This item is also published in today's Hanassi Highlights. An AI-generated version of the text in Ivrit is reproduced here.
Parashat Shemini brings us to a moment of culmination. After the long process beginning with the Exodus, the construction of the Mishkan is complete, and the eighth day finally arrives—the moment at which the Divine Presence will dwell among the people.
At the centre of that moment stands Aharon HaKohen, the same Aharon who is praised for
fulfilling the command to light the Menorah without deviation. Aharon is the
model of zerizut, of faithful and consistent avodat Hashem without
hesitation.
And yet, here, at the very inauguration of his service, he
hesitates.
Aharon must be encouraged: “Krav el hamizbe’ach”—“Come forward to the altar.”
The wording is striking.
Rashi explains that he was overcome with shame and fear. The
Ramban adds that the appearance of the mizbeach evoked for him the image of the
Golden Calf. At the threshold of his greatest role, Aharon is confronted by a
lingering sense of failure. How could he be the one to bring about the resting
of the Shechinah?
Yet he is told: “Why are you ashamed? For this you
were chosen.” Chazal’s formulation can be read in more than one way: not only that Aharon was chosen for
this service, but that he was chosen for it precisely because of his
reluctance.
Aharon’s hesitation is not incidental. It reflects a profound awareness of the gravity of avodat Hashem. He does not approach the mizbe’ach lightly. He is conscious of the responsibility, and of his own limitations. That very awareness is what qualifies him.
This becomes clearer when set against the later episode of
Nadav and Avihu. They bring an esh zarah, a fire that was not commanded,
and suffer tragic consequences. Chazal offer a range of explanations, but a
common thread emerges: a failure of restraint, an element of overconfidence.
Where Aharon hesitates before acting, they do not.
The contrast is sharpened further by Aharon’s response to
their tragic deaths: “Vayidom Aharon”—“Aharon was silent.” Even in the
face of personal tragedy, he does not presume to explain. His silence reflects
the same humility that marked his hesitation at the outset.
Aharon’s greatness lies not in certainty, but in perspective—the
ability to carry responsibility without the illusion of complete mastery.
“Krav el hamizbe’ach.” The call to step forward remains. It is a call to step
forward with awareness—with the knowledge that what we are doing matters, and
that even when we do not feel fully equal to the task, we are called
nonetheless.
Perhaps that is the enduring lesson of Aharon’s first step:
not that one must feel ready, or certain, or even worthy, but that one must be willing to approach, carrying that very
sense of hesitation.
For it is not despite that hesitation that a person is able
to step forward—but sometimes
precisely because of it.
Shabbat Shalom!











