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The Israel
Koschitzky Virtual Beit Midrash
Parashat Hashavua Yeshivat Har
Etzion
This
parasha series is dedicated Le-zekher Nishmat HaRabanit Chana
bat HaRav Yehuda Zelig zt"l.
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PARASHAT TZAV
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Please pray for Techiya
Gitit bat Simcha, critically injured in a car
accident.
May
she and the entire family be comforted among the mourners of Zion
veYerushalayim.
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The
Laws of the Sacrifices
By
Rav Yehuda Rock
The body of laws pertaining to
the sacrifices set out in Sefer Vayikra chapters 1-7 – i.e.,
Parashat Vayikra and the first part of Parashat Tzav
– actually comprises two sections: all of the sacrifices that are listed in
Parashat Vayikra (chapters 1-5) reappear in the first part of
Parashat Tzav (6-7).
The section in Parashat
Tzav is not only distinct from Parashat Vayikra; it is a
unified entity with much that is common to its various
elements.
The units discussing the various
sacrifices in these chapters are referred to as “teachings” (torot): “…
This is the teaching of the burnt sacrifice… And this is the teaching of the
meal offering… This is the teaching of the sin offering… And this is the
teaching of the guilt offering… This is the teaching of the peace offering….”
This is not the case in Parashat Vayikra. In addition, the central
laws pertaining to each type of sacrifice here are conveyed in a Divine
utterance to Moshe, which begins with an explicit command to transmit the laws
to the kohanim: “… Command Aharon and his sons, saying…” (6:2); “… Speak
to Aharon and to his sons, saying…” (6:18).
Within this section (chapters
6-7) there are two units that deviate from the style of the rest of the
parasha in both respects. The units in question are the “sacrifice of
Aharon and his sons” (6:12-16) and the unit on “all fat” (7:22-36). In both
cases, the formula “this is the teaching of…” is missing, and both units start
with a new Divine utterance to Moshe, devoid of any command to transmit the law
to Aharon and his sons. While the unit on “the sacrifice of Aharon and his sons”
does discuss them, there is no specific command to convey the information to
them. The unit on “all fat” includes an explicit command to transmit the law to
all of Israel – “Speak to the
children of Israel, saying…” – but not
specifically to Aharon and his sons.
Apparently, these two units are
not an integral part of the body of “teachings of the sacrifices”; they are
independent of this body, but the Torah nevertheless includes them in amongst
those laws. It appears that the more fundamental level consists of only one
Divine utterance, described in the opening verses: “God spoke to Moshe, saying:
Command Aharon and his sons, saying…." The Torah adds the parenthetical unit on
“the sacrifice of Aharon and his sons," and subsequently the Torah repeats its
introduction in verses 17-18, indicating a return to the utterance aimed via
Moshe to Aharon and his sons.
We shall not discuss here the
reasons and significance of the integration of the above two units among the
teachings of the sacrifices; rather, we shall focus on the teachings of the
sacrifices themselves, as a unified body of laws.
Difficulty of Categorizing the
Parasha and its Details
To Ramban’s view (as noted in
his introduction to the parasha), the latter characteristic mentioned
above concerning the laws of the sacrifices – the command to convey the laws to
Aharon and his sons – reflects the fundamental difference between the two
parashot. He states:
“In Parashat
Vayikra, the Torah teaches: ‘Speak to Bnei Yisrael,' for there [Moshe]
was about to be commanded concerning the bringing of the sacrifices, and it is
Israel who bring them. Here, it says
‘Command Aharon,' since here the Torah is going to speak about the actual
performance of the sacrifices, which is done by the
kohanim.”
Parashat Vayikra, then, concerns
“the bringing of the sacrifices” – i.e., the reasons leading a person to bring a
sacrifice, while Parashat Tzav concerns “the performance of the
sacrifices." To Ramban’s view, this explains the difference in the respective
recipients of the commands: the “bringing” belongs to all of Israel, while
the actual preparation and performance of the sacrifice is the province of the
kohanim.
This explanation is not
satisfactory. When we come to examine the details of each of the two
parashot, it becomes difficult to match their contents to this
theory.
There is no doubt that
Parashat Vayikra does, indeed, address the initiative of bringing
the sacrifice on the part of the person who brings it. There is a fundamental
inner division into freewill offerings (burnt offering, meal offering, peace
offering) and obligatory offerings (sin offering and guilt offering). Each of
these inner units starts with a description of the sacrifice being brought by
the person. In the context of freewill offerings: “If any person among you
offers a sacrifice to God from the animals… and if a person offers a meal
offering to God… and if his sacrifice is a peace offering, if he offers of the
animals…." In the context of the obligatory offerings, we find: “If a person
sins… he shall offer… and if all the congregation of Israel
mistakenly transgress… then they shall offer… If the prince sins… he shall
bring… and if one person sins… he shall bring…” etc. But Ramban’s
characterization of Parashat Tzav is problematic: the details of
the actual performance of the sacrifice are to be found both in Parashat
Vayikra and in Parashat Tzav, and it seems difficult to
contend that this characterization applies to Tzav to a greater degree
than it does to Vayikra.
Parashat Vayikra includes the
principal laws of the various sacrifices – including the activities that are
performed exclusively by the kohanim. What, then, is the essential theme
of the teachings of the sacrifices in Parashat Tzav, justifying a
separate parasha that follows on Parashat Vayikra?
Aside from the question of
characterization of the parasha, we note some “gaps” in the teachings of
the sacrifices in Parashat Tzav; these are difficult to explain.
The most obvious example concerns the “teaching of the burnt offering” (6:1-6).
This unit addresses the laws of the offering of ashes and the fire upon the
altar, but includes no laws pertaining to the sacrifice itself! Likewise, the
“teaching of the sin offering” (6:17-23), where we find laws concerning the
slaughter and the sanctity of the flesh, its consumption, and its burning (in
the case of an inner sin offering). But the most basic details concerning the
sprinkling of the blood on the altar, and the offering as a sweet savor of the
fats and the inner parts, are nowhere to be found!
We cannot suppose that
activities such as the sprinkling of the blood and the offering as a sweet savor
fall outside the scope of the parasha, since the matter of the blood does
appear in the context of the guilt offering, and the offering of the sweet savor
appears in connection with the meal offering and the guilt offering. We might
propose that the details in Tzav come to complement the details set out
in Vayikra, in the same way that some of the details that have already
appeared in Vayikra are omitted from Tzav. However, this theory
turns out to be unfounded: the details of the performance of the meal offering –
the "handful" and the offering as a sweet savor – appear in Tzav although
they have already been set out in Vayikra.
Difficulty in the Conclusion of
the Parasha
Let us set aside the above
questions for the meantime, and turn our attention to the conclusion of the
teachings of the sacrifices, at the end of chapter 7
(37-38):
“This is the teaching for the
burnt sacrifice, for the meal offering and for the sin offering, and for the
guilt offering, and for the consecration offering, and for the sacrifice of the
peace offering; which God commanded Moshe at Mount Sinai, on the day He
commanded Bnei Yisrael to offer their sacrifices to God, in the wilderness of
Sinai.”
These verses conclude the entire
body of laws of the sacrifices in Parashat Tzav, as is evident in
the expression “the teaching," as well as in the list of sacrifices mentioned
here, which follows the order of the sacrifices treated in the parasha:
the burnt offering, the meal offering, the sin offering, the guilt offering,
(the consecration offering) and the peace offering. However, this conclusion
gives rise to two main difficulties:
a.
The conclusion makes mention of
a “consecration offering," but there is no teaching concerning such a sacrifice
in the parasha. The command describing the “ram of consecration” – a
special sacrifice offered on each of the seven days of consecration of the
Mishkan – is recorded in Shemot 29. Why, then, is it included in
the conclusion here?
b.
In the description of the time
and place of this parasha, there is an obvious contradiction. The first
part of verse 38 states that these teachings were given “at Mount Sinai” – i.e., at the time of God’s revelation to
Moshe at Sinai, prior to the construction of the Mishkan. The second part
of the verse then goes on to say that the teachings were given “in the
wilderness of Sinai” – i.e., from the Tent of Meeting, where Parashat
Vayikra was conveyed, as we learn from the first verse of the
Sefer: “[God] called to Moshe, and God spoke to him from the Tent of
Meeting, saying…”; “on the day He commanded Bnei Yisrael to offer their
sacrifices to God” – i.e., as a continuation of Parashat Vayikra,
which deals with the sacrifices made by Bnei
Yisrael.
Ramban addresses the second question (b)
and suggests three possible explanations:
1. “As our Rabbis explained it,"
all the commandments that appear in the Torah, even those described as having
been transmitted from the Tent of Meeting or on the plains of Moav, were
actually given first at Sinai, and God then repeated them later on at those
locations. On the basis of this theory, Ramban suggests, what the verse is
telling us here is that the “teachings” in Parashat Tzav, along
with the laws of bringing sacrifices that are recorded in Parashat
Vayikra, were first given at Sinai, and then again in the wilderness of
Sinai.
This explanation presents a
number of problems:
i.
This hypothesis of “our Rabbis”
– like many other teachings of Chazal – is not grounded in the literal
text. According to the literal reading of the text, certain commandments were
given at Sinai, while others were conveyed later
on.
ii.
If all of the commandments were
given at Sinai, why does the Torah choose to note specifically with regard to
these laws in our chapter that they were first given at
Sinai?
iii.
If the verse indeed means to
indicate that the laws were given twice, it should read, “and (i.e., “as
well as”) on the day He commanded…," rather than just “on the day He commanded."
2. Ramban proposes a second
explanation, “in accordance with the literal text”: some of the teachings of the
sacrifices listed here (“This is the teaching…”) were given at Sinai, while
others were given here, at the Tent of Meeting. The laws of the consecration
offering were given at Sinai, as stated explicitly in Shemot 29. The
burnt sacrifice and sin offering also appear there, in the context of the
sacrifices offered during the days of consecration of the Mishkan, and
are repeated in our parasha. The meal offering, guilt offering and peace
offering appear only in Sefer Vayikra, and were transmitted from
the Tent of Meeting. In other words, the laws of the sacrifices in the
parashot of Vayikra and Tzav were given only from the Tent
of Meeting, but verses 37-38 of chapter 7 sum up all of the teachings pertaining
to the sacrifices, starting with those conveyed in the context of the days of
consecration and continuing up until the laws of the sacrifices in
Parashat Tzav.
The advantage of this
explanation is that it also addresses the first question that we posed above –
the matter of the consecration sacrifice and why it appears here. On the other
hand, this explanation also brings certain difficulties:
i.
As we have already shown, the
expression “the teaching," as well as the order of the sacrifices in verse 37
(aside from the consecration sacrifice), prove that these verses of conclusion
pertain only to the teachings of the sacrifices in Parashat Tzav –
contradicting this explanation of Ramban.
ii.
Here the Ramban himself notes
that the descriptions of the time and place should be regarded as being
connected: “Meaning, ‘which God commanded Moshe at Mount
Sinai and on the day He commanded…." But if this is so, why
does the text not say this?
iii.
How can the word, “this
teaching," with its specific and focused denotation, refer to a collection of
scattered chapters, from Tetzaveh to
Tzav?
3. Ramban offers a third
possibility: “It is possible that [the words] “at Mount Sinai” means “at this
place, in front of Mount Sinai," i.e., in the Tent of Meeting… and therefore the
text here reads that “this is the teaching of the burnt sacrifice," and all the
sacrifices, which God commanded “at Mount Sinai on the day He commanded him in
the wilderness of Sinai, specifying that it was “at Mount Sinai” and “in the
wilderness of Sinai," so as to tell us that it was not given on the actual
mountain, at the place of Glory, where God told [Moshe] the Ten Commandments,
nor in the wilderness of Sinai, after they had journeyed away from the mountain,
but rather in the wilderness of Sinai while still in front of the mountain,
within its precinct and close to it; that was where the Tent of Meeting was… the
text is telling us where the Tent of Meeting was at the time.”
In other words, the Torah is
deliberately combining the two expressions so as to specify the location of the
Tent of Meeting, which was close to Mount Sinai
but not upon the mountain itself.
This explanation once again
entails difficulties:
i.
If the Torah wants to tell us
about where the Tent of Meeting is situated, the most appropriate place to do so
would seemingly be in the parashiyot dealing with the construction of the
Mishkan, rather than here.
ii.
This does not seem the clearest
way of indicating the location of the Tent of Meeting. On the contrary, the
formulation is clumsy and confusing.
In summary, the questions
arising from the “teachings of the sacrifices” in Parashat Tzav
fall into three main categories: a.) the question of the characterization and
definition of the parasha, including the difficulty in understanding the
considerations guiding the selection of details to be included or omitted from
the various sacrifices; b.) the appearance of the “consecration sacrifice” in
this context; and c.) the contradiction between the two parts of verse 38 with
regard to the location of the parasha in terms of time and
place.
Explanation Offered by Rav D.
Hoffman
It would appear that the best
solution to the first two problems is proposed by Rav David Tzvi Hoffman, in his
commentary on Vayikra (p. 20 onwards). We shall review the crux of his
argument here, and then use this as the basis for solving the third
problem.
According to Rav Hoffman,
chapters 6-7 were indeed conveyed to Moshe at Mount Sinai, as noted in the first
part of 7:38 – “at Mount Sinai." They were
conveyed during Moshe’s second ascent of the mountain, after the command
concerning the Mishkan, after the commands concerning the sacrifices to
be offered during the days of consecration (Shemot 29), and even after
the command concerning the daily sacrifice (end of Shemot
29).
To Rav Hoffman’s view, not only
was our parasha conveyed after Shemot 29, but it also complements
that chapter in terms of content: our chapter supplies details of the laws of
sacrifices that are not known to us from Shemot 29.
Thus, the laws of performing the
burnt offering are clear from the verses commanding the ram offered as a burnt
offering during the seven days of consecration (Shemot 29:15-18): “You
shall take one ram, and they shall lay hands… and you shall slaughter… and you
shall take its blood and sprinkle it upon the altar… and you shall offer the ram
wholly upon the altar, it is a burnt offering to God…." For this reason, when
our parasha presents its orderly list of the laws of the sacrifices, the
“teaching of the burnt offering” can skip the fundamental laws of performing
this sacrifice.
The obligation of the daily
sacrifice offered at twilight is likewise known to us from Shemot
29:39-41, and therefore we already know that there is a burnt offering that is
burnt upon the altar during the night, such that the “teaching of the burnt
sacrifice” can treat as a familiar phenomenon “the burnt sacrifice – which is
burned upon the fire on the altar throughout the night."
The meal offering is not
mentioned in Shemot 29 at all, and therefore “the teaching of the meal
offering” lists all the details of the performance of this sacrifice – the
“offering," the handful, the offering as a sweet savor, and the consumption by
the kohanim in the courtyard of the Tent of
Meeting.
In the command concerning the
days of consecration we find the details of the sin offering (29:10-14): “And
you shall offer the bull… and place hands… and you shall slaughter… and you
shall take of the blood of the bull and place it upon the horns of the altar…
and you shall take all of the fat… and offer it upon the altar, and the flesh of
the bull and its skin… you shall burn with fire outside of the camp; it is the
sin offering.” However, the sin offering of the days of consecration is
distinguished from the sin offerings throughout future generations in that the
former is an “external offering” (i.e., its blood is placed only on the altar in
the courtyard) whose flesh is burned, while for all future generations a
regular, external sin offering may be consumed by the kohanim, and only
an “internal” sin offering (i.e., an offering whose blood is brought into the
Tent of Meeting) is burned. Therefore, the “teaching of the sin offering” in our
parasha adds these laws concerning the consumption and the
burning.
The guilt offering does not
appear in Shemot 29, and therefore the “teaching of the guilt offering”
in our parasha lists all the details of these laws – slaughter, the
service involving the blood, the offering of the inner parts, and the
consumption by the kohanim in the Mishkan
precincts.
The offerings of the days of
consecration included no peace offerings, but these are mentioned in the command
of the days of consecration in the context of the gifts of the ram of
consecration, and in comparison with it. To Rav Hoffman’s view, the general
picture that arises is that the peace offering is similar to the ram of
consecration (with the obvious exception of whatever is unique to the context of
the consecration of the kohanim). For this reason, apparently, the
“teaching of the peace offering” (7:11-21) mentions the placing of the blood
only as an aside, while the slaughter, offering of the inner parts as a sweet
savor and the gifts are all omitted; the text here focuses on the loaves that
accompany the thanksgiving offering, and the laws of consuming the
meat.
The conclusion of the
parasha, according to the above analysis, relates not only to
Vayikra 6-7, but also to the laws of sacrifices set out in Shemot
29. For this reason the conclusion also makes mention of the consecration
sacrifices: “This is the teaching of the burnt sacrifice, of the meal offering
and of the sin offering, and of the guilt offering, and of the consecration
sacrifices…," since these, too, were an independent category worthy of their own
name, even though they were not applicable for future
generations.
Back to the
Conclusion
We have shown that the source of
this parasha is Sinai, and not the Tent of Meeting. How, then, are we to
explain the closing verse (7:38) – “… which God commanded Moshe at Mount Sinai, on the day he commanded Bnei Yisrael to offer
their sacrifices to God, in the wilderness of Sinai”?
In his article in Megadim
2, A. Shama uses Rav Hoffman’s thesis to answer this question as well. To his
view, the second part of the verse (“on the day he commanded…”) also refers to
the command at Mount Sinai, and focuses on the
command of the daily sacrifice at the end of Shemot 29. To his view,
“their sacrifices” refers here to the daily sacrifices; “in the wilderness of
Sinai” is not the location of the command, but rather the place where the
sacrifice is meant to take place – i.e., “on the day when God commanded Bnei
Yisrael to offer the daily sacrifices in the wilderness of
Sinai."
This interpretation is
problematic in several respects. Firstly, the textual reference to the lamb
offered as a daily sacrifice, in Shemot 29, is to a single sacrifice, in
the singular (Shemot 29:42): “the daily burnt offering." Likewise
in the parallel unit in Parashat Pinchas (Bamidbar 28): “…
This is the offering by fire… the daily burnt offering… the daily
burnt offering that is made… an offering by fire to God, and it
shall be…." Secondly, the simplest understanding of the term “their
sacrifices” would appear to indicate something far broader than just the daily
sacrifice. Furthermore, it is stated explicitly in the unit describing the daily
sacrifice that the command is “for all your generations”; it is not something
that applies only then and there, in the wilderness. In addition, the language
of the text here is, “on the day he commanded them to Bnei Yisrael." In
the unit discussing the daily sacrifice in Shemot 29 there is no command
to Bnei Yisrael; there is only a command to Moshe! While it is clear that the
intention is for the command to be relayed to Bnei Yisrael, this cannot be the
meaning of the phrase, “on the day he commanded them to Bnei Yisrael." Clearly,
then, the second part of our verse refers to Parashat Vayikra,
where there is indeed a command to Israel, (1:2) “Speak to Bnei
Yisrael…," to offer the spectrum of sacrifices; this command was given in the
wilderness of Sinai, at the Tent of Meeting.
A structure similar to that of
our verses is to be found in Bereishit 2:4 – “These are the generations
of the heavens and the earth when they were created; on the day the Lord God
made earth and heavens." Let us compare them, as follows:
Bereishit:
“These are the generations of
the heavens and the earth
When they were
created
On the day the Lord God made
earth and heavens.”
Tzav:
“This is the teaching of the
burnt offering, of the meal offering and of the sin offering, and of the guilt
offering, and of the consecration sacrifice, and of the sacrifice of the peace
offering, which God commanded Moshe
At Mount
Sinai
On the day he commanded Bnei
Yisrael to offer their sacrifices to God in the wilderness of
Sinai."
In both cases there are two
expressions describing time or place. The first expression in each case is
introduced with a bet, meaning "at" or "when" (“when they were created”;
“at Mount Sinai”), while the second expression
begins with the word “be-yom” (“on the day”), followed by a verb in
similar conjugation (“asot”; “tzavot”).
But the parallel extends further
than this. The first part of the verse in Bereishit (“These… and the
earth when they were created”) sounds, in terms of style, like a conclusion of
what has preceded it (the act of Creation, 1:1-2:3). This is reflected in the
word “generations," which is common in the context of biblical units that use
the name “Elokim” rather than the Name of God; the fact that the word “heavens”
precedes “earth," as in Bereishit 1:1; and the expression “created,"
which is used in chapter 1. Similarly, in our chapter, the verses are a
conclusion of the preceding body of laws.
In contrast, the second part of
the verse in Bereishit, in terms of style, does not seem to conclude
chapter 1, but rather to introduce what follows (as reflected in the Name “the
Lord God”; the verb “to make," which does not appear in chapter 1 but does
appear in 3:21; and the “earth” preceding the “heavens," in contrast to the
order in chapter 1). Thus, in Bereishit, too, we find a sort of
combination within the same verse of two descriptions of time that seemingly do
not belong together.
The verse in Bereishit
was given an original interpretation by my revered Rabbi and teacher, Rav
Mordekhai Breuer z"l (Megadim 11, and thereafter in Pirkei
Bereishit). The first part of the verse would appear to be suited to serve
as a heading for chapter 1 of Bereishit, with its content and style
molded accordingly. The second part of the verse appears suited to stand alone
as a heading for what follows it; its content and style are likewise molded
accordingly. (In the article in Megadim, Rav Breuer points out that were
this to be the case, the verse should include the word “va-yehi”: “And it
was, on the day that the Lord God made earth and heavens…”; this comment does
not appear in Pirkei Bereishit.) In order to bring the messages of
both chapters together, the Torah transfers the heading of chapter 1 to the end
of the chapter, combining it with the introduction to the chapters that
follow.
It would seem that the verses in
our chapter may be explained in the same way.
Parashat Tzav really deserves its
own heading, meant not only to indicate the subject of the body of text that
follows, but also to emphasize that what follows represents a deviation from the
chronological continuity of the narrative, which now stands at the point after
the Mishkan has been built, the Divine Presence has descended into it,
and God has spoken to Moshe (Parashat Vayikra), to provide the
description of an event that took place many months previously, when Moshe was
at Mount Sinai. A similar phenomenon is to be found in Parashat
Behar, where the Torah once again deviates from the chronological
continuity in order to go back to a command that issued at Mount Sinai. There, the Torah notes this “flashback” right
at the beginning of the parasha (Vayikra 25:1): “God spoke to
Moshe at Mount Sinai, saying…." The same
formulation would apply to our case.
The second part of our verse, in
accordance with the model in Bereishit, should be read as an introduction
to what follows. What follows is God’s command to Moshe to embark on the
procedures related to the days of consecration (those procedures which he was
commanded in detail in Shemot 29). Were the second part of our verse to
stand alone, perhaps the Torah would indeed introduce the word “va-yehi,"
so as to read: “And it was (va-yehi) on the day that He commanded Bnei
Yisrael to offer their sacrifices to God in the wilderness of Sinai, that God
spoke to Moshe, saying: Take Aharon and his sons…." The meaning of the verse
would then be that on the same day that God commanded Moshe, in the Tent of
Meeting, concerning Israel’s sacrifices (Parashat
Vayikra), He also told him to commence the days of
consecration.
That would indeed be a logical
formulation, in terms of each parasha independently. But the Torah
transfers what should logically have been the introduction to the “teachings of
the sacrifices," to the end of this body of laws, joining it together with the
heading of the next unit – a heading that, chronologically speaking, should have
connected the next parasha to Parashat
Vayikra.
If we now take an overall look
at the Torah’s “editing” of the various commands, we see that the body of laws
concerning the sacrifices, which was conveyed at Sinai, is inserted in between
two events: the command of the sacrifices in Parashat Vayikra,
conveyed from the Tent of Meeting, and the beginning of the service of the days
of consecration. The verse that should have connected these two events is
brought together with the verse that concludes the “teachings of the
sacrifices." What is the significance of this technique?
Let us first try to understand
the significance of the “teachings of the sacrifices” in their original context
– as the continuation of the unit describing the daily sacrifice, at the end of
Shemot 29. The daily sacrifice is described there as a constant system,
maintaining the conditions for the Divine Presence to rest there. The constant
service of Am Yisrael towards the Tent of Meeting causes God to come and
meet with them, as it were, at the Tent of Meeting: “The daily burnt sacrifice
for your generations at the entrance to the Tent of Meeting before God… and I
shall meet there with Bnei Yisrael… and I shall dwell amongst Bnei Yisrael, and
I shall be their God…." The teachings of the sacrifices are meant to expand this
system: the function of the kohanim in the Sanctuary is to accept the
sacrifices of Israel and to prepare them properly,
so as to complement the daily burnt offering and to maintain a full and constant
system of Divine service in the Sanctuary. Since the emphasis in the
parasha is not on the ability of the owner of the sacrifice to come close
to God and to appease Him, but rather to maintain this system of service in the
Sanctuary, therefore the parasha appeals to Aharon and his sons rather
than to all of Israel.
Parashat Vayikra, on the other
hand, brings the message of how each and every individual among Bnei Yisrael has
the ability of coming close to God and finding favor before Him. For this
reason, Parashat Vayikra lists the voluntary sacrifices before the
obligatory ones. A voluntary offering, indicating man’s quest for extra
closeness to God, is a higher expression of closeness to God than are the
obligatory sacrifices, where the distanced sinner seeks atonement that will
allow him to close some of the gap that has been created, and to regain “normal”
closeness.
From the perspective of
chronology, the teachings of the sacrifices in Parashat Tzav were
conveyed at Sinai, long before Parashat Vayikra was conveyed. The
reason for this is that the maintenance of the system of daily sacrifices and
the dwelling of the Divine Presence precede – both logically and chronologically
– the possibility of the individual coming before God, to the Sanctuary. But if
all of this were to be set out in order of chronology, it would seem as though
the kohanim enjoy preference and greater closeness to God, being more
favored by God than the rest of Israel. This is not the Torah’s view.
The actual service is admittedly performed only by the kohanim, and it is
important that a regular Israelite keep his distance from the actual service of
the Sanctuary; at the same time, the Divine Presence is fundamentally “amongst
them," among the nation of Israel, and accessible – through the appropriate
channels – to everyone. In order to remove any possibility of misunderstanding
in this regard, the Torah deliberately postpones the “teachings of the
sacrifices," which are entrusted to the kohanim, and deals first with the
fundamental statement: “A person from among you who offers a sacrifice to God…
he shall bring it to the entrance of the Tent of Meeting, for favor before God."
Only after this principle has been established does the Torah go on to the
“teachings of the sacrifices," so as to add the further statement that these,
too, should be viewed within the context of “the day when he commanded Bnei
Yisrael to offer their sacrifices to God in the wilderness of
Sinai."
Translated by Kaeren
Fish
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