Yom Kippur, Leviticus 16:1-34
This week's parashah has been generously sponsored in loving memory of Meryl Gardner's mother, Harriet H. Cohen. Kolel is grateful to Meryl for her ongoing support and appreciates its weekly sponsors.
Since the world is sustained through human actions and interactions, it is in our relationships to others to that the greatest infractions of holiness occur.
This is a special Shabbat, the holiest day of the year, the Sabbath of Sabbaths: Yom Kippur. An old tradition explains that during ten days of teshuvah (repentance) we draw nearer to heaven; on Yom Kippur, God draws nearer to us. No wonder this is the most important day in the Jewish calendar.
The Day of Atonement has its own Torah portions, one for the morning and one for the afternoon. In traditionalist congregations, these are Leviticus 16 and Leviticus 18, and in Reform congregations they are selections from Deuteronomy 30 and Leviticus 19. The latter is also the alternative reading in a number of Conservative congregations.
Our focus this week will be on the traditional morning reading, Leviticus 16, which describes the offerings that Aaron, the High Priest, is to bring before God as atonement for his sins, the sins of his household and of the entire community. In addition, this chapter describes the scapegoat ritual. And so, without further ado…
Housecleaning: You either love it or hate it. However you feel about it, it is a necessity of life. If, or in some cases, when, the chores don't get done – the dust bunnies turn to dirt monsters, the laundry takes over an entire room, or the mail piles up on the dining room table so there is no room to eat – life becomes chaotic. How embarrassing to have someone drop by!
Leviticus 16 is about maintaining a proper home. Not just any home, but God's home. Obviously, this is an important and crucial task. To understand why, we must put ourselves in a Levitical mindset.
This third book of the Torah is permeated with the idea and ideal of holiness. Holiness is a separate realm which can be dangerous if not handled correctly. The very first verse of the Yom Kippur reading is evidence of this: Adonai spoke to Moses after the death of the two sons of Aaron who died when they drew too close to the presence of Adonai. The events surrounding the deaths of Aaron's sons are recounted in Leviticus 10: Now Aaron's sons Nadab and Abihu each took his fire pan, put fire in it, and laid incense on it; and they offered before Adonai alien fire, which God had not enjoined upon them. And fire came forth from Adonai and consumed them; thus they died at the instance of Adonai. Basically, they didn't follow directions and made an offering that was inappropriate –either in terms of time or the actual ritual.
Leviticus teaches that holiness must be handled precisely; there is a correct time, a proper procedure, and appropriate attire. The role of the priest is to make sure that everything is carried out in exactly the right way. This makes it possible for God's presence to be in the midst of the people, and ensures that the universal order is maintained and the world continues to function properly. Hence, Aaron's task as described at the beginning of the parashah:
Adonai said to Moses: Tell your brother Aaron that he is not to come at will into the Shrine behind the curtain, in front of the cover that is upon the ark, lest he die; for I appear in the cloud over the cover. Thus only shall Aaron enter the Shrine: with a bull of the herd for a sin offering and a ram for a burnt offering. — He shall be dressed in a sacral linen tunic, with linen breeches next to his flesh, and be girt with a linen sash, and he shall wear a linen turban. They are sacral vestments; he shall bathe his body in water and then put them on. — And from the Israelite community he shall take two he-goats for a sin offering and a ram for a burnt offering.
Aaron is to offer his own bull of sin offering, to make expiation for himself and for his household. Aaron shall take the two he-goats and let them stand before Adonai at the entrance of the Tent of Meeting; and he shall place lots upon the two goats, one marked for Adonai and the other marked for Azazel. Aaron shall bring forward the goat designated by lot for Adonai, which he is to offer as a sin offering; while the goat designated by lot for Azazel shall be left standing alive before Adonai, to make expiation with it and to send it off to the wilderness for Azazel. (Leviticus 16:2-10)
The Hebrew word for holy is kadosh, a word that also means "set aside;" the root k-d-sh forms the basis of much that is significant in Judaism. When we perform Kiddush we are setting the boundary between the holiness of Shabbat and the mundane week. Kiddushin, the Jewish marriage, means that the partners in this holy relationship are setting themselves apart for each other. The main thrust of the rituals in Leviticus is to makes sure that the holy is set apart from the profane, thus imposing order on a chaotic world. To maintain order and the proper boundaries, Aaron is to undertake this annual ritual cleansing. He performs three sacrifices: for himself, his household, and the entire community, in addition to the scapegoat ritual. These rituals of expiation are formalized in the Temple service for Yom Kippur and are the basis of the Avodah service reenacted in modern synagogues on this holy day.
The danger of holiness is found throughout the Torah. Recall that the people of Israel stayed a distance from Mount Sinai because coming into contact with God could cause them to perish. Only the High Priest was allowed into the Holy of Holies and only at certain times. Holiness is its own realm; and when the sacred "breaks forth" and meets the mundane, it is like matter and anti-matter; the consequences can be devastating, even fatal, as happened to Aaron's sons.
As Baruch Levine explains in his commentary on Leviticus:
The primary objective of expiatory rites like the ones set forth in chapter 16 was to maintain a pure sanctuary. An impure, or defiled, sanctuary induced God to withdraw His presence from the Israelite community. Obviously, the greatest threat to the purity of the sanctuary came from the priesthood itself whose members functioned within its sacred precincts and who bore primary responsibility for its maintenance. The sanctuary was also threatened by major transgressions of the laws of purity involving the entire Israelite community or by the failure of individual Israelites to attend to their own purification—for example, after contamination by a corpse. This occurred because such serious impurities were considered to be contagious and thereby ultimately affected the sanctuary, which was located within the area of settlement. As long as impurity persisted, God remained offended, so to speak, and the danger of His wrath and possible alienation was imminent.
“For on this day atonement shall be made for you to cleanse you of all your sins; you shall be clean before the Lord.” The purification of the sanctuary was understood to extend to the people—to relieve them of their transgressions as well. However, no ritual of purification was actually performed over the people, as was the case on other occasions.
But times change, and as the Yom Kippur liturgy developed, our spiritual purification now includes a series of confessions. Interestingly, none of the confessions we undertake as a community deals with ritual infractions. Our modern acts of purification are concerned with the moral and ethical realm. Since the world is sustained through human actions and interactions, it is in our relationships to others to that the greatest infractions of holiness occur; and breaches in such relationships are what threaten the modern boundaries between holiness and chaos. On this Sabbath of Sabbaths we stand together as a community, each responsible for the other and for the entire world. This is quite a large house that we are cleaning, but the joint effort makes the task that much easier. One final thought about our annual spiritual housecleaning comes from a story about the Baal Shem Tov. The Hassidic master was away from home on the High Holy Days. Arriving at his destination he asked the inhabitants of the city about the Yom Kippur service. They said it was conducted by the local rabbi who led the service in a joyful manner. Thinking this to be somewhat strange, the Baal Shem Tov went to see the rabbi who explained the reason he sang the confessions with great joy: May we all be written and sealed for a good year. G'mar hatimah tova,"Lo, a servant who is cleaning the courtyard of the king, if he loves the king, is very happy cleaning the refuse from the courtyard, and sings joyful melodies, for he is giving pleasure to the king." Said the Baal Shem Tov, "May my lot be with yours!" (Or Yesharim as quoted by S.Y. Agnon, Days of Awe)
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Labels: holiness, purification, Yom Kippur




