Weekly portion – צַו – Tzav – Command; Leviticus 6:1–8:36; Jeremiah 7:21–8:3 / 9:22–23
What keeps faith alive when the great moments have long passed? What sustains a person when no visible signs remain—no Temple, no altar, no sacrificial service? Is it the extraordinary that shapes us, or rather what we do day after day, often unnoticed, but steadfastly? This time, we are led into that tension: between visible service and inner attitude, between the one-time sacrifice and the fire that never ends. It shifts our attention away from the dramatic moment and toward the quiet, continuous faithfulness that forms the true foundation of faith, life, and responsibility.
The parashah Tzav continues the engagement with the world of sacrifices in the Book of Leviticus, the third book of Moses. While the previous weekly reading focused on instructions regarding the different kinds of offerings, the focus now turns to the priests and their daily work. The Torah describes in detail how the offerings are to be presented, how the meat is to be handled, what is to be eaten and...
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