Parashat Terumah
Using Our Contributions to Create the Sacred
In order to help
build sacred space, the act of giving must be accompanied by a heart that
reaches out to others.
By Rabbi Sara Paasche-Orlow
The following article
is reprinted with permission from SocialAction.com.
"The Lord spoke to Moses,
saying: Tell the Israelite people to bring Me gifts; you shall accept gifts for
Me from every person whose heart so moves him (yidvenu libo)…And let them make me a sanctuary that I may dwell
among them."
(Exodus, 25:1,2,8)
The Israelite people is commanded
to build a sanctuary (mishkan) for
God. God gives Moses this command during the period of forty days that Moses is
on the mountain top. Simultaneously, the people, waiting for his return, lose
hope and go to Aaron, his brother and the High Priest, for reassurance.
While Moses is receiving the
command to collect materials from the people for the building of the Mishkan
and the detailed plan for the Mishkan, Aaron aids the people in circumventing
this process. He collects gold from the people for the building of the Golden
Calf. The people willingly give up their gold for the calf and then worship
before it. There are no values or commitments connected with this worship. They
worship their own gold in the form of an idol--an egocentric and self indulgent
act. The people later flock to give the requested supplies for the building of
the Mishkan, which will house the tablets on which the Ten Commandments are
written--including the commandment against idolatry.
In both cases the people give
willingly. In the case of the Golden Calf, Aaron takes their gold and casts it
into a Golden Calf; in the case of the Mishkan, all the skilled artisans among
the people are called forth to do the work of building. The Mishkan will serve
as a reminder and a physical presence for a God who has communicated a vast
code of ethics and behavioral norms. The building of the Mishkan is an effort
by people to reach beyond themselves toward communal good.
The Mishkan is built from our free
will offerings and the labor of our hands. This is our creation story, in which
we imitate God's creation of the world and create a vessel for the presence of
God in our midst. The function of the Mishkan is to make tangible God's
presence in the camp of Israel such that people can direct themselves, their
actions and their hearts, toward the contents of the ark, the Ten Commandments.
This building is a communal effort to create a spiritual and moral environment.
And yet the people also rallied to
give their gold to build the Golden Calf, and their time to worship it. How do
we know the difference in our lives between the times when we are creating our
own idols and those when we are truly making space the sacred, fulfilling a
moral and ethical tradition?
One of the ways we create a moral
and spiritual environment is by volunteering our own time to come to the aid of
other people, and to work for wider social change. We learn from these two
experiences of the Israelite nation that the act of giving is not inherently
good.
The root of the word yidvenu is nadav, to volunteer; a literal translation of the phrase in Exodus
25:1 might yield "from every person according to the volunteering of his
heart," or "according to the generous nature of his heart." The
act of giving must be accompanied by a "volunteering heart," a heart
that is reaching out to serve the other.
We can understand the phrase,
"volunteering heart," to mean one who invests their time and energy
in trying to understand and relate to the other person or people in need. When
we act toward others with generosity of spirit, we create a place in our lives
which is a mishkan, a place where God dwells with us.
Sforno, a 15th-century
Italian commentator, writes about this verse that no items of monetary value
could be given, but rather items that would themselves be used for the work of
building the sanctuary. The Israelites did not contribute money; instead, they
brought the thirteen materials actually needed for the building project and its
accoutrements: gold, silver, and copper; blue, purple and crimson yarns, fine
linen, goats' hair; tanned ram skins, dolphin skins, and acacia wood; oil for
lighting, spices for the anointing oil and for the aromatic incense; lapis
lazuli and other stones.
Such is the case with community
service: we must understand and be involved with those we are serving in such a
way that we bring what is most needed and join together in the project of
meeting communal needs. If we approach service like we came to the project of
the Golden Calf, we will risk only furthering our own needs, giving our money
and time for our own well being. With a "volunteering heart" and a
true effort to reach beyond our selves, we create a true sanctuary for bringing
God's presence into our lives.
Rabbi Sara Paasche-Orlow is a Program Officer/Educator at
the Jewish Life Network/Steinhardt Foundation, working on promoting
volunteerism and service in the Jewish community. She was ordained at the
Jewish Theological Seminary, served as a CLAL Fellow, and was the North
American Founder of the Bavli-Yerushalmi Project.