The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
Student Summaries of Sichot of the Roshei Yeshiva
Yeshivat
Har Etzion
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PARASHAT
TZAV
SICHA
OF HARAV AHARON LICHTENSTEIN SHLIT"A
The Message of
the Burnt Offering
Summarized by
Shaul Barth
Translated by
Kaeren Fish
God spoke to
Moshe, saying: Command Aharon and his sons, saying, This is the teaching of the
burnt offering: it is the burnt offering which shall burn upon the altar all
night until the morning, and the fire of the altar shall burn within it. And the
kohen shall wear his linen garment, and shall wear his linen pants upon his
flesh, and he shall take up the ashes which the fire shall consume with the
burnt offering upon the altar, and place them beside the altar. And he shall
remove his garments and put on other garments, and he shall remove the ashes to
outside of the camp, to a clean place. And the fire upon the altar shall remain
burning on it; it shall not be extinguished. (Vayikra
6:1-6)
At first
glance, the opening verses of parashat Tzav seem very strange. Usually, the structure of a
parasha discussing some sort of sacrifice is that first the Torah
establishes the reason for bringing the sacrifice, and then details the process
by means of which the person achieves atonement. For example, in parashat
Metzora we are told: "This is the teaching concerning the metzora on
the day of his purification" (Vayikra 14:2). Furthermore, the Torah
generally details the entire sacrificial process in the order in which it is
performed. But in our
parasha, the Torah starts by saying, "This is the teaching concerning the
burnt offering" – and then suddenly introduces the process of taking up the
ashes, rather than the process involved in bringing a burnt offering. What is
the meaning of this?
We may say that
the burnt offering (korban ola) serves two functions. On the one hand,
the burnt offering is part of the general framework of sacrifices and, as such,
is there to serve man. In other words, a person has a problem, and the burnt
offering functions as the solution to his problem. But on the other hand, the
verses reveal that this sacrifice also has another role: it serves the altar.
"It is the burnt sacrifice that burns upon the altar… and the fire upon the
altar shall continue to burn within it; it shall not be extinguished." The
purpose of the burnt offering is to ensure a perpetual fire upon the altar.
Thus, at the beginning of parashat Tzav, the Torah chooses to present
first the function of the burnt offering as serving the altar, rather than as
serving man, unlike the format in all the other sacrifices.
As we know, the
burnt offering is the first sacrifice offered every morning upon the altar, and
it was preceded by clearing the altar from the ashes of the previous evening's
sacrifice, the service known as "raising up the ashes" (terumat
ha-deshen). The verses teach us that the kohen who took up the ashes then
had to change his clothing, because the work involved made him dirty; it could
not be performed in the uniform required for sacrificial service, but rather
required "work clothes." (These were not street clothes, but rather priestly
garments of lesser quality.) The Gemara (Yoma 23b) teaches that the
reason for the change of clothing is that one does not wear the same clothes to
pour a drink for one's master as one wears to boil a pot for his master.
Nevertheless, despite the fact that these are two different jobs, the Gemara
(Yoma 22a) teaches that a kohen who is not prepared to clean out the
ashes is not permitted to perform the sacrificial service,
either.
These laws may
be hinting at an important message. A person who wants to engage in Divine
service, to serve in God's world, cannot put his own personal interests before
the requirements of the task. A person who is not prepared to carry out the
unglamorous, tedious, taxing, dirty work of cleaning out the ashes is not worthy
of serving in the exalted capacity of offering the sacrificial service. For this
reason, it may be that when the Torah defines the purpose of the burnt offering,
it starts by telling us about the aspect of serving the altar; it presents God's
"needs," as it were, before man's needs. A person who is prepared to pour a
drink but is not prepared to boil the pot is not a true servant, and therefore
he is not worthy of pouring the drink.
We may apply
this idea to our own reality and say that a person who wants to live a life of
sanctity, in the shadow of God, must leave his own personal interests behind
general ones – whether Godly or communal. What defines us as servants of God is
our ability to put our personal desires aside when they collide with higher
values. This is what differentiates a person who is a servant of God from a
person who is a servant of himself.
(This sicha was
delivered at seuda shelishit, Shabbat parashat Tzav 5762
[2002].)