Efrat, Israel
"And you shall make sacred garments for Aaron your brother for
honor and glory" (Exodus 28:2).
The Torah portion of Tetzaveh
is wholly dedicated to Aaron and his children, the High Priest
and the Holy Temple priesthood without even a mention of
Moses' name throughout the reading. We are also given a precise
description of the ritual by which they were consecrated for
their Divine task, including the specific Sanctuary offerings
which were to be brought.
But what is most jarring to the
modern ear and especially to those of us who have become
accustomed to the informality of Israeli dress is the
painstaking description of the unique apparel of the priests,
the eight special garments of the High Priest and the four
special garments of the regular priests. The Torah itself
commands, "and you shall make sacred garments for Aaron your
brother for honor and glory" (Exodus 28:2). The Talmud
stipulates that only when properly garbed, are the priests
endowed with sanctity and permitted to minister in the Sanctuary
(B.T. Zevahim 7). Is the Torah then teaching us that "clothes
make the man?" What about the internal characteristics of
knowledge, virtue and commitment?
I believe that upon deeper
reflection we will come to understand that the priestly garb is
not meant to endow sanctity but rather to inspire sanctity as
well as to instill within the priests the confidence that they
can make the entire world sacred. Moreover, the Torah teaches
that every Jew must see him/herself as a High Priest dressed in
sacred vestments, a member of "a holy nation and a Kingdom of
priests."
Immediately prior to the Revelation at Sinai there
is a strange dialogue between G-d and Moses, in which the
Almighty calls out to Moses, Moses attempts to ascend to the top
of the mountain, G-d tells him to go down to the nation, Moses
complains that the nation has been disallowed from ascending the
mountain, and G-d again tells Moses to go down (Exodus
19:20-25). My revered teacher and Rav J. B. Soloveitchik, zt"l,
explained that Moses thought, in accordance with the other
religions, that spirituality means to leave the material world
and ascend to the celestial spheres of the Divine; G-d explains
to Moses that Jewish spirituality means to bring G-d down into
the material world and sanctify it. This is indeed the basic
function of Torah: to sanctify the kitchen and dining room with
kashrut, to sanctify the bedroom with family ritual purity, to
sanctify the market-place with business ethics, to sanctify the
calendar with holy days and sacred moments. Hence our Sages
declare that what the Almighty truly has in this world is the
four ells of halakha (religio-legal practices).
The previous
Torah portion of Terumah began with the Divine charge: "They
shall make a Sanctuary for Me so that I may dwell among them".
In effect, G-d gave us a world- an imperfect, incomplete world
with darkness a well as light, evil as well as good (Isaiah
45:7) - and expects us to perfect it, to re-make the world into
a veritable Sanctuary so that the Divine will feel comfortable
dwelling among us. This is the charge as well as the challenge,
the model as well as the mission, of the Sanctuary
In order
to effect this, the High Priest must first see himself as being
capable of carrying out such a formidable task, he must see
himself as a powerful king, representing the King of all Kings,
garbed in regal robes of honor and glory. And his dress
expresses a message. Just as the ideal King of Israel dare not
involve himself with opulent, material blandishments like
numerous wives, horses, gold and silver, but instead must
demonstrate his devotion to G-d by always having with him a copy
of the Torah (Deuteronomy 17:16-20), so must the High Priest
wear the "tzitz" on his forehead "always," a gold head-band on a
thread of tchelet (heavenly royal blue) on which was written
"holy unto the Lord" (Exodus 28:36-38). And just as the ideal
king of Israel must understand that his authority derives from
the will of the people and for the sake of the people
(Deuteronomy 17:18,19 especially in accordance with the
interpretation of the Ha'amek Davar and the Talmudic dictum that
a king cannot relinquish the honor due him because it is in
actuality the honor of his nation, by whose will and for whose
well-being he must rule), so the High Priest wears the
breast-plate of justice over his heart, upon which were
embroidered twelve precious stones upon which were written the
names of the twelve tribes of Israel. "Aaron shall carry the
names of the children of Israel in the breast-plate of judgment
upon his heart when he enters the Holy Place as a constant
reminder before the Lord" (Exodus 28:29). In order to succeed in
his daunting task of perfecting the world in the Kingship of
G-d, he must learn from his special garb to lead the priests in
total devotion to G-d and the nation.
And every Israelite
must also see himself as a High Priest, as a proud
representative of a holy nation and kingdom of priests. After
all, does not the Israelite dress himself every day in his
tefilin-phylacteries, the head tefilin atop his forehead on the
place of the High Priest's tzitz and the hand tefilin opposite
his heart, the place where the breast-plate of the High Priest
expressed the names of the twelve tribes? And the tefilin are
called a symbol of glory (pe'er, Ezekiel 24:17), just as the
regal robes are vestments of honor and glory (tife'eret - Exodus
28:2). In wearing the tefilin, the Jew becomes adorned with the
four portions of the Torah- expressing love of G-d, fealty to
commandments, the sanctity of the people of Israel and the
sanctity of the land of Israel- placed in the tefilin batim
(house-like repositories), much like the King is adorned with
the copy of the Torah which must always accompany him.
Moreover, the second traditional Jewish mens garb is the ritual
fringes of the talit or talit katan ("Prayer Shawl"), featuring
a thread of t'chelet (heavenly royal blue) which is a salient
feature of the High Priest's tzitz and is significantly called
by the Bible "tzitzit," or a junior tzitz. Every Jew must share
in the mission to perfect the world, and must be inspired to do
so by wearing the priestly, regal garments which teach
commitment to G-d and commitment to nation.

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