Talmud Bavli
Talmud Bavli

Musar for Eruvin 36:17

ואמר רבי ירמיה בן אלעזר מיום שחרב בית המקדש דיו לעולם שישתמש בשתי אותיות שנאמר (תהלים קנ, ו) כל הנשמה תהלל יה הללויה

it is written 'freshly plucked'<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' . hbphryv ;ry');"><sup>35</sup></span> and elsewhere it is written: Feed me<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' , of the same rt. as supra.');"><sup>36</sup></span> with mine allotted bread.<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Prov. XXX, 8.');"><sup>37</sup></span>

Shenei Luchot HaBerit

Noach then was righteous in terms of his generation since he responded to inspiration from "above." G–d "encouraged" Noach during the one hundred and twenty years prior to the deluge. He sent him on a mission to warn his contemporaries to repent of their wicked ways. The Torah however, records only מקצת שבחו בפניו, וכלו שלא בפניו. The usual meaning of this concept is that one does not reveal all of a person's merits while he is alive, whereas when eulogizing such a person one must reveal all his merits. In this instance the meaning of שלא בפינו is that Noach did not initiate his role as the conscience of mankind, but he was prompted to do so by G–d.
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Orchot Tzadikim

Every man can learn from David in the matter of repentance. And so do we find with Adam. When Adam saw that the world was punished with death because of his deed he sat fasting one hundred and thirty years, and separated himself from his wife and covered his body with garlands of figs (to remind him constantly of his sin in eating the fruit of the forbidden tree) (Erubin 18b).
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