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22 February 2026

The Temple Mount is about to collapse!

If the premise in this Video explanation is for real, it will be the azzus of the Arabs that will destroy a portion (or maybe more) of the space that they illegally hover over, i.e. Our Temple Mount Area. IY"H  [comments invited please]


Azzus (or Azus, derived from Hebrew: עַזּוּת) refers to the Hebrew concept of brazenness, boldness, impudence, or intense audacity. It is generally used in Jewish ethical, Talmudic, and Kabbalistic literature to describe a hard-hearted, disrespectful, or arrogant attitude.
Here is a breakdown of the definition, origins, and usage:
1. Linguistic Root and Meaning
  • Root: The word stems from the Hebrew root עז (a-z), which signifies strength, vehemence, or harshness.
  • Primary Definition: Brazenness, audacity, nerve, or chutzpah.

Something to Consider:

 STALLING IS A DECEPTIVE POSTURING
Why is the great Us Prez stalling in his decision to act decisively?

Is it possible there is a hidden agenda?
Could it be that the hemming and hawing is to allow the enemy to prepare its onslaught on the World?
BOTH IRAN and the US don't want to make the first move!
Meanwhile Russia and China are squeezing into the Narrow Strait of Hormuz!
Could it be that the US is waiting for the enemy to act so it can claim defensive war maneuvers? Not to be the first to strike?
So who will be the target of the first attack?
Is the US in agreement with the PM of our tiny nation, that we receive the first onslaught from this enemy or Hizbollah? 
And then, and only then, will the U S begin the next World War in "defence of Israel"?
Preposperous?
What do think about this?




Rabbi Weissman: Timeless and Timely Teachings from Tanach

 

Timeless and Timely Teachings from Tanach

Plus the latest scheduled war, an informal reader survey, and the cost of the Haredi Draft


Tanach is not studied nearly enough by Torah-minded Jews (which is the only type of Jew there is supposed to be). The typical reasons people offer do not hold up to even mild scrutiny, and, just as typically, they are forced to fall back on the “Da’as Torah” card. Rabbi so-and-so said we don’t need to study Tanach anymore, end of story. 

That’s right, folks, we are following “Da’as Torah” to remain willfully ignorant of the only book of the Torah given word for word by Hashem Himself and those written by actual prophets. Let the Christians have Tanach. We don’t need it.

Those loosely within the Orthodox world who do study Tanach tend to do so in the style of academics, literature professors, and Bible critics, thereby stripping it of its holiness and completely missing the point.

In my first year of post-high school yeshiva in Israel I was rebuked for studying Tanach, and a rabbinic dean at Yeshiva University told me it was bittul Torah. Yes, he actually called it that. 

(I was intelligent and strong enough not to just follow orders even back then, Baruch Hashem, and haven’t regretted it for one second of my life. I wouldn’t have lasted one day in the IDF even back then.)

I’ve written and spoken about this travesty over the years, and here’s a class I recommend from a year and half ago: We Are Learning and Teaching Torah the Wrong Way

In last night’s Torah class we began studying the book of Yirmiya, which we will continue in future classes. Nothing fancy; just letting the words of the Hashem, the prophet, the commentaries, and Chazal speak to us, with an emphasis on timely messages to guide us (similar to the Rabbi Wasserman classes, and how I tend to study Torah in general).

The class is embedded above and on Rumble here.

I got a text message from the municipality of Jerusalem that they are sending all residents a booklet for staying safe in the upcoming scheduled “war. (It’s online here, our roughly 70% in slavery taxes hard at work for us.)

It’s so considerate of them to schedule wars for us like this instead of just springing them unexpectedly like they did on October 7! 

I vaguely remember a miraculous, biblical victory over Iran a few months ago that was supposed to usher in the redemption with a bunch of rising lions, but now is still not the time to ask questions. 

I’m sure Bibi will be praying at the kotel again tonight, followed by a strictly kosher Shabbos meal with lots of Divrei Torah, and teshuva for all those minor sins we’re not supposed to think about him ever doing. Trump too.

Get afraid, but don’t panic. Prepare your safe room and get your running shoes on. Keep the radio on over Shabbos. Download the phone app for pre-alert alerts. Wait for further instructions. Another round of globalist war theatre is coming, and those who just follow orders with the greatest devotion will surely be the biggest winners.

Am Yisrael Chai. LOL.

I often wonder how many articles are “too much”. On the one hand, I have many more things I wish to share and write about, and much more Torah I wish to teach. On the other hand, I don’t want to bombard people with emails, overwhelm them, or cheapen the content by sending things out too frequently. Also, I want to leave time for the most important pieces to be prominently features, digested, and shared.

So, first of all, how much is the right amount? Do you want more?

No, I’m not going to weigh in on all the daily dramas and distactions, like “Tucker Carlson’s controversial visit to Israel”. I realize many people are here just for provocative posts about Israel, Trump, the IDF, etc., but I’m not here just for that. 

More Torah classes or Torah-based articles are definitely possible, though…if you want it.

I have a lot more to say about the shidduch world, too, which is a much more important issue than many people realize, especially married people who don’t have kids to marry off. I’m willing to do an occasional program on the subject, addressing questions and topics from readers…if you want it.

I can also fix the infield fly rule for Major League Baseball…if you want it (they didn’t reply to my email years ago).

I realize many people who read my work don’t want to be outed by publicly commenting (bad for shidduchim, etc.), so please feel free to email me directly at weissmans@protonmail.com. 

Sage Advice From Rabbi Glatstein — Interview: Thank You Hashem For Emesdikeh Yidden -

What Is the Correct Path In Avodas Hashem?

The Pasuk Rashi Has Identified As the Most Enigmatic in Chumash

 

The Chida Uncovers the Staggering Remez to Purim in the Opening of Parshas Tetzaveh

 

The Bells of War

 

Shavua Tov: Homebound and The Controversial String

 

Rediscover one of the most powerful and inspiring mitzvos in the Torah — tzitzit and the royal blue thread of techeles. Once a defining symbol of Jewish identity, techeles was lost to us for centuries… and is now returning in our generation. In this week’s Daf Yomi, the Gemara dives into the halachos of techeles — not as history, but as living Torah. How is this “forgotten mitzvah” connected to the Geula, to Eretz Yisrael, and to the rebuilding of the Beis HaMikdash? Why did Chazal describe techeles as a thread that leads from the sea, to the sky, to the Throne of Glory? This shiur explores the depth, beauty, and urgency of reclaiming this mitzvah, and what it means for Am Yisrael today. It’s time to look again at the blue thread.


Interesting comments

In the Midbar, there was no access to harvesting these snails.
42 stages of Galut are the 42 camps in the Midbar. The 43rd gate/camp (Chessed that is in Malkhut) is the first level of Purity that can only be reached in Israel and happens to be the Sefirah of Yom Yerushalayim. 43 is Gematriah of Luz

Coincidental" that the mitzvah of tzitzis is considered a "kiyumis" yet hands down it is widely observed throughout all Orthodix circles in the exile......but they also view the mitzvah of yishuv Eretz Yisrael the same way.....but THAT mitzvah has become "controversial" and whatever way we can find not to do it there will be someone in the exile who blesses you for it.....the real story is brought down by the Chofetz Chaim in his Sefer "Shem Olam" that there is a special light that each mitzvah carries and when we perform a mitzvah with the proper intentions, that light envelops all around us. He goes on to write that one who fears HKBH will always look for ways to obligate themselves in performing mitzvos and not look for ways not to observe them. So when a person takes any mitzvah, like techeiles, or even the more so yishuv Eretz Yisrael, they attach themselves to more and more mitzvos. The reward for a mitzvah, is the zechus to perform another mitzvah......so can one imagine the zechus of ending the exile and returning to Eretz Yisrael where all of the mitzvos await?

Judea and Samaria Update

 

PRESS RELEASE

Fundamental Changes in Governance Structures Effect a Revolution in Israeli Facts on the Ground in the West Bank

 

Bet El, Feb 20, 2026WestBankJewishPopulationStats.com is pleased to announce the release of its annual report, updated through January 1, 2026. The report reveals that the Jewish population in the West Bank grew by an impressive 2.2% in 2025, reaching a total of 541,085 residents—more than double the growth rate of Israel's general population, which increased by 1.1%, bringing Israel’s total population to 10,178,000, according to Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics.


The detailed report includes a breakdown of Jewish towns and villages in the West Bank by region, as well as population data for each individual village, based on Israel’s Population Registry. The report also tracks the growth of these communities over the last five years.
 

The PDF report is attached to this email, An online flip-book version is available to view here.
 

Over the past three years, a quiet but far-reaching revolution has taken place in Judea and Samaria. At the center of this transformation stand Religious Zionist Party Ministers Bezalel Smotrich and Orit Strock, whose reshaping of Israel’s administrative and planning architecture has translated ideology into facts on the ground.

 

In coalition negotiatings after the 2022 elections, Minister Smotrich insisted on the establishment of the Settlement Administration within the Ministry of Defense under his party’s authority which centralizes planning and land policy for the West Bank region.

 
In addition, dozens of key powers (about 70) were transferred from the head of the West Bank Civil Administration (a senior military officer) to a civilian deputy appointed by Smotrich who effectively became the de facto governor of civilian life in Judea and Samaria. With this move, Smotrich wrested practical control over land allocation, planning, and enforcement from military beaucrats who were less sympathetic to a Jewish presence in Judea and Samaria to his appointees in the Civil Administration and Defense Ministry.

 

In the last two years, Finance Minister Smotrich has established 69 new Jewish towns, approved for construction over 60,000 new homes, and declared tens of thousands of dunams - amounting to many thousands of acres – to be “state lands (and thus available for Jewish development),” invested 7 billion shekels in highways, 140 Jewish farms which have reclaimed 700,000 dunam (roughly 170,000 acres) from Arab squatters. all this was done by legally by government authority, on the table , with budgeting, and coordinated with military security. Simultaneously, Smotrich has increased enforcement and quadrupled the demolition of illegal Arab structures such that for the first time in 2025, there were more illegal Arab structures demolished than built. 
 

The 2026 West Bank Jewish Population Stats Report, offering comprehensive insights into this demographic's growth, is available by subscribing (free) at WestBankJewishPopulationStats.com

 

See Also: West Bank Jewish Population Stats is a project of Bet El Institutions and Israel Empowered.

Rabbis Dance At Jewish Chasanahs!

 

CLAIM:  LAPID thinks that we all are safe due to the IDF soldiers misguided by their decisors trained in Wexners Academy (“How to lose wars”)?

REPLY:  On Simchas Torah 5784 (7th Oct ’23) we saw, that even with the IDF, we are not really safe… and after 2 years of war with hundreds correction: thousands of lost lives and thousands of severe casualties, suicides, and mental breakdown issues R”L, IDF has still not managed to defeat Hamas…

CLAIM:  And as one magazine article wrote:  We have become a nation of protestors. 

REPLY:  If the government was doing what a government was supposed to do there would be much less protesting. It only means that all segments of society are abused!


*the above pompted by https://www.theyeshivaworld.com/news/israel-news/2514765/yair-lapid-flips-out-after-rav-sholom-ber-sorotzkin-seen-dancing-to-anti-tziyoni-song-at-wedding-of-arrested-bochur.html

🎻מרגש ומפעים: כשילדי ת"ת תל ציון שרו עם מנהיג הדור הרב לנדו "כי הם חיינו אורך ימינו"

 

20 February 2026

Rabbi Freund: Terumah..... A house We Still Yearn to Build

 A house we still yearn to build

We did not simply remember the Temple. We organized our civilization around its absence.

The Haftorah for Parashat Teruma (I Kings 5:26-6:13) describes what is arguably the most ambitious construction project in Jewish history: the building of the First Temple by King Solomon.

It is not a passage filled with miracles, prophecy or war but with measurements.

Cubit upon cubit. Cedar beams. Gold overlay. Carved cherubs. Windows recessed within thick walls.

At first glance it reads like an architectural blueprint rather than sacred literature. Yet that is precisely the point.

The Torah portion commands the construction of the Mishkan (Tabernacle) in the wilderness, while the Haftorah presents its permanent successor in Jerusalem. Together they teach a revolutionary Jewish idea: holiness is not only experienced in moments of inspiration but constructed through deliberate effort in physical space.

G-d does not merely appear. We make room for Him.

“And they shall make Me a sanctuary, and I shall dwell among them" (Exodus 25:8).

Not in it - but among them.

The Divine Presence rests upon a people who actively prepare a place for it. As the Kotzker Rebbe (Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Kotzk, 1787-1859) taught, G-d is to be found where we let Him in.

Solomon’s Temple was not simply a religious building. It was the focal point of Jewish national identity. Every tribe, every pilgrim, converged upon a single mountain in Jerusalem. The Temple unified heaven and earth, priest and farmer, king and shepherd.

When the Temple stood, Jewish longing had an address. And when it was destroyed, Jewish yearning became history’s longest memory.

For nearly two thousand years Jews prayed facing one direction - geographically, not metaphorically. Every wedding shattered a glass to recall its loss. Every Passover ended with “Next year in Jerusalem." Every synagogue echoed something absent.

We did not simply remember the Temple. We organized our civilization around its absence.

But in recent years, something remarkable has begun to unfold.

Increasing numbers of Jews have ascended the Temple Mount, not merely as tourists, but as worshippers.

For decades after 1967 Jews were discouraged, even intimidated, from praying there. The holiest site in Judaism became the only holy site in the world where Jews were effectively barred from worship.

History, however, has a momentum of its own.

Today, thousands of Jews ascend the Mount in accordance with their rabbi's halakhic guidelines. Many immerse beforehand. Many whisper Psalms. Some bow. Increasingly, they pray openly.

This is neither a political movement nor a provocation.

It is a spiritual reflex.

A people that recited three daily prayers for the restoration of the Temple cannot indefinitely remain strangers to its location.

In light of this, the Haftorah’s architectural precision now takes on renewed meaning.

Judaism does not await a vague utopia. The prophets describe courtyards, gates, altars, all of which are tangible realities in a tangible place.

Faith in Judaism has a strong geographic component. Sinai happened somewhere. Hebron is somewhere. The Temple Mount is somewhere.

The growing Jewish presence there reflects continuity. It is what happens when a people takes its liturgy and longing seriously.

If King Solomon measured walls because holiness requires structure, Jewish history measures time because redemption requires preparation.

You cannot pray daily for the rebuilding of the Temple while emotionally treating the Temple Mount as irrelevant.

Eventually prayer demands proximity.

Critics portray Jewish prayer on the Mount as destabilizing. But longing for one’s sacred site is not radical - it is human.

The Haftorah reminds us the Temple was built through devotion. It carried a vision from Sinai to Jerusalem.

Today’s Jewish visitors to the Temple Mount (even those who do not ascend due to their rabbis' halakhic interpretation, ed.) are not forcing redemption. They are expressing hope in Jewish memory and faith in our collective destiny.

They stand where prophets rebuked kings and face the place toward which Jews have prayed in every exile - Babylon, Spain, Poland, Morocco, Yemen and America.

For the first time in two millennia Jews can physically ascend the place their prayers never abandoned.

History has closed a circle.

At the Haftorah’s conclusion G-d tells Solomon:

“If you walk in My statutes… I will dwell among the children of Israel and will not forsake My people" (6:12-13).

The Temple was never guaranteed by stone alone. It depended on spiritual readiness.

Perhaps that is why this generation approaches the Mount not in triumph but yearning - descendants returning to a long-lost home.

Parashat Teruma teaches that a sanctuary begins with a teruma, a lifting of the heart.

The renewed Jewish presence on the Temple Mount may be exactly that: a collective offering of memory and hope.

And a people that still longs for the Divine Presence is already preparing a place for it. May we witness it soon.

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/422660

Reb Ginsbourg: Terumah.....Why did the Sanctuary need a Table?


What purpose did the Table serve and what need was there in the Sanctuary and in the Temple, that required a Table?


In our Parasha, Moshe is commanded:( 23:23-30)’ You shall make a Table of acacia wood, two cubits its length, a cubit its width, and a cubit and a half its heigth. You shall cover it with pure gold and you shall make for it a crown all around. You shall make for it a molding..all around and you shall make a gold crown on the molding all around. You shall make for it four rings of gold. upon the corners of its four legs.opposite the moldings, as housings for the staves..and cover them with pure gold, and the Table shall be carried through them.

‘You shall make its dishes, its spoons, its shelving-tubes, and its pillars, with which it shall be covered, of pure gold you shall make them.

‘On the Table shall you place show bread before Me always.’

Rabbeinu Bachya wonders:’We have already learned that the Ark was to fulfill a great need - to house the tablets of the law in it - and the Kaporet to cover it; the Cherubim which were from this cover, allude to the existence of angels - but the Table, what purpose did it serve and what need was there for it, in the Sanctuary and in the Temple, that required that there be a Table?

‘On a practical level, there was a need for the Table in the House of G-d, because of the bread which was placed on it, to be the root of blessing arising from it.

‘This bread, which was placed on it, was fed to the Kohanim, who served in the Sanctuary, and a little of it satiated the many, who ate of it.

‘It was therefore called שלחן: Table, because Hashem שלח: sent His blessing on thd bread that was on it, and this blessing spread from there, to the food in the whole world, and sustained all.

‘The midrash offers a different understanding: The Table was made of עצי שטים: acacia wood : the initials of שלום ט'ובה ישועה מחילה: peace, good, salvation and forgiveness.

‘We find that in the Ark and in the Altar, all of these could be found, and - in their merit - they all come to be.

‘Likewise, they also all come by reason of the Table, as it operates as a מזבח כפרה : an altar of atonement - the bread on the Table reckoned as an offering, when a good-hearted benevolent person feeds the poor on it - and then it is referred to, in the words of the prophet (Yechezkel 41 ):’And He spoke to me: this is the Table which is before Hashem’ - first said: ‘altar’ but concluded with ‘table’ - as, when the Bet Hamikdash existed, atonement was by the offerings on the altar, but now - that we do not merit to have the Temple, a person’s atonement is ‘by his table’.

‘The custom of the French chassidim was to make their burial coffins out of their tables, as man takes nothing from all his toil, in this world, but the charity that he does here, and the goodness that he bestows around his table.’

The Midrash Aggadah offers the following insight, to our question:’You shall make a Table’: ‘Not that it was needed for eating and drinking, but rather, because the deeds of men are revealed before Him - as there are men whose only desire in this world is eating and drinking - therefore He said:’And make a Table’, and have in mind that the Table’s place is בצפון: in the north, and man’s evil inclination, yetser ha’ra, is located בצפונו : in his north, which is his left - as we read ( Kohelet 10:2): ‘the heart of the fool is in his left side’.

‘This is an allusion to those who are drawn after their yetser ha’ra, which is in his left side - which is why Hashem commanded that we lay our tefillin on our left side, to break the attraction of the yetser ha’ra.

This is why Hashem promises - by His prophet, Yoel - ‘I shall dostance from you הצפוני’ - the yetser ha’ra which is בצפון: in the north of a person.’

Sforno adds:’After the Torah describes the making of the Ark - which is likened to making a throne for the Shechina - as it says:’And I shall gather with you, there’ (verse 32), it commanded the making of the Table and the menorah, as was the custom, for ministers, as we read regarding the Shunamit (Melachim 2, 4:10 ):’We will place there for him a bed, a chair and a menorah’.

Our Sages comment, that the Table alludes to the crown of kingship, the affairs of the conduct of the nation having two aspects: The one being sitting in judgement on the subjects, and the second being to defend the country against its enemies - as it says: ( Samuel 1, 5:20:)’And our king will judge us, and go before us, to fight our battles’ - two crowns were placed on the Table: one for the Table itself, alluding to the welfare of its people, and the conduct of its affairs - and the second, as a frame, as if guarding those within it, from any external harm.’

Rav Shimshon Raphael Hirsch comments:’The fresh acacia tree - from which the Table was made - symbolizes activity which leads to welfare - but this requires that it be founded on a basis of purity, so that the resulting welfare is in the likeness of gold which has been purified

‘The זר (zer): the crown, linguistically alludes to distancing from anything זר (zar) alien, and not sanctified.

‘The Table - as the Torah states - was itself made of only wood, except fo the gold crown adornment , to signify its distancing from anything impure, in regard to the objectives it represented.

‘This is to teach that all our material activities - those which result in welfare and profit - should be based on purity , always being alert to the lurking risk of impropriety in these activities.

‘This motif of purity - as signified by the pure gold crown - is not found in regard to any of the other items in the Sanctuary.

‘This concern on purity, is encapsulated by the Table being called השולחן הטהור: ‘the pure Table’ on which the bread was placed, ‘before Hashem’.

Abarbanel comments:’As the Sanctuary was created in the likeness of a King’s palace, therefore it had - as it were - an inner sanctum reserved exclusively for the use of the King, where his treasure and most sanctified object was kept, and where no-one else was permitted, as there was to be found the seat of the King, in which were found his throne, his Table and His menorah

‘That is where His servants would enter to render Him service, the Table being in the likeness of the table of kings in all its opulence and glory - and where the altar on which incense was offered in the evening and in the morning, in the manner that was usual for kings, at their two mealtimes.

‘The Table was made of acacia wood, so that it was light, and easy to carry , and its length was two amot, as if for one person only to eat, as the width of a man is one ama, leaving a half ama on either side, for the two series of bread, one at each end, still leaving room for the person, to eat.

‘Each of the two sets of bread were of six loaves, as against the six days on which manna was provided for Bnei Israel in the desert, one in the morning for each person, and the second in the evening.

‘As no manna fell on Shabbat, the Kohen arranged it before Hashem.

The Table was one ama wide, so that the remaining place before the eater, was one ama by one ama - and its height was one-and-a half, so that the table was as the height of a person’s abdomen - as the height of a person is three amot, and from the legs to the abdomen, is one half of that.

‘The height of the Table from the ground - one and a half amot from the ground - signifies : That Hashem chose that His Table, was not ‘on the ground’ - as was the custom of some peoples, such as the Ishmaelites, but rather higher off the ground, in the manner of nobles - and more so, kings - as befits their honor.

‘The entire Table was to be covered in gold, and surrounded by a frame, and then crowned by two crowns- one around the frame, and the second one as described in the passage.

‘If we are seeking allusions in the measurements of the Table - and of the other items in the Sanctuary - the Kli Yakar has graced us with his beautiful insights.

Expounds the sage:’Let us note, that the three main items which merited to have a gold crown, being: the Ark, the Table and the Altar, regarding which our Sages say ( Yom 72: ), that they are against three crowns: the crown of Torah, the crown of the Kehuna and the crown of kingship.

‘Look around, and you will find that they are different in their measurements, in amot - the Ark, all its measurements are broken (meaning whole numbers, ed.) , the altar’s measurements are all complete, whereas some of the Table’s measurements are broken, and some are complete.

‘It appears to me, on this, that, as our Sages say: in the matter of spiritual ascent, look at that which is above you, as you will then realize that you have not reached completeness, and are less complete than your fellow man, and this will lead you be envious of him, spurring you to grow in completeness.

‘In matters of this world - physical and material matters, and matters of wealth and honor - look down, at those who have less than you, and thereby rejoice in your lot.

‘The measurements of the Ark were all broken - in length, in width and in height - to signify that three barriers affect the acquisition of wisdom: the limitations of our intellect, the depth of wisdom, and the great amount to be acquired.

‘The Table, on the other hand, alludes to kingship, and to all the material blessings that we receive from the Divine Table - here, some of the measurements are complete, to teach that we should be happy in our lot, and have been blessed by Hashem with all that we need - and, in our hearts, feel that we lack nothing , as Yaakov Avinu said:’I have everything’.

‘However, some of the measurements are broken, to teach that a person will never fill all his material desires in this world.’

‘The altar’s measurements are all complete, to signify that atonement makes the offerer complete again.

The chassidic master, the Be’er Mayim Chaim, adds:’ The Table and its allusions, all come to teach us, as to the table of a man whilst he is eating on it, that it merit to be ‘as a table before Hashem’, so that it will be an atonement for him before Hashem, like an offering on the altar - as our Sages teach:’Now that we do not merit to have a Bet Mikdash where we can bring offerings as atonement, a person’s table, atones for him’.

‘We have on several occasions brought the teaching that the main objective of a person when eating, is to be elevated from his food, from all the sparks of holiness in it - this by eating in a manner that subjugates all his material desires, as these are the marks of animals, and not fittiing to man who is created with intellect and understanding of the service of Hashem - it is not proper that he and animals should ‘eat from the same trough’, in their manner of eating.

‘If he does so, then man’s eating resembles the offerings on the altar, whose purpose is also to elevate- and to unite those things which through man’s transgressions, have separated the offender from his Source.

‘To achieve this, man must first take some assistance from Above - which is the deeper meaning of the opening words of our parsha:’’Take for Me an offering’: the word תרומה alludes to taking something elevated (ram), which, in turn, will enable our offering to ascend.

‘The thirteen items from which offerings are to be brought, allude to the Thirteen Attributes of Mercy - praying that we merit that these attributes come to our aid, so that our atonement is accepted Above’ - may we merit this grace.

A parting gem from the Chatam Sofer: ’The measurements of the objects in the Sanctuary, allude to lofty matters - the broken measures of the Ark, to the תלמיד חכם: the torah scholar, whose heart should always be ‘broken’’ within him, in his service of his Creator; the measurements of the Table are complete, alluding to the supporters of Torah doing so in a wholehearted manner - whilst, in their own eyes, they should always regard themselves as incomplete in their holy endeavors - therefore, the height of the Table is a broken measure.’

לרפואת חיילי צה"ל ולרפואת נועם עליזה בת זהבה רבקה ונחום אלימלך רפאל בן זהבה רבקה, בתוך שאר חולי עמנו.

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/422640

The Temple Mount is about to collapse!

If the premise in this Video explanation is for real, it will be the azzus of the Arabs that will destroy a portion (or maybe more) of the s...