“Vayavo’u kol hachachamim ha’osim es kol mileches hakodesh
ish ish m’milachto… marbim ha’am l’havi…” (34:4-5). A skilled craftsman has to be able to
estimate the quantity of materials needed to do a job before he begins. Here, the Torah tells us that the craftsmen
making the Mishkan came from their work, seemingly in the middle of the job,
and told Moshe that the people had brought more than enough. Why didn’t they realize they had too much material before they
began?
The Ksav Sofer answers by being medayek in the Torah‘s
description of the craftsmen given a few pesukim earlier: “V’kol ish chacham
lev… asher nasan Hashem chochma u’tevunah ba’heima la’da’as la’asos es kol
mileches hakodesh l’kol asher tzivah Hashem” (34:1). A carpenter, jeweler, or craftsman is
blessed by Hashem with certain skills, but these craftsmen could just
as well use their skills to build a house, make a fine piece of jewelry, or
fashion a beautiful piece of furniture as to make a Mishkan.
The Torah here is not speaking about such people. It is talking about people who were blessed
specifically with ability to do, “…mileches hakodesh l’kol asher tzivah
Hashem,” the work of making a Mishkan – they could not use those skills and ability in any other area! These were not craftsmen or professionals who
came to the job already in possession of certain skill set – these were people who came with no
prior experience or training, with nothing more than their desire to help. Hashem blessed these people with a special
bracha that enabled them to translate that desire into “mileches hakodesh” even
if they had never done such work before.
The Midrash comments that the word “ba’heima” has the
same letters as “beheima,” animal, hinting that Hashem even endowed animals with intelligence
to help in the building of the Mishkan.
Perhaps the Midrash is not meant to be taken literally, but is meant to
emphasize that the skills used in building the Mishkan were a bracha given by Hashem in this special circumstance to even those born with two left
hands, those who otherwise had no innate abilities and were no more skilled
than animals.
It’s no wonder that these people did not realize in advance
whether they had enough or too much material to do the work needed. They were literally learning (or being
blessed with the knowledge needed) on the job as they did their work.
This idea is a klal gadol in accomplishing in Torah and
avodah. “What do you want from me? – I
don’t have the ability to do that,” is an easy excuse to avoid trying to rise
to the next level of learning, of avodah, of making the effort to accomplish
tzorchei tzibur. We assume the lamdan
was born with genius, the ba’al avodah was born with great ability to
concentrate in davening, the person who is a ba’al tzedoka or chessed always
had that drive. But that’s not the
case. What these people had more than
anyone else is desire. If that
ingredient is in place, even if we lack ability, Hashem will
provide the skills and knowledge it takes, “la’asos es kol mileches hakodesh.”
This same theme is echoed in the closing of Parshas
Pekudei. Rashi (39:33) writes that
because Moshe did not have any job to do in building the Mishkan, Hashem left
him with the final task of erecting the structure once it was completed. The boards and beams were too heavy to be lifted
into place and the people were stuck.
Hashem told Moshe that this was his personal task to accomplish. Moshe asked, “But how can I alone lift the
boards?” Hashem answered that he just needed
to make the effort; the rest will be accomplished by a miracle.
“K’chol asherh tzivah Hashem es Moshe kein asu Bnei Yisrael
es kol ha’avodah” (39:42). Just as Hashem commanded Moshe – just as Hashem told Moshe that all he needed
was to make an effort and Hashem would do the rest – so too with respect to the work of Bnei Yisrael. It was not the skill of the craftsman or the
architects and engineers that ensured the success of the building, as even those with no skills or experience were free to participate. It was Hashem’s miraculous bracha. The overt miracle of the raising of the boards was the sign that even the success of the little details was the result of miraculous intervention as well.
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