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VaYakhel – Labor of Love

The Parsha of VaYakhel could have been much, much shorter. It could have just said,

“And Moshe told the Jewish People all the things that G-d had commanded them regarding building the Mishkan (tabernacle). The Jewish People did all the things that G-d commanded.”

End of Parsha.

If it wanted to be a little more descriptive, it might have included chapter 25, the first chapter of Parshat VaYakhel. In it, Moshe first warns them about keeping Shabbat, then he tells them about all the things that need to be made, and asks for donations. We hear about how all the people donated everything that was necessary, after which it could have ended with, “And the Jewish People made all the things that G-d commanded.”

End of Parsha.

Instead, we have chapters 26, 27, and 28, which are in the format of:

“He made fifty golden hooks…”
“He made goatskin curtains …”
“He made wooden boards…”
“He made a woven hanging for the entrance…”

and so on,  thirty-odd times[1].

The Haftarah has a similar format. The chapter of Melachim that is read for the Haftarah describes the making of the objects needed in the Temple. Here too, the list is very detailed, including objects like pots, shovels, nets, and basins. Here too, this chapter (of which the Sefardim read one subset of verses and Ashkenazim another) repeats the word “he made”, ויעש, many times[2]. The Haftarah that we read is even known by its first few words, “ויעש חירם”, “Hiram made”, referring to the chief craftsman of the project.

Hence we see that both in the Parsha and the Haftarah, there is an emphasis on the detailed craftwork that was required for the various objects needed in the Temple, with a specific emphasis on the craftsman.

Why is this important?

Pulpit rabbis and Bar Mitzvah boys who find themselves having to give a speech about this Parsha tend to find refuge in its first few verses. Moshe gathers the people, and the first thing he does, as we mentioned earlier, is tell them that they must keep Shabbat.

(א) וַיַּקְהֵל מֹשֶׁה אֶת כָּל עֲדַת בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל וַיֹּאמֶר אֲלֵהֶם אֵלֶּה הַדְּבָרִים אֲשֶׁר צִוָּה ה’ לַעֲשֹׂת אֹתָם:
(ב) שֵׁשֶׁת יָמִים תֵּעָשֶׂה מְלָאכָה וּבַיּוֹם הַשְּׁבִיעִי יִהְיֶה לָכֶם קֹדֶשׁ שַׁבַּת שַׁבָּתוֹן לַה’ כָּל הָעֹשֶׂה בוֹ מְלָאכָה יוּמָת:

1) Moshe gathered the entire congregation of Bnei Israel; he said to them, these are the things that Hashem has commanded you to do:
2) Six days you will do melacha[3], and the seventh day will be holy, Shabbat-Shabbaton to Hashem; whoever does melacha will be put to death. (Shemot 35)

Keeping Shabbat means that you do melacha for six days, and during the seventh day, you do not do any melacha. What is melacha? It’s something that one does, a form of labor or work. But what kind, exactly?

A bit later in the same chapter, when the chief craftsman of the Mishkan, Betzalel, is introduced, we hear more about what it entails:

ל) וַיֹּאמֶר מֹשֶׁה אֶל בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל רְאוּ קָרָא ה’ בְּשֵׁם בְּצַלְאֵל בֶּן אוּרִי בֶן חוּר לְמַטֵּה יְהוּדָה:
לא) וַיְמַלֵּא אֹתוֹ רוּחַ אֱ-לֹהִים בְּחָכְמָה בִּתְבוּנָה וּבְדַעַת וּבְכָל מְלָאכָה:

30) Moshe said to Bnei Israel: Look, Hashem has called the name of Betzalel ben Uri ben Chur of the tribe of Yehudah.
31) He has filled him with the Spirit of G-d: with wisdom, with understanding, with knowledge, and with all melacha.

Similarly, when chief craftsman of the Temple, Hiram, is introduced (a few verses before he appears in our Haftarah[4]), it says:

יג) וַיִּשְׁלַח הַמֶּלֶךְ שְׁלֹמֹה וַיִּקַּח אֶת חִירָם מִצֹּר:
יד)….וַיִּמָּלֵא אֶת הַחָכְמָה וְאֶת הַתְּבוּנָה וְאֶת הַדַּעַת לַעֲשׂוֹת כָּל מְלָאכָה בַּנְּחֹשֶׁת וַיָּבוֹא אֶל הַמֶּלֶךְ שְׁלֹמֹה וַיַּעַשׂ אֶת כָּל מְלַאכְתּוֹ:

13) King Shlomo sent for and got Hiram of Tzor.
14) … He was filled with the wisdom, the understanding, and the knowledge to do all forms of melacha in bronze. He came to King Shlomo and he made all of his melacha.

From the juxtaposition of melacha with “wisdom, understanding, and knowledge”, we can infer that melacha refers to skilled labor, or craftsmanship. In fact, the Laws of Shabbat define melacha as the set of activities that were needed to build the Mishkan and its contents, activities that require a certain amount of skill or competence. Moreover, actions that are not done in a skillful manner do not count as melacha. Examples of this are: doing something unintentionally, having two people do a task meant for one individual, or doing something for a particular purpose and accomplishing something else as a result. In other words: if it’s done without “wisdom, understanding, and knowledge”, it is not truly melacha.

Now one might think that the fact that G-d does not want us to do melacha on the day that He made holy, on Shabbat, it means that G-d does not think very highly of this type of work, or even work in general. Perhaps the ideal for human beings is to be spiritual beings who spend their time in contemplation, rather than in activity.

But that is not the message that we get from Parshat VaYakhel. Shabbat is meant to remind us of Creation. When G-d created the world, He did not rest for seven days. Rather, He acted for six days and rested on the seventh. Human beings were created “be’tzelem Elokim”, in the image of G-d. We are His partners in Creation; He has given us power over nature, the ability to work with wood and metal to create things that nature cannot bring forth on its own. Just as He created for six days, we, too, are expected to act, to be “filled with wisdom, understanding, and knowledge”, and to create things for six days. We are then commanded to also emulate Him by holding back, by refraining from melacha, from craftwork, on the seventh day, on Shabbat. Not because melacha is not important, but because it is an expression of our godliness, of our “Tzelem Elokim”, as is Shabbat itself.

Having given us the ability to create, a portion of Himself, as it were, G-d is delighted in seeing us do so. So much so that He lists every one of the actions of craftsmanship involved in implementing the joint G-d / human project, the Mishkan.

The Ramban, in attempting to answer the question posed above, regarding the purpose of Parshat VaYakhel’s detailed repetition of the work of the Mishkan, says the following:

ועל הכלל כל זה דרך חבה ודרך מעלה, לומר כי חפץ השם במלאכה ומזכיר אותה בתורתו פעמים רבות

In general, all of this shows affection and regard, that is, that Hashem desires this melacha and mentions it in His Torah several times (Ramban, Shemot 36:8)

The reason that the Torah repeats each and every act of melacha, of creation, thirty-odd times, is that Hashem gets nachas from seeing His children act in “tzelem Elokim”, in wisdom, understanding, and knowledge.

It is precious to Him, and it should be precious to us, also.


Dedicated to the memory of Rose Alster, z”l, my grandmother (in-law), Elta Bubby to thirty-odd great-grandchildren, whose yahrtzeit was this past week, 19th Adar. She got nachas from hearing every detail of each and every one of their actions, as they were each precious to her. She is still precious to us all.


Copyright © Kira Sirote
In memory of my father, Peter Rozenberg, z”l
לעילוי נשמת אבי מורי פנחס בן נתן נטע ז”ל

 


[1] According to the search results of Bar-Ilan’s Morashti CD, 37 times.

[2] Seven times in the entire chapter, 2 of them in the Haftarah that we read.

[3] The word melacha was deliberately left un-translated, as it does not have a direct parallel in English. The rest of this essay attempts to pin down its precise meaning.

[4] This is the section of the chapter read by Sefardi shuls for VaYakhel. They read our section next week, for Pekudei, while we read the section after that.

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Shabbat Rosh Chodesh – Partners with G-d

When Rosh Chodesh falls out on Shabbat, we pre-empt the Haftorah of the Parsha and instead read the last chapter of Yeshayahu, which mentions both Rosh Chodesh and Shabbat.

The Haftorah describes a vision of the future, a utopia where all evil has been removed from this world and all of mankind worships G-d. The Haftorah ends this vision with the following verse:

וְהָיָה מִדֵּי חֹדֶשׁ בְּחָדְשׁוֹ וּמִדֵּי שַׁבָּת בְּשַׁבַּתּוֹ יָבוֹא כָל בָּשָׂר לְהִשְׁתַּחֲוֹת לְפָנַי אָמַר ה’:
It will be, on each new month and on each Shabbat, all mankind will come to bow before Me, said Hashem. (Yeshayahu 66:23)

This verse states that commemorating Rosh Chodesh and Shabbat is key to acknowledging G-d’s dominion over the world. In order to understand this, we need to examine the meaning of Shabbat and the purpose of Rosh Chodesh.

The division of the month into weeks is not a natural one. Unlike years and months, which are based on the cycles of the sun and the moon, the week is a human construct (or rather, one commanded to us by G-d). Counting the days, one through seven, over and over again, is the Torah’s way of getting us to identify with G-d’s role in Creation. By doing so, we testify to G-d being the Source of all that exists. When we emulate G-d by ceasing all creative tasks on Shabbat, we make ourselves His partners in Creation.

What about Rosh Chodesh? The month is a natural phenomenon known to all human beings from the dawn of time. Yet the Torah “gives” it to the Jewish People, and makes it a commandment to declare the new moon and determine the date of Rosh Chodesh. This was originally done through a complicated Halachic process that verified the observation of the new moon in the night sky. This determination was based on human effort, not on objective fact; thus, human error was a real possibility. The pre-calculated calendar that the Jewish People have been using for the last millennium and a half is also a human artifact; it also has the potential for error. Such an error would affect not only Rosh Chodesh itself, but any holidays in that month. Would the Passover Seder be on Monday or on Tuesday night? Friday night or Saturday night? The Jewish People get to make that call. But what if we’re wrong?

רבי קריספא בשם ר’ יוחנן לשעבר אלה מועדי יי’ מיכן ואילך אשר תקראו אותם אמר רבי אילא אם קריתם אותם הם מועדי ואם לאו אינן מועדי
R’ Krispa said in the name of R’ Yochanan: At first it said, “These are the holidays of Hashem,” but then it became, “that you shall declare.” R’ Ilah said, [it is as if G-d said] “If you declare them they are My holidays, if not, they are not My holidays.” (Talmud Yerushalmi Rosh Hashana 1: 57 b)

Even if our astronomical observations are mistaken, or our calculations incorrect, as far as G-d is concerned, the holidays declared by the Jewish People are the actual holidays. This is key to understanding what G-d wants from His relationship with mankind.

First and foremost, we need to know that G-d is involved in the world. It is hard for us to even fathom the alternative, but there are still religions and philosophies that believe that even if there is a G-d Who created the world, He cannot possibly be involved in running it. He is too transcendent, too abstract, too great, to care about what you and I do or do not eat, what you and I do or do not say, or even whether you and I steal, rape, or murder. The Exodus from Egypt proved otherwise; its purpose, as stated in the Torah in Parshat VaEira, is “that you should know that I am Hashem.” It showed all of mankind that G-d has power over the entire world, that He sees what happens in it, and that their actions matter to Him. That is also the purpose of the holidays that are mentioned in the Midrash above, the “holidays of Hashem.” As “זכר יציאת מצרים” , they commemorate the Exodus, the greatest manifestation of G-d’s intervention in the affairs of mankind.

The Midrash takes this a step further. Not only do we need to know and accept that G-d runs the world, but G-d also wants the Jewish People to be His partners in running the world. He handed over the determination of Rosh Chodesh, and with it, the decision of when to celebrate the holidays, to us. Even though we are fallible human beings, and might get it wrong, He wants us to be involved.

Thus, the commemoration of Rosh Chodesh expresses the idea that G-d continues to renew and maintain the world; He is actively involved in history and our actions matter to Him. Shabbat stands for our assertion that G-d created the world; as Creator, He has the authority to command us. Without accepting both of these fundamental beliefs about G-d, the world cannot reach the utopia described in Yeshayahu. It is the mission of the Jewish People to share this understanding with the world, and one of the ways that we accomplish this is through our calendar.

The conjunction of Shabbat and Rosh Chodesh reminds us that we are G-d’s partners in perfecting Creation, and in bringing about its ultimate destiny as described in the Haftarah of Shabbat Rosh Chodesh, a world where evil has been vanquished and only good remains.

Copyright © Kira Sirote
In memory of my parents, Peter & Nella Rozenberg, z”l
לעילוי נשמת אבי מורי פנחס בן נתן נטע ואמי מורתי חנה בת זעליג ז”ל

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Filed under Connections, Shabbat Rosh Chodesh, Special Shabbatot

Shabbat Rosh Chodesh

The Haftarah of Shabbat Rosh Chodesh is read whenever Rosh Chodesh falls out on Shabbat, and overrides any other Haftarah. The only exception is Shabbat Shekalim and HaChodesh, which are tied to Rosh Chodesh Adar and Nissan, respectively.

It is not an easy Haftarah; it contains some very powerful imagery, both of comfort and of fear.

Linear annotated translation of the Haftarah of Shabbat Rosh Chodesh

The obvious connection is the repetition of the words “Shabbat” and “Chodesh”. Understanding why Shabbat and Chodesh are mentioned, and what they have to do with the general theme of Geula (redemption), now that is not obvious at all.

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Filed under Shabbat Rosh Chodesh, Special Shabbatot