Parashat Vayakhel
Initiative and Self-Sufficiency
God met the Israelites' need to relate to God on their own terms — we must do the same.
Sacred Relationships
The mirrors used to create the basin in the Tabernacle teach us that sanctified sexuality means seeing ourselves in relation to others.
Clothes Are The Message
The clothing of our religious leaders communicates our perceptions of our relationships to God and each other.
On Matters Of The Heart
The image of Israelites, whose hearts moved them, donating gifts to the Tabernacle, inspires us to consider the meaning of having a heart that is moved.
Parashat Vayakhel: Summary
The Israelites bring so many materials for the construction of the Tabernacle that Moses tells them to stop; Bezalel and Oholiab, gifted craftspeople, construct the elements of the Tabernacle.
Table For Two
Our tables, symbolic altars, become tools in our quest for sacredness when we share them with the poor and marginalized.
Spirituality Never Stops
The connections between building the Tabernacle and Yom Kippur reminds us that all aspects of our spirituality are connected.
And The Loveliest Of All Was The Unicorn
The many interpretations of the tachash remind us to look beyond surface appearances for spiritual intensity.