Efrat, Israel – “And he made the ephod of gold, blue, and purple
and scarlet…And he made the breastplate of artistic work...He made
the robe of the ephod, weaving it completely...And they made coats of
fine linen of woven work” (Exodus 39:1-31).
Why should priestly garments be so elaborately constructed, gold
beaten into threads, embroidered sashes, blues and purples and
scarlets skillfully and intricately woven? In this week’s
portion Pekuday, some 30 verses are devoted to the making of the
priestly garments, and several portions back in Tetzaveh, more than 40
verses were devoted to these same garments. What’s clear is that the
priestly garments were unusual, awesome to behold.
Granted that priests should look different from the rest of the
nation, but why isn’t a white garment sufficient, something simple
and functional? Indeed, one might even argue that priests
should not wear anything special or unique because of G-d’s
declaration to all of Israel: “You shall be unto me a kingdom of
priests and a holy nation” (Exodus 19:6).
Furthermore, in Tractate Zevachim (17b), the Talmud teaches that
“..while their [priestly] garments are upon them, the priesthood is
upon them. If their garments are not upon them, the priesthood is not
upon them.” In other words, without the garments there is no
priesthood, a far-reaching statement.
Over the centuries many commentators have addres¬sed themselves to
the question of priestly garb. In Tractate Eruchin (16a), R. Annani
bar Sasson asks why portions of the priestly garments is next to that
of the sacrifices, and the answer given is that just as the sacrifices
atone for sins, these garments atone for sins as well—the tunic for
murder, the breeches for illicit sexual acts, the waist sash for
one’s innermost thoughts, the ephod for idol worship, the robe for
slander, the turban for haughtiness...
Nachmanides sees the priestly garments as the garb of kingship and
royalty, each one of the garments regal in its own right. For
Nachmanides, the priestly garb need not be seen beyond its inherent
beauty intended to exalt the priest into the domain of the majestic.
The author of the Sefer Hachinuch, an anonymous commentary on the 613
commandments first published in l523 (usually identified as Rabbi
Aharon HaLevy), acknowledges that a person’s inner being is affected
by his outer garments. Thought follows action, and since a priest must
have special thoughts when he performs the service, unless he is
transformed himself he won’t be able to achieve the required
concentration, a process which begins with the act of getting dressed
in special garb. Extraordinary garments are intended to transform an
ordinary human being into someone who becomes a master of thought—
kavanot. This idea recalls the text in Tractate Zevachim which states
that without the priestly garments “there is no priesthood.”
The Netziv (1817-1893) in his Torah commentary follows the principle
of the Sefer HaChinuch except that he switches the focus from the
priest to the Israelite coming upon the glory of the priests in their
ceremonious garb. Seeking atonement, he is confronted with the gravity
of what is about to transpire. And since the ultimate purpose of the
sacrifice is to bring about this atonement, it is the Israelite’s
thoughts which are most significant, his contrition, his encounter
with the transcendent. The garments of the priests are intended to
draw the individual closer to his own spiritual cleansing.
These explanations certainly illuminate the complex and varied role of
the priestly garment. But I would suggest that if we look at the first
time a garment is mentioned in the Torah, we discover that there is
more to clothes than meets the eye.
When Adam and Eve are exiled from the Garden of Eden, the text tells
us that “...the Lord G-d made for Adam and his wife, garments
of skin, and clothed them” (Genesis 3:21).
Two verses later G-d drives them out of the Garden of Eden, and
because of the power of the tale of this banishment, the reader tends
to overlook how unique it is that G-d Himself created these garments.
After the creation of the universe, G-d commanded man to conquer the
world, “...replenish the earth and subdue it, and have domin¬ion”
(Gen. 1:28). The world is a tabula rasa for man to discover, unravel,
invent, define, and so man discovers fire and bronze, wheels and
windmills, atoms and electricity. There is nothing that man doesn’t
discover except the clothes on his back, and this he carries with him
when he is banished. But of all the potential discoveries within human
scope why should the creation of a garment be relegated to G-d
Himself? What can it possibly mean?
It was a serpent that led to the banishment of man. Condemned to eat
dust, the serpent remains naked, but G-d forms these garments for man
to rise above his animal nature.
Worn in modesty, a garment paves the road toward recapturing what was
lost in the Garden, redeeming a measure of holiness.
If we glance at the more visible symbols of Jewish life, we see how
sanctity is associated with a covering. Inside the synagogue, the
Sefer Torah is covered with its special garb; this is also the case
regarding the table upon which the Torah is read from, similarly the
Ark in which the Scroll stands. Everything holy needs a covering and
it all began with the human body.
Commanded to wear unique garb during the temple service, the priest
puts us in touch with the separation between the human and the animal.
Perhaps the reason why G-d creates these garments Himself is because
the passage between the two realms—before exile and after
exile—requires that G-d point the human in the direction he must
take in order to fight the lure of the animal kingdom.
Departing from the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve are taught the
holiness of the body. Once they know this, they can go out and
“conquer” the world, transforming it in the process, but if they
forget that the body is holy, then the world transforms them, in the
process getting drawn closer to their animalistic nature.
From the Jewish point of view, clothes do not make the man. Clothes
do, however, distinguish the man, reminding him of the inherent
sanctity of the body separating man from beast, priest from ordinary
laymen.