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S.A.L.T.
– PARASHAT VAYIKRA
By Rav
David Silverberg
Motzaei
Shabbat
One of the categories of voluntary sacrifices discussed in Parashat
Vayikra is the shelamim offering. The fats of the animal brought as a
shelamim were burned on the altar, while the meat was eaten mostly by the
ba’alim (person bringing the sacrifice, and his family and guests); a
small portion of the meat was shared with the kohen who tended to the
sacrifice.
In describing the offering of the fats
of the shelamim upon the altar, the Torah writes, “Aharon’s sons shall
offer it on the ola which is upon the wood which is upon the fire”
(3:5). Rather than simply requiring
the kohen to place the animal fats on the fire which
burned on the altar, the Torah instructs that the fats must be placed “on the
ola.”
The term “ola” refers to the burnt-offering, the
voluntary sacrifice which was entirely burnt upon the altar, as discussed in the
first chapter of Sefer Vayikra.
What does the Torah mean when it requires burning the fats of the
shelamim “on the ola”?
Rashi explains this verse to mean that no sacrifice may be offered upon
the altar before the daily ola, that
is, the tamid offering
that was brought each morning. By
requiring that the fats be placed “on the ola,”
referring to the daily tamid
sacrifice, the Torah teaches that the tamid must
have been already offered on the altar before any sacrifice is
offered.
Rav Shimshon Raphael Hirsch, in his commentary, notes the broader
implications of this concept, particularly as reflected by the context in which
it is introduced. As mentioned, the
Torah speaks here of the shelamim
sacrifice, which is, generally, an individual offering. (National shelamim
sacrifices – shalmei tzibur – were
brought very rarely.) A person
brought a shelamim
sacrifice as a celebration to mark a festive occasion. The requirement to ensure that all the
meat was eaten within two days necessitated the inclusion of family
members. The shelamim was thus
a personal, family event, in direct contrast to the tamid
sacrifice, the daily offering which was purchased with public funds and thus
represented the entire nation.
Moreover, as opposed to the shelamim, which,
as mentioned, was eaten in the form of a feast, the tamid was
entirely burnt upon the altar. The
shelamim thus
represents the festive, joyous aspect of religious observance, whereas
the ola
signifies humble, somber devotion and submission to the Almighty. The tamid, the
ola offering
brought each day by the entire nation, expresses Benei Yisrael’s
national, collective sense of duty and submission to the
Almighty.
Rav Hirsch explained that by commanding that the fats of the
shelamim be placed upon the tamid, the
Torah alludes to the inextricable bond between our national sense of devotion to
God and the joys of personal, family life.
He writes, “…this could be to express the great Truth, that it is just in
the pure happiness of the families and individuals that the national devotion to
the Torah finds its fruits…” The
Torah seeks to demonstrate that there is no contradiction between the ola and the
shelamim, between
humble submission to God’s authority, as reflected by the ola, and the
festive, joyous aura that characterized the shelamim feast. Our national sense of religious duty and
devotion to God is to lead to the shelamim, to the exhilarating sounds of families
joyously celebrating together around a sacrifice. Both are integral components of the
sacrificial rite in the Mikdash, and both are integral components in the
religious life envisioned and mandated by the
Torah.
Sunday
Yesterday, we noted the Torah’s puzzling description of the shelamim
offering, the animal sacrifice whose fats were placed upon the altar while the
meat was eaten by the kohen and,
mainly, by the individual bringing the sacrifice. The Torah writes that the kohen tending
to the sacrifice would place the animal’s fats “on the ola which
is upon the wood which is
upon the fire” (3:5). The fats were
not simply placed upon the altar, but were placed “on the ola.” The ola is the first kind of
sacrifice discussed by the Torah in Sefer Vayikra. The obvious question arises as to what
the Torah means when it requires burning the fats of the shelamim “on the
ola.”
The Meshekh Chokhma suggests that the Torah here makes a halakhic
clarification regarding the burning of the shelamim fats. The obligation to place the fats upon
the altar would, seemingly, require that the fats be placed directly on the
altar, without anything in between them and the firewood. At the very least, we might assume, the
fats may not be placed on anything other than firewood or other fats. The halakhic rule of “min be-mino
eino chotzeitz” establishes that two objects of the same kind do not
constitute a “disruption” (chatzitza) for one another. Thus, we would concede that if animal
fats from a previous sacrifice are burning on the altar’s firewood, one may
place the shelamim fats upon those fats, and the shelamim fats would be considered as placed directly
upon the firewood. However, it
would be invalid, at first glance, to place the shelamim fats on an ola sacrifice that had been previously placed
on the altar. The ola sacrifice is entirely burnt; both the meat
and the fats are burned on the altar.
Seemingly, then, if one places the fats of a shelamim over an ola, the meat of the ola – which is a different substance than the
animal fats – “interrupts” between the fats and the altar, such that the
mitzva remains
unfulfilled.
For this reason, the Meshekh Chokhma
suggests, the Torah wrote that the shelamim fats may
be placed “on the ola.” Since we would have intuitively
concluded that the shelamim fats may
not be placed on an ola, for the
reason discussed, the Torah made an explicit stipulation allowing this placement
of the shelamim
fats.
Why, in fact, did the Torah permit placing the
shelamim fats on
top of an ola? Why does the
meat of the ola not constitute a “disruption” between the fats and the
altar?
The answer, perhaps, relates to the nature of the ola sacrifice. Later, in the beginning of Parashat Tzav
(6:2), the Torah says about the ola sacrifice, “eish ha-mizbei’ach tukad bo” – “the fire of the altar is kept going on
it.” The ola sacrifice essentially served as part of the
fuel that sustained the fire on the altar.
There in Parashat Tzav the Torah requires that the fire on the altar
continuously burn (“Eish tamid
tukad al ha-mizbei’ach lo tikhbeh”
– 6:6). It appears that the
ola was one of the means by which it was
ensured that the flame on the altar would not be extinguished, as the fire
burned on the meat and fats of the animal.
If so, then we can readily understand why an ola
sacrifice would not “interrupt” between the shelamim fats on
the altar. The ola was
considered part of the altar’s firewood, and thus the obligation to place the
fats on the altar’s fire could indeed be fulfilled by placing the fats over a
previously-offered ola
sacrifice.
Monday
The second verse of Parashat Vayikra establishes that one who wishes to
bring a voluntary animal sacrifice should offer either a bull, sheep or
goat. The Da’at Zekeinim Mi-Ba’alei
Ha-Tosafot
commentary notes (citing from Torat Kohanim) that
the Torah allows as animal sacrifices only domesticated animals which (at least
in ancient times) were widely bred and easily accessible. Rather than require Benei
Yisrael to go hunting
for wild game to bring as sacrifices, God designated for sacrifices specifically
the animals that were most easily obtained. Da’at Zekeinim comments that this
is an expression of God’s benevolence and kindness toward Benei Yisrael,
as He did not with to overburden them by requiring them to sacrifice animals
which were difficult to capture.
The implication of this comment, seemingly, is that in principle, going
into the jungle and hunting wild animals would be a greater expression of
devotion to God than simply taking a sheep from one’s herd. The time and exertion entailed in
bringing a deer, for example, would
demonstrate one’s desire to serve his Creator at the highest standard, and his
willingness to go to great lengths and endure considerable inconvenience for
this purpose.
One might wonder, then, why the Torah disqualifies animals such as a deer
as sacrifices. We understand that
God did not want to overburden Benei Yisrael by requiring the offering of wild
animals, but why did He take away this option? Why did He not allow those who wish to
demonstrate the highest levels of devotion to go to the jungles and hunt for
deer and bring them as sacrifices?
God did not, for good reason, make such sacrifices obligatory, but why
did He make them invalid?
Rav Moshe Feinstein (in Kol Ram, vol. 3) explained that sometimes,
voluntary measures that entail significant time and exertion are not only
unnecessary, but also discouraged.
Self-imposed acts of devotion often have the effect of depleting one’s
limited resources of time, energy and concentration, at the expense of his basic
obligations and responsibilities.
The Torah established the institution of voluntary sacrifices to allow us
to extend beyond the strict demands of Halakha and express our personal
spiritual feelings in a way that could not be done through the performance of
the mandatory mitzvot alone.
However, the Torah also sought to ensure that these voluntary acts of
devotion would not take too much time or attention away from our basic
obligations. Hunting for sacrifices
could easily lead to a situation of people spending days in the hunt, thinking
that they thereby express their devotion to God, but taking precious time away
from pursuits such as Torah study, raising a family, and communal
involvement. God therefore chose to
disqualify wild animals as sacrifices, in order that voluntary sacrifices would
not come at the expense of more critical and basic religious
duties.
Before trying to do great things, we must first ensure that we are doing
all the good things that we are supposed to be doing. It is certainly admirable to go beyond
the strict call of duty – but only after we have answered that call, and
adequately fulfilled all our basic obligations.
Tuesday
There is a famous controversy among the Rishonim regarding the
reason underlying the institution of the korbanot (sacrifices). The Rambam, as cited in the Ramban’s
commentary to Parashat Vayikra (1:9), famously explained the sacrifices as a
necessary means of reinforcing Benei Yisrael’s rejection of paganism and
pagan sacrificial rites. According
to the Rambam (at least as the Ramban understood his comments), the rituals of
the korbanot are not intrinsically significant, but were necessitated due
to the strong pagan influence to which Benei Yisrael had been exposed. The Ramban vehemently disputes the
Rambam’s theory, and insists that the sacrifices required by the Torah indeed
have inherent value, and do not simply fill the need to provide an alternative
to paganism. He explains that the
procedures done to the animal sacrifice reflect the consequences that a sinner
deserves on account of his wrongdoing, thus leading him to repentance. The Ramban then proceeds to present an
additional perspective on sacrifices “al derekh ha-emet” (according to mystical
teachings).
The Meshekh Chokhma suggests
a “compromise” position of sorts between these two views of the Rambam and the
Ramban. He writes that the
fundamental reason and purpose of the korbanot depend
upon the circumstances. In the
times of the Beit Ha-mikdash, when sacrificial offerings were
allowed only in the Temple, the sacrifices were intrinsically
significant as a vehicle by which Benei Yisrael drew closer to God. However, as the Mishnayot relate toward
the end of Masekhet Zevachim, there were two periods when Benei Yisrael
were permitted to offer sacrifices on bamot – private altars – and were not required to
bring their sacrifices specifically to a central location. Immediately after Benei Yisrael crossed into Eretz Yisrael, the Mishkan was positioned
in Gilgal, but without the ark.
Under these circumstances, sacrifices were allowed on bamot. This occurred again after the
destruction of the Sanctuary in Shilo.
From then until the Temple was built, private altars were allowed
because the ark was not in the Mishkan.
The Meshekh Chokhma contends that offering sacrifices on
bamot served the purpose mentioned by the Rambam, but not the purposes
mentioned by the Ramban. Meaning,
these sacrifices did not bear inherent religious significance, and were
sanctioned only as a response, of sorts, to paganism. Sacrifices in the Mishkan and
Beit Ha-mikdash, however, were inherently significant as a medium of
fostering a close relationship between the Almighty and His nation. In this vein the Meshekh
Chokhma explains a series of
verses in Sefer Tehillim (51:18,20-21): “For You do not desire that I give a
sacrifice; You do not want a burnt-offering… May it please You to make Zion prosper; build the walls of Jerusalem. Then shall You desire sacrifices offered
in righteousness, burnt and whole offerings…” David here asserts that God does not
desire sacrifices until “the walls of Jerusalem
are built,” meaning, until the Temple is erected. As long as sacrifices are brought on
private altars, God does not desire the offering of sacrifices, even if He
allows and sanctions them. It is
only after the Temple’s construction that God desires
Benei Yisrael’s sacrificial
offerings.
Toward the end of his discussion, the Meshekh Chokhma makes
reference to a passage in the Zohar in Parashat Mishpatim, stating that
this passage bears relevance to his theory. The passage to which the Meshekh
Chokhma refers (as noted by Rav Shimon Diskin in his Mas’at Moshe)
discusses one of the aforementioned verses in Tehillim: “For You do not desire that I give an
offering; You do not want a burnt-offering.” The Zohar notes that, as we know from Parashat
Vayikra, God certainly wants Benei
Yisrael to bring sacrifices. What this verse means, the
Zohar explains, is that God does not want us to offer sacrifices
to the divine Name of Elokim, which denotes the divine attribute of
strict justice. He desires our
sacrifices only when we offer them to the divine Name of Havaya,
which represents the divine attribute of kindness. (See also Menachot 110a and Ramban to
Vayikra 1:9.)
It appears that the Meshekh
Chokhma understood the Zohar’s comments as expressing the
distinction he drew between sacrifices offered on bamot and sacrifices offered in the Beit Ha-mikdash.
The situation of heter
bamot, when there is no
centralized location for offering sacrifices, is one of distance between God and
Benei Yisrael.
Under such circumstances, God does not truly desire our sacrifices. He sanctions them and accepts them for
the reason discussed by the Rambam, as a necessary means of rejecting idolatrous
worship. Essentially, however,
sacrifices in these times of distance are not desirable. As David writes there in Tehillim, “For
You do not desire that I give an offering; You do not want a
burnt-offering. The offerings of
Elokim are a broken spirit; a broken, despondent
heart will not be despised by Elokim.”
In situations characterized by the divine Name of Elokim –
the attribute of justice and distance between God and Am Yisrael –
God wants us to sacrifice our spirits, not animals. But in the times of the Beit
Ha-mikdash, when the relationship between the Almighty and Am Yisrael
is one of closeness and affection, then He indeed desires our sacrificial
offerings. He lovingly accepts our
offerings as a person rejoices over a gift received from his dear friend. Korbanot offered during periods
of closeness are looked upon as expressions of love and devotion. It is thus only once the Temple is built and God
“takes residence” within it that He “desires sacrifices offered in righteousness,
burnt and whole offerings…”
Wednesday
The first topic discussed in Parashat Vayikra is the korban ola, or
burnt-offering, the voluntary sacrifice that was entirely burned on the
altar. The Torah instructs that the
kohanim must
skin the slaughtered animal and dissect it (“hefshet ve-nitu’ach”), at
which point the various parts of the animal are arranged on the fire on the
altar. Interestingly, the Torah
writes before instructing that the animal parts be placed on the altar, “The
sons of Aharon, the kohanim shall
place fire on the altar, and shall arrange wood on the fire” (1:7). This refers to the halakha known as
the ma’arakha, the
logs of wood that the kohanim were
instructed to place on the altar each day for the purpose of sustaining the fire
(see Vayikra 6:5). The obvious
question arises as to why the Torah makes mention of this halakha here, in
the context of the instructions regarding the voluntary ola
offering.
The Ramban, in his Torah commentary, explains that the Torah sought to
distinguish between the voluntary ola offering
and the tamid, the mandatory ola sacrifice
that was brought twice each day. As
the Gemara discusses in Masekhet Yoma (33a), the kohanim were required to
arrange wood on the altar each morning before tending to the morning tamid sacrifice. One might have thought that before every
personal, voluntary tamid, too, it was required to add firewood to
the altar before the kohanim slaughter the sacrifice. The Torah therefore speaks of the
ma’arakha only after it describes the procedure of
slaughtering, skinning and dissecting the korban, indicating that the kohanim do not have to add firewood to the altar
before they begin tending to the ola.
Still, the question remains as to why this verse is necessary at
all. As Malbim notes, arranging the
ma’arakha was done
each morning so there would be sufficient firewood for the day’s offerings, and,
in any event, the kohanim were
required to ensure a constant presence of fire on the altar (“eish tamid tukad al ha-mizbei’ach lo
tikhbeh” –
Vayikra 6:6). There was thus always
a fire on the altar. Why, then, did
the Torah write that the kohanim must
place wood upon the altar before placing a voluntary ola offering on the
altar?
Rashi, in his commentary to Masekhet Yoma (27b), suggests a simple
explanation of this verse. He
writes that the Torah actually refers here to the arranging of the
ma’arakha that took place each morning, before the offering of the
tamid. Before the Torah
could command placing an animal sacrifice upon the altar where it would be
burned, it must first inform us that a fire would be constantly burning on the
altar. The command regarding the
ma’arakha is presented only later, in Parashat Tzav, and therefore the Torah
interjected here in Parashat Vayikra with a brief comment that the
kohanim were required to place a large pile of wood on the altar each
morning in order to sustain the fire.
This information was necessary for us to know before the Torah could then
proceed to command that the fats and meat of the ola must be burned on
the altar.
Malbim suggests a different explanation. According to one view in the Torat
Kohanim (Tzav, 2:10), during the forty years in the wilderness, the
kohanim would extinguish the fire on the altar when the time came to
disembark and journey. (According
to the other view, the flame continued burning even during travel.) If so, Malbim writes, then we could
perhaps explain this verse here in Parashat Vayikra. It may have happened on occasion that
the nation would encamp during the afternoon hours, after the final time for
offering the morning tamid
sacrifice, and a person would then show up in the Mishkan with a voluntary ola offering. In such a situation, there was no fire
on the altar to burn the sacrifice, since the normal rituals, including placing
the ma’arakha, had not been performed that day. Regarding such a situation, perhaps, the
Torah writes that the kohanim must first place wood on the altar and
kindle a flame before they proceed to place the sacrifice on the altar. Although normally this would not be
necessary, since in any event the kohanim ensured a constant presence of fire on the
altar, it became necessary in the situation of midday encampment, when an
individual brought an ola before the fire on the altar was
rekindled.
Thursday
Parashat Vayikra begins with a discussion of the korbenot nedava,
personal voluntary sacrifices which people had the option of bringing to the
Mishkan (the
ola,
mincha and
shelamim). God introduces these laws by telling
Moshe, “Adam ki yakriv mikem korban
le-Hashem…” (“A
person among you who offers a sacrifice to the Lord…” – 1:3). Rashi, citing the Midrash (Vayikra
Rabba 2:7), notes the Torah’s use of the word adam (“person”) in this
context. According to the Midrash,
the Torah here alludes to Adam, who offered a sacrifice to God – a sacrifice
which, in a certain sense, serves as a paradigm that all future sacrifices
should follow. Meaning, as the
Midrash comments, Adam offered his sacrifice before any other person was
created, such that the entire world was indisputably in his possession. It was not possible for Adam to offer a
stolen animal as a sacrifice, because, quite simply, there was nobody from whom
he could have stolen. By using the
word “adam” in the context of the korbanot, the Torah indicates
that all sacrifices must resemble Adam’s sacrifice, and a stolen sacrifice is
disqualified.
This halakha, of course, is readily understandable, and warns
against the hypocrisy of trying to serve God while mistreating other
people. We might wonder, however,
why specifically the situation of Adam was invoked as the paradigm through which
this halakha conveyed. Adam’s case was clearly extreme. Even if he had been corrupt, he did not
have the possibility of offering a stolen animal. In fact, one could argue that Adam does
not serve as an accurate example in this regard, since he was unable to offer a
stolen animal, and thus his sacrifice does not necessarily attest to his
integrity and the sincerity of his offering. How might we explain the paradigm of
Adam’s sacrifice?
Possibly, the Midrash seeks to teach us not only that we may not offer a
stolen sacrifice, but that we should not offer voluntary sacrifices at all until
we are incapable of stealing.
Chazal pointed
to Adam’s offering as the paradigmatic example of a voluntary sacrifice
specifically because it was impossible for him to steal – and this is precisely
the kind of person one must be before he decides to bring a voluntary
sacrifice. Before we undertake
voluntary religious measures such as sacrificial offerings, we must first do
something which Chazal deemed
far more basic – work on our characters to ensure that we are honest and
upright. We have no business
spending large sums of money on voluntary animal sacrifices if we are able to
seriously consider stealing from other people. God welcomes voluntary sacrifices only
from “Adam,” from people who have achieved a basic level of moral and ethical
conduct. Honesty and integrity must
come before voluntary sacrifices, and the Torah therefore speaks of sacrifices
being offered only by “Adam” – by those who would not even contemplate the
possibility of cheating other people.
Friday
One of the voluntary korbanot
discussed in Parashat Vayikra is the mincha
offering, which consisted of flour and oil (2:1-16). Throughout most of its discussion of
this offering, the Torah speaks of the person bringing the sacrifice in second
person, as though God speaks directly to him: “If you offer a mincha
offering baked in an oven… And if your sacrifice is a mincha in a frying
pan… Any mincha that you offer to the Lord shall not be made into
leaven…” Naturally, in reference to
the kohen ministering to the offering, the Torah speaks in third person
(“The kohen shall separate from the mincha a handful from it… And the leftovers from the mincha
shall be for Aharon and his sons…”).
Since the Torah speaks to the person bringing the sacrifice, it refers to
the kohanim in third person.
There is, however, one verse in this section which is written in the
second person form, despite the fact that it appears to be directed toward the
kohanim: “And you shall season all your meal
offerings with salt…” (2:13). This
verse requires that salt be added to all sacrifices, a job that was, presumably,
assigned to the kohanim.
As they were the ones who tended to the offerings, it is reasonable to
assume that it was their responsibility to add salt. Why, then, does the Torah direct this
command to the individual offering the sacrifice?
One answer, perhaps, is that the verse refers to the individual’s
responsibility to provide salt along with the sacrifice. Although it was the kohanim who
actually poured the salt over the offering as part of the sacrificial ritual,
the person bringing the sacrifice bore the responsibility to provide salt for
this person.
The Ramban, however, in his commentary to this verse, explains
differently, claiming that “melicha kesheira be-zar” – even a non-kohen can perform the act of melicha, salting the sacrifice. Although the salting was done as part of
the sacrificial rituals, it differed from the other stages of the process in
that it could be performed by a non-kohen.
The Torah therefore directed this instruction toward the person bringing
the sacrifice, to indicate that this part of the ritual did not require a
kohen.
Rav Eliezer Lipman Lichtenstein, in his Sheim
Olam
commentary to Sefer Vayikra (Warsaw, 1877), questions the Ramban’s comments
in light of the Gemara’s discussion in Masekhet Sota (14b) of the procedure for
offering the mincha. Citing the Tosefta (Menachot, chapter
1), the Gemara specifies each step in the process of offering a korban
mincha,
including the adding of salt. It is
clear from the Gemara that melicha
took place only after the korban
was brought to the top of the altar.
No non-kohen
was ever permitted to approach the altar, and it therefore seems inconceivable
that a non-kohen
could perform melicha
on a sacrifice. Indeed, the Gemara
in Masekhet Menachot (20a) initially considers a situation where a
non-kohen salts a sacrifice, and it then immediately rejects such a
possibility, noting that a non-kohen is not allowed to approach the
altar. The Ramban’s comments thus
seem, at first glance, to run in opposition to the Gemara.
In defense of the Ramban’s remarks, the Sheim Olam suggests that
although in practice the salting took place atop the altar, it could, strictly
speaking, be done earlier, before the sacrifice is brought upon the altar. He notes that after the Gemara in
Masekhet Sota cites the Tosefta’s outline of the procedure for offering the mincha sacrifice, the Gemara goes
through each step and identifies its Biblical source. It shows where the Torah mentions or
alludes to each halakha
concerning the mincha offering listed in the Tosefta. Curiously, however, the Gemara does not
identify the source requiring performing melicha specifically on top of the altar. Elsewhere in the Talmud, the Sheim Olam observes, the Gemara provides the Biblical
source requiring performing certain rituals specifically on top of the altar
(Yoma 45a regarding the lighting of the alita wood; and Zevachim 65a regarding melika). The absence of any Biblical source to
this effect with regard to melicha might suggest that according to Torah
law, the salting does not have to be
performed after the sacrifice is placed on the altar. Strictly speaking, it appears, the melicha may be done even earlier, but Chazal enacted that it should be performed only
once the offering is on the altar.
Therefore, the Ramban may indeed be correct in asserting that, as far as
Torah law is concerned, melicha could be performed by a non-kohen.
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