Terumah 5772 – Gilayon #739
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Parshat Truma
And you shall make a lamp stand of pure gold,
hammered work it shall be made,
its base and its shaft, its cups, its calyxes and its blossoms,
shall be from that work.
(Shemot 25:31)
Hammered work it shall be made
– It shall not be made of links nor shall he make its shaft and its cups piece
by piece and afterwards soldered together as the goldsmiths do… but all
should come from a single piece and he shall beat with the hammer and cut with
the appropriate tools and separate one from the other.
(Rashi, ibid.,
ibid.)
The rationale for the lamp stand
(menorah) and it's it burning lamps is self-explanatory – it is the
light which it spreads. And the rationale for the light, we would think, is
also self-explanatory – it is the symbol of knowledge. Say, then, that the
menorah represents the spirit and knowledge, and this [conclusion is
reached] especially because of the menorah's location in front of the Ark of
the Covenant of God's Torah, facing the table. These two, the menorah and the
table – the latter representing physical well-being, are ostensibly the
entirety of the life of the Israelite nation, a life founded in God's Torah and
whose main principle is devotion to the existence of God's Torah… It seems to
us that one is to understand the light in the Temple as symbolic of the
spirit¸ in both its aspects; the theoretical and the practical, the aspects
of awareness and of volition, of knowledge and of the force which motivates
action… the light which emanates from the menorah, then, symbolizes
the spirit of the knowledge and the actions which the Shekhina
induces. What, then, is the significance of the menorah in relation to
the light which emanates from it? We recall the external form of the menorah
and we immediately note that its shape – its base and its shaft, its cups,
its calyxes and its blossoms, its branches with their cups like almond blossoms
– is like the shape of a tree, which grows up from its roots, ascending
to become the carrier of this light… the tree which symbolizes the awareness
and the act of the truthful and the good, this is the golden tree… and
it stands in its complete fullness, from root to flower – a single mass which
does not come apart and is not made of links, but is, from beginning to end, a
perfect unity.
(Rabbi Shimshon Rafael Hirsch, ibid., ibid., translated from a Hebrew translation)
Generosity and the shekhina
Ariel Rathaus
In memory of my
father and mentor
Menachem
Mendel ben Mosheh z"l
Died on 27 Shevat
5755
And the Lord
spoke to Moshe, saying: Speak to the Israelites, that they take Me a donation from every man, as his heart may urge him you
shall take My donation. (Shemot
25:1-2)
And they shall
make Me a Tabernacle,that I
may abide in their midst. (ibid. ibid. 8)
The above passages which open Parashat Terumah are not
adjacent, but the midrash
scans them with a single exegetic view and combines them. In Shemot Rabba we read:
Said the Holy
One Blessed Be He to
I sold you My Torah; I, as it were, was sold together with it, as is written: "That
they take Me a donation". This may be compared to
a king who had an only daughter. Came one of the kings and took her. He wished
to go to his land and take along his wife. He said to him: "My daughter whom I gave to you, is an only child; I cannot
separate from her, but to tell you "Do not take her" I cannot,
because she is your wife. But do me this favor, wherever you go, have a little
chamber ready for me that I may dwell with you, for I cannot leave my daughter".
So said the Holy one to Israel: I gave you the Torah, I cannot leave it, to
tell "Do not take it" I cannot; but wherever you go, make for me a chamber
that I may dwell within, as is written: "And they shall make me a
Tabernacle". (Teruma,
Chap 33:1)
This midrash opens with "That
they take me a donation", and concludes with "And they shall make me
a Tabernacle", and the two passages merge into a single fascinating midrash. The darshan
(explicator) is unafraid to humanize; he presents deep theological ideas
with illustrative creativity, sans trepidation and inhibition. Not only
does he employ the usual characters of the 'drama' of legend (king, king's
daughter, king's son-in-law), but he also creates an extreme metaphoric image
bordering on profanation of the holy: the Lord, as it were, is "sold"
to Yisrael along with the Torah, and now the Children
of Israel must provide the father of the bride with a small room in which to
dwell wherever they sojourn. It is superfluous to note that the first passage
is interpreted with daring creativity; according to the darshan,
"and they shall take Me a donation" means that they will take Me as a
donation" (not that the Children of Israel are asked to give a donation to
the Lord, but rather that He be given as a donation to the Children of
Israel!). As for "and they shall make me a Tabernacle" the darshan seems to interpret the passage as referring
not only to the sanctuary in which sacrifices were offered, but also to the
post-destruction houses of study and houses of prayer, to the "mikdash me'at"
(' diminished sanctity") that every Jewish community established in its
place of exile.
The midrash reveals with
impressive literary form the ideal connection between "and they shall take
Me a donation" and "they shall make Me a sanctuary", thereby
opening gates for additional commentary based on this tie, even beyond the
specific ideas which the text wishes to impart. Therefore, I shall attempt to
follow in the darshan's steps and, at the same
time, suggest an alternate reading which places the connection between the two
passages in a different light.
In order to
explain the nature of this connection we must stress the uniqueness of that
donation [terumah] that serves as the title of
our parasha. We recall that the donation was
to be taken "from every man as his heart may urge him". Perhaps it is
in these words, in particular, "as his heart may urge him" from the
first passage, that lie the key to our understanding of the second passage, that
speaks of the dwelling of the Shekhina in
I shall abide in their midst"). The identifying aspect of that donation,
which was to facilitate the erection of the tabernacle, was the totally
voluntary participation of all
without any pressure or coercion. Rabbi Yitzchak Abarbanel
emphasizes this clearly in his commentary on the Torah:
This passage
includes the following messages: First – they should not think that the leaders
and heads of the congregation alone, with their own means, should perform the
work of the tabernacle, but every man according to the urges of his heart,
small and great included, if his heart so urges, shall they take from him a
donation. Secondly – No man shall be forced to donate in this appeal, but 'according
to the urges of his heart' – they shall take that which he willingly gives, not
by force. Third – no man shall be asked to make a donation, but they, without
being so requested, shall of their own volition bring their donation. (Abarbanel Shemot, Teruma, 25:1-2)
The giving of
the donation was to be conducted on a totally egalitarian basis, its validity
contingent upon its being general, not of any particular sector or class; great
and small alike were asked to contribute, not only the leaders (and one might
add: men and women, as indicated by the passage in Parashat
VaYakhel " And the men came with the women, all
whose heart urged them, they brought brooches and earrings and rings, etc"
(Shemot 35:23).
This and more: Abarbanel emphasizes that the offering
of the donation was an expression of freedom, of individual choice, of true generosity
bursting forth from the depths of the soul, for actually the command was not to
approach people and solicit contributions, but rather to depend upon their
willingness to give "without question." It is to this amazing freedom
of the act of giving, resulting from true inner motivation,
that the "Sefat Emmet" refers in his
exposition of the first Mishna of Tractate Shekalim:
On the first
of Adar, announcement is made regarding the shekalim
and on the kilayim (mixed species)" (the
donation of shekalim which was customary
during the days of the Second Temple was used for the purchase of public
offerings, and was a kind of continuation of the shekalim
donated towards the erection of the Mishkan). The
acceptance of the teruma commandment, the true
willingness to give the shekalim to the Tabernacle – says
the 'Sefat Emmet" – make one a free man; through
it "Man expands from the place of distress [Alternate translation – "from
the straits" – Trans.] The Sefat Emmet
homiletically interprets 'kilayim' [mixed species] as
deriving from "kele" – imprisonment;
one is liberated from his personal prison by his generosity, by his willingness
to give (On parashat
"Shekalim", 5636 and elsewhere).
Without doubt,
this liberation through giving also bestows upon man an increasing sense of
religious maturity. One who contributes of his free will towards the erection
of the sanctuary and towards the sacrificial needs, has taken personal
responsibility for his spiritual life, chosen to participate in its conduct,
has left the prison of his egoism and his isolation in order to join others,
with the goal of constructing the foundations upon which their shared society
will rest. The teruma may be intended for holy
use, but its significance was also human-social. The Children of Israel joined
together to achieve a goal which no individual could have achieved alone.
From all the
above we conclude that generosity [In Hebrew original, "nidvat libow' – giving of
the heart] is the basis, the requisite condition for the induction of the Shekhina ("I shall dwell amidst them"). For the Shekhina to dwell in
other, and desire to build their sanctuary together– and, of course, they must
open their hearts to their Father in Heaven. Torah may have been received under
duress, as per the midrash about God
forcefully imposing Torah "upon them like an [inverted] cask", but Shekhina – which is experienced by man as the sense of God's
proximity on earth – can dwell only if man opens himself to God of his free
volition, only if "his heart so urges" him to prepare himself for
such an encounter. How beautiful the words of Gaon of
Vilna's short homiletic exposition in this respect:
And they shall
make me a mikdash [sanctuary] and I shall
dwell within them" – meaning, within
as is written: "Talpiyot ['Turrets' – an epithet for the
need a single place where all the hearts can gather together. Therefore did he
choose a choice location in the Land, there He
intended that the Shekhina rest in
Terumah, Shemot 25:2)
Dr. Ariel Rathaus,
literary researcher and translator, teaches in the
Giving – equally and humbly
Here is another explanation why
the first two contributions (terumot) are
ordered specifically in God's name, whereas the third is not. Wherever we find
humility and submission among mortals, there we find the secret might of Holy
One, who dwells among the oppressed and the meek; but wherever there is the
slightest hint of pride, the Holy One refuses to bestow his name. Therefore,
the first two contributions, which were given equally by all, for "The
rich are not to pay more, and the poor are not to pay less", and no
one can boast "My contribution is greater than yours", these God
attributed to himself:
1. The first is preceded by
"And they may take Me – to
my Name. We have already explained, at the beginning of Parashat Miketz, and on the verse
"Every place where I call my name to be recalled I will come to you and
bless you," (Shemot
20:21) – every letter of His great name
points to humility.
2. The second contribution is
termed "my contribution".
Similarly, the use to which the
contributions were put offers the same message. Just as all contributions were
equal, forestalling any boasting, so were the boards – all of equal length.
They were at the bottom of the entire edifice, a trodden threshold, foundations
of the entire building . "Those who
fashion them shall become like them" – just as the givers were equal
in their contributions, none having excuse for pride over his fellow, so were
these boards acquired by the contributions, symbolic of humility, for humility
is the foundation of the building upon which the entire House of Israel is
established. They are called adanim
– which hint at mastery and rule [Trans. note: adan means board; adon means
master], because whoever makes of himself a trodden threshold below, is
appointed master above, for whoever lowers himself, the Holy One raises him us
and makes him the foundation and support for the entire building, just like
these boards which were foundation and support for all the edifice. And so
the nasi – (highest
official) is so called such because he carries the others,
for they all depend on him [Trans. note: The Hebrew for "high
official" and "carry" share a common root].
(Kli Yakar, Shemot, 25:1)
Cherubim – They had the
form of a child's face.
(Rashi, Shemot
25:18)
"And you shall make two
cherubim… with their face one to another…" – like two companions
who discuss words of Torah.
(Baal HaTurim, ibid.)
Life, death, and holiness are
in the power of the tongue
The sin of language is one of
speech, not of thought. It [the priest's robe] had pomegranates and bells [on
the hem] – which made sounds – to atone for the
tongue which is in the mouth, similar to the clapper inside
the bell, and the atonement for speech is that one no longer break his pledge
and should speak only of holy matters, as is written: "And his voice will
be heard when he enters the sanctuary, and he will not
die" , because "lashon
ha-ra" – slanderous speech – kills three (Arachin 15),From this we derive that
one who is careful not to speak slanderously will be spared death, as in the
story of the vendor who used to announce "Who wants to buy the elixir of
life, etc." (Kli Yakar, Shemot 28:31)
The connection of wisdom to
peace
"And the Lord gave wisdom
to Shelomo as He had promised him, and there was peace
between Shelomo and Hiram".
(From the Haphtara for Parashat
Teruma, I Kings, 5:26)
Teaching us that Shelomo's great wisdom was the reason for the peace between
Hiram and Shelomo, for Hiram loved him because of his
wisdom.
(Ralbag, ibid.)
Charity is greater than all of
the sacrifices
There is a positive commandment
to give charity in accordance with one's ability. One should be extremely
careful about it – more so than with any other positive
commandment – because it can lead to
blood shed if one does not give it immediately and the poor man dies, as in the
incident involving Ben Zoma. We have been
commanded several times regarding it as a positive commandment, and it also
involves the prohibition not to ignore it, as it is said: You shall not
harden your heart, and you shall not close your hand from your needy brother.
Anyone who ignores it is considered worthless and similar to an idolater, and
anyone who is careful about it demonstrates that he is of the seed blessed by
the Lord, for it is written, For I have known him because he commands his
sons and his household after him, that they should keep the way of the Lord to
perform righteousness [tzedaka – which also means "charity"]
and justice. The throne of
is founded and the true religion stands only through charity, for it is said:
You shall be established in tzedaka (Isaiah 54). Only through charity will
redeemed through justice and her penitent through tzedaka,
and it says, Keep justice and practice tzedaka,
for My salvation is near to come, and My
benevolence to be revealed. And charity is greater than all of the
sacrifices, since Rabbi Eliezer said:
charity is greater than all of the sacrifices, for it is written, Performing tzedaka and
justice is preferred by God to a sacrifice. Rabbi Eliezer said:
Anyone who performs tzedaka and
justice, it is as if he filled the world with loving-kindness, for it is said:
Lover of tzedaka and justice, the
Lord's loving-kindness fills the earth.
(Tur Yoreh De'ah 247)
Study as a sublimated and
updated substitute for concrete action
Do not let it enter your heads
for one moment, that these descriptions of the Tabernacle and its
appurtenances, the priestly garment and sacrifices, the laws of purity and
those dependent on the soil and all the rest of the ordinances practiced in
antiquity have no relevance for us today in exile. What use, you may well ask,
does it serve us to study them today?
My answer is this: Everything
recorded in the Torah is designed to provide us with a permanent source of
inspiration and Divine wisdom, to perfect our souls therewith. This is the
message of the text (Devarim 29:8): You
shall preserve the words of this covenant and do them in order that you may be
discerning in all that you do. Our Sages explained (Sifrei, Re'eh, Rashi on Devarim 4:6): You shall preserve – this refers to
the Mishnah (Oral
Tradition): You shall do – in its primary sense of actual doing. The
doing consists in the study of the text and deriving of the spiritual lessons
to be learnt there from by student and scholar, whether during the time they
were actually performed or afterwards (when they were no longer in vogue).
Thus our study and explication of
the symbolism of the Tabernacle and its furniture today is as relevant now as
it was then when they were in full use. In the same way the sacrificial rites
are not obsolete even though their actual physical performance is not feasible.
For their spiritual lessons remain fresh. Through them man can learn humility
before God, in accordance with the text (Psalms
51:19): The sacrifices of God are a contrite spirit.
(From Abarbanel's Commentary,
towards the end of parashat Trumah, as quoted by Prof. Nehama Leibowitz in her Studies in Shemot pp. 504-5, Aryeh Newman,
translator)
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In
Honor of His 70th Birthday
May
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