Friday, April 4, 2025

The Paschal Offering

by Rav Moshe Leib HaCohen Halbershtadt, Founder and Director of YORU Jewish Leadership, yeshiva.org.il, translated by Hillel Fendel.




When the Children of Israel left Egypt, G-d commanded them to take lambs, one for each household, on the 10th day of the month of Nissan, and slaughter them for the Paschal sacrifice. (See Sh'mot 12). Specifically, Moshe told the elders of Israel, "Pull forth or buy for yourselves sheep for your families and slaughter the Passover sacrifice" (verse 21).

Elaborating on the word Mish'chu, "Pull forth," the Medrash (Sh'mot Rabba 16,3) states:

When the Holy One, Blessed be He, told Moshe to slaughter the Passover lamb, Moshe said: "Master of the world, how can I do this thing? Do You not know that the sheep is Egypt's god [and they will stone us; see Sh'mot 8,22]?!"

G-d answered: "By your life that Israel will not leave Egypt before they slaughter the gods of the Egyptians' before their very eyes, and thus I will show them that their gods are worthless.”

And in fact that very night He smote the firstborns of Egypt, and that night Israel slaughtered their Passover lambs and consumed them. And the Egyptians saw their firstborns killed and their gods slaughtered and they could do nothing, as is written, "And the Egyptians were burying all their firstborns that G-d had smitten, and G-d had destroyed their idols" (Bamidbar 33,4). This is a fulfillment of the verse, "All worshippers of graven images will be humiliated" (Psalms 97,7).

Why did G-d test Israel with such a difficult test? Why did He command them to do something that was liable to provoke the Egyptians to stone them? Why did G-d not simply continue to smite the Egyptians with miraculous plagues?

Israel's Idol Worship

Sh'mot 12 also tells us that Israel was commanded to take the lambs on the 10th of the month, and to hold them in safekeeping until the 14th of the month, when they were to perform the slaughter. The Medrash (Yalkut Shimoni, Sh'mot 195) asks why Israel was told to take the lambs such a long time before they were to be slaughtered. It answers:

Israel was awash with idol-worship – a sin that we are commanded against in a mitzvah that is equivalent to all the mitzvot of the Torah … If one violates just the one mitzvah of idol-worship, he is like one who violates all the mitzvot of the Torah, throws off the yoke of Torah, and comes out brazenly and mockingly against the words of Torah… Therefore G-d commanded us here to "pull out"mishchu u'kchu – and draw away from idol worship, and adhere to the mitzvot.

As the Zayit Raanan (a commentary on the Yalkut Shimoni by the famed Magen Avraham) explained, the Israelites also fulfilled other mitzvot at the time, but by killing the gods of the Egyptians – and the object of their own idolatry as well – they were truly abolishing idol worship.

How to Escape the Deep Pit of Egyptian Impurity

It appears that the message of the holy Torah here is how to avoid impurity. It was telling the Hebrews who left Egypt how they could climb the stairs of spirituality all the way to the summit: the acceptance of the Torah at Mt. Sinai. The way to do this is firstly to totally leave all evil. As written in Psalms, "Forsake evil and do good" - precisely in that order. The first prerequisite before quitting Egypt was to "leave all sin." They must depart from the gods of Egypt by slaughtering them before their eyes, and only afterwards would they be able to begin the process of "do good," of leaving Egypt and its impurities, and then climbing the spiritual ladder, step by step until they receive the Torah.

For a person cannot become ritually clean when immersing in a ritual bath if he is holding a reptile in his hand… They could not have left Egypt and expected to become pure if they were still involved in idol worship; they had to first destroy all vestiges thereof, with great sacrifice and at significant risk to themselves – and only then could they begin the climb upwards to the greatest spiritual revelation in history: the Giving of the Torah by the Holy One, Blessed be He.

The Recipe for Spiritual Ascent

This is in fact a very fundamental principle in the service of G-d: One cannot climb the ladder of spirituality merely by doing good deeds, without first ridding himself of corrupt ideology. To try to improve spirituality while still holding on to bad deeds is a contradiction in terms. First the Paschal lamb must be destroyed and slaughtered, the ideological reptile must be cast aside - and only then can we embark upon a journey of spiritual ascent, of "do good," of mikveh, purification, of rising spiritually, and coming close to G-d.

May it be G-d's will that we merit to see His return to Zion, and the reestablishment of His Temple on the Mount, to where we will go up and bring the Pesach offering at its right time!

Vayikra: The Sacrificial Service: Coming Close

by Rav Moshe Leib HaCohen Halbershtadt, Founder and Director of YORU Jewish Leadership, yeshiva.org.il, translated by Hillel Fendel.




The word for sacrifices is korbanot, from the Hebrew root k.r.v., meaning "to come close"

This week's Torah reading begins the Book of Vayikra, Leviticus, which is practically all about sacrifices and the sacrificial service. The second verse posits that when a person brings a sacrifice, it is mikem, "from you." Let us seek to understand this.

Last week, we concluded the Book of Sh'mot, Exodus, in which we learned of the construction of the Mishkan, Tabernacle; the utensils inside, such as the Ark and the Menorah; and the priestly garments worn by Aharon the High Priest and his sons, who were the other priests. The Mishkan was to be the place in which Israel would come close to G-d on the highest level possible on earth, as is written, "They shall make Me a tabernacle and I will dwell in their midst" (Sh'mot 25,8).

The Torah now begins Vayikra by pouring content into the physical house, namely, the sacrificial service. The principle purpose of the sacrifices is to bring the Children of Israel closer to their Father in Heaven; the Hebrew word for sacrifices is korbanot, from the root meaning "to come close." As Nachmanides explains: "Every korban refers to coming close and unity."

In the beginning of the second chapter of Vayikra, we read of the mincha offering: "A soul who offers up a korban mincha to G-d – the offering shall be of milled flour." This is the only offering that refers to a person as a "soul." Rashi says: "Who is accustomed to donate a mincha? A poor person; G-d says, 'I consider him as if he offered up his soul.'"

Who is more highly regarded: a poor person who tries hard and gives a small sum  - the most he has - to charity, or a wealthy person who gives a large sum, even though he could easily afford much more? The answer clearly is that in our world of deception, the wealthy man is more admired, because the bottom line is that he gave more.

However, in the world of truth, the Sages tell us that "G-d desires the heart," He wants to know what is in our heart, and the reward He gives is commensurate with our effort, toil, and hardship. The poor man who essentially gives his soul has done a greater act than the rich person, and thus coming much closer to G-d with what he did. He offered his soul, which is a higher level than offering one's money or even one's body; he thus "came close to G-d" with kirvat nefesh on the highest possible level.

There are roughly three levels in human relationships: There is a superficial acquaintance that causes people to like each other; there are acts of giving that bring about love; and there is the highest degree of love, soul love, that is the result of a series of little acts of giving, or of major acts that are actually sacrifices. Our forefather Yaakov gave over to his son Yosef everything he learned from Shem and Ever (see Rashi to B'reshit 37,3); he gave him his all – and this led to, in the words of Yehuda, "his [Yaakov's] soul is bound up with his [Yosef's] soul" (B'reshit 44,30).

In another example, we know that King Sha'ul's son Yehonatan gave up any possibility of succeeding his father as the monarch, and even risked his life – all for the sake of his love for David. Their love was certainly a soul love, as we read: "… Yehonatan's soul was bound up with David's soul, and Yehonatan loved him as his own soul... and Yehonatan made a covenant with David, loving him as his own soul" (Samuel I 18,1-3).

The Sefer HaChinukh beautifully explains one of the rationales for the sacrifices:

"G-d commanded us to always sacrifice from that which the heart of man covets, such as meat and wine and bread, so that the heart will be more aroused to it. A poor person is similarly obligated to bring [not from animals, but] from the small amount of flour that his eyes and heart are constantly set upon.

"And there is yet another aspect of arousal of the heart with animal sacrifices, in that human and animal bodies are nearly the same; they are differentiated only in that a feeling heart and mind was given to humans and not animals.

"And when the human body "takes leave" of his mind when he sins, he must know that he has entered the realm of animals, as he has abandoned the only thing that differentiates him from them. He must therefore take a body of flesh like him and bring it to the place chosen for the raising of the intellect and burn it there, so that it is completely incinerated, in order to form a strong picture in his heart that a body without intellect is lost and null… And by fixing this image in his soul, he will be very careful not to sin…"

The purpose of the sacrifices is that we should give up some things that he greatly love, to remind us not to sink into the mire of materialism, but rather to come close to G-d – which is the ultimate goal of man in this world.

Prayer Instead of Sacrifices
The Medrash Tanchuma teaches: "Look how G-d forgives the sins of Israel. Whoever has a bull should offer up a bull, whoever has a ram should bring a ram… a lamb… a dove… even just milled flour… And whoever doesn't even have flour, should bring words [of prayer], as is written, 'Take with you words and return to G-d' (Hoshea 14,3)."

Our prayer service was instituted to correspond to the sacrifices, because when the Holy Temple was destroyed, we had no way to come close to G-d other than via the words of our prayers, as is written, "We will pay bulls with our lips" (ibid.).

And as with sacrifices, we can choose the level on which we wish to pray and come close to G-d: like "a man who sacrifices from you an offering to G-d," or on the higher level of "a soul who brings a mincha offering to G-d," as if he is giving his soul.

Given that prayer takes the place of sacrifices, it is appropriate and worthy that we pray in the way we would offer sacrifices: with great devotion, without foreign thoughts, in a permanent place, and even, if possible, with special clothing for prayer; see Shulchan Arukh Orach Chaim 98,4.

The more we implement these laws of the Shulchan Arukh, the more we will merit to reach a higher level of closeness to our Father in Heaven – "as if we had sacrificed our souls."