TZAV
Torah
Jeremiah 7:21-8:3, 9:22-23
THE ALTAR FIRE
Parshas TZAV is taken up with sacrificial
laws and rituals. For many people, it is easier to relate to narrative portions
of the Torah or commandments that apply in our day than to those dealing with
The same world that
resents two daily lambs on G-d's Altar in
The
Maybe the reason why some feel uncomfortable about the sacrificial ritual is precisely because it presents our existential situation so starkly in the form of the animal blood, fat and other offerings on the Altar. It is a fundamental law of creation that higher life forms consume lower forms of life in order to subsist. When a lower form of life is eaten and ingested by a higher form, the lower life-form is "elevated" in the sense of actually turning into the body and feeding the activities of the higher life-form. As humans, our blood and fat are made up of materials derived from other, lower levels of existence, mineral, vegetable and animal. Our physical life-functions come to "feed" and serve a higher life-form: the soul.
The
The body requires tending
in order to serve as an "altar" for the service of God, just as the
Keeping the Altar fire stoked was the daily task of the priests. So each one of us has the task of keeping the "altar" of the body, the digestive system and the liver, properly stoked with the right nutrients in the right quantities. As priests of our own bodies, our aim must be to keep the fire of the soul burning brightly every day -- as a "fire offering, a sweet savor for HaShem".
Last week's parshah of
VAYIKRA introduced the subject of sacrifices by setting forth all of the
different categories of sacrifices and the various animals, birds or produce
that are to be brought in each case. The major part of our present parshah,
TZAV, is a continuation of the subject of sacrifices. TZAV explains the
specific procedures accompanying the actual offering of the each of the
different kinds of sacrifices. The parshah begins with the daily procedure of
removing the Altar ashes because this was the start of the
TZAV continues with the procedures accompanying the MINCHAH-flour offering, the CHATAS-Sin and ASHAM-Guilt offerings, the SHELAMIM-Peace Offering, and another specific kind of peace offering: the TODAH-Thanksgiving Offering for those who have been miraculously delivered from serious danger (illness, captivity, shipwreck or being lost in the wilderness).
Some sacrifices, such as the OLAH-Whole-burned offerings and certain other offerings, were "consumed" only on the Altar and were not permitted to be consumed by any humans. However, the priests had a share in eating Sin, Guilt and Minchah offerings, as well as the Peace and Thanksgiving offerings. In the case of the last two, the person who brings the offering also has a share in it together with his dear ones.
The fact that a priest can eat from a sin or guilt-offering and thereby accomplish atonement for the sinner is a wonder. So too is the eating of an animal to make peace between man and G-d. What distinguishes holy eating from animalistic eating for the sake of pure self-gratification is the motive of the person who is eating -- his KAVANAH (= intention). Having the correct intention is a recurrent theme in our parshah. The priest has to have the correct intention at every stage in the sacrificial ritual.
So too, when we eat, everything depends on our intention. The parshah is teaching us to eat with the intention of stoking the Altar of G-d with nutrients that we can elevate to His service by using this energy for our prayers and our mitzvot day by day. The blessings we make before and after eating serve us to focus upon this intention.
Eating may serve as a means of celebrating, as in the case of the TODAH-Thanksgiving offering. The rabbis stated that in the future, this is the one kind of personal offering that will remain. (Since people will be cleansed of sin, there will be no more place for sin and guilt offerings.) May we be worthy of offering the THANKSGIVING PEACE-OFFERING in the rebuilt HOLY TEMPLE in order to celebrate the true end of war and the inauguration of genuine peace with the coming of MELECH HAMASHIACH very soon in our times. Amen.
Shabbat Shalom!!!
