Teruma teaches us to prepare to build the Tabernacle for a better life. The month of Adar teaches us to be happy and that we are not victims no matter what comes our way.
The Connection of Parshat Terumah and Adar
1) Terumah — God when He is visible
In Parashat Terumah the Jewish people are secure.
They just left Egypt. They saw the sea split. Revelation happened publicly.
So God says:
“V’asu li Mikdash v’shachanti b’tocham — Make Me a sanctuary and I will dwell among them.”
Notice — not in it, but among them.
The Mishkan is not for God.
It is a training device for awareness.
And that explains why the donations must be voluntary:
“From every person whose heart moves him…”
Because the Mishkan only works if people feel God’s presence willingly.
When God is obvious, service comes naturally.
This is Judaism in its ideal state:
clarity → gratitude → generosity → closeness.
2) Purim — God when He is hidden
Now jump to Adar.
No prophecy.
No miracles.
No Temple.
No army.
No sovereignty.
And most importantly:
God’s name never appears in the Megillah.
That is not accidental — it’s the entire message.
Ahasuerus doesn’t save the Jews because of justice
He doesn’t save them because of morality
He doesn’t save them because of covenant
He saves them because he loves Esther.
History looks random.
Politics looks petty.
Everything looks human.
Exactly like the story you told about Rabbi Moshe Seel —
the entire fate of a Jewish life hanging on a friendship between two women and a tired secret-police officer’s marriage.
That is Purim reality.
3) The Deep Connection
Terumah teaches:
God lives among us when we see Him.
Purim teaches:
God lives among us when we don’t see Him.
The Mishkan = revealed providence
Purim = concealed providence
In the desert:
Clouds, fire, miracles
In exile:
Coincidences, relationships, politics, personalities
But the Torah is telling us:
Both are the same divine presence.
4) Why Adar Begins with Donations
Now the calendar suddenly makes sense.
Before Purim we read about giving (Terumah and Shekalim).
Because the Jewish mistake in exile is passivity.
When God is hidden, people become victims:
“History happens to us.”
Purim comes to destroy that idea.
Mordechai doesn’t say pray only
He says act
Esther risks her life
The Jews organize
They fast together
They strategize
God saves them — but only after they behave like partners in history.
So we read Terumah now to remind us:
Even when God is hidden, we still build His dwelling place — through what we do.
5) The Real Meaning of “Mishenichnas Adar Marbim B’simcha”
Joy in Adar is not optimism.
It is confidence in hidden meaning.
A Jew in Adar says:
I may not see miracles
I may not control politics
But history is not random
And therefore I am never a victim
That’s exactly your point.
Egypt = slavery of the body
Exile = slavery of the mind
Purim frees the Jewish psyche.
A One-Sentence Connection
Terumah teaches how Jews live with God in the Land.
Purim teaches how Jews survive with God in exile.
And the same God is present in both —
once openly in a sanctuary,
and once secretly in events.
That’s why they always arrive together.


