Ari's PostsAri Fuld on the ParshaParshat Tzav: The Rush of Gratitude

Parshat Tzav: The Rush of Gratitude

The sacrifice is never the main point. Giving thanks is. But if so, then why do we rush through it?
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It’s Friday afternoon, we’ve got just a few minutes before Shabbat. No grill this week—Pesach cleaning disaster. We had steaks in the freezer, forgot to plug it back in… kaput. So no Grill & Torah in the literal sense, but we’ve still got Torah.

This week’s parasha — Parshat Tzav — is a little bit of a difficult one to talk about, because from beginning to end it’s really all about sacrifices. Different sacrifices — from sin offerings to the Olah, which is the sacrifice that goes entirely to God, none of it to man — all the way to the sacrifices where you’re simply saying thank you to God.

Now, today it’s a little difficult to learn from the Korbanot in a practical sense, because we don’t have the Beit HaMikdash built yet. And of course Pesach is coming up, and everything we do for Pesach today is more or less a Hollywood production. The whole seder is like theater — because without the Beit HaMikdash, we have to act almost everything out, and the main parts of Pesach are essentially non-existent for us. But the lessons are very much alive.


Two Kinds of Sacrifices

A lot of people make the mistake of thinking that sacrifices are only about sin offerings — only about repentance. And then there are people who say, well, it’s for God. But both of those are missing the picture.

God doesn’t eat meat. And it’s not only about repentance. There are sacrifices we bring to God simply to say thank you. These are called Korban Shalomim — peace offerings — and there are two basic types. The first is the Shalmei Todah, a thanksgiving offering. The second is the Shalmei Nedavah, a voluntary offering — where we simply want to express our appreciation to God and draw closer to Him. Not because we sinned. Not because we owe anything specific. Just because we want to.


What’s the Rush?

Here’s what’s fascinating. With the Shalmei Todah — the thanksgiving sacrifice — the Torah imposes a very tight time limit. You have to finish eating it in one day. If you leave it over, you have to destroy it, and leaving it over is a serious Torah violation — an issur.

Now think about that. Why the rush?

If anything, you’d think it should be the sin offering that’s rushed. Let’s get the guilt over with, right? Let’s eat it fast and move on. In fact, with the sin offering, you’d almost say we shouldn’t want any enjoyment from it at all — and we don’t eat it ourselves for that reason. The Kohanim, the priests, eat it. But even there, you might argue, let’s finish it quickly. We don’t want to prolong the memory of the sin, the guilty feeling.

But no. It’s specifically the Korban Todah, the sacrifice of saying thank you, that has this urgency attached to it. Why?


The Problem with Gratitude

Here’s the answer, and I think it’s a profound one.

When God does something for us — saves us, heals us, pulls us through a difficult situation — there’s an emotional high. There’s an awakening. We feel it deeply. We want to say thank you and we mean it with everything we’ve got.

But what happens over time? We get used to things.

How many people wake up in the morning, take a breath, and genuinely say, “Thank God I’m alive”? How many people see the sun coming up and think, “What a miracle”? We don’t — because we’re used to it. We take it for granted. That’s just human nature.

Think about it this way. If someone gave you a hundred dollars every single day, the first day you’d be thrilled. By the end of the month? You’d expect it. By the end of the year? If it didn’t show up, you’d be saying, “Hey, where’s my hundred dollars?” — as if it’s coming to you.

That’s what happens to gratitude. It fades. It becomes routine. And God is telling us: I don’t want your thank you to become routine. I don’t want your Korban Todah to drift into a place where you’re not really meaning it anymore.


Sincerity Is the Whole Point

That’s why the Korban Todah has to be eaten in one day. God wants you to hold onto that emotional sincerity — that genuine feeling of the moment you were saved, the moment you realized what God had done for you — and act on it right then, while it’s real and raw and honest.

And here’s another beautiful detail. The Korban Todah comes with more food than almost any other sacrifice. You bring 40 loaves of various types — different kinds of bread and cakes — alongside it. That’s a tremendous amount of food to finish in one day. Why?

Because God doesn’t want you to be thankful alone. He wants you to throw open your doors, invite everyone in, make a big party out of it. Why? Because genuine gratitude is contagious. When people see someone who has truly been saved by God, who is genuinely overwhelmed with appreciation — that energy spreads. It inspires others to look at their own lives and recognize what God has done for them too.

So the design of the Korban Todah is intentional: a massive amount of food, a short window of time, and the built-in requirement to share it with as many people as possible — because God wants your gratitude to be real, immediate, and infectious.


The Sin Offering Is the Opposite

With sin offerings, the dynamic is completely reversed. There, we don’t want the pressure of time. We want the repentance to go on. The guilty feeling should linger — not because guilt is valuable in itself, but because guilt that lingers motivates you to change. Guilt alone is worthless. But guilt that pushes you to fix something? That’s the whole point. You don’t want to rush past a sin offering. You want to sit with it, reflect, and do the work.

This is the contrast the Torah is drawing. Gratitude must be expressed urgently, while the feeling is alive and real. Repentance needs time to do its work.


The Korban Is Never the Main Thing

There’s one more point I want to make, and it’s really the heart of everything.

The Haftarah we read at the end of this parasha has HaKadosh Baruch Hu — God — saying to Bnei Yisrael: “I didn’t command you to bring sacrifices.” Now, we know God did command us to bring sacrifices — so what does this mean?

It means: I didn’t command you to just bring the animals.

On a sin offering, the main act is the vidui — the verbal confession, the leaning of the hands on the animal, the genuine acknowledgment: I sinned. If you skip that, the Korban means nothing. You haven’t achieved repentance. The animal was just an animal. The Korban itself was never the main thing. It never was. It’s the physical expression of something that has to be happening on the inside.

And this is exactly what went wrong. One of the reasons our Sages say the Beit HaMikdash was destroyed is precisely this: people were bringing sin offerings without doing the vidui. They weren’t putting their hands on the animal and saying, I sinned. They were just handing over the animals and walking away — going through the motions — and in doing so, they lost the entire point of the Beit HaMikdash. They lost the whole idea of being genuinely close to God on a real and spiritual level.


A Lesson for Today

Even without the Beit HaMikdash — and we certainly hope it will be rebuilt speedily in our days — this lesson is completely alive for us today. When we pray, going through the motions is not enough. You have to mean it.

We say the Shemoneh Esrei every single day — 19 blessings — and according to halacha, every day you have to bring something new and personal to your davening. Every section connects to something real in your life. The blessing for wisdom — that’s not just asking to be smart. It’s asking God to help you make the right choices in your life. The blessing for repentance — you have to actually feel that. The blessing for healing, for redemption — each one is supposed to hook into something you genuinely feel that day. You have to recharge it every single morning.

And there’s one beautiful halacha that captures everything we’ve been talking about. When the chazan repeats the Shemoneh Esrei — Chazarat HaShatz — the congregation is generally covered by the chazan’s recitation. You don’t have to say most of the words yourself; you answer amen and you’re fulfilled your obligation.

Except for one blessing. Modim — the blessing of thanks.

For Modim, the tzibbur, the congregation, has to say it themselves. You are not yotzei — you are not covered — by the chazan. The chazan says his version, and the congregation says Modim d’Rabbanan simultaneously. Because you cannot have someone else say thank you on your behalf. That’s not gratitude — that’s an insult. Thanking God has to come from you, in your own words, from your own heart. No one can do it for you.

That is the lesson of Parshat Tzav. The Korbanot themselves are the sidekick. They always were. The sincerity behind them — that’s the main event. Whether it’s repentance or gratitude, God is not interested in the animal. He’s interested in you.

Say thank you — and mean it. And when you mean it, share it with as many people as you can.

Shabbat Shalom from Judea.

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