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             |   |                                                Parshas Terumah 
 
 
          Tabernacle Building: Sharing Our Wealth  
  The parsha of Terumah follows  those of Mishpatim and Yitro. In parshat Yitro we experienced the moment  of the revelation at Mount Sinai and the granting of the Torah to the  Jewish people. In parshat Mishpatim the Torah began to fill in the  details of Jewish law and life, especially as they relate to human and  societal behavior and the standards of such behavior that the Torah  wishes us to uphold.  
 
In this week’s parsha of Terumah the Torah presents another  challenge to human behavior – wealth, money, charity and the ability to  give away what one may deem to be his or hers. The Torah demands from us  the ability to donate to others, to give to great causes, to the public  welfare and to be able to share with others our material possessions.  
 
The rabbis of the Talmud stated that this is one of the major  identity tests of life. Miserliness, a bad eye and an unwillingness to  be able to contribute to others in need are held to be violations of  Torah principles and morals. The Torah at Sinai instructed us not to  steal, not to take from others what belongs to them without their  explicit consent. Now the Torah raises the bar and asks us to be able to  give away what we deem to be ours to others less fortunate than us or  to national and religious causes that benefit us all.  
 
All of this is implied in the request for donations to help build  the holy Mishkan/Tabernacle. The Lord could have provided us with a  ready built spanking new Mishkan/Tabernacle on His own. Instead He  challenged us then and in every continuing generation of Jewish life to  build a Mishkan/Tabernacle on our own and from our own resources. And  that requires a proper view of our own wealth and what we do with it.  
 
My beloved Talmud rebbe taught me over sixty years ago how to read  the daily newspaper – how to filter out the golden nuggets of life and  morality from the overwhelming amount of dross that fills the pages of  all of our newspapers. There was an item in the newspaper last week  about a baseball pitcher who gave up a guaranteed salary of twelve  million dollars for 2011 and retired from the game because he felt in  all honesty that he could no longer pitch effectively and did not wish  to be paid for essentially doing nothing.  
 
This naturally goes against the grain of the vast majority of  professional athletes whose greed and avarice is so well known. That is  why it made news – it was a man bites dog story. But it indicated to me  that the lesson of parshat Terumah still lives in the human heart.  
 
To be able to walk away from money not honestly earned is a Torah  value. And to share and give of our wealth to others and to the building  of society, to Torah education and a national home for Jews, is also a  supreme Torah value.  
 
We have to build our own Mishkan/Tabernacle constantly in every  generation. The Torah’s attitude towards the sharing of our wealth is  the key to such a form of Mishkan/Tabernacle building.  
 
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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