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parshanut:

This post originally appears at Kevah.org.

What is holiness?

The concept of holiness (or ‘sanctity’) is central to Jewish theology, but commentators have struggled throughout the ages to give it precise definition. The word in Hebrew, kedusha(קדושה), has the connotation of ‘distinct,’ or ‘separate.’ Hence the first usage of the term in the Torah, to describe the Shabbat: 

God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it (vaykadesh oto), because on it God ceased from all the work of Creation that he had done.(Gen. 2:3)

וַיְבָרֶךְאֱלֹקיםאֶת-יוֹםהַשְּׁבִיעִי,וַיְקַדֵּשׁאֹתוֹ:  כִּיבוֹשָׁבַתמִכָּל-מְלַאכְתּוֹ,אֲשֶׁר-בָּרָאאֱלֹקיםלַעֲשׂוֹת.  

Holiness also seems to have something do with closeness to God, who is the source of the sacred. This is the impression we get from the first appearance of the word in the Book of Exodus. In Moses’ encounter with the Burning Bush, God tells him: 

Do not come any closer. Remove your sandals from your feet, for the place on which you stand is holy ground.(Exod. 3:5)

 וַיֹּאמֶר,אַל-תִּקְרַבהֲלֹם;שַׁל-נְעָלֶיךָ,מֵעַלרַגְלֶיךָכִּיהַמָּקוֹםאֲשֶׁראַתָּהעוֹמֵדעָלָיו,אַדְמַת-קֹדֶשׁהוּא.

We continue to see references to holiness, here and there, throughout the Book of Exodus, and it becomes clear that this is a value to be pursued. So we are told that we are to be “holy people” to God (22:30), and even that the Israelites will be known as a “holy nation”(19:6). 

Yet it is not until the construction of the Tabernacle and the appointment of the priesthood that holiness truly comes into center stage in the Biblical text. The Tabernacle, meant to serve as a dwelling place for God on earth, is called a mikdash, or sanctuary – literally a ‘holy thing.’ And the High Priest who will oversee the sacrifices offered there is to wear a golden headband, upon which we are told to engrave: ‘Kodesh L’Hashem’ - Holy to the Lord.

So by the time we enter Leviticus, which presents itself as entire book devoted to detailing the work of the priests and the rituals of the Tabernacle, we have fully entered into a religion of holiness. The sacrifices themselves are described, again and again, as ‘holy’; the inner chamber of the Tabernacle is ‘The Holy of Holies’; and the priests themselves, dressed in their ‘holy garments’ are the official representatives of this holiness. In fact, it is in our parsha that they receive the most explicit description of their role:

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