Parashat Pekudei
God is in the Details
The Torah teaches us to think globally and act locally.
By Rabbi Eliezer Shore
This
commentary is provided by special arrangement with Canfei Nesharim. To learn
more, visit www.canfeinesharim.org.
Pekudei
is the Torah portion of details. This short, seemingly redundant parashah does
little more than sum up the information presented already twice in the
preceding chapters.
In Terumah and Tetzaveh, Moses receives from God the
instructions for building the Mishkan, including its utensils and the priestly
garments. Vayakhel describes the actual construction of these items. Whereas
Pekudei begins with an accounting of all the material that went into the
project, and concludes with a further recounting of the Mishkan's parts as they
are finally erected into a single structure by Moses.
Considering how incredibly sparing the Torah is with words,
it seems strange that this parashah should spend so much time simply summing up
what was said before. Why wasn't it enough for the Torah to simply state:
"And the people did all that Moses commanded, and Moses assembled the
Mishkan." Perhaps the answer lies in the nature and purpose of the
Mishkan, and its relationship to the creation.
Revelation & Redemption
According to Nahmanides, the Mishkan was the continuation of
the Sinaitic revelation into history. Just as God spoke to Moses from the top
of the mountain, so He continued to address him from out of the Mishkan. The
Mishkan--and the Temple after it--was a "portable" Mount Sinai. It was
a place of continual revelation, where the presence of God could be felt and
experienced vividly.
According to Midrash (Numbers Rabbah 12:13), there was
another aspect to the Mishkan. The Sages describe it as a microcosm of the
universe, with each of its vessels corresponding to another part of the
creation: the tent of the Mishkan paralleled the firmament, the menorah
paralleled the sun and moon, the laver paralleled the oceans, and so on,
through the days of creation.
By describing the Mishkan as such, the Midrash suggests that
the structure was a model of a redeemed creation. It fulfilled God's
original intention of the world as a setting for revelation. This was the
nature of the Garden of Eden, and it will be the nature of the future world,
when "the knowledge of God will fill the earth as waters cover the sea
(Isaiah 11:9)." In the interim, the Mishkan and Temple served as loci of
God's revelation in the world.
Embrace the Details
Thus, the meaning of the Torah's precise recounting of the
Mishkan's construction may not lie in the specific verses themselves, but in
their overall effect. The Torah is telling us that details--no matter how
small--are actually of supreme importance.
We tend to think of revelation as a grand event--the
splitting of the sea, the thunder of Sinai--yet the verses detailing the
Mishkan's construction suggest that a revelation of God can also be born out of
attention to the smallest details. This is the implication of the final verses
of Parshat Pekudei:
"And God spoke to Moses, saying: On the first day of
the first month shall you set up the tabernacle of the Tent of Meeting. And you
shall put in it the Ark of the Testimony, and hang the veil before the Ark. And
you shall bring in the table, and set in order the things upon it; and you
shall bring in the candlestick, and light its lamps. And you shall set the
altar of gold for incense before the Ark of the Testimony, and put the screen
of the door to the tabernacle. And you shall set the altar of the burnt
offering before the door of the tabernacle of the Tent of Meeting… (Exodus
40:1-7)"
"Thus did Moses, according to all that the Lord
commanded him, so he did… Then a cloud covered the Tent of Meeting, and the
Glory of God filled the tabernacle. And Moses was not able to enter the Tent of
Meeting, because the cloud rested on it, and the Glory of God filled the
Mishkan (Exodus 40:16, 33-38)."
These passages tell us that through the precise alignment of
details, something infinitely greater than the parts can be revealed.
The Minutia of Mitzvot
This idea is reflected in the
path of mitzvot (commandments) as a whole. Many spiritual seekers are
often frustrated and baffled by the Torah's unending concern with the minutia
of religious observance. Yet here, too, the Torah is telling us that through
the careful arrangement of the details of life, something much greater--a
revelation of Divinity on a personal level--can take place.
Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz sums this up as follows: "The
system of the mitzvot constitutes the design for a coherent harmony, its
separate components being like the instruments of an orchestra. So vast is the
harmony to be created by this orchestra that it includes the whole world and
promises the perfecting of the world. Seeing the mitzvot in this light, one may
understand on the one hand, the need for so great a number of details and, on
the other, the denial of any exclusive emphasis on any one detail or aspect of
life. The mitzvot as a system include all of life, from the time one opens
one's eyes in the morning until one goes to sleep, from the day of birth to the
last breath (The Thirteen Petaled Rose)."
The Midrash above compares the Mishkan to the work of
creation. I believe that this parallelism can be applied in both directions.
Just as the Mishkan became a dwelling for God's Presence through proper
attention to its myriad details, so the creation itself can be redeemed and
transformed into a setting for revelation through the proper care and
orchestration of all its elements.
Ecological Details
Furthermore, there is a deep ecological way of thinking
inherent in these passages. Today, even individuals with little environmental
awareness realize the life-threatening changes that are occurring on a global
level; yet few of us, as individuals, feel we are in a position to affect the
wide scale changes needed to avoid such catastrophes. We are left to making
donations to "green" organizations and supporting the appropriate
politicians. What else can we do?
About twenty years ago, a small book was published that quickly
became a national bestseller: 50 Simple Things You Can Do to Save the Earth
(Earthworks Press, 1989). Subsequently, numerous similar books were written.
All of them bear the same message--that our smallest actions can have universal
repercussions, and that by becoming sensitive to even the smallest details of
our lives, we can, as a whole, help rectify the world.
For example, the United States goes through approximately
100 billion plastic shopping bags annually. These end up in garbage dumps and
will never biodegrade. If just 25% of American homes used 10 fewer
plastic bags a year, the country would save over 2.5 billion bags a year.
There are seven million copy machines in the United States
today, producing approximately 400 billion photocopies a year. If each of these
machines would print five fewer copies a day, it would save the equivalent of
1.4 million trees and keep more than 26 million cubic feet of paper out of
landfills.
In the average home, the toilet accounts for 30-40% of water
use. By placing even a small bottle place in the water tank, thousands of
gallons can be saved annually.
If we are looking to perfect the world, the place to begin
is the Mishkan of our own lives--our homes and workplaces. Early in its
inception, the environmental movement coined the term: "Think globally,
act locally." Meaning to say, while our eyes and hearts must always be on
the larger picture, the repair of the world begins in locales closest to us,
with the smallest details of our lives.
This is the preeminent Jewish way of thinking, which
recognizes the importance of details in the redemption of the world. And it is
a natural consequence of a Torah lifestyle that one learns to think on both of
these levels simultaneously.
Suggested
Action Items:
1. Do a
Google search for the phrase: "Simple things to save the earth." You
will be directed to numerous sites that provide easy ideas that can improve the
world. Choose some and start implementing them.
2.
Share your discoveries with others.
3.
Try one of the simple actions suggested above to cut down on water use,
paper use, and disposable bag consumption.
Rabbi Eliezer Shore received his doctorate from Bar-Ilan
University on the subject of
Language and Mystical Experience in the Thought of Rebbe Nachman of Breslov. He
currently teaches at various universities and colleges in Israel, and writes on
the topic
of Jewish spirituality.