Parashat Tzav
Ears, Thumbs, and Toes
The ceremony
installing the priests teaches the importance of consecrating the entire body
for sacred service.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article
is reprinted with permission from University of
Judaism.
Traditionally, the Book of Va-Yikra (Leviticus) was known as
Torat Kohanim, "the Teachings of
the Priests." Its contents are directed to people who would be ministering
in the Temple in Jerusalem, and its topics pertain to priestly sacrifice,
ritual and purity.
Yet, our tradition also holds that the eternal task of the
Jewish People is to mold ourselves into a nation of priests, a holy people. In
doing so, the standards that apply to a 'kohen'
(priest) in the Beit Ha-Mikdash (the
Temple) are essential tools for elevating our own spiritual and ritual status
as well. The same guidance that the Torah provided the '' at his task can
ennoble and uplift the serious Jew of today as well.
In seeking to fulfill our divine mission, we turn to the
very book that trained God's servants in antiquity as well. At the outset of
our commitment to become a nation of priests, we can look with special benefit
to the ordination of the 'kohanim'
(priests) into their sacred service.
That installation took place amidst elaborate ceremony. The
'kohanim' washed themselves to become ritually pure, and then donned special
clothing to demarcate themselves for their activity in the Temple. Anointed
with a special oil, the 'kohanim' sacrificed a sin offering to atone for their
own shortcomings and errors before attempting to intercede for the atonement of
the people.
After sacrificing the ram of burnt offering, Moses took some
blood from the ram of ordination, and "put it on the ridge of Aaron's
right ear, and on the thumb of his right hand, and on the big toe of his right
foot." He then repeated that same ritual for each of Aaron's sons.
Finally, the remains of the animal were boiled and consumed by the
newly-ordained 'kohanim.'
That same ritual was repeated throughout seven complete days
of celebration. Why was blood applied to those particular extremities--the
right thumb, toe and ear? An ancient commentator, Philo (1st Century Egypt),
perceived that, "The fully consecrated must be pure in words and actions
and in life; for words are judged by hearing, the hand is the symbol of action,
and the foot of the pilgrimage of life." Thus, Philo reads specific
meaning into each of the three body parts by analyzing the special function of
each part in terms of their human use.
Our words, actions and life all must cultivate our highest
potential of growth, expression and humanity. Rabbi Abraham ibn Ezra (12th
Century, Spain) argues, on the other hand, that the ear "symbolizes that
one must attend to what has been commanded" and the thumb "is the
origin of all activity."
Unlike Philo, ibn Ezra sees the two pivotal points as
obedience to God's 'mitzvot'
(commandments) and a commitment to a life of sacred deeds. While ibn Ezra
provides different reasons than Philo, the two of them agree in reading
metaphoric meaning into the details of the ritual (which body parts are used).
However, both sages ignore the requirement of spilling
blood, and both fail to explain the entire ritual as an interrelated unit.
Building on their insights, we can extend their vision by utilizing the methods
and findings of the modern study of religion as well.
Blood is a symbol filled with ambivalent meaning. A symbol
of life (recall the emblem of the Red Cross) and of death (think of the devil's
pitchfork), it is as a simultaneous expression of both realities--life and
death--that blood becomes such a prominent symbol for moments and places of
transition. At a child's birth--with 'brit
milah' (circumcision), at the first Passover--when blood was smeared on the
lintels of Jewish homes, blood marks the moment or the place as a transition
between death and renewed life.
Here, too, by placing sacrificial blood on the priest's
extremities, the Torah indicates that the newly-ordained 'kohen' has passed
through a transitional moment from being a private citizen to becoming a
representative of God and a public leader. Ear, hand and foot--an abbreviated
code for his entire body--emphasize that service to one's highest ideals, to
one's people, or to one's God, must be total.
Through his induction into the Temple ritual, he '' entered
a higher state of purity, devotion and of service. To become a nation of
priests requires of us no less.
Rabbi Bradley Shavit
Artson is the Dean of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at the University
of Judaism in Los Angeles. He is the
author of The Bedside Torah: Wisdom, Dreams, & Visions (McGraw Hill). For a free subscription to his weekly email Torah commentary,
please send an email request to bartson@uj.edu.