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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 KORACH
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Dedicated in
memory of Cvi ben Moishe Reinitz (Nagykallo, Hungary) - whose yahrzeit is on
2 Tammuz, from those who remember him.
********************************************************* This shiur is dedicated in celebration of Ahavya and Hillel's successful completion of shana rishona.
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The Significance of the
Incense
By Rav Yehuda
Rock
The incense (ketoret) appears in
our parasha in two contexts. First, following the complaint of Korach and
his company, Moshe sets up a test:
(16:5) "He spoke to Korach and to all of
his company, saying: In the morning God will show who is His, and who is holy,
and will cause him to come near to Him; He will cause him who He chooses to come
near to him.
(6) Do this: take censers, Korach and all
of his company,
(7) and put fire in them and place
incense upon them before God tomorrow, and it shall be that the man whom God
chooses – he shall be holy…
(16) And Moshe said to Korach: You and
all of your company – be before God, you and they and Aharon,
tomorrow.
(17) Let each man take his censer, and
let them put fire upon them, and place incense in them, and present yourselves
before God, each man with his censer – two hundred and fifty censers, and you,
and Aharon; each with his censer.
(18) So they took each man his censer and
put fire upon them, and placed incense in them, and they stood at the entrance
to the Tent of Meeting, with Moshe and Aharon.
(19) And Korach gathered the whole
congregation against them at the entrance to the Tent of Meeting, and God's
glory appeared to all of the congregation…
(35) And a fire came out from God and
consumed the two hundred and fifty men who offered the
incense."
Further on in the story, when God is
about to destroy the nation, it is Aharon's incense that stops the
plague:
(17:11) "Moshe said to Aharon: Take the
censer and put fire in it from off the altar, and place incense, and go quickly
to the congregation and make atonement for them…
(12) So Aharon took as Moshe had spoken,
and he ran to the midst of the congregation, and behold – the plague had begun
among the people. And he put incense, and made atonement for the
people.
(13) And he stood between the dead and
the living, and the plague was halted.
It is not clear from these verses for
what reason it was specifically incense, rather than any other aspect of the
service of the Sanctuary, that was chosen as a test of holiness and of God's
selection. Rashi explains:
"The incense is more beloved than any of
the sacrifices, and [also because] it contains the drug of death, with which
Nadav and Avihu were burned…"
Rashi distinguishes two characteristics
of incense: firstly, it is "more beloved than any of the sacrifices" – but gives
no basis or reason for this. Secondly, he asserts that incense is dangerous, as
proven by what happened to Aharon's sons. However, this still does not tell us
how or why it is that specifically the Divine service of incense is
dangerous.
In order to understand the significance
of incense in general, let us first review the places in the Torah where it is
mentioned.
a.
Shemot 30: in the command concerning the Sanctuary, as part of the
command to build the golden altar (the incense altar), the Torah states that
incense must be offered on the golden altar, twice each day. Further on, the
preparation of the incense is discussed.
b.
Vayikra 9: On the eighth day of the inauguration of the Sanctuary,
Nadav and Avihu offer incense with "foreign fire"; as a result they
die.
c.
Vayikra 16: As part of the order of the Yom Kippur service, the
Kohen Gadol is commanded to offer incense in the Holy of
Holies.
d.
Bamidbar 7: At the dedication of the altar, the prince of each
tribe offers various sacrifices, including a golden spoon full of
incense.
e.
Our parasha.
In the fourth appearance – the sacrifices
of the princes – incense appears among all of the necessities for the Sanctuary
that were provided by the princes, and so nothing may be deduced from this
source with regard to the significance or characteristics of the incense. The
first and third appearances concern commandments for all generations concerning
offering of the incense by the kohen. The second and fifth are narratives of
events involving sin and a punishment of death.
Let us start with the first mention of
incense in the Torah: the commandment of the golden altar. A number of
difficulties arise with regard to this unit, the first of which concerns its
location. The command to build the Sanctuary, in the parashot of
Teruma and Tetzave (Shemot 25-29) has a relatively clear
structure; its focus moves from the inside of the Sanctuary outward. Parashat
Teruma begins (after the command to collect the raw materials) with a
command to construct the inner vessels – the Ark, the Table, and the
Menora. This is followed by the structure of the Sanctuary itself: the
curtains, covering, boards, rings, sockets, and the veil. Then comes the altar,
and the courtyard of the Sanctuary – its hangings, pillars, and screen. After
every part of the Sanctuary has been described, there are commands concerning
the kohanim and their garments, and the sanctification of the kohanim and of the
Sanctuary (during the seven days of inauguration).
In Shemot 29:38 we find the
parasha of the daily sacrifice, which clearly concludes the body of
commands concerning the Sanctuary. The daily sacrifice appears as the central
rite of worship performed upon the altar facing the Tent of Meeting. It is also a rite that facilitates the
dwelling of the Divine Presence, which was described at the beginning of this
lengthy unit as its purpose.
Following this entire structure comes the
command about the golden altar (Shemot 30:1-10). Ramban notes that the
proper place for this unit would seem to be among the discussion of the inner
vessels, along with the Table and the Menora. He brings support for this
view from the description of the actual building of the Sanctuary, in
parashat Vayakhel, where the golden altar does in fact appear along with
the Table and the Menora. He comments as follows:
"You shall make an altar for offering
incense' – but the incense altar is one of the inner vessels; it should have
been mentioned with the Table and the Menora, since it stands together
with them, and they are mentioned [together] accordingly in parashat
Vayakhel."
Why, then, is this unit not located in
its proper place? Ramban answers:
"The reason for it being mentioned here,
after the Sanctuary and all of the vessels and the sacrifices, is because God
said, after all of that, "It shall be sanctified with My glory" (29:43); "I
shall dwell in the midst of Bnei Yisrael" (45). This implied that He would still
require them to construct an altar for the offering of incense for the glory of
God. This was a secret that was conveyed to Moshe – that the incense halts the
plague, for incense is of the attribute of justice… that they should acknowledge
My glory, for it will not tolerate your sins; so let them be cautious concerning
My glory."
Therefore He says here, "And you shall
place it before the veil that is upon the Ark of Testimony, before the covering
that is over the Testimony where I shall meet with you'. For why should He
elaborate as to all of this? After all, He did not say, "You shall place it
before the Ark of Testimony in the Tent of Meeting" when He conveyed the
parasha of Vayakhel (40:5)! However, it comes to indicate our
point."
Ramban notes the Torah's emphasis on the
location of the golden altar, facing the place of the Divine presence, and
explains that since the Divine Presence dwells in the Sanctuary in the wake of
the daily sacrifice, this demands a show of honor. The incense symbolizes the
attribute of justice by arousing honor for the Divine
Presence.
Ramban's explanation brings together a
number of assumptions:
a.
The basic structure of the command concerning the Sanctuary, up to the
unit on the daily sacrifice, includes those factors that bring the Divine
Presence (as indicated by the introduction to the command – "Let them make Me a
Sanctuary, that I may dwell in their midst," and from the end of the command in
the discussion of the daily sacrifice), and does not include those objects or
actions which are required as a result of God's Presence.
b.
The Divine Presence necessitates a show of honor, in accordance with the
verse from the daily sacrifice: "It shall be sanctified by My
glory."
c.
The incense expresses the attribute of justice.
d.
Acknowledgment of the attribute of justice arouses
honor.
This presentation raises several
difficulties. Ramban does not explain in what way the incense expresses the
attribute of judgment. Furthermore, the simple meaning of the verses, according
to his approach, is not that the Divine Presence necessitates honor, but rather
that the honor of God brings sanctity and the Divine Presence: "I shall meet
there with Bnei Yisrael, and it shall be sanctified with My honor… and I
shall dwell in the midst of Bnei Yisrael…."
The Vilna Gaon, in Aderet Eliyahu
(Parashat Tetzaveh) offers an explanation that is similar to that of
Ramban in his first assumption ('a' above):
"You shall make an altar for incense" –
this was not mentioned among the vessels of the Sanctuary that were to be
made.
First God gave the details of the
Sanctuary and its vessels, the garments, and the preparation of Aharon for the
[service of the] altar. Thereafter He commanded the offering of the daily
sacrifice, saying, "By means of this I shall dwell in your midst." Then He
mentions the fashioning of the incense altar and the atonement money.
This tells us that these [latter
elements] were not a necessary precondition for the dwelling of the Divine
Presence; they were merely for atonement for Israel. And so the Torah says, with
regard to the atonement money, "To make atonement for your souls" (Shemot
30:16)."
The Vilna Gaon asserts, like the Ramban,
that the golden altar lies outside of the basic structure of the command
concerning the Sanctuary because it does not contribute towards the Divine
Presence dwelling there. However, while Ramban understands its purpose as
showing honor towards the Divine Presence, the Vilna Gaon maintains that the
incense is necessary for atonement – like the half-shekel, which appears in the
text immediately thereafter.
The Vilna Gaon does not tell us why it is
that the Torah provides for these means of atonement specifically here. We may
propose that God's Presence among Bnei Yisrael brings a higher level of the
attribute of justice, such that there is greater need for
atonement.
The idea of the incense as bringing
atonement is obviously based on the narrative in our parasha, where
Aharon does indeed make atonement for Bnei Yisrael by means of incense. However,
in parashat Tetzaveh, in the context of the golden altar and the daily
offering of incense, there is no mention of atonement. The concept of atonement
appears only in the context of the "blood of the sin-offering of atonement" of
Yom Kippur, some of which is placed upon the golden altar on that day. And still
it is not clear why the incense should serve as atonement rather than any other
sacrifice.
The key to this puzzle appears to lie in
a question raised by Ridbaz on the Rambam, but the substance of his question
concerns not the Rambam, but rather the incense altar:
"It is asked in the midrash: no sacrifice
was offered upon it; why, then, is it called an 'altar'?"
The verse states: "You shall make an
altar for offering incense" ("mizbeach miktar ketoret"). Ridbaz notes
that the word 'altar' (mizbeach), as a noun derived from the root
"z-v-h," is not appropriate for this golden altar. Not only are no sacrifices
offered upon it, but there is actually an explicit negative command that
prohibits offering sacrifices upon it: "You shall not offer foreign incense upon
it, or any burnt offering, or any meal offering…" (Shemot 30:9).
Moreover, the Torah itself provides a suitable name: "miktar." This noun
parallels "mizbeach," being derived in this case from the root "k-t-r."
Hence, this would seem to be a better name for a vessel meant for burning
incense; why, then, does the Torah add the word "mizbeach" to describe
this incense altar?
Ridbaz answers:
"According to the plain meaning we may
say that its form and its purpose resembled the form and purpose of the outer
(sacrificial) altar, since the outer altar, too, was square. They would not
slaughter the animals at the top of the altar, but would bring the carcass up to
there and offer it (maktirin), and because of the smoke [that was thereby
created] this was called "haktara" (literally, "offering incense").
Likewise, incense was offered upon the inner (golden) altar, and it is called
"ketoret" because of the smoke that arises from it, and [the form of this
altar] was also square, like that of the outer altar."
In other words, to Ridbaz's view, the
golden altar is called a 'mizbeach' because it resembles the outer,
sacrificial altar. The similarity involves both their form (square) and the fact
that an act of 'haktara' – burning that gives rise to smoke - is
performed on both of them.
This would seem to be a surprising
interpretation. Is the golden altar really called a 'mizbeach' only
because of its physical resemblance to the sacrificial altar, and because of the
similarity of the technical actions performed on them, using different
substances (sacrifices vs. incense)? Can we suggest such an explanation when the
action in question is precisely that which would make the name 'miktar'
more appropriate, and where the name 'mizbeach' is altogether
inappropriate from the point of view of its function?
In fact, the Ridbaz's explanation gives
rise to another question: If the golden altar and the sacrificial altar have
different functions, why are they so similar in form? Why does the Torah command
that the altar form be imitated for a vessel that is going to be used for
offering incense?
We may propose the following
explanation:
The main purpose of the Sanctuary is for
God's Presence to dwell in the mist of Bnei Yisrael. It is meant to reflect,
more than anything else, a relationship of closeness between God and Israel.
However, man is limited; Bnei Yisrael have their deficiencies and their
transgressions; they cannot live in close proximity with God's Presence without
being harmed (by punishment) or distanced. In the words of Yishayahu (6:5), "I
said: Woe to me, for I am ruined; for I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in
the midst of a nation of unclean lips, for my eyes have seen the King, Lord of
Hosts."
For this reason, the Sanctuary is
constructed in concentric form, with barriers within barriers – the courtyard,
the Tent of Meeting, and the Holy of Holies. Thus, the Sanctuary expresses the
tension between closeness and distance: a fundamental relationship of closeness,
while maintaining a proper distance and separation. God is in the midst of Bnei
Yisrael, but He dwells within the Sanctuary, while they are outside of
it.
This tension is given prominent
expression in the context of the sacrifices. As noted, in the unit discussing
the daily sacrifice, in parashat Tetzaveh, the Torah describes how the
sacrifices bring the Divine Presence: "This is how you shall prepare the
sacrifice… and I shall meet there with Bnei Yisrael, and it shall be sanctified
with My glory… and I shall sanctify the Tent of Meeting and the altar… and I
shall dwell amongst Bnei Yisrael…."
The Divine Presence is depicted here as
an expression of acceptance and favor shown towards the sacrifices by God. As
such, it would seem that the Divine Presence should really rest at the place
where the sacrifices are offered – on the sacrificial altar. However, the altar
is the place where Bnei Yisrael perform the sacrificial service – and, as we
have mentioned, man and the Divine Presence cannot exist in the same place
without man being harmed. This presents a problem: the Divine Presence must
express acceptance of the sacrifices, and therefore should be at the place where
the sacrifices are offered. But Bnei Yisrael cannot offer sacrifices in the
place where the Divine Presence rests!
The golden altar seems to offer a
solution to this problem. The Torah commands that inside the Tent of Meeting, a
model of the sacrificial altar be constructed – the golden altar; upon it will
be an expression of the fire and the cloud of the Divine Presence – the
incense.
The Divine Presence at the end of
parashat Mishpatim – the same Divine Presence that descended into the
Sanctuary at the end of parashat Pekudei, (which has clear linguistic
links to the end of Mishpatim) – is described as a cloud, with "the glory
of God" within it, with "the appearance of God's glory like a consuming fire."
It would seem that God expresses this image for all generations not by means of
miraculous fire and cloud, but rather by means of His emissaries – the kohanim
who offer up the incense. The kohanim perform the service of the incense – not
as one of the sacrifices, which express man's service of God, but rather as
emissaries of God. The incense is fundamentally an expression of God's Presence,
His closeness to Israel, and – in the case of the daily incense on the golden
altar – His acceptance of their sacrifices, specifically the daily sacrifice
offered on the sacrificial altar.
Now the nature of the golden altar is
clear: it is fashioned in the same form as the sacrificial altar because it
symbolizes it and is meant to be the place that receives the Divine Presence,
which in turn expresses the acceptance of the sacrifices that are offered on the
sacrificial altar. It is called 'miktar' because of the service that is
actually performed on it, but it is also – and more importantly – a
'mizbeach,' because of its fundamental significance. The unit describing
the golden altar comes as a continuation to the unit on the daily sacrifice,
because it serves as a solution to the "problem" of the Divine Presence that
arises in that context.
Let us try to anchor the perception of
the incense as an expression of the Divine Presence more firmly in the text.
Firstly, in the offering of the incense there is an emphasis on the "fire" that
is placed in the censer, in a number of places (as in our case, concerning
Korach: "Each man took his censer and they put fire on them, and they placed
incense in them…"). As we shall see further on, the same can be said of the
cloud of incense. These elements of fire and cloud resemble the elements of the
Divine Presence at the end of Mishpatim.
The incense as an expression of the
Divine Presence is almost explicit in a beraita in Yoma,
discussing the incense of Yom Kippur (53a): "It would rise up like a staff,
until it reached the ceiling. Once it reached the ceiling it would come down the
walls, until the Sanctuary was filled with smoke, as it is written, "And the
Sanctuary was full of smoke."" The verse cited in the beraita is from
Yishayahu, chapter 6, which discusses the revelation of the Divine
Presence: "In the year of the death of King Uzziah, I saw the Lord sitting upon
a Throne, high and elevated, and His train filled all of the Temple. Serafim
stood above him… and they called to one another, saying: Holy, holy, holy is the
Lord of Hosts; the whole world is filled with His glory… and the House was
filled with smoke."
In two different places, the Torah
stipulates that the fire – i.e. the coals – upon which the incense is placed,
must be atop the altar. Thus, in the Yom Kippur service (Vayikra 16:12)
we find, "He shall take a censer full of burning coals from off the fire before
God, and his hands full of incense beaten fine…." Likewise, in our
parasha, when Moshe sends Aharon to stop the plague, he tells him: "Take
the censer and place fire on it from off the altar, and place
incense…."
In light of what we have said, the reason
for this is clear: the specific expression of the Divine Presence that is
realized by means of the incense is God's closeness in the wake of the offering
of sacrifices; it is an expression of favor and acceptance of the sacrifices.
This is expressed in the fact that the incense "rests" upon fire (coals) taken
from the altar, and thereby comes to symbolize the fire of the
altar.
Let us now consider the other type of
commandment of incense – the incense offered by the Kohen Gadol on Yom Kippur.
Thereafter we shall come back to the two narratives that involve incense – the
sin of Nadav and Avihu, and our parasha.
The Tziddukim and the Perushim were
divided as to how the incense is offered on Yom Kippur (Yoma 53a): "He shall
place the incense upon the burning coals before God – he should not arrange them
in place outside [of the Holy of Holies] and then enter, except the Tziddukim
who say that he should arrange it outside and then bring it in." In other words,
the view of the Tziddukim is that the Kohen Gadol offers the incense while he is
still outside of the Holy of Holies, and only then does he enter with the
censer. Unquestionably, this view regards the incense as a sort of screen that
protects the Kohen and separates between him and the Divine Presence (as Rashbam
explains). The halakha, on the other hand, stipulates that the Kohen offers the
incense only after he enters. Clearly, then, the function of the incense is not
to create a barrier.
In light of what we have said, the matter
is clear: the crux of the Yom Kippur service is the atonement that is made for
the places of the Divine Presence (Vayikra 16): "… And he shall make
atonement for the holy place, from the impurities of Bnei Yisrael, and from
their transgressions in all their sins; and so he shall do for the Tent of
Meeting, which dwells with them in the midst of their impurity… and he shall
finish making atonement for the holy place and for the Tent of Meeting and for
the altar… and he shall make atonement for the Holy Sanctuary, and for the Tent
of Meeting, and for the altar shall he make atonement…." The incense in the Holy
of Holies creates a tangible expression of the Divine Presence; only after this
does the Kohen Gadol come and make atonement for it.
We mentioned previously that the essence
of the Yom Kippur service is atonement for the places of the Divine Presence –
the Holy of Holies, the Tent of Meeting, and the altar. Which altar is referred
to here? In the order of the service, at the stage where Aharon is in the Tent
of Meeting, we read: "He shall go out to the altar which is before God and make
atonement for it…." This means that he goes out to the courtyard of the
Sanctuary, and the altar in question is the sacrificial (outer)
altar.
In contradiction to this stands the verse
in the unit concerning the golden altar (Shemot 30:10): "Aharon shall
sprinkle upon it for atonement, once in the year, of the blood of the sin
offering of atonements." Clearly, this is talking about the golden altar, and
the Mishna decides the halakha accordingly in Yoma. How, then, are we to
understand the verses in the order of the Yom Kippur
service?
The order of the Yom Kippur service was
conveyed to Aharon in the wake of the deaths of Nadav and Avihu on the eighth
day of the inauguration of the Sanctuary. On this day, the devouring fire of the
Divine Presence emerged outward to the sacrificial altar and was visible to the
nation (Vayikra 9:23-24): "And the glory of God appeared to all of the
nation, and a fire came out from before God and it consumed upon the altar the
burnt offering and the fats, and all the nation saw…." For this reason, in the
order of the first Yom Kippur service that Aharon performed, the Divine Presence
was in its proper place – on the sacrificial altar. For this reason, the
atonement was likewise made upon it. But for future generations, as we have
seen, the resting of the Divine Presence upon the altar was realized in the
golden altar, in the form of the incense. Therefore, for future generations, the
atonement for the altar is performed on the golden altar.
On the eighth day of the inauguration,
Nadav and Avihu brought incense, which was a "foreign fire." It seems that they
believed that the Divine Presence that is expressed through the incense rests
especially on the person who offers the incense. By means of the incense they
meant to direct the Divine Presence itself. As a result of their actions, a fire
emerged from before God and consumed them – the same "consuming fire" that is
meant to be symbolized by the incense. Not only could Aharon's sons not control
it, it came out and killed them.
The lesson to be learned is stated by
Moshe: "That is as God spoke, saying: I shall be sanctified by those close to
Me, and before the entire nation I shall be honored." Moshe explains the
significance of the commandment of incense and the promise of the Divine
Presence: only the selected, close few, actually perform sanctification by
offering the incense, but God's glory is not limited to them; He is glorified
before all the nation equally.
Korach and his company sinned in the same
way as Nadav and Avihu. They too aspired to be among the kohanim in the
Sanctuary who effected the bringing of the Divine Presence. Moshe's test was
meant to prove that only God's chosen – a person who is appointed and sent for
this by God – is really capable of bringing the Divine Presence. And they, too,
like Nadav and Avihu were consumed by God's glory, the consuming fire – the same
fire which they had sought to control.
Aharon was able to make atonement and to
halt the plague, not because the incense is fundamentally a mechanism of
atonement, but because in this way he – as the person so authorized and
appointed – was able to correct that which had been perverted, and to show that
the Divine Presence indeed rests only by means of the actions of His chosen
servants – the kohanim. Aharon's act of repair, as a counter-action to Korach
and his congregation, indeed made atonement for Bnei Yisrael and halted the
plague.
Translated by Kaeren
Fish
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