Priceless Integrity Burnt Offerings The Almighty said, Let - TopicsExpress



          

Priceless Integrity Burnt Offerings The Almighty said, Let us make adam (man) in our image and our likeness. (Bereshith 1:26) The word adam is used again in Vayikra: When an adam (man) sacrifices one of his animals to God....1 Man is referred to here as adam to teach us that just as the first adam offered sacrifices to God only from his own property - for everything belonged to him - so all sacrifices should be taken from property belonging to the person offering them, not from stolen property.2 I am God who loves justice and hates theft in an Olah offering.3 The prophet notes that Gods hatred is not limited to stolen sacrifices, but that He hates theft in the Olah offering itself. Since a birds diet consists of stolen food, the Torah specifies that the organs that consumed the stolen food be removed before sacrificing it.4 Since a birds innards are associated with theft, they cannot be allowed to exist even for a moment in the Beith HaMikdash, a place of absolute truth. They are thrown onto the floor where they are miraculously absorbed into the ground.5 There is another reason that the verse singled out the Olah sacrifice. The meat of most offerings is divided three ways: between the owner, the Kohanim, and the altar. The Olah is the only sacrifice that is totally burned up on the altar. Since no one would benefit by eating the meat of a stolen Olah, one might think that God would accept a stolen Olah. The verse emphasizes that when it comes to theft there are no exceptions, and all stolen offerings are repulsive in Gods eyes. Our Sages illustrate this idea with the following analogy. A king was journeying through his kingdom when he reached the place where travelers pay customs. The king took the required amount of money from his pocket, and instructed his servants to give it to the tax collector. The servants were slightly taken aback; since all the money collected belonged to the king, what reason should the king have to pay customs. Replied the king, If I pay this tax all of the other travelers will understand that they certainly should pay.6 One might think that since everything belongs to God, He would accept a stolen Olah on the grounds that it is merely being returned to its true owner. As the verse notes, God loves justice, even when it is seemingly unnecessary, for it is a pillar of the world and a mainstay of society. Therefore God hates injustice, even when no one benefits from it. By Rabbi Daniel Travis
Posted on: Wed, 26 Nov 2014 21:00:01 +0000

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