PLEASE USE A NAME WHEN COMMENTING

20 March 2025

Rabbi Wein: Vayakhel

VAYAKHEL


The haftorah for this week’s parsha describes the efforts of the great King Shlomo in the construction of the First Temple. King Shlomo himself is a great and tragic figure. The attitude of the Talmud towards him is an ambivalent one.

 

On one hand, he is the builder of the Temple, the expander of the kingdom, the builder of great fortresses, and the administrator of twelve districts of his country. He is also the wisest of all men who understands even the sounds of animals and birds, the author of three of the great books of the Bible and someone upon whom the Divine Spirit itself has rested.

 

And yet on the other hand, the Talmud questions his right to immortality, criticizes his excesses and hubris, condemns his tolerance of the public support of idolatry by his foreign wives and even attributes the rise of Rome and the subsequent destruction of the Second Temple to his marrying the daughter of the Egyptian Pharaoh. Jewish legend has him driven off of his throne by a demon and having to wander in exile for part of his life. All of this naturally dims the luster of his great earlier accomplishment, of building the Temple. The haftorah parallels the parsha in the description of the work in constructing the mishkan and its artifacts, with the same type of artisanship in the creation of the Temple and its artifacts.

 

Shlomo, so to speak, becomes the second Moshe in supervising the building of the house of G–D. But, in the case of Moshe, the building of the mishkan was only one of his career’s accomplishments and was dwarfed by his major accomplishment of teaching and instilling Torah within the people of Israel. The building of the Temple by Shlomo was the high point of his career. Afterwards he slipped off the mighty pedestal of greatness that he had attained.

 

The Talmud teaches us that “happy are those whose later years do not shame their earlier accomplishments.” My old law school professor taught us that every lawyer makes a bad mistake at least once in his professional career. He also stated that those who are fortunate enough to make that mistake early in their career are truly blessed because they can recover and advance. Making it late in one’s professional life can be disastrous to one’s reputation and life. The reverse trend may be true of accomplishments.

 

Early accomplishments can be very dangerous because they set a standard and inspire a sense of self-aggrandizement that will prevent any further achievements. Only gradual ascent and mature considerations, which usually are part and parcel of advancing years, can guarantee that those early achievements become lasting and untarnished by later behavior. The comparison between the two great builders of G–D’s house – Moshe and Shlomo - is illustrative of this truth. Building G–D’s house is a great achievement in itself. Maintaining it and using it for greater spiritual influence and instruction to the people of Israel is an even greater achievement.  

 

Shabbat Shalom

Rabbi Berel Wein   

No comments:

馃敟讛讬讬转讬 诪转驻诇诇 讘讘讬讛讻谞"住 转讬诪谞讬: 谞讚讬专, 讛诪谞讛讬讙 讛专讘 诇谞讚讜 注诇 讛讬住讟讜专讬讬转 讬讛讚讜转 转讬诪谉 讜讬诇讚讜转讜 讘诪讞讬爪转 讛转讬诪谞讬诐

  讘谞讬 讬砖讬讘转 讗讬转谉 讛转讜专讛 诇讘谞讬 讬讛讚讜转 转讬诪谉 讘讗诇注讚 谞讻谞住讜 讬讞讚 注诐 专讗砖讬 讛讬砖讬讘讛 诇诪讘讞谉 注诇 驻专拽 专讗砖讜谉 讘住讜讻讛, 讜诇拽讘诇转 讚注转 讛转讜专讛 诪诪谞讛讬讙 讛讚讜专 专讘讬谞讜 诪专谉 砖诇讬...