Parashat vayakhel
summary
Last week we heard about the episode of the Golden Calf when
the Children of Israel, while Moses was up on Mount Sinai, decided
that they needed a god that they could see.
This week's Torah portion is Vayakhel (Exodus 35:1-38:20)
which begins "And Moses congregated (vayakhel) the entire
community of Israel" (Exodus 35:1). Basically, this portion
finds Moses recounting to the Israelites the instructions that
he had received from God on Mt Sinai. He reminds them to observe
Shabbat and that on Shabbat they are not to do any work. It
is added that there also should be no lighting of any fires.
The people are asked to bring gifts of beautiful yarns and
fabric, jewellery and gem stones, animal skins, spices and oils
for the construction of the mishkan (the desert tabernacle).
Rather than have a god that they could see they were to create
a visible and unique place in which our invisible God could
be worshipped. Everyone who is skilled is invited to help build
and decorate the mishkan under the direction of Bezalel and
Oholiab the two craftsmen who were singled out by name in last
week’s portion.
commentary and culture
Last week I had the rather surreal experience of having two
Erev Shabbats! The first on Thursday evening was filmed for
a show to go out later this year on Channel 4 (those who come
to tent on March 11 may be filmed!!!). The surreal nature of
what we did last week sunk home when I saw Liora’s (aged
2!) confused face on Friday night! Was this no longer special
to Fridays!
I had to explain about the significance of Shabbat both traditionally
and personally. In my reading I found this list of Do’s
and Don’ts, Ten Pathways toward a New Shabbat from Arthur
Green, a modern day mystic who I had the pleasure of learning
from once in NYC. I do think that they give pause for thought
and I would be interested in your responses.
DO:
STAY at home. Spend quality time with family and real
friends.
CELEBRATE with others: at the table, in a synagogue, with your
community or with those with whom you can best share in appreciating
God’s world.
STUDY or read something that will edify, challenge, or make
you grow [a bit like reading this!].
BE alone. Take some time for yourself. Check in with yourself.
Review your week. Ask yourself where you are in your life.
MARK the beginning and end of this sacred time: lighting candles
and kiddush on Friday night and havdalah on Saturday night [and
I would add, your own rituals that are meaningful to you]. DON’T:
DO anything you have to do for your work life. This includes
obligatory reading, homework for kids, unwanted social obligations,
and preparing for work as well as doing your job itself.
SPEND money. Separate yourself completely from the commercial
culture that so much surrounds us.
DO business. No calls to the broker, no following up ads, no
paying bill. It can all wait.
TRAVEL. Avoid especially commercial places like airports, hotel
check-ins, and similar depersonalising commercial encounters.
Stay free of situations in which people are likely to tell you
to “have a nice day!” (“Shabbat already is
a nice day, thank you!”).
USE commercial or canned video entertainment, including TV and
computer. Stay in situations where you can be face-to-face with
those around you, rather than facing the all-powerful screen.
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