Aaron is commanded to light the Menorah every day in the Tabernacle. This comes after the presentation of the gifts of the leaders of Tribes. This is to show that as important as the gifts were, the real holiness is doing the everyday tasks.
A Quick Devar Torah: The Importance of the Everyday
This week’s parsha begins with Aaron being commanded to light the Menorah each day.
The placement of this command is striking. Last week’s parsha ended with the dramatic dedication of the Mishkan. The leaders of the tribes brought their offerings, there was celebration, ceremony, and great public recognition. It was a historic moment.
Yet immediately afterward, the Torah turns our attention to something much quieter: Aaron lighting the Menorah every single day.
The Torah is teaching us an important lesson. As significant as the dedication of the Mishkan was, the real importance lay not in the grand opening but in the daily use of the Mishkan. A building is not made holy by one great ceremony. It becomes holy through the steady, continuous service that takes place within it.
We often overlook the importance of the everyday.
I remember when Rabbi Schwartz finally received a long-awaited hip replacement. He had waited months for the procedure. For him, it was a major event. But for the doctors and nurses, it was simply another day at work. They performed these procedures every day. What was life-changing for one person was part of the daily routine for others.
So much of our lives depends on people who faithfully do their jobs day after day without fanfare.
The Torah teaches that Judaism works the same way. We should celebrate the great moments. Today is the Israel Day Parade, and it is important to participate and show our support. Holidays, special events, and public celebrations all have their place.
But that is not what keeps Judaism alive.
What keeps Judaism alive is that we got up this morning and came to pray. We studied Torah today. We gave tzedakah. We performed acts of kindness. We did what we were supposed to do yesterday, we do it today, and we will do it again tomorrow.
The real mitzvah is found in consistency.
Think about an aircraft carrier. People notice the pilots, but an aircraft carrier may have 100 or 200 pilots and a crew of 5,000 sailors. Thousands of people work every day behind the scenes to make everything possible. Without their daily efforts, nothing happens.
The same lesson appears in our parsha. The tribal leaders deserved recognition for their generous offerings and dedication of the Mishkan. Their names are recorded for all time. But the Torah immediately reminds us that the real work begins the next morning when Aaron lights the Menorah.
The great events matter.
But what matters even more is what we do every day.
The future of Judaism, and indeed the future of any worthwhile endeavor, depends not on occasional moments of inspiration but on daily acts of commitment.
The Menorah was not lit once. It was lit every day.
Something to think about.
