Holy Days
DAY OF ATONEMENTS
Rabbi Moshe Alshich
"This shall be an eternal statute (chok) for you...on the tenth day of the seventh month you must afflict yourselves and not do any work...on this you shall have all your sins atoned so that you shall be purified before G-d...A Sabbath of Sabbaths..." Lev.(16:29-31)
The Torah wishes to teach that G-d neither wants man to afflict himself--fast, etc.--but merely wants complete repentance. Self-castigation is of no intrinsic value, cannot take the place of repentance, and is only a means to an end, the end being character rehabilitation.
G-d, having described a variety of animal sacrifices, points out that man himself must also afflict himself in some way. G-d does not want man to think however, that His interest is served by man afflicting himself, such as denying himself food and drink. He wishes that man would restrain himself "as an eternal statute," i.e., on an ongoing basis, all year round, lifelong. In that event, special rituals leading to repentance would not ever be needed!
If such were man's lifestyle, then these rituals would become a chok, i.e. irrational, since they would be unnecessary in practice, man not having any need to induce repentance by means of self affliction. Man would then be assured of complete atonement for any errors he had committed, without the need for such legislation. The occurrence of the very day of Yom Kippur would suffice for him to purify himself of his own accord in public, but also in his heart, "before G-d," i.e. something visible only to G-d Himself. In such a scenario, Yom Kippur will become merely a shabbbat shabaton, a heightened Sabbath experience, due to the forgiveness this particular Sabbath brings in its wake. On the other hand, "afflicting yourselves," will become merely a formality, a chukat olam, an ongoing statute, devoid of significance for you.
There is a distinction between atonement and purification. The former occurs by the grace of G-d, the latter by dint of one's own efforts. Although Yom Kippur brings with it atonement, forgiveness, its ultimate objective is that you "purify yourselves before G-d," inside and out, by your own efforts.
In order to achieve this purification, the average person requires the afflictions, a part of the Torah legislation. It is true that by its very nature, Yom Kippur is shabbat shabbaton, a heightened Sabbath experience, a day of rest and rejoicing for the forgiveness attained, nonetheless the legislation to submit to afflictions is an ongoing one, chukkat olam, "an eternal statute." Although G-d could have insisted on a variety of acts of affliction, He requires this only achat bashanah (verse 34), once a year.
(Adapted from Torat Moshe - 16th commentary of Rabbi Moshe Alshech of Zefat on the Torah, as translated and condensed in the English version of Eliyahu Munk.)
Selected with permission and adapted from the three-volume English edition of Midrash of Rabbi Moshe Alshich on the Torah, as translated and annotated by Eliyahu Munk.