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Or HaChaim on Leviticus 21:8

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Torah

8 โ€Ž[1] ** ื•ืงื“ืฉืชื•, "You shall sanctify him, etc."** The Torah refrains from addressing the priests in the plural, i.e. as a group as it had done up to now. *Yevamot* 88 explains that the word ื•ืงื“ืฉืชื• is a warning to a priest who married a divorcee, or some other category of woman forbidden to him and who refuses to divorce her. The court is to administer corporal punishment to such a priest and otherwise afflict him until he agrees to divorce such a woman. The words **ื›ื™ ืืช ืœื—ื ืืœื•ืงื™ืš ื”ื•ื ืžืงืจื™ื‘ "for he offers the bread of your G'd"** mean that as long as there are many other priests who are ritually able to perform the service in the Temple there is no need to apply corporal punishment to the dissident priest who refuses to divorce a wife he married in violation of Torah law. This explains why the Torah addressed the priest in the singular in this instance.

โ€Ž[2] **ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื™ื”ื™ื” ืœืš, "he shall be holy unto you."** This means that in order for him to be holy he has to be a priest unto you. In other words, it is up to you to see that he conducts himself in a holy manner. The emphasis on the words "for he is holy" stems from the premise that holiness is something that is acquired through one's free-willed effort, one does not achieve it because it is forced upon one. How then can the Torah command us to "force" holiness on the priest? This is why the Torah had to repeat: "for he is holy," that the holiness of the priest is of a different nature than that of ordinary Israelites (if and when they achieve it in some measure). We do not impose holiness on the priest. We are commanded to see to it that he does not lose or abandon the holiness which is his by birth. The Torah underlines this at the end of our verse with the words: "for I the Lord sanctify you." G'd allows His Presence to rest on the whole people only through the priests. When there is no priest there is no sacrificial service; when there is no sacrificial service there is no Sanctuary. When there is no Sanctuary G'd's Presence is not at home amongst us.

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Version: Or Hachayim, trans. Eliyahu Munk

Source: http://www.urimpublications.com/or-hachayim-commentary-on-the-torah-5-vols.html

License: CC-BY

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