WELCOMING SHABBAT

Shabbat is more than a day of refraining from worldly activity.

When experienced to its spiritual fullest, its holiness enlightens all other days of the week.

We invite you to enhance your Shabbat with these words of Torah.

 

An open Torah scroll rests on the bimah inside a synagogue, its Hebrew text visible on parchment, with a silver yad placed across the scroll and a blue velvet cloth beneath it, softly lit by the sanctuary in the background.

PARASHAT TAZRIA-METZORA: Words Hurt

PARASHAT TAZRIA-METZORA: Words Hurt

April 16, 2026

This teaching on Parashat Tazria-Metzora presents Sefer Vayikra as a book ordered around holiness, with the Mishkan at the center of Jewish life. The progression from kashrut (dietary distinctions) to tumah and taharah (ritual impurity and ritual purity), and then to tzaraat (a spiritual affliction), shows that the Torah is shaping not only ritual conduct but the person’s entire capacity to live in relation to holiness. In this reading, misuse of speech becomes especially serious because it does not only affect the individual; it threatens the moral and spiritual life of the community.



The teaching begins by noting a change in Sefer Vayikra. After the discussion of korbanot (offerings), the Torah turns to the broader subject of holiness. 

From there, the Torah extends this discipline of distinction into everyday life through kashrut (dietary distinctions). The separation between kosher and non-kosher animals is not presented only as a matter of permitted and forbidden food. In the teaching, it forms part of a larger education in discernment, training a person to live with attentiveness to boundaries that matter for holiness.

That movement continues into tumah and taharah (ritual impurity and ritual purity). Here, tumah (ritual impurity) is understood not primarily as moral guilt, but as a state of distance from the Mishkan. Once the Torah has taught distinction in worship and in eating, it proceeds to distinction in one’s condition of nearness to, or separation from, the center of holiness. The sequence is therefore coherent: the Torah moves from acts performed in the Mishkan, to habits of daily life, to the person’s very state of relation to holiness.

Within that framework, tzaraat (a spiritual affliction) becomes especially significant. The teaching emphasizes that although contact with death generates tumah (ritual impurity), the metzora (person afflicted with tzaraat) is sent farther outside the camp. Following Chazal (the Sages), this suggests that tzaraat is not being treated as an ordinary physical disease, but as a spiritual condition linked to sinful or destructive speech.

This is the sharpest point in the teaching. Death is tragic, but it is not spiritually contagious in the same way. Misused speech, by contrast, spreads corruption through the community. For that reason, the metzora (person afflicted with tzaraat) is distanced not only from the Mishkan, but even from the camp itself. The implication is that holiness is not limited to ritual status; it also requires integrity in language, because speech can either sustain or damage communal life.

The teaching concludes by returning to Sefer Vayikra as a book of holiness. The kohen (priest) examines the afflicted person as a kind of spiritual authority, and through a process of teshuvah (repentance/return) and restoration, the individual may reenter the community. Holiness, then, is not only about exclusion; it is also about the possibility of return once the person has been healed and restored.

NOTE: The above is a summary based on the original teaching.