This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and please share this Dvar...
Parshat Terumah is the beginning of the building of the Mishkan, where G-d
would dwell among the Jews as they traveled in the desert. To build the
Mishkan materials had to be collected, and G-d commanded the Jews to
collect several types. After listing the need for metals, wools, hairs,
skins, and wood, the Torah tells us that they collected "oil for
illumination" and "spices for the anointment oil and incense". Why does the
Torah suddenly need to tell us what the materials were to be used for, when
it hadn't discussed it thus far?
One possible answer is that there are two differences between the
characteristics of the other materials and those of the oil and spices.
Firstly, while the other materials were important, they required little
effort to produce, while the oil and spices had to be manufactured and
maintained. Those people that didn't have the precious stones to donate to
the building of the Mishkan still had the opportunity to contribute with
their efforts instead. Secondly, both the oil and the spices are of the
most 'giving' materials used in the Mishkan; The oil was used to light the
Menorah, which gives off light to everything around it, and the spices give
off a beautiful smell to its surroundings. The message it clear...The most
beautiful and giving things in life are those that require our active
effort. Spices smell and oil illuminates because someone took the time and
effort to make them. The same can be said today...Being a good person and a
good Jew is beautiful and rewarding to ourselves and to others, but only
because we take the time and effort to understand and cultivate it.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the Week:
"I didn't come this far only to come this far."
This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and please share this Dvar...
_______________________________________________
Parshat Terumah is the beginning of the building of the Mishkan, where G-d
would dwell among the Jews as they traveled in the desert. To build the
Mishkan materials had to be collected, and G-d commanded the Jews to
collect several types. After listing the need for metals, wools, hairs,
skins, and wood, the Torah tells us that they collected "oil for
illumination" and "spices for the anointment oil and incense". Why does the
Torah suddenly need to tell us what the materials were to be used for, when
it hadn't discussed it thus far?
One possible answer is that there are two differences between the
characteristics of the other materials and those of the oil and spices.
Firstly, while the other materials were important, they required little
effort to produce, while the oil and spices had to be manufactured and
maintained. Those people that didn't have the precious stones to donate to
the building of the Mishkan still had the opportunity to contribute with
their efforts instead. Secondly, both the oil and the spices are of the
most 'giving' materials used in the Mishkan; The oil was used to light the
Menorah, which gives off light to everything around it, and the spices give
off a beautiful smell to its surroundings. The message it clear...The most
beautiful and giving things in life are those that require our active
effort. Spices smell and oil illuminates because someone took the time and
effort to make them. The same can be said today...Being a good person and a
good Jew is beautiful and rewarding to ourselves and to others, but only
because we take the time and effort to understand and cultivate it.
Shlomo Ressler
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the Week:
"I didn't come this far only to come this far."