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The Israel
Koschitzky Virtual Beit Midrash
Introduction to Parashat Hashavua
Yeshivat Har Etzion
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YCT and Michlelet Herzog's Yemei Iyun
on Bible and Jewish Thought
Tuesday, June 27, 2006 - Thursday, June 29, 2006
At
Ma'ayanot Yeshiva High School, Teaneck, NJ
For
more information and/or to register,
please download the brochure at www.yctorah.org
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PARASHAT KORACH
Guarding the Temple
By Rav Michael Hattin
INTRODUCTION
Parashat Korach follows closely on the heels of the episode
of the Spies. Just recently condemned to
perish in the barren wilderness after they had been swayed by the Spies'
defeatist report, the people of Israel
were now easily swept up by Korach's indignant allegations. "All of the community, all of them are
holy!" he thundered in the direction of Moshe and Aharon, "why then
do you lord it over God's congregation?" (Bamidbar 16:3). Gathering about himself a motley assortment of
malcontents, Korach ostensibly pressed for reforms and for a more equitable
distribution of power, but to no avail.
The priesthood and the sacrificial service remained concentrated in the
hands of Aharon and his descendents, the maintenance of the Mishkan remained
under the aegis of the Levites, while the earth suddenly opened up to swallow
the ringleaders as Korach and his two hundred and fifty firstborn followers
perished in the flames at the challenge of the firepans. As if anyone missed the point, a plague broke
out among the people and was stayed by Aharon's intervention, the High Priest's
wooden staff then miraculously blossomed to confirm his election as leader of
the tribe of Levi, and the unique status of his priesthood was subsequently
enshrined in law with a lengthy communication to him from God Himself.
God said to
Aharon: You and your children and your family shall bear the responsibility for
the Holy Precinct, and you and your children with you shall bear the
responsibility of the priesthood. Also
your kin the tribe of Levi, the tribe of your father, you shall draw near so
that they accompany you and serve you, but you and your children with you shall
be before the Tent of the Testimony.
They shall keep your charge and guard the entire Tent, but they shall
not come near to the holy vessels or to the altar lest they and you both
perish. They shall join you and guard
the charge of the Tent of Meeting according to all of its service, but an
Israelite shall not draw near to you.
You shall guard the charge of the holy place and the charge of the
altar, and there shall not be any anger against the people of Israel. As for Me, behold I have selected your
brethren the Levites from among the people of Israel, to you they are given for
God to perform the service of the Tent of Meeting. But you and your children with you shall
guard your priesthood concerning all matters pertaining to the altar or to
within the curtain where you serve, for I have appointed you to serve as
priests, but the Israelite who draws near shall die (Bamidbar 18:1-7).
THE
HIERARCHY OF THE SERVICE
In the passage above, the respective roles of the Kohanim
and the Levi'im are spelled out, and the hierarchical relationship between them
is emphasized. The priests alone shall
serve at the altar and minister to God using the holy vessels housed in the
sanctified precincts beyond the dividing curtain. The Levites in turn shall guard the perimeter
of the Mishkan, ensuring that no Israelites trespass or else attempt to perform
those parts of the service for which they are unfit. The single repeating word in the passage that
highlights its central theme is, of course, "guarding" (veShaMRu,
miShMaRtecha, miShMeRet, etc.), and in its various forms it occurs no less than
nine times. Quite clearly God's words to
Aharon constitute a strong Divine reaction to the failed rebellion, and to
Korach's repeated calls for the portals of the Mishkan and for its exclusive
services to be flung open in order to accommodate the people of Israel at large. In effect, God now makes it abundantly clear
that there will be no democratization of the service and no wider participation
of the people of Israel. The Kohanim and the Kohanim alone shall offer
sacrifices or enter the Mishkan proper while the Levites shall assist them in
their duties from the outside, but no Israelites, firstborn or otherwise, shall
officiate.
The priestly and levitical dues that were placed upon the
people of Israel,
concerning which the subsequent passages speak (18:8-32), leave no room for
doubt about the order of things. The
Kohanim were to receive from the people an honorary share of the sacrifices
that they presented, a percentage of the crops that they raised, the first
fruits of their fields and the firstborn animals of their flocks. The Levites, in comparison, were to receive a
tithe (1/10) of the people's produce but were then expected in turn to share a
tithe of that tithe with their priestly brethren. Significantly, both groups were not to
possess any tribal portion in the new land, for it was to be divided only among
the Israelites. The overall effect of
the legislation was to foster the creation of a priestly and Levitical
hierarchy that would be physically sustained by the people, while the people
themselves were to be effectively excluded from the ritual aspects of the
service. It is not difficult to see why
such an arrangement may not have been enthusiastically embraced by the people
of Israel
at large. Though many of them may not
have identified with Korach's methods, they certainly did identify with his
message. Why then was Israel barred from
participating in the service of the Mishkan?
THE
COMMAND TO GUARD
The Sefer Ha-Chinukh, a 14th century anonymous
work probably authored by the Spanish sage Rabbi Aharon HaLevi, discusses the
mitzvot of the Torah according to the Torah portion, and addresses the issue a
number of times in our Parasha. For him,
the starting point for explaining many of the features of the Mishkan is the
need for the House of God and its service to be revered and respected by the
people of Israel at large. A number of
early sources preserve interesting traditions relating to Temple ritual that
tend to reinforce this fundamental point.
One of the most striking for our purposes concerns the directive to
"guard" the Mishkan. Recall
that in the passage quoted earlier, God spoke emphatically about
"guarding": "They shall keep your charge and guard the entire
tent, but they shall not come near to the holy vessels or to the altar lest
they and you both perish. They shall
join you and guard the charge of the Tent of Meeting according to all of its
service, but an Israelite shall not draw near to you. You shall guard the charge of the holy place
and the charge of the altar, and there shall not be any anger against the
people of Israel". In the Mishna
Tractate Middot this guarding was understood to imply not the need for the
Kohanim and Levi'im to maintain a state of propriety or proper frame of mind while
in the holy spaces, but rather the formation of an actual priestly and
Levitical gendarmie that was expected to stand sentry at the entrances to the
Mishkan as well as to patrol its perimeter at all times. As the Sefer Ha-Chinukh relates:
As for the
rational of this mitzva, it is as I have already stated a number of times. If the House (of God) is honored, then people
will revere and respect it and when they then come there to ask forgiveness or
to supplicate the Master of All then their hearts will quickly become receptive
to perform Teshuva…It is also honor for the House to have guards arrayed around
it, after the manner of great earthly monarchs who do just that…(commentary to
Mitzva #388 – the Command to Guard the Temple).
THE
COURT OF THE KING
The Sefer Ha-Chinukh argues that it is essential for the
House of God to be revered by the masses.
After all, the purpose of approaching and entering God's House is not
simply to be impressed by its architecture and its appurtenances or else to
while away a pleasant few hours far from the bustle of the madding crowds and
shielded from the heat and noise in its cool and silent spaces. The purpose of entering the Temple is to be
sufficiently inspired, as a result of the encounter with the Master of All, to
desire to transform one's life in a meaningful way. Of necessity, this requires an experience
that is characterized by overwhelming feelings of both reverence as well as
adoration. But in order to instill that
reverence and love in the hearts of Israel it is essential that the framework
in which that encounter takes place be conducive to those goals. Therefore, God's House cannot be less
impressive or emotionally moving than the court of an earthly monarch or mortal
ruler and in fact must borrow from the trappings of those more temporal
places.
Of course, as the Sefer Ha-Chinukh related earlier, the
soul of the supplicant who enters must be receptive to the call of Teshuva – we
are all only too aware that witnessing the ceremony of the "changing of
the guard" in and of itself will not transform the recalcitrant human
heart. But on the other hand, if the
service performed in the Holy Temple is unimpressive or pedantic, mundane or
prosaic, then life-altering inspiration is more difficult to summon forth and nurture. The critical difference, then, between the
House of God and the palace of the president is that a stopover at the latter
is an end unto itself and no further demands are placed upon the visitor once
he or she has been overwhelmingly impressed for the hour. A pilgrimage to God's Temple, on the other
hand, is here understood to be only part (albeit a critical part) of a much
more involved process of spiritual growth.
One enters the Temple only after a lengthy series of physical and mental
preparations and one leaves it having become a different person.
FAMILIARITY
BREEDS CONTEMPT
It is therefore clear why the ministrations at the Mishkan
and Temple were effectively barred to the Israelites, Korach's impassioned
outcries notwithstanding. If the service
was freely opened up to any and all who so desired to perform it, then that
service would become less impressive and inspiring as a result. The reasons for this are twofold. First of all, to quote the old adage,
familiarity breeds contempt. If
Israelites could enter the Temple at will as often as they wished, then their
visits would of necessity become routine and less dramatic. The Rambam (12th century, Egypt)
in fact argues along the same lines that the numerous laws of "Tuma"
(ritual unfitness for lack of a better translation) that underlie Sefer Vayikra
are simply legislated as impediments to Temple entry. Writing in the Guide to the Perplexed (3:37)
he remarks:
We have already
explained that the purpose of the Temple was to inspire the visitor with
feelings of reverence and awe (of God).
It is well known that any encounter, no matter how exalted or noble,
loses its efficacy when it is experienced regularly, and its effect on the
human soul and personality correspondingly decreases. Therefore our Sages have suggested that it is
not preferable to visit the Temple too regularly…This being the case, the Torah
legislated such a multitude of forms of Tuma and barred those individuals in a
state of Tuma from entering the Temple, in order to limit the possibility of
being in a state of Tahara and therefore the opportunity of entry…All of these
regulations are a means of limiting one's access to the Temple and discouraging
habitual entry to its precincts…thus preserving the reverential character of
the place and safeguarding the purpose of instilling humility before God.
Returning to our context, the Sefer Ha-Chinukh (who was, by
the way, a great admirer of the Rambam) simply applies the same thesis in a
more comprehensive fashion: in order to ensure that the service remains a transformative
experience it must be limited to a select few who will be charged with the
difficult task of maintaining its uniqueness.
Israelites will have to experience the service from the outside as it
were, but the effects will be more pronounced as a result.
But there is a second aspect as well. Recall that Korach had passionately argued
that "All of the community, all of them are holy! Why then do you lord it over God's congregation?" His intent was to "democratize" the
service of the Mishkan so that any and all who wanted to officiate (including
himself!) could do so at will. But what
sort of a service would that become? In
order to either accommodate or else suppress everyone's special needs,
idiosyncrasies and personal interests, the service would in turn have to be
either quirky, unpredictable and impulsive or else utterly egalitarian,
mediocre and populist, both possibilities constituting unbearable outcomes for
what was intended to be life's most sublime spiritual experience.
FOR
THE SAKE OF THE KOHANIM AND LEVI'IM
Of course for the Sefer Ha-Chinukh, the guarding of the
Temple is not only for the sake of impressing the Israelites. It has an important collateral effect: to
impress upon those that minister at the Temple, the Kohanim and Levi'im, the
gravity of their service. Thus, the
Mishna in Tractate Middot (1:2) relates that
The Captain of the
Temple Mount would patrol each one of the sentry positions with a lighted
torch. This Captain would beat any
sentry who was found to be asleep and who had failed to rise when he would call
out "peace be upon you!" In
fact, the Captain even had the authority to set his clothes alight. Thus, it would sometimes happen that people
would say: what is that outcry in the Temple forecourt? They would respond: it is the sound of a
Levite being beaten and his clothes being set on fire for having fallen asleep
during his watch! Rabbi Eli'ezer ben
Ya'akov related: they once found my own brother asleep and burned his clothes!
Taken together, then, the exclusivity of the Temple service
creates a unique potential for that service to be transformative, for
Israelites and Kohanim/Levi'im alike.
Korach appealed to the masses' desire for direct involvement but the
Torah appeals to their souls.
Ultimately, the efficacy of the God-man encounter depends upon many
factors but inspiration is surely one of them.
Shabbat
Shalom
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