Hebräische Bibel
Hebräische Bibel

Chasidut zu Schemot 29:47

Kedushat Levi

Genesis 28,10. “Yaakov left Beer Sheva, etc.;” ‎‎[I presume the connection to Chanukah the author makes ‎here is based on his having composed this commentary for a ‎Shabbat Chanukah sermon. Ed.]‎‎
The reason why the miracle of Chanukah, actually the ‎miracle of the cruse of oil, is popularly known as the “miracle of ‎Chanukah,” is due to the word ‎חנוכה‎, being a derivative of ‎חנוך‎, ‎‎“consecration.” We find in Exodus 29,33 in connection with the ‎consecration of the priestly garments, that before the priests ‎were allowed to perform their sacred service they had to be ‎provided with suitable vessels to be used, i.e. priestly garments. ‎Wearing these priestly garments was so important that if they ‎performed their duties improperly dressed (even missing one of ‎these garments) this was a cardinal sin. (Maimonides 10,4 ‎‎hilchot kley hamikdash) The container in which certain ‎offerings were presented, were as integral a part of the ritual as ‎the ritual itself. The garments are the “container” in which the ‎priestly body performs his sacred task. It or they, are viewed like a ‎חנוך‎, educational tool, consecration, that must precede the actual ‎ritual in order for the priest to be truly a priest.
‎‎[Possibly, the emphasis on this in connection with the ‎priests especially, is due to the fact that the priest was born to ‎his status, and it would have been most unseemly for him not to ‎undergo preparations before fulfilling his sacred tasks. Rabbis ‎might not need this, as they were not born to the Rabbinate but ‎had to study and pass exams before being granted their titles, ‎ordination. Ed.]
‎Children are trained to perform the commandments before ‎becoming legally of age, i.e. ‎בר מצוה‎ or ‎בת מצוה‎, as the case may ‎be, before being ushered into adulthood and all that this entails.‎‎
Our patriarch Yaakov had contemplated the awesome ‎fact of the Unity of G’d from the day he was able to think, and he ‎realized that the foundation of all parts of the universe was the ‎Jewish people, i.e. if there were to be no Jewish people, G’d’s work ‎of creating the universe would have been in vain.‎
Zohar I,24 (and elsewhere) states that ‎ישראל עלה במחשבה ‏בראשית‎, “the eventual existence of the Jewish people was the first ‎thought that G’d entertained when contemplating the creation of ‎this universe.” Numerous scriptural verses are quoted in support ‎of this statement, one of which that concerns us especially being ‎that Israel was also known as ‎אבן‎ as in “foundation stone,” seeing ‎that the entire universe emerged from that origin. The Jewish ‎people therefore are not only the “root” of mankind, but also in ‎no lesser degree the founders of the celestial regions. While still in ‎the stage of being only a thought in G’d’s mind, they were called ‎אבן‎, “rock” in the singular mode, as at that point the true unity ‎of the Jewish people and what they represent could be found.‎
Our ancestor Yaakov attempted with all the intellectual and ‎emotional powers at his disposal to unravel the secrets of these ‎concepts in order to convert Israel’s potential into an actual. As ‎per Genesis 49,24 he wanted ‎משם רועה אבן ישראל‎, “to lay the ‎foundation stone of Israel,” as the shepherd of a nation consisting ‎of 12 tribes that parallel the 12 bisections of the 6 sides of the ‎cube when the universe is portrayed as a cube, dividing it into 12 ‎triangles (compare Sefer Yetzirah, “Book of creation”) by ‎bisecting each side from corner to corner. Each of the tribes of ‎the Jewish people represents one of these “triangles.” In order for ‎the celestial merkavah, Divine chariot, to be complete it ‎must be comprised of 600000 components, the number of Jewish ‎male adults that were redeemed from bondage in Egypt. ‎According to our sages, the Presence of the Shechinah will ‎not manifest itself as resting above the Jewish people when they ‎number less than these 600000. According to our author, when ‎the Torah in Genesis 28,11 describes how Yaakov took “stones” in ‎order to prepare to spend the night, and he put his head on of ‎the stones to serve as his “pillow,” the Torah merely illustrates ‎the kind of thoughts that preoccupied Yaakov at that time, and ‎how during his “dream” of the ladder he experienced Divine ‎insights that had never been revealed to him.
Nonetheless, in view of the sages having said that no verse in ‎the Torah must be explained in a way that departs completely ‎from the written text and its plain meaning, we must pay ‎attention to this also. [I believe that in accordance with the above ‎Yaakov/Yisrael’s role as ‎רועה אבן ישראל‎, “shepherd of the nucleus ‎of the people” of Israel began here. Ed.]‎‎
According to the plain text there is no question that Yaakov ‎placed his head on real stones, as he had no softer pillow at hand. ‎Nonetheless while lying with these rocks as his pillow, he thought ‎of matters far beyond his immediate and pressing terrestrial ‎concerns. Perhaps this very fact qualified him for experiencing ‎the first of his many Divine visions, although this time he was not ‎certain for 34 years that it had indeed been a divine vision. ‎According to our sages, during this night Yaakov’s mind foresaw ‎the ruins of two Temples and the great anger that the Jewish ‎people, his descendants, would provoke in G’d’s mind on ‎numerous occasions.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy

Kedushat Levi

Exodus 29,9. “you shall ordain Aaron and his ‎sons.” We know that in this lower world, better known as ‎עולם הזה‎, “this world,” i.e. the world inhabited by mortal ‎creatures, we cannot find absolute perfection, as every creature is ‎tied to a greater or lesser degree to the need to satisfy physical ‎requirements. It is also a fact that these “joys or satisfactions” our ‎bodies derive from fulfilling their cravings never endure, and we ‎always experience the lack of something. This is the basic ‎difference between serving the Lord, and indulging one’s physical ‎or erotic fantasies. David expressed this beautifully, when he said ‎in psalms 34,11 ‎ודורשי ה' לא יחסרו כל טוב‎, “but those who seek ‎their satisfaction by seeking out G’d will not ever feel that ‎something is missing.” The “good” they will experience will be ‎felt to be absolute, enduring.‎
The elite of our people who have succeeded in glimpsing the ‎אין סוף‎ with their mental eye will be rewarded by this feeling of ‎having attained something sublime, complete.‎
When the Torah instructs Moses to ordain Aaron, by using ‎the expression: ‎ומלאת‎, from the root ‎מלא‎, “full, fill,” it conveys to ‎Moses that Aaron will find total fulfillment in his role as High ‎Priest. Also Aaron’s sons will feel this sense of fulfillment when ‎carrying out their duties in the Tabernacle, an experience that ‎cannot be compared to fulfilling one’s secular needs. When G’d ‎tells Moses about this, it is because He wants him to know that ‎he, Moses, will have a share in elevating both his brother and his ‎nephews to such spiritual heights.‎
Our author feels that the reason why the eight days of ‎consecration were called ‎שמונת ימי מלואים‎, was to symbolize that ‎Aaron and his sons used these days to get familiar with this new ‎level of serving the Lord, something they would not do ad ‎hoc, in their spare time, so to speak, but something that ‎henceforth would afford them a degree of satisfaction that is not ‎to be found when devoting oneself to earthly concerns, however ‎noble in intent and deed. During these days they would ‎experience the meaning of G’d’s presence being among them on ‎earth.‎
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Vorheriger VersGanzes KapitelNächster Vers