Parashat Terumah
The Role Of
Ritual
In focusing on
ritual laws, Parashat Terumah teaches us that by reliving heroic historic
moments we can introduce the transcendent into our daily lives.
By Rabbi Shimon Felix
The following article is reprinted with permission from The Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel.
If the sudden shift of gears in the Torah from the heroic
narratives of Genesis and Exodus to the apparently pedantic legalism of
Mishpatim ('Laws') is puzzling, this week's parsha is even more problematic. In
Trumah (which means 'Donation,' referring to the materials donated by the
Israelites for the construction of the Tabernacle), we move from the legalistic
concerns of last week's parsha to the ritualistic details of the building and
maintenance of the Tabernacle.
We begin a very long discussion, which actually takes us
through much of the rest of the Torah, of the Temple: the materials needed to
construct it, its design, its vessels, the sacrifices to be offered and the
rites to be practiced within it. If the legal material of Mishpatim does in
fact hold a good deal of relevance for our own lives, and actually represents a
shift from the stories of redemption to the commandment to redeem, what does
the Temple and its rituals mean to us?
The Temple ritual is just that--ritual. It has no 'real'
effect on the 'real' world, and does not change it, in the way that freeing a
slave, or being charitable to the needy, does. If following the moral-ethical
precepts of the Torah makes me an actor, and a playwright, rather than a member
of the audience, in God's drama, what does the ritual of the Temple do?
What do these symbolic acts mean for the people who
worshipped in the Tabernacle in the desert, or in the Temple in Jerusalem? What
were the sacrifices, the burnt offerings, the various rituals meant to do for
them? What meaning did they have in their lives? And, by extension, what
difference could they possibly make in ours?
To get to an understanding of where ritual fits in to the
Torah's narrative, I would like to share with you the approach of Rabbi Moshe
ben Nachman (known as the Ramban, or Nachmanides) to the Temple. At the
start of his commentary on Trumah, the Ramban posits that the Temple was meant
to be a reenactment of the dramatic experience the Jewish people had just gone
through; the giving of the Torah on Mount Sinai.
That moment, when the entire nation experienced directly the
presence of God, and heard His word, was the supreme moment of Jewish, and in
fact of human, history. Almost immediately afterwards, Moshe is instructed to
tell the Jews to construct a Tabernacle, to be used while they are in the
desert, which foreshadows the permanent Temple which will be built when they
arrive in Israel.
Nachmanides posits that the point of the Temple, its raison d'etre, is NOT the
offering of sacrifices or the reciting of prayers. Rather, he says, it is a
direct continuation of the Exodus narrative:
"The secret of the Tabernacle is that the Divine Glory,
which rested on Mt. Sinai, rests upon it [the Tabernacle], in a hidden way. And
just as it says there [on Mt. Sinai] 'and the Glory of God rested on Mt. Sinai'
(Exodus, 24, 16), and it says 'behold, the Lord our God has shown us his glory
and his greatness' (Deuteronomy, 5, 20), so, too, it says concerning the
Tabernacle 'and the glory of God filled the Tabernacle' (Exodus, 40, 34).
...And there was in the Tabernacle, always, with Israel, the glory which was
seen by them on Mt. Sinai."
According to the Ramban, the Tabernacle, and, after it, the Temple in
Jerusalem, was meant to offer the people the opportunity to experience, again
and again, the defining moment of Jewish history; the revelation at Sinai. This
was achieved through ritual; the physical experience of the Sanctuary, the
vessels, the Priests, the Levites, the sacrifices, all came together to create
for the devotee the 'ultimate' experience, the experience of Sinai, the
presence of God. These ritual objects and acts are the means, not the ends,
with which one could relive the most important moment in our collective consciousness.
I think that there is something important being said here about a gap, a
fissure in our lives. A gap between what once was, or might have been, and what
is. Between a remembered, imagined, or anticipated reality, and life as it is
really lived. The Jewish people at Mt. Sinai went thorough a heroic,
unforgettable, transcendent experience, the climax of a series of such
experiences. By definition, whatever came next would be anti-climactic.
The Torah, after the 'heroic' period of Genesis and Exodus,
now moves on to grapple with a question that we must all deal with in our own
lives: how can one live a life without transcendence, without heroism, without
the fantastic events which only rarely befall a nation, or an individual? There
is a gap, a dissonance, in our lives; between life as we may, at some heroic
moment, have lived it, or as it may have been lived in some distant heroic
past, or in some half-imagined future, and life as we actually experience it on
a day to day basis--taking out the garbage, fighting with our parents, fighting
with our kids, studying for tests, changing diapers, going to the bank, paying
bills.
Very few human beings live lives of intensely heroic
activity. And yet, we long for a life that is heroic, transcendent, full of
ultimate meaning. We want such a life, we need such experiences.
In the laws of Parshat Mishpatim we close this gap, we harmonize this
dissonance. The Torah gives us the opportunity to recreate, through our own
actions, some of the heroic events of Exodus. If God redeemed us in Egypt,
Jewish law challenges us to be redeemers, and shows us how to be that. If God
lifted up the downtrodden Jewish slaves, the Jewish laws of charity demand of
us that we approximate God's behavior, and show us how to do that. We are
commanded to evolve from readers of someone else's story, into actors, heroes,
in a real-life drama, in which we can, again and again, on a day-to-day basis,
experience the dramatic narrative of exile and redemption, by acting upon the
moral-ethical principles of Mishpatim.
Parshat Trumah, on the other hand, gives us another way, a very different way,
to make our lives heroic--the way of ritual. If the Israelites experienced at
first-hand the drama of redemption from Egypt, the splitting of the Red Sea,
and the receiving of the Torah at Mt. Sinai, we can also, through ritual, break
through the less-than-heroic nature of our every day lives and experience these
events for ourselves. The Temple ritual is the way to experience God the way
the Israelites did at Mt. Sinai. If we successfully give ourselves over to the
strategy of the ritual, if we allow it to work for us, we can have that
experience as well.
On Passover, at the Seder, one can transform oneself into
someone who was himself or herself redeemed from Egypt. On Purim, with the
reading of the megillah (Scroll of Esther) and the rituals of
celebration, we can transcend our reality and in some way share the experience
of the Jews of Persia, who actually lived through the terrible danger, and the
miraculous salvation. Every Shabbat, the Rabbis tell us, we can, through
ritualized rest, acts of prayer, song, Torah study, and feasting, experience
something of the end of days, the Messianic era--ma'ayn olam ha'ba, a
bit of the world to come--and transcend the travails of this world.
These, and other, rituals offer us the chance to live a heroic moment,
fashioned out of what would otherwise be the dry stuff of history. It is
through ritual that we can create existences and experiences not otherwise
accessible to us, but for which the soul yearns.
The question that occurs to me now is this: Can we discern, in the Jewish world
in which we live, two types, two strategies for achieving transcendence within
the mundane: one which, through acts of morality, redemption, justice and
charity, seeks to imitate and recreate the miraculous works of God in the book
of Exodus, and another, which seeks to introduce the transcendent, the
miraculous, the heroic, into our lives through acts of ritual?
And is not the Torah, by placing the laws of Mishpatim and
then the rituals of Trumah immediately after God's miracles in Exodus, telling
us that both paths are there for us to take?
This Dvar Torah is dedicated to the memory of Tani Goodman, who lived life
heroically.
Rabbi Shimon
Felix is the Israel Director of the Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel.
He lives with his family in Jerusalem, and has taught in a wide variety of
educational frameworks in Israel and abroad.