Parshas Tetzaveh: What Pressure Reveals
There’s a moment that happens every so often when a man walks into an unfamiliar shul on the right day of the week. The gabbai approaches quietly with a stack of aliyah cards and asks, almost casually, “Kohen, Levi, or Yisrael?” The answer never changes, no matter how much you’ve grown, no matter what kind of week you’ve had, no matter how much responsibility you’re carrying. For me it has always been simple. Yisrael. Clear. Fixed. Uncomplicated. And yet earlier in the Torah, before Sinai, before the mitzvos are given, we are told something that widens the frame entirely: וְאַתֶּם תִּהְיוּ לִי מַמְלֶכֶת כֹּהֲנִים “You shall be to Me a kingdom of Kohanim.” Not a tribe, not a narrow lineage, but men, women, and children — an entire people called into priesthood. Identity came before instruction, before garments, before roles were assigned. Parshas Tetzaveh does not restate that calling so much as it shows how it begins to take shape, and it begins not with fabric or gold threads, but wit...