Vayikra: A Summary of the Parsha
God commands Moses
regarding various types of offerings: under what circumstances they should be
offered, and what they should consist of.
By Nancy Reuben Greenfield
The following article
is reprinted with permission from Jewish
Family & Life!
Moses has conducted a ceremony to anoint the Tent of
Appointed Meeting and the Priests who will officiate in it. A cloud now covers
the Tent of Appointed Meeting, and the Presence of the Lord fills the
Tabernacle.
God calls to Moses, “Explain to the sons of Israel the ways
of bringing offerings to God. There will be offerings of animals and grains and
fruit. Animals for sacrifice shall be male and without blemish. These animals
shall be killed and washed and burned so each shall smoke on the altar in the Tent
of Appointed Meeting. This will be for an ascent offering, an offering made by
fire in expression of compliance to God and to make atonement before God.
“For the grain, make the offering with fine wheat flour and
oil and incense. Put it straight on the altar. Anything leavened shall be made
into a fire offering. You shall season every offering of grain with salt.
“For the offerings of cattle and small livestock, all the
fat belongs to God. It shall be an everlasting statute for your descendants in
all your dwelling places not to eat any fat, nor any blood.
“If a person inadvertently sins, then sin offerings are to
be made. If the entire council of Israel sins inadvertently and something is
hidden from the community, guilt will be incurred. If the sin becomes known in
the community, then the community shall bring an offering for sin. A bull is to
be brought by the elders of the community and made into an offering to clear
the community of sin.
“If a prince commits a sin, then he has incurred guilt. He shall
take a buck from the goat species and sacrifice its blood upon the altar of
ascent offering, then burn its fat in a fire offering for peace. This is an
offering to clear him of sin.
“If any person from among the people sins by doing something
God commands shall not be done, then guilt will be incurred. A she-goat,
without blemish will be taken for this sin offering. Then the priest will make
the fat go up in smoke as an expression of compliance to God. The priest will
effect atonement for him for his sin and he will be forgiven.
“A person incurs guilt when he is a witness but does not
testify. A person incurs guilt when he touches an unclean animal or unclean
human. Even when the touching goes unnoticed, guilt is incurred when the sin is
discovered. A person incurs guilt when he swears in an oath to deny or to grant
something but does neither.
“If a person incurs guilt, he shall acknowledge to himself
that he has sinned and he shall bring to God an offering for his guilt. The
offerings of small livestock, a female sheep or goat, shall clear him of his
sin. If the person’s means are not sufficient enough for sheep, then two
turtle-doves or two young pigeons can be offered to God. One is an offering to
clear sin and one is an ascent offering.
“If the person’s means are not even sufficient for these
animals or birds, then an ephah
(measurement) of fine flower is to be the offering to clear sin. He shall put
no oil upon it, nor incense. He shall take it to a priest, who will take a
handful, a memorial portion, and smoke it on the altar as a fire offering to
God. The priest will effect atonement for his sins and he will be forgiven. And
it shall belong to the priest like the homage offering.
“If a person commits a breach of trust and thoughtlessly
trespasses against any of the holy things of God, he shall bring an expression
of his guilt to God. One ram, without blemish, shall be given. This ram shall
be of value equal to the money offering given in the Sanctuary. And he shall
make restitution, and shall add to it one-fifth and give it to the priest. The
priest shall then effect atonement for him.
“A person who sins for acting negligently incurs guilt. He
shall bring a ram to the priest to effect atonement for him for his act of
negligence and he will be forgiven. It is a guilt offering. He is surely guilty
before God.
“A person sins and commits a breach of trust against God by
making a denial to his neighbor with regard to something entrusted to him or a
loan or an object taken by robbery. A person also sins when he withholds
something from his neighbor or if he has found a lost article and denies it or
has sworn to a lie. If the person knows of the sin and breach of trust against
God, then guilt is incurred.
“The person shall restore what was stolen or withheld, or
what was entrusted to him for safekeeping, or the lost article which he has
found, or anything else about which he lied. The person shall pay for it in
capital, equivalent to its value, and shall add one-fifth of the value of it to
atone. On the day the person acknowledges his guilt, the person shall pay for
it to the one to whom it is rightfully due. But as for his guilt offering, he
shall bring it to God. He shall bring an unblemished ram as a guilt offering
and give it to the priest who shall effect atonement for him before God.
“Then the person will be forgiven regarding any one of the
things done to incur guilt.”
Questions for Discussion
1) Why is God so specific in what kind of offerings can be
given to God for different purposes? What difference does it make what kind of
offering or how it is made, as long as it is an offering?
2) What is guilt? What do you do with your guilt? Why do we
need to seek forgiveness for our sins and for the guilt incurred?
3) How can an offering to God on an altar in the holy
Sanctuary clear one of sin or guilt? Why does a Priest need to “effect the
atonement?” Do we still need a Priest to “effect the atonement?” Why or why
not?
4) Is it necessary to seek forgiveness from God and from
another human? Can you do one and not the other? Why or why not?
5) Describe how it feels to be forgiven by God. Describe how
it feels to be forgiven by another human. How is the feeling of forgiveness the
same or different?
Nancy Reuben
Greenfield is a freelance writer who lives in Carrollton, Texas, with her
husband and two young children. She writes frequently on Jewish themes and is
finishing a book, co-authored with her father, called The Golden Medina.