{"id":9570,"date":"2014-09-03T08:00:30","date_gmt":"2014-09-03T05:00:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ph.yhb.org.il\/en\/?p=9570"},"modified":"2019-11-21T11:09:00","modified_gmt":"2019-11-21T09:09:00","slug":"14-03-08","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ph.yhb.org.il\/en\/14-03-08\/","title":{"rendered":"08. Purity and Impurity"},"content":{"rendered":"
We still need to explain two halakhot<\/em>, one Torah law and one rabbinic, that seem to indicate that despite the sanctity of the mitzva of ona<\/em>, it has an aspect of impurity as well.<\/p>\n
According to the Torah, semen ejaculated by a Jew is a source of impurity (av ha-tuma<\/em>). Even when a husband and wife have marital sexual relations and fulfill the Torah commandment, since he ejaculated inside her, they both become impure, as they have come into direct contact with a source of impurity (they have the status of rishon le-tuma<\/em>). To purify themselves, they must immerse in a mikveh<\/em> and wait until nightfall, whereupon they resume their ritually pure status and are permitted to enter the Temple, eat the meat of the sacrifices, and, if they are kohanim<\/em>, eat teruma<\/em>. Similarly, clothing and kelim<\/em> that have come into contact with a Jewish man\u2019s semen become ritually impure and may not be used or worn while handling sacrifices or objects that must retain their pure status. These items are purified through immersion in a mikveh<\/em>. In the Torah\u2019s words:<\/p>\n
When a man has an emission of semen, he shall bathe his whole body in water and remain impure until evening. All cloth or leather on which semen falls shall be washed in water and remain impure until evening. And a woman with whom a man has sexual relations and an emission of semen, they shall bathe in water and remain impure until evening. (Vayikra 15:16-18)[5]<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n