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Saturday, March 29, 2025

PARSHAS VAYIKRA, 1:1- 5:26

 PARSHAS VAYIKRA, 1:1- 5:26

 We start a new Book this week, Vayikra ("and He called") or Leviticus.

 

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QUESTIONS FOR THE SHABBOS TABLE



Questions For The Sabbath Table contains snippets from the weekly Torah portion.

The goal of Questions For The Sabbath Table is to bring more Torah to English speakers living in Israel and abroad.

For some who have recently immigrated to Israel, there may be the nagging sentiment of being in a foreign country. These weekly essays are intended to do away with that sentiment, for you are not a stranger in a strange land.

And for those living abroad, it is a means to come closer to the Divine. If however you are living in the Land, you are already a step closer

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I have a compulsion for which I apologize.  In the words of Rav Kook, the 1st Chief Rabbi of Israel: I don't speak because I have the power to speak; I speak because I don't have the power to remain silent.”  

קְרָא בְגָ'רוֹן אַל-תַּחְשֹׂךְ, כַּשּׁוֹפָר הָרֵם קוֹלֶךָ; וְהַגֵּד לְעַמִּי פִּשְׁעָם, וּלְבֵית יַעֲקֹב חַטֹּאתָם
“Call with a בְגָ'רוֹן, do not spare, like a shofar raise your voice, and make known to My people their transgression, and to the house of Jacob their sins”.
Isaiah 58:1

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At Vayikra 1:2 it says:”When a person from you will sacrifice an offering to the Lord; from animals, from cattle or from the flock you shall sacrifice your offering”.

אָדָם כִּי-יַקְרִיב מִכֶּם קָרְבָּן, לַיהוָה--מִן-הַבְּהֵמָה, מִן-הַבָּקָר וּמִן-הַצֹּאן, תַּקְרִיבוּ, אֶת-קָרְבַּנְכֶם

Offering a sacrifice, in this case an animal, was the means for people at that time to come closer to God.


Rabbi Riskin expands on the term “from you” as meaning what does Hashem want from us?
He concludes that in making sacrifices today, Hashem wants us to give of ourselves, upfront and personal.

As of the th of March, since the start of the war against Hamas,  Israeli security forces have paid the ultimate sacrifice in defending our Land.

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This week’s parsha begins with the word Vayikra: א ויקר   On all Torah scrolls the letter א is small…Why?

It was always seen as a symbol of the intense modesty of Moshe. But there is another explanation of the small aleph that Rabbi Berel Wein teaches us:
Hashem is to be seen and heard in the small things in life and not only in the large, great events. Hashem tells Elijah that He is not to be found in the wind, the noise of a quake, the brightness of a burning fire but rather in the still, small voice, in the sound of a whisper and not of a shout.


The still, small voice is most representative of Hashem and his omnipotence. Science has shown us in our time that our physical appearance, if not even our longevity and health, lie in small almost invisible strands that make up our DNA. God calls out with a small aleph to his creatures – to see Him in every aspect of life, no matter how small and insignificant it may appear on its surface.

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The word “offering” or “sacrifice” is Korban or קָרְבָּןThe three letter root is קרב.
A verb having this root is לְהִתְקַרֵב , to come closer. Try squeezing out more meanings for קָרְבָּן.

Juggling the letters of the root yields the following possibilities:
רֵבקַ damn רקב decay ברק lightning בקר beef קַברֵ grave 

קַרֵב interior

Are we not the People of the Book, or what?

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In the Parsha there is a specific commandment, at 2:13, that the grain offering (the Minchah) requires salt. This is followed by a general statement that all sacrifices require salt, hence the custom to have salt at our Shabbos table where table is symbolic of the Altar on which sacrifices were placed.

וְכָל-קָרְבַּן מִנְחָתְךָ, בַּמֶּלַח תִּמְלָח, וְלֹא תַשְׁבִּית מֶלַח בְּרִית אֱלֹהֶיךָ, מֵעַל מִנְחָתֶךָ; עַל כָּל-קָרְבָּנְךָ, תַּקְרִיב מֶלחַ
“And every meal-offering of yours you shall season with salt; neither shall you omit the salt covenant of your God to be lacking from your meal-offerings; with all your offerings you shall offer salt”.

A question: What is the salt covenant?

Offerings must not lack salt. This is a commandment and as such does not need to be understood. (That does not mean that we should not try to understand the commandment.) The commandment is part of a covenant, the “salt covenant”. Apparently, the commandment a legally binding agreement that Hashem has imposed upon us. And Hashem’s obligations under the covenant, if any, are not stated.

In the Book of Numbers 18:19, God's covenant with the priesthood is said to be a covenant of salt. In the second book of Chronicles 13:5, God's covenant with the Davidic kings of Israel is also described as a covenant of salt. A covenant of salt most likely means that the covenant is a perpetual covenant, because of the use of salt as a preservative.

A question: What is it about salt that makes it so important to Hashem?


Try these facts to come up with your answer.  Oceans are salty.  They are comprised by about 35% salt.  98% of all the water on our planet is salty.  Lakes, rivers and underground water comprise only 2% of the Earth’s water.  All original life stemmed from sea water.  Layers of salt, “rock salt”, are only the remains of ocean water that has evaporated.

My answer: There is a fundamental connection, evidenced by salt,  between the creation of life and life’s Creator. 

 

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In Parsha Vayikra we are instructed about the variety of offerings that are to be made to Hashem. The first offering that is discussed is known as the 
עולה, which is not shared with the public or the priests (except for the hides), but is entirely dedicated to Hashem.


עולה has in its narrow meaning something that is raised up. It is no coincidence that an immigrant Israeli is also referred to as an עולהNative born Israelis, sabras as they are called, are great in their own right, but the עולה has special meaning to Hashem and for Israel. Be proud. Walk tall.

An
 עולה (Oleh) who in English-speaker is called an Anglo. An Anglo עולה is commonly depicted by native born Israelis as cowboys whether or not they hail from the USA, as they are often Canadians, Brits, Australians, South African and the like.

In 2015, Anglo’s living in Nahariya, Israel, dressed as cowboys marched in the city’s Purim parade.  Here’s what we looked like:

 



 In the USA in the 1800's the westward movement brought many distinct ethnicities all with their own. cultural traditions. In a way Israel is like that.

In terms of persistent stereotypes I like to think that cowboys represent the encouragement of  honorable behavior, respect and patriotism.



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What will the rebuilt Temple be like? Will we really offer animal sacrifices once again?

These are some views on the subject held by Rav Kook as interpreted by Channon Morison:

In the writings of the Kabbalists, we find a remarkable description of how the universe will look in the future.  All aspects of the universe will be elevated. Even the animals in that future era will be different. Animals will advance to the level of people today (Sha’ar Hamitzvot of the Ari z"l). Obviously, no sacrifice could be offered from such humanlike animals. At that time, there will no longer be strife and conflict between inhabitants of the world. 

Human beings for their own physical, moral, and spiritual needs will no longer take the lives of animals.

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More from Rav Kook?

Is fasting a substitute for bringing a sacrifice?

When the fourth-century scholar Rav Sheshet fasted, he would add the following request to his Amidah (Standing) prayer:

“Master of the Universe! You know that when the Temple stood, a person who sinned would bring a sacrifice. Although only the fats and blood would be offered on the altar, the person would be granted atonement.

Now I have fasted, and my fat and my blood have diminished. May it be Your Will that the decrease in my fat and my blood should be considered as if I offered them on the altar, and my offering was accepted.” (Berachot 17a)

Rav Sheshet’s prayer is inspiring, but it makes one wonder: Why should one go to the trouble of bringing a sacrifice if the same atonement may be achieved through fasting?

Coming forward to today let me add my 2 cents:

I probably fast five days a week. An individual fast may last as little as 12 hours or as much as 20 hours.  I drink water or tea or black coffee during a fast.

When you have fasted for 12 hours,  amazing things begin to happen:

Your insulin level begins to drop which is a guarantee of becoming healthier. Also a cascade of Human Growth Hormone begins, and this will strengthen your bones, increase your muscle mass, strengthen your immune system and slow down the aging process.  As the hours increase things get better and better.

At around 16 hours or more your body on a cellular level experiences a phenomenon called autophagy:

Autophagy is the body's way of cleaning out damaged cells, in order to regenerate newer, healthier cells. The body removes unnecessary or dysfunctional components Consider it as a form of recycling or waste management.


Now, relating fasting to sacrifice, think of this: Offering sacrifices was a form of purification.  You offer the sacrifice and you come out a better or "cleaner" person.

Fasting will do the same. 

 Rav Sheshet in the 4th century was on to something good.

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There are verses in Psalm 50 that relate to Hashem’s take on bringing Him sacrifices.

Every animal is already part of Hashem’s possession.

8 - I will not reprove you concerning your sacrifices, neither are your burnt offerings before Me constantly.

9 - I will not take from your household a bull, from your pens any goats.

10 - For all the beasts of the forest are Mine,…

Rashi: If you do not bring Me sacrifices, and your burnt offerings are not before Me constantly. I do not set My eyes and My heart on that.

14 - Slaughter for God a confession and pay the Most High your vows.

Rashi: Confess your deeds and return to Me. That is the sacrifice that I desire, and afterwards pay the Most High your vows, for then they will be accepted willingly.

15 - And call to Me on a day of distress; I will rescue you and you will honor Me.

12 - If I were hungry, I would not tell you, for the world and its fullness are Mine.

13 - Will I eat the flesh of bulls or do I drink the blood of he-goats?

Do not to think of the sacrifice as food for God, for God neither hungers nor eats. 


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Haftarah:

Ezekiel 45:18 - 46:15; Samuel I 20:18; Samuel I 20:42


Saturday, March 22, 2025

PEKUDEI, EXODUS 38:21 - 40:38, SHABBAT HACHODESH

 PEKUDEI, EXODUS 38:21 - 40:38, SHABBAT HACHODESH


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Pekudei (“Accountings Of”) is the final Torah reading in the Book of Exodus. It describes the making of priestly garments worn in the Mishkan (Tabernacle) and the completion of its construction. At Hashem's command, Moses erects the Mishkan and puts its vessels in place, and the Divine Presence fills the Mishkan.

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The Tabernacle in the Wilderness (illustration from the 1890 Holman Bible)

On this Shabbat we conclude the reading of Sefer Shemot with the concluding Parsha, Pekudei. 
There is a 19th century saying attributed to Lord Acton that goes as follows: “Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men..."

It would seem what is very much true now, was also true in the time of Moshe Rabbeinu.   Moshe, our greatest leader, gives an accounting before the people of the gifts and donations brought by B’nei Yisrael in conjunction with the construction of the Mishkan.  For Moshe there is complete transparency. 

By comparison, for Solomon there is enough information to condemn him for his travesty.

Psalm 24:3-4: “Who shall ascend into the mountain of the LORD? and who shall stand in His holy place?  He that hath clean hands, and a pure heart;  who hath not taken My name in vain, and hath not sworn deceitfully.”

This week’s parsha concludes with the Mishkan being completed. All its
components are brought to Moses, who erects it and anoints it with the holy anointing oil.  Moses initiates Aaron and his four sons into the priesthood. A cloud appears over the Mishkan, signifying the Divine Presence, the Shekinah, has come to dwell within it.  
May it continue to do so.
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At the conclusion pf Parshat Pekudei in Chapter 40 there are some very significant things going on:

The Mishkan has been completed and is ready to accommodate the Divine Presence. Although the Divine Presence is beyond our capacity to understand its meaning, It is a manifestation of Hashem in the form of a cloud that has chosen to dwell in the Mishkan.

34 - And the cloud covered the Tent of Meeting, and the glory of the Lord filled the Mishkan.

38 - For the cloud of the Lord was upon the Mishkan by day, and there was fire within it at night, before the eyes of the entire house of Israel in all their journeys.

There has been a downside in having Hashem being so close by. On one hand He has been our ultimate protection on all of our Journeys, but on the other hand, He knows when we have strayed from His path and the course corrections have not been pleasant.

Today the Land of Israel takes the place of the Mishkan. The Divine Presence is manifest. It has been made clear to us to our enemies what Jews must do in order to protect the Land from their evil intent. And so we do.

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https://www.rabbiwein.com/blog/post-2556.html

 In his essay, Rabbi Wein sets out the template for all further Jewish history. There are always ups and downs, plus and minuses in the national behavior of the Jewish people. The book of Shemot ends on a triumphant note – the spirit of God, so to speak, invests and dwells within the Jewish people, and the Mishkan/Tabernacle that they so lovingly built –promising an eternal relationship.

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We conclude our reading of the Book of Exodus with:
חזק חזק ונתחזק

Be strong; Be strong, and let us strengthen one another.

Chazak Chazak Ve-Nit’Chazek 

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The haftarah for the parashah when there is no special Sabbath is: for Sephardi Jews1 Kings 7:40–50 and for Ashkenazi Jews: 1 Kings 7:51–8:21

Both the parashah and the haftarah report the leader's construction of the holy place—Moses' setting up the Tabernacle, and Solomon's building of the Temple in Jerusalem. Both the parashah and the haftarah report that the builders finished the work: 

"Moses finished the work" וַיְכַל מֹשֶׁה, אֶת-הַמְּלָא in Exodus 40:33, 

 "so Hiram made an end of doing all the workוַיְכַל חִירָם, לַעֲשׂוֹת אֶת-כָּל-הַמְּלָאכָה in 1 Kings 7:40.

We all know about Moshe Rabbeinu. Hashem tells him to build the Mishkan.

Hiram is from the Tribe of Naftali and lives in Tyre. King Solomon entrusts him to fabricate the vessels in the Temple.

There is no comparison.

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This Shabbos is Shabbat Hachodesh. The Haftarah reading is from Ezekiel 45:18-25, 46:1-15; and 1Samuel 20:18, 20:42.

It concludes with Jonathan saying to David:

יְהֹוָ֞ה יִֽהְיֶ֣ה | בֵּינִ֣י וּבֵינֶ֗ךָ וּבֵ֥ין זַרְעִ֛י וּבֵ֥ין זַרְעֲךָ֖ עַד־עוֹלָֽם

Hashem shall be between me and you, and between my seed and your seed, forever.' 


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Shabbat HaChodesh



Shabbat HaChodesh
שבת החודש takes place on the Shabbat preceding the first of the Hebrew month of Nisan (or on the 1st of Nisan itself if it falls on Shabbat), during which Passover is celebrated. A special maftir, Exodus 12:1-20 (from Parashah Bo) is read, in which the laws of Passover are defined. On the first day of Nisan, God presented the first commandment of how to "sanctify the new moon" (Kiddush Hachodesh) for the onset of Rosh Chodesh and thus Nisan becomes the first month of the Jewish year (counting by months).

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Ki Tisa, Exodus 30:11-34:35

Ki Tisa, Exodus 30:11-34:35



Ki Tisa, what an action-packed special Parsha with so much to offer:
Half shekel census in which the participants have to pony-up a half shekel each.
Betzalel from the Tribe of Judah and Aholiav, אָהֳלִיאָב, from the Tribe of Dan take charge of the construction of the Mishkan sanctuary.
We are emphatically commanded to keep the Sabbath.
Moses ascends the mountain to be schooled in the Torah.
Aaron makes the Golden Calf, oh boy, and we start dancing around it.
Moses descends; he carries the stone tablets; he sees us worshiping the calf, and he smashes the tablets.
Hashem is disgusted with us and wants to start over with Moses’ family.
Moses tells Hashem, if you do not forgive us Jews, blot me out; we are forgiven.
Moses insists that Hashem and not an Angel accompany us to our Land; Hashem desists.
Moses ascends once more and prepares a second set of tablets.
When Moses rejoins us, his face is so radiant that it must be covered with a veil.

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Hashem instructs Moshe (30:12-16 ) as to how to take a census of the B’nai Yisrael. The census serves as a poll tax of males, aged 20 and up where each male contributes a half shekel weight (about 6 grams) of solid silver to be used in the construction of the Mishkan. It is not a simple head count; Hashem says that taking a census in any other manner will result in a plague.

"When you take the sum of the children of Israel according to their numbers, let each one give to the Lord an atonement for his soul when they are counted; then there will be no plague among them when they are counted.  This they shall give, everyone who goes through the counting: half a shekel according to the holy shekel..." 

The weight of a half-shekel was non-negotiable. Not only were people not allowed to give less, they weren’t allowed to give more. The money collected was to be used for building the Mishkan.
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Taking the Census

What does it mean: ... let each one give to the Lord an atonement for his soul when they are counted; then there will be no plague among them when they are counted.

It seems possible that that the half shekel count was conducted in part to know the size of our army.  In giving a half shekel soldier is giving Hashem a ransom for his soul.  Perhaps he would then receive His Divine help and protection in battle.

According to Rashi: for the evil eye has power over numbered things, and pestilence comes upon them, as we find in David’s time (II Sam. 24).
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The Adoration of the Golden Calf – picture from the Hortus deliciarum of Herrad of Landsberg (12th century)

At 32:1-14 we learn about the sin of the Golden Calf.
We have learned, 24:12 that Moses at Hashem's command ascended the mountain.  Before going up, accompanied by Joshua, Moses tells the Elders to wait for him and Joshua.  If there are matters to decide, Aaron and Chur will deal with them. Rashi assumes that Joshua only went part way up. 

After 40 days and nights when Moses had not returned the people had Aaron make a golden calf to which they offered sacrifices and sang and danced.

This raises some questions:
Where was our leadership?  I am thinking about Aaron, Chur, the Elders, Aaron's sons and the Tribe of Levi?  
Was it foreseeable that if Moses stayed away too long that there may be a problem?  Are we talking about poor planning?  
Did Hashem have any responsibility?

Some say that Chur was killed resisting the mob because his name is no longer mentioned.  But if you look hard in the Book of Numbers at 31:8 the name Chur comes up again as one of the slain Midianite kings.  This is when the expedition of a 1000 from each tribe, led by Pinchas, wiped out the Midianites and Bilaam.
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The gravity of the Sin of the Golden Calf should not be underestimated. It was not a foregone conclusion that Hashem would forgive the Israelites. Divine justice dictated that the Jewish nation deserved to be destroyed for this calamitous breach of faith.

Seven hundred years or so later, Jeroboam breaks away from the Kingdom of Judah and sets up the Kingdom of Israel with two temples of worship that housed Golden Calves. Not long after, the Kingdom of Israel is vanquished, and Israel goes into exile.

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In Parshat Ki Tisa at 32:19 we learn abut Moses destroying the two leukot, the tablets written by Hashem that contained the Ten Commandments:
וַיַּרְא אֶת-הָעֵגֶל, וּמְחֹלֹת; וַיִּחַר-אַף מֹשֶׁה, וַיַּשְׁלֵךְ מִיָּדָו אֶת-הַלֻּחֹת, וַיְשַׁבֵּר אֹתָם, תַּחַת הָהָר

“…he saw the calf and the dances, and Moses burned with anger, and he sent the tablets from his hands, and he shattered them at the foot of the mountain”.

Destroying something a holy object written by Hashem takes Chutzpah.




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Somehow or other the Patriarchs had learned to read and write in Ivrit, a language with a written alphabet that contains 22 letters.

However their family connection or roots was Babylonia, in the cities of Charan and Ur where the people used cuneiform, a non-alphabetic written language that called for 100's of symbols.



What do you think the leukot would have looked like had Avraham Avinu not made Aliyah?
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Let's look at the Sin of the Golden Calf from Hashem's point of view:

Was it a betrayal? Betrayal of trust?   treachery?

Perhaps the lowest point in the history of the Jewish people occurred shortly after the Torah’s revelation at Mount Sinai. Without Moses’ leadership and guidance, the people turned to idolatry, worshipping a golden calf.

Divine justice demanded that this terrible betrayal be punished severely, but at 32:11 Moses “pleaded before God” on their behalf.



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At 33:17-23, one of the more enigmatic passages in the Torah describes a mysterious encounter that took place following the Sin of the Golden Calf.

“Please let me have a vision of Your Glory!”

God replied that it is impossible for mortal man “to have a vision of Me and live.” However, God agreed to protect Moses in a mountain crevice as He “passed by.”

“You will then have a vision of My back. My face, however, will not be seen.”



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This week's haftorah, is taken from 1 Kings 18:1-39 (Sephardi Jews begin at verse 20).  On Mt. Carmel, a one hour drive from my home, Elijah the Prophet confronts idolatry in an effort to restore worship of of Hashem. Elijah has a successful face off confrontation with 850 prophets of Baal. 

However in addition to the main account that link to the Parsha, there is some background before and after the Haftarah portion worth mentioning:

The account takes place in the northern Kingdom of Israel ruled by King Ahab (אַחְאָב) and his Queen Jezebel (אִיזֶבֶל) in the 9th century BCE. Jezebel has been killing Prophets of Hashem.  Ahab has an Administrator whose name is Ovadiah.  He has hidden 100 of these Prophets, perhaps the first of what we call since the Holocaust a "righteous Gentile".

Ovadiah sets up a meeting between Ahab and Elijah, and we get into the heart of the confrontation.  Elijah puts on quite a show and is successful.  He then has the 850 Prophets of Baal taken down to the river where they are slain. Jezebel does not take these events lying down and Elijah has to run for his life. He goes South to the Kingdom of Judah and hides out in a cave in the wilderness, near Beersheva.

It is no easy thing to be a Prophet of Hashem.