We are commanded to bring an offering every day. It is the same Morning and afternoon. This is to teach us that real spirituality is being consistent and keeping our appointment with God.
The Power of the Same Thing Every Day
(Tetzaveh – the Korban Tamid and fixed prayer)
One of the most striking things in this week’s parashah is the Korban Tamid — the daily offering.
Every day.
Morning and afternoon.
Same animal.
Same procedure.
No creativity. No excitement. No novelty.
If the Torah wanted spirituality to be thrilling, this would be the worst possible design.
And that is exactly the point.
Why Repetition?
We often struggle with kavana in davening because the prayers are identical every day.
So we ask:
Does God really need us to say the same words again and again?
The answer: the prayers are not for God — they are for us.
Prayer trains the mind the way exercise trains the body.
You don’t go to the gym once and say, “Great, I’m in shape forever.”
Growth comes from repetition.
The Korban Tamid teaches:
Spirituality is not inspiration — it is discipline.
The Danger of the “Shiny Moment”
Human beings love peaks:
Sinai
A moving sermon
A powerful experience
But societies are not built on peaks — they are built on routines.
Destroy routine and you destroy civilization.
Shared habits create shared values.
That is why daily rituals matter — whether tefillah, Shabbat, or even civic rituals like the Pledge of Allegiance once was.
They teach that we belong to something larger than ourselves.
Leadership Means Showing Up
A famous story is told about Theodore Roosevelt.
During a heavy Washington snowstorm, a man came to the White House for an appointment.
He saw a lone figure outside who offered to walk him to the entrance.
When the door opened, the butler said:
“Good evening, Mr. President.”
Roosevelt had personally come outside so the visitor would not arrive alone.
That is leadership — not speeches, not glory, but keeping the appointment.
Our Appointment
The Korban Tamid is God telling us:
You have a meeting with Me every day.
Not when inspired.
Not when convenient.
Not when emotional.
Every day.
If you keep business appointments reliably but skip prayer, you are saying something about priorities.
Judaism teaches the opposite:
Faith is not a feeling — it is a schedule.
The Message
Holiness is not created by dramatic moments.
Holiness is created by consistency.
Miracles inspire people.
Routine builds people.
The Tamid offering — and our fixed prayers — teach that a relationship with God, like any real relationship, survives not on excitement but on commitment.
You don’t become holy by visiting God.
You become holy by showing up every day.


