Difference between revisions of "Purpose of the Mishkan/2/he"
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<p>המשכן מיסד את המשך ההתגלות הא-לוהית שהחלה בהר סיני ואיכסן את לוחות הברית שניתנו במעמד.<fn>R"Y Bekhor Shor is the commentator who most explicitly merges these two motifs. It is theoretically possible to split between them, however the Sinai connection serves as the link between them.</fn></p> | <p>המשכן מיסד את המשך ההתגלות הא-לוהית שהחלה בהר סיני ואיכסן את לוחות הברית שניתנו במעמד.<fn>R"Y Bekhor Shor is the commentator who most explicitly merges these two motifs. It is theoretically possible to split between them, however the Sinai connection serves as the link between them.</fn></p> | ||
<mekorot> | <mekorot> | ||
− | <multilink><a href="RYBSShemot25-2" data-aht="source"> | + | <multilink><a href="RYBSShemot25-2" data-aht="source">ר' יוסף בכור שור</a><a href="RYBSShemot25-2" data-aht="source">Shemot 25:2</a><a href="RYBSShemot25-6" data-aht="source">Shemot 25:6</a><a href="RYBSShemot25-18" data-aht="source">Shemot 25:18</a><a href="RYBSShemot30-1" data-aht="source">Shemot 30:1</a><a href="RYBSShemot36-8" data-aht="source">Shemot 36:8</a><a href="RYBSShemot38-21" data-aht="source">Shemot 38:21</a><a href="RYBSVayikra2-13" data-aht="source">Vayikra 2:13</a><a href="R. Yosef Bekhor Shor" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yosef Bekhor Shor</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="RambanShemot25-2" data-aht="source">רמב"ן</a><a href="RambanShemotIntroduction" data-aht="source">Introduction to Shemot</a><a href="RambanShemot25-2" data-aht="source">Shemot 25:2</a><a href="RambanShemot29-46" data-aht="source">Shemot 29:46</a><a href="RambanShemot40-34" data-aht="source">Shemot 40:34</a><a href="RambanVayikraIntroduction" data-aht="source">Introduction to Vayikra</a><a href="RambanBemidbarIntroduction" data-aht="source">Introduction to Bemidbar</a><a href="RambanToratHashem" data-aht="source">Derashat Torat Hashem Temimah (p. 163)</a><a href="R. Moshe b. Nachman (Ramban, Nachmanides)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Moshe Nachmanides</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="CassutoShemot25" data-aht="source">משה דוד קאסוטו</a><a href="CassutoShemot25" data-aht="source">Introduction to Shemot 25</a><a href="Prof. Umberto Cassuto" data-aht="parshan">About Prof. U. Cassuto</a></multilink> |
</mekorot> | </mekorot> | ||
<point><b>"וְשָׁכַנְתִּי בְּתוֹכָם"</b> – שלושת פרשנים אלו מסכימים שפירושו המילולי של פסוק זה מספר את הסיבה העיקרית לציווי בניית המשכן.<fn>See also <multilink><a href="PesiktaDRK2-10" data-aht="source">Pesikta DeRav Kahana</a><a href="PesiktaDRK2-10" data-aht="source">Ki Tisa 2:10</a><a href="Pesikta DeRav Kahana" data-aht="parshan">About Pesikta DeRav Kahana</a></multilink> and <multilink><a href="TanchumaNaso11" data-aht="source">Tanchuma</a><a href="TanchumaNaso11" data-aht="source">Naso 11</a><a href="TanchumaNaso22" data-aht="source">Naso 22</a><a href="Tanchuma" data-aht="parshan">About the Tanchuma</a></multilink>.</fn> אך הם חולקים בשאלה אם היתה נוכחות פיזית של ה' במשכן: | <point><b>"וְשָׁכַנְתִּי בְּתוֹכָם"</b> – שלושת פרשנים אלו מסכימים שפירושו המילולי של פסוק זה מספר את הסיבה העיקרית לציווי בניית המשכן.<fn>See also <multilink><a href="PesiktaDRK2-10" data-aht="source">Pesikta DeRav Kahana</a><a href="PesiktaDRK2-10" data-aht="source">Ki Tisa 2:10</a><a href="Pesikta DeRav Kahana" data-aht="parshan">About Pesikta DeRav Kahana</a></multilink> and <multilink><a href="TanchumaNaso11" data-aht="source">Tanchuma</a><a href="TanchumaNaso11" data-aht="source">Naso 11</a><a href="TanchumaNaso22" data-aht="source">Naso 22</a><a href="Tanchuma" data-aht="parshan">About the Tanchuma</a></multilink>.</fn> אך הם חולקים בשאלה אם היתה נוכחות פיזית של ה' במשכן: | ||
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</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
<point><b>למה עכשיו?</b> לרבי יוסף בכור שור ורמב"ן, הגיוני שהציווי לבניית המשכן מגיע רק בנקודה זו, מכיוון שזה המשך של ההתגלות בהר סיני<fn>It is possible that according to them, Hashem's presence continued to reside on Mt. Sinai until the Mishkan was built – see <multilink><a href="IbnEzraShemotLong19-13" data-aht="source">Ibn Ezra</a><a href="IbnEzraShemotLong19-13" data-aht="source">Shemot Long Commentary 19:13</a><a href="R. Avraham ibn Ezra" data-aht="parshan">About Ibn Ezra</a></multilink>.</fn> וצריך לאחסן את הלוחות שמשה מוריד מההר. באופן דומה, לדעת קאסוטו, בניית המשכן תוזמנה להסתיים לפני עזיבת העם את הר סיני.<fn>According to Cassuto, while the nation was encamped at Sinai, the mountain itself symbolized Hashem's previous revelation (even if His presence was no longer there); the Mishkan became necessary only once they left Mt. Sinai.</fn></point> | <point><b>למה עכשיו?</b> לרבי יוסף בכור שור ורמב"ן, הגיוני שהציווי לבניית המשכן מגיע רק בנקודה זו, מכיוון שזה המשך של ההתגלות בהר סיני<fn>It is possible that according to them, Hashem's presence continued to reside on Mt. Sinai until the Mishkan was built – see <multilink><a href="IbnEzraShemotLong19-13" data-aht="source">Ibn Ezra</a><a href="IbnEzraShemotLong19-13" data-aht="source">Shemot Long Commentary 19:13</a><a href="R. Avraham ibn Ezra" data-aht="parshan">About Ibn Ezra</a></multilink>.</fn> וצריך לאחסן את הלוחות שמשה מוריד מההר. באופן דומה, לדעת קאסוטו, בניית המשכן תוזמנה להסתיים לפני עזיבת העם את הר סיני.<fn>According to Cassuto, while the nation was encamped at Sinai, the mountain itself symbolized Hashem's previous revelation (even if His presence was no longer there); the Mishkan became necessary only once they left Mt. Sinai.</fn></point> | ||
− | <point><b>רצף כרונולוגי</b> – לפי רמב"ן וקאסוטו, הציווי | + | <point><b>רצף כרונולוגי</b> – לפי רמב"ן וקאסוטו, הציווי לבניית את המשכן נכתב על הסדר הכרונולוגי, לפני חטא העגל ואחרי קבלת התורה בהר סיני.<fn>Ramban here is consistent with his general disinclination to suggest that Biblical narratives are out of order, unless this is explicitly indicated by the text. See <a href="R. Moshe b. Nachman (Ramban, Nachmanides)" data-aht="parshan">About Ramban</a> for elaboration.</fn> לעומתם ר"י בכור שור  R"Y Bekhor Shor, though, maintains that the instructions were given only after the sin of the Golden Calf.<fn>R"Y Bekhor Shor might explain that since Hashem knew that the first set of Tablets would be broken, he waited to command Moshe about the Mishkan until Moshe's third set of forty days on Sinai when he received the second set of Tablets.</fn></point> |
<point><b>Relationship of the Mishkan to the sin of the Golden Calf</b> – According to this approach the command to build the Mishkan is independent of the sin.</point> | <point><b>Relationship of the Mishkan to the sin of the Golden Calf</b> – According to this approach the command to build the Mishkan is independent of the sin.</point> | ||
<point><b>Ancient Near Eastern parallels</b> – In the Ancient Near East, copies of treaties were often stored in the temples of the gods of the two parties,<fn>See Cassuto Shemot 25:16 who mentions this practice with regard to a treaty between Ramses of Egypt and a Hittite king. See, also, N. Sarna, Exploring Exodus (New York, 1996): 137-138, who points to a Hittite treaty in which the king writes, "A duplicate of this treaty has been deposited before the sun-goddess of Arnina... In the Mitanni land [a duplicate] has been deposited before Tessub, the lord of the kurrinu [sanctuary or shrine] of Kahat".</fn> both for their safekeeping and to instill fear of retribution from the divine witnesses for any transgressions.  As the Tablets of the Law served as testimony to the covenant (or treaty) between the nation and Hashem, it is not surprising that they were similarly stored in the joint "Temple" of Hashem and the nation, the Mishkan.<fn> This practice can also explain the opinion of the Sages in Mekhilta Yitro BaChodesh 8 that each of the two tablets contained all ten utterances. If treaties were usually written in duplicate, one copy for each party, it is logical that the tablets, too, were identical, one being a copy for Hashem and one for the Nation of Israel, each stored in the ark within Hashem's Mishkan.<p>Cassuto suggests that the ark itself was also seen as more than a storage chest. In the Ancient Near East, treaties were deposited "at the feet" of the deity and it is possible that the Israelites imaginatively viewed the ark as Hashem's "footstool". Thus, King David in Divrei HaYamim I 28:2 says: "אֲנִי עִם לְבָבִי לִבְנוֹת בֵּית מְנוּחָה לַאֲרוֹן בְּרִית ה' וְלַהֲדֹם רַגְלֵי אֱלֹהֵינוּ", and Tehillim 132:7-8 also relates the two: "נָבוֹאָה לְמִשְׁכְּנוֹתָיו נִשְׁתַּחֲוֶה לַהֲדֹם רַגְלָיו. קוּמָה ה' לִמְנוּחָתֶךָ אַתָּה וַאֲרוֹן עֻזֶּךָ".</p></fn></point> | <point><b>Ancient Near Eastern parallels</b> – In the Ancient Near East, copies of treaties were often stored in the temples of the gods of the two parties,<fn>See Cassuto Shemot 25:16 who mentions this practice with regard to a treaty between Ramses of Egypt and a Hittite king. See, also, N. Sarna, Exploring Exodus (New York, 1996): 137-138, who points to a Hittite treaty in which the king writes, "A duplicate of this treaty has been deposited before the sun-goddess of Arnina... In the Mitanni land [a duplicate] has been deposited before Tessub, the lord of the kurrinu [sanctuary or shrine] of Kahat".</fn> both for their safekeeping and to instill fear of retribution from the divine witnesses for any transgressions.  As the Tablets of the Law served as testimony to the covenant (or treaty) between the nation and Hashem, it is not surprising that they were similarly stored in the joint "Temple" of Hashem and the nation, the Mishkan.<fn> This practice can also explain the opinion of the Sages in Mekhilta Yitro BaChodesh 8 that each of the two tablets contained all ten utterances. If treaties were usually written in duplicate, one copy for each party, it is logical that the tablets, too, were identical, one being a copy for Hashem and one for the Nation of Israel, each stored in the ark within Hashem's Mishkan.<p>Cassuto suggests that the ark itself was also seen as more than a storage chest. In the Ancient Near East, treaties were deposited "at the feet" of the deity and it is possible that the Israelites imaginatively viewed the ark as Hashem's "footstool". Thus, King David in Divrei HaYamim I 28:2 says: "אֲנִי עִם לְבָבִי לִבְנוֹת בֵּית מְנוּחָה לַאֲרוֹן בְּרִית ה' וְלַהֲדֹם רַגְלֵי אֱלֹהֵינוּ", and Tehillim 132:7-8 also relates the two: "נָבוֹאָה לְמִשְׁכְּנוֹתָיו נִשְׁתַּחֲוֶה לַהֲדֹם רַגְלָיו. קוּמָה ה' לִמְנוּחָתֶךָ אַתָּה וַאֲרוֹן עֻזֶּךָ".</p></fn></point> |
Version as of 03:54, 23 May 2019
מטרת המשכן
גישות פרשניות
המשכן כאידיאל
בניית המשכן סיפקה מגוון הזדמנויות לבני ישראל והיטיבה איתם.
הרחבה של הר סיני
המשכן מיסד את המשך ההתגלות הא-לוהית שהחלה בהר סיני ואיכסן את לוחות הברית שניתנו במעמד.1
- ר"י בכור שור מסביר שברמה הבסיסית ביותר שלו, המשכן נועד להחזיק את ארון הברית, ששימש ככספת ללוחות. בהתבסס על הקשר בין המשכן והארון לבין הלוחות, רמב"ן מפתח את הרעיון שהמשכן הוא בעצם המשך של הר סיני,6 ובכך מבין את המשכן כמיסוד של נוכחות השכינה המתמשכת.7 לדעת שניהם, בעוד לקב"ה אין צורך אישי במבנה, המשכן הכרחי למען המשך נוכחותו בקרב העם.
- לעומתם, קאסוטו מבין שלמרות שה' יכול לנכוח בקרב העם ללא בניין גשמי, העם היה צריך לראות מבנה ממשי כדי להבטיח להם שהשכינה עדיין שורה בקרבם.8
Honoring Hashem
The Mishkan provided an opportunity for the Children of Israel to express their gratitude to and respect for Hashem. Thus, all of the nation's initial collective and creative labors are dedicated to Hashem in the form of the Tabernacle.
National Center
The Mishkan ensured the unity of the nation by providing a centralized location for all to gather in their worship of Hashem.
An Antidote
The construction of the Mishkan was intended not as an ideal or an end unto itself, but rather as a means of remedying a problematic situation.
Means of Atonement
The Tabernacle was built to atone for the sin of the Golden Calf.38
- Achronological order – The Sifre would likely maintain that although the directive to build the Tabernacle appears before the sin of the Golden Calf, it was actually commanded only afterwards, and in response to the sin. This is explicit in the Tanchuma.
- Chronological order – While Lekach Tov and R. Bachya agree that the building of the Mishkan atoned for the sin of the Golden Calf, they nonetheless assert that the command preceded the sin, as God "provided a cure before the illness" ("הקדים רפואה למכה").
Sign of Forgiveness
The manifestation of the Divine presence in the Mishkan was intended to testify ("מִשְׁכַּן הָעֵדֻת") that Hashem had indeed forgiven the Children of Israel for their sin of the Golden Calf.
- The nations of the world – The Tanchuma emphasizes that the intent of the Mishkan was to prove to all of the other nations ("כדי שידעו כל האומות", "עדות לכל באי העולם") that Hashem had forgiven the Children of Israel for the sin of the Golden Calf.
- The Children of Israel themselves – Rashi modifies the approach of the Tanchuma52 and asserts that the proof was needed for internal consumption ("עדות לישראל"), as the Israelites themselves were concerned that Hashem had not completely forgiven them.
Concession to Human Foibles
The Mishkan was not the preferred forum for worship, but simply a necessity given the people's tendencies towards idolatrous practices.
- R. Yehuda HaLevi emphasizes the nation's need for a tangible object to which they could direct their service to Hashem. As the people were used to others worshiping idols, they, too, looked for some concrete representation of God's presence.
- Rambam, instead, focuses on the people's need for a sacrificial service. As neighboring religions worshiped their gods through the bringing of sacrifices and incense, the Israelites wanted to serve Hashem in the same manner. Rambam emphasizes that God's allowance of this service was a means of weaning the people away from true idolatry.58
- Rambam appears to view the Tabernacle and sacrificial service as being a necessary antidote to idolatrous tendencies in general, regardless of the specific sin of the Golden Calf. As such, he might maintain that the command is found in its proper chronological place and was given before the sin.61
- According to R"Y HaLevi, regardless of the sin, Hashem had planned on giving the people the Tablets and ark to serve as tangible objects through which to focus their worship of Hashem. It is likely then, that the Mishkan was commanded at the same time and with the same purpose. It served to house these objects and thereby represent Hashem's presence within the nation. Alternatively, though, it is possible that originally Hashem thought that the ark alone would suffice to house the Tablets, without a surrounding Tabernacle. However the sin of the Calf confirmed that the people not only needed a physical symbol of Hashem's presence, but also that there was danger in such symbols, for the people might come to worship the symbols in place of Hashem. Thus, after the sin, Hashem added a Tabernacle to the plan, recognizing that the ark needed to be housed in such a way that the people did not come to mistake it for a god.62
- According to R"Y HaLevi, the Tabernacle is directly connected to the receiving of the Tablets (and perhaps also to the Sin of the Calf) and is thus commanded to be built now, right as they are given (or the people sin).
- Rambam could suggest that Hashem gave the command regarding the Tabernacle while still in the Wilderness because He needed to provide an alternative to the idolatrous Canaanite worship before arrival in Israel.63 Had there not been an alternative mode of worship set in place before arrival, there would have been a danger that the nation would come under corrosive influences and abandon monotheistic worship altogether.
Multiple or Evolving Objectives
The Mishkan had multiple purposes or reflected the revision of an originally preferred Divine plan as a result of human failings.
Multiple Purposes
The Mishkan had several objectives, serving as a vehicle through which the nation could honor and show their appreciation to God, as a site which facilitated expiation of sins, and as God's dwelling place.64
- R. Saadia Gaon vehemently opposes the idea that Hashem is confined in, or has need of, a physical structure, and asserts that God does not reside in the Mishkan at all.70 He, presumably, understands that in this verse God is saying that He will dwell amongst the people as a whole.
- Tanchuma, in contrast, reads this to literally refer to Hashem's dwelling in the Mishkan. Out of His love for the nation, Hashem left His abode on high and moved to a parallel one on earth.
- Palace for a king – Midrash Aggadah and R. Saadia Gaon suggest that the nation only knew how to relate to Hashem via human models of relationship. Thus, they thought to honor God in the way that subjects glorify a king,71 by building him a palace complete with a candelabrum, table, and incense.72
- Parallel home – Tanchuma suggests that Hashem does dwell in a house and views the Mishkan as God's earthly abode.
- Response to Sin of Golden Calf – Tanchuma also brings the opinion that building the Mishkan was either part of the atonement process73 or testimony to Hashem's forgiveness.74
- Tangential benefits – R. Saadia points to other benefits of the building as well, including the fact that it serves as a focal point for people's prayers, as a disincentive to sin (lest it be destroyed), and as a site for people to prophesy and God to perform signs and wonders.
- Chronological – According to Midrash Aggadah and R. Saadia, the story is in its proper place. Though Midrash Aggadah asserts that certain aspects of the Tabernacle were meant to atone for the sin of the Golden Calf (or other future sins), it explains that God preempted the nation's sins with a ready-made cure.75
- Achronological – According to the opinion in Tanchuma that the construction was a response to the sin of the Golden Calf, the command is achronological.
Mishkan vs. Sacrifices
In Hashem's original plan, there was to be just the Tabernacle, a vehicle through which the nation would feel His presence amongst them. After the sin of the Golden Calf, Hashem added a sacrificial component to facilitate the atonement process.
Setting Divine Boundaries
Originally God's presence could be accessed anywhere and by anyone, but after the sin of the Golden Calf, an intermediary in the form of the Mishkan and priests was necessary