One of the offerings that we bring is the Thanksgiving Offering. When we read about it we see that we are required to bring a huge amount of food. It has to be eaten in one night. This forces us to share it with others. Making it a community affair.
This week we begin the discussion of the korbanot, the offerings that were brought first in the Tabernacle and later in the Beit HaMikdash. One of these is the korban todah, the thanksgiving offering, sometimes associated with the peace offering. It was brought when a person had something special for which to thank God—such as surviving a dangerous journey, especially a journey by sea. In fact, the same basic situations that later required the blessing of HaGomel are derived from this idea of thanksgiving.
There are two especially striking things about this offering.
First is the sheer amount of food involved. A whole animal—a goat, sheep, or bull—together with forty loaves of bread. That is a tremendous amount of food. And on top of that, it all had to be eaten that very night; nothing could be left over until the next day.
Now, most people could not possibly eat that much by themselves, even with their immediate family helping out. The Torah is teaching us something very important: when something good happens to you, you are meant to share that joy with others. The thanksgiving offering forces a person to invite friends, neighbors, and community members to join in. Gratitude is not meant to remain private. It becomes communal. When God does something good for us, we celebrate not only alone, but together with others. In that sense, it is very much like making a large kiddush after a simchah, where everyone joins in the joy and gratitude.
The second fascinating point is the teaching of the Gemara that in the days of Mashiach, all korbanot will cease—except for the thanksgiving offering. Why? Because no matter how elevated the world becomes, we will always need to express gratitude to God. Gratitude never goes out of date.
And if we stop to think about it, there is always much for which to be grateful. Even in difficult times, we still have blessings. Consider how much human life has changed. When I was growing up in the 1950s, if someone lived to age sixty, people would say he had lived a good, long life. Today, people regularly live into their eighties and beyond. We recently honored someone at a dinner who was close to one hundred years old, and that is no longer such a rarity. We should recognize the blessings God has given us through advances in medicine, technology, and so many other areas of life.
The message of the korban todah is simple but profound: never take blessings for granted. When something good happens, acknowledge it, thank God for it, and share that gratitude with others. A life of Torah is not only about asking God for what we need; it is also about recognizing what we already have and being truly grateful.
Something to think about.
