Friday, February 15, 2013

The Uplift of the Heart—Terumah


The Uplift of the Heart—Terumah
D’var Torah by Rabbi Boaz D. Heilman


Years and years ago, back in college when I was a music student, I learned that art happens not only in the shape you give the notes, but also in the spaces you leave between them.

“Dolphins communicate with each other not through sound itself but through the … silences between individual sounds,” wrote composer Toru Takemitsu in his liner notes for his luminous work, “November Steps.”

I don’t know about dolphins, but I am pretty certain that it’s true about human beings.  We communicate not only through the words we actually speak, but also in the spaces between the sounds.  It’s in the intonation, in the breaths we take, in the way we stretch or condense sound, no less than in the shape we give to the sound itself as we turn it into language.

The purely mechanical can never be human simply because of its automatic nature.  It doesn’t breathe; it doesn’t long for anything; it doesn’t speed up unless ordered to.  It doesn’t stop or give in to hesitation in its ongoing rush to get from one point to the next.

Shabbat is such a pause—not only in God’s work, but also in ours.  It is so special because, more than all our other gifts from God, it humanizes us.  Shabbat permits us to stop.  It gives us respite from the more mechanical nature of the rest of the week, transforming us from obedient slaves into free and equal citizens.  Shabbat allows us not only to catch our breath, but also to regain control over our lives.  The pause that refreshes, Shabbat is an atom of that infinite space between periods of measured time, reflecting the fact that we are humans, not automatons.  And that’s what makes it holy.

I find it revealing that following last week’s Torah portion, Mishpatim, with its long list of 53 intricate laws, we get something so totally different in this week’s portion, Terumah (Ex. 25:1—27:19).  In this parasha, the Israelites aren’t commanded to do anything.  They are instead asked to bring freewill offerings:  “You are to receive the offering for me from everyone whose heart prompts them to give (Ex. 25:2).

It is of that which is immeasurable that God wants:  the willingness of the heart to offer.

Now don’t get me wrong!  There are specific quantities of each and every gift that will be needed.  The topic of the parasha is the building of the Mishkan, the Tabernacle—that portable temple which the Israelites carried with them throughout their wanderings in the Sinai Wilderness.  Its specs are as exact as any architect would require.  So much gold, so much silver and copper; so many cubits of acacia wood; thus and thus must the length of the curtains be.  The dimensions are exact, the quantities are precisely measured.  No structure can be raised or maintained without these material goods.  Yet the amazing thing that God clarifies for Moses in this portion is that no one is to be required to give any specific part of the whole.  Whatever they bring is gratefully accepted.   From each individual, all that’s asked for is what they would willingly give.  From each man or woman, only that which his or her heart moves them to give.

Holiness, the parasha teaches, isn’t found only in the number of commandments you fulfill without thinking every day; it’s also in the things you do because your heart moves you.  It’s in the immeasurable and infinite as much as in the cut and dry.

It should come as no wonder to anyone that the Tabernacle, for all its splendor and magnificence, cannot house the endless presence of God. Even King Solomon, in his prayer on the occasion of the dedication of the magnificent Temple he built to God in Jerusalem, understands this truth:  “But will God indeed dwell on the earth?  Even heaven and the highest heaven cannot contain you, much less this house that I have built!” (I Kings 8:27).  We may be fooled by all the gold and silver, by the lavish tapestries and by the richness of the ritual to think that God is found within any structure’s bounds.

Terumah, this week’s Torah portion, teaches us otherwise.

In the midst of the myriads of intricate details of the Tabernacle, we find the description of the Holy Ark, where the Ten Commandments are to be housed (both the shattered pieces of the set written in God’s own hand and the second set, written by Moses).  Made of one piece of sculpted gold, the cover of the Ark depicts two cherubs, their wings stretched up and out, sheltering the Ark.  The angels face one another; the tips of their wings are nearly touching.  Yet they do not touch.  Some small space remains between them.  It is in that space, “from between the two cherubim… that I will deliver you all my commands for the Israelites,” God tells Moses (Ex. 25:22).

And Moses, who spent years alone in the desert, who listened to the rush of the wind ontop mountains in the wilderness, understands.  It’s in the emptiness between all the gold; in the blank void between material things, in the silent spaces between the sounds we make, that God’s voice can be heard. 

So where do we find God?  In the eternal silence, in the immeasurable, infinite space between our words and deeds; in the pauses we take in our daily routines to listen to the other person; in our effort to hear what he’s really trying to communicate to us; in our opening our hearts and reaching out to feel another’s longing, love, or pain.

Holiness is defined not only by how much material good we bring to our community, but also by our desire to help, by our willingness to be one of those who build God’s sanctuary on this earth. 

Holiness is in our terumah, in the uplift of our hearts.



© 2013 by Boaz D. Heilman



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