The Torah lays down specific laws about the offerings we bring to the Tabernacle. They have to be legally ours is one of them. We are not feeding God. God looks at our intent when bridging the offering.
As we begin the book of Vayikra, the book of Leviticus, we enter a new stage in the Torah.
Up until now, in the book of Exodus, we were busy building the Tabernacle. Now, in Vayikra, we begin putting it to use. This book is largely about the Temple service and the korbanot — the offerings.
One of the most important things to understand is that the Torah introduces a major change in the way sacrifices were understood in the ancient world.
In many ancient cultures, sacrifices were made because the gods supposedly needed food. People believed the gods depended on humans to feed them.
If you read the Epic of Gilgamesh, which contains the ancient Mesopotamian flood story, the gods decide to destroy humanity because there are simply too many people and they are too noisy. There’s no moral dimension to the flood the way there is in the Torah. And at the end of the story, after the flood destroys humanity, the gods realize they made a mistake — they say, in effect, “We’re idiots. We just destroyed our own food supply.”
The Torah takes a completely different approach.
Nowhere in the Bible does it say that God eats the sacrifices. Instead, the Torah says God “smells the pleasing aroma.” That phrase isn’t about food. It’s about intent. God is looking at the heart and the intention of the person bringing the offering.
This is a major innovation.
Another innovation is that the offering must be legally yours. You cannot steal someone else’s animal and offer it to God. The korban must belong to you legitimately. In the ancient world this was not obvious at all, but the Torah insists on ethical ownership.
And the attitude of the person bringing the offering matters.
If it is a sin offering, a person must come with true contrition.
If it is a thanksgiving offering, the person should come with joy and gratitude.
The thanksgiving offering is especially interesting. It involves a whole animal, and it must be consumed that night. Now realistically, a person and even their immediate family cannot eat an entire animal in one evening. So what do you have to do?
You invite your neighbors and friends.
In other words, the offering becomes a community event. Your gratitude becomes something shared with others.
So one of the purposes of the korbanot is not just ritual. It’s about building community and recognizing that we depend on one another and ultimately on God.
We’re also approaching the month of Nissan, whose symbol is the lamb. Why the lamb?
Because the lamb is an animal that cannot defend itself. In the same way, we are reminded that ultimately we cannot defend ourselves without God.
We do our best, we make our efforts, but in the final analysis we recognize that everything is in God’s hands.
And that is one of the central messages as we begin the book of Vayikra.
Just a few thoughts for the start of the book of Leviticus — something to think about.
