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  |   The weekly Sfas Emes is now available in a  Sefer. The Seferis called Emes Ve'emunah : A Sfas Emes Companion. This  Sefer contains all of the materials in the weekly emails, plus new  insights. The Sefer also contains the text in lashon hakodesh on which  the Sfas Emes worked to produce his ma'amar. Accessing the  the Sfas  Emes via the Sefer offers advantages. You have the week's Torah without  having to print the email. You have the Sfas Emes' text--which could not  be sent by email. Also many people who would enjoy the Sfas Emes do not  have internet.  You can purchase  this Sefer at your favorite bokstore, or online, at  the Targum or Feldheim websites. Emes Ve'Emunah will also be available  for purchase or perusal at the SOY Seform Sale, January 15-January 24. 
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              |              Parshas Pekudei       
 Sfas Emes, Zechuso Tagein Aleinu, Parshas Pekudei 5632/5635  
 
The parsha begins: "Eileh pekudei ha'mishkan, mishkan ha'eidus ..."  (ArtScroll: "These are the reckonings (i.e., the accounts) of the  Tabernacle, the Tabernacle of Testimony ..."  
 
 
The Sfas Emes starts his ma'amar by quoting the first paragraph of  Medrash Rabba on the parsha. That paragraph, in turn, refers us to a  pasuk in Mishlei (28:20): "Ish emunos rav berachos ..." (ArtScroll: "A  man of integrity will increase blessings ..."). Finally, to complete  this introduction, we note the comment of the Medrash on that pasuk:  "Ish emunos, zeh Moshe." ("Who is the 'man of integrity' of whom the  pasuk speaks? Moshe.")  
 
This Medrash is truly enigmatic. We are therefore grateful to the  Sfas Emes for explaining it to us. The Sfas Emes tells us that this  Medrash is trying to deal with a basic problem. Chazal (Ta'anis, 5a)  have taught us that counting things can harm them. Similarly, things  that are kept out of sight -- by not being counted -- are more likely to  flourish. In light of these principles, why did the Mishkan have to  undergo an accounting process?  
 
Before going further, we address another question. On what basis  does the Medrash see "ish emunos" as an allusion to Moshe Rabbeinu? I  suggest two answers. As you may remember, HaShem refers to Moshe as  "be'chol bei'si ne'eman hu" (Bemidbar, 12:7). (ArtScroll: "In My entire  house, he is the trusted one."). And "ne'EMaN" quickly evokes "EmuNos".  
 
Another possible answer also comes to mind. The pasuk's word  'emunos' readily suggests the shoresh (root) MNH -- to count (as in the  word 'minyan'). The Torah (Shemos, 38:21) tells us that in fact, Moshe  Rabbeinu was personally involved in the accounting. Bringng it all  together, we can understand why Chazal saw Moshe Rabbeinu as the 'ish  emunos'.  
 
This discussion helps us answer a key question that the Sfas Emes  raised earlier. We know that counting generally harms the objects being  counted. Why, then, did the mishkan have to undergo an accounting  process? As is so often the case, the Sfas Emes finds an answer in the  Zohar. Citing that sacred text, he explains that the enumeration  recounted in our parsha had a special feature. As noted above, Moshe  Rabeinu himself was doing the counting. For this reason, the accounting  came not with a negative effect, but, to the contrary, with a blessing.  As the pasuk tells us, "Ish emunos," -- - i. e., when Moshe Rabbeinu is  doing the counting -- "rav berachos" -- he brings with him an abundance  of blessings.  
 
How does this work? To answer, the Sfas Emes begins by explaining  why counting objects can be harmful. He notes that counting involves  giving each item in the set a number of its own. But having a number of  its own separates the item being counted from the others in the set. In  this situation of "pirud," each is on its own, without mutual support.  By contrast, a batch of uncounted objects constitutes a "klal," with  each member of the klal drawing strength from being part of a larger  group.  
 
Likewise, when Moshe Rabbeinu was counting the objects, his  involvement brought them closer to their shoresh (their source). And  proximity to HaShem brings with it a happier state -- i.e., berachos.  
 
We can readily understand how this pirud / klal pattern works with  people. Why HaShem established the same pattern for inanimate objects is  not clear. One possibility is that the reason is pedagogic. That is, to  drive home the point about pirud and klal, HaShem built the same  pattern into the world of inanimate objects  
 
We move now to the second paragraph of the Sfas Emes of the year  5635. The parsha's first sentence contains the words "pekudei  ha'mishkan". As we saw earlier, the pshat (simple, plain meaning) of  these words is "the reckonings of the Tabernacle." But the Sfas Emes  shares with us a deeper understanding of these words. "Ahl pi remez" --  by allusion -- we can read the word "pekudei" as having the sense of  commands or orders, as in Tehilim (19:9): "Pekudei HaShem yesharim..."  (ArtScroll: "The orders of HaShem are upright ...")  
 
The Sfas Emes understands "commands" in this context to refer to  mitzvos. But how does this sense of "pekudei" fit in with the pasuk's  next word, "ha'mishkan" -- the Tabernacle? The Sfas Emes answers that  the word "mishkan" comes from the same root as does the word Shechina  (the Presence of HaShem). Thus, continuing this line of thought, we see  that "pekudei hamishkan" comes to mean that by doing mitzvos, we bring  HaShem into our midst.  
 
Transition from the pshat meaning of "pekudei ha'mishkan" -- the  Tabernacle's accounts -- to its meaning via allusion -- mitzvos bring  HaShem to us -- is clearly a bold intellectual khap (coup). But being  bold is not enough for a dvar Torah. It must also be true. As his name  indicates, the Sfas Emes is a person who insists on truth. Thus, he  asks, how does our performing mitzvos bring the Presence of the Shechina  to our midst?  
 
He answers with a close reading of the Torah's text. The pasuk says:  pekudei hamishkan, mishkan ha'eidus" (" ... the Tabernacle of  Testimony"). The Sfas Emes explains that by performing mitzvos, we bear  witness that we accept HaShem's Kingship. Every mitzva we do is  testimony that we subordinate our will to that of HaShem ("Avinu,  Malkeinu"). And in our so doing, HaShem's Presence in the world becomes  more apparent to the naked eye.  
 
Note further the Sfas Emes's conceptualization -- that by doing  mitzvos, we can deepen our relationship with HaShem. This  conceptualization can help us avoid a standard pitfall of observant Jews  - doing mitzvos, but without much of a relationship to HaShem.  
 
For one more thought of the Sfas Emes on this parsha, we go to the third paragraph of his ma'amar in the year 5635.  
 
The Sfas Emes quotes the pasuk (Shemos, 39:32): " ... vaya'asu Bnei  Yisroel kechol ahsher tziva HaShem ...." (ArtScroll: "All the work of  the Tabernacle was completed ... the children of Israel had done  everything that HaShem had commanded ....")  
 
The Sfas Emes tells us that much more is going on here than a  superficial reading would suggest. He explains that construction of the  Mishkan was the "tikun" (the repair, redemption) of "asiya" (building,  doing). Physical activity (i.e., "asiya ") can be used for Avodas HaShem  or (chas ve'shaslom) for bad purposes. When we used our asiya to make  the golden calf, asiya acquired negative associations. But apparently  HaShem wanted to redeem asiya from disrepute. How did He do it? By  giving Bnei Yisroel the option of building the mishkan. Constructing the  miskan involved the complete range of asiya activities. Hence, by  building the mishkan, Bnai Yisroel redeemed all asiya.  
 
This is why the activities used to construct the mishkan are the  same melachos that are forbidden on Shabbos. For these activities are  the prototypes of the actions with which HaShem created the world. By  commanding Bnei Yisroel to use the very same activities to create the  mishkan, HaShem made it clear to Bnei Yisroel that asiya in this world  can be a noble activity, indeed, "ahsher tziva HaShem."  |       |   
  
                            
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