A Thought on the Parsha
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Vayikra
Does God Need our
Sacrifices?
The building of the Mishkan which
took up the second half of the Book of Shemot, focused on creating a Sanctuary
as a place for God's Presence to dwell, for God Godself to dwell among the
Children of Israel. In contrast, the book of Vayikra focuses on what is
done in that Sanctuary - which is, first and foremost, the bringing of
sacrifices. What is the connection between sacrifices and the
Temple? The Torah seems to be telling us that sacrifices are the primary
means to serve and connect to God, and that this connecting is best done in the
Temple, were God's presence dwells.
But how are we to understand how
animal (and grain) sacrifices serve as a means to connect to God, let alone as
the primary means? As modern people, it seems to us a very bizarre way to
worship an infinite God. What does God need with our sacrifices?
Isn't such a messy and bloody act, one that takes an animal's life no less, the
furthest thing possible from a religious elevated act of worship? At the same
time, we must acknowledge that it was the primary form of worship in the
ancient world. Did it answer a universal human need, something relevant
even for us today, or was it part of a primitive, less intellectually and
spiritually developed society.
Given that the Torah commands obligatory
communal and individual sacrifices (as well as allowing for non-obligatory,
free will sacrifices), it stands to reason that a traditional Jewish approach
would seek to find intrinsic value in these animal sacrifices. Rambam
(Maimonides), however, in the Guide
to the Perplexed (section III, chapters 31 and 46), coming from a
strong rationalist perspective, says otherwise. Rambam states that worshiping
God through animal sacrifices is not ideal, but the people at the time of the
Giving of the Torah could not conceive of any other form of worship. If they
would have been forced to choose between worshiping God with prayer or
worshiping pagan gods with sacrifices, they would have chosen the latter. Thus,
God conceded to them their need to use sacrifices, but demanded that they be
brought to God and brought in a way that did not lead to idolatry.
[This approach, which resonates
with most modern people, still raises some questions. First, how could
Rambam, as a traditional Jew who believed in the eternal bindingness of the
mitzvot, suggest that sacrifices had outlived their purpose? If he did not
believe that they would continue to be binding in the future, why did he write
all the laws of sacrifices in his Yad Hachazaka? And doesn't this take
away from the concept of the perfection of the Torah? Rambam himself answers
this latter question, and says that God does not change the nature of people,
and a perfect Torah is one that is perfectly suited for the reality of where
people are at. Sometimes, says Rambam, we have to look where the mitzvot
are pointing us, and not see them as describing an ideal final state.This idea
is quite provocative, one that we have discussed at greater length elsewhere.]
Ramban (Nahmanides), in his
Commentary to the Torah (Vayikra
1:9) takes great issue with Rambam's approach and - besides arguing on the
specifics and bringing prooftexts to contradict Rambam - argues in principle
with the idea that sacrifices, which are so central to worship in the Torah,
and which already existed with Adam and Noach, should not have intrinsic
value. He states that the significance of the sacrifices could be
understood to be symbolic and psychological. He sees the sin-offering as
the primary sacrifice. Given this, he states that when a person sees the
animal being slaughtered, the blood being thrown on the altar, and the entrails
burned up, he reflects and takes to heart the greatness of his sin, how he
deserves to die, and how he has sinned both in thought and in deed. He
also gives a kabbalistic explanation, which seems to indicate that the
sacrifices have a theurgic and metaphysical impact on God's relationship to the
world.
It should be noted that Ramban's
emphasis on the sin-offering seems misplaced, given that the olah, the burnt offering,
seems to be the primary form of worship. It was the sacrifice of Kayin
and Hevel and of Noach, and in the Temple it is the olah that is the
twice-daily communal sacrifice and that is the core of the musaf sacrifices brought
on Shabbat and Yom Tov. The Chinukh (Mitzvah 95) addresses this problem,
and extends Ramban's symbolic and psychological approach to non-sin-offering
sacrifices and to the symbolism to other details and rituals of the sacrifices.
There seems to be one thing
missing from all these explanations, a point implicit in Rambam and hinted to
in the Chinukh. The religious value of sacrifices would seem, at its core, to
be what is indicated in the first sacrifice of the Torah, that of Kayin and
Hevel. The verse states: "... Cain brought of the fruit of the ground an
offering to the Lord. And Abel also brought of the firstlings of his
flock and of the fat of it..." (Breishit 4:3-4). That is, the
primary sacrifice is the olah,
the burnt offering, the giving of something fully to God. It is to take the
fruit of one's labor - be it agricultural or livestock - take what one values
highly and feels deeply connected to, and to recognize that this comes from
God, and to give it back to God to demonstrate and internalize this mindset.
This is why the idea of sacrificing one's children - or the command of akeidat Yitzchak - fits
into this model. It is taking the "giving of what is most dear"
to the ultimate extreme.
Understood this way, the sin
offering is using this principle as a form of achieving forgiveness and
expiation. We say in the u'Netaneh
Tokef prayer that "u'teshuva
u'tefillah u'tzedakah ma'avirin et ro'ah ha'gezeirah" that
repentance, prayer and charity eliminate the stern decree. In the same way, a korban - which is an
intense and personal form of charity, of giving of oneself, of giving what is
most dear - accompanied with the verbal confession done with the sin-offering,
can achieve atonement.
It may be that one of the reasons
that this is most hard for us to relate to is not the concept of giving things
that we treasure to God, but because (1) we don't relate that way to animals,
and - even ethical issues aside - we are aesthetically repulsed by the idea of
slaughtering animals, given how little most of us have to do today with
livestock and slaughtering and (2) we would like our donations to
religious causes to be used in a more practically useful way, and not in a
merely symbolic way. While both of these are true, and reflect different
sensibilities from those in the past, we can still understand the core human
need that sacrifices did address at the time of the Temple.
A related point is the importance
of using something physical in our worship. As physical beings, it is often
hard for us to connect to an infinite, non-physical God. Just as Rambam
explains that we need to use anthropomorphic and anthropopathic terms in
describing God, to give us a means to relate to God, so most of us need a form
of worship that has a physical component as well. This was what sacrifices
gave people. The reason that this physical mode took the form of
sacrifices, specifically, is because of people's personal connection to
this things, as discussed above. This framing helps us understand Rambam's
point of saying sacrifices is to prayer what prayer is to intellectually
connecting to God. The ultimate form of worship for Rambam is purely
non-physical, pure intellectual connection. People, however, can't handle
that. They need something more connected to human concerns and more
involving human actions - petitionary prayer, fasting, and the very act of
praying. While necessary for most, says Rambam, this is not the ideal.
The question that persists,
though, is that given that we are human, why describe what we need as not
ideal? We are not angels, or pure intellects, so for us - as physical beings -
prayer might be the best way to connect to God. And, how many of us have
not felt when praying that we could connect more strongly if there was a more
physical component? Wearing a tallit or tefillin can help, as can shukeling - it feels like
we are connecting more if we are doing more.
So, in the end, I believe Rambam
was right that korbanot
were a concession to humans, but not because of our ancient pagan context, but
because of our human nature, our physical nature. The need to find
meaningful ways to connect, and the importance of the physical, remain as true
today as they did in the time of the Temple. If for us, animal sacrifices is not
the way, we should still be honest with the deep human need to find a way to
connect to God, and work at developing those paths in the absence of
sacrifices.
Shabbat
Shalom!
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