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INTRODUCTION TO PARASHAT HASHAVUA
PARASHAT SHEMINI
Playing
with Fire
by Rav Zvi Shimon
In this week's sedra, parashat Shemini, we read about the culmination of
the consecration of the Mishkan, the Tabernacle. It is the apex of a very
lengthy section in the Torah which commences in parashat Teruma (Exodus, chapter
25) and spans over twenty chapters. The people of Israel have given their
generous contributions for the construction of the Mishkan. The craftsmen have
labored arduously applying their skills and with utter devotion. The kohanim
(priests) have studied all the laws relating to the sacrifices and have
completed their ordination period remaining at the entrance of the Tent of
Meeting day and night for seven days. Our parasha opens on the eighth day, the
day which has been so eagerly anticipated, the day that God will appear before
the people and dwell in the Mishkan:
Aaron
lifted his hands toward the people and blessed them; and he stepped down after
offering the sin offering, the burnt offering, and the offering of well-being. Moses and Aaron then went inside the
Tent of Meeting. When they came out,
they blessed the people; and the Presence of the Lord appeared to all the
people. Fire came forth from before
the Lord and consumed the burnt offering and the fat parts on the altar. And all the people saw, and shouted,
and fell on their faces. (Leviticus
9:22-24)
God accepts the sacrifices of the people and an awesome fire descends
from the heavens consuming the offerings on the altar. The people are ecstatic
and shout with joy. However, the joy and exhilaration are short-lived. Bliss
turns to sorrow as the event is marred by a horrible tragedy:
Now
Aaron's sons Nadav and Avihu each took his censer, put fire in it, and laid
incense on it; and they offered before the Lord alien fire, which He had not
enjoined upon them. And fire came
forth from the Lord and consumed them; thus they died before the Lord. (10:1,2)
According to the Rashbam (Rabbi Shmuel ben Meir, France, 1080-1160), the
same divine fire which consumes the offerings on the altar, expressing God's
satisfaction with his people and arousing their delight, also consumes Aaron's
sons, Nadav and Avihu. What was the sin of Nadav and Avihu that brought upon
them such a horrible punishment? Why was God so angry at them?
The Sin
The verse states that Nadav and Avihu offered before the Lord an 'Eish
Zara asher lo tziva otam,' an alien fire which God had not instructed them to
offer. The commentators disagree as to the interpretation of this verse. The
Bekhor Shor (Rabbi Yoseph Ben Yitzchak Bekhor Shor, France, twelfth-century) and
the Chizkuni (Rabbi Chizkiya ben Manoach, France, mid-thirteenth century)
interpret the clause 'asher lo tziva otam' as a prohibition. God explicitly
forbade them to offer this offering. The clause 'asher lo tziva otam' should not
be understood as stating that God had not instructed them to offer but rather
should be understood as 'asher tziva otam lo,' stating that God explicitly
forbade them from offering their sacrifice. What is your opinion of this
interpretation? (take a few moments to reflect).
There are two advantages to this interpretation. The first advantage is
textual since the Torah describes the offering as "alien fire," God obviously
didn't command them to offer it. This is the reason why it is referred to as an
alien fire. Rather, the Torah informs us that God also prohibited the offering.
The second advantage of this interpretation relates to the content of the
narrative. It is much easier to understand the harsh punishment as retribution
for the disobeying of God than for the offering of a sacrifice which was not
commanded. However, there are certain obvious difficulties with this
interpretation. First, if this interpretation is correct, than the phrasing of
the clause is odd. A clearer formulation would have been 'asher tziva otam LO,'
Which God commanded not [to offer]. A second difficulty with the interpretation
is that it portrays Nadav and Avihu as people who are rebellious to the extent
of disobeying an explicit command of God. This is difficult especially in light
of their background and function as priests.
The majority of the commentators interpret the clause as in our
translation, "an alien fire which God had not instructed them to offer." Their
sin was not of disobeying God but rather offering an "alien fire" which was not
commanded of them. What was this alien fire which ignited God's wrath?
Rabbi Hirsch
(Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch, Germany, 1808-1888) offers
the following explanation:
"The
offering itself appears in every way illegal. The censers as well as the fire
and the incense were all against the
law. All the utensils must belong to the congregation and be holy. By giving his
offering over into a national vessel of
the Sanctuary, the bringer, together
with his offering, enters within the framework
of the national sanctuary of the Torah, and thereby gives himself up to all its demands, to the
exclusion of any decisions made
according to his own ideas. But the
censers of Nadav and Avihu were each his own; they approach God, not with the
vessels of the Sanctuary, but with their own, without self-renunciation. They put a fire in the censer, more
precisely an alien fire, from their own hearths, as Rabbi Akiva explains - not
fire from the altar. And finally,
the incense itself. Incense was the
one sacrificial substance, which neither from the community nor from the
individual was allowed to be brought.
The bringing of incense was to remain restricted exclusively to that
which was prescribed for the community daily and for the high priest on Yom
Kippur.
Nadav and Avihu desecrated the Mishkan by using their own private
utensils and by bringing an alien fire, not fire from the altar but from a
normal fireplace. Their sin was in performing tasks of a holy nature with the
improper tools. The Rashbam takes a different approach:
"Even
before the heavenly fire had descended they [Nadav and Avihu] had already taken
their censers to burn incense on the altar of gold since the incense offered in the morning precedes the offering of
animal sacrifices (see Exodus 30:7);
and they put in [the censers] an alien
fire which Moses had not commanded on THIS DAY. Though on other days it
is written "And the sons of Aaron the priest shall put fire upon the altar"
(1:7), on this day Moses did not desire that they bring a man-made fire since
they were anticipating the descent of a heavenly fire; therefore the bringing of
a different fire was not desired in order that God's name should be sanctified
and that all would know that the fire came from the heavens"
In contrast to Rabbi Hirsch who interprets an alien fire as an unholy
fire originating not from the altar but from an unholy source, the Rashbam
posits that the fire was indeed taken from the altar. It was foreign not because
of its source but rather because of its timing. On the day that God was to
appear through a heavenly fire before the whole congregation, man-made fire was
undesirable. It would only limit the extent of the miracle. Nadav and Avihu's
sin was not the desecration of the Mishkan but rather the detrimental
interference in the miraculous events of the day.
[The assumption of the Rashbam is that Nadav and Avihu acted before the
descent of the heavenly fire and were burned by it. The Rashbam does not explain
why the Torah recounts the narrative of Nadav and Avihu only after the heavenly
fire. The apparent reason is to separate the awesome and glorious appearance of
God in the Mishkan and the tragic death of Nadav and Avihu. Although they
occurred simultaneously, the Torah separates them so as not to detract from
God's momentous appearance.]
Our sages in Vayikra Rabba (A compilation of homiletical interpretations
of our sages) offer several explanations of the sin of Nadav and Avihu. We will
cite two of them:
Bar Kappara in the name of Rabbi Jeremiah ben Eleazar said: Aaron's sons
died... for drawing near [to the holy
place] since they entered into the innermost precincts of the sanctuary, [and] for offering
since they offered a sacrifice which
they had not been commanded to offer.
It is not only as intimated by our verse that Nadav and Avihu sinned in
offering an "alien fire." They also sinned by trespassing into sections of the
Mishkan which they should have not entered. What is the textual source for this
explanation? In the continuation of the book of Leviticus the deaths of Nadav
and Avihu are mentioned: "The Lord spoke to Moses after the death of the two
sons of Aaron who died when they drew too close to the presence of the Lord"
(16:1). Here there is no mention of the sinful offering, only of a prohibited
"closeness" to God's presence, to the holy of holies in the Mishkan. Even
without the forbidden offering, Nadav and Avihu would still have received the
punishment of death simply for entering sections of the Mishkan which were
forbidden.
The Cause
So far we have dealt with the essence of the sin of Nadav and Avihu. We
will now turn our attention to their motive, the cause which led them to
perpetrate the sin. Where did they go wrong? What caused men of such stature to
fall to their doom?
The Sifra ('Tannaitic halakhic midrash on Leviticus) offers the following
explanation:
"And
Aaron's sons Nadav and Avihu each took his censer"- "They, in their joy, since
they saw a new fire [the heavenly fire], they came to add love to love"
Nadav and Avihu were so overjoyed by God's acceptance of the sacrifices
that they decided to add another offering. Their enthusiasm and excitement led
them to instinctively perform deeds without contemplating their desirability and
taking the proper precautions. The awesome love of God that Nadav and Avihu
possessed overshadowed their fear of God. This imbalance, the overflowing of
love unchecked by the restraining influence of the fear of God, led to the sin
of Nadav and Avihu. In contrast to the ecstatic frenzied states characteristic
of modes of worship in Eastern religions, the worship of God, as prescribed by
the Torah, warns against a loss of control. Love must always be accompanied by
the fear of God. It is the combination of the two which creates the desirable
state of mind necessary for a close relationship with God.
Rabbi Hirsch offers an alternative explanation:
More than
anything else the Word of God stresses that God had not commanded them. Even if the various phases of the
offering had not themselves been wrong, as we have seen that they were, the fact
that it was not a "bidden" one would have sufficed to make it a forbidden one.
No place is allowed in the whole service
of the offerings of the Sanctuary of the Torah for subjectively doing just what
you think right. Even the free-will offerings have to be kept meticulously
within the limits of the forms and kinds prescribed for them. For the proximity of and getting near
to God, which is the purpose of every offering, is only to be found by the way
of obedience, by compliance with God's Will and subordination to it. This is one of the points in which
Judaism and Paganism go in diametrically opposite directions. The Pagan brings his offering in an
attempt to make the god subservient to his wishes. The Jew, with his offering, wishes to
place himself in the service of God; by his offering he wishes to make himself
subservient to the wishes of his God.
So that all offerings are formulae of the demands of God, which the
bringer, by his offering, undertakes to make the normal routine for his future
life. So that self- devised
offerings would be a killing of just those very truths which our offerings are
meant to impress upon the bringers, would be placing a pedestal on which to
glorify one's own ideas, where a throne was meant to be built for obedience, and
obedience only. We can understand
that the death of the priestly youths, and their death in the first moment of
the consecration of the Sanctuary of God, is the most solemn warning for all
future priests of this Sanctuary; it excludes from the precincts of the
Sanctuary of God - which was to be nothing else but the Sanctuary of His Torah -
every expression of caprice, and every subjective idea of what is right and
becoming! Not by fresh inventions
even of God-serving novices, but by carrying out that which is ordained by God
has the Jewish priest to establish the authenticity of his activities.
Nadav and Avihu had misunderstood their task as kohanim. They were
searching for self-expression and an outlet for their creativity. As a result
Nadav and Avihu became absorbed in their own ideas, as they attempted to create
novel forms of worship. They did not understand that the Mishkan was not a place
for individual creative expression. It is God, and only God, who determines the
framework for His worship. The Torah describes in great detail all the laws of
the sacrificial worship. Any straying from these laws is a desecration of the
Mishkan, and an undesirable and alien form of worship.
Our sages offer another explanation for Nadav and Avihu's downfall:
"And
Aaron's sons Nadav and Avihu each took his censer"(10:1) - "Aaron's
sons"-[teaches us that] they did not seek advice from Aaron, "Nadav and Avihu"-
[teaches us that] they did not seek advice from Moses, "each took his censer"
[teaches us that] they did not seek advice from one another" (Sifra, Acharei Mot
1)
Our sages infer from scripture that Nadav and Avihu acted independently
without asking anyone with regard to the desirability of their actions. The last
two textual inferences are clear. Moses' name does not appear in the verse since
he was not approached by Nadav and Avihu. Likewise, scripture emphasizes that
Nadav and Avihu each acted independent of the other, each taking his own censer.
However the first inference is obscure. How do our sages infer from the clause
"And Aaron's sons" that Aaron was not consulted? The fact that Aaron's name
appears in the verse would seem to imply the opposite, that he was involved in
their deed! The Netziv (Rabbi Naphtali Zvi Yehuda Berlin, Lithuania, 1817-1893)
explains that the source for the inference is the order of the verse. When the
Torah states people's parentage it usually does so after giving the name of the
individual. Here the order is the opposite. The Torah does not state 'Nadav and
Avihu, Aaron's sons' but rather "And Aaron's sons Nadav and Avihu." The change
in order teaches us that although Aaron was their father he did not influence
them and was not involved in their misdeed. The appearance of Aaron at the
beginning of the verse teaches that his influence was only in the past but not
in the present behavior of his sons.
According to this explanation of our sages, Nadav and Avihu downfall
stemmed from over-confidence. They did not deem it necessary to seek advice from
their elders and teachers. Furthermore, they acted without hearing a second
opinion, and they did not even discuss their plan amongst themselves! This
hyper-individualism and rashness brought about their tragic end.
Shadal's
(Rabbi Shmuel David Luzzatto, Italy, 1800-1865) understanding of the cause of Nadav and Avihu's sin is even more
critical:
"They
sinned due to haughtiness. They were not satisfied with being helpers of their
father as is written: "Aaron's sons
passed the blood to him" (9:12). They wanted to show that they too were the
priests of God like their father, and since Moses had not assigned them any
independent function, they chose a lucrative one and presented an alien
offering." (compare to the explanation
in the Midrash Hagadol.)
It was their hunger for prominence and prestige which led them to sin.
They held very important positions but were unhappy so long as they didn't enjoy
a dominant role. Therefore, they independently tried to take on more central
functions and they used the Mishkan as a locus for their growth in power and
political advancement. This desecration of their spiritual position and its
usage for self-aggrandizement was what led to their ultimate failure and
consequently a harsh punishment was incurred.
Rashi (Rabbi Shlomo ben Yitzchak, France, 1040-1105), citing our sages,
offers a completely different explanation of the cause of Nadav and Avihu's sin:
"Rabbi
Yishmael said: They died because they entered the Sanctuary intoxicated by wine.
You may know that this is so, because after their death he admonished those who
survived that they should not enter when intoxicated by wine"
Nadav and Avihu sinned because they were drunk and consequently, they
were not careful in the performance of their duties. Entrance into the sanctuary
demands utmost seriousness and reverence. It is no place for flippancy and
frivolity. Nadav and Avihu entered the sanctuary in an improper state of mind
which led to an improper form of worship. Rabbi Yishmael learns this from the
fact that immediately after the death of Nadav and Avihu God speaks to Aaron
saying:
"And the
Lord spoke to Aaron, saying: Drink no wine or other intoxicant, you or your
sons, when you enter the Tent of Meeting, that you may not die. This is a law for all time throughout
the ages, for you must distinguish between the sacred and the profane, and
between the unclean and the clean." (Leviticus 10:8-10)
Whichever explanation of the cause of Nadav and Avihu's sinning we adopt,
the punishment appears extremely harsh. The severity of God's reaction is
undoubtedly a consequence of the location of the sin and the identity of the
sinners. The Netziv comments on the clause: "and they died BEFORE GOD" (10:2),
that it comes to explain why Nadav and Avihu were punished so severely. Since
they were before God, in his sanctuary, he dealt with them in the most stringent
manner and without mercy. Proximity to holiness demands utmost care. Sin in the
sanctuary is magnified and becomes all the more severe. However it is not only
the location but also the identity of the sinners which incurred such a harsh
reaction. This is perhaps the meaning behind Moses' words to Aaron following his
sons' death: "This is what the Lord meant when He said, Through THOSE NEAR TO ME
I show myself holy..." (10:3). Rabbi Hirsch comments on this verse:
The more
anybody stands in front of the people as a leader and teacher in their relation
to God, the less does God overlook his mistakes.... Had Aaron's sons not been so close to
God, pardon might have perhaps been granted to them, and the tragic fate which
God so immediately dealt them would not have been such a weighty warning to the
people. In sharpest contrast to the
modern point of view which regards spiritual and intellectual greatness as a
free pass for moral laxness, and grants men of intellect a greater consideration
in lapses against God's laws of morality, the Jewish point of view raises the
strictness of the demands for morality with each higher degree of
intellectuality.
God is most exacting with those who are closest to him. The assumption of
leadership positions, especially in the religious domain, demands exemplary
moral behavior. The potential and the responsibility for sanctifying God's name
when in a position of leadership is all the greater. Likewise the punishment
incurred for, God forbid, desecrating His name is much more severe. No Biblical
narrative illustrates this idea more powerfully than the tragic deaths of Nadav
and Avihu.
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