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Hebrew Text
וְאִם־תַּחְתֶּיהָ תַעֲמֹד הַבַּהֶרֶת לֹא־פָשְׂתָה בָעוֹר וְהִוא כֵהָה שְׂאֵת הַמִּכְוָה הִוא וְטִהֲרוֹ הַכֹּהֵן כִּי־צָרֶבֶת הַמִּכְוָה הִוא׃
English Translation
And if the bright spot stay in its place, and spread not in the skin, and it be somewhat dimmer; it is a swelling caused by the burn, and the priest shall pronounce him clean: for it is a scar of the burn.
Transliteration
Ve'im-tachteha ta'amod habaheret lo-fasta va'or ve'hi keha se'et hamikhva hi vetiharo hakohen ki-tzarevet hamikhva hi.
Hebrew Leining Text
וְאִם־תַּחְתֶּ֩יהָ֩ תַעֲמֹ֨ד הַבַּהֶ֜רֶת לֹא־פָשְׂתָ֤ה בָעוֹר֙ וְהִ֣וא כֵהָ֔ה שְׂאֵ֥ת הַמִּכְוָ֖ה הִ֑וא וְטִֽהֲרוֹ֙ הַכֹּהֵ֔ן כִּֽי־צָרֶ֥בֶת הַמִּכְוָ֖ה הִֽוא׃ <span class="mam-spi-pe">{פ}</span><br>
וְאִם־תַּחְתֶּ֩יהָ֩ תַעֲמֹ֨ד הַבַּהֶ֜רֶת לֹא־פָשְׂתָ֤ה בָעוֹר֙ וְהִ֣וא כֵהָ֔ה שְׂאֵ֥ת הַמִּכְוָ֖ה הִ֑וא וְטִֽהֲרוֹ֙ הַכֹּהֵ֔ן כִּֽי־צָרֶ֥בֶת הַמִּכְוָ֖ה הִֽוא׃ {פ}
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Parasha Commentary
📚 Talmud Citations
This verse is quoted in the Talmud.
📖 Nega'im 7:5
The verse is discussed in the context of the laws concerning skin afflictions (tzara'at), specifically regarding the distinction between a bright spot that spreads and one that remains unchanged, which affects the priest's determination of cleanliness.
Context in the Laws of Tzara'at
This verse (Vayikra 13:28) is part of the Torah's detailed laws concerning tzara'at (often mistranslated as "leprosy"), which is a spiritual affliction manifesting as discolorations or lesions on the skin, garments, or homes. The passage discusses a case where a bright spot (baheret) appears on the skin but does not spread and appears dimmer—indicating it is not tzara'at but rather the scar of a burn (s'eit hamichvah). The kohen (priest) examines it and declares the person tahor (ritually pure).
Rashi's Explanation
Rashi (Vayikra 13:28) clarifies that the phrase "lo fastah ba'or" ("it has not spread in the skin") means the discoloration remains confined to its original location. He notes that the dimness ("ve'hi keha") is a key sign distinguishing this from actual tzara'at, which typically intensifies in brightness. Rashi further explains that "s'eit hamichvah hi" ("it is the swelling of the burn") refers to a scar from a prior injury, not a new affliction.
Rambam's Halachic Perspective
In Hilchot Tumat Tzara'at (1:6), the Rambam (Maimonides) rules that any skin discoloration resulting from a burn, bruise, or wound cannot be classified as tzara'at, as the Torah explicitly excludes such marks. He emphasizes that the kohen must carefully examine whether the mark is a natural scar or a potential spiritual affliction.
Midrashic Insight
The Midrash (Torat Kohanim 13:28) connects this verse to the broader theme of Divine justice: just as Hashem distinguishes between true tzara'at (a sign of spiritual failing) and harmless scars, so too does He judge with precision, never conflating incidental suffering with punishment. This teaches that suffering is not always indicative of sin—sometimes it is merely a natural consequence of physical injury.
Key Halachic Principles