anit (Talmud) Explained

Mishnayot:34
Chapters:4
Talmudpages:31
Talmudypages:26
Tosefta:3
Next:Megillah

Ta'anit or Taynis (he|תַּעֲנִית) is a volume (or "tractate") of the Mishnah, Tosefta, and both Talmuds. In Judaism these are the basic works of rabbinic literature. The tractate of Ta'anit is devoted chiefly to the fast-days, their practices and prayers.[1] In most editions of the Talmud this treatise is the ninth in the mishnaic order of Seder Mo'ed, and is divided into four chapters containing thirty-four folio in all.

Summary

The main contents of the Ta'anit are as follows:

Other Talmudic literature

The Tosefta to this treatise contains much that elucidates and supplements the Mishnah. Especially noteworthy are the account of the origin of the priestly classes (4:2), the changes which affected them after the return from exile, and how they were again subdivided (2:1).

The two Gemaras contain, in addition to the explanations of individual mishnayot, many aggadic sayings, as well as many narratives and legends. The following sayings from the Babylonian Gemara may be cited here:

Among the narratives particular attention should be given to the story of Nicodemus b. Gorion (19b-20a) and to the legend of Honi the Circledrawer, who slept for seventy years (23a).

Noteworthy in Talmud Yerushalmi is the account of the three scrolls of the Law which were in the Temple in Jerusalem and which differed from one another in various passages. Where two of these scrolls agreed as regards a reading, it was accepted as the correct text (4:2, 20b or 68a).

This Gemara contains also a remarkable saying of Abbahu, which is evidently directed against Christianity: "If a man says, 'I am God,' he lies; and if he says, 'I am the son of man,' he will have to repent; and if he says, 'I shall go up to heaven,' he will not do it, nor achieve what he promises" (2:1, 9a or 65b). It likewise relates how Simon bar Kokhba killed Eleazar of Modi'im, whom a Samaritan had falsely accused of treason.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Howland . Jacob . Plato and the Talmud . 11 October 2010 . Cambridge University Press . 978-1-139-49221-8 . 78 . en.