Grasp the Moment
• Torah.org
torah.org/torah-portion/legacy-5770-tzav/
Posted on April 2, 2020 (5780) By Rabbi Naftali Reich |
Series: Legacy | Level: Beginner
Not everyone has the privilege of saying “thank
you” to the Creator by bringing a thanksgiving offering to the Holy Temple. The Talmud
tells us that only people who were
recently delivered from extreme
danger – an ocean voyage, a desert
journey, a serious illness, a term of imprisonment – can bring this special
sacrifice.
Why is this so? Why can’t we
express our
gratitude for other momentous occasions in our lives by
bringing this selfsame thanksgiving offering?
Furthermore, we find an anomaly in the laws of this
sacrifice. The thanksgiving offering falls
into the general category of shelamim, peace offerings. However, we read
in this week’s Torah portion that
there is less time allowed for eating the meat of the sacrifice. The peace offering can be eaten for two days, but
the thanksgiving offering for only one day. Why does the Torah reduce the eating time of this sacrifice?
The answers to
these questions are rooted in the fundamental concepts of the sacrificial service. The purpose of the sacrifices is
to foster closeness between the Creator and ourselves. When we bring a sacrifice to the altar we are symbolically
offering ourselves up to Him, subsuming
our hearts, our minds, our souls, our very lives in the universal embrace of
the Divine Presence. Eating the meat
of the sacrifice, the Talmud explains, is an extension of the sacrificial service. Through the act of
ingesting the sanctified meat, we connect to the transcendent concepts and symbolism of the sacrifice not only
through our intellectual and emotional
faculties but through our purely physical ones as well. In this way, the
experience becomes total and the
connection is absolute.
When we bring a thanksgiving offering to G-d, we take
advantage of moments of outstanding inspiration
to forge a closer relationship with our Creator. Life is full of little inspirations
and numerous opportunities to
express our gratitude to Hashem. Most of these, however, do not move us to our core, and therefore, they
are not powerful enough to warrant a sacrifice. But when a person is reprieved after staring death in the face, he
is totally energized and exhilarated,
and the words of thanksgiving and joy he directs heavenward emanate from the essence of his being. This sort of
inspiration can be brought to the Temple and presented to Hashem in the form of a thanksgiving sacrifice.
This sort of inspiration can be channeled to
foster an everlasting closeness.
But inspiration is an ephemeral thing. Like a flash of
lightning, it illuminates our surroundings
in painfully sharp clarity and then is gone, leaving only a memory that slowly fades away. During that moment, we gain a
totally different and highly vivid perspective of what is important and what is trivial. During that moment, we
have the ability to find new direction
and meaning for our daily existence. Later, it is too late. Therefore, the
Torah limits the time period for
eating the thanksgiving offering. Grasp the moment! If we wait, it will be gone.
A high-level royal minister was deeply
involved in a national crisis situation. During this time, while the king and his ministers conferred daily to
discuss developments, the king’s birthday
came and went without the customary celebration. The crisis eventually passed, and the conduct of government affairs
returned to normal. Shortly thereafter, the minister purchased a beautiful birthday gift and sent it to the king.
A few weeks later, the king and his minister were discussing
the crisis and what could be done
to prevent future recurrences.
“We can’t afford to go through something like this again,”
said the king with a wry smile. “Do you
realize that I didn’t even receive any birthday gifts this year because of the
crisis?”
“Your majesty, have you forgotten?” the minister protested.
“I sent you a very beautiful gift. Didn’t you receive it?”
“Indeed, I did,” said the king. “And I thank you. Had you
given it to me on my birthday, I would
have perceived it as an expression of your joyous celebration of such an
important day in my life. But it was
given several weeks later. It did not represent your sense of joy but rather your sense of obligation. Much as I
appreciate it, I do not consider it a true birthday gift.”
In our own lives, we are often profoundly inspired during times
of great joy or, Heaven forbid, great
distress. On these occasions, we are inclined to take stock of our existence
and resolve to make important
changes, either to improve our relationship with our Creator, to correct our flaws and shortcomings or
simply to spend more time with our families. When this happens, it is important to translate our inspiration into
action immediately, for if we wait
until we get around to it, more often than not we never will.
Text Copyright © 2010 by Rabbi
Naftali Reich and Torah.org.
Rabbi Reich is on the faculty of the Ohr Somayach Tanenbaum Education Center.
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Don't Cut Corners
• Torah.org
torah.org/torah-portion/legacy-5771-tzav/
Posted on March 22, 2019 (5779) By Rabbi Naftali Reich |
Series: Legacy | Level: Beginner
The money didn’t come out of the priests’ own
pockets. It came from the well-filled coffers of the Temple. Every year, money poured from
all the Jewish people to a special
fund which provided for the daily
sacrifices. There really was no
reason to skimp.
And yet, I this week’s Torah portion we read that Hashem told Moses to “command Aaron and his sons” regarding the daily olah sacrifice.
Why did the priests have to be “commanded”? Why wasn’t it
enough for them to be “told,” as was
usually the case? Our Sages tell us that Hashem was forewarning the priest not
to cut corners in order to reduce the
considerable expense of bringing an animal every morning and every afternoon.
But why was this necessary? Why would the priests even
consider such a thing? After all, there was no cost to them personally, and there was plenty of public money
for the sacrifices.
Let us consider for a moment the nature of the
sacrificial service. There were actually two
aspects to it. First, the detailed physical process of the sacrifice.
Second and even more important, the
thoughts, feelings and commitments that the sacrifice represented; without the idea behind it, the sacrifice was
meaningless.
Unlike most of the sacrifices, which were partially burnt
on the altar and partially eaten, the olah
sacrifice was kalil, completely incinerated. Therefore, the commentators
explain, there was a real possibility
that the priest would focus on the intent and not attribute enough importance to the physical act itself.
Since the sacrifice was all being given to Hashem, they might reason, what difference would it make if fewer funds were
expended on the sacrifices? All
that mattered was the intent.
Not so, the Torah warned. It was not the
place of the priests to make such judgments. If the Torah commanded that two animals be brought daily, the
commandment was to be obeyed without
question.
An elderly king appointed a new chamberlain to oversee his
palace affairs.
“Your first major
responsibility in your new post,” said the king, “will be to arrange the parade
in honor of my birthday next week. Find out how it is done every year. The information is in the palace records.”
The following week,
on the king’s birthday, there was no parade. Instead, the chamberlain brought
together the greatest poets in the land in a gala public ceremony, and each of
the poets read an exquisite poem
composed for the occasion. The king was pleased.
The next day, the
king summoned the chamberlain and removed him from office for failing to stage
the customary parade.
“But, sire,” the
chamberlain protested, “I only tried to please you, and if I am not mistaken, you really did seem pleased.”
“The poems were very
beautiful,” said the king, “but it is not for you to substitute poems for the customary observance. You are not a
chamberlain for me.”
In our own lives, it is easy to take a somewhat cavalier
attitude towards the rituals and observances
of the Torah by rationalizing that it is the heart that counts. The heart
indeed counts a great deal, but
actions speak more loudly than words. As servants of the Almighty, we should leave it to Him to decide what
form those actions should take. With our own
limited scope, we cannot possibly know the extent to which a particular
ritual or observance described in the
Torah may stimulate our inner feelings and touch our very souls. We all understand that the Almighty needs nothing
from us. Therefore, if the Torah calls for a
certain action, we can rest assured that it is for our own benefit and
that in the end it is we ourselves
who will be immeasurably enriched.
Text Copyright © 2011 by Rabbi Naftali Reich and Torah.org.
Rabbi Reich is on the faculty of the Ohr Somayach Tanenbaum Education Center