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The Jerusalem Talmud: A Translation and Commentary is unavailable, but you can change that!

The Jerusalem Talmud, or Yerushalmi, is a commentary on the oral law (the Mishnah) of Israel that ties that oral law to the written law (the Torah, the Hebrew Scripture). Completed about 200 years prior to The Babylonian Talmud. Now all thirty-nine Yerushalmi tractates, as translated by Professor Neusner and Tzvee Zahavy, have been brought together in a single searchable resource. In addition to...

“Fire, ark, Urim and Thummim, anointing oil, and Holy Spirit. [J] “As it is written, ‘[Go up to the hills and bring wood and build the house], that I may take pleasure in it and that I may appear in my glory, [says the Lord]’ (Hag. 1:8). [K] “ ‘And that I may appear in my glory’ is written without the expected he [Hebrew letter representing the numeral five] which refers to the five things of the First Temple which were lacking in the last Temple.” [III:4 A] There is the following story. R. Ba