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Vayikra - 1st Portion
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Join me as we learnish. As we begin the
vayikra, the thirdish
of the five books of Moses, the book of
Leviticus, the book of Leviticus is
known as kahhanim. The laws which are
pertaining to the priests, to the
kohanim as this and many of this uh
Torah reading and many others talk about
the sacrifices, the laws of impurity,
the laws of the holy days of yum kipper
as well as
generally learned the first verse of it
at least by young children as it talks
about sacrifices. The holiness and
Jewish children are as holy and as pure
as sacrifices. So, as we're going to
learn the complex details of all the
different sacrifices that are enumerated
in the following Torah readings of the
book of Leviticus,
chapter 1, verse one.
Now that the tabernacle is already
standing and the work of the holy uh
temple has to now take place, God speaks
with Moses and tells them about the laws
pertaining to the sacrifices. So,
God spoke to him and God spoke to him a
love. Where did he speak to him from?
From the tent of meeting
saying to address the Jewish people and
tell them the laws of the sacrifices.
Rashi points to the fact that it says
that he called Moshe and then he says
and then he spoke to him. If he called
him then he's going to speak to him. Why
the double terminology?
It is teaching us that for all the times
when God speaks to Moses that every time
God says the words
or
he first calls him and then he tells him
what it is because this is a way of
showing love and kindness and respect to
Moshe.
This is also a terminology that the
angels use. We find in Isaiah uses a
terminology
they each called each other and said and
that's the way God shows his love and
endearment to Moshe.
However, to the prophets of the
non-Jews, as we find,
God pierced to them only in a temporary
way, as it says in the book of Genesis,
book of numbers,
and God chanced upon Bum. Interestingly
enough, if you look at the first word of
the Torah reading of Vayikra, you'll
notice that there's a small alf. The
Balotum explains that why there's a
small alf is because motion is humility.
when God told him and he was dictating
the law by God, he felt that this wasn't
behooving of his ability that he God
should call upon him. So therefore, he
made a small olive being that he has to
write what God said. But the word when
you don't see the alf it says that God
chanced upon him show just like God were
chants upon anybody else even bum
showing a sign of Moses's utmost
humility
that the voice goes and reaches the ears
of Moshe
but all the other Jewish people did not
hear God calling him I would think
I would think even when there's an
interruption also there God calls him
like we're going to find later on
there's numerous laws and then there's
interruptions in between does God call
them by each individual time
therefore the Torah says it twice God
called him he called him once and then
he told him all the laws that had to
follow afterwards
for this statement there was God called
him
but not for all the other interruptions
they were all part of the same statement
if so
Why there interruptions? Did God tell it
at once or were there interruptions?
God called him, told them the
statements, then gave him the ability
that he should have as some breathing
room in between so he can understand and
absorb everything that God told him and
then God would continue to say,
"How much more so?" of motion needed
uh time and breaks to absorb what was
being told to him. How much more so
simple people who are hearing something
from an individual from a human being
not Moses from God how much more so we
should also need breaks to be able to
understand appreciate and realize and
and embrace and uh really understand
what's being learned.
He loved to him
to exclude
said
there were 13 times in the Torah we are
God spoke to Moses and Aaron together
connect
then we also find 13 times we are Aaron
is the exception
to teach
to tell you that it was not said to and
only to Moshe
then afterwards Moshe would have to then
teach it to
these are the three 13 exceptions
Every time it says to speak to him and I
would speaking to him meaning it's
saying specifically to Moses and not to
Aaron
and all of them are enumerated in the
Torah meaning in the book of Leviticus
and the different places that we find
that are mentioned I would think
that he would hear
that maybe just the actual statement he
didn't hear but the actual calling they
did hear therefore tells us
that God called him and only when he
called him and nobody else heard it from
the tent of meeting
teaches us that the voice would stop at
the entrance of the tent of meeting of
the tabernacle and nobody else would
hear it would think the reason why
people couldn't hear it because it was a
very soft voice
therefore says
therefore it says the voice that they
heard in the book of numbers that it
says the voice penetrated that Moshe was
able to hear it even to the outside
why does it say with a hey at the front
of it meaning this is the voice which is
explained in Psalm 29
the voice of God penetrates and it
breaks the trees it's a powerful voice
Why then does it say from the tent of
meeting?
It teaches us that the voice would then
end there and nobody else would hear it.
We find a similar thing in a different
text
where he talks about the voice that
would emanate from above the crew and
we're only heard until the outside
courtyard. I would think
I would think because it's a soft voice.
Therefore, it continues to say because
God's voice is a penetrating voice, a
strong voice.
And why does it then say until the
outside courtyard
once it reached the outside courtyard
then it would stop
think I would think that the whole
entire voice was heard about in all
parts of the holy tabernacle.
Therefore, it says that it came from
above the cover of the ark.
I would think that maybe it's coming
from the entire arcs cover. Therefore,
he tells me the voice emanated only
specifically from between the two
to address saying. What does it mean
saying?
go out and tell the Jewish people words
of encouragement, words that bring that
of inspiration
that will bring them to repentance and
showing them.
Why is God speaking to me is only in the
honor and the merit of the Jewish people
that we find that the 38 years after the
sin of the spies which is enumerated in
the book of of numbers. Then those 38
years that the Jewish people were
considered distant from God
because of the case of the spies,
the God did not speak individually with
Moses. As it says,
only once all the people died. Only then
did God speak to me. Then did God speak
to me in a close way. And another reason
why he says the word here to address
go out speak to the Jewish people. Tell
them the words I say and let me know
what their response is. As it says later
in the said in the book of Exodus that
when Moshe was told a word by God on
Mount Si, he went and told it to the
Jewish people by
and then Moshe came and told back the
Jewish people what God said.
Told God what the Jewish people said.
Verse two,
speak to the Jewish people
and you will tell them,
"A man
or a man or a woman from you brings who
will bring from among you a sacrifice.
You must bring the sacrifice from
domestic animals, from cattle or from
flock.
You will bring your sacrifice.
This is referring to certain type of
sacrifices which were a sacrifice that a
person willingly will bring on his own.
Adam over here he doesn't say man or
woman just as a human
why does he say the terminology
you have to learn from Adam just like
Adam didn't bring a sacrifice from
something that was stolen everything
belong to him
so too you should not bring from a
stolen animal
why then say the animal the domestic
animals I would think
even a wild animal
saying therefore it tells me the cattle
and the sheep that it has to be
something from which is a kosher for an
animal to bring which is a domestic
animal
why from the animal what does it mean
from the animal of not all of it meaning
that there were certain animals that you
were not allowed to bring because if
they were used for a uh if it was used
for a transgression if it were used for
an aappropriately
then it cannot be brought as a sacrifice
because that is disgusting before God
from the cattle. Why does he tell me
again what kind again minus
comes to exclude the one that was served
for idolatry?
From the sheep one that was designated
for idolatry is also not allowed to be
brought as a sacrifice
from the sheep.
Shahus. This comes to exclude besides
all the previous ones that we mentioned
previously that if one h if this was a
goring animal that a gored an animal and
because of it killed him somebody one is
not allowed to bring it as a sacrifice.
Rashi then continues to discuss about
how do we know about what would be
considered illegitimate or inappropriate
to bring for a sacrifice.
Then when the Torah says again if from
later on in verse three it's going to
say from the cattle
this is didn't have to repeat it over
there it's coming to exclude is an
animal that was injured so therefore
it's not considered a kosher animal it
is prohibited from eating so two
one is not allowed to bring it as a
sacrifice as well
interesting This theidus explains that
it says technically really it should say
a person from amongst you that will
bring. Why does it say
a person from you that will bring as the
explains and then brought down in many
places in that the word that a person
has to bring a sacrifice he himself
comes close to God but it has to be mimm
from within you even bringing the
animals the animalistic inclination the
animal within you has to come close to
God as well. Verse three
If his sacrifice is going to be an
ascent offering from the cattle,
which will be an unblenmished meal, he
should bring close to the uh tent to the
entrance of the tent of meeting. We
should bring you should bring item
willingly before God.
You shall bring
the two people can bring it as well.
Can bring the offering in partnership
your sacrifice.
This is still on the previous verse.
This is coming to tell us that when a
person donates a sacrifice that it comes
in a way just like a communal sacrifice.
And what kind of uh what kind of ola
what kind of a scent offering can be
brought that the entire community brings
it. This is an ola that was brought when
the ms was empty from sacrifices and the
coanim did not have anything to bring.
They would bring certain ascent
offerings which were donations and were
left over and they were called the end
of the mb meaning like a person has
nothing left and this is what he brings.
Now we're in verse three. It has to be a
male
but not a female.
when it says later on male when it comes
to the sheep
not that the vers the Torah didn't have
to repeat it a male why does the Torah
repeat it again
not other kinds which are not a male or
a female which one may say oh well I can
bring it anyway therefore the Torah
tells me it has to be clearly a male
defined as a maleim complete without any
blemish to the entrance of the tent of
gathering which at
Does the actual person who brings the
sacrifice go into the courtyard and come
to the front of the uh come to the front
of the tent of the gathering? But it's
telling us that he brings it actually to
the Cohen
and the Cohen is the one who deals with
it and brings it at that point.
But he has to bring it to the furthest
this point. He can't go and tell the
cohen here take my animal and you deal
with it. That's disrespectful to the
work of the cohen.
Why does he say first and now says
like he says in the beginning a male
shall be brought and then he says be
brought to the front meaning as follows.
How is that possible?
Let's say if one the ascent offering the
offering of Ruven got mixed up with the
of Shim.
So then each one Ruven and Shim brings
the sacrifice for that person meaning
he's saying I am going to bring the
sacrifice for whoever may be whether
it's ru or shims
or another case if what happens if a
scent offering got mixed up with a
regular animal of somebody else's animal
so that person doesn't have to make his
animal holy what he needs to do is
he can sell the weekday animal that
means the animal that has not been
sanctified for the use of ascent
offerings
even though he doesn't know which one it
went to.
And then they can all be considered as
sacrifices
and then each one brings us for whoever
may be needed for for the owners that
may brought it. That's why he uses the
termology and sometimes because
sometimes it is an individual that
happens and sometimes the exception is
as we're going to see
I would think okay so therefore if I'm
saying if it gets mixed up and I can
just may say whoever may be for that's
who sacrifice it may be what happens if
this animal now gets mixed up with
animals which are not allowed to be
brought for a sacrifice or or if it gets
mixed up with a schlamim a different
kind of sacrif acrifice.
Therefore, the Torah says, "No, you can
only bring it as a sacrifice only if you
know that it's a kosher sacrifice and
only if it's from its its particular
kind, then I can say I can rely and
bring one for the other." But if you
don't know what it was mixed up, then
you have to wait sell the animal and
then it's used for something else and
you cannot use that sacrifice.
You will bring it. What does it mean? It
teaches us
say that if a person does not want to
bring the sacrifice, the rabbitical
court can then force the individual
even against his will.
Therefore, the Torah says willingly.
How does it possible that you can force
a person, but at the same time they will
be willingly?
You force a person until he concludes
and says, "Yes, I want to do it." The
Reb explains, "What does this mean? It
sounds like an oxymoron. If I'm forcing
him, then he doesn't do it willingly.
How can I force a person that he decides
to do it willingly? So the Reb explains
because every person really wants and
sometimes you have to ignite within the
person that he should want that it
should be a revealed wanting and that's
why he needs a little bit of a forcing
and
verse four.
If we look the last two words of this
Torah reading of the before of this
verse is before God. Then verse four it
says place. This comes to tell us
because
the only that when there were these
private altars before there was built
the holy temple people had personal
altars that they were allowed to bring
sacrifices in their personal backyard.
Over there they did not put their hands
on the animal. The only time the word
you placed your hands on the animal was
when it was before God in the holy
temple. Verse four,
he must lean his hand forcefully on the
head of the offering
and it will be accepted for him to atone
for him.
This comes to include
why does he tell us twice about the is
because there are two kinds of olas.
This is an ola which was obligated that
you need to have place your p hands upon
it and also concerning the for sheep
that you had to do it as well. Put your
hand place your hands on it.
Why does it say
there was as we're soon going to see
that if a person brought a bird and on
the birds one did not place his hands
and this was then accepted by him to
atone
for whatever sin he is bringing this
ascent offering for one might say
that if a person's bringing about for
those sins that there are a punishment a
punishment of curse where he gets cut
off or there's the punishment of the
penalty of the of the rabbitical court
or the penalty that God kills the person
or by lashes
or all these people their punishment
already stated and clearly put in the
Torah. So what kind of sacrifice would
this be brought for
so what is this brought for? What kind
of sacrifice and what kind of atonement
is this sacrifice used for? This is if a
person missed out on doing a positive
commandment
say and so too or for a negative
commandment which is dependent on a
positive command which was that there is
no punishment of lashes for. So this is
talking about for example if a person
misses saying putting on fillin misses
saying the shama those are all positive
commandments. There is no technically
punishment for it. He can bring an ola
offering for an atonement for that.
Verse five,
he will slaughter the bull before God.
And Aaron's sons then must receive the
blood.
What will they then do? They'll sprinkle
the blood
around the uh altar on the outside of
the altar
that is at the entrance of the tent of
meeting.
these four things that the it says that
the cohen has to do is number one to
slaughter it to gather the blood
sprinkle the blood and then
and accepting it in the vessel. All of
these things the coen has to do it.
If you notice over here there are many
things that are mentioned in the verse
what has to be done. However, the first
item that mentions that the Cohen has to
do is accepting the blood because from
accepting the blood the Cohen has to do.
But the actual slaughtering a Israelite
is allowed to do as well.
This was done where was the slaughtering
had to be done in the Azara in the
courtyard of the holy temple.
This is accepting the blood catching it
in a vessel.
This was the first activity that the
Cohen would do. Number two was actually
taking the blood
bringing it
that the children of iron had to do with
it.
I would think that even an invalid cohen
is allowed to. That means a kal is a
child of a cohen who was born from a
notallowed marriage of a cohen. Let's
say for example a coin marrying a
divorce and that child is considered.
Therefore the Torah tells us it has to
be a legitimate coin.
Why does it say the word blood twice?
This comes to include
if it was mixed in with the same blood
that means the blood of the owners of
this animal or it was mixed in with the
blood of another animal as well. I would
think
even though it was mixed with different
blood but even by blood of a non-coosher
one which one was not allowed to be
brought as a sacrifice
or with the sin offering which had to be
sprinkled inside
and it was mixed together with the blood
offering of a sin offering that was
sprinkled on the outside
because some are sprinkled on the top
part of the altar and some of the bottom
of the altar.
Therefore, when we're talking about the
mixed up bloods, the Torah tells us
Only its blood can be sprinkled but not
blood that's mixed a either with a non
unfit blood of an unfit animal or blood
which is sprinkled in different places.
You cannot mix the bloods
and they would sprinkle it. How would
they would sprinkle the blood on the
altar?
You would stand below and throw it
upward with the vessel
to the wall of the altar
underneath the red line. And it was a
red thread that went around the whole
thing that he knew exactly what was the
top and the bottom is towards the
corners.
That's why he uses the terminology in
circling
that the blood was put on both sides
because he put it on the circle. It went
on both sides of on the corner and he
put it on both sides of the corner and
then he did it on the other side on both
sides of the corner. So therefore he had
all four corners had the blood on it.
I would think that maybe can you may
think that maybe you can just take it
with a brush or a thread and bring the
blood and make a circle around it.
Therefore, it uses a terminology you
have to sprinkle it. You have to throw
it
and you cannot encircle it by just
throwing it.
But then I may say if it says you should
throw it should do it with only one
throw. It should be able to go in all
four corners. Therefore, he uses the
terminology in circling. How does he do
it?
He does two throws which those two
throws make it happen on all four
corners that we just explained
at the entrance of the
only time that a person can actually uh
bring a sacrifice was when the tent of
gathering was up not when it was
dismantled and only then would it be um
valid.
verse six.
Then he must then skin the of the
offering of the ascent offering
and then cuts it up into pieces.
Why does it have to tell me and the
aren't we talking about the
this is coming to tell me that anytime a
person brings in a donation sacrifice
all of them have to be skinned and cut
to pieces
meaning that those pieces to the very
well-known pieces that were explained
and the rabbis explained in the track
date of Yuma not that you should cut up
it up even into smaller pieces verse
seven
and then children of Aaron are going to
put arrange a fire on the altar
and they'll arrange the wood on the fire
even though
even though there's already a fire
coming from heaven still in all
it's a mitzvah that the individual
should also bring a fire as we know the
lesson that we learn from this that even
though God gives us special gifts of
blessings and there's a fire that's
coming from heaven still and all we have
to add our contribution to it and if we
don't bring our contribution to it then
it's as if as the fire didn't happen and
the sacrifice is invalid
the son of the
is telling us that when when how does he
have to do it he has to do it when he's
wearing the holy garments that a cohen
is not allowed to work in his ordinary
garments
verse eight
and then the children of Aaron will
arrange the meat on the uh will arrange
the pieces of meat
the
the head
and the and the animals fat Allah eats
him on the wood
that's on the fire
that is on the altar.
So once as we mentioned they we cut them
up in sections then they're going to
arrange these pieces and put them on the
fire
when they are wearing their garments.
Why does it have to say it again?
Because you would think okay I know that
he has to wear the kohanic garments but
what if he goes and wears the priestly
garments of the high priest also it's
not it's not considered kosher. He has
to wear those four garments that are
designated for him.
Why does he separate the pieces and then
the head? Because the head is not
skinned
because it was already cut by the
slaughtering and therefore it's not part
of the part that has to be cut.
Therefore, it's enumerated on its own.
What is the fats?
Why does it say the fats on its own?
that he brings the fats together with
the head
and covers the area where we're
slaughtered.
This is out of respect for God.
That's on the altar.
You have to make sure that all the
pieces are arranged on the wood and
should nothing be sticking out.
Verse N.
Before the Cohen places all the animal
sections on the altar, he has to first
wash the inards and its legs in water.
Then the Cohen will burn it all up on
the altar.
This is an ascent offering, a fire
offering which is pleasing to God. Verse
nine,
the word means to go up
because he's bringing it for the purpose
to completely go up to God.
The word is what is it coming to?
Because when he slaughterers it
slaughter it for the sake and have in
mind at the time of slaughtering that it
should be burnt on the fire.
Anytime you find the word means a
sacrifice which is consumed by fire.
The word
when a person brings a sacrifice, this
gives God great pleasure. What's the
pleasure? Not that God enjoys the steak,
but the very fact that I told you to do
something and you follow my laws.
Verse 10.
If his offering is from the flock from
the sheep, from the goats for an ascent
offering
to make sure it's an unblenmished male
that he brings.
This is continuing what he said before
because the and continues
as we mentioned to them. Why is he
making an interruption? If you look
there's a that there means is a break.
This is
this is for Moshe to digest what God
told him to understand to contemplate
that it should be uh to think about it
and then he can continue telling writing
and learning what God told him. So
you'll notice that whenever there is a a
pay in the Torah these are breaks so to
speak when God told it to Moshe the
laws.
This is three exceptions because it says
from the sheep, from the from the flock
and from the goats. These three
exceptions are telling us this excludes
an elderly sheep that once it's over two
years old, it cannot be brought
for a sick animal that's not well, you
cannot bring it as a sacrifice or one
that has a bad odor. So all these are
unfit for a sacrifice. Verse 11.
And this must be slaughtered next to the
north side
on the north side of the altar in front
of God.
And then the children of Aram will then
dash the blood on the altar encircling
it.
What is the word on the side of the
altar? North side in front of God.
However, when it comes to the personal
altars that people had, they would not
have the issues of which side they would
burn. which side it would slaughter on.
They can slaughter it on either side
that they want. Verse
uh 12
would then cut it into pieces pieces
its head and its fast
and then the coen would arrange it on
the wood that's on the fire that's on
the altar. Verse 13
and the inards and the
and the inards and the legs. He will
first wash with water
and then the coen will bring it all as a
sacrifice.
They'll burn it on the altar. This is an
ascent offering consumed in fire.
A pleasing offering to Hashem. This
concludes the first Torah reading of
Vayikra.