Talmud Bavli
Talmud Bavli

Musar for Pesachim 42:4

ולא יסיק בו תנור וכירים: פשיטא לא צריכא לר' יהודה דאמר אין ביעור חמץ אלא שריפה סלקא דעתך אמינא הואיל ואמר ר' יהודה מצותו בשריפה בהדי דקא שריף ליה ליתהני מיניה קמ"ל:

That is obvious? - It is necessary [to state this] only in respect of the hours [when leaven is interdicted] by Rabbinical law.<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' I.e., in the sixth hour.');"><sup>7</sup></span> For R'Gidal said in the name of R'Hiyya B'Joseph in R'Johanan's name: He who betroths from the sixth hour and onwards, even with wheat of Cordyene. We have no fear of his betrothal.<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' V. supra ');"><sup>8</sup></span>

Shenei Luchot HaBerit

Although our sages say in Chulin 115 that the repetition of this prohibition in the Torah on three separate occasions teaches that the mixture is forbidden to be eaten, to be boiled, and to be otherwise enjoyed, we count this prohibition in the list of prohibitions only as two (not three). The reason for this is that the prohibition to eat the mixture includes the prohibition to enjoy it in some other way. Our sages have stated in Pesachim 21 that wherever we find the wording לא תאכל, do not eat, this includes the prohibition of eating and enjoying it in another way. This is why the prohibition to benefit from something forbidden in any form is always couched in the expression "do not eat!" Eating is the most common form of enjoying or benefiting from forbidden food. It is also a necessary form of enjoying something. When the Torah speaks of the nobles of the Children of Israel "seeing a vision of G–d, and eating and drinking" (Exodus 24,11), the Torah compares their pleasurable experience of having such a vision to eating and drinking.
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