The specialized search keyword combines distinct citations from the : Keritot 6b (which corresponds to page 78 in certain classic commentaries or print editions) and Yevamot 61a-61b (archaically spelled Jebhammoth ), focusing specifically on the concept of intentionality, marital work, and holy actions .
May your work on these pages be fruitful.
The citation "Keritot 6b page 78 Jebhammoth 61 work" is not an accurate representation of the Talmud. It is an artifact of a 19th-century antisemitic forgery, The Talmud Unmasked , which deliberately mistranslated and decontextualized rabbinic texts. The true content of Keritot 6b is a discussion of Temple incense, not human nature. The ruling in Yevamot 61 is a technical point about ritual purity, not a general dehumanization of gentiles. The inclusion of the impossible "page 78" serves as a final, conclusive marker of the quote's inauthenticity.
Numbers 19:14 states, "This is the law when a man ( Adam ) dies in a tent ( Ohel )..."
Tractate Keritot deals with the 36 sins for which one is liable to karet (divinely imposed early death or childlessness). The sixth chapter (and specifically page 6b in Babylonian Talmud pagination) discusses —cases where a person may have unintentionally violated a karet -level prohibition but is uncertain.
"The Gemara answers: 'You are called adam, and gentiles are not called adam.'"
The references you provided point to significant discussions within the regarding Jewish ritual law, family obligations, and the status of gentiles. While "page 78" and "work" likely refer to specific folio numbers (Daf) or localized topics, here is the informative content based on those tractates: Tractate Keritot 6b: Ritual Incense and Measurements
This passage has absolutely nothing to do with non-Jews or their status as human beings. It is a discussion of the precise ingredients and preparation methods of a Temple offering, a topic far removed from the inflammatory quote attributed to it [20†L23-L24].
The specialized search keyword combines distinct citations from the : Keritot 6b (which corresponds to page 78 in certain classic commentaries or print editions) and Yevamot 61a-61b (archaically spelled Jebhammoth ), focusing specifically on the concept of intentionality, marital work, and holy actions .
May your work on these pages be fruitful.
The citation "Keritot 6b page 78 Jebhammoth 61 work" is not an accurate representation of the Talmud. It is an artifact of a 19th-century antisemitic forgery, The Talmud Unmasked , which deliberately mistranslated and decontextualized rabbinic texts. The true content of Keritot 6b is a discussion of Temple incense, not human nature. The ruling in Yevamot 61 is a technical point about ritual purity, not a general dehumanization of gentiles. The inclusion of the impossible "page 78" serves as a final, conclusive marker of the quote's inauthenticity.
Numbers 19:14 states, "This is the law when a man ( Adam ) dies in a tent ( Ohel )..."
Tractate Keritot deals with the 36 sins for which one is liable to karet (divinely imposed early death or childlessness). The sixth chapter (and specifically page 6b in Babylonian Talmud pagination) discusses —cases where a person may have unintentionally violated a karet -level prohibition but is uncertain.
"The Gemara answers: 'You are called adam, and gentiles are not called adam.'"
The references you provided point to significant discussions within the regarding Jewish ritual law, family obligations, and the status of gentiles. While "page 78" and "work" likely refer to specific folio numbers (Daf) or localized topics, here is the informative content based on those tractates: Tractate Keritot 6b: Ritual Incense and Measurements
This passage has absolutely nothing to do with non-Jews or their status as human beings. It is a discussion of the precise ingredients and preparation methods of a Temple offering, a topic far removed from the inflammatory quote attributed to it [20†L23-L24].