CHUMASH CANDESCENCE
 PARASHA VAYAKHEL
EXODUS  35:01-38:20
Rabbi  Arthur Segal   www.jewishspiritualrenewal.org 
Via Shamash Org on-line  class service
Jewish Renewal  www.jewishrenewal.info 
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish  Spirituality
Eco Judaism
Hilton Head Island, SC, Bluffton, SC, Savannah,  GA
''SHE'S A BRICK HOUSE. SHE'S MIGHTY MIGHTY, JUST LETTIN' IT ALL HANG OUT''
"And  there was Extra" (Ex 36:07)
In this week's Torah portion  we are given the mandate to build the
sanctuary. The details of how it was  built, who funded it, and who was in charge of its construction are given. 
It is interesting to note that a  13 year old, named  Bezalel, was assigned the task to be in charge of the  artistry and construction of the Tabernacle. We can learn from this that even a  great man  such as Moses, cannot be perfect in everything. We are a  community and  depend on each other for our different skills and strengths.  Bezalel needed Moses to teach him Torah. Moses needed Bezalel to teach him  architecture and gold crafting.
Moses asks the people to contribute all  sorts of items to be used for the
Mishkan's manufacture. The people  voluntarily delivered gold, silver,
gems, jewels, cloth, silks, furs, and  hides. They were so giving that there
was a  surplus of donations. God  instructs Moses to "restrain us from giving"
(Ex 36:06). If only our modern  building funds had this "problem"!
Why did we need a Mishkan? Why did we  need the first and second Temples
in Jerusalem? Why do some of our people  pray for the restoration of the
Third Temple? Why do we need our modern  synagogues and temples? Do we in the year third  millennium  really need a place where we can "see" God dwell among us?  Is the Mishkan the answer to our quest to see and feel God that we tried to  achieve  with the Golden Calf? (Please refer to last week's D'var on Ki  Tisa.)
Bezalel made a wondrous menorah (Ex 37:17 to 24). It was of pure  gold.
Did you ever note that the seven-candled menorahs in traditional shuls  are
never golden. Perhaps they are bronze or silver. This is because the  Talmud
ruled that a gold menorah can only be used in the Temple in Jerusalem.  Have you noticed that Reform Judaism chose a gold menorah for its logo? Have you  
noticed that gold menorahs are used in liberal temples? They are making  the
statement that they are no longer waiting for or praying for the  Third
Temple. 
In our temples, in our hearts, and in our good deeds are  where we say
God's presence, the Shekinah, dwells. The Divine Light is  accessible to us 
each and every day. We know from our history that God's  presence left the
Second  Temple. Why? It was because of people's  unbiased hatred, jealousy,
arguments, and the fact that even murder was  committed there.
The Talmud teaches that studying Torah at night (when  melancholy can
set in, when one can cry over the reasons for the Temple's  destruction), is 
effective in bringing the Divine Light back. Our very own  human behavior
can cause this light to be with us. Or our behaviors can cause  it to leave
us. 
We have freedom of choice. "Who is strong? The person who  practices 
self-control" (Pirkei Avot 4:01).
Rabbi Chanina said,  "Anyone whose good deeds are greater than his
wisdom, his wisdom will endure.  Anyone whose wisdom is greater than his good deeds, his wisdom will not endure"  (Pirket Avot 3:12). Torah study, or going to temple, or even teaching a class  there, does not change people. Only by practicing what we learn or teach can we  influence our own behavior and 
the behavior of others. Our actions of good  deeds and tikun olam are 
essential.
They show our commitment. They  help us to grow spiritually while at the
same time help others. The Talmud in  Sotah (3a) tells us that we only sin
when  we are not thinking straight.  God rewards us, in traditional teaching,
for  planning to do a good deed  along with the finished deed itself. But God 
punishes us for sinning only if  we do the act, not our thinking about it 
(Kiddushin 40a). 
What  if Moses said he did not want Bezalel's help, that
he knew it all? What if  Moses acted jealously toward Bezalel or sabotaged
his  project? Do any  of us today get jealous of the successes of our friends
and  undermine  their advancement? Do we have folks in our temples who would be great resources,  but do not use them because our fear and our  jealousy keep us from doing so? This comes from a lack and faith a trust in  God.
Are we so silly as to think that there is a finite amount  of goodness in
God's  universe. Are we so unsophisticated to think that  if we ignore our
friends  when they are in need, and do lashon ha ra  about them when they wish to succeed, that these sins do not affect our own  well-being? These types of
behaviors only reinforce our own fears of  mortality and insecurities.
After all, is it not illogical to think that if  we help another, there will be
less help available to aid us when we are in  need? Is the Divine Light
available to us only finite?
What do we do  in our modern Mishkan that we call our temples, shuls, and 
synagogues? "The  people has approached Me with its mouth and honored Me
with its lips, but has  kept its heart far from Me, and its worship of Me has
been a commandment of  men learned by rote" (Isaiah 29:13). 
The  Torah is a tree of life. Judaism is not just a religion. It is a way of  life.
"L'chaim...to life!!" is our toast. The Torah teaches us to behave at  all times "when  we lie down and we rise up." Although we are taught  to "love your brother as yourself" and to "pursue justice, " do we? What does  our Judaism mean to us?
Is it just matzoth balls and singing our prayers without  trying to act on
them in our daily lives? We are all children of God. If you  want to make a
parent happy, be nice to his/her kids. "You are children of  God, your
Almighty" (Deut 11:01).
We are also servants of God as it  says in Ex 19:06: "You shall be unto Me
a  kingdom of priests. " We are  to act holy, in all of our activities. "You
shall  be holy, for I God am  holy" (Lev 19:02). This holiness is not genetic. We
need to work at it  regularly. As Isaiah says it best in Chapter 44, verses
6-10,  "You are  My witnesses...a light unto the nations, so that My salvation
may  be  unto the ends of the earth!"
We are living during some interesting times  when politicians have a
litmus test  for national office. They have a  need to tell the voters how Jesus plays a  role in their lives. Does  this marginalize us as Jews? Could you imagine in the mid-1970s a radio  commentator saying to an African American, "Get the  bone out of your nose  and get the NAACP to buy a liquor store and do riot rehearsals?" Yet,  this  speech is allowed on the Rush Limbaugh
radio show from the mouth of the  host!! 
Limbaugh and his ilk want prayer in school  and the  Ten Commandments posted. This is just as vain as having the Second Temple full  of hatred and our modern temples filled with Torah talk without Torah  behavior.
In Europe today, in the countries of the former USSR, Russia,  Hungary, 
Sweden, France, and Austria, neo-Fascists parties like Le Pen  and
Haider are or were part of their coalition governments.  Anti-Semitic  web sites abound. Yet  Abe Foxman of the Anti-Defamation  League acted conciliatory to
the government of Austria fearing a backlash.  Didn't we hear those same
fears in  the 1930s? Did it save our European  cousins? 
Rabbi Stephen Wise of our Reform movement  spoke out  courageously against Hitler and Nazism in the 1930s. Aside from R' Michael  Lerner and R' Arthur Waskow, who among us  will speak out forcefully now  against  the American ayatollahs of the religious right?
Bezalel's  menorah in his Mishkan, as our menorah and Torah in our own 
sanctuary,  remind us about God's dwelling in this world. By virtue of our
incorporating  Godliness and holiness into our own lives we can redeem the
world! This was  the message that Moses brought to us from Sinai. 
This  is our mission as Jews. We cannot avoid it. Once we do, we are not Jews, and  not  worthy of our temples, Torah, and menorah. May we all try to act  better toward one another so that our neighbors can see that if we make our  
temples a place for brotherhood, there is hope, tikvah, to make  our
cities, nations, and world fulfill our prophets' dreams. Let us give a  little
"extra"  so that one day, there will be so much love, peace, and  understanding,
God will tell us all to "restrain" with a loud  "Dayenu"!
Shabbat Shalom,
Rabbi  Arthur Segal  www.jewishspiritualrenewal.org 
Via Shamash Org on-line  class service
Jewish Renewal  www.jewishrenewal.info 
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish  Spirituality
Eco Judaism
Hilton Head Island, SC, Bluffton, SC, Savannah,  GA
If visiting SC's Low Country, contact us for a Shabbat meal, in our home by the sea, our beth yam.
Maker of Shalom (Oseh Shalom) help make us deserving of Shalom beyond all human comprehension!
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