The Torah reading this week includes a review of the holidays of the Jewish calendar. The list of holidays is recited several times in the Torah. We find it in the book of Shemot and again in the books of Bamidbar and Devarim, as well as here in our reading in the book of Vayikra. Since there are no needless repetitions in the holy text of the Torah, commentators over the ages have offered many varied explanations as to why this calendar is repeated.
A closer examination of the context and background to each of these holiday listings can offer us an insight and historical overview as to the import of the regular festive seasons of the Jewish people. In each place where the Torah outlines these occasions, a specific textual background is affiliated with it. There is no mere repetition of the same ideas. Rather, they offer us an indication of the multilayered nuances that these special days seek to impart to the Jewish people throughout its history. Each reference to the holidays contains a particular message for a particular event that occurred, or will occur, during the long saga of the Jewish story. It is an understanding of this alliance of text and historical overview that makes these portions of the Torah so important and relevant to us, more than three millennia after they were written down for us by our teacher Moses.
But the context of these festivals is also relevant
according to the personal lives and experiences of its celebrants. In this
week's reading, the holidays are attributed to the commemorations and
celebration of specific historical events once the Jewish people reside in the
land of Israel. There are agricultural innovations and references to seasonal
climate that place these holidays in a geographical context. The Jewish people
have a natural existence only when they are in the land of Israel. Accordingly,
even though the Torah’s first reference to them allows us to celebrate the
holidays no matter where we live and no matter what time-frame we are consigned
to, this second reference in our reading places it within the framework of the
Jewish people as inhabitants of the land of Israel, attached to its land and
its traditions.
We also read of the Torah holidays in the book of Bemidbar.
There, the backdrop relates to the offerings of the particular sacrifices in
the Temple that were to be brought upon the date of each holiday. This reading
concentrates on the Temple service associated with each festival, and not
necessarily with the reason for its existence in the first place. The final
reference in the book of Devarim seems to sum up all the previous references:
its backdrop is the Temple, the land of Israel and the explanation of the days
on which each holiday is to be commemorated. Thus, the combination of all these
references makes our calendar eternal and valid in all places and for all times
and allows us to celebrate the commandments that the festivals bring with them
in joy and good purpose.
Shabbat shalom, Rabbi Berel Wein