When he accidentally left the ruler's presence
In the chapter, a verse is written among the words that one Amora said to his friend, "And I, your father, fell down and fell down, and I fell down, and I fell down, and I fell down." I have always regretted this Gemara, and what righteousness and justice (heavenly) is there in this, and that because he said something hypothetical, and even in matters of Torah and Halacha, would something like this happen to him? And is this the Torah of life that lasts for days, etc.? And further, let's compare the limit to this, since every morning we say, "And you will take it away from me," and there are hundreds of other examples of this. And in general, what sin did this Amora commit because of the words of another person who was sitting far away from him and spoke about him? It is known from the Hatam Sofer that he would be tortured when he studied tractates in the yeshiva because of their content and even more so because they are letters of the Bible. It is very puzzling, after all, if a person studies Torah and has no nefkm in any matter, and should he feel that the Torah will cause him harm? Perhaps he would say, "It would be better for me not to study these laws at all, and only from me" (Mohal Tov).
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