Tetzaveh: Essential Eights - Olive Oil and the Priestly Garments
Eight Priestly Garments Correspond to the Eight Components
of the Cherubim
The main subject of this week's Torah portion is the priestly
garments worn by the priests in their service in the holy Temple in Jerusalem
and in the Tabernacle. An ordinary priest wore four priestly garments, while
the High Priest wore eight priestly garments. These eight garments correspond
to the eight components of the ultimate image of the Temple, the cherubim.
Each cherub had four components:
-
A Face
-
A body
-
Right wing
-
Left wing
Together, the two cherubim had eight components.
Likewise, the eight priestly garments also divide into four and
four:
-
The four white garments of the ordinary priests--These
four garments correspond to one cherub and the four letters
(yud, kei, vav, kei) of God's Essential Name, Havayah .
They represent a relatively male dimension.
-
The four golden garments of the High Priest--These
four garments are worn together with the four white garments of the ordinary
priests. They correspond to the two cherubim united, and the
four letters (alef, dalet, nun, yud) of God's Name, Adnut.
They represent a relatively female dimension.
The Atoning Power of the Eight Priestly Garments
Each of the eight priestly garments had a special power to atone
for a particular sin of Israel:
| Garment |
Name
of Garment |
Name
in Hebrew |
Atoning
Power |
Four
white garments of ordinary priests |
hat |
mitznefet |
haughtiness |
| wide belt (from
waist to heart) |
avnet |
lust |
| shirt |
kutonet (same
word as Joseph's shirt which brothers used as evidence of "murder.") |
murder |
| pants |
michnasayim |
adultery |
| Four
golden garments of the High Priest |
golden plate
on forehead |
tzitz |
Brazenness |
| robe |
me'il |
slander and
evil speech |
| breastplate |
chosehen
mishpat |
corrupt judgment |
| gown |
efod |
idolatry |
Eight Garments and Essentially Eight Oil
This week's Torah portion actually begins with God commanding
Moses to prepare pure olive oil to be used in the menorah (the seven-branched
candelabrum that was lit daily in the Holy Temple), and then proceeds to
describe the priestly garments. This juxtaposition points to a close connection
between the olive oil and the eight garments.
The Hebrew word for "oil" is shemen, which is the root
of the Hebrew for "eight," shmoneh. Let us first explore the essential
connection between oil and the number eight.
The number seven represents nature. Eight is supernatural. It
represents ein sof, "infinity."
The numerical value of God's Essential Name, Havayah,
is 26. 26 reduces to 8 (2 plus 6). Thus, eight is the one number essence
of Havayah, the Name that refers to miracles.
The word shemen also means "fat." If the perfection
of nature is seven, the oil, fat, is more than the natural state of the human
being. There were great rabbis and tzaddikim who became physically
fat just from the great Divine pleasure of serving God and experiencing the
supernatural revelation of God in the world. (This can be called holy fatness).
The first verse of our Torah portion (Exodus 27:20) has 15 words.
Ve'ata te'tzveh et bnei Yisrael ve'yikchu ei'lecha shemen zayit
zach katit lama'or la'alot ner tamid
"And you shall command the children of Israel and they shall take to you
pure olive oil, ground, to become a light, to raise an eternal light"
The 8th word, both from the beginning and the end of the verse
is the word shemen, "oil":
| 1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
| "Ve'ata |
te'tzveh |
et |
bnei |
Yisrael |
ve'yikchu |
ei'lecha |
|
8 |
|
| shemen |
| 7 |
6 |
5 |
4 |
3 |
2 |
1 |
| zayit |
zach |
katit |
lama'or |
la'alot |
ner |
tamid" |
The phrase from the above verse, "shemen zayit zach," pure
olive oil, also revolves around eight.
There are 8 letters in the phrase shemen zayit zach (spelled
in Hebrew: shin-mem-nun, zayin-yud-tav, zayin-kaf),which divide
into 3, 3 and 2. When 8 is divided in this way, the product of its components
(3 times 3 times 2 = 18) is maximal. This is the optimal way to divide a
number.
When each letter of the words shemen and zayit are
spelled out in full, we again receive two sets of eight letters that divide
into 3, 3 and 2:
Shemen is spelled: shin-mem-nun.
Spelled out in full: shin-yud-nun, mem-mem, nun-vav-nun.
Zayit is spelled: zayin-yud-tav
Spelled out in full: zayin-yud-nun, yud-vav-dalet, tav-vav.
The sages (Midrash) begin the explanation of this week's
Torah portion with the verse from Jeremiah 11:16 that defines the properties
of the olive and explains why the Jewish people are likened to olive oil.
This phrase also has 8 words that divide into 2, 3 and 3:
"Zayit ra'anan (2), yafeh peri to'ar (3), karah
Hashem shim'cha (3)--Peaceful olive tree, whose fruit is of beautiful
appearance, has God called your name."
Fat is a Covering
In Deuteronomy 32:15 Israel is criticized for having become "fat,
thick and covered." Our sages say that these three adjectives correspond
to the three generations preceding the revelation of the Mashiach.
From the Ba'al Shem Tov we learn that everything has
two manifestations. For every negative interpretation, there is also a positive
interpretation. The Lubavitcher Rebbe explained further that the
three positive interpretations of the above adjectives is as follows:
-
Fat--Indulging in the pleasure of the mysteries
of the Torah
-
Thick--Indulging in good deeds
-
Covered--Revelation to the world of the secrets
that were previously covered. According to the Lubavitcher Rebbe,
this adjective refers specifically to the final generation before the
revelation of the Mashiach.
From the above adjectives we learn that fat is a covering--a garment.
The Jewish People Resemble Olive Oil
Our Sages say that the five descriptions of olive oil in the first
verse of this Torah portion ("Shemen zayit zach katit lama'or--Pure
olive oil, ground to become a light") also describe the Jewish people:
| Description |
Property
of Oil |
Corresponding
Property of Jewish People |
| 1 |
Shemen
(Oil) |
Rises
to top and coats surface--cream |
When
the Jewish people delve into the secrets of the Torah (oil) they
produce coatings (garments). |
| 2 |
Zayit
(Olive fruit and tree) |
Tree
does not shed leaves |
Eternity
of Jewish people |
| 3 |
Zach
(Pure) |
Oil
does not mix with other substances |
Jewish
people will not totally assimilate |
| These
first three descriptions correspond to the eight garments of the
High Priest. In particular, the priestly class, and its restrictions
against assimilating with other Jews, gives power to all the Jewish
people not to assimilate. |
| 4 |
Katit
(Ground) |
The
olive must be ground in order to extract the oil. |
Sometimes,
the Jewish people must endure the hardships of exile in order to
truly return to God. |
| 5 |
Lama’'or
(To become a light) |
It
is the grinding that produces the oil which lights the lamps |
From
the grinding of the return to God, the Jewish people becomes the
source of light to illuminate the entire world, including those
who initially ground them. |
The Connection
Eight is the secret of the connection of pure olive oil to the
priestly garments. When we meditate on the olive oil and connect to its energy,
we create the eight garments of the High Priest, who radiate their energy
to the Jewish people so that they may illuminate the world.
|