- Ketoret
The Ketoret is the incense described in the
Hebrew Bible andTalmud offered in the the days of theTemple in Jerusalem .In the Hebrew Bible
The sacred incense prescribed for use in the wilderness Tabernacle was made of costly materials that the congregation contributed (
Exodus 25:1, 2, 6; 35:4, 5, 8, 27-29). TheBook of Exodus describes the following prescription:quote|Take to yourself perfumes: stacte drops and onycha and perfumed
galbanum and purefrankincense . There should be the same portion of each. And you must make it into an incense, a spice mixture, the work of an ointment maker, salted, pure, something holy. And you must pound some of it into fine powder and put some of it before the Testimony in the tent of meeting, where I shall present myself to you. It should be most holy to you people...Whoever makes any like it to enjoy its smell must be cut off from his people.-Exodus 30:34-38; 37:29.At the end of the Holy compartment of the tabernacle, next to the curtain dividing it off from the Most Holy, was located the
incense altar . (Exodus 30:1; 37:25; 40:5, 26, 27) According to theBooks of Chronicles , there was also a similar incense altar in Solomon'stemple inJerusalem (1 Chronicles 28:18 and 2 Chronicles 2:4). Every morning and evening the sacred incense was burned. (Ex 30:7, 8; 2Ch 13:11) Once a year on the Day of Atonement coals from the altar were taken in a censer, or fire holder, together with two handfuls of incense, into the Most Holy, where the incense was made to smoke before the mercy seat of the ark of the testimony.-Leviticus 16:12, 13.In the Talmud
According to the
Talmud , the ketoret was offered twice daily, once at the morning offering and once following the afternoon offering. It was also offered in a special offering by theKohen Gadol (high priest) onYom Kippur , the Day of Atonement.Talmudic passages describing the composition of the incense and other Temple offerings are studied by contemporary Orthodox Jews at daily prayers as part of the daily liturgy.
The rabbis of the
Talmud described the composition of the incense as follows:According to the
Talmud , theHouse of Avitnas was responsible for compounding the "ketoret" in the days of theSecond Temple .References
*Arnold Lustiger and Michael Taubes, "The Kashirer Edition Yom Kippur Machzor: With Commentary Adapted From the Teachings of Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik", K'hal publishing, 2006.
* [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=125&letter=I Incense] , "Jewish Encyclopedia " (1906)
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