Shabbat Forshpeis
A Taste of Torah in Honor of Shabbat
PARSHAT PEKUDE
SANCTITY OF TIME IS EVEN MORE IMPORTANT
THAN SANCTITY OF PLACE
MARCH 7-8, 2003/ 4 ADAR | 5763
The last two portions of the Book of Exodus
apply and repeat information found in previous passages of the Torah. In Parshat Va-Yakhel, the Taberenacle is constructed in its detail by following the prescriptions found in the portion of Terumah. In the portion of Pikudei, the priestly garments are made following the details laid out earlier in the portion of Tetzaveh.
Why is it that the Torah needs to repeat every detail when describing the making of the Tabernacle and the garments? Wouldn't it have been enough for the Torah to simply say that the Temple was constructed and the garments were made as God had commanded?
Several reasons for this repetition can be suggested. First, the Torah may want to make the very point that the commands were followed in great details. Presenting the details of the law shows that that nothing mandated by God was overlooked.
Another possibility is that presenting the details again points to a loving involvement in this process. Each step in making the Tabernacle and the garments, was an expression of the love that Moshe (Moses) and the people felt towards God.
Another answer to our question may lie in considering the sequence of events in the latter part of Exodus. The portion of Terumah deals with the command to make the Tabernacle. Tetzaveh follows with the command of the priestly garments. Immediately following these portions, the importance of Shabbat is mentioned in the portion of Ki Tisa.
Not coincidentally, the portion of Vayakhel, which follows Ki Tisa, mentions Shabbat at its very beginning. The building of the Tabernacle, found in Vayakhel, and the making of the garments, found in Pikudei, then follow. The sequence is truly a mirror opposite with one notable exception. Whereas the command of Tabernacle and priestly garments was followed by Shabbat, in the actual implementation of the laws, Shabbat comes first.
In Judaism, there are two sanctities, the sanctity of place and the sanctity of time. As important as any place may be, time is of even greater importance. Perhaps then, it can be suggested that the reason why the Torah repeats the commandments in detail is to point out that Shabbat, the epitome of the sanctity of time, is even more important than the sanctity of space represented by the Tabernacle and the garments.
In his book "The Sabbath," Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel points out that the acquisition of "space," is an appropriate human quest. But life goes wrong when one spends all of his/her time to amass "things." "For to have more, does not mean to be more."
It is interesting to note that the incident that falls between the command and the implementation is the sin of the Golden Calf. The keruvim, the angelic forms atop the Ark were holy objects desired and commanded by God which sanctified space; the Golden Calf, on the other hand, which the Jews may have seen as a replacement of these keruvim, was a defiling of place.
Precisely because of this perversion of the sanctity of space, the Torah deems it important to start again and to repeat the whole sequence with the placement of Shabbat first so that its spirit be infused in every detail of the construction of the Tabernacle and making of the priestly garments. This teaches that ultimately we are people who carve out our empires in time and not in space.
Shabbat Shalom,
Rabbi Avi Weiss
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