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The Israel
Koschitzky Virtual Beit Midrash
Mikdash Yeshivat Har
Etzion
Shiur #05: The Functions of the Mikdash (Part
I)
The Place Where God Rests His Shekhina and the Place
Where Man Worships God
Rav Yitzchak Levi
In the next five shiurim, we shall examine the essence of the
Mikdash and its various functions.
In this shiur we shall focus on what we understand to be the two
supreme objectives of the Mikdash: 1) the place where God rests His
Shekhina; 2) the place where man serves God in His house. We shall begin by adducing proof to
this assertion, and then we will consider the many varied manifestations of this
assertion in the Mikdash as well as its ramifications.
I.
IN SCRIPTURE
1.
IN GOD'S WORDS TO SHLOMO FOLLOWING THE DEDICATION OF THE FIRST
TEMPLE
At the end of
the dedication of the first Temple, God reveals Himself to Shlomo a second time
and explains the objective of the Mikdash:
And
the Lords said to him, I have heard your prayer and your supplication, that you
have made before Me: I have hallowed this house, which you have built, to put
My name there forever; and My eyes and My heart shall be there perpetually
(I Melakhim 9:3).
And
the Lord appeared to Shlomo by night, and said to him, I have heard your prayer,
and have chosen this place to Myself for a house of sacrifice (II
Divrei Ha-yamim 7:12).
These parallel verses clearly present two essential aspects of the Temple
service: "to put My name there" and a "house of sacrifice." Interestingly, the
book of Melakhim – which was written during the first Temple period,
during most of which the
Shekhina rested in the Temple (until the ark was stored away in the days
of Yoshiyahu - see our shiurim on biblical Jerusalem, year II, shiurim
26-28) – emphasizes the putting of God's name in the place, whereas the book
of Divrei Ha-yamim, which was written by Ezra during the second Temple
period when the Shekhina did not rest in the Mikdash (Yoma
9b), emphasizes man's service – the sacrificial order. In short, each book emphasizes that
aspect of the Temple service that best suits the period during which it was
written. This difference also finds
expression in Shlomo's description of the Mikdash to Chiram:
And,
behold, I purpose to build a house to the name of the Lord my God, as the Lord
spoke to David my father, saying, Your son, whom I will set upon your throne in
your place, he shall build the house to My name (I Melakhim 5:19).
Behold, I build a house to
the name of the Lord my God, to dedicate it to Him, and to burn before Him sweet
incense, and for the continual showbread, and for the burnt offerings morning
and evening, on the Sabbaths, and on the new moons, and on the appointed seasons
of the Lord our God. This is an
ordinance forever to Israel (II Divrei Ha-yamim 2:3).
2.
KING DAVID AT THE REVELATION OF THE SITE OF THE
MIKDASH
In the wake of the census and the plague, the prophet Gad
reveals to David the site of the Mikdash in the threshing floor of Aravna
the Yevusi, and David builds there an altar, offers sacrifices, and calls out to
God. God answers his call with fire
from heaven descending upon the altar.
After this revelation, it is stated:
Then
David said, This is the house of the Lord God, and this is the altar of the
burnt offering for Israel.
(Divrei Ha-yamim 22:1)
David defines here the two aspects of the Mikdash: the house of
God, where God rests His Shekhina and reveals Himself to Israel, and the
worship of man – the altar of the burnt offering. The Mikdash is comprised, then,
of a house and an altar: a house for the Divine presence, and an altar so that
man can turn to God in the place where He reveals Himself to him.
3.
YAAKOV AT THE REVELATION AT BET-EL
David's words are very reminiscent of what Yaakov said when God revealed
Himself to him at Bet-El. In his
dream, Yaakov saw a ladder set up on the earth, the top of it reaching the
heaven, and God standing above it.
Following this exalted vision, Yaakov says:
How
dreadful is this place! This is no other than the house of God, and this is
the gate of heaven (Bereishit 28:17).
Like the ladder, which bridges between heaven and earth, Yaakov also
relates to the two essential aspects of the Mikdash:
the resting of the Shekhina – the house of God - and man's worship – the
gate of heaven, the place of prayer, where man can turn to God.
4.
AVRAHAM AT THE AKEIDA
The account of the Akeida does not explicitly mention these
two aspects, but they are nevertheless present in the substance of the story: on
the one hand, the altar and the offering of Yitzchak as a burnt offering, and on
the other hand, the Divine revelation, the angel's call from heaven, and the
naming of the place, "The Lord will appear," in the sense of Divine selection of
the place.
II. MOUNT
MORIYA – THE SITE OF THE CREATION OF THE WORLD AND THE CREATION OF
MAN
Chazal
understood that the world and man were both created at Mount Moriya. Regarding the creation of the world, we
find in the Tosefta (Yoma 2:14):
There was a rock there
from the days of the early prophets called Shetiya… At first the ark
stood upon it. When the ark was
removed, the incense burnt in the innermost sanctuary would be burnt there. Rabbi Yose says: The world was founded
upon it, as it is stated: "Out of Zion, the perfection of beauty, God has shone
forth" (Tehillim 50:2).
Rashi explains (Yoma 54b): "Zion was created first, and clods of
earth were attached around it in all directions until the far corners of the
world."
Regarding the creation of man, we find in Bereishit Rabba
(14:8):
"Of
the ground (adama)" – Rabbi Berakhya and Rabbi Chelbo said in the name of
Rabbi Shemuel bar Nachman: He was created from the place of his atonement, as
you read: "An altar of earth (adama) you shall make unto Me"
(Shemot 20:21). The Holy
One, blessed be He, said: "Behold, I will create him from the place of his
atonement, and may he endure!"
And similarly in Targum Yonatan (Bereishit 2:7, 15): "And
He took dust from the site of the Temple…
And the Lord took the man from Mount Moriya, where he had been
created."
According to Chazal's description, Mount Moriya's purpose was
evident from the very beginning of creation. On the one hand, the world was created
from the Holy of Holies, the site where God rested His Shekhina in the
world, namely, the place which marks God's connection to the formation and
maintenance of the world. It was
from the Holy of Holies, the place where God reveals His Shekhina, that
the entire world – God's "hidden" revelation - was created. On the other hand, man was created from
the place where God is worshipped, the place of the earthen altar (the altar of
burnt offerings, the outer alter), and this is what allows man to repair
himself. Material man, who is
liable to sin, was created from the very place where he can achieve
atonement.
III. THE
STRUCTURE OF THE MISKHAN AND THE MIKDASH
This division
at Mount Moriya between two essences – the place of the revelation of the
Shekhina and the place of human worship – finds expression in the
structure of the Mishkan.
The Holy of Holies, which during the first Temple period was also
called the Devir (see, for example, I Melakhim 6:5), because from
there God spoke (dibbur), was meant to express the fact that the
Mikdash served as the house of God and the place where He rests His
Shekhina. It was from there
that the Shekhina revealed itself to Moshe and spoke to him from between
the two keruvim on top of the cover on the ark (Shemot 25:22;
Bamidbar 7:89). Only once a
year, on Yom Kippur, was a service performed there by the High Priest,
who entered the chamber to perform four rites with the incense and the
blood. The significance of this
entry is that on that day, God, as it were, invites the High Priest, as the
representative of all of Israel, to enter more deeply into the place of God's
Shekhina, following a process of purification and preparation.
The vessels that are found in the Holy of Holies are not vessels used for
the Divine service; these vessels – the ark, the kaporet and the
keruvim – represent the resting of the Shekhina. The ark represents the footstool of
God's kingdom, as, for example, in the words of David: "As for me, I had it in
my heart to build a house of rest for the ark of the covenant of the Lord, and
for the footstool of our God" (I Divrei Ha-yamim 28:2). The keruvim that rest on the
kaporet represent the throne itself, the seat of the Shekhina, as
in the expression, "the ark of the Lord of hosts, who sits upon the
keruvim" (I Shemuel 4:4).
The proof to this argument is that during the second Temple period, when
the Shekhina did not rest in the Mikdash, the Holy of Holies was
absolutely empty; nothing replaced the ark, the kaporet, or the
keruvim.
In contrast to the Holy of Holies, which was the innermost chamber of the
Mikdash, the outer altar stood in the courtyard. As a rule, the line that separates
between the resting of the Shekhina and human worship runs between the
Holy (the heikhal) and the Holy of Holies (the devir).
In the heikhal, the priests performed the inner service – the service
connected to the table, the menora, and the incense altar, which
relate to the senses of taste, sight and smell, respectively. In the courtyard, on the outer altar,
they performed the outer, more "material" service – the sacrificial order.
This division also finds expression in the relationship between the
vessels in the Holy – the table, the menora, and the incense altar
– and the three articles placed in the Holy of Holies, in addition to its
vessels. The Baraita in Yoma
(51b) states that when the ark was concealed, the jar of manna and Aharon's
staff (as well as the flask of anointing oil and the chest sent by the
Pelishtim), which were also in the Holy of Holies, were also
concealed. The Torah scroll written
by Moshe was also found in the Holy of Holies, as the verse states: "Take this
book of the Torah, and put it in the side of the ark of the covenant of the Lord
your God, that it may be there for a witness against you" (Devarim
31:26). It seems that we can
find a correspondence between these articles found in the Holy of Holies, which
represent what was received from God, and the holy vessels, which represent
human action directed toward Divine revelation:
·
The table, the shulchan, symbolizes the bringing of bread on the
part of man. Corresponding to it,
we find in the Holy of Holies the jug of manna – "bread from heaven"
(Shemot 16:4), which gives expression to Divine
Providence.
·
The menora symbolizes human wisdom coming from below ("Rabbi
Yitzchak said: He who wishes to become wise should turn south, to become wealthy
should turn north. And your sign
is: the table in the north and the menora in the south" Bava Batra
25b). This corresponds to the Torah
scroll placed alongside the ark in the Holy of Holies, which symbolizes the
revelation of Divine wisdom from above.
·
The incense altar in many ways represents the uniqueness of priestly
service (see Devarim 33:8-10: "And of Levi he said… They shall teach
Yaakov Your judgments, and Israel Your Torah; they shall put incense before
You…," and the Rishonim, ad loc.).
Parallel to the incense altar, the staff of Aharon that issued blossoms
was placed in the Holy of Holies, as a sign of the Divine selection of the tribe
of Levi.
IV. THE ARK AND
THE ALTAR
The two
vessels that best express the polarity of the two focuses of the Mikdash –
the resting of the Shekhina and human worship – are the ark and the
altar. It is interesting that
separate commands were issued regarding these two vessels even before the
command was given to establish the Mishkan, and that, under certain
circumstances, both of these vessels can exist independently even after the
Mishkan was established.
1.
THE ALTAR
Following the
revelation on Mount Sinai, prior to the command regarding the establishment of
the Mishkan, the Torah issues a command regarding the construction of the
earthen altar:
An
altar of earth you shall make to Me, and you shall sacrifice on it your burnt
offerings, and your peace offerings, your sheep, and your oxen; in all places
where I cause My name to be pronounced, I will come to you, and I will bless
you. (Shemot 20:21)
This section, which stands on its own, gives the altar independent status
even after the establishment of the Mishkan, as was the case in the
period of the patriarchs and, for example, when Moshe erected an altar at the
foot of Mount Sinai. This
independent status finds expression during the period when bamot were
permitted, as is stated in the Mishna:
Until the Mishkan
was erected, bamot were permitted… When the Mishkan was
erected, bamot became forbidden… They came to Gilgal and the bamot
were permitted… [When] they came to Shilo, the bamot were forbidden…
[When] they came to Nov and to Giv'on, the bamot were [again] permitted…
[When] they came to Jerusalem, the bamot were [again] forbidden, and were
never again permitted; and it was the "inheritance" (Devarim 12:9). (Zevachim 14:4-8)
After the sanctity of
Shilo, bamot were permitted, but after the sanctification of Jerusalem,
bamot were not permitted.
(Megila 1:11)
The Rambam explains this in his Sefer Ha-mitzvot (positive
commandment 20):
It
is true that He has said with regard to the altar, "An altar of earth you shall
make unto Me" (Shemot 20:21), so that one might suppose this to be an
independent commandment, apart from the commandment to build the Temple, but the
true state of the case is as I will explain to you. The literal sense of the verse refers to
the time when bamot were permitted to us and we were allowed to make an
altar of earth in any place and to offer sacrifices on it. The Sages already declared that the
purpose of the verse was to command us to build an altar attached to the earth,
which would not be movable as it had been in the desert. This was said by them in the Mekhilta
de-Rabbi Yishmael, where the verse is thus interpreted: "When you enter the
land you are to make unto Me an altar attached to the ground." This being so,
the commandment [about the building of the altar] is one which is binding for
all time, relating to one of the parts of the Temple – that is to say, the verse
in its entirety means that the altar to be built must be of stone.
Mekhilta de-Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai learns from this command about
the primacy of the altar, a primacy that can be witnessed in many periods of our
history:
Great is the [sacrificial]
service, for Scripture opened with it [as the first commandment after the giving
of the Torah]: "An altar of earth you shall make to Me, and you shall sacrifice
on it." And similarly you find in the Tent of Meeting, where it opened with the
[sacrificial] service, as it is stated: "And the Lord called to Moshe, and spoke
to him out of the Tent of Meeting, saying, 'Speak to the children of Israel, and
say to them, If any man of you bring an offering to the Lord'" (Vayikra
1:1-2). And similarly you find
when they entered the Land, they opened with the [sacrificial] service, as it is
stated: "Then Yehoshua built an altar to the Lord God" (Yehoshua
8:30). So, too, in the future,
they will open with the [sacrificial] service, as it is stated: "I will go into
Your house with burnt offerings" (Tehillim 66:13). And similarly you find when they
returned from the exile, they opened with the [sacrificial] service, as it is
stated: "And they set the altar upon its bases" (Ezra 3:3).
As is noted by the Midrash, during the period of the return from
Babylonia the initial service was performed on the altar. This altar was used for about twenty
years without a Temple, as is stated in the Mishna:
Rabbi Yehoshua said: I
have heard that sacrifices may be offered even though there is no Temple…
because the first sanctification was valid both for its own time and for the
time thereafter. (Eduyot
8:6)
And the Gemara states in tractate Zevachim (62a):
Rabba bar bar Chana said
in the name of Rabbi Yochanan: Three prophets went up with them from the exile…
and the third testified to them that they could sacrifice even though there was
no Temple.
That is to say, the sacrificial service can be performed on an altar on
Mount Moriya even without a Temple.
In recent generations, Rav Kalischer, the Karliner Rav and many others
ruled that the altar should be rebuilt and sacrifices should be offered on it
even before the Temple is rebuilt.
Rav Moshe Adas
notes that there are several indications that the altar enjoyed independent
status even within the framework of the Mikdash:
1) It was forbidden to use iron
when building the altar, as the Torah commands: "And if you will make Me an
altar of stone, you shall not build it of hewn stone, for if you lift up your
tool upon it, you have defiled it" (Shemot 20:22). Contact with an iron implement
disqualifies a stone from being used for the altar, and stones were therefore
taken from bedrock. The rest of the
Temple's vessels must be made of metals.
2) The altar has a ramp, in
keeping with the Torah's command: "Neither shall you go up by steps to My altar,
that your nakedness be not exposed to it" (ibid. v. 23). We do not find similar concern regarding
any of the other vessels, and indeed the menora had steps which the
priest ascended (Rambam, Hilkhot Bet Ha-bechira 3:11).
3) The altar must be attached to
the ground, as the Torah states: "An altar of earth you shall make to me"
(ibid. 1:13) – in contrast to the
Temple Mount, which was built on vaults (Rambam, Hilkhot Para Aduma
2:7).
4) While in transit in the
wilderness, the altar was covered with a crimson colored cloth, whereas the
other vessels were all covered with a blue cloth (Bamidbar 4).
5) Most of the Mikdash
stood on the territory of the tribe of Binyamin, but "a strip of the portion
of Yehuda jutted out into the portion of Binyamin, upon which the altar was
built" (Yoma 12a).
Rav Adas suggests that these differences can be understood in light of
the altar's significance as the focus of man's worship of God in the Temple:
1) The
prohibition to use iron in the construction of the altar intimates that man's
turning to God must be pure even of the thought of bloodshed. In contrast, the other vessels of the
Mikdash are made of various metals, because they represent the revelation
of the Shekhina, the perfect Divine appearance in the Mikdash.
2) Turning to
God demands a very high level of abstention, especially in the realm of sexual
relations, and the altar therefore requires a ramp so that "your nakedness not
be exposed to it." When lighting the menora, on the other hand, the
priest does not turn to God, but he rather allows Divine light to appear in the
world by way of the menora.
3) Building
the Mikdash over vaults intimates that the Shekhina hovers up
above, whereas the altar must be attached to the ground because it is wholly
concerned with raising the world to God.
4) During the
journeys in the wilderness, the other vessels were covered with blue, which is
similar to the throne of glory (Menachot 43b), but the altar was covered
in crimson, which alludes to the flame of human yearning for God coming from the
blood of life (see Rav S.R. Hirsch on Shemot 25:3-8). In similar fashion, the fire on the
altar, which did not cease to burn even when the altar was in transit (according
to Rabbi Yehuda, Bamidbar Rabba 4, 17), symbolizes man's uninterrupted
yearning for intimacy with God.
5) The
Mikdash stood entirely on the territory of Binyamin, the portion of the
Shekhina, which joins together the Shekhina and the land, matter
and spirit. The spiritual power of
Yehuda was situated to its south and the material power of Yosef was located to
its north (see our shiurim on biblical Jerusalem, year 1, shiurim
16-19 – "The Territory of Binyamin – the Territory of the
Shekhina"). The altar,
however, was built in the territory of Yehuda, who knew how to confess his sins
and repent.
2.
The ark
The ark exists
independently of the Mikdash, as well. In Parashat Ekev, Moshe
states as follows:
At
that time, the Lord said to me, "Hew for yourself two tablets of stone like the
first, and come up to Me into the mountain, and make for yourself an ark of
wood. And I will write on the
tablets the words that were on the first tablets which you did break, and you
shall put them in the ark." And I made an ark of shittim wood, and hewed
two tablets of stone like the first, and went up to the mountain, having the two
tablets in my hand. And He wrote on
the tablets, according to the first writing, the Ten Commands… And the Lord gave
them to me. And I turned and came
down from the mountain, and put the tablets in the ark which I had made; and
there they were, as the Lord commanded me.
(Devarim 10:1-5)
The Rishonim (Rashi, Ibn Ezra, ad loc.) write that this command
was issued at the end of the second period of forty days that Moshe was on Mount
Sinai, and the Chizkuni identifies it with the command given in
Parashat Ki-Tisa, "Hew for yourself" (Shemot 34:1). All agree, then, that this was a command
that was given prior to the construction of the Mishkan, and according to
some of the Rishonim (Rashi, Seforno, Rabbenu Bachye), even before the
commandment to build the Mishkan.
The Rishonim disagree, however, about this ark. According to Rashi, this is not the ark
that was fashioned by Betzalel; following the construction of the
Mishkan, there were two arks serving different functions:
And
He said to me, "Hew for yourself [two tablets]," and afterwards, "Make you an
ark of wood." I, however, made the ark first, because when I came with the
tablets in my hand where could I place them? Now this was not the ark which
Betzalel made for the Mishkan, because with the Mishkan, they did
not occupy themselves until after Yom Kippur, for only when he came down
from the mountain on that day did He give them the command regarding the
construction of the Mishkan, and Betzalel made the Mishkan first
and afterwards the ark and the other articles. It follows, therefore, that this was
another ark; and it was this that went forth with them to battle, while
that which Betzalel made went forth to battle only once, in the days of Eli, and
they were punished for this, for it was captured by the Pelishtim.
The Ramban agrees that this ark was not the ark made by Betzalel, but he
understands that this ark served as a temporary ark until the Mishkan was
constructed; it was then put aside and replaced by the golden ark, with the
kaporet and keruvim:
"And
make you an ark of wood" – The meaning thereof is that you should put the
tablets into this ark when you descend [the mountain]. Now this ark, including its cover, is to
be entirely of wood… And the tablets should remain there until the
Mishkan is made. [Only]
then, they made the ark which was covered with gold and the kaporet upon
it of pure gold… And the meaning of the verse, "And there they were, as the Lord
commanded me," is that the tablets were there [in the ark] until the Mishkan was made, concerning which He commanded me,
"And you shall put the kaporet
upon the ark, and in the ark you
shall put the Testimony that I shall give you" (Shemot 25:21)… Rather, [we must say] that this ark
of Moshe was stored away upon the completion of the ark of Betzalel, as is the
law of implements of holiness [which must be stored away after having served
their purpose]. (Ramban, commentary to Devarim 10:1)
The Ramban attributes Rashi's position to a sole dissenting view among
the Tannaim, and bases the matter on a Tannaitic dispute found in
Yerushalmi Shekalim (6:1):
It
was taught: Rabbi Yehuda ben Lakish said: Two arks went with Israel in the
wilderness, one in which the Torah was placed, and one in which the broken
tablets were placed. That which
contained the Torah rested in the Tent of Meeting. This is what is written: "Nevertheless
the ark of the covenant of the Lord, and Moshe, departed not out of the camp"
(Bamidbar 14:44). That which
contained the broken tablets went out and came in with them, and sometimes it
appeared with them. The Sages say:
There was [only] one ark; once it went out in the days of Eli and was
captured.
According to Rabbi Yehuda ben Lakish, two arks traveled with Israel
through the wilderness, each of them serving a different function. One of them housed the broken tablets;
it went before Israel on their journeys (see Bamidbar 10:33-35) and it
went out with them to battle. The
second housed the second set of tablets and the Torah scroll, and it remained in
the Tent of Meeting. According to
the Sages, a single ark filled both functions.
In conclusion, it should be noted that during the time that the
Mishkan was in Nov and Giv'on, the ark was not in the Mishkan, but
rather in Kiryat Ye'arim and in the City of David.
SUMMARY
The altar of the burnt offerings and the ark are unique among the vessels
of the Mishkan. Inasmuch as
they are the outstanding representatives of the resting of God's Shekhina
and of man's worship, these vessels have independent status, even outside the
framework of the Mishkan.
The full revelation of the Mikdash, however, occurs when they are
together in one place.
V. DAVID
AND SHLOMO – THE ARK AND THE ALTAR
It is
interesting that the two kings who built the first Temple, David and Shlomo,
clearly represent these two aspects.
David represents the aspect of the resting of the Shekhina, which
finds expression in the ark, and Shlomo represents the aspect of man's worship,
which is expressed in the altar.
David's
connection to the ark is particularly striking. It is David who brings the ark to
Jerusalem after the twenty years that it rested in Kiryat Ye'arim (II Shemuel
6), and in various places he expresses his view that the Mikdash is
the resting place of the ark. For
example:
The
king said to Natan the prophet, "See now, I dwell in a house of cedar, but the
ark of God dwells within curtain." (ibid. 7:2)
As
for me, I had it in my heart to build a house of rest for the ark of the
covenant of the Lord, and for the footstool of our God… to build a house for the
sanctuary.
(I Divrei Ha-yamim 28:2, 10)
Immediately after bringing the ark up to Jerusalem, David clearly
differentiates between the site of the ark, which had been set to rest in the
City of David, and the place of offering sacrifices, in the bama at
Giv'on, and assigns each place watches of its own (I Divrei Ha-yamim
16:36-42). David left the ark
in Jerusalem during the period of Avshalom's rebellion, indicating his belief
that the ark must be in Jerusalem, in the place where God rests His
Shekhina, and not with the fleeing king (II Shemuel
15:25-26). And finally, the
Gemara (Shabbat 30a) relates that at the dedication of the
Mikdash, Shlomo was only able to bring the ark into the Holy of Holies
through the virtue of David.
As opposed to David, whom we do not find offering sacrifices in Giv'on,
Shlomo from the very beginning exhibits a strong connection to the sacrificial
order:
And
Shlomo loved the Lord… only he sacrificed and burnt incense in high places. And the king went to Giv'on to sacrifice
there, for that was the great high place.
A thousand burnt offerings did Shlomo offer upon that altar. (I Melakhim 3:3-4)
Shlomo later thanks God for having appeared to him in a dream by offering
burnt offerings and peace offerings before the ark (ibid. v. 15).
As we saw at the beginning of the shiur, when Shlomo asks for
Chiram's assistance in building the Temple, Shlomo defines his goal as follows:
"to burn before Him sweet incense, and for the continual showbread, and for the
burnt offerings" (II Divrei Ha-yamim 2:3). This understanding also finds expression
at the dedication of the Temple. We
already saw above that it was only by virtue of David that Shlomo succeeded in
bringing the ark into the Holy of Holies.
His words at the dedication ceremony (I Melakhim 8) are centered
on prayer, implying that this is the primary purpose of the Mikdash. The dedication itself stands out with an
enormous number of sacrifices:
And
the king, and all Israel with him, offered sacrifice before the Lord. And Shlomo offered a sacrifice of peace
offerings, which he offered to the Lord, twenty-two thousand oxen, and a hundred
and twenty thousand sheep. So the
king and all the children of Israel dedicated the house of the Lord. On the same day did the king hallow the
middle of the court that was before the house of the Lord: for there he offered
burnt offerings, and meal offerings, and the fat of the peace offerings: because
the altar of brass that was before the Lord was too little to receive the burnt
offerings, and meal offerings, and the fat of the peace offerings. (ibid. 62-64)
All this was noted by the Tanchuma (Acharei Mot 1), which
defines Shlomo as "he who sacrifices:" "'And to he who sacrifices' (Kohelet
9:2) – this refers to Shlomo, as it says: 'And Shlomo offered a sacrifice of
peace offerings.'"
The fact that the construction of the Mikdash was the joint
project of two kings allowed for these two fundamental aspects to reach full
expression.
VI. FROM WHERE
DOES GOD SPEAK WITH MAN?
It is
stated:
This
shall be a continual burnt offering throughout your generations at the door of
the Tent of Meeting before the Lord, where I will meet you, to speak there
to you. (Shemot
29:42)
From where does God speak? Where is "there"? Rashi explains:
"Where I will meet you" –
when I will appoint a place of meeting to speak to you, I shall choose to meet
you there [at the entrance of the Tent of Meeting]. Some of our Rabbis learn from this that
it was from above the copper altar that the Holy One, blessed be He, spoke with
Moshe after the Mishkan was erected [for this was at the entrance]; but
some say [that He spoke] from above the kaporet – as it is said: "And I
will speak to you from above the kaporet" (Shemot 25:22), and that
the words "where I will meet you" which are said here are not used in reference
to the altar [which was at the entrance of the Tent of Meeting], but in
reference to the Tent of Meeting [itself] which is mentioned in this verse [so
that the meaning is: "at the entrance of the Tent of Meeting where, viz., in the
Tent of Meeting, I shall be met by you].
Rashi's source is Baraita De-melekhet Ha-mishkan, chap. 14:
From
where did the Shekhina speak to Moshe? Rabbi Natan says: From the Tent,
as it is stated: "And you shall put it before the veil… where I will meet with
you" (Shemot 30:6). Rabbi
Shimon ben Azai says: From the altar of incense, as it is stated: "And you shall
beat some of it very small [… where I will meet with you]" (ibid. 36)…
Rabbi Yishmael's disciples say: From next to the altar of burnt offerings, as it
is stated: "This shall be a continual burnt offering throughout your
generations… [where I will meet you, to speak there to you]" (ibid. 29:42).
The disciples
of Rabbi Yishmael have an interesting position: the revelation was not from
inside the Mishkan, the site of the resting of the Shekhina, but
from the courtyard, from next to the altar of burnt offerings. That is to say: Man's actions allow for
revelation from the site of worship itself, and not only from God's place in the
Holy of Holies. Through the
sacrificial order – the attempt to raise the entire world to God – it becomes
possible to merit the resting of the Shekhina.
***
In this
shiur we noted the two main goals of the Mikdash – resting of the
Shekhina and worshipping God.
In the next shiur we will examine these two goals and the
connection between them.
(Translated by David Strauss)
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