PARSHAS TETZAVEH, EXODUS 27:20–30:10, SHABBAT ZACHOR
Among other things in the Parshah we learn:
· The Menorah is to have an everlasting flame fed by pure olive oil, tended by Aaron, burning from morning to evening.
· The priestly garments are described as well as those of the Kohen Gadol.
· Instructions are given for the initiation of Aaron and his four sons.
· Instructions are given for the construction of the golden altar on which the incense will be burned.
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At 27:20 the Parshah begins,
“וְאַתָּה תְּצַוֶּה אֶת-בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל, וְיִקְחוּ אֵלֶיךָ שֶׁמֶן זַיִת זָךְ כָּתִית--לַמָּאוֹר: לְהַעֲלֹת נֵר, תָּמִיד
“And you shall command the children of Israel, and they shall take to you pure olive oil, crushed for lighting, to kindle the lamps continually"
But one thing is for sure: Whether represented by precious or semi-precious stones all the Children of Israel are treasured by Hashem.
At Reb Yitz’s weekly shiur on the Parsha,
he brought out some very interesting commentary:
Aaron the Kohen Gadol was required to
wear special garments when officiating in the Mishkan, particularly when he was
in the Holy of Holies which was only on Yom Kippur.
In contrast, Moshe spoke with Hashem in
the Holy of Holies at will and was not required to wear special clothing.
Going back to the time of Adam and Eve, before
they sinned they did not wear any clothing at all.
Fast forwarding to Aaron’s role in perpetuating the Sin of the Golden Calf, perhaps there is a connection between his sinful behavior and the requirement for him to wear special clothing when entering the Holy of Holies. And if you consider Moshe to be unblemished, he could wear what ever he wanted when speaking to Hashem.
At 28:30 Hashem says:
וְנָשָׂא אַהֲרֹן אֶת-מִשְׁפַּט בְּנֵי-יִשְׂרָאֵל עַל-לִבּוֹ, לִפְנֵי יְהוָה--תָּמִיד.
“…and Aaron shall bear the law of the children of Israel upon his heart before the LORD continually.”
Over the course of time, however the Kohen’s role has become at most a ceremonial one; it has been greatly diminished. We have picked up the slack, something foreseen by Hashem.
Consider Exodus 19:6 -
וְאַתֶּם תִּהְיוּ-לִי מַמְלֶכֶת כֹּהֲנִים, וְגוֹי קָדוֹשׁ
“And you shall be unto Me a kingdom of priests, and a holy nation…”
While once we were instructed by the Priests, now we have become as Priests and are expected to instruct the peoples of the world in righteous compassion and moral justice (paraphrasing from Rabbi Riskin’s words).
In Parshat Tetzaveh we learn that the Kohen Gadol wore two stones on his shoulders on which were engraved the names of the Tribes. These are the Shoham Stones....what are they?
Shoham is commonly thought to be a semi-precious gem called onyx. Onyx is either solid black or black with white stripes. It is mentioned in Sefer Bereishis (2:12) in conjunction with B'dellium, another mysterious substance: B'dellium may be a resin for making perfume or incense.
וּזְהַב הָאָרֶץ הַהִוא, טוֹב; שָׁם הַבְּדֹלַח, וְאֶבֶן
הַשֹּׁהַם
"And the gold of that land is good; there is the b'dellium and the onyx stone"
At 28:31-43 we learn about the clothing worn by the Kohen Gadol and by regular Kohanim:
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS REGARDING KOHANIM CLOTHING
Priests and Prophets were very different in their roles, despite the fact that some Prophets, most famously Ezekiel, were Priests also. The primary distinctions were:
1. The role of Priest was dynastic, that of Prophet was charismatic. Priests were the sons of Aaron. They were born into the role. Parenthood had no part in the role of the Prophet. Moses’ own children were not Prophets.
2. The Priest wore robes of office. There was no official uniform for a Prophet.
3. The priesthood was exclusively male; not so prophecy. The Talmud lists seven women who were Prophets: Sarah, Miriam, Deborah, Hannah, Abigail, Huldah and Esther.
4. The role of the Priest did not change over time. There was a precise annual timetable of sacrifices that did not vary from year to year. The Prophet by contrast could not know what their mission would be until God revealed it to them. Prophecy was never a matter of routine.
5. As a result, Prophet and Priest had different senses of time. Time for the Priest was what it was for Plato: the “moving image of eternity,”[3] a matter of everlasting recurrence and return. The Prophet lived in historical time. Their today was not the same as yesterday and tomorrow would be different again. One way of putting this is that the Priest heard the word of God for all time. The Prophet heard the word of God for this time.
6. The Priest was “holy” and therefore set apart from the people. He had to eat his food in a state of purity, and had to avoid contact with the dead. The Prophet by contrast often lived among the people and spoke a language they understood. Prophets could come from any social class.
7. The key words for the Priest were tahor, tamei, kodesh and chol: “pure”, “impure”, “sacred”, and “secular”. The key words for the Prophets were tzedek, mishpat, chessed and rachamim: “righteousness”, “justice”, “love”, and “compassion”. It is not that the Prophets were concerned with morality while the Priests were not. Some of the key moral imperatives, such as “You shall love your neighbour as yourself,” come from priestly sections of the Torah. It is rather that Priests think in terms of a moral order embedded in the structure of reality, sometimes called a “sacred ontology.”[4] Prophets tended to think not of things or acts in themselves but in terms of relationships between persons or social classes.
8. The task of the Priest is boundary maintenance. The key priestly verbs are le-havdil and le-horot, to distinguish one thing from another and apply the appropriate rules. Priests gave rulings, Prophets gave warnings.
9. There is nothing personal about the role of a Priest. If one – even a High Priest – was unable to officiate at a given service, another could be substituted. Prophecy was essentially personal. The Sages said that “no two Prophets prophesied in the same style” (Sanhedrin 89a). Hosea was not Amos. Isaiah was not Jeremiah. Each Prophet had a distinctive voice.
10. Priests constituted a religious establishment. The Prophets, at least those whose messages have been eternalised in Tanach, were not an establishment but an anti-establishment, critical of the powers-that-be.
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This Shabbat is called Shabbat Zachor, the Sabbath of Remembrance, שבת זכור. It is the Shabbat immediately preceding Purim. On Shabbat Zachor we read from Deuteronomy 25:17-19 which describes the attack by Amalek:
“You shall remember what Amalek did to you on the way, when you went out of Egypt, how he happened upon you on the way and cut off all the stragglers at your rear, when you were faint and weary, and he did not fear God.
Therefore, it will be, when the Lord your God grants you respite from all your enemies around [you] in the land which the Lord, your God, gives to you as an inheritance to possess, that you shall obliterate the remembrance of Amalek from beneath the heavens”.
“You shall not forget!”
There is a tradition from the Talmud that Haman, the antagonist of the Purim story, was descended from Amalek. The portion that is read on Shabbat includes a commandment to remember the attack by Amalek, and therefore at this public reading both men and women make a special effort to hear the reading.
We were entering a “bad neighborhood”. It was bad then and it is still bad today.
And there is a lesson to be learned in connection with a “bad neighborhood”:
Moshe should have known that there were stragglers who were vulnerable, and needed rear-guard protection. A leader is responsible for the well-being of his people. Moshe needed to learn this.
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