A Real Story in the Making
Parshas Terumah
Posted
on January 31, 2014 (5774) By Rabbi Label Lam | Series: Dvar
Torah| Level: Beginner
“And they shall make Me a Sanctuary that I may dwell among
them.” (Shemos 25:8) It’s a big wonder that the Torah spends
so much ink on the description of the construction of the Tabernacle which was
a one-time event in history that seems to have little relevance or practicality
for us today. Yet we recite nightly, “It is our life and the length of our
days…”There are many other important details about Shabbos or
the construction Tefillin that would be much more valuable, seemingly for us to
know about and yet they are relegated to the Oral Torah after an abbreviated
phrase. Why does the Torah take almost 4 and ½ Parshios to tell us how the Mishkan was built?
The Chofetz Chaim remarked
that on a map of the world you’ll find the names of big cities like New York,
Paris, Tokyo, etc. shown in large print on the map. In Heaven G-d has His map of the world and there is
Jerusalem, Vilna, Radin, etc. in his day and Jerusalem, Brooklyn, Queens,
Lakewood, Bnei Brak, and Monsey in our time. These are the special places where
The Almighty has His people who are quietly learning, and praying, and carrying
out His will ever so discretely within the four cubits of Hallacha.
By extension, perhaps we can say that there is a newspaper
on earth and we know already what’s in the worldly paper. It’s a constant
recycling of the most sensational combination of jealously, appetite, and glory
seeking. We don’t have to guess about the heavenly map either.
The Torah is a record of that which catches the Almighty’s
attention. Whatever is most treasured is most often repeated, like the story of
Eliezer the servant of Avraham, loving the convert,
and the Exodus from Egypt.
Now we get to a practical point. In a parenting class my
wife and I received a most useful piece of advice. If ever children are acting
up during mealtime, rather than attending immediately to the trouble maker(s),
turn attention to the ones acting civilly. “Look how nice Sara is sitting!”
“See how Eli is eating so carefully!” etc.
Rather than noticing the rebels and thereby inviting others
too, ignore them. Encourage the good quiet behavior. Give proper attention to
those who are doing what they are supposed to be doing. It works like this in
class daily and at assemblies as well. Just point out the how much you
appreciate some display of good behavior and suddenly there is a contagion of
cooperation that spreads like whipped butter on warm bread. It works! Just try
it!
By the way, by failing to do this, the news media is
complicit in and even responsible for promoting terrorism and other miscreant
behavior in the world by giving free advertisement and attention to their
ruinous causes.
When it comes to the construction of the Tabernacle in the
dessert, we have a unique event in human history. There is a group of people, a
whole nation in fact, working in cooperation, setting aside egos, personal
opinions, and political agendas while using their unique talents and resources
to create a place for G-d in this world and all
according to Divine specs. That action is newsworthy in Heaven. The Torah
focuses enormous attention on the good news!
During the time when these Torah events actually occurred
there were no doubt presidential scandals, wars, and social upheaval, but
that’s not new, and it’s not news. What’s new and what’s really news is not the
child shouting at the dining room table and disrupting. It’s natural to rant
and rave, setting the whole house into a state of chaos, and it’s not unusual
for the parent to obsess only on that.
What would be new and news worthy is the wisdom of a parent
who fixes his or her gaze of love on the good one with only a few spots on his
shirt and the one who is quietly contributing to the harmony of the family
orchestra.
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