Parashat Vayikra
Sacrifices Are Alive And Well!
The model of
sacrifices, of offering our kindness, generosity and compassion even if it is
difficult, inspires us to continue to draw close to God.
By Deborah Gettes
The following article
is reprinted with permission from The Union of
American Hebrew Congregations. For
a free e-mail subscription to the UAHC’s weekly Torah commentary, please click here.
Parashah Overview
God instructs Moses on the five different kinds of
sacrifices that were to be offered in the sanctuary:
- The olah or "burnt offering"
was a voluntary sacrifice that had a high degree of sanctity and was
regarded as the "standard" offering. The entire animal, except
for its hide, was burned on the altar. (Leviticus 1:1-17)
- The minchah or "meal
offering" was a sacrifice made of flour, oil, salt, and frankincense
that was partly burned on the altar and partly given to the priests to
eat. (Leviticus 2:1-16)
- The zevach sh'lamim or "sacrifice
of well-being" was a voluntary animal offering from one's herd,
sometimes brought to fulfill a vow. (Leviticus 3:1-17)
- The chatat or "sin offering"
was an obligatory sacrifice that was offered to expiate unintentional
sins. This offering differs from the others in the special treatment of
the blood of the animal. (Leviticus 4:1-5:13)
- The asham or "penalty
offering" was an obligatory sacrifice of a ram that was required
chiefly of one who had misappropriated property. (Leviticus 5:1-26)
Focal Point
If his offering to Adonai
is a burnt offering of birds, he shall choose his offering from turtledoves
or pigeons. The priest shall bring it to the altar, pinch off its head, and
turn it into smoke on the altar; and its blood shall be drained out against the
side of the altar. He shall remove its crop with its contents and cast it into
the place of the ashes, at the east side of the altar. The priest shall tear it
open by its wings, without severing it, and turn it into smoke on the altar,
upon the wood that is on the fire. It is a burnt offering, an offering by fire,
of pleasing odor to Adonai.
(Leviticus 1:14-17)
Your Guide
What purpose did the sacrifices serve for our forefathers?
What did ancient sacrifices look like? (To answer this
question, read most of the parashah.)
Today we do not have an altar for sacrifices and we no
longer sacrifice living animals. What are our present-day sacrifices?
Do you think that sacrifices should be difficult to offer?
By the Way…
The term "sacrifice" comes from a Latin word
meaning "to make something holy." The most common Hebrew equivalent
is korban, "something brought
near," i.e., to the altar. (The
Torah: A Modern Commentary, edited by W. Gunther Plaut, UAHC Press, 1981,
p. 750)
God introduces a subject that is most fundamental and most
esoteric at the same time: the korbanot,
"offerings" or "sacrifices," by which we are brought near
to God…. The Sages of talmudic times began to modernize the korbanot for us. The sacrificial
service, they said, should be replaced in the post-Temple era by three things: tzedakah, our table, and prayer. (Tamar
Frankiel, Learn Torah With…, Alef
Design Group, 1999, p. 202)
On one occasion when [Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakkai and his
disciple Rabbi Yehoshua] were leaving Jerusalem, the latter gazed upon the
destroyed Temple and cried out, "Woe to us! The place where Israel
obtained atonement for sins is in ruins!" Rabbi Yochanan said to him,
"My son, be not distressed. We still have an atonement equally
efficacious, and that is the practice of benevolence." (Avot d'Rabbi Natan 4)
Ben Azzai said: Run to fulfill a slight mitzvah as if it
were a weighty one, and flee from transgression: For one mitzvah draws another
mitzvah, and one transgression draws another transgression, because the reward
of a mitzvah is a mitzvah and the reward of a transgression is a transgression.
(Pirkei Avot (Ethics of the
Forebears) 4:2)
Let a person do good deeds, study Torah, and bring an
offering. Then God will have mercy and extend repentance. (Eliyahu Rabbah, A Torah Commentary for Our Times, UAHC
Press, 1990, p. 100)
Nehama Leibowitz explains that the sacrifices are a
"positive means of promoting communion with the Divine" and "a
symbol and expression of a person's desire to purify himself and become
reconciled with God." (cited by B. S. Jacobson in Meditations on the Torah, Sinai Publishing, Tel Aviv, 1956, pp.
137-142)
Prayer is the heart…of significant living… Prayer is a step
on which we rise from the self we are to the self we wish to be. Prayer affirms
the hope that no reality can crush, the aspiration that can never acknowledge
defeat… Prayer seeks the power to do wisely, to act generously, to live
helpfully… Prayer is the search for silence amidst noise… Prayer takes us
beyond the self… Our prayers are answered…when we are challenged to be what we
can be. (Rabbi Morris Adler, cited in A
Torah Commentary for Our Times, UAHC Press, 1990, p. 101)
Your Guide
Since we don't have a Temple in which to make sacrifices,
what does Rabbi Yochanan say about how we should perform them?
How does Ben Azzai suggest that we move closer to God?
How does Eliyahu Rabbah think that the Jewish people can
attain forgiveness? Do you think we can attain forgiveness without making
physical sacrifices?
What is Rabbi Morris Adler's description of prayer? How
would you describe it? How is prayer like sacrifice?
D'var Torah
Understanding the concept of korbanot gives us concrete ways to live our lives. To the
Israelites, the Temple was the place where God resided. Making offerings at the
Temple was their way to get closer to God. Certainly the sacrifices were not
easy to make. The animals had to be slaughtered in severe and brutal ways.
Ripping limbs, pinching off heads, tearing animals open, dashing blood against
the altar, and dipping fingers into blood don't sound like pleasant activities.
Although it is not possible to make sacrifices at the Temple
today, that doesn't exclude us from having to put forth an effort to bring
ourselves closer to God--making our own korbanot.
We can draw closer to God if we act in a God-like way. Our practice of
benevolence is shown through kindness, compassion, generosity, and goodwill for
the earth and its inhabitants.
In the movie Pay It
Forward, the boy, Trevor, seeks to have a positive impact on the world by
doing unsolicited good deeds for people and asks only that they repay him by
doing the same for three others. When one of his recipients says that is not
easy, Trevor replies, "It is not supposed to be easy." Trevor is
acting in a benevolent way and is encouraging others to behave in the same
manner.
The study of Torah and prayer are other means that bring us
closer to God. They allow us to act in a God-like way.
In his famous book Guide
for the Perplexed, Moses Maimonides argues that sacrifices were an early
form of worship given to the Jewish people so that they could learn how to
serve God without feeling different from all other peoples surrounding them.
Slowly, Maimonides says, the people learned that "the sacrificial service
is not the primary objective of the commandments but that prayer is a better
means of obtaining nearness to God." Agreeing with the early Rabbis,
Maimonides emphasizes that the superiority of prayer is that "it can be
offered everywhere and by every person." (A Torah Commentary for Our Times, UAHC Press, 1990, p. 100)
As we conclude our study of Parashat Vayikra, we need to know what our present-day korbanot should consist of. Certainly
all forms of tzedakah and the
following of mitzvot
(commandments) are essential. Studying Torah and attending
prayer services also move us to the closer connection with God that we so
desire.
Whether we have sinned or not, whether we have done so
intentionally or unintentionally, we still have the desire to move closer to
God, to offer our own korbanot. To do
so, we must put forth the effort to show kindness, compassion, generosity, and
goodwill even if that is not easy. At the same time, we must put forth the
effort to study Torah and attend worship services. As Pirkei Avot states, Mitzvah
goreret mitzvah: The more good we do, the more good we do. This is really a
model for life. Sacrifices are alive and well: They just have to be slightly
redefined.
Deborah Gettes is the
regional educator for the UAHC Pennsylvania Council.
The Union of American Hebrew Congregations is the
central body of Reform Judaism in North America, uniting 1.5 million Reform
Jews in more than 900 synagogues. UAHC
services include camps, music and book publishing, outreach to unaffiliated and
intermarried Jews, educational programs, and the Religious
Action Center in Washington, DC.