Subject: Parashat Vayikra 5758 - "The Sacrificial Service"
Date: Fri, 3 Apr 1998 00:25:56 +0000
To: "Parasha-Page List"<heb_roots_chr@geocities.com>
From: Mordecai Kornfeld <kornfeld@netvision.net.il>
To: Intriguing glimpses into the weekly Torah reading and Jewish holidays <parasha-page@virtual.co.il>
Subject: Parashat Vayikra 5758 - "The Sacrificial Service"
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The Weekly Internet
P * A * R * A * S * H * A - P * A * G * E
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by Mordecai Kornfeld
of Har Nof, Jerusalem
(kornfeld@virtual.co.il)
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PARASHAT VAYIKRA 5758
THE SACRIFICIAL SERVICE
This week's Parasha introduces us to the details and intricacies of
the sacrificial service, as practiced in the Mishkan (Tabernacle) and later
in the Holy Temple. A good deal of the ensuing Torah portions dwell on this
theme, listing the circumstances under which each of the various sacrifices
must or may be brought, and the exact manner in which each of them were
offered. In general, after an animal was slaughtered its blood was
sprinkled on the sides of the Mizbe'ach (altar), certain of its fats were
removed and burned on the top of the Mizbe'ach, and the remainder of the
animal was eaten either by the Kohanim that were serving in the Mikdash or
by the one who offered the sacrifice (depending upon the nature of the
sacrifice).
Although this practice may seem bizarre to the uninitiated, the
early commentaries point out the profound and enduring effect that offering
a sacrifice has on a sinner. Man, like animal, is a physical organism of
flesh and blood. Both are driven by their lusts and emotions; all that
separates man from animal is his intellect. When a person sins because he
allows his desires to get the better of his intellect, he puts himself on
equal footing with the animal. It is necessary to impress upon such a
person the futility of physical existence which is not led by the mind's
rational judgment. This is accomplished by having him offer a sacrifice.
The sinner brings a body of flesh and blood, like his own, to the
Mikdash. There, he slaughters it and burns it on the altar -- much as he
allowed his own body to be "burned" by the fire of desire (Rabeinu Bachye
1:9). The blood is sprinkled on the altar and the intestines and fats (the
vehicles of desire) are burned, to demonstrate "there, but for the grace of
G-d, go I" (Ramban 1:8). It is thus vividly portrayed to him that a body
without a mind is valueless (Chinuch, Mitzvah #95). The meat of the
sacrifice provides sustenance for the Kohanim, educators of the people and
purveyors of the Torah (Devarim 33:10), who then pray for the complete
atonement of the sinner (Ramban).
This is one approach to the sacrificial service. Other approaches,
ranging from the philosophical to the mystical, have been proposed as well,
each shedding light on yet another aspect of the Temple service.
Particularly intriguing is that of the Rambam.
II
In his Guide to the Perplexed (3:46), the Rambam explains that the
nations of the world that worshipped animals generally worshipped one of
three domestic animals: either sheep (as did the Egyptians, Targum Onkeles
Shemot 8:22), goats (as in Vayikra 17:7) or cows (as in India, until
today). In order to remove any reverent thoughts for these animals from
Jewish minds, Hashem commanded us to take specifically these three animals,
and to slaughter them and burn them on the Mizbe'ach. (In ch. 3:32 of the
Guide, the Rambam offers yet another approach to the matter of sacrifices.)
Ramban (1:8), however, finds this approach absolutely unacceptable.
It is unthinkable to assume that the purpose of sacrifices is no more than
to demonstrate the absurdity of the foolish practices of idolaters!
Besides, we find that before any idolaters began serving animals, animal
sacrifices were offered by Adam (Shabbat 28b), his sons (Bereishit 4:4) and
Noach (Bereishit 8:20). How can the Rambam state that sacrifices only
became necessary after people began to deify animals?
Perhaps the answer to these questions lies in a better
understanding of what prompted people to deify animals in the first place.
Rabeinu Bachye (1:9) explains that the Egytians realized the great benefit
that one derives from the wool, offspring and milk of sheep. In the words
of Chazal (Rashi Devarim 7:13), "Why are [sheep] called 'Ashterot' (ibid.)?
Because the make their owners rich (Me'ashrot)!" The same applies to goats,
and to cows -- which provide not only milk and offspring but plow the
fields as well, thus producing a large proportion of the daily rations. The
nations deified these animals in an attempt to appeal to the powers of
sustenance that they perceived in them. (This is not dissimilar from the
manner in which people today often put considerable amounts of time and
effort into a particular non-Torah mode of behavior, convinced that it will
bring them "true happiness and peace of mind.")
We, who know that Hashem provides us with our livelihood and no
other, do not attribute any supernatural powers to such animals. They are
simply the vehicles through which the Omnipotent One provides us with our
daily needs, and have no power unto themselves. Even in the absence of
actual idol-worship, the sacrificial service is necessary as a declaration
that we "know the hand that is feeding us." By offering these animals on
the altar in Hashem's service, we are declaring that He is the G-d of G-ds
and all that we have is from Him alone. As such, the sacrificial service
relates to more than just the folly of misguided nations; it denotes that
we realize Who has granted us all that we have. It was certainly
appropriate even for Adam and Noach to offer animal sacrifices.
III
The Rambam (ibid.) adds a reason for specifically offering
goat-sacrifices on the first day of the lunar month and on Mo'adim (Jewish
holidays). Citing a Midrash (see Yalkut Shimoni, Shemini, 1:521), the
Rambam tells us that goats were brought for these, and other, public sin
offerings in order to atone for the sin our grandfathers sinned by selling
Yosef and dipping his cloak into the blood of a *goat* (to fool his father,
Bereishit 37:31). By constantly bringing up this sin, we demonstrate how
long lasting the effects of sin can be, discouraging future sins.
Haga'on Rav Yehoshua Leib Diskin used this theme to explain a
Gemara in Yoma (42a). The Gemara tells us that a red ribbon of two
Sela-weights was tied to the scapegoat on Yom Kippur, and when the Jews
achieved a full atonement through the scapegoat it turned white. Perhaps,
Rav Diskin explains, this was because the scapegoat, like the other goats
offered on the holidays, was meant to atone for the sin of selling Yosef.
According to the Gemara (Shabbos 10b), the cloak given Yosef by his father
which aroused the brothers' jealousy for Yosef (Bereishit 37:3) weighed
exactly two Sela-weights more than those of his brothers. The two
Sela-weight red ribbon turned white to demonstrate that Hashem would
forgive the nation for persecuting Yosef because of his two Sela-weight
cloak!
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