Study Menachot folio 51B with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
with regard to the griddle-cake offering of the High Priest, which is a meal offering that comes in the amount of a tenth of an ephah of flour, from the meal offering that accompanies the sacrifice of sheep, which is also a meal offering that comes in the amount of a tenth of an ephah of flour, and
Mishnah: If they did not appoint another High Priest in his stead, from whose property was the griddle-cake offering brought and sacrificed? R' Shimon says: It is brought and sacrificed from the property of the community. R' Yehuda says: It is brought and sacrificed from the property of the heirs
Talmud: A baraita states: In a case where the High Priest died and they did not appoint another High Priest in his stead, from where is it derived that his griddle-cake meal offering should be sacrificed from the property of the heirs of the High Priest? The verse states in reference to the griddle
One might have thought that the heirs should sacrifice it in halves as the High Priest does. Therefore the verse states “it,” teaching that they should sacrifice all of the tenth of an ephah and not half of it; this is the statement of R' Yehuda.
R' Shimon says: The continuation of the verse: “It is a statute forever [olam] to YHWH,” teaches that in this case of a High Priest who has died and has not yet been replaced, the offering is brought from the property of the world [olam], i.e., the community. The end of the verse: “It shall be who