** Please consider joining DailyGiving.org - donate $1 a day and make
a huge difference for a deserving charity! **
This short, practical Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App
Store (iTunes and Android). I hope you enjoy this Dvar...
This week’s Parsha, Terumah, details the intricate instructions of
building the Mishkan, a sanctuary for G-d, complete with utensils used
for His service. Of all the items, however, only two were to be
sculpted of one piece of gold: The Keruvim (the golden angels that
rest on top of the ark cover), and the Menorah (the candelabra to be
lit daily, with its six branches), complete with upside down goblets,
knobs and flowers along its many stems (25:31-37). What was so special
about the Menorah that required it be made of one piece of gold, when
even the Ark itself didn’t have that same requirement (25:10-11)?
Rabbi Israel Greenberg suggests that the branches represent different
segments of the Jewish nation, and the ornaments on each stem
represent diverse approaches of understanding the Torah, and that all
people and all approaches contribute to a single goal of illuminating
the world. Moreover, the upside down goblets represent not receiving
liquid, but supporting the flame of our Torah. The knobs resembled
apples, representing the sweetness found from within, and the flowers
symbolize the novel insights that we discover hidden within the Torah
text. All these factors represent all that the Torah has to offer, but
only when they function as one unit, one segment of people inspiring
another, and one form of study celebrating the other. We are all
different, and those differences make each of us unique and golden, if
we act as a cohesive group of people.
Quotation of the week:
“On a team, it's not the strength of the individual players, but the
strength of the unit and how they all function together." - Bill
Belichik
** Please consider joining DailyGiving.org - donate $1 a day and make
a huge difference for a deserving charity! **
This short, practical Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App
Store (iTunes and Android). I hope you enjoy this Dvar...
_______________________________________________
This week’s Parsha, Terumah, details the intricate instructions of
building the Mishkan, a sanctuary for G-d, complete with utensils used
for His service. Of all the items, however, only two were to be
sculpted of one piece of gold: The Keruvim (the golden angels that
rest on top of the ark cover), and the Menorah (the candelabra to be
lit daily, with its six branches), complete with upside down goblets,
knobs and flowers along its many stems (25:31-37). What was so special
about the Menorah that required it be made of one piece of gold, when
even the Ark itself didn’t have that same requirement (25:10-11)?
Rabbi Israel Greenberg suggests that the branches represent different
segments of the Jewish nation, and the ornaments on each stem
represent diverse approaches of understanding the Torah, and that all
people and all approaches contribute to a single goal of illuminating
the world. Moreover, the upside down goblets represent not receiving
liquid, but supporting the flame of our Torah. The knobs resembled
apples, representing the sweetness found from within, and the flowers
symbolize the novel insights that we discover hidden within the Torah
text. All these factors represent all that the Torah has to offer, but
only when they function as one unit, one segment of people inspiring
another, and one form of study celebrating the other. We are all
different, and those differences make each of us unique and golden, if
we act as a cohesive group of people.
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the week:
“On a team, it's not the strength of the individual players, but the
strength of the unit and how they all function together." - Bill
Belichik