• First Pray For God’s Guidance

    We are fasting today to remind us that before Esther put her plan in motion to save the Jews, she fasted and she asked that the Jews fast. This was to seek God’s guidance in her plans.

    Ta’anit Esther — Preparation Before Courage

    The fast of Esther is unique among Jewish fast days.

    Most fasts commemorate tragedy:
    the destruction of the Temple, a siege, or calamity.

    But Ta’anit Esther happens before the salvation.

    Why?

    Because the miracle of Purim did not begin when Haman was defeated.
    It began when the Jews changed themselves.


    1. The Crisis Was Spiritual Before It Was Political

    The story starts with the feast of King Ahashverosh — a celebration marking 70 years since the destruction of the First Temple, implying the Jewish redemption would never come.

    Jews attended.

    Maybe the food was kosher.
    But the message was not.

    They were participating in the declaration:

    Jewish history is over.
    The covenant is over.
    We are just another nation now.

    The danger of Purim wasn’t military annihilation first —
    it was assimilation.

    Haman merely gave physical form to an already existing spiritual problem.


    2. Esther’s Fear — and Mordechai’s Response

    When Mordechai tells Esther to go to the king, she hesitates:

    Approaching the king uninvited meant death.
    And Judaism forbids relying on miracles.

    Mordechai answers with one of the most profound lines in Tanach:

    “Who knows if for this very moment you became queen.”

    And even stronger:

    Salvation will come — with or without you.

    Meaning:
    History has a direction.
    The Jewish people will survive.
    The question is only — will you participate?

    Leadership is not about being indispensable.
    It’s about choosing responsibility.


    3. Why the Fast Comes First

    Esther’s response is not strategy.
    Not politics.
    Not alliances.

    She says:

    Gather the Jews. Fast for three days.

    Before confronting the enemy — fix yourselves.

    This becomes a Jewish principle:

    We do not act first and pray later.
    We prepare spiritually so our actions matter.

    Action without introspection is arrogance.
    Faith without action is passivity.

    Judaism demands both.


    4. The Eternal Pattern

    Throughout Jewish history the pattern repeats:

    Before battles — prayer.
    Before decisions — reflection.
    Before salvation — self-examination.

    Not because victory depends only on miracles,
    but because success requires clarity of purpose.

    The fast transforms events from coincidence into meaning.


    The Message of Ta’anit Esther

    Purim teaches God works through hidden events.
    Ta’anit Esther teaches we must first make ourselves worthy participants in those events.

    We do not control outcomes.

    We control whether we are ready when history calls our name.

    Just like Esther.

  • The Lion Is Roaring

    Yesterday Israel began its air campaign against the Islamic regime in Iran in conjunction with the US. The name of the Israeli campaign is Roaring Lion. This has biblical connotations. The Lion is the symbol of the tribe of Judah. No longer are Jews defenseless to our enemies. The Lion of Judah is now roaring and the Iranians hear it.


    1. The Lion — Not Just Power, But Responsibility

    You’re absolutely right that the “lion” is a deeply loaded Jewish symbol.

    • “Gur Aryeh Yehudah” — Judah is called a lion cub (Genesis 49:9)
    • The lion becomes associated with Jerusalem and the Davidic monarchy
    • It symbolizes sovereignty — not merely survival

    But Jewish tradition doesn’t present the lion as constant aggression.
    It presents a controlled power.

    The lion sleeps most of the day.
    It only rises when necessary.

    So the symbol is not:

    We fight because we can

    It is:

    We fight because sometimes we must

    That distinction is crucial in Jewish thought.


    2. Amalek — The Unique Biblical Enemy

    Your connection to Shabbat Zachor is actually the key theological point.

    Amalek is not hated merely for attacking Israel.

    Other nations attacked Israel.

    Amalek is condemned because of how they attacked:

    “They struck the stragglers behind you… the weak… and did not fear God” (Deuteronomy 25:18)

    The crime is moral, not ethnic or political.

    Amalek represents a worldview:

    • Target civilians
    • Exploit weakness
    • Deny moral accountability

    In Jewish philosophy, Amalek becomes less a people and more a pattern of behavior — the ideology that power alone decides right and wrong.

    That’s why the Torah commands memory, not rage.


    3. Human Responsibility — The Elie Wiesel Question

    You quoted Elie Wiesel — and that idea sits at the center of modern Jewish theology:

    The question after catastrophe is not “Where was God?”
    but “Where was man?”

    Judaism does not allow passive innocence.

    Unlike many religious traditions where evil is something God will fix at the end of time, the Torah repeatedly places responsibility on human beings:

    • Build courts
    • Defend the innocent
    • Intervene against injustice

    The command to remember Amalek is really:

    Never outsource morality to heaven.


    4. The Post-Exile Shift

    Your contrast between pre-state Jewish helplessness and modern sovereignty touches a major theme in modern Jewish thought.

    For nearly 2,000 years Jewish survival strategy was:

    Endure history

    Modern Israel introduces a different category:

    Participate in history

    That creates a permanent tension in Jewish ethics:

    Exile JudaismSovereign Judaism
    Moral witnessMoral actor
    Martyrdom possibleForce sometimes necessary
    God protectsHumans must protect

    Shabbat Zachor lands exactly on that fault line.


    5. The Deeper Lesson

    Your parents’ responses actually illustrate the Jewish moral framework:

    • Your mother: Do not cheapen evil by mislabeling it
    • Your father: Freedom includes protecting speech you hate

    Put together, that becomes a Jewish paradox:

    A society strong enough to fight enemies must also be strong enough to tolerate dissent.

    Otherwise the lion becomes indistinguishable from what it fights.


    Closing Thought

    Shabbat Zachor is not a call to permanent war.
    It is a warning about moral amnesia.

    Forget Amalek → you justify cruelty.
    See Amalek everywhere → you justify tyranny.

    The mitzvah is to remember evil precisely enough to fight it —
    and precisely enough not to become it.

    That balance has always been the hardest part of Jewish history.

  • Don’t Be Merciful To Evil

    The Haftorah this week reminds us of how Haman became what he was. He was a descendant of Agog, who was able to have a child because Shaul was too merciful.

    Parshat Zachor – Mercy, Morality, and Moral Clarity

    The Haftarah of Parshat Zachor tells the story of King Saul and the war against Amalek.

    God commands Saul:
    Destroy Amalek completely — no survivors, no spoils, nothing kept.

    But Saul does two things:

    • He spares King Agag
    • He keeps the best sheep and cattle, intending to offer them as sacrifices

    Then the prophet Samuel confronts him:

    “What is this sound of sheep in my ears?”

    Saul answers:
    “The people wanted them — we will bring offerings to God.”

    Samuel’s response becomes one of the most powerful lines in Tanach:

    Obedience to God is greater than sacrifice.

    Saul misunderstood something fundamental:
    You cannot serve morality by violating morality.


    The Mistake of Saul

    Saul thought he was being compassionate.
    He thought he was elevating the situation — turning war booty into holiness.

    But the Torah teaches a difficult truth:

    Mercy outside a moral framework is not mercy.

    There is a famous idea in Jewish thought:

    One who is merciful to the cruel will ultimately be cruel to the merciful.

    By sparing Agag, Saul allowed evil to survive.
    Chazal teach that from Agag eventually came Haman — the story of Purim.

    The lesson:
    Failing to confront evil does not end evil — it postpones it.


    Justice vs. Sentiment

    The Haftarah is not teaching cruelty.
    It is teaching moral clarity.

    After World War II, the Nazis requested execution by firing squad — a military death.
    The Allies hanged them instead, declaring:

    They were not soldiers.
    They were criminals.

    Similarly, at the trial of Adolf Eichmann, he said:

    “I killed six million of you, and you kill only one of me.”

    The answer given:
    You are not being killed for revenge.
    You are being punished by law — because murder cannot be allowed to stand.

    Justice is not hatred.
    Justice is the protection of humanity.


    The Message of Parshat Zachor

    Parshat Zachor is not about remembering a nation long gone.
    It is about recognizing a philosophy:

    Amalek represents evil that attacks morality itself — evil that targets the weak and innocent.

    The Torah demands:

    • Do not confuse evil with disagreement
    • Do not legitimize evil through misplaced compassion
    • Do not allow moral confusion to replace moral responsibility

    We are commanded to destroy Amalek —
    not only historically, but spiritually:

    Remove cruelty, moral relativism, and indifference from the world — and from ourselves.


    Takeaway

    Kindness is holy.
    Compassion is holy.

    But compassion detached from truth becomes destructive.

    Judaism demands both a soft heart and a clear mind.

    Remember Amalek —
    because forgetting evil is the first step toward allowing it to return.

  • Believe Amalek

    One of the things we have to remember about those who would try to murder us is that they are open about it. They say that they want to murder us. It is up to us to believe them.


    Shabbat Zachor — Remembering Amalek

    This Shabbat is Shabbat Zachor — the Sabbath of remembrance.

    Before Purim we read the Torah commandment to remember Amalek. The question is obvious:

    Why does Judaism require us to remember evil?
    Wouldn’t it be healthier to forget?

    The Torah is teaching that memory is not about revenge — it is about understanding reality.


    The Philosophy of Amalek

    Amalek was not just another enemy nation.
    Amalek represented an idea.

    1) “Either me or the Torah”

    Amalek’s worldview was simple:

    The world cannot contain both the Torah and Amalek.

    The Jewish people represent meaning, morality, and Divine purpose in history.
    Amalek represents the denial of meaning.

    So the war is not merely physical — it is philosophical.


    2) They openly say what they intend

    One striking pattern in Jewish history is that our worst enemies announce their intentions.

    They don’t hide it.

    People often refuse to believe them — but they tell us directly.

    The mitzvah of remembering Amalek teaches:

    When someone declares they want to destroy you — believe them.

    Jewish history repeatedly confirms this tragic lesson.


    3) Chance vs. Providence

    Why did Haman cast lots (Pur — the origin of Purim)?

    Because Amalek believes history is random.

    Everything is coincidence.
    Everything is chance.

    The Torah teaches the opposite:

    God runs the world — even when hidden.

    The heroine of Purim is Esther — from Hester Panim, Divine hiddenness.
    God is not absent; He is concealed.

    Read the Megillah carefully: every “coincidence” happens at the perfect moment.
    History is guided — quietly.


    Why Remember?

    We remember Amalek on two levels:

    Intellectual

    So we recognize ideologies that deny morality, meaning, and responsibility in the world.

    Emotional

    So we have the courage to stand up to them.


    The Jewish Response

    At a synagogue in Tzfat, above the chair used for a brit milah, there is a memorial to Jews murdered in Europe.

    Why place them together?

    Because that is the Jewish answer:

    You tried to end the Jewish people —
    instead, we bring new Jewish life into the world.

    Amalek wanted not only to kill Jews physically, but to erase Judaism spiritually —
    to allow Jews to exist, but not as Jews.

    Our response is the opposite:

    We continue living as Jews.
    We continue mitzvot.
    We continue the covenant.


    The Message of Shabbat Zachor

    Remembering Amalek is not about hatred.

    It is about clarity:

    • Evil exists
    • Some ideologies reject moral meaning
    • History is not random
    • And Jewish survival is not accidental

    Shabbat Zachor reminds us:

    The Jewish people survive not merely by living —
    but by living as Jews.

  • Clothes Make The Man

    The Torah goes into detail of what a priest would have to wear while doing his duty in the Tabernacle. The reason is that we should concentrate on his actions, not on the person.

    Quick Devar Torah — The Uniform of Responsibility

    (Parashat Tetzaveh)

    This week’s parsha describes in great detail the clothing of the Kohanim and especially the Kohen Gadol.
    Every garment is specified. No creativity. No personalization. No self-expression.

    At first glance this feels strange.

    Today we value individuality — even in shul you see different talleisim, different styles.
    So why in the Mishkan must every priest look the same?

    Because the Torah is teaching a fundamental idea:

    In Judaism, leadership is not identity — it is office.

    The Kohen is not important because of who he is.
    He is important because of what he represents.

    Just like in the military:
    You salute the uniform, not the personality.
    The rank matters more than the individual.

    The priestly garments remove ego.
    They turn a person into a function.


    The Clothing Changes the Person

    The Kohen Gadol had to behave differently when wearing the bigdei kehuna.

    While in uniform, he represents the entire nation.
    He is constantly being watched.

    And eventually that awareness follows him even when he takes the clothing off —
    because once a person holds an office, he never fully stops representing it.

    Judaism’s view:
    Honor is not privilege.
    Honor is restriction.

    The higher the position — the fewer personal freedoms.


    The Shocking Proof: The Cities of Refuge

    The Torah tells us:

    Someone who kills accidentally remains in exile until the death of the Kohen Gadol.

    Why?

    The High Priest wasn’t there.
    He didn’t know the killer.
    He didn’t cause the accident.

    Yet the Torah holds him responsible.

    Because leadership in Torah is not about authority — it is about accountability.

    If society failed, the leader failed.


    The Message

    In the modern world, rank often means power.
    In Judaism, rank means burden.

    The uniform of the Kohen teaches:

    The greater the title, the greater the responsibility.

    A Jewish leader does not stand above the people.
    He stands answerable for the people.

    Not someone to be worshiped —
    someone who carries the consequences of everyone else.

    And that is why the priests could not choose their clothing.

    Because they were not dressing as themselves.

    They were dressing as the nation.


  • No Job Is Beneath Us

    The Eternal Light in the Tabernacle reminds us that we have to do our duty no matter what. Even if it is a dirty job it still has to get done.

    A Quick Devar Torah — The Ner Tamid and the Responsibility of Leadership

    (Parashat Tetzaveh)

    One of the very first items the Torah discusses in the Mishkan is the Ner Tamid — the eternal flame. It must burn constantly. Day and night. No interruptions.

    And who is responsible for maintaining it?

    Not a helper.
    Not a junior kohen.
    Not an assistant.

    The Kohen Gadol himself.


    1. Leadership Begins With the “Small Jobs”

    Imagine the High Priest’s morning:

    He wakes up — and the first task is not a grand ceremony.
    He does not begin with blessings for the nation.
    He does not start with majestic service.

    He cleans yesterday’s ashes.

    A dirty job.

    The Torah is teaching a foundational principle of leadership:

    A real leader does not only take responsibility for glory — he takes responsibility for maintenance.

    Many people want leadership because leadership brings honor.
    But Torah leadership begins with accountability.

    If something worked — it’s your responsibility.
    If something failed — it’s also your responsibility.

    The Ner Tamid burns because the leader maintains it.


    2. Why Must the Flame Never Go Out?

    The eternal flame represents consistency.

    Judaism does not run on inspiration.
    It runs on commitment.

    You daven when inspired — that’s easy.
    You daven when tired — that’s Judaism.

    You go to work when motivated — normal.
    You go when you don’t feel like it — avodah.

    The message of the Ner Tamid:

    Your duty does not depend on your mood.

    Feelings are temporary.
    Obligation is permanent.


    3. The Kotzker Insight — The Yetzer Hara Test

    There’s a famous story about the Kotzker Rebbe.
    On a freezing morning he debated whether to go to shul.

    Then he noticed the yetzer hara whispering:
    “Stay home.”

    That decided it.

    If resistance appears specifically when doing the right thing —
    that itself proves what your job is.

    The Ner Tamid teaches:
    You don’t ask “Do I feel like it?”
    You ask “Is it my responsibility?”


    4. Judaism: Action Before Motivation

    We live in a world that says:

    “Follow your heart.”

    The Torah says:

    Train your heart by your actions.

    You can do the right thing for imperfect reasons —
    but you cannot do the wrong thing for noble reasons.

    Give charity for a tax deduction — still a mitzvah.
    Steal to help someone — still a sin.

    Because Judaism measures deeds, not emotional narratives.


    5. The Eternal Flame in Everyday Life

    The Ner Tamid isn’t just in the Temple — it’s in life.

    • Showing up to minyan
    • Going to work responsibly
    • Supporting family
    • Doing unpleasant tasks
    • Keeping commitments

    Sometimes the job is honorable.

    Sometimes — like cleaning a flooded cowshed — it is very not honorable.

    But if it must be done:

    Holiness begins where excuses end.


    Final Thought

    The Ner Tamid burns constantly to remind us:

    Not every day will be uplifting.
    Not every mitzvah will be inspiring.
    Not every responsibility will be pleasant.

    But Judaism is not the religion of inspiration.

    It is the religion of reliability.

    Be the person who keeps the flame lit — even when nobody sees.

  • No One Is Indispensable

    That Moses’s name does not appear in this week’s portion of the Torah is important in that it shows that no one is indispensable. We can all be replaced. This does not mean that we should do nothing. We have a job to do. We might not complete it but we still have to do it.

    Quick Devar Torah — Parashat Tetzaveh: The Disappearing Leader

    In this week’s parashah, Tetzaveh, something striking happens:
    Moshe’s name does not appear even once.

    This is remarkable. From the moment he is introduced in the Torah until his death, Moshe dominates the narrative — the redeemer, lawgiver, teacher, and greatest leader we ever had. Yet in the portion dealing with the priestly service — the ongoing spiritual life of Israel — he vanishes.

    Why?

    Many explanations are given, but perhaps the deepest lesson is about leadership itself.

    Moshe understood something few leaders ever accept:
    Leadership is a mission, not an identity.

    He knew he was a servant of God, not the center of the system. The Torah had to survive him. The nation had to function without him. Therefore in the parashah that establishes the permanent institutions — the daily offerings, the priesthood, the continuity of Jewish life — the leader steps aside.

    The system matters more than the personality.

    A true leader prepares the day he will no longer lead.

    History gives us a famous parallel. After the American Revolution, many expected George Washington to become a lifelong ruler. Instead, he voluntarily stepped down after two terms, establishing that no person is indispensable to the nation. Only much later, after Franklin Roosevelt’s four elections, was the limit formalized in the Constitution.

    Moshe lived this principle thousands of years earlier.

    He raises Yehoshua.
    He trains others.
    And in his greatest institutional achievement — he disappears.

    Because Judaism is not built around a man.
    It is built around a covenant.

    There is a famous saying often attributed to J.P. Morgan:
    “The cemetery is full of indispensable people.”

    Parashat Tetzaveh teaches the Torah version:
    You are necessary for your task — but never necessary forever.

    A leader takes responsibility for the present
    and prepares others for the future.

    That is not the weakness of leadership.

    That is its greatness.


  • We are commanded to bring an offering every day. It is the same Morning and afternoon. This is to teach us that real spirituality is being consistent and keeping our appointment with God.

    The Power of the Same Thing Every Day

    (Tetzaveh – the Korban Tamid and fixed prayer)

    One of the most striking things in this week’s parashah is the Korban Tamid — the daily offering.

    Every day.
    Morning and afternoon.
    Same animal.
    Same procedure.
    No creativity. No excitement. No novelty.

    If the Torah wanted spirituality to be thrilling, this would be the worst possible design.

    And that is exactly the point.


    Why Repetition?

    We often struggle with kavana in davening because the prayers are identical every day.
    So we ask:

    Does God really need us to say the same words again and again?

    The answer: the prayers are not for God — they are for us.

    Prayer trains the mind the way exercise trains the body.
    You don’t go to the gym once and say, “Great, I’m in shape forever.”
    Growth comes from repetition.

    The Korban Tamid teaches:
    Spirituality is not inspiration — it is discipline.


    The Danger of the “Shiny Moment”

    Human beings love peaks:
    Sinai
    A moving sermon
    A powerful experience

    But societies are not built on peaks — they are built on routines.

    Destroy routine and you destroy civilization.

    Shared habits create shared values.
    That is why daily rituals matter — whether tefillah, Shabbat, or even civic rituals like the Pledge of Allegiance once was.
    They teach that we belong to something larger than ourselves.


    Leadership Means Showing Up

    A famous story is told about Theodore Roosevelt.

    During a heavy Washington snowstorm, a man came to the White House for an appointment.
    He saw a lone figure outside who offered to walk him to the entrance.
    When the door opened, the butler said:

    “Good evening, Mr. President.”

    Roosevelt had personally come outside so the visitor would not arrive alone.

    That is leadership — not speeches, not glory, but keeping the appointment.


    Our Appointment

    The Korban Tamid is God telling us:

    You have a meeting with Me every day.

    Not when inspired.
    Not when convenient.
    Not when emotional.

    Every day.

    If you keep business appointments reliably but skip prayer, you are saying something about priorities.

    Judaism teaches the opposite:
    Faith is not a feeling — it is a schedule.


    The Message

    Holiness is not created by dramatic moments.
    Holiness is created by consistency.

    Miracles inspire people.
    Routine builds people.

    The Tamid offering — and our fixed prayers — teach that a relationship with God, like any real relationship, survives not on excitement but on commitment.

    You don’t become holy by visiting God.
    You become holy by showing up every day.


  • A Blueprint For Society

    The Tabernacle was a blueprint in how to have a just society. The Ark, Menorah, Table and the Altar all had deeper meaning for us.

    The Mishkan as a Blueprint for Society

    When we read Parashat Terumah, it looks like architecture — measurements, materials, furniture.
    But Chazal teach: the Mishkan is not just a building.

    It is a model of how a Jewish society must function.

    Every vessel represents a foundational principle of civilization.


    1. The Aron — Law Above the Individual

    Inside the Aron are the Tablets.

    The message:
    A healthy society cannot be based on personal opinion.

    The Torah rejects a culture where “everyone does what is right in his own eyes.”
    That description appears at the end of the Book of Judges — and it describes chaos, moral confusion, and collapse.

    Even leadership is accountable.
    The phrase in Ruth “in the days when the judges judged” can also mean when the judges were judged — meaning authority itself is subject to law.

    Principle:
    Law must be objective, equal, and above every individual — ruler and citizen alike.

    A society survives only when conscience is anchored in something higher than human preference.


    2. The Menorah — Unity of Life

    The Menorah is hammered from one solid piece of gold.

    Not assembled. Not attached.

    One piece.

    The message: Torah is not confined to synagogue ritual.
    There is no split between “religion” and “real life.”

    There is:

    • Torah ethics
    • Torah economics
    • Torah government
    • Torah military decisions
    • Torah daily behavior

    Judaism is not a department of life — it is the framework of life.

    Principle:
    Holiness means integration.
    A fragmented life creates a fragmented society.


    3. The Shulchan — Wealth and Responsibility

    The Table holds the Showbread — constant prosperity.

    The Torah is not anti-wealth.
    Avraham, Yitzchak and Yaakov were wealthy.

    But wealth is never private ownership alone — it is entrusted power.

    Money creates influence → influence creates responsibility.

    A Jewish economy is therefore neither:

    • ascetic poverty
    • nor selfish accumulation

    It is productive wealth tied to moral duty.

    Principle:
    You may own wealth — but wealth never owns only you.
    It obligates you to society.


    4. The Mizbeach — Action Defines Spirituality

    Finally, the Altar — the place of doing.

    Judaism does not primarily ask:
    “What did you feel?”

    It asks:
    “What did you do?”

    Kavanah matters — but action creates reality.

    If a person says:
    “I don’t feel like praying today”

    The Torah answer is:
    Do it anyway.

    Because holiness is not inspiration.
    Holiness is consistency.


    The Message of the Mishkan

    The Mishkan teaches four pillars of civilization:

    1. Aron — Law above personal opinion
    2. Menorah — Unified life under Torah values
    3. Shulchan — Responsible prosperity
    4. Mizbeach — Action over intention

    Put together, the Mishkan is not a temple God needs.

    It is a society humans need.

    God does not dwell in buildings.
    He dwells in a civilization structured by these principles.


    Closing Thought

    The Torah is telling us:

    Not how to build a sanctuary…

    But how to build a world where the Divine can live among people.

    “They shall make Me a sanctuary — and I will dwell among them.”
    Not in it — but in them.


  • Holiness Though Our Actions

    Holiness does not come from miracles, as much as our everyday activities.

    Parashat Terumah — Holiness Is Built, Not Miraculous

    Parashat Terumah shifts the Torah in a surprising direction.

    We have already:

    1. Left Egypt — freedom
    2. Received the Ten Commandments — morality
    3. Received civil law — justice

    And now… we build the Mishkan, the Tabernacle.

    But why?

    God says:

    “Build Me a sanctuary so that I may dwell among you.”

    Not in it — but among you.

    God does not need a house.
    We need a way to live with God.


    The Progression: From Freedom → Law → Responsibility → Holiness

    The Torah is teaching a political and spiritual philosophy:

    • Miracles do not create holiness
    • Inspiration does not create holiness
    • Even revelation at Sinai does not create holiness

    Behavior creates holiness

    A holy society is built — literally — by human beings acting properly toward each other.

    The Mishkan is therefore not a building for God.
    It is a training system for human character.


    The Test of Holiness: Money

    Terumah begins with voluntary donations.

    Not taxes.
    Not forced charity.

    Voluntary giving.

    Because the real test of spirituality is how a person relates to property.

    People often quote:

    “Money is the root of all evil.”

    That is incorrect.

    The real idea is:

    The love of money is the root of evil.

    And Judaism goes even further:

    You cannot do a mitzvah through a sin.

    • Charity from stolen money → invalid
    • Offering a sacrifice you don’t own → invalid
    • “Holy crimes” → invalid

    The Torah rejects the Robin Hood principle.

    Good intentions never justify wrongdoing.

    That is also the meaning of:

    Not taking God’s name in vain

    It does not mean merely swearing.

    It means committing wrongdoing and claiming God wants it.

    The Torah rejects the attitude:

    “I’m doing this for a holy cause.”

    (Great comedy example: “We’re on a mission from God” — and committing crimes.)

    Holiness demands integrity, not justification.


    A Society Built on the Image of God

    Why build the Mishkan?

    To train us to see God in people.

    The great sages taught:
    When a human being enters the room — the image of God has entered.

    That is the goal.

    Not ritual alone.
    Not miracles alone.
    Not inspiration alone.

    But a society where every human being is treated as carrying divine dignity.


    A Historical Reflection

    Before the American Civil War, many abolitionists were deeply religious people.
    They believed that if every person is created in God’s image — slavery cannot exist.

    That same principle lies behind the Mishkan.

    You cannot build a dwelling place for God
    while denying the divine image in man.


    The Message of Terumah

    God does not live in buildings.

    God lives in societies built on justice, honesty, and dignity.

    The Mishkan was never about creating a place for God.

    It was about creating a people capable of living with Him.


    Something to think about:
    Holiness is not what happens in sacred spaces.
    Holiness is what happens between people — and the Mishkan trains us to live that way.