<p dir="ltr">Regarding the view that there is a mitzvah for a Yisrael to be blessed by a kohen, R' Zev Sero asked:</p>
<p dir="ltr"><<< According to this opinion should we be saying a brachah? >>></p>
<p dir="ltr">As I understand it, one of the rules of Birkas Hamitzva is that one does not say thea bracha when he is dependent on someone else. Classic examples are giving tzedaka or giving terumah, because if the recipient changes his mind and refuses, it will be a bracha l'vatala. How much more so here, where I am not even offering something to the kohen, but asking a favor *from* him.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Similarly, I recently heard a similar rule, that we say the bracha only if we will be doing the pe'ulah personally, such as by Hallel and Sefirah. But we do not say the bracha ourselves if we are merely being yotzay on the kiyum, such as by Shofar and Megilah. If there is indeed a mitzvah to be blessed by the kohanim, it seems closer to the latter than the former.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Akiva Miller</p>