Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. Please consider
forwarding this to others, and I hope you enjoy...
After detailed instructions on how to build the Mishkan and an accounting
of the completed garments and parts of the Mishkan, Moshe is finally ready
to put it all together. The passuk (verse) tells us that the Mishkan was
set up on the first day of the first month in the second year (40:17). The
very next passuk reiterates that Moshe indeed assembled the Mishkan, and
subsequent pessukim (verses) detail exactly what Moshe did. Why do we need
to be told three times in a span of eleven pessukim (two in summary and one
in detail) that the Mishkan was assembled?
Rabbis Scherman/Slotowitz (Artscroll) suggest that the process of
designing, crafting, and assembling the Mishkan culminated in the most
singular event in human history: The glory of G-d rested among people, in
full view of all. This extraordinary tabernacle was built with the people’s
gifts and their hands, directed by their prophets, and made possible by
their repentance. This recipe of care, effort, and thoughtfulness warranted
repeated affirmations that our Mishkan was at last complete. When we pour
our hearts and souls into something we value and succeed, we deserve to
feel proud, and G-d is just as proud of us.
Quotation of the week:
"What we love determines what we seek, which determines what we think and
do, which determines what we become."
Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. Please consider
forwarding this to others, and I hope you enjoy...
_______________________________________________
After detailed instructions on how to build the Mishkan and an accounting
of the completed garments and parts of the Mishkan, Moshe is finally ready
to put it all together. The passuk (verse) tells us that the Mishkan was
set up on the first day of the first month in the second year (40:17). The
very next passuk reiterates that Moshe indeed assembled the Mishkan, and
subsequent pessukim (verses) detail exactly what Moshe did. Why do we need
to be told three times in a span of eleven pessukim (two in summary and one
in detail) that the Mishkan was assembled?
Rabbis Scherman/Slotowitz (Artscroll) suggest that the process of
designing, crafting, and assembling the Mishkan culminated in the most
singular event in human history: The glory of G-d rested among people, in
full view of all. This extraordinary tabernacle was built with the people’s
gifts and their hands, directed by their prophets, and made possible by
their repentance. This recipe of care, effort, and thoughtfulness warranted
repeated affirmations that our Mishkan was at last complete. When we pour
our hearts and souls into something we value and succeed, we deserve to
feel proud, and G-d is just as proud of us.
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the week:
"What we love determines what we seek, which determines what we think and
do, which determines what we become."