The Return: The Incense Offering
Mans quest to serve his Creator is perpetual and all-consuming,
and can be pursued by all people, at all times, and in all
places. There was one event, however, that represented the
apogee in the human effort to come close to G-dan event
that brought together the holiest day of the year, the holiest
human being on earth, the holiest place in the universe and
the holiest of deeds. On Yom Kippur the Kohen Gadol
(High Priest) would enter into the Holy
of Holies (the innermost chamber of the Holy Temple
in Jerusalem) to offer ketoret to G-d.
The offering of the ketoret was the most prestigious
and sacred of the Temple services. The ketoret was
a special blend of eleven herbs and balms whose precise ingredients
and manner of preparation were commanded by G-d to Moses.[1] Twice a day, the ketoret was burned on
the golden altar that stood in the Temple.[2] On Yom Kippur, in addition to
the regular ketoret offerings, the Kohen Gadol
would enter the Holy of Holies with a pan of smoldering coals
in his right hand and a ladle filled with ketoret in
his left; there he scooped the ketoret into his hands,
placed it over the coals, waited for the chamber to fill with
the fragrant smoke of the burning incense, and swiftly backed
out of the room.[3] The moment marked the climax
of the Yom Kippur service in the Temple.
Holy Deodorizer
Maimonides describes the function of the ketoret as
the vanquishing of the unpleasant odors that might otherwise
have pervaded the Holy Temple. Since many animals were
slaughtered in the sacred place each day, their flesh butchered
and burnt and their intestines cleaned, its smell would doubtless
have been like the smell of a slaughterhouse... Therefore
G-d commanded that the ketoret be burned twice a day,
each morning and afternoon, to lend a pleasing fragrance to
[the Holy Temple] and to the garments of those who served
in it.[4]
But Maimonides words carry a significance that extends
beyond their superficial sense. In the words of Rabbeinu Bechayei,
G-d forbid that the great principle and mystery of the
ketoret should be reduced to this mundane purpose.[5]
Chassidic teaching explains that the animal sacrifices offered
in the Holy Temple represent the persons offering of
his own animal soul[6]
to G-dthe subjugation of his natural instincts and desires
to the divine will. This is the deeper significance of the
foul odor emitted by the sacrifices which the
ketoret came to dispel: the animal soul
of man, which is the basic drive, common to every livining
creature, for self-preservation and self-enhancement, possesses
many positive traits which might readily be directed toward
gainful and holy ends; but it is also the source of many negative
and destructive traits. When a person brings his animal self
to the Temple of G-d and offers what is best and finest in
it upon the altar, there is still the foul odorthe
selfishness, the brutality and the materiality of the animal
in manto contend with. Hence the ketoret, which
possessed the unique capability to sublimate the evil odor
of the animal soul within its heavenly fragrance.
Essence and Utility
This, however, still does not define the essence of the ketoret.
For if the more external parts of the Temple might be susceptible
to the foul odor emitted by the animal souls offered
there, the Holy of Holies was a sanctum of unadulterated holiness
and perfection. If the garments (i.e., character
and behavior[7]) of the ordinary Kohen
might be affected by the negative smell of the slaughtered
beasts that he handled, this is certainly not the case
with the Kohen Gadol, the greatest of his brethren[8] in the fraternity of divine service.
If every day of the year the scent of evil hovers at the periphery
of even the most positive endeavor, Yom Kippur is a day in
which there is no license for the forces of evil to
inculpate.[9]
So if the ketoret was offered by the Kohen Gadol
in the Holy of Holies on Yom Kippur, its ultimate function
cannot be the sublimation of evil.
The sublimation of evil is something that only the ketoret
can achieve, but this is not what defines its essence. The
essence of the ketoret is a pristine yearning of the
soul of man to come close to G-d, a yearning that emanates
from the innermost sanctum of the soul and is thus free of
all constraint and restraints, of all that inhibits and limits
us when we relate to something with the more external elements
of our being.[10] Its purity and perfection is
what gives the ketoret the power to sweeten the foulest
of odors, but dealing with evil is not what it is all about.
On the contrary, its highest expression is in the utterly
evil-free environments of Yom Kippur and the Holy of Holies.
Bringing the Past In Line
Today, the Holy Temple no longer stands in Jerusalem, and
the Kohen Gadol enters the Holy of Holies only in our
recitation of the account of the Yom Kippur service in the
prayers of the Holy Day and in our vision of a future Yom
Kippur in the rebuilt Temple. But the ketoret remains
a basic component of our service of G-d in general, and of
our observance of Yom Kippur in particular. We are speaking,
of course, of the spiritual ketoret, which exists within
the human soul as the potential for teshuvah.
Like the incense that burned in the Holy Temple, the manifest
function of teshuvah is to deal with negative and undesirable
things. On the day-to-day, practical level, teshuvah
is repentance a response to wrongdoing,
a healing potion for the ills of the soul. But teshuvah
is also the dominant quality of Yom Kippur, the holiest day
of the year. Obviously, there is more to teshuvah than
the neutralization of sin.
The word teshuvah means return: return
to pristine beginnings, return to the intrinsic perfection
of the soul. For the essence of the soul of man, which is
a spark of G-dliness, is immune to corruption.
The inner self of man remains uninvolved in the follies of
the ego, untouched by the outer selfs enmeshment in
the material and the mundane. Teshuvah is the return
to ones true self, the cutting through of all those
outer layers of misguided actions and distorted priorities
to awaken ones true will and desire.
This explains how teshuvah achieves atonement for
past sins. Teshuvah enables the sinner to touch base
with his own inherent goodness, with that part of himself
which never sinned in the first place. In a sense, he has
now acquired a new self, one with an unblemished past; but
this new self is really his own true self come
to light, while his previous, corrupted self was
but an external distortion of his true being.
Only teshuvah has such power over the past; only teshuvah
can undo a negative deed. But this is only one
of the uses of the power of return. Teshuvah
is not only for sinners, but also for the holiest person in
the holiest time and the holiest place. For even the perfectly
righteous individual needs to be liberated from the constraints
of the past.
Even the perfectly righteous individual is limitedlimited
because of knowledge not yet acquired, insights still ungained,
feelings yet to be developed, attainments still unachieved;
in a word, limited by time itself and the tyranny of its one
way only traffic law. As we advance through life, we
conquer these limits, gaining wisdom and experience and refining
and perfecting our self and character. But is our ability
to grow and achieve limited to the future only? Is the past
a closed frontier?
But one who adopts the inward-seeking approach of teshuvah
to everything he does, never leaves an imperfect past behind
at the waysides of his life. When he learns something new,
he uncovers the deeper dimension of his own self which was
always aware of this truth; when he refines a new facet of
his personality, he brings to light the timeless perfection
of his soul. Never satisfied in merely moving forward, his
search for his own true self remakes the past as well.
Based on the Rebbes talks, Simchat Torah 5727 (1966);
Sivan 14, 5746 (June 21, 1986); and on other occasions[11]
Adapted from the teachings of the Rebbe by Yanki Tauber
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[1]. Exodus 30:34-38; see Talmud, Keritot 6a and Jerusalem
Talmud, Yoma 4:5.
[2]. Exodus, ibid., vs. 8-9.
[3]. Leviticus 16:12-13; Talmud, Yoma 5:1 (mishnah).
[4]. Guide for the Perplexed, part III, ch. 45.
[5]. Rabbeinu Bechayei on Torah, Exodus 30:1.
[6]. As Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi elaborates in
his Tanya, every person possesses two souls: an animal
soul that is the essence of his physical self, and
a G-dly soul that embodies his drive for self-transcendence
and union with G-d.
[7] . See Tanya, chs. 4 and 6.
[10] . Cf. Zohar, part III, 288a.
[11] . Likkutei Sichot, vol. XIV, pp. 129-131; Hitvaaduyot
5746, vol. III, pp. 583-584; et al.
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