A GREAT SABBATH Shabat hagadol by Rabbi Baruch Cohon

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A GREAT SABBATH – Shabat hagadol – by Rabbi Baruch Cohon

          This week, most synagogue Torah services include a special reading from the Prophets – not the regular Haftorah but one designated for the Sabbath before Passover, called Shabat hagadol, the Great Sabbath.   It comes from the third chapter of Malachi, last of the Biblical prophets.  Try some of his statements on for size:

“Your words are strong against Me, says G-d.   You say it is vain to serve G-d.  What benefit did we get from keeping His charge, and walking mournfully because of the Lord of Hosts?… Those who work mischief are built up.  They challenge G-d and get away with it.”

Sounds pretty contemporary?

Well, Malachi lived some 2500 years ago, in the days of the Second Temple.  He saw a generation becoming what we would call secular.  The Hertz commentary points out that Israel was beginning “to doubt whether there was a righteous Governor of the universe, and was losing Israel’s belief in Israel.” So not only were the people losing faith in G-d, they were also losing faith in themselves as a nation. Malachi countered that condition with a message of justice and hope.  We do well to read his message today.

Speaking for G-d, he says: “I will come near to you for judgment.  I will be a swift witness against the sorcerers and the adulterers and the perjurers, and against those who cheat the laborer out of his pay, and those who oppress widows and orphans and turn the stranger away.”  In other words, religion is more than an individual opinion; it is a way to correct our wrongs.  A thoughtful message at any time.

The last sentences of this Haftorah bring us its connection with the coming holiday: “Behold, I will send you Elijah the Prophet before the coming of the great and awesome Day of G-d.  And he will turn the hearts of parents to their children, and the hearts of children to their parents, lest I come and strike the land with utter destruction.”  No more generational conflict. 

It will be Elijah – Eliyahu haNavi – who will appear to announce the Messiah.  We know that Elijah, one of the first Prophets, was not depicted dying a natural death.  He was swept up into a fiery heavenly chariot as his disciple Elisha looked on.  That is how his exit is described in Second Kings chapter 2. Ever since then, Jewish lore has held out the hope that the great prophet will some day return to earth and bring on the Messianic Age.  We dramatize that hope at every Seder meal when we keep a full goblet of wine on the table for Elijah’s cup, and open the door at a designated point in the evening to receive him.  And of course we sing to him… and doesn’t it seem like the wine in that cup is now a little less than full?

One of these years….

 

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HOW MUCH TO SACRIFICE Vayikra by Rabbi Baruch Cohon

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HOW MUCH TO SACRIFICE – Vayikra – Leviticus 1-5

          The Book of Leviticus – called in Hebrew “Vayikra” – begins with the call to Moses, written with a small letter “aleph” at the end of the first word.   Various commentators ancient and modern go through some literary contortions to explain that little “aleph,” but let’s not get into that right now.         

Bigger fish to fry.  Or rather, bigger animals, birds, fine flour – bigger sacrifices.  Kind of hard to relate to the procedure of animal sacrifice as the expression of religion, these days, but let’s try.  Starting here, Leviticus spells out all the rules for bringing and offering different animal sacrifices, as was done in the Tabernacle in the desert, and later in the Temple in Jerusalem.   Sacrifices celebrated holidays.  They also expressed guilt.                               

If the anointed kohen – the officiating son or descendant of Aaron – committed a violation (and the text names a few, from becoming ritually contaminated to misappropriating a dedicated object) he had to bring a young bull.  If a tribal chief – a nasi, a “prince” – was the violator, he had to bring a sheep.  An ordinary Israelite brought a goat.  And that only if he could afford it.  The Torah specifically provides a way to pay for a mistake without taking food from the family’s mouths.   “If he cannot afford (literally if his hand does not reach the value of) a sheep, he brings two doves or two pigeons, one for a sin offering and one for a burnt offering.”  Further, if birds are out of his “reach,” let him bring an offering of fine flour.

Clearly, the value of the sacrifice is not the vital factor.  It is the action.  Once you acknowledge your mistake, you express your regret through a sacrifice.  That’s how they did it in the time of Moses and for many following generations.   This kind of payment for violating a negative commandment applied to business dealings as well as to relations with the Divine.  If an Israelite cheated his neighbor by denying an obligation – “a deposit?  What deposit?” – or by not returning a pledge (security for a loan) or by finding something his neighbor lost and not returning it, or by theft, or by not paying wages and then lying about it – he must return what he had no right to keep, and must add a fifth of its value as a penalty.  Then he must still bring his guilt sacrifice.  Only then can the kohen help him to atone for his violation.  Only then will he be forgiven. 

In later days, as prayer replaced sacrifice, each Jew had to take on more responsibility.  We can’t pay for our mistakes with pigeons any more.  But we can still return a lost article.  We can still acknowledge our debts and pay them.   And we can still atone – not just once a year on Yom Kippur but every day in our prayers.   And in our attitude.

That is our sacrifice.  Admit we did wrong, and do what we can to correct it.  How about it?  Would it be easier to slaughter a goat?

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Updated Blog Site

WordPress just updated my blog site, and all archived blogs now have punctuation errors where the apostrophe has turned into a question mark. Please bear this in mind while reading my past blogs. There are some new features at the bottom of each entry to show this week’s Shabbat times and Torah portion and Facebook “Like” and “Share” buttons.

Thank you for taking the time to read my weekly blog,

Baruch

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A DO IT YOURSELF SHRINE Sedrot Vayakhel and Pikudey by Rabbi Baruch Cohon

 Sedrot Vayak’hel & Pikudey Exodus 35-40

This is a special week in the cycle of the Jewish year.   All right, so every week is special.   Every week re-acquaints us with a history that a show like TV’s “The Bible” only hints at.  So what’s so special this week?

For one thing, this Saturday will be Shabat haHodesh – the Sabbath that introduces the month of Nisan, the month of freedom.  We announce the month that includes Passover and celebrates Israel’s freedom from Egyptian slavery.  Also we will complete the reading of the Book of Exodus which tells the story of that liberation, and of Israel’s hard won nationhood. 

In its last chapters, the book of Exodus describes a real artistic explosion, as all the talents of these ex-slaves get mobilized to build the first Jewish house of prayer, the Tabernacle in the desert.  First Moses calls on one man he knows can design and build such a portable structure, Bezalel of the tribe of Judah.  Besides being a skilled craftsman who understands construction using precious metals, wood, stone and cloth, Bezalel and his assistant, Oholiav of the tribe of Dan have a talent for teaching.  So they can guide others to execute what they design.  

Then Moses calls for contributions.  Pass the word through the camp that everyone should bring whatever they can donate of those construction materials, plus oil for the lamps, to prepare for this sacred task.  And he reminds them that no work, even for this holy purpose, is to be done on the Sabbath.  

So we find out that people responded with spirit and ability – an ability that is called khokhmat lev – “the wisdom of the heart.”  Men carved, women sewed.  The princes among them brought gems for the high priest’s vestments.   Organized under Bezalel’s leadership, the contributions poured in.  

In fact, they got more than they needed.  Moses had to send cryers through the camp, proclaiming: “Let no man or woman do any more work on the holy offerings.”  Rabbis and synagogue presidents always shake their heads over that line.  One time in history when a building campaign was oversubscribed!  

Really, why could they do it?  Why can’t we?  The Torah goes into great detail about all that Bezalel and his men did with the contributions for the Tabernacle.  All the beautiful furnishings they built, the ark and the altars and the ten curtains with the poles that held them as this portable shrine got carried through the desert – all constructed from the donations of common people.

Maybe there is a message in that experience that makes this reading even more special.  They could oversubscribe because they were doing it themselves.   This was not Bezalel’s tabernacle.  Not even Moses’ tabernacle.  This was ours.  This belonged to the entire community.  Maybe we can still accomplish such an outpouring of shared work.  All we need is a little khokhmat lev.  Just some “wisdom of the heart.”

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HALF A SHEKEL Ki tissa by Rabbi Baruch Cohon

HALF A SHEKEL – Ki tissa – Exodus 31

          Call it a census.  Counting heads.  Registering for the draft.  Whatever name we use, we are talking about a government determining how many people they are governing.  Sometimes that can be an expensive process.  Not long ago, we saw various unofficial census takers getting paid off to pad statistics in one-party districts.  That is not how Moses did it.

          He used Divine authority to order every male Israelite over the age of 20 to come forward and bring half a shekel.  The priest on duty would duly take the name and the coin, and that man was registered.  The order stated specifically: “the rich shall not bring more, and the poor shall not bring less than half a shekel.”  Not a fund-raiser, this operation, but a census of all Israelites of military age.

          Granted, record keeping in Moses’ time was limited, and a good deal cheaper than now.  Half a dollar per head would hardly pay the cost of a modern census, or of a national draft board if we had one. We can assume that it was enough for the generation of Israelites trekking through the Sinai desert.  

          But the most significant feature of this operation is not its economic aspect but the human one.  If Abie Rockefeller and Yossel Smith bring what they can afford, Abie could probably buy himself a general’s commission while Yossel can expect to be a buck private.  But when they must bring just half a shekel each, they are equals.  Let Moses or Joshua or whoever will be their commander decide on their rank.  Let them earn that commander’s respect, and the rank should come with it.  On the other side of the coin, undoubtedly Moses knew that if the men brought what they could afford, some would certainly buy their way out of the service, as happened in many places throughout later history. 

Remember, Moses did not command a volunteer army.  Every Israelite man was expected to defend his people.  Universal military service.  That is not the case in our time and place.  A volunteer army inevitably attracts a large majority of those who have no other opportunity.  That does not mean they won’t be good fighters.  It does mean than defending the nation becomes the work of the poor.  And it should not be that.   Universal military service needs to be for all citizens.

 Just bring half a shekel.

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