A Thought on the Parsha
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Acharei-Mot - Kedoshim: God Who dwells in the Midst of our Impurities.
Acharei-Mot - Kedoshim: God Who dwells in the Midst of our Impurities.
Acharei Mot details the special avodah,
sacrificial rites, that the High Priest would perform on Yom Kippur to effect
atonement for the Jewish People. However, as the Vilna Gaon in Kol
Eliyahu already noted, the Torah only introduces the connection to Yom Kippur
at the very end of the lengthy description of this special avodah.
The framing of the avodah is not what must be done to achieve
atonement on Yom Kippur but rather what must be done when Aaron wants to enter
the inner sanctum:
Speak
to Aaron your brother, that he come not at all times into the holy place inside
the veil before the covering, which is upon the ark; that he die not; for I
will appear in the cloud upon the covering. (Vayikra 16:2)
Thus, says the Vilna Gaon, this is a rite that the High Priest -
or, according to the Gaon, specifically Aharon, could do at any time that he
would want to enter the Holy of Holies, and not die as his sons had, provided a
precise ritual is followed. Understood this way, the parsha is
underscoring the dangers of unbridled religious passion, of approaching God
without due care and caution, and is giving a very structured way that one -
the High Priest - can channel his desire for intense, intimate connection.
This approach, however, makes the avodah a tool
for the High Priest's realization of his religious yearnings, but does not
address larger communal issues. This is certainly not the simple sense of
the Torah, which mandates communal sacrifices for this avodah and which
declares that this avodah will cleanse the Mikdash and atone for the
People. It seems, rather, that while the emphasis of the avodah is not
on Yom Kippur, it is also not on the High Priest entering the Holy of
Holies. Yes, he must enter it, but that is a means, not an ends.
What is the end goal? The Torah tells us in the climactic verses
declared after the High Priest exits the inner sanctum:
And
he shall make atonement, vi'kiper, for the holy place, from the uncleanness of
the people of Israel, and from their transgressions in all their sins; and so
shall he do for the Tent of Meeting, that remains among them in the midst of
their uncleanness. And there shall be no man in the Tent of Meeting when
he goes in to make atonement, li'khaper, in the holy place,
until he comes out, having made atonement, vi’khiper, for himself, and for his household, and for
all the congregation of Israel.
(Vayikra
16:16-17).
The goal is not the entering itself, not the religious
experience for its own right. Neither is the goal primarily for bringing
atonement and forgiveness for the Children of Israel. The goal is atoning
for the Sanctuary. Well, not atoning exactly, for what atonement does the
Sanctuary need? The term used here is kaper, a term
which more precisely means cleansing, not atoning. The Sanctuary must be cleansed from the defilement
that it has endured as a result of the sins of Israel.
Sins, according to the Torah, create a type of tumah.
Sin defiles, both the person who performs it, and the person's
surroundings. And how much more so does it defile the Sanctuary, the
place of the Presence of God.
Thus, to cleanse the Sanctuary, and to cleanse the people, this avodah must be
performed. The central sacrifices of
this avodah are chataot, generally translated as
"sin-offerings," but more accurately translated as "cleansing
sacrifices." [This is why certain tamei people, such as a woman who has given
childbirth, must bring a chatat. Not because she has sinned, but because
the chatat achieves a cleansing of tumah.
See Sotah 15a.]
The focus is not on the sin itself, but on its impact, on its
defilement, and the sin-offerings, or rather, the cleansing-offerings, restore
the world to as it was before, restore the person to how she was before this
sin had affected her, and to restore God's Sanctuary to how it was before, so
that God's Presence could continue to dwell among the People.
Now, it is worth asking how this cleansing is achieved, or can
be effective. Isn't tumah the antithesis of the Sanctuary?
Why, then, does the tumah not drive God's Presence out of the
Sanctuary? The question is sharpened further when we realize that of all
the invalidities that can occur to sacrifices, tumah is the one problem that can most be
tolerated. The Talmud (Menachot 25a) teaches that the tzitz that
the High Priest wore on his forehead allowed sacrifices that were tamei to be
acceptable after the fact. And, a fixed-time sacrifice may be brought
despite tumah: tumah
hutra bi'tzibbur. Why is it that of all problems, tumah
is the very thing which must be driven from the Temple, also the very thing
which can be tolerated?
The answer relates to the very nature of the Temple, of God
choosing to make God’s Presence dwell among the People of Israel. One
the one hand, tumah is
the antithesis of kedusha, and having a Mikdash in our midst creates a
heavy demand that we do everything in our ability to keep tumah at bay. But because we are not
God, because we are human, tumah is
an inevitable part of our lives. This is certainly true terms of the
ritual tumah that
has been the focus of Vayikra – animals die, people die, women give birth
to children, women menstruate, men have seminal emissions – such tumah is encountered every day.
But perhaps more significantly, it is also true about the tumah that is a result of sin. To be
human is to sin. No matter how valiant our attempts otherwise, to be
human is to produce tumah.
So if tumah and sin are an inevitable consequence of
our human existence, how can God continue to dwell among us? The answer
to this is that God wishes it to be so. When, after the sin of the Golden
Calf, God accedes to Moshe's request that God continue to dwell among them, God
agreed to accept the reality of human sin and to dwell among us regardless.
We, on our part, must do all we can to keep tumah away, but even when we do not, God
continues to dwell among us. This is what is both acknowledged and
addressed by the Yom Kippur avodah. God has given us this day not only to
allow us to be forgiven and to start fresh. And hence, this verse of
cleansing the Temple ends with an acknowledgement of the inevitability of tumah:
And so
he shall do to the Tent of Meeting that dwells in their midst, in the midst of
their impurity.
Of all the verses that speak about God dwelling (shakhen) among the Children of Israel, this is the
only verse that emphasizes not that tumah must be kept at a distance, but rather
that despite our best efforts, tumah will
always be present to some degree. And this acknowledgement comes exactly
in the section of the Torah that speaks to how it can be tolerated – because
God has agreed to tolerate it, God has accepted our humanity, and, to make the tumah
manageable, God has given us a rite to cleanse the Temple and start over each
year.
Of course, we cannot allow this Divine tolerance to undermine
our awareness of God’s presence. If tumah becomes too much of the
norm, then the place will no longer be one of kedusha. This is why it is the tzitz that allows the tumah to be tolerated. The tzitz,
with the words kodesh la’Hashem, Holy to God, worn on the forehead of
the Kohen Gadol, tamid, continually, is a symbol of the continual
consciousness of the Divine Presence. If in the presence of tumah the consciousness of the Divine
Presence remains firm, then the tumah will
be tolerated.
This is why it is only the Kohen Gadol who can effect the
necessary cleansing. The Kohen Gadol, who symbolizes the constant
awareness of God's Presence, does the rites of the Yom Kippur avodah without wearing the tzitz,
because such a reminder is not necessary. The Kohen Gadol enters into the
Holy of Holies, is not only reminded of God, but directly in contact with the
Divine Presence. It is this connection to God, achieved through
constant mindfulness and awareness, which reaches its apex on Yom Kippur.
It is this connection to God that allows tumah not to undermine God's presence, but to be
tolerated and cleansed. "With this Aharon may enter the holy
place," he may concretize the connection to God, so that the Temple and
the People may be cleansed.
Tumah in its essence it is
the very thing that distances us from God, but if we work to keep God in the
forefront of our consciousness, to have kodesh la’Hashem inscribed
on our forehead, then this tumah will
be tolerated, and God will be close to us despite our tumah.
God, Who dwells among with them, despite their impurity.
A postscript in the aftermath of the Boston bombings: Our hearts go out
to all those, and the families of those, who have been killed, injured, or
traumatized by this horrific event. When
such events happen, there is much talk, which is soon forgotten, around
controlling access to deadly weapons and explosives. This degree of tumah, which constantly
defiles the society in which we live, cannot continue to be tolerated. As a society we must work together to keep
our responsibilities, religious and moral, at the forefront of our
consciousness, so that we may act to cleanse this tumah from our midst.
Shabbat Shalom!
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