Friday, April 17, 2015

Guest D'var Torah

"And Aharon lifted up his hands toward the people and blessed them..."  (Lev. 9:22)

Although the Torah does not describe the content of Aharon's blessing, the Sages assume that it was the well-known Priestly Blessing that appears in Parshat Naso.  There is also a textual anomaly in the verse:  The word that is pronounced "his hands" is spelled deficiently (the term of art for words written in the Torah missing a typical letter) as  "his hand."  The Torah Temimah explains that the deficient spelling comes to teach us a nuance of the Priestly Blessing procedure.  The Kohen positions himself in a manner that satisfies both the pronunciation of the verse and its spelling.  He raises both hands but places his right hand above his left; he has both raised "his hands" and "his hand."  R' Samson Raphael Hirsch takes a more homiletic tack.  He suggest that the deficient spelling of "his hands" hints to the idea that the blessing is not really coming from him, it is coming from Him; the Kohen is merely a messenger on behalf of G-d, the source of all blessing.

by Dan Lifshitz

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