9b----------------------------------------9b
3) REWARDING A PERSON FOR SPENDING MONEY FOR A MITZVAH
QUESTION: The Gemara teaches that one should spend up to a third of the value of a Mitzvah in order to beautify the Mitzvah (to make it more "Mehudar"). The Gemara adds that in Eretz Yisrael they said that when a person spends up to a third, "it is from his own," and anything more than that "is from Ha'Kadosh Baruch Hu." This implies that a person will be rewarded if he spends more than a third for beautifying a Mitzvah, but not if he spends up to a third.
This is problematic, because if there is reward in this world for Mitzvos, then both should be rewarded in this world. If there is no reward in this world for Mitzvos, then neither one should be rewarded in this world. (See Kidushin 39b-40a.)
ANSWERS:
(a) RABEINU CHANANEL explains that "from Ha'Kadosh Baruch Hu" has nothing to do with the reward that a person receives for beautifying a Mitzvah. Rather, it means that more than a third is voluntary, while up to a third is obligatory, and a person will be punished if he does not spend that much.
Alternatively, the Gemara means that a person should spend more than a third only if he sees that Hash-m has given him enough money to do so. He is not allowed to take money out of funds designated for his own needs if his funds are limited.
(b) The RASHBA writes that if a person spends more than a third for beautifying a Mitzvah, Hash-m will return to him the amount of money that he spends for the Mitzvah. The Rashba seems to refer to the Gemara in Beitzah (16a) which states that Hash-m repays a person for all of the money he spends for the needs of his Shabbos meals and for teaching Torah to his children. The Ritva there adds that this applies to money spent for any Mitzvah. Perhaps the Rashba learns that this applies only to money added to beautify a Mitzvah, and the Gemara cites the Se'udah of Shabbos and Talmud Torah as examples because a person often spends more than he needs for such Mitzvos.
(c) Neither RASHI nor TOSFOS seems to agree with these answers. Tosfos writes explicitly that a person "will receive Peros in this world" for spending more than a third, implying that he will receive reward and not just compensation. The Acharonim explain that Rashi and Tosfos maintain that although a person does not receive reward for a Mitzvah in this world, he does receive reward for any efforts he expends in order to beautify a Mitzvah, and for the Zerizus that he expends in order to fulfill a Mitzvah. (See LIKUTEI REBBI TZADOK HA'KOHEN, end of SEFER SICHAS MAL'ACHEI HA'SHARES, p. 102; KOL ELIYAHU #16.)
4) ENTRUSTING A "SHOR," "BOR," OR "ESH" WITH A "CHERESH" TO GUARD
QUESTIONS: A Beraisa teaches that a person who gives a Shor or Bor to a Cheresh, Shoteh, or Katan to guard is liable for any damage that it does. If he gives an Esh to a Cheresh, Shoteh, or Katan, he is exempt from any damages that result.
The Gemara asks what is the difference between a Shor or Bor and an Esh. Reish Lakish explains that the Beraisa is discussing a "Gacheles," an ember, when it refers to "Esh," and it is discussing a Shor that is tied up and a Bor that is covered. The reason why one is exempt for giving the Gacheles to a Cheresh, Shoteh, or Katan is because the Gacheles becomes extinguished by itself. RASHI explains that the Shor is prone to break out of the rope that holds it, and the cover of the Bor is prone to collapse if left unattended. Since the Cheresh is not capable of watching it properly so that it not cause damage, it is as if the owner left the Shor or Bor alone with no one to guard it, and therefore the owner is liable for any damage that it causes. In contrast, when a Gacheles is left alone and unguarded, it will become extinguished before it causes any damage, and therefore the owner is exempt.
Rebbi Yochanan argues with Reish Lakish and explains that the Esh for which one is exempt is a "Shalheves," a live flame, and the Shor and Bor are untied and uncovered, respectively. The reason why one is exempt for damage caused by the Shalheves is because "the Cheresh's actions were involved."
Rashi explains that the damage that the Shalheves caused was accomplished through the involvement of the Cheresh who brought the fire to the grain which it burned. The owner of the Esh is not liable because he did not cause the damage alone, but rather it was the Cheresh's contribution to the act that caused the damage. The Shor and Bor, on the other hand, which were left unguarded, caused damage without the involvement of the Cheresh.
There are a number of questions on this Sugya.
1. Why does Rashi write, in his explanation of Reish Lakish, that if one leaves a Bor covered he is liable for any damage caused by the cover collapsing? The Mishnah later (52a) states clearly that even if one digs a pit, it suffices to cover it with a strong cover, and one does not have to worry that it will cave in unexpectedly. (TOSFOS DH Shor)
2. According to Reish Lakish, why does the Beraisa say that one is liable for leaving a Shor or Bor in the hands of a Cheresh, Shoteh, or Katan, while one is exempt for leaving an Esh with him? The Beraisa should say simply that one is liable for leaving a Shor or Bor unguarded, while he is exempt if he leaves an Esh (Gacheles) unguarded since it will become extinguished before it causes damage, as Rashi himself writes later (10b, DH Peshita). (RABEINU PERETZ)
3. The Gemara later (59b), in which Rebbi Yochanan originally makes his statement that one is exempt when he leaves even a Shalheves with a Cheresh, says that Rebbi Yochanan agrees that one is liable for leaving an Esh in the hands of a Cheresh when he leaves a torch together with combustible material in the hands of the Cheresh, because in such a case it is clearly the owner's negligence (in leaving a flame and combustible material with the Cheresh) that causes the damage. In what way, though, is it more clear that his act caused the damage when he leaves combustible material with the fire? Even a flame, Shalheves, without fuel can cause damage when left alone, as Reish Lakish implies when he says that only a Gacheles, and not a Shalheves, can be left unguarded without fear that it will cause damage.
If Rebbi Yochanan disagrees with Reish Lakish on this point and maintains that a Shalheves will also become extinguished by itself, then he should compare a Shalheves, too, to a Bor that is covered and to a Shor that is tied up (just as Reish Lakish compares a Gacheles to such a Shor and Bor). (TOSFOS DH ul'Rebbi Yochanan)
ANSWERS:
(a) According to Rashi, when Reish Lakish discusses a covered Bor and a bound Shor, he refers to a Bor that is covered with a weak covering and a Shor that is bound with a weak rope. The Mishnah exempts the owner only if he covers it with a proper, strong cover (RA'AVAD; see Tosfos).
Why, then, does Reish Lakish mention that the Bor is covered at all, if a Bor with an insufficient cover is the same as Bor with no cover? He should compare the Gacheles to an uncovered pit, since a weak cover does not accomplish anything. (RABEINU PERETZ)
The answer is that Reish Lakish wants the Shor and Bor to be similar to a Gacheles. Although a Gacheles will soon become extinguished, it still can cause damage before it becomes extinguished. Nevertheless, since the time in which it can cause damage is limited, it is not expected to actually cause damage during that time. In this sense, the Gacheles can be compared to a Bor that is covered with a weak cover. There is a chance that the Bor will cause damage because the cover might cave in, but its damage is not certain to occur, in contrast to an uncovered Bor. The Beraisa is distinguishing between a partial protection in quality (in the case of Shor and Bor) and a partial protection in quantity (in the case of Esh, where it is considered guarded from the time that it becomes extinguished, and thus is not expected to do damage). The partial protection of a Shor and Bor is not sufficient protection to exempt the owner, because the possibility that it will do damage (by breaking loose from its rope, or by its cover caving in) is continual and will not come to an end (like a Gacheles, which will eventually become extinguished).
The GILYON cited by the Shitah Mekubetzes answers the second question and explains why the Beraisa needs to mention that the owner gave his item to a Cheresh, Shoteh, or Katan altogether. The Beraisa wants to teach that even when one gives the Gacheles to a Cheresh, Shoteh, or Katan, he is exempt because he was not expected to assume that the Cheresh would take the fire and use it to cause damage. Although the Cheresh does not guard the flame, he normally does not use it to cause damage. Therefore, if he does cause damage with it, the owner is exempt. (See also RASHI DH Me'amya.)
With regard to the third question, according to Rashi it seems that the difference between a Shalheves and a torch with combustible material is that although the Shalheves, if left unguarded, will cause damage to anything that approaches it, nevertheless it cannot approach, on its own, property that is resting elsewhere. Therefore, if it causes damage to grain that is not adjacent to it, it can do so only through the help of the Cheresh. The owner is exempt because he had no reason to suspect the Cheresh of bringing the fire close to someone else's property. On the other hand, the case in which one is liable when he leaves a torch with combustible material in the hands of the Cheresh refers to a case in which the combustible material leads to the grain that was damaged. If the fire does damage, the owner is liable even if the Cheresh brought it to the grain, since the fire would have spread there by itself. (See ME'IRI (59b) in the name of "Yesh Mefarshim.")
(Reish Lakish, on the other hand, maintains that even a Shalheves can damage property that is not near it, because flames tend to jump haphazardly. See RABEINU YEHONASAN MI'LUNIL, cited by the Shitah Mekubetzes (59b).)
(b) TOSFOS takes a different approach to the Sugya. Tosfos explains that the cover of the Bor is a strong cover. Had he not given over the Bor to a Cheresh to guard, the owner would have been exempt. When he gives the Bor over to a Cheresh he is liable because the Cheresh is likely to remove the cover and cause damage with the Bor, since the Bor was entrusted to him. Thus, the owner was negligent in giving him the Bor to guard.
This answers the first two questions. Giving the Shor or Bor to a Cheresh is worse than leaving the Shor or Bor by itself.
Tosfos understands the difference between a Shalheves and a torch with combustible material to be that a Cheresh is able to guard a Shalheves but he is not able to guard a torch with combustible material. The Cheresh can provide only preventative protection by ensuring that no new element should cause the fire to do damage, but rather the fire should remain as it is. The Cheresh cannot provide active protection by stopping a fire that is already spreading (or a Shor which is untied, or a Bor which is uncovered and which will cause damage unless one covers it). (TALMID RABEINU PERETZ cited by the Shitah Mekubetzes)
This explains why Rebbi Yochanan compares a Shalheves to an open Bor; both are prone to do damage when not guarded. Nevertheless, one is exempt for damage caused by the Shalheves because the Cheresh is able to guard it. Therefore, if any damage that the Cheresh causes was unexpected, the owner is exempt from liability for the damage.
According to this approach, Rebbi Yochanan certainly would exempt the owner of a Shor that is tied and a Bor that is covered when he gives them to a Cheresh to watch. Rebbi Yochanan maintains that a Cheresh can even guard an easily-guarded item, and thus he certainly is not suspected of undoing the protection that is already in place (in contrast to the view of Reish Lakish).
The RASHBA offers a similar explanation for the Gemara. (However, it is possible that the Rashba exempts the owner of the Shalheves not because he may rely on the Cheresh to guard the flame, but because anytime the Cheresh involves himself in the damage that is caused, the owner is automatically exempt from liability.)
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