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<point><b>Reason for the prohibition</b> – These sources offer a variety of possible reasons for the prohibition:<br/>
 
<point><b>Reason for the prohibition</b> – These sources offer a variety of possible reasons for the prohibition:<br/>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li><b>Bad etiquette and cruelty </b>– According to Rashbam, cooking meat and milk is not decorous and betrays gluttony. Philo and others<fn>See Ibn Ezra, R"Y Bekhor Shor, Ramban, Abarbanel (in his first explanation) and Shadal.</fn> further emphasize that using a mother's milk to cook her own children is needlessly cruel and/or invites crulety.<fn>Philo points out that using the very milk which had nourished the kid to cook and consume its flesh is cruel and inappropriate.&#160; The prohibition might further be compared to that of eating blood which might similarly stem from its being a life source; eating flesh with either its blood or the milk which nourished it betrays a disregard for the sanctity of life. [See <a href="Prohibition of Blood" data-aht="page">Prohibition of Blood</a> for elaboration on this understanding of the prohibition and for alternative understandings.]<br/>According to this understanding, one would have expected the law to be limited to a mother's milk and not encompass any other animal's milk. This, is in fact, how Philo reads the law. Ibn Ezra, though, explains that other milk was included as a safeguard. Since many people buy their milk in the market where it is gathered from many animals, there is no way of knowing what includes the milk of the mother and what does not.&#160; Ramban, instead, suggests that it is in appropriate to use any mother's milk; the very idea of using a source that was meant to give life and nourishment in order to cook is simply wrong.</fn> These sources compare the prohibition to that of "אֹתוֹ וְאֶת בְּנוֹ לֹא תִשְׁחֲטוּ בְּיוֹם אֶחָד" (Vayikra 22:28) and "שילוח הקן" (Devarim 22:6-7).<fn>These laws similarly deal with a mother animal and her son and appear to stem form humanitarian values and a desire to prevent cruelty.</fn></li>
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<li><b>Bad etiquette and cruelty </b>– According to Rashbam, cooking meat and milk is not decorous and betrays gluttony. Philo and others<fn>See Ibn Ezra, R"Y Bekhor Shor, Ramban, Abarbanel (in his first explanation) and Shadal.</fn> further emphasize that using a mother's milk to cook her own children is needlessly cruel.<fn>Philo points out that using the very milk which had nourished the kid to cook and consume its flesh is cruel and inappropriate.&#160; The prohibition might further be compared to that of eating blood which might similarly stem from its being a life source; eating flesh with either its blood or the milk which nourished it betrays a disregard for the sanctity of life. [See <a href="Prohibition of Blood" data-aht="page">Prohibition of Blood</a> for elaboration on this understanding of the prohibition.]<br/>According to this understanding, one would have expected the law to be limited to a mother's milk and not encompass any other animal's milk. This, is in fact, how Philo reads the law. Ibn Ezra, though, explains that other milk was included as a safeguard. Since many people buy their milk in the market where it is gathered from many animals, there is no way of knowing what includes the milk of the mother and what does not.&#160; Ramban, instead, suggests that it is in appropriate to use any mother's milk; the very idea of using a source that was meant to give life and nourishment in order to cook is simply wrong.</fn> These sources compare the prohibition to that of "אֹתוֹ וְאֶת בְּנוֹ לֹא תִשְׁחֲטוּ בְּיוֹם אֶחָד" (Vayikra 22:28) and "שילוח הקן" (Devarim 22:6-7).<fn>These laws similarly deal with a mother animal and her son and appear to stem from humanitarian values and a desire to prevent cruelty.</fn></li>
<li><b>Idolatrous Customs</b> – Rambam and others in his wake<fn>See R. Avraham b. HaRambam, Ralbag, Abarbanel, and Seforno.</fn> suggest that cooking meat and milk together was an idolatrous custom, practiced during the festivals, perhaps with the belief that it would bring abundant crops or flock.<fn>See Abarbanel and Seforno who make this last point. [Netziv suggests that the mixture might have been used the way one uses fertilizer today, sprinkling it over the field. However, he implies that this was a superstition, a "charm" or "סגולה", and not an idolatrous practice.]</fn> Rambam is consistent in reading many laws as stemming from this same goal of distancing Israel from idolatrous rites,<fn>For some of many examples, see his understanding of <a href="Purpose of the Sacrifices" data-aht="page">Sacrifices</a>, <a href="Purpose of Orlah" data-aht="page">Orlah</a>, <a href="Purpose of the Laws of Hybrids" data-aht="page">Hybrids</a> and the <a href="Prohibition of Blood" data-aht="page">Prohibition of Blood</a>.</fn> however, as he himself notes, no evidence exists of such a custom in this case.<fn>In the nineteen thirties various scholars, following&#160;H.L. Ginsberg, "Notes on the Birth of the Gracious and Beautiful Gods," JRAS (1935): 45-72, attempted to bring evidence of such an idolatrous practice from an Ugaritic text known as "Birth of the Gracious and Beautiful Gods."&#160; Line 14 of the text was understood to read, "coo[k a k]id in milk, a ? in butter", leading scholars to assume that there was some Canaanite cultic ceremony which mandated cooking a goat in milk, and it was against this that the Torah was reacting. Over the next few decades, however, better photographs of the tablet and closer analysis has questioned this reading and led to the conclusion that one cannot learn of any such cultic practice form the Ugaritic text.&#160; For discussion, see&#160;M. Haran, "Seething a Kid in its Mother's Milk", Journal of Jewish Studies 30 (1979):23-35 and R. Ratner and B. Zuckerman, "A Kid in Milk"?:New Photographs of KTU 1.23, Line 14*", HUCA 57 (1986): 15-60.</fn></li>
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<li><b>Idolatrous Customs</b> – Rambam and others in his wake<fn>See R. Avraham b. HaRambam, Ralbag, Abarbanel, and Seforno.</fn> suggest that cooking meat and milk together was an idolatrous custom, practiced during the festivals, perhaps with the belief that it would bring abundant crops or flock.<fn>See Abarbanel and Seforno who make this last point. [Netziv suggests that the mixture might have been used the way one uses fertilizer today, sprinkling it over the field. However, he implies that this was a superstition, a "charm" or "סגולה", and not an idolatrous practice.]</fn> Rambam is consistent in reading many laws as stemming from this same goal of distancing Israel from idolatrous rites,<fn>For some of many examples, see his understanding of <a href="Purpose of the Sacrifices" data-aht="page">Sacrifices</a>, <a href="Purpose of Orlah" data-aht="page">Orlah</a>, <a href="Purpose of the Laws of Hybrids" data-aht="page">Hybrids</a> and the <a href="Prohibition of Blood" data-aht="page">Prohibition of Blood</a>.</fn> however, as he himself notes, no evidence exists of such a custom in this case.<fn>In the nineteen thirties various scholars, following&#160;H.L. Ginsberg, "Notes on the Birth of the Gracious and Beautiful Gods," JRAS (1935): 45-72, attempted to bring evidence of such an idolatrous practice from an Ugaritic text known as "Birth of the Gracious and Beautiful Gods."&#160; Line 14 of the text was understood to read, "coo[k a k]id in milk, a ? in butter", leading scholars to assume that there was some Canaanite cultic ceremony which mandated cooking a goat in milk, and it was against this that the Torah was reacting. Over the next few decades, however, better photographs of the tablet and closer analysis has questioned this reading and led to the conclusion that one cannot learn of any such cultic practice from the Ugaritic text.&#160; For discussion, see&#160;M. Haran, "Seething a Kid in its Mother's Milk", Journal of Jewish Studies 30 (1979):23-35 and R. Ratner and B. Zuckerman, "A Kid in Milk"?:New Photographs of KTU 1.23, Line 14*", HUCA 57 (1986): 15-60.</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Unhealthy Mixture</b> – Rambam and Ralbag add that eating a mixture of meat and milk is unhealthy.&#160; Other food prohibitions, including <a href="Purpose of the Laws of Kashrut" data-aht="page">Kashrut</a>,&#160;<a href="Purpose of Orlah" data-aht="page">Orlah</a> and fat, have similarly been explained as being related to health concerns.<fn>This utilitarian approach to mitzvot has often been questioned.&#160; See, for example, Akeidat Yitzchak and Abarbanel (in the context of the laws of kashrut) who argue that the purpose of Torah is not to teach medicine but rather to instill good character and deeds.&#160; Rambam and Ralbag, though, appear to disagree with the basic assumption that laws cannot be utilitarian and give practical explanations for several commandments. See, for instance, Rambam's understanding of the purpose of <a href="Purpose of Shemittah" data-aht="page">Shemittah</a> and the <a href="Purpose and Placement of the Incense Altar" data-aht="page">Incense Altar</a> and Ralbag on the laws of <a href="Tzara'at" data-aht="page">Tzara'at</a>.</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Unhealthy Mixture</b> – Rambam and Ralbag add that eating a mixture of meat and milk is unhealthy.&#160; Other food prohibitions, including <a href="Purpose of the Laws of Kashrut" data-aht="page">Kashrut</a>,&#160;<a href="Purpose of Orlah" data-aht="page">Orlah</a> and fat, have similarly been explained as being related to health concerns.<fn>This utilitarian approach to mitzvot has often been questioned.&#160; See, for example, Akeidat Yitzchak and Abarbanel (in the context of the laws of kashrut) who argue that the purpose of Torah is not to teach medicine but rather to instill good character and deeds.&#160; Rambam and Ralbag, though, appear to disagree with the basic assumption that laws cannot be utilitarian and give practical explanations for several commandments. See, for instance, Rambam's understanding of the purpose of <a href="Purpose of Shemittah" data-aht="page">Shemittah</a> and the <a href="Purpose and Placement of the Incense Altar" data-aht="page">Incense Altar</a> and Ralbag on the laws of <a href="Tzara'at" data-aht="page">Tzara'at</a>.</fn></li>
<li><b>Hybrids </b>– R. Hirsch suggests that the prohibition should be seen in light of similar forbidden mixtures<fn>He notes that the verse does not forbid only eating the mixture, but its very creation through cooking. As such,the prohibition should be compared not to other forbidden foods, but to other forbidden mixtures.</fn> such as כלאיים, which are prohibited since they are an unnatural mixing of species or kinds, going against Hashem's creation of "each according to his species".<fn>undefined</fn> In remembering this natural law, man is supposed to recall that he, too, has an assigned and unique task in life: to keep Hashem's Torah.<fn>For elaboration on this understanding of forbidden mixtures and other explanations of the laws, see <a href="Purpose of the Laws of Hybrids" data-aht="page">Purpose of the Laws of Hybrids</a>.</fn> <b><br/></b></li>
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<li><b>Hybrids </b>– R. Hirsch suggests that the prohibition should be seen in light of similar forbidden mixtures<fn>He notes that the verse does not forbid only eating the mixture, but its very creation through cooking. As such,the prohibition should be compared not to other forbidden foods, but to other forbidden mixtures.</fn> such as כלאיים, which are prohibited since they are an unnatural mixing of species or kinds, going against Hashem's creation of "each according to his species". In remembering this natural law, man is supposed to recall that he, too, has an assigned and unique task in life: to keep Hashem's Torah. [See&#160;<a href="Purpose of the Laws of Hybrids" data-aht="page">Purpose of the Laws of Hybrids</a> for elaboration on this understanding of the law.] <b><br/></b></li>
 
</ul></point>
 
</ul></point>
 
<point><b>Context in Shemot</b><ul>
 
<point><b>Context in Shemot</b><ul>
<li><b>Relevance to <i>bikkurim</i></b> –&#160; Seforno suggests that the juxtaposition is also meant to combat idolatrous beliefs. Since idolators believed that cooking meat in milk would ensure abundant crops, the Torah explains that this is erroneous and prohibited; if one wants their crops blessed, they should instead bring <i>bikkurim</i>.<fn>Cf. Targum Yerushalmi (Fragmentary), Targum Yerushalmi (Neofiti), andTargum Yerushalmi (Yonatan) who explain that the juxtaposition hints that the punishment for violating the prohibition of meat and milk is damage to the crops mentioned in the beginning of the verse.</fn></li>
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<li><b>Relevance to <i>bikkurim</i></b> –&#160; Seforno suggests that the juxtaposition is also meant to combat idolatrous beliefs. Since idolators believed that cooking meat in milk would ensure abundant crops, the Torah explains that this is erroneous and prohibited; if one wants their crops blessed, they should instead bring of their first fruits to Hashem.<fn>Cf. Targum Yerushalmi (Fragmentary), Targum Yerushalmi (Neofiti), andTargum Yerushalmi (Yonatan) who explain that the juxtaposition hints that the punishment for violating the prohibition of meat and milk is damage to the crops mentioned in the beginning of the verse.</fn></li>
<li><b>Relevance to the festivals</b> – The law might be placed within a discussion of the festivals because that is when the fear of violation was highest:<fn>See also Ramban who explains that as young goats were born around the same time of the year as fruits ripened, the first fruits and firstborn goats would often be brought together to the Mikdash as people came to Jerusalem for the pilgrimage festivals.&#160; As the firstborns who were still suckling were often accompanied by their mothers, this increased the potential for cooking them in their mother's milk.&#160; Hence, the prohibition is mentioned in connection to laws of both <i>bikkurim</i> and the festivals.</fn></li>
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<li><b>Relevance to the festivals</b> – The law might be placed within a discussion of the festivals because that is when the fear of violation was highest:<fn>See also Ramban who explains that as young goats were born around the same time of the year as fruits ripened, the first fruits and firstborn goats would often be brought together to the Mikdash as people came to Jerusalem for the pilgrimage festivals.&#160; As the firstborns who were still suckling were often accompanied by their mothers, this increased the potential for cooking them in their mother's milk.&#160; Hence, the prohibition is mentioned in connection to laws of both first fruits and the festivals.</fn></li>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
 
<li>According to Rashbam, since large amounts of meat are consumed during the festivals, it is more likely that meat and milk might come to be mixed.</li>
 
<li>According to Rashbam, since large amounts of meat are consumed during the festivals, it is more likely that meat and milk might come to be mixed.</li>

Version as of 03:05, 21 February 2020

"לֹא תְבַשֵּׁל גְּדִי בַּחֲלֵב אִמּוֹ"

Exegetical Approaches

This topic has not yet undergone editorial review

Prohibition to Cook a Goat in Milk

The command "לֹא תְבַשֵּׁל גְּדִי בַּחֲלֵב אִמּוֹ" prohibits cooking meat and milk together.

Meaning of "תְבַשֵּׁל" – This approach understands "תְבַשֵּׁל" according to its most common meaning, "to cook".1
Meaning of "גְּדִי" – Many of these sources maintain that "גְּדִי" refers to a young goat specifically, but that the prohibition nonetheless extends to all animals.2 The goat is singled out as an example only since it was the most common source of meat to be boiled in milk (דיבר הכתוב בהווה).3
Meaning of "בַּחֲלֵב אִמּוֹ" – Though the phrase "בַּחֲלֵב אִמּוֹ" means the milk of the goat's mother, according to most of these sources,4 this, too, is understood to be but an example and the prohibition includes all types of milk. This case is specified only because it is the most common occurrence.5
Reason for the prohibition – These sources offer a variety of possible reasons for the prohibition:
  • Bad etiquette and cruelty – According to Rashbam, cooking meat and milk is not decorous and betrays gluttony. Philo and others6 further emphasize that using a mother's milk to cook her own children is needlessly cruel.7 These sources compare the prohibition to that of "אֹתוֹ וְאֶת בְּנוֹ לֹא תִשְׁחֲטוּ בְּיוֹם אֶחָד" (Vayikra 22:28) and "שילוח הקן" (Devarim 22:6-7).8
  • Idolatrous Customs – Rambam and others in his wake9 suggest that cooking meat and milk together was an idolatrous custom, practiced during the festivals, perhaps with the belief that it would bring abundant crops or flock.10 Rambam is consistent in reading many laws as stemming from this same goal of distancing Israel from idolatrous rites,11 however, as he himself notes, no evidence exists of such a custom in this case.12
  • Unhealthy Mixture – Rambam and Ralbag add that eating a mixture of meat and milk is unhealthy.  Other food prohibitions, including KashrutOrlah and fat, have similarly been explained as being related to health concerns.13
  • Hybrids – R. Hirsch suggests that the prohibition should be seen in light of similar forbidden mixtures14 such as כלאיים, which are prohibited since they are an unnatural mixing of species or kinds, going against Hashem's creation of "each according to his species". In remembering this natural law, man is supposed to recall that he, too, has an assigned and unique task in life: to keep Hashem's Torah. [See Purpose of the Laws of Hybrids for elaboration on this understanding of the law.]
Context in Shemot
  • Relevance to bikkurim –  Seforno suggests that the juxtaposition is also meant to combat idolatrous beliefs. Since idolators believed that cooking meat in milk would ensure abundant crops, the Torah explains that this is erroneous and prohibited; if one wants their crops blessed, they should instead bring of their first fruits to Hashem.15
  • Relevance to the festivals – The law might be placed within a discussion of the festivals because that is when the fear of violation was highest:16
    • According to Rashbam, since large amounts of meat are consumed during the festivals, it is more likely that meat and milk might come to be mixed.
    • According to Ralbag, since the prohibition is a reaction against idolatrous festival practices, the warning logically appears in the midst of the festival laws.
  • Larger context of idolatry – The larger context of the laws of both Shemot 23 and 34 is a distancing from idolatry.17 This might support those who understand the prohibition to be a reaction to such cultic practices.
Context in Devarim – Ibn Ezra and Ramban explain that the prohibition is listed in Devarim after the laws of Kashrut and the prohibition of carrion because it is similarly a food prohibition.
Three-fold repetition – The Mekhilta brings a variety of explanations for the three-fold repetition of the prohibition, suggesting that it might come to include three groups of animals (domesticated animals, undomesticated animals and poultry), three types of prohibitions (against cooking, eating and deriving benefit) or to parallel the three covenants, at Sinai, Arvot Moav and  Mt. Gerizim). Alternatively, one might suggest that the repetition is for emphasis.  If cooking meat and milk was a common practice, many warnings might be necessary to distance the nation from it.

Warning Not to Delay Offerings

The verse is a warning not to delay the bringing of offerings. This approach subdivides with regards to the meaning of "גְּדִי" and, hence, regarding which offering is referred to:

First Fruits

The "גְּדִי" is a fruit and the verse warns that one must bring first fruits to the Mikdash in a timely fashion.

Meaning of "תְבַשֵּׁל" – Menachem and Dunash understand "תְבַשֵּׁל" to refer to the ripening of fruit, as per the word's usage in Bereshit 40:10 and Yoel 4:13.  The verse warns against leaving the first fruits on the tree, allowing them to continue ripening,20 rather than bringing them to the Mikdash as soon as possible.
Meaning of "גְּדִי" – Menachem asserts that "גְּדִי" is related to the word "מְגָדִים" and refers to fruit.21 [See Devarim 33:13-15Shir HaShirim 4:13, 4:16, and 7:14 where the root is connected to fruit or crops.]
Meaning of "בַּחֲלֵב אִמּוֹ" – According to this approach, "בַּחֲלֵב אִמּוֹ" could refer to the sap of the tree which feeds the fruit till it ripens. This understanding of "חֲלֵב" might be supported by Bemidbar 18:12. However, the word "אִמּוֹ" as a reference to the tree is somewhat difficult. 22
Reason for the prohibition – The prohibition is simply the flip side of the commandment to offer first fruits. Tanakh mandates both that the first fruits be brought to the Mikdash and that they not be left on the tree too long, delaying the observance of the command.
"מְלֵאָתְךָ וְדִמְעֲךָ לֹא תְאַחֵר" – These sources might suggest that our prohibition is identical to the directive, "מְלֵאָתְךָ וְדִמְעֲךָ לֹא תְאַחֵר" of Shemot 22:28. A simple understanding of that verse teaches that one may not tarry in bringing of one's crops.
Context in Shemot – The juxtaposition of the warning "לֹא תְבַשֵּׁל גְּדִי בַּחֲלֵב אִמּוֹ" to the command of first fruits is the main motivation for this approach's understanding of the verse.23 This reading allows for the entire verse to be speaking about one topic only.
Context in Devarim – It is difficult to understand why a law regarding prompt offerings would be connected to the food prohibitions of Devarim 14.  This approach might suggest that the prohibition really is unconnected to these laws and relates not to that which precedes it, but to the laws of tithes which follow it. Juxtaposing laws of first fruits and tithes is logical as they both relate to the bringing of one's crops to the Mikdash.
Variation of this approach – Midrash Aggadah, Tanchuma, Rashi, and R. Saba raise the possibility that "לֹא תְבַשֵּׁל גְּדִי בַּחֲלֵב אִמּוֹ" does not constitute a prohibition against tarrying in bringing one's fruits, but a warning of the consequences of so doing. They understand "תְבַשֵּׁל" to mean cook, "גְּדִי" to refer to kernels of grain,24 and "חֲלֵב אִמּוֹ" to be metaphor for young grain that is still in its husk.  Hashem warns that if one delays in bringing one's crops, he will cause the young kernels of his grain to dry out as Hashem brings an easternly wind and "cooks" them while still in their husks. The verse appears by the laws of first fruits in Shemot and by the laws of tithes in Devarim as the warning is applicable to both.

Firstborn Animals

The "גְּדִי" is a goat and the verse warns to bring firstborn animals to the Mikdash as soon as possible.

Meaning of "תְבַשֵּׁל" – According to this approach, "תְבַשֵּׁל" means to mature or develop, and refers to the growth of the young goat.26  The verse warns not to delay one's offering as one waits for the animal to mature and fatten.
Meaning of "גְּדִי" – The word "גְּדִי" means a young goat, but in this context refers specifically to a firstborn. These sources would likely explain that the verse is just using a goat as a common example, but that the law refers to any firstborn animal.27
Meaning of "בַּחֲלֵב אִמּוֹ" – According to this approach, "בַּחֲלֵב אִמּוֹ" is the milk of the goat's mother upon which the goat is nourished and develops.
Reason for the prohibition – This prohibition is the flip-side of the positive commandment to sacrifice the first-born animals. The Torah both mandates that we offer firstborns and warns not to delay the offering.
"שִׁבְעַת יָמִים יִהְיֶה עִם אִמּוֹ בַּיּוֹם הַשְּׁמִינִי תִּתְּנוֹ לִי" – This approach appears to understand our verse to be equivalent to Shemot 22:28-29 which directs that a firstborn must stay by its mother for seven days, but "בַּיּוֹם הַשְּׁמִינִי תִּתְּנוֹ לִי". Though Rabbinic interpretation reads the verse in light of Vayikra 22:27 (וּמִיּוֹם הַשְּׁמִינִי וָהָלְאָה יֵרָצֶה לְקׇרְבַּן) to mean that one may bring a firstborn at any point from the eighth day and on, these sources read the phrase literally, that one must bring the firstborn on the eighth day itself.  Our verse, then, similarly warns that one should not delay, but to bring the animal when still young and not fully matured.28
Context in Shemot – According to this reading, the connection between the laws of first fruits and the prohibition of "לֹא תְבַשֵּׁל גְּדִי בַּחֲלֵב אִמּוֹ" is obvious. The verse speaks of two types of first fruit – those of the ground and those of animals, mandating that both must be brought to the Mikdash. It is possible that these two laws close the unit on festivals as that is when people would normally bring of their first fruits or flock to the Mikdash.29
Context in Devarim – According to this approach, it is unclear why the prohibition would be found in the context of laws of prohibited foods in Devarim. This is perhaps what leads R"Y Bekhor Shor to explain the phrase in Devarim to refer to the prohibition of milk and meat and not firstborns. It is possible, though, that the prohibition connects to the laws of tithes that follow it rather than the laws of Kashrut which precede it. As both firstborns and tithes are gifts that must be brought to the Mikdash, the two sets of laws are juxtaposed.30
Three-fold repetition – It is not clear why this prohibition needs to be repeated so many times, especially as many other verses already mandate the bringing of firstborns.