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Sunday, May 3, 2026

Siyum on Masechet Menachot, on My Mother's Second Yahrzeit

 Masechet Menachot deals primarily with the Korban Mincha, the flour offering brought to the Temple. There are many types of Mincha, but nearly all are brought according to the following general procedure.

A precise measure of flour is placed into a sacred vessel (kli sharet). (In most cases, with oil and frankincense on top.) A kohen then performs kmitzah, scooping some flour mixed with oil (but no frankincense) with his three middle fingers pressed against his palm. He places that flour, called the kometz, into another kli sharet, and it is then taken to be burned on the altar. The remainder, called the shirayim, is eaten by the kohanim.

This is relatively straightforward. But there’s one strange detail.

Nearly every standard of measure in the Temple is fixed and objective. A log of oil is a log. A hin is a hin. These are absolute quantities, the same for every offering regardless of who brings it or who performs the service. Indeed, in Menachot we learn how there was a veritable set of measuring cups which were klei sharet. But the required measure for the kometz is not objective—it depends on the size of the kohen's own hand. A large-handed kohen and a small-handed kohen each perform a valid kmitzah. And it is not because there is no specific measure needed. If a tiny bit of flour were missing from a large kohen’s kometz, it is invalid, even though there may be more flour left than would have been in a full kometz from a smaller kohen.

There is only one other place in all of Temple law where we find a similarly "subjective" measure: the chofen, the double handful of incense that the High Priest alone burns the Kodesh haKodashim, the Holy of Holies, on Yom Kippur. There too, the measure is defined not by an absolute volume but by the individual High Priest's own two hands.

What is the connection between these two, seemingly very different, offerings? And why should these two, among all the Temple rites, be the ones uniquely defined by the person rather than by an external standard?

To approach this question, we need to understand what the kometz is, and ultimately, what the Mincha itself is all about. To start with the kometz, we’ll take a short detour to a technical analysis of kmitzah by Rav Chaim Brisker (Chidushei R' Chaim al haRambam, Ma'aseh Hakorbanot 13:12)

The Rambam rules that if a kometz (after it is scooped) is inadvertently divided between two different klei sharet, the situation can be remedied by pouring the contents of one kli into the other, reuniting the kometz and allowing it to become sanctified.

However, this contradicts what we would expect, based on the halachot for animal korbanot. The act of kemitza for a Mincha is parallel to the act of shechita (slaughtering) of an animal korban. A shiur of blood is collected in a kli sharet directly from the animal’s neck, and it is sprinkled or poured on the altar (depending on the type of korban). That blood is analogous to the kometz. However, if the blood gets divided between two klei sharet, such that neither has the requisite amount, all is lost. They cannot be recombined – it is as if the blood had spilled on the floor.

Why the difference between the two cases? Why can part of the kometz be held in transit in another kli sharet, but blood cannot.

R. Chaim's conceptual analysis that answers the question is this. Blood has no legitimate intermediate state between the animal and the kli sharet. It must go directly from the animal to the vessel, and the vessel is the sanctifying agent. If insufficient blood reaches the vessel, it is effectively as though it were spilled; there is no legitimate way to hold it in transit.

The kometz, however, by definition, passes through an intermediate stage: the kohen's hand. The kli sharet into which the kometz is then placed acts, in R. Chaim's analysis, as an extension of the hand. The hand is itself a legitimate waypoint in the sanctification process — not merely the means of transport, but a recognized stage in the korban’s journey to the altar. This is why a split kometz can be reunited: because the portion that was held up in another kli sharet is still considered to be on its way to its ultimate destination.

The process, then, has three distinct stages: the act of scooping (kmitzah); a holding phase, in which the flour rests in the hand or its extension, the kli sharet; and the final sanctification as it comes to rest fully in the vessel. In this sense, the kohen's hand holding the kometz is structurally parallel to the dynamic flow of blood from the animal into the kli sharet — both represent the transition from the raw material of the offering into its sanctified form. But in the Mincha, uniquely, the kohen's body is part of that transition.

This now enables us to understand the similarity and difference between kemitza of a korban Mincha, and the chafina of incense by the High Priest on Yom Kippur. In the latter case, as Rav Yosef Dov Soloveitchik has argued, the High Priest's cupped hands are themselves a kli sharet – they do not merely convey the incense, they sanctify it. On Yom Kippur, the High Priest stands before God as the representative of Klal Yisrael, the community of Israel, a living vessel for the holiness of the entire people. His hands do not point toward the sanctity; they embody it.

In the Mincha, by contrast, the kohen's represents an individual, and so his hand is not the vessel of sanctification, but a conduit. It is a tzinor, a pipe, one might say, that takes the offering from a lower to a higher state of holiness (when it reaches the kli sharet). The kohen here does not create holiness; he channels it. He is not the source but the means by which holiness is reached.

And yet, functioning as a conduit for holiness, his hand is irreplaceable and irreducibly his own. Each kohen, every individual, has their own specific mode of sanctifying this world. The individuality of the measurement of the kometz represents the fact that none of us can substitute for anyone else in bringing the Divine into the world. We each have our individual derech which we must each seek and follow.

Why is this lesson connected specifically to the Mincha, however? To understand the essential nature of the Mincha, we turn to R. Samson Raphael Hirsch, who examines the name of the korban, the word Mincha itself. Mincha is often used outside of the context of the Temple service, to mean a gift. More specifically, it means a tribute, a gift given by a person of lesser standing to one of greater standing, expressing one’s submission to and dependence on the will of the recipient. The paradigmatic case of this in the Torah is when Jacob was traveling back to Israel, and prepared to meet his brother Esau by sending him a Mincha, to seek to appease him (Gen. 32:14). The gift was not given out of gratitude or love, or because Esau could use the flocks that Jacob sent. It was a concrete expression of Jacob’s submission to Esau’s authority and power.

God, of course, does not need anything from us. He does not need the kometz burned on the altar, nor does it benefit Him in any way. The Mincha is not a gift in the sense of transfer of ownership; it is a tribute that declares, "Everything I am and have is Yours." It proclaims our submission and dedication to God’s will.

This is why the measure of the kometz depends on the hand of the one who brings it. Absolute quantity is beside the point. What matters is the completeness of one’s devotion, symbolized by the kohen bringing to sanctity everything his hand could hold.

This is expressed beautifully in the very last Mishna in Menachot:

Echad hamarbeh v'echad hamamit, bilvad sheyechaven libo l'Shamayim.

It is the same whether one gives much or little, as long as the heart is directed toward Heaven.

The measure of the hand represents the measure of the person.

And the measure of the person is the measure of the heart’s devotion.

This is what characterized my mother a”h.

As a mother, there were many things she did wonderfully; at the same time, like all people, she had her limitations. But there is no question that she sought to devote herself one hundred percent, with everything she had to give, to HaKadosh Baruch Hu, to my father, and to her children and family.

She lived the lesson of the Mincha. God does not look at the absolute size of the offering. Rachmana liba ba’ei, God wants heart. He cares that it was a complete expression of her heart.

May this learning be a zechut for her neshama.

 

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