Page 5 - VAIKRA
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awareness that this act is devious, signifying corruption within. This
 corruption must be entirely uprooted. Hashem commanded us to sacrifice
 the gods of the Egyptians, in order to uproot from our hearts the corruption
 that led us to worship idols.
 Today our prayers substitute for the service of korbanot, as it states, “And
 let our lips substitute for bulls.” Just as the korbanot required
 self-sacrifice, so too, tefillah requires much effort and concentration, to the
 point of self-sacrifice, in order to counteract the powerful Yetzer Hara,
 who attacks man precisely when he prays.
 The Yetzer Hara is compared to Amalek. Just as Amalek weakened Bnei
 Yisrael in their study of the holy Torah, by causing them to experience
 fatigue while learning, likewise, the Yetzer Hara generates a feeling of
 exhaustion, in order to prevent people from serving Hashem and praying
 to Him. Just as it is a mitzvah to erase the memory of Amalek, so too, it
 is a mitzvah to eliminate the weariness that accompanies us while praying
 or serving Hashem, which stems from Amalek.











 “Hashem called to Moshe, and spoke to him

 from the Tent of Meeting saying: Speak to the
 Children of Israel and say to them: When a
 person from among you will bring an offering
 to Hashem: from the animals – from the cattle
 and from the flocks you shall bring your
 offering”

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