Emor 5773 – Gilayon #796
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Parshat Emor
A person who touches these shall be unclean till
evening
and shall not eat of the sacred donations
Until he bathes his body in water,
And the sun sets and he becomes clean
(Vayikra 22:6-7)
Until he bathes his body in
water – Could it be that he may wash limb by limb? The text instructs "And
the sun sets and he becomes clean" – just as the setting sun cleanses his
entire body at once, so here, all at once.
(Hizkuni
Ibid. ibid.)
A person [lit. "a soul"]
who touches these shall be unclean till evening and shall not eat of the sacred
donations until he bathes his body in water, and the sun sets and he becomes clean,
and after he may eat of the sacred donations – This is to say that one who
touches impurity in a way that it touches his soul, that the sin will afflict
and flaw him to his very soul, then "he shall be unclean until
evening" [the impurity] embraces him and leads him until the day of
death, and even then he will not be able to partake of the celestial sacred
donations since he died in his wickedness, unless he bathes his body in the
waters of Torah or the tears of his eyes, then "the sun will set"
and then "he becomes clean", but if this not be the case, "the
other will he eat of the sacred donations" [the Hebrew for 'after' – achar' may also be read as 'acheyr' – 'the other'- sometimes a synonym
for 'the rejected]; instead of him eating of the celestial sacred donations, he
will eat of 'the other'- the shell of his sacred donations.
(Chatam Sofer ibid.
ibid)
This is the order to be followed
by the penitent: He bathes and emerges, eats of the ma'aser
–tithe – this is the basic repentance, the first level: repentance out of
awe, because the tithe implies awe as is written "So that you learn to
hold in awe", and the second level is "when the sun sets, he eats of
the teruma (the heave offering) , the
setting of the sun means that his repentance is through mesirut
nefesh (willingness to devote his life), for
his world becomes dark for him, as is written "until his sun set etc."
which refers to death, and it is written "because the sinning soul shall
die" and when one repents with mesirut
nefesh, it is said of him "and the sun sets
and becomes clean' and reaches the higher level of eating terumah,
which is the level of Kriat Shema – the recitation of the Shema,
as is written "From when do we read the Shema in
the evening" From when the priests enter to partake of their termuah', and when one performs a mitzvah
with mesirut nefesh¸
this is called the setting of the sun, and the third level is that when
he brings atonement he partakes of the sacred donations, the bringing of his
atonement is when he transforms the sin itself into a donation, as is written
that in repentance out of love intended transgressions are considered as
merits, and this is the highest level, the atonements comes on the eighth day
which is beyond nature, beyond the world which is only of seven days, and this
the place where the repentant stand etc., in this way the repentant reach the
level where the Children of Israel were before the transgression.
(Rabbi Avraham Mordecai Alter of Gur – Imrei Emmet – Parashat Emor 5666)
A priest with a blemish
Devorah Greiniman
Among the
instructions defining the behavior and activities of the priests, we find that
a cohen with a
defect may not participate in the holy ritual:
And the Lord
spoke to Moshe, saying, "Speak to Aharon,
saying, 'No man of your seed to their generations in whom there is a defect
shall come forward to offer his God's bread. (Vayikra 21:17)
Most
traditional commentators explain these words in a relatively perfunctory
manner. This restriction is disturbing, however, for a liberal society striving
to relate to all its members equally, even though they differ physically from
each other. Why should these priests, who perhaps yearn to serve in the holy
ritual as per their hereditary legacy, suffer discrimination because of
a defect which does not impair their ability to perform the service with less
skill than their brother priests? (In this article we do not deal with the
gender-based discrimination which characterizes the performance of the priests
and our attitude towards them until this very day).
Thinkers and
exegetes who have dealt with this issue attribute the exclusion of the defect
carrier to the representational function of the cohen in the sanctuary. Rashi,
in this context, refers us to the prophecy of Malachi, who compares the
grandeur of a pasha's court "'For every man who has a defect shall not
come close' – it is proper that he not come close, as in "When you present
a blind animal for sacrifice – it doesn't matter! When you present a lame or
sick one – it doesn't matter! Just offer it to your pasha: Will he accept you?
Will he show you favor? – said the Lord of Hosts'" (Malachi 1:8)
The
explanation given by RaSHaR Hirsh, which was perhaps
influenced by the winds of Romanticism which blew in Germany in his time, also
calls attention to what the cohen represents as
he performs the holy ritual: "The physical wholeness demanded [both of the
priest and of the offered animal] … expresses also the wholeness of our
devotion – and also the wholeness of the life which we merit in the proximity
of the Lord. The altar of the Lord was not erected for the sake of the broken
and shattered, the blind and lame, the cripple, the paining and the sick; not
for this was the altar built, that the tired person should drag himself up its
stairs and there find comfort for his mourning or miraculous cures for his infirmity.
It is that life in all its wholeness, its freshness and valor, should there be
sanctified to a life of God-serving activity; and thus will they merit God's
blessings of youthful vigor and the life force. Life and courage, not death and
weakness dwell at the altar of the Lord; He demands the devotion of the whole
man, man in his wholeness shall there rise up and blossom."
In our time,
Rabbi Yuval Cherlow, in a response presented on the "Moreshet" site, also takes a similar position: "Under
discussion is incompleteness, and it is His desire that the sanctuary service
be performed in wholeness, even in physical wholeness. Their defect is not an
indication of guilt. On the contrary, one may be the saint of the generation …
a priest with a defect cannot be considered one who is whole, expressing even
in his external wholeness the service in the sanctuary."
I happened to
read these passages when my family was watching an old film about an American
musical in the style of the 20's and 30's of the previous century – featuring
chorus lines of extravagantly attired male and female dancers executing
complex, closely-synchronized movements. In order to gain acceptance into the
musical, the female dancers had to exhibit not only their talents in song and dance,
but also their thighs. A leg deviating from the 'norm' would flaw the unified
appearance of the chorus line and detract from the play's perfection.
True, the priest
serving with splendor and proficiency in the temple is not comparable to a
dancer in a musical, but, I thought, this is exactly what was demanded of the
priest, to have a "whole" appearance, standard and not irregular, so
as not to blemish the grandeur and solemnity of the ceremonies which were
probably carefully choreographed, to the accompaniment of the song and playing
of the Levites. Anything less, according to the theories presented above, would
not do honor to the event, both in terms of the desire to worship the Lord in an
impressive and elegant ceremony, and also in terms of the impression that the
presentation was to make upon the observers.
It seems,
however, that this blemished priest did not lack purposeful occupation. According
to the midrash halacha in the Sifra (Vayikra, Tazria, Negaim, Chap.1). Even the priest with a defect was
eligible for sitting in judgment in matters of contagion and quarrel:
And he shall
be brought to Aharon the priest" – From this we
might infer only Aharon himself; from where do we learn other priests [are also eligible]? The text says: "the
priest". From where do we earn that even a blemished priest? The text
reads "of his sons" … An alternative exposition: What does
Scripture teach us in "Or to one of his sons the priests"? Because it
says "By their mouth shall be [determination] of every dispute and every
defect" – the Torah juxtaposed disputes and defects – [to teach us that]
just as defects [may be decided] by a priest with a blemish, so disputes [may
be decided] by a priest with a blemish; just as disputes may not [be
adjudicated by] a relative, so defects not by a relative.
We may also
surmise that particularly those priests not engaged in the ritual service were
more easily available for this occupation, one which demanded special
sensitivity. Expounding the passage (Vayikra 13:3): "And
the priest shall see the affliction on the skin of the body, and if the hair in
the affliction has turned white and the affliction seems deeper than the skin
of his body, it is skin blanch; when the priest sees it, he shall declare him
unclean", the Sifra infers from the words "when
the priest sees" – which seem redundant – that the priest must examine not
only the location of the affliction, but also the whole person who stands
before him. So explains R. Ovadia of Seforno: "And they shall instruct the afflicted to
inspect his behavior, and pray for himself, and the cohen shall also pray for him, and because they
determine the nature of every affliction they acquire a sharp eye for stages of
appearances in order to distinguish between types of affliction". Who,
better than one who suffers an affliction himself can develop the sensitivity
required for viewing the afflicted person as a whole person, not reaching
conclusions from only the clearly visible affliction but also providing
spiritual counsel?
The discussion
of the priests' wholeness extends beyond the service in the
(Megilla 4:7) we
learn: "A priest who has sores on his hands shall not raise his palms [to
bless the congregation]… because the congregation is looking at him". Here
the fear is not of a flaw in the grandeur of the event, but, on the contrary – we
are apprehensive that the attention of the supplicants will be shifted from the
benediction to the priest's irregular appearance. Despite this, the Talmud records
cases of priests with various blemishes who did raise their palms in the
synagogue. The Talmud reconciles: "This refers to a case where the priest
is well-known in his community." Inasmuch as inhabitants of his town were
familiar with him, the irregularity of his appearance did not interfere with
their attention. This reservation was incorporated into the halacha (and in addition, accepted
tradition became the covering of the priests' heads and hands with prayer
shawls to prevent their being seen by the congregation). From an article that
Rabbi Benny Lau penned on the subject, we learn from the Talmudic discussion
that it is society which determines the attitude towards 'different' people; it
has the power to exclude them or to include them.
What can be learned
from the above regarding the attitude towards those with physical irregularities
in our time? Today there is a commendable tendency to include persons whose bodies
are irregular in all social frameworks. Despite this, on public stages, in the
world of entertainment and the media, there is still worship of physical
perfection and of those possessing the young and "whole" appearance.
These tendencies can arouse in those who feel that their appearance is "flawed"
a yearning to be like "all the others" and pressures (internal and
environmental) to fashion the body (or the soul) in order to acquire the "accepted"
appearance. The halacha
dealing with the temple service of the blemished cohen
determines a boundary for such attempts in certain matters; one whose appearance
is unsuitable will not be accepted. But this is so only for a narrow and
external compartment of public life. There are, however, positions in life and
community, in which coping with such irregularities will perhaps make one
highly suitable – especially in terms of development of the necessary insight,
sensitivity and idealism. On the other hand, it is incumbent upon us all to develop
a society in which attention is not drawn to the "irregularity" of
the person with different appearance. We must accustom ourselves to seeing the
whole person who stands before us, even when we know that perfection – in
ourselves and in others–exists only in outward appearance.
Devorah Greiniman, editor, translator and author, is the general
editor of "Women:
A Journal of Women and Gender Studies in Judaism." She is a member of "Kehillat Yedidya" in
And God seeks the pursued"
"And
God seeks the pursued" (Kohellet 3:15) – Rav Huna said in the name of Rav Yosef: "Forever 'God seeks the pursued'. The
wicked pursues the righteous, "And God seeks the
pursued"; the wicked pursues the wicked, "And God
seeks the pursued"; and even when the righteous pursues the
wicked, "And God seeks the pursued". In every
case, "And God seeks the pursued". Said Rabbi Yehudah ben Rabbi Simon in the
name of Rabbi Yehudah ben
Rabbi Nehorai: "God always demands the blood of
the pursued from the pursuers. Know that this is so, for Hevel
was pursued by Cain, and The Holy One, Blessed Be He, chose Hevel,
as is written "God had regard for Hevel and
his gifts". Noah was pursued by his generation, and The Holy One,
Blessed Be He, chose Noah, as is written: "For you I have seen as
righteous before me in this generation." Avraham
was pursued by Nimrod, and The Holy One, Blessed Be He, chose Avraham, as is written, "You are the Lord God who
chose Avraham". Yitzhak was pursued by the
Philistines, and The Holy One, Blessed Be He, chose Yitzhak, as is written,
"For I have observed that God is with you." Yaakov was
pursued by Esav, and The Holy One, Blessed Be He,
chose Yaakov, as is written, "For God chose Yaakov for
himself." Yosef was pursued by his
brothers, and God chose Yosef, as is written, "He
imposed it as a decree upon Yosef." Moshe
was pursued by Pharaoh, and The Holy One, Blessed Be He, chose Moshe, as is written "…had not Moshe, his chosen
one."
pursued by Shaul, and The Holy One, Blessed Be He,
chose
he chose
servant." Shaul was pursued by
Philistines, and The Holy One, Blessed Be He, chose Shaul,
as is written, "Have you seen him whom God has chosen."
One, Blessed Be He, chose
as is written, "For you are a people holy to the Lord your God, your
God has chosen to be for him a specially-treasured people."
Rabbi
Eliezer ben Rabbi Yossi ben Zimra
said: "It is so also with offerings. Said The Holy One,
Blessed Be He: 'The ox is pursued by the lion, the
goat is pursued by the leopard, the sheep by the wolf; dnot
bring me offerings from the pursuers, but from the pursued, as is
written: "An ox ora sheep or a goat,
when it is born."
(Vayikra Rabba,
Chap. 27)
"And
an ox or a sheep – it and its young you are not to slay on one day."
Not
only was man commanded by the Torah to have pity and compassion upon man, but
also upon beast and fowl. On the one hand, this is for the good of the animals
themselves, for His mercy is upon all his creations. On the other hand, it is
for the benefit of man himself, in order that he instills in himself the
quality of mercy, and avoid the trait of cruelty.
(From, The Foundations of the Torah, Rabbi Shmuel
by Dr. Avraham Stahl z"l,
p.447).
Hassidim
relate:
The
story is told of Rebbi
of Lalov, who came on Rosh Hashanah to pay respect to
his rabbi, the "Seer" of
Before the [shofar] blasts, his fellow Hassidim
noticed that Rebbi
was not present. They went to his inn to seek him out. Upon arrival, they
discovered Rebbi
standing in the stable, feeding hay to the horses. The stablekeeper,
engaged in prayer and the shofar sounding, had
lingered at the synagogue, and had forgotten to give the horses fodder and
drink. Arose Rebbi
and claimed the mitzva for himself.
(Ibib, p.454)
They are not to make a bald spot
on their head, the edge of their beard they are not to shave off,
in their flesh they are not to incise an incision. Holy are they to be to their
god.
(Bemidbar 21:5-6)
"You shall live by them – and not die by
them"
Shaving smooth
and gashing are signs of submission; they are offered up to the god
of death, whose power fills the world. This enables us to understand why
these prohibitions were taught especially to the priests… ancient and modern
idolatry customarily associate religion with death. Only with the death of man
does the kingdom of the god flourish; dying and death are the main revelation
of the divinity; the lord is for them the god of death and not the god of life;
he takes life but does not give life; he sends death and its messengers –
sickness and poverty – so that man fear him, that he remember the power of the
god and the helplessness of the man. Therefore their temples stand alongside
graves, and the first place of their priest is near the corpse; in that place
where the eye is dimmed and heart broken, they find the proper soil to sow
religion. He who carries on his flesh the sign of death, the symbol of the
power of death which overcomes all – thus keeping us constantly aware of death
– is performing clearly a religious act… not like these are the
priests of Israel. Not so is the Torah of the God of Israel. Not so is
the religion of
The Lord, who teaches the priest his status is
most exalted revelation is not through the power of death, which ruptures
courage and life; He reveals himself in the power of life which liberates and
vitalizes, which lifts man to desire freedom and to live the life of eternity.
He does not teach man how to die, but how to live; He teaches him how to
conquer death while still alive, how he will overcome the lack of freedom, the
physical subjugation and the sensual weakness; how he will live every moment of
moral freedom, a life of thought and will, creativity and action and also of
pleasure; this is the Torah, and God sanctified His Temple for its dwelling
therefore is it said especially to the priests: "They shall not shave
smooth any part of their heads… let them not carry with them the
symbol of death; in their appearance let them preach the power of life,
not the power of death.
(Rabbi Shimshon Rafael Hirsch, Vayikra 21:5)
From pirke
avot, chapter 4
Whoever desires to be a hassid… let him observe that
which is written in Pirke Avot".
(Bava Kamma 30a)
Shmuel HaKattan [the Lesser] said: If
your enemy falls, do not exult; If he trips let your heart not rejoice, lest
the Lord see it and be displeased and avert His wrath from him.
(Proverbs 24:16-18)
Said Rabban
Gamliel to the sages: Is there anyone who knows how
to formulate the prayer against the heretics? Shmuel HaKattan composed it. At a later date, he forgot it.
(Bavli, Berachot
28b)
Whom did Rabban
Gamliel ask [to compose the prayer against the
heretics]? What did he ask of the man whose mind uplifted him to come and coin
this prayer?
The man whom Rabban
Gamliel appointed to formulate the prayer against the
heretics was totally devoted to hessed – to
kindness and benevolence. Hessed flowed
from him with force and courage. If the unfortunate events of the period caused
the Sages of Israel to deviate from the line of mercy and love for all, and to
stand up with bravery and amazing mettle against an inflexible and corrupt
movement which perverted the face and the nation and the faith, the permission
to attack was given only to a man whose soul drew from roots of heavenly
kindness and not from the sources of power. Only this man, whose entire soul
and might were planted by the streams of giving and of mercy, in whose soul
welled up the fountain of hessed, only
he was authorized to compose the prayer against the heretics and to ask of his
Father in Heaven the eradication of evil and the destruction of the evildoers.
They searched and found Shmuel HaKattan,
whose life's goal was expressed in the aphorism from the book of wisdom "If
your enemy falls, do not exult: If your enemy falls, do not exult." Shmuel, the righteous and the humble, the meek
and the unobtrusive, who had never tasted the taste of hate, who never longed
for measure-for-measure retribution, who never complained about another nor
bewailed insult and injustice caused him, he was chosen for this assignment
which was essential for the generation.
(From: Rabbi Y. B. Soloveitchik: B'sod HaYachid v'HaYachad – The Remnant of Their Scholars, edited
by Rabbi Dr. Pinhas Peli)
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