The Kohen as a Keli
In Parashat Naso, the Torah gives the words of Birkat Kohanim, the priestly blessing:
“May Hashem bless you and protect you.
May Hashem turn His panim toward you and grant you chen.
May Hashem direct His panim toward you and place upon you shalom.”
The Torah then concludes: “They shall place My Name upon the children of Israel, and I will bless them.” This final verse defines the meaning of the blessing. The kohanim are not the independent source of berachah. They place the Name of Hashem upon Am Yisrael, and Hashem Himself gives the blessing.
Before reciting Birkat Kohanim, the kohanim say that Hashem commanded them levarech et amo Yisrael be’ahavah — “to bless His people Israel with love.” This phrase is essential. The kohen does not bless from personal authority or status. He blesses as a descendant of Aharon, whose path is to love shalom, pursue shalom, love people, and bring them close to Torah. The kohen’s role is therefore to become a keli — a vessel — through which Hashem’s berachah reaches Am Yisrael.
Ahavat Yisrael and the Unity of the Soul
The Tanya explains that ahavat Yisrael is rooted in the shared source of Jewish souls. Jews are called brothers because their souls come from one Father. Separation belongs to the level of the body; unity belongs to the level of the neshamah.
For this reason, Birkat Kohanim must be given be’ahavah. The kohen blesses Am Yisrael not as separate individuals standing apart from him, but as one people rooted in one spiritual source. The blessing requires ahavah because it is placed upon Israel as a united people.
Words Given by Hashem
The kohen does not invent the blessing. He repeats the words given by the Torah. This is central to the meaning of Birkat Kohanim: the blessing is not personal speech, but Hashem’s words placed upon His people.
The Torah says: “They shall place My Name upon the children of Israel.” The words of the blessing carry the Name of Hashem. The kohen’s task is to transmit them faithfully, without making himself the source.
From Berachah to Shalom
The three verses of Birkat Kohanim form a clear progression.
The first blessing is berachah with shemirah — blessing together with protection. A person may receive success, livelihood, strength, or opportunity; but every blessing needs shemirah, so that it is preserved and directed toward its proper purpose.
The second blessing asks for panim and chen. Panim means Hashem’s direct turning toward the person. Chen means favour, acceptance, and the ability to find one’s proper place before Hashem and before others.
The final blessing is shalom. The Mishnah teaches: “Hashem found no vessel that holds blessing for Israel except peace.” Shalom is therefore not an added detail at the end. It is the vessel that allows all other blessings to remain.
The Inner Meaning of Birkat Kohanim
Birkat Kohanim teaches that berachah is Hashem’s gift to Am Yisrael, transmitted through a vessel that does not place itself at the centre. The kohanim speak the words of Hashem; Am Yisrael receives the Name of Hashem placed upon them; and Hashem Himself gives the blessing.
The blessing begins with protection, continues with chen, and reaches its completion in shalom — the vessel that allows Hashem’s berachah to rest upon Israel.