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The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
Introduction to Parashat Hashavua Yeshivat Har Etzion
Yom Iyun in NY with Har Etzion Faculty - Sunday March
11th Har Etzion
Dinner - Tuesday March 13th For more info: contact etzion@att.net or call 1212-732-4874
PARASHAT KI TISA
The Half-Shekel of Silver
By Rav Michael Hattin
INTRODUCTION
Parashat Ki Tisa begins with preparations for the construction of the
Mishkan continuing apace. First,
the Torah introduces the half-shekel of silver that is to be collected from
every adult male over the age of twenty, with the precious metal to be utilized
for the building effort about to commence.
Next, the bronze laver is described, a large container of water with
multiple spigots, to be placed upon a stationary base of bronze and located
between the building proper and the bronze altar that is situated in the
courtyard. Every ministering
Kohen must wash his hands and his feet from it before entering the Mishkan or
performing the sacrificial service.
Afterwards, the Torah spells out the detailed and exacting provisions of
the anointing oil and the incense, with both of them incorporating a long list
of prized spices. The former is to
be used to inaugurate the new vessels as well as the Kohanim at the dedication
ceremony of the Mishkan while the latter is to be offered twice daily, upon the
small golden altar that is situated just opposite the dividing curtain that
guards the Holy of Holies. Finally,
the Torah introduces by name the chief artisans selected to execute the actual
construction of the Mishkan vessels and building elements, and then the section
concludes with a solemn reference to the Shabbat, for the sanctity of that
awesome day is not to be compromised even by the holy task of building God's
house.
THE
HALF-SHEKEL OF SILVER
This week, we will consider the opening of the Parasha, namely the mitzva
of the half-shekel and its treatment by the commentaries. We begin by quoting the relevant passage
in its entirety:
God
spoke to Moshe saying: When you count the people according to their numbers then
each man shall give atonement for his soul to God when you count them, so that
there shall not be any plague among them when you count them. This is what each one who is counted
shall give: a half-shekel weighed by the standard of the holy shekel, twenty
gerahs is one shekel and they shall give a half-shekel as an offering to
God. Each one who is counted from
above the age of twenty shall present this offering of God. The wealthy shall not exceed nor shall
the poor fall short of a half-shekel, to give the offering of God in order to
atone for their souls. You shall
take the atonement money from the people of Israel and you shall assign it to
the work of the Tent of Meeting, and it shall serve the people of Israel as a
memorial before God to atone for their souls (Shemot 30:11-16).
Before
considering the specific provisions of the mitzva, we note that the above text
contains a number of emphatic repetitions.
The half-shekel amount is recorded no less than three times, as is the
mention of the people of Israel, "an offering to God" and the reference to
"atonement for the soul."
Additionally, the passage is appropriately concluded by a further
reference to "atonement money," thus underlying the importance of the
theme. The most oft-repeated phrase
in the passage, however, relates to the act of counting and being counted, from
the Hebrew root P-K-D that in other contexts often has the sense of "being
remembered or brought to mind."
Recall, for instance, that Yosef at the time of his demise had extracted
an oath from the children of Israel that when God would "surely remember them"
("PaKoD yiFKoD") to bring them forth out of Egypt, they would take his bones
with them (Bereishit 50:25).
AN IMPLIED
CENSUS OF THE PEOPLE OF ISRAEL
The provision of the half-shekel, like all of the other items enumerated
in the opening paragraphs of the Parasha, had special relevance for the task at
hand, namely the construction of the Mishkan about to commence. Though Parashat Teruma was silent
concerning the connection, it emerges from the later discussion in Parashat
Pekudei that the collected silver was ultimately used for the fashioning of the
sockets serving as the bases for the thick planks of acacia wood constituting
the building's walls. The silver
sockets themselves had been earlier described in Parashat Teruma as square
extrusions that were placed side by side to receive the square double pegs that
constituted the base of the boards (Shemot 26:15-25), but it is not until
Parashat Pekudei that the Torah informs us about the source of the material used
in their construction:
The
silver from the counting of the congregation totaled 100 talents, and an
additional 1,775 shekels, weighed according to the standard of the holy
shekel. One half per head, a
half-shekel weighed in accordance with the standard of the holy shekel, for all
those that were counted from the age of twenty and above, namely the 603,550
men. These 100 talents were used to
forge the sockets of the holy space as well as the sockets of the dividing
curtain's pillars, 100 sockets for the 100 talents which is one talent per
socket. As for the remaining 1775
shekels, he used it to fashion hooks for the (courtyard) pillars as well as to
plate their capitals and to form their decorative rings (Shemot 38:25-28).
The
straightforward calculation is as follows: Rashi (11th century,
France) informs us that a talent of silver equals 3000 shekels, so that 100
talents contain 300,000 shekels (commentary to 38:24). This is of course equivalent to 600,000
half-shekels, roughly the same as the number of adult male Israelites above the
age of twenty, according to the census preserved in Bemidbar 1:1-37. The additional 3,550 men (above the
600,000) enumerated in that census each contributed a half-shekel, so that 1,775
whole shekels were ultimately collected from them (3,550 /2 = 1,775). While the census of Bemidbar Chapter 1
took place a short time AFTER the completion of the Mishkan, we must assume
according to this calculation that the number of Israelite males above the age
of twenty that were counted in our census was the same.
THE RAMBAN'S
COMPARISON WITH ANOTHER CENSUS OF THE PEOPLE
It is the Ramban (13th century, Spain) who pays special
attention to our context and carefully compares it to the census recorded at the
outset of Parashat Bemidbar:
God
commanded Moshe that when he would count the people of Israel according to
number that each one should provide a half-shekel as atonement for their
souls. He further instructed him to
"take the atonement money from the people of Israel and to assign it to the work
of the Tent of Meeting" (30:16), so that Moshe understood that he was to count
them now. So he did, as it states
later on that "the silver from the counting of the congregation totaled 100
talents…" (38:25). It was
unnecessary to expound at length and to say "Now count them and assign the
proceeds to the fashioning of the Mishkan" because the matter was self-evident
that Moshe was to count them now.
Therefore the mitzva is presented in general terms: "When you count the
people according to their numbers then each man shall give atonement for his
soul to God when you count them…" (30:11), for this formulation includes the
provision for every time that they are counted.
It seems to
me that Moshe was not required to enter their tents and to count them
individually as he did in the Book of Bemidbar, but rather only to do as our
Rabbis have remarked concerning the yearly sacrificial contributions. That is, he commanded them that
whosoever knew concerning himself that he was above the age of twenty should
contribute this amount, and the people brought the half-shekels along with their
daily contributions of the other precious materials…and therefore Aharon and the
tribal elders were not needed to assist him with this census…The text is
ambiguous as to whether this constitutes an eternal statute or rather only
applied to Moshe while the people of Israel were in the wilderness…(commentary
to 30:12).
The Ramban informs us of two possible but mutually exclusive readings
that are not immediately obvious from our Parasha. According to the first approach, by
virtue of the fact that Parashat Pekudei associates the 100 talents of silver
used to fashion the sockets with the number of adult Israelite males indicates
that there MUST have been a census undertaken on the eve of the Mishkan's
construction, though the Torah is entirely silent concerning the details. If our Parasha opens with a provision to
collect one half-shekel of silver from each Israelite male above the age of
twenty and we later learn that the silver was used for the formation of the
sockets, it therefore follows that the people were in fact counted at this
time. But why was the Torah silent
about this census, preferring to leave the matter as an implication? Because, avers the Ramban, the Parasha
means to inform us that ANYTIME a census is undertaken, it must be accomplished
through the collection of the half-shekels rather than through a direct count of
the people. According to this
reading, the provision to count the people of Israel through the instrument of
the half-shekel is AN ETERNAL STATUTE THAT APPLIES FOR ALL TIME. Though in our context, there was an
immediate need for the silver in order to fashion the Mishkan, the mitzva of
collecting the half-shekel from adult male Israelites is forever. There is therefore no fundamental
difference between the implied census undertaken in our Parasha and the census
of Parashat Bemidbar. We must
therefore assume that our Parasha neglects to mention the details of the census
because these are superfluous. It
was clearly understood by Moshe that a census was called for, and that is what
he did.
In his alternative reading, the Ramban suggests that our census and that
of Parashat Bemidbar are in fact markedly dissimilar. While that of Parashat Bemidbar mentions
Aharon and the tribal elders as assisting Moshe, and carefully enumerates each
tribe by name and by population, our census fails to mention any of this. The reason for the omission is
straightforward enough: the census of Parashat Ki Tisa was unlike that of
Parashat Bemidbar. Our census did
not involve an individual counting of the people that was undertaken by a
dedicated body of elders. Rather,
each adult male was asked to contribute a half-shekel of silver towards the
construction of the Mishkan, and this was duly brought ALONG WITH ALL OF THE
OTHER PRECIOUS MATERIALS THAT WERE COLLECTED FROM THE PEOPLE. But whereas the other materials – gold,
bronze, sky blue, purple, scarlet, precious stones, etc. – were contributed as
freewill offerings by whosoever wanted to participate, the half-shekels of
silver were a required contribution of the adult males. Significantly, according to this
reading, the provision to contribute a half-shekel of silver, cohesively linked
as it was to the immediate needs of the construction of the Mishkan, MAY NOT
HAVE BEEN AN ETERNAL STATUTE AT ALL, so that a later census of the people of
Israel undertaken after the wilderness wanderings were completed may not have
required the half-shekel instrument.
To be fair, the Ramban concludes that in fact the half-shekel
contribution was needed for every census of the people and that the opening of
our Parasha therefore constitutes an eternal mitzva that applies for all time,
but this does not negate his fundamental proposition that our census was
different than that of Parashat Bemidbar.
ETERNAL
ASPECTS OF THE MISHKAN PARADIGM
Of course, in light of the Ramban's conclusion, the question must be
asked: it is readily apparent that the silver collected in our Parasha had an
immediate use, namely to fashion the sockets for the boards. But what of the silver collected in the
other censes? For what purposes
would it have been used? According
to Rabbinic tradition (see Mishna Shekalim 4:1-3), this silver would have two
distinct but nevertheless intertwined applications: firstly, the half-shekel
contributions would be utilized for the purchase of communal sacrifices, that is
those sacrifices offered on behalf of the entire people of Israel. Secondly, the funds would be disbursed
for any expenses associated with the maintenance of the Mishkan/Temple physical
plant.
These two applications are of course decidedly national in nature, as
they pertain especially to the communal services and to the upkeep of the
Mishkan/Temple complex. As such,
they are perfect analogs to the silver sockets of the Mishkan's
construction. Recall that these
sockets constituted the very foundation of the Mishkan, and the fact that the
silver for their construction was contributed by all of the adult Israelite
males broadcast a very powerful message: the House of God was built by all of
His people and no one could claim that he had contributed more. For this reason, all adult males – rich
or poor - contributed the exact same amount, an amount that by its very
denomination made it abundantly clear that this was a national undertaking. Standing alone, the individual Israelite
could only provide a half-shekel, a profound commentary on the need for communal
and national involvement in order to achieve self-actualization. Only by coming together with others,
could the half-shekels become whole and complete.
In a similar vein, the ancient Rabbis correctly intuited that any future
census that was predicated on the collection of the half-shekel contributions
had to also address national goals and aspirations. That is to say that the collected funds
could not be used for any sort of individual needs of the Kohanim or others,
vital as those may have been. The
communal sacrifices and the physical preservation of the Temple, however, were
the concerns of all Israelites as a people, and the funds could therefore be
justifiably directed towards those decidedly national and noble needs.
In essence, then, we may summarize by saying that all of the features of
the mitzva point us to a perfect paradigm for peoplehood. The half-shekels become whole when
brought together, the collected funds maintain the national service and the
national shrine, and the impetus for the entire endeavor is a count that
includes the entire adult male population of the people of Israel. As Pesach approaches and we recall the
half-shekel tax that was paid at this time of year (see Mishna Shekalim 1:1),
let us hope and pray that this season brings us the national restoration that we
so sorely need.
Shabbat
Shalom |