Parshas Pekudei
Mishkan Repeated. Again1
The Greeks had their Seven Wonders of the ancient world, but the Jewish
list was much shorter. No one even thought of submitting more than one
entry. No tomb, or colossus, or hanging garden could compete with the
greatest feat of human handiwork ever – fashioning a place appropriate for
the Divine Presence out of the ordinary materials of our imperfect,
material world.
Parshas Pikudei brings us to the end of the story of the construction of
the Mishkan. Chazal strain our understanding by filling in one detail
that we would be unaware of by looking at the text alone. During the
seven days of the Mishkan’s inauguration, it was not left standing from
day to day. Instead, says the Tanchuma,2 Moshe disassembled it, and then reassembled it each
and every day. Twice each day, in fact. Except according to R. Chanina,
who held that he did it three times.
This boggles the mind. What possible purpose could there have been in
taking apart the Mishkan, putting it back together again, and then
repeating this over and over again?
We can appreciate what Chazal are telling us, at least if we view the
parshah on the plane of instruction in avodah. The goal of
every Jew is intertwined with the Mishkan. More accurately, the Mishkan
is the perfect symbol of the task of each of us: to create a sanctuary so
that Hashem will dwell within us. We strive to prepare and ready our
physical selves so that we can carry the Divine, and that the Divine can
be comfortable, as it were, in us.
The allocation of space within the Mishkan points to the arrangement of
multiple spiritual worlds, stacked one above the other in profundity and
elevation. Man mimics this, as a microcosm. He, too, contains multiple
levels.
The most obvious division of space within the Mishkan yields three
different areas. The most elevated was the Holy of Holies, which housed
the aron and the cheruvim. Next to it stood the
Heichal, in which stood the menorah, the shulchan and
the incense altar. Moving further away we get to the courtyard, with its
outer altar.
Man displays the same three-fold division: mind, heart, and limbs. The
Mishkan cannot function without all of its components; Man, too, cannot be
whole without learning to integrate his three chief components into a
smoothly functioning unit.
Along these lines, we can understand the symbolic message of the pillars
and hangings that formed the outer perimeter of the courtyard, and
therefore the entire Mishkan. They hint at our need to surround ourselves
with limits and barriers to properly sustain our avodah.
Toras Avos found a beautiful expression of this thought in the
story of Bilam’s difficult ride atop his she-donkey. “A fence on this
side, and a fence on that side…and it pressed Bilam’s leg…”3 Homiletically, we can see in this image
the way a Jew must conduct his affairs. He requires fences and walls. He
needs fences in his acquisition of the good and noble, that his Torah and
avodah not be tarnished by admixtures of lesser thoughts and
motivations. He needs, as well, fences in his dealings with material
things, lest he become weighted and bloated through them, rather than
using them for Hashem’s purposes alone. Through these mechitzos,
the regel/ habits of Bilam within him are pressed and confined as
they ought to be.
The curtains can be taken in a quite different sense – as a symbol of the
ohr makif4 of emunah. To
the Torah Jew, emunah is everything. Its quality and its clarity
impact on all of his endeavors. It is the sine qua non of all his
mitzvos, and their animating influence. Only by fully surrounding
ourselves with emunah, by completely enveloping ourselves in it,
can we hope to succeed in our avodah.
In any event, the Mishkan charts a course for us to arrive at the
terminus of becoming an abode for the Shechinah. We must act with the
utmost attention to kedushah in relation to all parts of ourselves,
from head to toe, applied to all the levels and stages of our being. We
must see to it that the Shechinah has a place within us, rather than be
repelled and driven away. We must see to it that we are surrounded by
fences that prevent any breaches in the sanctuary we build.
The mandatory multiple cycles of building and tearing down during the
milu’im week are no longer inexplicable. To the contrary, they
powerfully hint at a crucial realization. Man will fail. He may fail
many times. Each time he fails, without exception, he cannot lose faith
or motivation. He must pick himself up and immediately try again. He may
build his sanctuary, and then see it not only threatened or breached, but
toppled completely. When that happens, he should not fall into depression
or melancholy, but once again begin the process of building the next
Mishkan. Moshe did this twice a day, morning and evening, alluding to
building during periods and moods of light and optimism, as well as times
of darkness, when the vision of the Divine is occluded.
Rabbi Chanina opines that Moshe erected the Mishkan thrice daily. In the
seven days of the milu’im, this amounts to twenty one times. (The
Chasam Sofer5 explained the halachic
legality of including Shabbos in the process. A medrash has
Bezalel and his helpers unable to erect the Mishkan. They bring it to
Moshe, who is also stymied. He complains to Hashem, who tells Moshe to
move his hands as if attempting to put up the Mishkan, and He, Hashem
would do the rest. Since Moshe in fact did nothing concrete, there was no
violation of the laws of Shabbos involved in erecting it on Shabbos along
with the other days.) Numerically, twenty-one corresponds to the Divine
Name “Ehkeh,” or “I will be.” It is the Divine Name
attached to teshuvah, because it indicates that the past already
happened; what is important is the new person I will make of myself
in the future. Although I may have been in this situation before, repeated
failures do not change the need for teshuvah, nor G-d’s willingness
to accept it. In fact, twenty-one squared 441, which happens to equal the
word “emes.” It is an incontrovertible truth that no matter how
many times he has fallen and failed before, HKBH will accept his attempt
at teshuvah.
The serial assemblies and dismantlings of the Mishkan point as well to
another important part of our avodah. We must be prepared to
inspect the quality of what we have built, constantly reevaluating all
details of its construction, looking for small flaws we may have been
unaware of in the original construction. There is often no end to the
upgrading work we can do, to make our personal Sanctuary even more
effective.
1 Based on Nesivos Shalom pgs. 278-280
2 Tanchuma 11
3 Bamidbar 22:24-25
4 Kabbalah differentiates between two kinds of oros, or
Divine lights. One is an ohr penimi, an internalized light; the
other is so powerful that it cannot be contained or structured.
Therefore, it is not depicted as contained within, but is a “surrounding
ohr” of great kedushah.
5 Vayakhel, s.v. sheshes yamim
Text Copyright © 2008 by Rabbi Yitzchok Adlerstein and Torah.org