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The colors used in this window are symbolic of both
agricultural products and the flesh of animals which were sacrificed
as atonement for sins and the smoke ascending toward the heavens.
Excerpt
from Stained Glass Quarterly article dated Fall 1989
Kodashim
is Hebrew meaning holy things. Kodashim deals with the sacrificial rights
of Jewish law. The offering of sacrifices was discontinued with the destruction
of the Temple, but the study of Kodashim has been kept alive in part because
of Judaism's stress on the importance of learning. Another reason is the
hope that the Temple will be rebuilt which would restore the sacrificial
cult. Yet another reason is the belief that the study of sacrificial law
is equally as valid as the sacrificial act. The importance of studying such
details is expressed by the idea that, "...ritual law of the Torah
has for its purpose the religious and moral perfection of humanity."
Sacrificial
law is firmly connected to the ancient Temple. Temple activities revolved
around the Altar, which along with the Ark of the Covenant, has been portrayed
in the Kodashim window. |