The Daily Tanach Podcast

Yoni Zolty

Welcome to The Daily Tanach Podcast. Together we join the global 929 project, learning one chapter of the Hebrew Bible each day, with reflections from Rabbi Yoni Zolty.

  1. JAN 14

    Vayikra Ch. 6

    Vayikra chapter 6 opens a new section of the book—and yet it feels strangely repetitive. After chapters 1–5 carefully laid out the various sacrifices, the Torah seems to start over, listing many of the same korbanot all over again. But this repetition is deliberate. Chapters 1–5 tell the story of sacrifice from the perspective of the person bringing the offering: the Israelite who decides to draw close to God. Chapter 6 shifts the camera. Now the Torah speaks not to the people, but to the priests, focusing on the avodah itself—the technical details, the handling of blood and ashes, the rules of consumption, and the daily discipline of the altar. The same sacrifices are described, but from the other side of the relationship. This shift also explains why the order changes. In the first section, offerings are arranged according to human experience—voluntary gifts before obligatory atonement. Here, they are ordered by levels of holiness, with the most sacred sacrifices grouped together and the communal, shared shelamim pushed to the end. Some scholars even suggest that historically, these priestly laws were taught first, at Sinai, and only later reframed from the worshiper’s perspective after the Mishkan was built. If so, the Torah’s final arrangement carries a powerful message: even a book called Torat Kohanim begins by centering ordinary Israelites. Sacrifice is not a priestly possession—it is a shared system, designed to make divine encounter accessible to the entire community.

    13 min
  2. 12/03/2025

    Shemot Ch. 19

    Shemot 19 presents an apparent contradiction: the people are strictly forbidden from ascending Har Sinai or touching it, yet immediately afterward they are told that when the shofar sounds, they shall ascend the mountain. Classical commentators attempt to resolve this by either relocating the ascent to a later, unrecorded shofar blast (Saadia, Rashi, Ibn Ezra) or by reading the verse to mean that ascent is only permitted after the shofar stops (Rashbam, Bekhor Shor). Both approaches face significant textual and linguistic challenges. Professor Jonathan Grossman instead argues that the verse means exactly what it says: the long shofar blast during Maamad Har Sinai was intended as God’s invitation for the entire nation to ascend the mountain and experience direct revelation. Drawing on parallels to the shofar at Yericho—where the blast signals divine arrival and human approach—Grossman shows that the Torah uses a consistent narrative pattern in which the shofar marks the moment when sacred space becomes accessible. Moshe’s retrospective account in Devarim supports this radical reading: the people were meant to ascend, but fear prevented them. Rather than accepting God’s invitation to meet the divine “face to face,” they recoiled from the overwhelming manifestation of fire, sound, and smoke, requesting that Moshe serve as intermediary. This shift had lasting spiritual consequences, perhaps even paving the way for the Golden Calf by depriving the people of the direct encounter meant to anchor their faith. The chapter thus becomes a profound meditation on the tension between divine desire for closeness and human fear of the transcendent—the tragedy of a relationship that could have been immediate, but became mediated instead.

    11 min

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Welcome to The Daily Tanach Podcast. Together we join the global 929 project, learning one chapter of the Hebrew Bible each day, with reflections from Rabbi Yoni Zolty.