03-06-2025 Torah Commentary

שאלו שלום ירושלים
Pray for the peace of Jerusalem
Orad por la paz de Jerusalén
Due to a heavy travel schedule this week we are combining two weekly Torah sections that are usually read separately. These two sections however are complementary. The first one is Trumah, and you can find it in Exodus: 25:1-27:19. The second parashah is one of Torah’s most difficult to understand and for many people is one of its least interesting. Its name is: Tetzaveh and you can find it in Exodus: 27:20 -30:11.
Parashat Trumah provides a sharp contrast to the previous sections in Exodus. The lofty ideas of past sections now give way to attention to daily necessities. We note this difference in both the section’s tone and narrative. The parashah begins with the words: “Dabber el Bnai-Yisrael vYikchu li trumah me’et col ish asher yiddbenu libo/Speak to the children of Israel saying that whoever is so willing, that person should bring me an offering.” (25:2). It is a section that deals less with thinking than with doing, less with the philosophical than with the practical.
This radical change puts the reader in a state of intellectual bewilderment. Why after the giving of the Ten Commandments, does G-d’s next section tell us that G-d desires nothing more than for us to bring free will offerings? Perhaps the answer to our dilemma is found in the building materials that we are asked to provide for the construction of the Mishcan (Tabernacle). The text tells us that the materials requested are to create a covering for the Mishcan. The Hebrew verbal root of the word for Tabernacle (Mishcan), s-c-h, is the same verbal root used in the tale of the “Egel Masechah” (the golden/molten calf). What might the text be teaching us by this subtle use of this same verbal root? Might the Torah be teaching us that all humans make mistakes and that going astray is a part of being human? From the Torah’s perspective the issue is not that we err, but rather what we do to repair the damage after we have erred.
One of the lessons of this week’s section is that what matters is what we do, and not what we say. The emphasis here is on the concept that good people not only say nice things, but do good works.
Parashat Tetzaveh provides the reader with a great amount of detail concerning the clothing that the high priests (cohanim ha’gdolim) were to use. When we read the parashah in its original Hebrew, we find that the text offers us a great number of insights into the meaning of life.
For example, the Hebrew word for clothing “beged” is derived from the verb “b.g.d” meaning: to hide something or to commit treason. Clothing is our cover-up; it hides our bodies’ flaws and weakness. As such, our clothing can help to create illusions of grandeur or can hide that which we do not want to be seen. The text indicates that our outer appearance is not what matters, what matters is the quality of our being. This second section is less about clothing, but rather about a worldview on life.
In this parashah we learn of the consistency of contradictions and the value of personal challenge. To live a life of predictability – a life without risk – is to miss many of the joys of life. What unites these two portions is that they teach us to not only speak niceties but to give of ourselves and to learn to accept the idea that success is not measured by what we have, but rather by what we do. What do you think?
YouTubes for the week
Salmo 91
In Hebrew
A Sephardic Version
An American Version
Please pray for Israel’s soldiers and the safe return of all of the remaining hostages.