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:
- Aron — Law above personal opinion
- Menorah — Unified life under Torah values
- Shulchan — Responsible prosperity
- 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.


