The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

A temple in time

- The writer is rabbi of the Western Wall and holy sites.

Parashat Ki Tisa begins with the final instructio­ns for building the Mishkan, the Tabernacle – the temporary temple that accompanie­d the Jewish nation through its journeys in the desert. The instructio­ns were given to Moses when he was on Mount Sinai and received the laws of the Torah from God.

The Jewish nation waited for Moses to come down from the mountain, and when time passed and he still did not return, they committed the sin of the golden calf. Within a short time of receiving the Torah at the sacred revelation at Mount Sinai, they reverted to the idolatrous habits of the ancient world and worshiped the golden calf.

As a result of this sin, God changed His mind about wanting the nation to build a temple for him. The Children of Israel were despondent over this decision, and Moses asked that the plans to build the Mishkan remain in place.

The Mishkan was much more than a symbolic structure. It was a place in the physical world for the presence of God. Therefore, the significan­ce of the question of whether or not the Mishkan would be built was actually a question of whether God’s presence would be present in our world or would be more distant.

God accepted Moses’s pleas and announced again that His presence would be closer and more intimate. The following two parashot – Vayakhel and Pekudei – reiterate the directions for building the Mishkan, this time as they were conveyed to the Children of Israel.

LET’S GO back to the beginning of the parasha. With the completion of the instructio­ns for building the Mishkan, God commands Moses: “And you, speak to the Children of Israel and say: ‘Only keep My Sabbaths! For it is a sign between Me and you for your generation­s, to know that I, the Lord, make you holy’” (Exodus 31:13).

Parashat Vayakhel also begins with the commandmen­t to keep the Sabbath: “These are the things that the Lord commanded to make. Six days work may be done, but on the seventh day you shall have sanctity, a day of complete rest to the Lord” (Exodus 35:1-2).

This raises two questions. The first is – What is the connection between the commandmen­ts to keep Shabbat and those relating to building the Mishkan; both the first time, when God conveyed the directions to Moses, and the second time, when Moses conveyed the directions to the Jewish nation?

The second question is – Why did the order change? The first time, before the sin of the golden calf, the commandmen­t to keep Shabbat came after those for building the Mishkan, whereas the second time, after the sin of the golden calf, Shabbat came before the Mishkan.

When examining these questions, it becomes clear that the Torah was emphasizin­g that just as a temple should be built in physical space, so must a temple in time be acknowledg­ed as well – on the Sabbath. And just as holiness can be present in a specific place, so it can be at a specific time.

On Shabbat, the entire world and all the people who are active in it spend an entire day in a temple that fills the world, a temple in time.

Before the sin of the golden calf, the Mishkan was the site of holiness more important than Shabbat, and therefore, the instructio­ns regarding Shabbat appear only after those given for building the Mishkan.

But then the Children of Israel sinned with the golden calf and proved that even the most transcende­nt of revelation­s – the revelation at Mount Sinai – cannot, on its own, strengthen faith in God and the connection with Him. A much stronger power was needed, a holiness that does not rest in one particular place but controls time itself. This is the power of Shabbat.

Therefore, when Moses conveys to the Children of Israel the instructio­ns for building the Mishkan, he begins first with instructio­ns for keeping Shabbat.

The holiness of Shabbat is so strong because it is not dependent on any human factor. It has the power to spread into the six days of the week and into our very bodies. Shabbat – the temple in time – can make work holy and morally more transcende­nt.

Shabbat is in memory of the days of Creation. God created the world in six days, and on the seventh he rested. A person who keeps Shabbat and rests from work actually acknowledg­es that God created the world.

Undoubtedl­y, every act that person performs all week long will gain greater significan­ce inspired by this temple in time. ■

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