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With this (b’zot) shall Aaron come into the holy place … Leviticus 16:3
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Stressing the initial word of our
verse, “b’zot”, which commences the description of the service of the
High Priest on Yom Kippur, our Sages comment that the High Priest entered
the Holy of Holies “with bundles of mitzvot in his hands”:
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With the merit of Torah, as it is written [Deuteronomy 4:44]
“this (v’zot) is the Torah”,
With the merit of mila (circumcision), as it is written
[Genesis 17:10] “this (zot) is My covenant which you shall observe”;
With the merit of Shabbat, as it is written [Isaiah 56:2]
“happy is the one who does this (zot)”;
With the merit of Jerusalem, as it is written [Ezekiel 5:5] “this (zot)
is Jerusalem”;
With the merit of the tribes, as it is written [Genesis 49:28] “and
this (v’zot) is what their father spoke to them”. Yalkut Shimoni, 571
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My father explained that our Sages’
intention is well beyond simply noting the coincidence of the use of the word “zot”.
As the High Priest enters the Holy of Holies, the place from which sanctity
emanates and spreads to the entire People, he must realize that it is not his
own merit which allows him to enter. It is through the merit of Torah,
and the fact that the Children of Israel observe Torah and fulfill God’s
covenant of mila that he is able to enter.
As well, the merit of Shabbat
is one of the factors which allows the High Priest to enter the Holy of Holies.
Shabbat represents the sanctity of time. The Midrash teaches us
that the three spheres of sanctity, time man and place, are interrelated. Man
has the power to sanctify himself. When he does, he is able as well to sanctify
time and place.
The merit of Jerusalem and the merit
of the tribes represent the unity of Israel, as our Sages consistently teach us
that the destiny of Jerusalem is to unite the Jewish people. This unity endows
the High Priest with strength.
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