PLEASE USE A NAME WHEN COMMENTING

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

When Moshe Raised His Arms, the Israelites Were Stronger......

Parashas Beshalach 17: 10-13


 

Head South!, If You Circle in the North You'll End Up Back In this World Again

 

THE CHABURAH Tomer Devorah: Emulating the 8th Middah of Kesser - The Mouth that Emits Only Good

 

The Elusive and Illusive Quest for “Frumkeit”

 

Decide for yourself who makes more sense

Chapter 2 of EndtheMadness Guide to the Shidduch World is lengthy, with a great deal of food for thought, so I will split it into two part.

The approved “experts” very much want you to believe that the problems in the shidduch world are primarily demographic in nature, and can be best solved by social engineering, throwing more money at those intrepid, heroic matchmakers, and, of course, giving the “experts” even more funding and control. 

Kind of like how the answer for the IDF’s “failure” on October 7 is to depend on them even more and force more people into the IDF, and the answer for Covid shots failing to work as promised was to take lots and lots of “boosters”. 

Keep doubling down. Keep doing more of the same and expecting different results. It’s much more comfortable than defying the “experts” and being ridiculed by losers. Better to die than to be ridiculed. Better to sacrifice your child to Molech than to be ridiculed. Right?

As you read the next installment of my magnum opus on the shidduch world, I want you to think about what makes more sense. 

Is the problem really a shortage of “good” men for all the amazing single women just desperate to marry the first nice guy who comes along?

Is the solution really to compel young women to start dating later so the older single women will have more opportunities?

Do we really need to pony up more money — up front — for all the hardworking shadchanim, because they are doing such a bang-up job, and it would be such a loss to society if they burned out?

Or do we need to engage in communal soul-searching and admit that we have gone way off the track of true Torah and sanity itself, making a shidduch crisis inevitable?

We cannot solve a problem if we refuse to recognize the true causes and seriously address them. If we have indeed veered off track, the only solution is to return, step by step. 

Teshuva.

Chapter 2 

The Elusive and Illusive Quest for “Frumkeit”

To read this, please go to https://chananyaweissman.substack.com/p/the-elusive-and-illusive-quest-for

To be continued…

Don’t be a cheap Jew. Buy the complete eBook for only $9.99 here.

Limited copies are available in Israel for 70 shekels. Contact me directly to purchase this and my other books at weissmans@protonmail.com.

How To Be A Biblical Jew

 Reminder!

In this video, we take an honest look at what the modern-day Jew looks like today — our mindset, our expectations, and how far we’ve drifted from the ancient, biblical Jew who lived with strength, faith, and total trust in God. We talk about courage, sacrifice, and what it really means to have the backbone to fulfill our Jewish mission in this world. This is a conversation about returning to power, purpose, and responsibility.

19 February 2026

Sir Jared Kushner…….

 …..has been in the news lately, both with references to the *Abraham Accords and in a personal way.

Below is a segment from a video about Jared and Ivanka’s Family Home in Florida. They seek a low key and private environment, for the children and both of them. I’ve seen the rooms and they are simple, a lot of white and nothing fancy, even though it’s a fairly large home overlooking Biscayne Bay. Very private.

This segment is about his philanthropy. Of note is the 18 million dollar donation(s) to Shaare Zedek Hospital in Yerushalayim, in addition Jewish educational centers, and others. I’m sure he keeps to the 10% and even more.

Rav Shternbuch Shlit”a Gavad of Yerushalayim and Gadol HaDor of this generation, has previously mentioned that HKB”H enabled many Jewish Men (and some women) to become Billionaires in our generation. This becomes a test of their loyalties, especially when there are so “many” Torah  institutions under attack and being denied funding. In addition to other Jewish needs. Especially in Israel the anti-God members in government and the small clique in society are very antagonistic towards Haredim and anything religious. We have witnessed Supreme Court decrees stripping financial support from Haredi life essentials that are graciously given to the rest of Israelis.

So, 


Many things can be said about Jared Kushner and Ivanka, but we should leave judgment up to Hashem 

* about the Abraham Accords, the Torah does indicate Yishmael does teshuva (Saudis and other tribes) in the end days, reconciling with Yisrael (Yaakov). My feeling is that this could become a very good situation. Not everything we see with our physical eyes should be interpreted in a suspicious and 
negative way. After all, we know that Hashem is in control and what looks one way now could turn out otherwise according to His Redemption Plan. Remember, it is Eisav (Edom) that hates Yaakov!

So I am holding back on making any judgment about the Abraham Accords, until Hashem reveals His plans. 

Rabbi Wein: Parsha Terumah

 

~ QUOTE OF THE WEEK ~

"The refusal to accommodate others, and not to recognize

how important it is for the social fabric to be sensitive to
 others' needs and wishes, is a death wish for a society"

(Rabbi Berel Wein - J Post)


WEEKLY PARSHA FROM THE DESTINY ARCHIVES

Terumah 5769/2009


In an environment of financial crisis and reduced philanthropy the call for donations issued by Moshe in this week’s parsha is timely if not in essence very challenging. There are many reasons why people do or don’t contribute to charities and educational and social causes. Moshe does not offer any convincing reasons for the necessity of his appeal for monetary help.

 

He represents that it is God’s wish that the people of Israel become a nation of donors, each person according to the donative instinct that resides within his or her heart.

 

The Lord phrases His appeal as being a donation symbolically to God Himself. “Let them take for Me” is the sentence that is used to justify this appeal for donations from the people. Apparently, donations are given because of our relations to our Creator and not only because of the justice of causes that require our help.

 

Charity is a commandment of the Torah. It may be a commandment that we can empathize with and claim to understand and appreciate but at the very root of this commandment is the bald fact that we are bidden to imitate our Creator, and our definition of God is one of goodness and charity.

 

We are told in the Torah that God is with the widow and the orphans even though we are ignorant as to why He made them widows and orphans. But that is our duty to also pursue goodness and charity as the Lord commands us to do. At the very end of the day, charity is an inexplicable commandment. The reason that there is so much charity in the world is that there is, somewhere deep within our consciences and souls, a streak of human kindness and goodness. We really wish to be charitable people.

 

That is why the Torah is convinced that everyone will contribute according to the donative intent of one’s own heart and being. It is within the nature of all to be charitable. Since we have freedom of will and choice, we can overcome our inner instincts of goodness and become miserly and even cruel towards others and to ourselves as well. Just as there are very base instincts that lurk within us, and we possess within ourselves the freedom to overcome and deny them, so too does this power of freedom of will and choice allow us to sublimate our good and charitable instincts. 


There is a well- known statement of the rabbis that many people regret being put upon for a charitable contribution and yet feel a deep satisfaction within themselves after they have in fact made that contribution. It is that deep instinct towards being charitable that engenders satisfaction within a person after having done a charitable deed or having made a charitable contribution.

 

The Torah wishes to encourage our charitable instinct. It resorts to making what is essentially a voluntary act one that becomes mandatory. It is a mechanism to allow the good within us to burst forth. The holy institutions of Israel can only be constructed with the charitable instincts of the Jewish people.

 

Shabat Shalom.

 

Rabbi Berel Wein



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 ...