Parashat Pekudei
The Role Of The
Tabernacle
Is the Tabernacle
a sacred center of intense love or an outgrowth of our sins?
By Irwin Kula
The following article is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
This parsha describes the building of the Tabernacle. What
is the purpose of the Tabernacle? If the whole earth is filled with God's
presence, if God is accessible from any place, why build one special place?
There are two midrashim that offer contrasting perspectives
on the mishkan (Tabernacle). The first teaches, "There once was a
king who married a beloved daughter to a foreign prince. Following the wedding,
the couple prepared to leave for the prince's land. The king said to the
prince: I cannot bear my daughter leaving, but neither can I keep you here. Do
me one favor. In your home prepare a small area for me where I might be with
you.
“So God said to Moses, ‘I have given you the Torah. I cannot
part with it; neither can I take it from you. Please, wherever Israel goes, let
them make me one place where I might be close to you.’" According to this
midrash, the mishkan is for God. The mishkan is a place of love, intimacy and
deep connection among God, Israel and Torah.
In contrast, another midrash notes that after the Golden
Calf, God said, "Since you have allowed evil into your midst, I cannot
dwell with you, but neither can I completely abandon you. Therefore, make me
one small area where I can dwell in your midst." Here, the mishkan is
necessary because the people are sinful. If the community were
"perfect," it would not need a mishkan at all!
Each midrash presents a different focus on the mishkan. The
former sees it as a sign of God's love and Israel's spiritual ascendancy, the
latter as an outgrowth of Israel's failure. The former sees the mishkan as an
intrinsically sacred place for lovers, the latter sees it as instrumentally
sacred, functioning to make us better people.
Can these midrashim serve as a model for building the modern
mishkan? Which role is more consistent with the role of the synagogue in our
day?