By Simon Jacobson
Does serving God mean that you have to sacrifice your life for God?
Is it conforming to be someone youre not? Obliterating your personality?
If this sounds unappealing, its no wonder: its not only
wrong, its anathema to the very fundamentals of Judaism. In the
third book of the Bible called Vayikra (Leviticus), we learn the quintessential
approach to how each and every one of us can and should serve God. But
rather than presenting a serene picture of spiritual reverie the book
of Vayikra reflects a subject that is more likely to evoke confusion
(even revulsion for some) than sublimity! In this Book, we enter the
bloody world of the great altar in the Holy Temple (Beis HaMikdash)
where the Jewish people brought animal sacrifices to Jerusalem to atone
for their sins. What possible connection could this slaughter of ox
and sheep have to do with establishing a fulfilling relationship with
God?
The Ramban, a classical Torah commentator, tells us (Leviticus 1:9)
that when a person had to bring a korban (animal sacrifice) to be offered
in the Beis HaMikdash, a person had to envision that what was
happening to the animal should have been happening to him or her.
Since it is we who need to be cleansed of our wrongdoingsa cleansing
of our blood, our flesh, and our fatGod in His great mercy gave
us an alternative: we could replace ourselves with an animal, an animal
that would endure this process in our stead.
The Torah is not a lesson in ancient history; its every word is eternal
and relevant to each one of us in every day and age. In a Temple-less
world, we need to look a little deeper into Torah to discover the relationship
of these sacrifices to our contemporary lives.
There are two polar forces within each of us: a force that desires
material pleasures and a force that yearns for spirituality and Godliness.
Simply put, our search for purpose, for meaning, for serving God are
at constant odds with the animal in us: the part of us that
would rather indulge our selfish passions than contribute our time and
resources to a higher cause. The centrality of the animal offerings
in the Temple reflects the essence of our Divine purpose: To submit
the animal within us to God.
Now, when we read how a person brought a sacrifice upon the altar:
Adam ki yakriv mikem
, we find a curious twist of words.
Instead of saying, When one of you will bring an offering,
the literal translation is, When a person will bring an offering
of you. The of you tells us that by bringing an animal
to be sacrificed on the altar, we are actually bringing to the altar
the animal in us.
Offering yourself, the animal in you, to God is the cornerstone of
all Judaism, but how is this accomplished? Do you crush the animal passion
and pleasure in you and live a somber life of deprivation and misery?
The answer lies in the derivation of the word korban. While korban is
often translated as sacrifice, the actual translation of
the word comes from the root word kiruv, meaning to draw close.
We make ourselves a korban by bringing close the pure essence
of the animal in us to God. We dont annihilate it, we dont
squash it, we use it to help us approach Divinity, to transcend our
limits and get closer to the quintessential purpose for which we were
created. An animal cannot behave in any way other than how G-d created
it. Bulls are aggressive, sheep are slothfully self-indulgent, and goats
are stubborn. But the animal in us has a choice. We can be an obnoxious
bully, or we can channel our passions toward an assertive
love for God. We can indulge in our sheep like lust for pleasure, or
we can get pleasure in helping others and living a meaningful life.
At the heart of every force in our lives, even the ones that manifest
negative expression, lies a kernel that can be directed to a constructive
and Godly cause. What we do "sacrifice is the object of our
desires, the immature or narrow attitudes we assume, our ignorance and
our blind spotsso that our essential natures can emerge, just
as you sacrifice the weeds to allow the flowers to surface.
Should we give up our lives for God? Certainly not! Thats
sacrifice. We shouldnt give up our God-given talents and behaviors;
we should bring them closer to their purer state. When you become a
korban, you have the opportunity to transform every aspect of yourself,
to become the greatest person you can be; a person who no longer walks
among the beasts, but hand and hand with God.
The story of the korban in the book of Vayikra teaches us that serving
God is not about self-annihilation but about self-actualization.
Giving
Up Your Life for God? No Thanks!
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