What Distinguishes the Chatat and Asham/2
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What Distinguishes the Chatat and Asham?
Exegetical Approaches
Function of the Offering
While the Chatat is first and foremost a purification offering, the Asham is a reparation offering.
Sources:R. David Zvi Hoffmann, modern scholars,
Meaning of חטאת – According to these sources, the root "חטא" means to purify, as proven by the many verses where it is clearly mentioned in the context of purification (sometimes being parallel to the root "טהר") including Vayikra 14:48-52, Bemidbar 8:7, Bemidbar 19:19 and Yechezkel 43:23-26.1
Chatat: common denominator – R. D"Z Hoffmann asserts that the common denominator between all cases in which one must bring a Chatat is that they involve contraction of impurity. Thus, both those who have created spiritual impurity by unintentionally transgressing a prohibition2 and those who have contracted physical impurity (a birthing mother, one who has tzara'at, one who has an emission, and a nazirite who has come in contact with a corpse) are obligated to bring a Chatat.3
What does the Chatat purify? R. Hoffmann explains that sin defiles not just the person, but also the Mikdash, and as such, the Chatat comes to purify the Mikdash itself from impurity. As evidence that the Mikdash itself can be polluted not just via physical impurity but by sin as well, he points to Vayikra 16:16, "וְכִפֶּר עַל הַקֹּדֶשׁ מִטֻּמְאֹת בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל וּמִפִּשְׁעֵיהֶם לְכׇל חַטֹּאתָם" and Vayikra 20:3, "כִּי מִזַּרְעוֹ נָתַן לַמֹּלֶךְ לְמַעַן טַמֵּא אֶת מִקְדָּשִׁי". As support, he points out that the blood of such offerings is sprinkled not on the person but in the Mikdash.
Where the blood is sprinkled – R. Hoffmann suggests that the gravity of the sin determines to what extent the Mikdash is polluted, and hence, where the blood is sprinkled. .
Meaning of Asham
Asham: common denominator
Animals brought?
"בְּעֶרְכְּךָ"
Severity of Sin
While both the Chatat and Asham serve an atoning role, they do so for different types of sins.
Asham More Severe
The more severe offenses necessitate an Asham offering rather than a Chatat.
Asham Less Severe
Less severe sins are expiated with an Asham rather than a Chatat.