Before building the Tabernacle, God asks that the Jews donate what they can. The amazing thing is that they were so generous with their donations that Moses had to tell them stop.
Parashat Terumah: Belonging Means Giving
We’ve now moved through three stages of formation of the Jewish people.
First came Sinai — the Ten Commandments: our relationship with God.
Then came Mishpatim — the civil laws: how to build a just society.
Now in Terumah, we begin building the Mishkan — the Tabernacle — the place of Divine presence.
And the very first command?
Not prayer.
Not sacrifices.
Not ritual.
Donation.
“Take for Me a contribution — from every person whose heart moves him.”
No taxes. No assessments. Completely voluntary.
And what happens?
The Torah tells us the people give so much that Moshe has to announce:
“Stop donating — we have more than enough.”
Possibly the only fundraising campaign in Jewish history that succeeded too well.
Why begin holiness with money?
Because the Mishkan is not just a holy building — it is a shared responsibility.
God is teaching something fundamental:
You cannot just attend a community.
You cannot just benefit from a community.
You must invest in a community.
Holiness requires participation.
We actually saw this in modern times as well.
During Operation Solomon in 1991, when Ethiopian Jews were airlifted to Israel with almost nothing, the public was asked to donate clothing and supplies.
Within one day they had to announce:
Stop — there is already more than enough.
When people feel ownership, generosity appears.
A profound halachic idea
Even someone supported entirely by charity must still give charity.
Why?
Because dignity comes from contribution.
A Jew is not just a recipient — a Jew is a participant.
The message of the Mishkan
God says: Build Me a sanctuary so I can dwell among you —
not in it, but among you.
The Divine Presence rests in a community where people give of themselves — materially, emotionally, and spiritually.
So the Torah begins the holiest structure ever built with a simple lesson:
Membership is not declared by words.
Membership is proven by contribution.
If you want to belong — build.
Something to think about.


