Nature of the Asham/2
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Nature of the Asham
Exegetical Approaches
Reparations Offering
The Asham is a reparations offering, allowing a sinner to pay back debts owed to Hashem for sacrilege to the Sanctum.
Meaning of Asham – This approach understands that the noun "אשם" means reparations or compensation, pointing to the word's usage in Bemidbar 5:7-8 and Shemuel I 6:3-8 as evidence.2 As such, in the cultic context, the word refers to a "reparations offering".
Asham: common denominator – Seforno asserts that the common denominator between all the cases listed in Vayikra 5 in which an Asham is brought is that they all involve sacrilege of the Sanctum (מעילה בקודש). The transgressor incurred a debt to Hashem by benefiting from the Kodesh. This debt is paid through the Asham.3
- אשם מעילות –This is most evident in the case of "אשם מעילות",4 brought by one who has unintentionally benefited from that which was sanctified to Hashem.5
- אשם תלוי – One who is unsure of whether he has unintentionally sinned also brings an Asham (known as an אשם תלוי)6 to compensate for the Chatat7 which he might owe Hashem.8
- אשם גזילות – One who owes money to another but denies this, swearing falsely about the matter, benefits from his oath. This person, too, is said to have "מָעֲלָה מַעַל בַּי״י" because he committed sacrilege against Hashem's name, using it for his personal benefit to steal from another. As such, he must pay back both the victim, through returning the amount taken and adding a fifth, and Hashem, via the Asham.
Other cases obligating an Asham – It is not as easy to see how the other instances in which one is required to bring an Asham9 are also cases of "theft" or sacrilege of the holy requiring reparations. R"Y Grossman10 attempts to show how these cases, too, fit the mold:
- One who had relations with a pledged maidservant has committed an offense which shares aspects of financial and sexual misconduct.11 While the former might have required only compensation to the individual, the latter is considered also a sin against Hashem. Under these circumstances, taking that which was sanctified to another is similar to "מעילה בקודש" and reparations are necessary.12
- A Nazirite who becomes impure nullifies the days of his oath to be "holy to Hashem," so that he has, in effect, taken for himself days which had been set apart for Hashem, necessitating him to pay reparations for the loss.
- In the Metzora's defiled state, he is prohibited from entering the camp and unable to enter the Mishkan or participate in its offerings. As such, he must also make reparation for this lost time.13
Missing sacrificial protocol – The fact that the sacrificial protocol of the Asham is not mentioned in Parashat Tzav might relate to the compensatory nature of the sacrifice. It is, perhaps, the reparations itself, i.e. the bringing of the animal, rather than its slaughter and sacrifice which is the key component of the sacrifice and so it is that which is emphasized.
"וְהֵבִיא אֶת אֲשָׁמוֹ לַי״י אַיִל תָּמִים מִן הַצֹּאן בְּעֶרְכְּךָ" – This approach might understand the directive that the animal brought be "בְּעֶרְכְּךָ" (according to your worth) to mean that one must bring an animal which costs the equivalent of the sanctified object that was taken. Again, this highlights the fact the sacrifice is first and foremost compensatory in nature.14
Animals brought? Most individuals who are required to bring an Asham are obligated to bring a ram as the offering. This more expensive animal is perhaps required to ensure that it cover the expenses of the sacrilege. The Nazirite and Metzora are exceptional, being required to bring only a lamb, perhaps because their "theft" is related only to holy time, and not to a material object.
"וְכִפֶּר עָלָיו הַכֹּהֵן לִפְנֵי י״י וְנִסְלַח לוֹ" – This position might understand "וְכִפֶּר" to mean remove or expiate. Through the offering the sin is expiated, not because it intrinsically removed the sin, but because through it reparations were made and the debt to Hashem was paid for. The individual can now be forgiven.
Comparison to Chatat – R. D"Z Hoffmann asserts that the two offerings have different purposes and are brought for different actions. The Chatat is mainly a purifying offering, meant to purge both the sinner and Mikdash of either physical or spiritual impurity.15 The Asham, in contrast, is not meant to purify but to repay debts incurred against Hashem. Neither offering, then, is really meant to purge one of sin itself.
Guilt Offering
The Asham offering is meant to expiate one's sins and save the individual from punishment.
Meaning of Asham – Ramban asserts that the root "אשם" refers to that which is deserving of harsh punishment such as destruction or desolation, pointing to the
Comparison to Chatat