TERUMAH
Torah
Haftara I Kings 5:26-6:13.
ABOVE
SHALL BE BELOW, BELOW ABOVE
From this week's parshah of TERUMAH onwards until the end of the book of
Exodus -- five parshahs -- the central theme is the
Sanctuary built by the Children of Israel in the Wilderness. The Sanctuary is
the prototype of the
This week's parshah explains the design of the Sanctuary and its
vessels, while next week's parshah of TETZAVEH
explains the garments that were to be worn by those who were to minister in
that Sanctuary -- Aaron and his sons. TETZAVEH also explains the sacrificial
rituals that were to inaugurate the Sanctuary and its priests.
After
TETZAVEH comes KI TISA, which continues the explanation of the form of the
Sanctuary vessels and the sacrifices. When this explanation is complete, KI TISA goes on to
narrate the sin of the Golden Calf and how Moses secured atonement for the
people through the 13 Attributes of Mercy.
Then come
the last two parshahs of Exodus, VAYAKHEL and
PEKUDEY, which explain how Bezalel and the other
craftsmen actually constructed the Sanctuary and made the priestly clothes.
VAYAKHEL and PEKUDAY repeat practically word for word some of the corresponding
passages in TERUMAH and TETZAVEH. PEKUDEY then concludes the book of Exodus
with the account of the inauguration of the Sanctuary and the priests on the
New Moon of the first Nissan after the Exodus. This was exactly one year to the
day since Moses received the first commandments while still in
At the close of TETZAVEH
and Exodus, we read how G-d's Cloud of Glory dwelled
constantly over the Sanctuary. Leviticus opens immediately with the Voice of
G-d emanating to Moses from between the mouths of the Cherubs in the Holy of
Holies, giving him the detailed laws of the
From this overview of the
remaining five parshahs of Exodus, we see that the
subject of the Sanctuary -- central to the Torah and to the whole world -- is
introduced in "sandwich" form. TERUMAH and TETZAVEH explain the
intended form of the Sanctuary and priestly garments BEFORE they were executed,
when they were in the "mind" and will of G-d. In the middle of the
"sandwich" is the account of the sin of the Golden Calf and it's
atonement through the 13 Attributes of Mercy. Then on the other side of the
"sandwich" come VAYAKHEL and PEKUDEY, which tell how the Sanctuary
IDEA was brought from POTENTIAL TO ACTUAL through the thirty-nine labors of the
craftsmen who made it.
At the very center of
this "sandwich" structure is the account of the sin of the Golden
Calf -- which changed everything for the Children of Israel. In the heady days
of the Exodus and the Giving of the Torah, the Children of Israel were elevated
to the greatest heights. Then suddenly, forty days after hearing the Voice of
G-d at Sinai, in one single orgy they sank to the lowest depths of degradation.
From then on they had to learn the terrible pain of retribution, suffering and
contrition. This was a loss of innocence parallel to the eating of the fruit of
the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil.
But God had already
prepared the remedy before the illness. Indeed, we might even say that the illness
was sent with the very purpose of revealing the great power of the remedy. The
remedy for sin is repentance, which saves man from himself and brings him back
to the One G-d, bringing him atonement -- AT-ONE-MENT. The penitential
"system" of the Torah is contained within the Sanctuary and its
sacrificial rituals, which are a teaching to mankind about how man draws close
(KaRoV) to G-d through his KORBAN
("sacrifice") -- literally, his "coming close". As the way
of repentance for having elevated wealth to the status of a god, man is
commanded to take gold, silver, copper and the richest fabrics in order to
glorify and magnify the One True G-d. Man is taught how to configure the
materials of this world so that instead of separating him from G-d through idolatrous
uses and configurations, they will serve to draw him ever closer, until G-d
Himself "dwells" with man.
TERUMAH and TETZAVEH
present us the Sanctuary and sacrificial IDEA before we have even learned about
sin. The lesson of the Golden Calf in KI TISA is harsh. But it is sweetened,
because immediately after Moses secured atonement for
The Torah never wastes a
word or a single letter. It is therefore a great wonder that many of the
passages about the Sanctuary, its vessels and the priestly garments that we
read this week and next in TERUMAH and TEZTAVEH are, as mentioned, repeated
almost word for word in VAYAKHEL and PEKUDEY. The "mirroring" of the
explanation of the IDEA in the account of its ACTUALIZATION comes to
communicate something that is at the very core of the Temple-Sanctuary idea.
The
In this way, what is
"above" -- "in heaven" -- actually dwells and exists in
material form in this world "below". And through this,
"below" becomes "above". "And they will take for Me an
offering. And they will make Me a Sanctuary, and I will dwell WITHIN THEM"
(Ex. 25 vv. 2, 8).
* * *
JACOB'S
CEDARS
"And you shall make
THE boards for the Sanctuary from the wood of cedar trees STANDING
upright" (Ex. 26:15). On this, Rashi comments:
"It should have simply said, 'you shall make boards' in the same way as
was said of everything else. What are 'THE boards'? These were boards from
those that were STANDING ready for this. Jacob our father planted cedars in
Egypt and before he died, he instructed his sons to take them up with them when
they left Egypt, and he said that the Holy One was going to command them to
build a Sanctuary in the wilderness" (Rashi ad
loc.)
In the Midrash which Rashi here brings
about the wood of the standing boards or beams of the Sanctuary -- the
"bones" that enable the entire structure to stand up -- he underlines
the conceptual connection between the Sanctuary idea and Jacob.
As discussed in UNIVERSAL
TORAH commentaries on the parshahs in Genesis dealing
with Jacob, it was he who made synthesis, order and structure out of the
opposing polar tendencies of the two fathers and teachers in whose tents he sat
-- Abraham (CHESSED, kindness and expansiveness) and Isaac (GEVURAH, power and
restraint).
Jacob was the
house-builder who built the House of Israel. And Jacob was a genius
house-builder precisely because he understood domestic life perfectly. In his
first appearance in the Torah (at the beginning of TOLDOS, Gen. 25:29) he is
cooking lentil soup -- using the round lentils as a hint to his father Isaac
(who was in mourning for the loss of Abraham, see Rashi)
that life and death go in cycles. Jacob's grip on the heel of Esau indicates
that Jacob possessed the power to take the simple things of this world (ASIYAH,
Esau) and transform them into communicators of G-dliness.
Thus the components of
the Sanctuary-Temple are the same as those of a home. It exists within a
defined space, a court-yard, where curtains of modesty separate between what is
outside (profane) and what is inside (holy).
The Sanctuary contains
different areas. Its very heart is the hearth, the "kitchen". This is
where the food is prepared (slaughter of animals) and cooked (on the
"oven", the Altar). Within the "domestic quarters" of the
House itself, there is a secluded, intimate living area with a lamp (the
Menorah) and a table (the Show-bread Table), and a pleasant aroma (from the
Incense Altar). Most secluded and intimate of all is the "bedroom",
to which no-one except the most trusted has access. This is the Holy of Holies,
where the "faithful of His house" may come "face to face"
with the King in the height of prophecy.
The Sanctuary and
* * *
TERUMAH
- LIFTING UP
The sin of the Golden
Calf pulled the Children of Israel down to the depths of degradation. But the
remedy existed already from before: TERUMAH -- the elevation of mundane objects
and materials, gold, silver, wood, fabrics -- through the service of G-d in
"homely" ways.
The great beauty of the
way of repentance that G-d has provided is that it enables man to repent with
honor. Despite having sinned, man is invited to become a contributor. He is
asked to give a TERUMAH -- to take the gold and silver that he has, the very
thing with which sinned, and "contribute" and "elevate" it
so that now it too has its proper place in what becomes a Sanctuary. Then the
proper order is restored, and everything sings out the glory of G-d.
One of the ways we
"contribute" is through the words of our daily prayers and blessings.
For in essence, the Sanctuary is a House of Prayer. So too our homes should be
filled with our blessings and thanks for all the good things of life that we
enjoy and with our prayers for all of our needs.
King David (who prepared
the way for the
KESEF,
"silver", is related to the word for "longing" -- as in KISUFin. Thus 100 ADNEY KESEF alludes to the hundred times
we bless the name of G-d (A-D-N-Y), our Lord, with longing and yearning for His
holiness to dwell with us! This small "contribution" on our part is
what keeps the entire Sanctuary standing!
MESHENICHNAS ADAR, MARBIN
BESIMCHAH!!! "When Adar arrives, we maximize SIMCHAH!!!"
