By Michael R. Mantell, Ph.D., in El Cajon, California

What may be the most anxiety-provoking question a Jew hears this week?
“Have you finished cleaning for Pesach yet?”
It’s Shabbat HaGadol. The first Seder is just days away, and everything, from the kitchen to the car to that one drawer we’ve been avoiding, suddenly matters. And right on cue, Parashat Tzav steps in not to add pressure, but to reorient how we understand what we’re doing.
Because Tzav is, at its core, a parsha about consistency, about process, and about what it means to live with ongoing awareness, not just inspiration.
It begins with the olah, the offering that burns through the night. Not dramatic, not fleeting, but steady. The Torah emphasizes that the fire on the altar must be maintained continuously. Aish tamid… lo tichbeh. A constant fire. It doesn’t run on bursts of motivation. It depends on daily tending.
And then, almost quietly, the Torah turns to what might seem like the least compelling detail: the ashes. The Kohen begins his day with terumat ha-deshen—lifting the residue of yesterday’s offerings. He doesn’t ignore it. He doesn’t rush past it. He attends to it carefully, deliberately, even respectfully. He changes garments when transporting it further, as if to say: even what is no longer needed still deserves dignity in how it is handled.
There’s something deeply instructive here. Before adding anything new, the Torah asks us to clear what’s already there.
That’s exactly where we are this week. Not just scrubbing surfaces, but confronting accumulation, physical and psychological. We hold onto objects, yes, but also to habits, narratives, expectations that may have outlived their usefulness. And like the ashes on the altar, they don’t look dramatic. They just quietly pile up.
Tzav teaches that clearing is not a distraction from meaningful living, it is part of it. But the parsha doesn’t stop there.
It moves through a series of offerings: the mincha, the chatat, the asham, the shelamim. Each one structured. Each one bounded by time, place, and intention. The shelamim, for example, must be eaten within a specific window. Leave it too long, and it’s no longer valid.
Which raises a subtle but powerful idea: even meaningful things have a time frame. Even something sacred, if held onto past its moment, can lose its purpose.
We don’t often think this way. We assume that holding on, whether to objects, roles, or even ways of seeing ourselves, is inherently safe. Tzav gently challenges that. Sometimes growth requires release, not because something was wrong, but because its time has passed.
And then comes another layer.
Before Aharon and his sons begin their service, there is a period of preparation, seven days of miluim. They don’t just step into the role. They practice. They repeat. They internalize. Holiness, the Torah is teaching, isn’t achieved in a moment. It’s built through consistent, structured engagement. That’s a message we often resist.
We look for transformation in big moments, inspiration, insight, breakthrough. Tzav redirects us to something quieter and more sustainable: repetition, discipline, showing up even when nothing feels particularly elevated.
From a psychological perspective, this is where real change happens. Not in intensity, but in consistency. Not in what we do once, but in what we return to again and again.
So, when we place all of this alongside the frantic energy of pre-Pesach cleaning, something begins to shift. This week isn’t just about removing chametz. It’s about learning how to live with intention:
- To clear what no longer serves (deshen).
- To respect the natural lifespan of things (notar).
- To build meaning through repeated action (miluim).
- And to sustain an inner fire that doesn’t depend on mood (aish tamid).
We often imagine that once the house is clean, we’ll finally feel settled. But Tzav suggests something deeper: that external order only matters when it reflects an internal process.
Clear, yes. But also tend. Because the same Kohen who lifts the ashes is responsible for the fire. Removal without renewal leaves emptiness. Renewal without removal leads to overload. The Torah holds both.
And maybe that’s the quiet invitation of this week. Not just: “Have you finished cleaning?” But: Are you living in a way that makes space for what matters and then consistently nurturing it? Because the goal is not a moment of perfection by the Seder.
It’s a way of living where, day after day, you are both letting go of what has accumulated and returning to what keeps your inner life alive.
Aish tamid… lo tichbeh. The fire doesn’t stay lit on its own. It never did.
A continuous fire shall burn upon the altar. It shall not go out. Each week we read of stories and learn messages in the Torah to offer us the strength and direction in how to serve Hashem, our Creator, in the best way possible, to live life most optimally. He is, in the words of “Yedid Nefesh” a piyyut first published in the Sefer Haḥaredim (1588) of Rabbi Elazar Moshe Azikri (1533-1600), the “Beloved of the soul, Compassionate Father,” Y’did nefesh av harachaman יְדִיד נֶֽפֶשׁ, אָב הָרַחְמָן.
This week, I’m left with a question. How do you keep your fire burning?
Peter Yarrow’s lyrics sung by Peter, Paul, and Mary in the song, “Light One Candle,” may come to mind:
Don’t let the light go out!
It’s lasted for so many years!
Don’t let the light go out!
Let it shine through our hope and our tears.
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Michael R. Mantell, Ph.D., prepares a weekly D’var Torah for Young Israel of San Diego, where he and his family are members. They are also active members of Congregation Adat Yeshurun