Hi I'm new here. But I have loads of questions and just trying to think of the best place to start.
I wonder if anyone could offer me an informed oppinion on the following:
LEVITICUS 16:7-10
If Azazel represents a leader of the fallen angels and therefore a Satan, why does God say Aaron must take two goats (assumed to be equal) and draw lots to select which should be sacrificed to God and which should be cast out as a sacrifice to Azazal (a satan)
Is this passage not actually saying we should sacrifice equally to God and Satan?
Any guidance would be apprieciated.
Azazel could never have represent a leader of the fallen angels, because in Jewish tradition there is no such thing as a fallen angel.
The traditional Jewish answer to your question is that the goat in question, which is called in Hebrew
ha-se'ir hamishtalei'ach ("the goat to be sent out"), was not to be sacrificed to a devil, but was to be killed outside the area in which anyone dwelt, because in confessing upon it, the High Priest transfers all of the sins, transgressions, and ritual impurities of himself, his family, the Priesthood, and all the People Israel, onto that goat. Thus, it cannot be killed in the populated area, lest the impurities return to affect the populace. Therefore, it was led away by a person designated by the High Priest, out into the wilderness, to a designated spot, where it was thrown over a cliff, and a large stone dropped on top of it, killing it in total isolation.
Traditionally, the "goat for Azazael" is either interpreted as a goat which is to be led to the designated spot, and that spot should be called Azazel (which can be translated as "strong, rough height;" or the term
se'ir l'azazel is translated instead as "a goat for escaping away," in which case the term
azazel is adjectival, and is not actually a proper name.
However, from the academic point of view, the historical answer is that it is almost certain that the ritual of the
se'ir hamishtalei'ach is probably a remnant of a ritual dating from the pre-monotheistic days of Israelite henotheism, wherein the goat with the sins was sent off to die in the wilderness, which was was thought of as the domain of a desert demon called Azazel. Giving him the goat with all the sins not only got rid of the sins, but, in doing so, gave an upsetting offering to the demon, which probably was deemed to help keep him at bay. There are several instances in the Torah of old pre-monotheistic rituals being kept and revisioned as monotheistic by later priests, probably because they were too popular to entirely discontinue.