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23 February 2026

Eliezer Meir Saidel: Mishpatim and Terumah JP


Mishpatim - Appetizers 

There is a debate where parshat Mishpatim fits in chronologically, was it before Matan Torah or after?

The first opinion, Rashi, says that when you have the Vav ha’Chibur (a connecting letter “vav), it comes to add to something mentioned before it. Since the parsha begins “Ve’eileh HaMishpatim,” with the Vav ha’Chibur, it means that parshat Mishpatim is a continuation of the parsha before it – Matan Torah. Just as the Ten Commandments were given on Har Sinai, so too were the Mishpatim given on Har Sinai.

The other opinion, R’ Yehuda in the Mechilta, says that these Mishpatim (Dinim) were already given to Am Yisrael at Mara, straight after the Splitting of the Red Sea, before Matan Torah and they were repeated again at Matan Torah.

In this shiur we will be exploring the second opinion, that the Mishpatim were first given at Mara.

Let us backtrack a little to parshat Beshalach, to recall the story of Mara. Am Yisrael had just experienced the greatest epiphany possible at the Red Sea. After the Egyptians had been swallowed by the sea, HaKadosh Baruch Hu commanded the sea to “spit them out” onto the shore. In addition to the dead Egyptians, all the loot that they brought with them from Egypt also washed up on shore. After the Ten Plagues, Pharaoh was finding it difficult to convince his army to pursue Am Yisrael into the desert, so he bribed them. He gave the soldiers free access to the treasuries of Egypt allowing them to load up as much loot as their chariots could carry.

In addition to all the riches that each member of Am Yisrael carried out of Egypt on 90 Libyan donkeys, Am Yisrael started adding another layer of loot on the donkeys from the spoils from the Red Sea.

The purpose of all this material wealth was to develop a lust for money within Am Yisrael, which they would later redirect into a lust to study Torah.

When HaKadosh Baruch Hu saw that the “mechanism” was working well, so well in fact that Moshe had to forcibly get them to leave the Red Sea, He said “OK, now’s the time to try it out!” When they arrived at Mara soon after, HaKadosh Baruch Hu gave them a small “preview” of the Torah that they would soon receive on Har Sinai, a little “appetizer,” to give them a taste for the “main course.” What was this “appetizer?” The Gemara (Sanhedrin 56b) says that HaKadosh Baruch Hu gave them Dinim, the halachot of Shabbat and the red heifer. Which Dinim? According to R’ Yehuda above – the same Dinim mentioned in parshat Mishpatim.

Have any of you seen a movie preview? The short excerpt the producers send to all the media channels to advertise the movie before it hits the movie theaters? What is the purpose of a “preview?” To arouse the appetite so that you want to see more of the same thing, right? You take snippets of the best of the best, the cream of the crop and you dangle it like a carrot. “Want more? Soon in a theater near you!”

What was the appetizer, the tantalizing first snippet that HaKadosh Baruch Hu gave Am Yisrael of the Torah? The laws of a Jewish slave!

There are two circumstances when a Jew can be sold as a slave. The first is when he has no money to survive, to buy food to eat. He can sell himself as a slave – to work in return for board and lodging. The second circumstance is when a Jew steals from another Jew and he does not have to pay back what he stole (plus the required fine), he is sold as a slave, either to the person he stole from, or to someone else (who will pay the debt in his stead). The case in the beginning of our parsha is the second case, the case of a thief.

This is the “carrot” that HaKadosh Baruch Hu wants to entice Am Yisrael to crave more Torah with? Not only is it a subject that most people want to run a mile from (who wants to discuss thieves and theft?), but these laws are not applicable immediately in the Midbar. The laws of a Jewish slave will only become applicable when Am Yisrael enter Eretz Yisrael and not immediately after, but at least one Yovel (50 years) after they have entered the land.

How does that stir the appetite? We can understand Shabbat and the red heifer – these are at least inspiring and applicable already in the Midbar. But the first introduction to the Torah is – talking about a thief? What is going on here?

To understand this, we need to understand what Matan Torah was. It was a reset of the world to the state of Creation before Adam and Chava sinned with the Tree of Knowledge.

For 2,448 years the world had been in a state of disconnect from HaKadosh Baruch Hu. At the time of Creation, HaKadosh Baruch Hu’s Shechina (Presence) dwelled in this world. After Adam and Chava sinned, HaKadosh Baruch Hu’s Shechina departed one level up (in the seven levels of Heaven). Following that, the sins of Kayin, the generations of Enosh, the Flood, Dor HaPalaga, Sodom and Egypt, the Shechina departed further and further from earth, one level at a time (Bereishit Raba 19:7), until Avraham went down to Egypt – when the Shechina was the furthest it could possibly be from earth. The Avot, Levi, Kehat and Amram managed to bring the Shechina back – one level at a time, until Moshe and Am Yisrael at Matan Torah, managed to restore the Shechina back to the final level on earth.

By eating from the forbidden tree, Adam HaRishon was stealing something that did not belong to him. Adam HaRishon, therefore, was the first thief!

HaKadosh Baruch Hu is about to give the Torah to Am Yisrael. This will repair the sin of Adam HaRishon and reset the world. What is the preview that HaKadosh Baruch Hu therefore gives Am Yisrael of the Torah? The laws of a Jewish slave – the tikkun for Adam HaRishon, the first thief.

 

Parshat HaShavua Trivia Question: How do we know that reparations for making someone blind are monetary?

Answer to Last Shiur’s Trivia Question: Why did Yitro not remain with Bnei Yisrael in the desert? He returned to Midyan to convert the rest of his family and he later returned and rejoined Bnei Yisrael (Rashi). His descendants inherited the city of Jericho.


Trumah - The Building Association

In this week’s parsha we find the commandment to build the Beit HaMikdash (Shemot 25:8). If you were to ask someone “On a scale of 1-10, how much of your daily energy is devoted to the Beit HaMikdash?” you would probably get varying answers.

If you were to ask someone like Eliezer Meir Saidel from the Showbread Institute, Karnei Shomron, Israel who is involved in intense research into the Menachot and the Lechem HaPanim, the answer would probably be in the 8-9 range. If you asked HaRav Yisrael Ariel, head of the Temple Institute in Jerusalem, the answer would be between 9-10.

You are probably saying to yourself “OK, but these are the ‘meshugeners’ – that is their life, their job. Obviously – they will be on the top end of the scale. I’m a regular person just struggling to be a good Jew, to keep the mitzvot as best I can, to be a good person, to help others, to study as much Torah as I can, while supporting my family, running a home …. Not everyone is intended to be actively involved in the Beit Mikdash’!”

In this shiur I would like to present an enormous chiddush – “The 3rd Beit HaMikdash is not going to be rebuilt at some unknown point in the future by someone else. It is going to be rebuilt today, by you!”

If that sounds a little far-fetched, then the next statement is really going to blow you away – “We all already have the 3rd Beit Mikdash, we just don’t realize it, because we do not think of it in that way.’

Allow me to run through a typical day in your life (taking Friday as an example), from a completely different perspective and you will soon understand what I mean.

What time do you wake up in the morning? 3,000 years ago, there was a central municipal “alarm clock” for the entire city of Jerusalem – the humungous golden doors of the Heichal of the Beit HaMikdash – that were designed specifically that when they were opened, they made an enormous CLANG that was so loud, it reverberated throughout the city and woke everyone up, just before the first glimpse of the sun on the horizon, when the Avodah began. If you wake up any time before or around 6:43 a.m. (Netz Hachama – in NYC), you are already with the Beit HaMikdash “program” (if you wake up later than that, you may want to reconsider trying to “get-with-the-program”).

What is the first thing you do when you wake up? Recite Modeh Ani and wash your hands three times on each hand, right? Then the morning “toilette” and again washing, twice on each hand. So far – your daily routine is 1:1 to that of the Kohanim in the Beit HaMikdash 3,000 years ago (back then, the morning “toilette” was down the stairs of the Beit HaMoked, a building just north of the Mizbeach).

Then dressing. You already have your kippah on (Migba’at) from when you woke up. Now, add to that the underclothes (Michnas), tzitzit, the “over clothes,” shirt, pants (Ketonet), socks and shoes (OK, the Kohanim back then were barefoot, but never mind), the belt holding your pants up (Avnet).

You arrive at shul for Shacharit. Wash hands before entering the main sanctuary (Kiyor) (you already washed your feet last night when you showered). You enter the shul with a sense of awe, reciting Mah Tovu, entering and approaching your seat from the right side. tallit, tefillin. (The Kohanim back then in the Mikdash were exempt from tefillin on the arm, but it is a debate whether they wore tefillin on the head or not [Zevachin 19a, Erchin 3b]. Yisraelim/Levi’im most likely wore tefillin all day, for sure in the Beit Mikdash [Bava Batra 60b]).

You recite Korbanot, the Tamid, the Ketoret. The rest of the tefillah, including repeatedly bowing down in the Amidah, Birkat Kohanim (in Israel), Shir Shel Yom.

Back home for breakfast and then beginning to prepare for Shabbat. Help your wife bake/buy the challahs (Lechem HaPanim). Prepare the cholent and the other meals (Korbanot). The fragrances of delicious Shabbat cooking waft through the house and the neighborhood (Ketoret). Set the table (Shulchan). The husband prepares the wicks for the Shabbat candles (Hatavat HaNeirot). Showering for Shabbat (Kiyor). Everyone dresses in Shabbat clothes (Bigdei Kehuna). The wife lights the candles (Menorah).

Shabbat day tefillot (Musafin). Birkat Kohanim (in Israel). Kiddush (Nisuch HaYayin). Mizmor le’Yom ha’Shabbat, Anim Zemirot (Levite choir). Eating Lechem Mishne (Lechem HaPanim). Shabbat meals (eating Korbanot). Zemirot (more Levite choir). Divrei Torah. Mincha (afternoon Tamid).

What I have described above is a typical Friday/Shabbat in a Jewish home – TODAY! I added in brackets the very same things that paralleled it in the Beit HaMikdash 3,000 years ago.

The only factor missing from our current, regular, daily lives that we had 3,000 years ago when Beit HaMikdash existed is – the association!

The reality of the Beit HaMikdash is very much alive and pulsating in our modern Jewish lives, we just don’t acknowledge it as such. To us, it is just the “normal Jewish routine.”

We are already living our lives according to the reality of the Beit HaMikdash! The 3rd Beit HaMikdash has already been rebuilt! It is there in our shuls and in our homes, we just don’t see it, our eyes and minds are focused on other things. All it takes is a tiny shift of mindset, an opening of the eyes, a directing of the thoughts – to make the Beit HaMikdash a reality. It doesn’t require much change in our routine. All it requires is the association and the recognition. It is a tiny thing but it transforms our reality.

The purpose of the Beit HaMikdash was not to erect a fancy building with gold and splendor. It was to create a framework, the infrastructure in which HaKadosh Baruch Hu’s Shechina can dwell – within ourselves.

 

Parshat HaShavua Trivia Question: What was the function of the Menakiyot on the Shulchan?

Answer to Last Shiur’s Trivia Question: How do we know that reparations for making someone blind are monetary? Rashi (Shemot 21:24) quotes the Gemara (Bava Kama 84) which says so. The letters of ayin (eye) are ayin yud nun. The letters following each of these are peh caf samech – which make the word “kesef” – money.



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Eliezer Meir Saidel: Mishpatim and Terumah JP

Mishpatim - Appetizers   There is a debate where parshat Mishpatim fits in chronologically, was it before Matan Torah or after? The first op...