TETZAVEH
Torah
Haftara: Ezekiel 43:10-27.
LIFE IN
THE HOUSE
In last week's parshah of
TERUMAH, the Torah taught us the form and shape of the House of G-d with all
its vessels. In this week's parshah of TETZAVEH, we receive instructions about
the daily activities that are to take place in that House. The central core of
the parshah is taken up with detailed instructions about the making of the
garments of those who are to be the ministering attendants in the House -- Aaron
and his sons, the priests -- and about the sacrifices that were to be offered
during their seven-day initiation.
It may help us to grasp
the overall structure of TETZAVEH by again using the "sandwich" idea.
In this case, the top and bottom of the "sandwich" would be the
opening and closing sections of the parshah, which give instructions about the
"daily life" in the House. TETZAVEH starts by introducing in its two
opening verses (Ex. 27;20-21) the daily lighting of the Menorah candelabrum in
the House using the choicest oil -- this opening section would be one side of
the "sandwich". Then at the end of TETZAVEH (Ex. 29:38-45; 30:1-10)
we come to the other side of the "sandwich". This consists of the
sections dealing with the daily animal sacrifices, meal, oil and wine offerings
on the outside Altar, the pleasing fragrance (the incense burned in the House
on the golden Incense Altar) and finally (returning to the parshah's opening
theme), the daily lighting of the Menorah.
In the middle of this
"sandwich" are two considerably lengthier sections. The first gives
instructions in fine detail for the making of the garments of those who are to
minister in the House -- Aaron and his sons, the priests. The second gives the
detailed instructions for what was to be a one-time event in the Wilderness:
the 7-day initiation of Aaron and his sons into the priesthood that was to lead
up to the permanent induction of the Sanctuary on 1st Nissan. (Because of the
central importance of this day in the Torah, we will be returning several times
in later parshahs to the description of its events - in PEKUDEY at the end of
Exodus as well as in several parshahs in Leviticus and Numbers.)
* * *
THE
ATTENDANTS -- AARON AND HIS SONS
A basic assumption underlies
all sections of our present parshah of TETZAVEH, from beginning to end. The
assumption is that the attendants conducting the daily life of the House, about
whose daily activities, garments and induction-day we read in such detail, are
to be none other than Aaron and his sons.
Throughout our parshah,
the entire focus is upon Aaron and his sons, their activities, garments and
induction. Indeed it is a fact that the actual name of Moses does not appear
anywhere in our parshah from beginning to end, though he is addressed directly
in its opening words, VE-ATAH TETZAVEH, "And YOU shall command..."
and moreover, he was to be the central actor in the priests' induction. [It is
said that one reason why Moses' actual name was left out of this week's parshah
is because Moses was later to pray -- in next week's parshah Ex. 32:33 --
"blot me out from Your book.". However, that prayer had already been
answered before it was said, since G-d "blotted out" Moses name by
not writing it anywhere in this week's parshah!]
Addressing now the
central assumption -- that it is to be Aaron and his sons who will play the
role of ministers in the House of the dwelling of the Holy Presence:
It must be understood
that EIN MUKDAM O ME-UCHAR BATORAH: "There is no 'before' and 'after' in
the Torah". The reason for the appointment of Aaron and his sons and none
other to be the priests ministering in the House does not become apparent in
the Torah narrative until next week's parshah of KI TISA, with the account of
the sin of the Golden Calf. Yet even before the reason became manifest, their
appointment was already conceived in the mind and will of G-d prior to that
event, as we see from this week's parshah of TETZAVEH.
The first-born of the
Children of Israel were originally offered an opportunity to become the ones
who would serve as the priests. Indeed at the Giving of the Torah, it was the
first-born -- the "lads" (Ex. 24:5) -- of the Children of Israel who
officiated at the sacrifices, as we read in MISHPATIM. However, with the sin of
the Golden Calf (told next week in KI TISA), the first-born of the Children of
Israel failed the crucial test. From that time on, the Priesthood was given to
Aaron and his descendants as an hereditary gift for all time.
* * *
HEREDITARY
PRIESTHOOD
In an era when public
office in virtually all "advanced" countries is theoretically open to
all citizens, the role of an hereditary priesthood, which is at the very center
of the Torah's system of penitence -- the Sanctuary and
Much of Genesis is taken
up with disputes about who is to serve in the role of the "priest".
Cain struggled with Abel. Ishmael fought against Isaac. Esau fought against
Jacob. Reuven was the first-born, but Levi took the initiative,
In Exodus: Levy's second
son, Kehat, took priority over Levy's firstborn, Gershon. Amram was indeed
Kehat's firstborn, yet while the priesthood went to Amram's older son, Aaron,
the latter was secondary in prophecy to his younger brother, Moses. The
firstborn of the Children of Israel had a brief taste of the priesthood at the
time of the Giving of the Torah, 50 days after having been saved from the
plague that killed all the Egyptian firstborn. However the Israelite firstborn
were displaced from their "birth-right" -- hereditary priesthood forever
-- owing to the sin of the Golden Calf.
This raises the question
of the nature of the priesthood in Judaism, which is relevant to our parshah of
TETZAVEH, all of which is devoted to the daily duties of the priests, their
garments and their induction service.
It is true that the tribe
of Levi (who did not participate in the sin of the Golden Calf), and the
Kohanim are in many respects separate hereditary castes. Nevertheless, it
remains the case that the ideal social structure of the Israelites as envisaged
in the Torah is remarkably free of the social hierarchies and inequalities that
characterize even the most "democratic" societies.
In particular, Israelite
society is envisaged as one that should be free of any kind of extensive
hierarchical network of full-time religious functionaries who act as
intermediaries between the people and G-d, and whose service before their
passive congregants takes the place of the individual's personal relationship
with G-d.
This is true,
notwithstanding the fact that only the Kohanim (male descendants of Aaron), and
members of the tribe of Levy could actually serve in the
It is certainly correct
that the Kohanim were an hereditary priestly caste, who received TERUMAH, the
first gift from everyone's crops, as well as portions of meat, wool and various
other gifts. This is what they lived off. The purpose of providing the members
of this caste with their material needs was to enable them to devote themselves
to a higher-than-average level of devotion (as expressed in eating of Terumah
and sacrificial portions in ritual purity) and to the study of the Torah. It
was the Kohanim who were expected to be able to play the role of the Torah
judges (see Deuteronomy 19:17) in cases of disputes. They were also to play the
central role in the "diagnosis" and "purification" of
leprosy and other maladies (Leviticus Ch. 13ff.)
Nevertheless, it remains
true that despite their exclusive role in the
The Children of Israel
were envisaged as a nation of free, independent small land-owners, each farming
his own and sitting under his vine and fig-tree. Only in dire circumstances
would one be sold as a slave to another (as instituted in MISHPATIM). Even one
who fell into slavery would eventually go free at the end of seven years or in
the Jubilee year. In the seventh year, all debts were to be cancelled. Those
who had sold their land would get it back in the Jubilee year. The vision was
not of a country where most of the wealth is permanently concentrated in the
hands of a small elite.
Just as all of the
Children of Israel heard the First Commandment, so they were all commanded to
serve the One G-d, each through his own prayers and acts of service. The Torah
commands that all of the Children of Israel must be holy (Leviticus 19:2).
Everyone must strive to go in G-d's ways. Becoming a Nazirite is considered an
excess -- the Nazirite must bring a sin-offering! There are no monks in
Judaism.
Outside of the
What then is the role of
the hereditary Kohanim, whose
The key concept necessary
to understand the role of the Kohen, particularly that of the Kohen Gadol (High
Priest), is the concept of KAPARAH -- atonement. This and related concepts
recur several times in our parshah. The purpose of the precious stones that
were attached to the High Priest's shoulders and bore the names of the tribes
of
The institution of the
priesthood was not intended to replace individual attachment to G-d on the part
of each person through his own devotions. While the Kohanim are charged with
maintaining the Holy Temple as the central focus of Israelite and indeed world
religious life (for "My House is the House of Prayer for all the Nations),
their role in the devotional life of the individual is of significance
primarily when the individual, independent "citizen" TURNS ASIDE from
the path and falls into sin. He is then unable to help himself. If he is liable
to bring a sacrifice, he needs a Kohen to offer it for him. If he has what he
thinks is a leprous patch on his skin (a sign of a personal deficiency), he
needs a Kohen to make the determination and a Kohen to purify him.
The Kohen can play his
role as functionary in the
The rich, colorful ritual
garments of the High Priest embody this concept of separateness, sanctity and
atonement. So too, the induction of the priests during their Seven Days of
Initiation was characterized by separation, sanctity and the atonement
accomplished through the offering of the ox sin offering (atoning for the sin
of the Golden Calf) and the eating of peace offerings.
Atonement depends upon
the priestly garments and the priests' consumption of sacrificial portions. The
original sin of Adam -- of which the sin of the Golden Calf was a
"repetition" -- came about through eating. After Adam and Eve sinned,
G-d gave them CLOTHES in order to cover over their nakedness and begin the
process of atonement. The priests continue this process of atonement through
wearing their unique garments while eating their portion of the sinner's
sacrifice.
The hereditary
inheritance of the priesthood --
Through the merit of our
Torah study, may we see the
Shabbat Shalom!!! Happy
Purim!!!
Avraham Yehoshua Greenbaum
