Bikkurim & The Presence of God
The Bikkurim and 13 Attributes of Mercy
In the Parshat Bikkurim, we find God’s name being mentioned on thirteen occasions, and just a few verses after the 13 Attributes of Mercy appear in Shemot 34:6-7 we are taught that ‘the first of your land’s early produce shall you bring to the Temple of God’ (Shemot 34:26). According to the Meshech Chochmah these two factors means that there is a strong connection between these two ideas. However, like the greatest of movies, he leaves the reader with this cliffhanger leaving it for us to work out what the unifying idea is.
Gifting those in need
Understood this way, Bikkurim takes on an entirely new identity. Rather than merely being the gift of First Fruits, it is actually the gift of the farmer’s choicest produce to a person in need (nb. Rambam writes that this rule applies in many other areas of life, and that when we feed or clothe the needy, we should give of our finest – see Issurei Mizbeach 7:11) and it expresses the compassion and graciousness that God wishes us to perform.
Moreover, the declaration made by the farmer when they bring their Bikkurim (see Devarim 26:5-9) itself supports this idea. We are told that when the Bikkurim were brought to the Temple, the farmers would recount how God saw the affliction of the Jewish people in Egypt and how He redeemed them from slavery. Ultimately, what the farmer is saying is that just as God was there for those in need, so too their gift of Bikkurim emulates God by bringing their best produce as a gift to others.
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