parsha bit: Chukat
Jun. 29th, 2006 09:01 amParshat Chukat begins with instructions for an unusual purification
ritual involving the ashes of a red heifer (parah adamah). Sforno
points out that the priest takes cedar wood, which is a symbol of
pride because the cedar stands tall, and hyssop, which is a symbol of
humility because it grows low to the ground, and a red thread, which
is identified with sinfulness, and throws all of them into the fire
that consumes the parah adamah. The ashes pull one from pride back
to humility and redeem one from sinfulness. (Commentary on
Numbers 19:1-10)
(My secondary source doesn't say why a red thread is identified with sinfulness. The only red thread that immediately comes to mind from Tanach is the one in Joshua that the two spies tell the woman in Jericho to use to signal her house so she'll be spared in the invasion -- which suggests righteousness, not sin, in that case.)
(This is a place-holder for a commentary on reading meaning into mitzvot versus "because God said so".)
Re: cedar & hyssop
Date: 2006-06-29 10:48 pm (UTC)