Can we do תפילות prayers for:
Rabbi Berel Wein and torah.org?
That also through them The האור Light, רפואה The Healing and The ואהבה Love of ישועת יהוה Yeshuath YHWH may come back to הארץ The Land of Israel?
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              |              Parshas Pekudei       The Ramban's Message  
 Ramban (Rabbi Moshe ben Nachman,  13th century Barcelona) points out that the conclusion of the book of  Shemot, with its detailed recording of the construction and expenditures  involved in the completion of the Mishkan/Tabernacle, places the Jewish  people as a whole at the level of spirituality that was present in the  homes of our patriarchs and matriarchs at the conclusion of the previous  book of Bereshith.  
 
 
Just as the spirit of the Lord hovered over the tents of our  forbearers, so now did it become recognizable and present amongst the  nation of Israel. Constructed for that purpose, the spirit of the Lord  dwelled within the Mishkan/Tabernacle. There is an important message  contained in this observation.  
 
This Jewish tradition teaches us that there are two places, so to  speak, where the Lord’s presence may be experienced and should be  cultivated. God’s glory fills the entire universe; He is omnipresent.  But the puny human being cannot encompass the entire universe in all of  its vastness and complexity. We need a personal God that we can relate  to somehow.  
 
That God can be found according to Jewish tradition in two places in  our small and narrow world. One place is in our home, our family and  our daily lives. The second place of Godly encounter is in the house of  worship and study and Torah service. That is our substitute  Mishkan/Tabernacle where the spirit of God hovers over those buildings  and is recognizable to us only if we are attuned and sensitive enough to  experience it. These two pillars of Jewish life have accompanied us on  our long journey the world – and through our history.  
 
Both of these bastions of Jewish strength and vitality – the home  and the synagogue/study hall – the meeting places so to speak of Israel  with its God, are under siege and attack in today’s modern society. The  home, marriage, children and the sense of family has given way to  relationships, moving-in and out, later marriages, a large number of  divorces and spousal abuse, and the sacrifice of children and family on  the altars of career and hedonism.  
 
Without strong Jewish families there cannot be a strong State of  Israel or a viable Jewish nation. Certainly intermarriage has eroded the  concept of Jewish family but even when this does not occur, the bonds  of family are frayed by television, the internet and the society  generally. Sometimes even well meaning gestures are counterproductive.  
 
During my years as a rabbi in Miami Beach we always had many Shabat  guests and because of that, contact between us and our own young  children was pretty much eliminated. One Friday one of our younger  daughters said to my wife: “Mommy, are children also guests?” We got the  message and then made certain that one of the Shabat meals would be  exclusively with our children.  
 
The synagogue also has lost much since it became the matter of the  whims and comfort of the attendees and no longer the House of God where  He is to be glimpsed and served according to His wishes as expressed in  Torah and halacha. I hope that the message of the Ramban will certainly  not be lost upon us.  
 
Shabat shalom.  
Rabbi Berel Wein  |       |   
  
                            
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Rabbi Berel Wein- Jewish historian, author and international lecturer  offers a complete selection of CDs, audio tapes, video tapes, DVDs, and  books on Jewish history at www.rabbiwein.com |                   
 
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