The mishkan
[Sanctuary] section of the Torah might delight
the designers or fascinate the architects, but
for the dimensionally challenged or the
spatially uninspired who dwell in our midst,
this part of Torah challenges one to mine
meaning from painful and painstaking detail.
Quite remarkably, for a Torah that mostly speaks
in a spartan tongue, [that barely alludes to
Shabbos prohibitions like "mountains hanging on
threads"] its' five - fold repetition of the
mishkan's sundry details serve to remind us that
ensconced in all those Mishkan particulars is
big and deep stuff.
A key phrase
tantalizes. Decoding its significance may allow
us to hone in on a Mishkan meta-message. It is a
phrase that appears seven times in Tanach, only
in the mishkan/mikdash context and quite
remarkably in no other place. Consider the
following verses[1]:
Speak to the B'nei Yisrael
and have them take for Me a terumah-offering.
From every man whose heart impels him to
generosity ... [Shemos, 25,2]
Take [collect] from among
yourselves a terumah-offering to Ad-noy. Every
man whose heart impels him to generosity shall
bring a terumah-offering .. [Shemos, 35:5]
And they came---both men and
woman--- all who were generous of heart brought
bracelets, nose rings, finger rings, and
buckles.. [Shemos, 35:22]
Every man and woman whose
generous heart inspired them to bring something
for all the work that Ad-noy had commanded to be
done .. The B'nei Yisrael brought a free-will
...[35:29]
The key
notion uniting these verses is generosity of
spirit; the operative Hebrew term nedivus leiv.
The building of the Mishkan rested upon donor
munificence. Rav Mayer Twersky shlit"a
highlights the first-rate paradox inherent in
the imperative of generosity. It is as if God is
saying: Jews, you must build the Mishkan, but no
one really has to give - so go figure out how to
summon the spirit of volunteerism
In this
paradox, Rav Twersky finds the essence of the
religious quest. We are obliged to build a
mishkan and yet it must be voluntaristic! Quite
simply, a minimalistic metzuveh mode [operating
in commanded mode] will not induce the Shechina.
Even as we must build the mishkan, we have to
want it.
It is a
paradox that repeats itself when the Jew
searches for the precise location of the Temple
Mount [Devarim, 12:5]
Rather at the place that Ad-noy,
your G-d, chooses from all your tribes to set
His Presence there, will you seek His Presence
and come there.
God chooses
the place and yet you must seek Him out! How
does that work? A striking Ramban highlights the
notion.
You shall go to it from a
distant land and ask where is the House of
Hashem .. and the Sifri states "seek it out
with the Navi" - I might think that you shall
wait until the Navi comes - thus the verse
states you shall seek and arrive, seek and find
and then the prophet shall tell you.
Hashem
through His prophet confirms the spot, but not
before we pine for His place!
What is true
in God's house applies for his world. Consider a
famous and striking gemara [Shabbos 88a]:
They stood at the foot of the
mountain. From this we may learn that Hashem
placed the Mountain upon them like a barrel and
said to them. If you accept the Torah - it will
be good, and if not, this shall be your burial
place...
So much is
problematic - but THE two classic questions here
are
1. if compulsion, whither
choice and of what value mitzvos?
2. What happened to our
majestic response of na'aseh v'nishma [we will
do and then comprehend].
Answers
abound. Maharal's approach is that the Jew must
realize that we are compelled. Torah isn't
merely a good idea, a metaphoric maraschino
cherry [on our Chocolate-Blackout cake geshmake
lives]; Torah is the essential stuff of life.
Even as the Jews respond with a tremendous
spirit of na'aseh v'nishma, they must remember
that Torah is a must.
But the
inverse of Maharal is also true. Even as Torah
is a must, we need to summon a sense of nedivus
leiv, that na'aseh v'nishma attitude that
characterizes our essential desire to connect
with Hashem.
Thus nedivus
leiv is needed in building the mishkan, finding
the mikdash and accepting the Torah. One final
piece need be said:
Ramban
[Introduction to Shemos] reminds us that that
power of the mishkan emanates from the avos/imahos
[patriarchs/matriarchs].
When Bnei Yisrael came to
Sinai and made the Mishkan and Hashem caused His
Divine presence to dwell, they returned to [the
status of] their fathers. Ha'avos hein hein
hamerkavah. The Patriarchs [and Matriarchs] -
they are the chariot.
Consider that the three constant miracles
adorning Sarah and Rivkah's tent [the continuous
cloud, constant candle and the ever-present
blessing in the dough - cf. Bereishis Rabah 60]
all find direct parallels in the Mishkan in the
form of the ner tamid, the lechem hapanim and
the ananaei hakavod (that hovered above the
mishkan)[2].
And why davka the avos/imahos and not
Moshe/Aharon [or someone else]. Psalm 47 speaks
of the end of days when all will clap with joy
in their recognition of the King. At the center
are the Jews, who are curiously described as
The volunteers of the peoples
have assembled, the people of the God of Abraham
A key Rashi explains:
the people of the God of
Abraham: who was the first nediv leiv
[volunteer], the first of the proselytes
Here it all comes together. The Avos/Imahos
power the mishkan precisely because they were
not obligated. They were the first nedivei leiv,
approaching the Torah as absolute volunteers,
compelled only by a desire to connect to the
source of all Truth and to live lives of
ultimate meaning.
It is no surprise that in the midst of the
Shechina's most intense presence, the Holy of
Holies, we find the Ark and the Torah,
highlighting the paradoxical imperative of the
Jew to summon obligation and volunteerism in the
very same place. To the extent that we
accomplish this our entire life becomes a
Mishkan.
Good Shabbos
Asher Brander
[1]עזרא פרק ב פסוק
סח וּמֵרָאשֵׁי
הָאָבוֹת בְּבוֹאָם לְבֵית יְקֹוָק אֲשֶׁר
בִּירוּשָׁלִָם הִתְנַדְּבוּלְבֵית
הָאֱלֹקִים לְהַעֲמִידוֹ עַל מְכוֹנוֹ:
עזרא פרק ז פסוק טזוְכֹל כְּסַף וּדְהַב
דִּי תְהַשְׁכַּח בְּכֹל מְדִינַת בָּבֶל
עִם הִתְנַדָּבוּת עַמָּא וְכָהֲנַיָּא
מִתְנַדְּבִיןלְבֵית אֱלָהֲהֹם דִּי
בִירוּשְׁלֶם: דברי הימים ב פרק כט פסוק
לאוַיַּעַן יְחִזְקִיָּהוּ וַיֹּאמֶר
עַתָּה מִלֵּאתֶם יֶדְכֶם לַיקֹוָק
גֹּשׁוּ וְהָבִיאוּ זְבָחִים וְתוֹדוֹת
לְבֵית יְקֹוָק וַיָּבִיאוּ הַקָּהָל
זְבָחִים וְתוֹדוֹת וְכָל נְדִיבלֵב
עֹלוֹת:
[2] Remarkably the word tamid, the
classic Torah term to describe constancy
and consistency is employed for all
three of these Mishkan miracles -
resonating Sarah and Rivkah's spiritual
energy.
שמות
פרק כה (ל)
ונתת על השלחן לחם
פנים לפני תמידשמות פרק כז
(כ)
ואתה תצוה את בני
ישראל ויקחו אליך שמן זית זך כתית למאור
להעלת נר תמיד:
במדבר פרק ט
(טו)
וביום הקים את המשכן כסה הענן את המשכן
לאהל העדת ובערב ...
(טז)
כן יהיה תמיד הענן
יכסנו ומראה אש לילה