by Rav Moshe Tzuriel zt"l, yeshiva.org.il, translated by Hillel Fendel.
During
the times of the Sages of the Talmud, it was customary among some young couples
that the groom would leave home before marriage in order to study Torah with
the greatest rabbis. [Perhaps this started] with Rabbi Akiva, who left his home
for 12 years, and then for another 12 years – of course with the permission of
his young and dedicated wife Rachel. Rava's son also received permission from
his wife to leave for the same reason, for six years. The Gemara also tells of
the son of R. Judah the Prince, redactor of the Mishna, who became engaged to
the daughter of R. Yossi ben Zimra – with the condition that the groom would
spend 12 years studying Torah. It happened that the boy saw his future wife
walk through the room, and he asked his father if he could reduce the period to
six years. The parents agreed, but before the final agreement could be signed,
the boy said that he wished to reconsider once again, and asked that the
wedding take place immediately, before he left for his studies. The boy then
became embarrassed at his impatience, but his father mollified him, saying:
"You have the idea of the Holy One. He, too, promised to dwell in the midst of the Children of Israel – but only when they come to the Land of Israel, as written in the Song of the Sea: "You will bring them and plant them in the mountain of Your inheritance" - i.e., Jerusalem - "the place You made for Your dwelling, Hashem" (Exodus 15,17). But then what happened? Hashem rushed things up, telling Moshe [in this week's Torah portion of Teruma] to tell Israel that "they should make Me a sanctuary and I will dwell in their midst" (ibid. 25,2). As Rashi explains, the groom followed G-d's pattern when He did not wait 40 years until Israel entered the Holy Land to dwell in their midst, but rather decided to do so at once.
And
it is in the Tabernacle, and then the Holy Temple, that the cherubim atop the
Holy Ark symbolize the mutual love between G-d and His people, as explained at
length by the Torah commentators.
Why
exactly does G-d love us so? There are two answers, as the Maharal of Prague
wrote in his commentary to Pirkei Avot: First is the very creation of Israel as
"the branch planted by [G-d], the work of My hands in which I take
pride" (Isaiah 60,21); Israel is the nation thus worthy of the
World to Come, even before they fulfill mitzvot and perform good deeds. And
secondly, we have the additional level of our good deeds and integrity. That
is, as the Maharal continues, "while the Christians and the Ishmaelites
(Muslims) tend to extremism in their religions, Israel has the trait of the
middle road (see Rambam's Guide 3,39 and De'ot 1)." "This
nation I created for Me," we read in Isaiah (43,21); Rashi
explains that the world was created for Israel – which means for the sake of
the Divine objective – and our higher level is not dependent upon our merits,
which grant us an extra level of Divine preference.
As
an aside, we must ask: Is this not a racist viewpoint? The answer is no,
because racism is defined as something that claims to grant one race authority
to take advantage of and subjugate the others that are supposedly lower than
them. But if one race claims to have advantages, but does not adopt the supposed
right to subjugate others, this is not racism. If we say that a European race
is polite and orderly, as opposed to a Far East tribe that is barbaric and
lacks those traits, that is not racism.
HaRav
Kook, of saintly blessed memory, taught us (Introduction to Musar Avicha):
"For as long as one does not teach himself to understand the greatness of
the soul of Israel and the virtue of Israel, and that of the Holy Land, and the
longing of every Israelite for the building of the Holy Temple, and the
greatness of Israel in the world – he will be practically unable at all to
taste the true flavor of the service of G-d."
This
helps us understand the mutual love between G-d and Israel symbolized by the
cherubim in the Temple facing each other with a common goal. We also understand
why G-d rushed to have Israel build a Tabernacle in the desert 40 years earlier
than planned – because G-d, as the "male," always wishes to give to
His chosen "female." And this also helps us understand the comparison
to the groom who wished to marry his intended right away.
But
we are well-advised to ensure that the love is mutual. Just
as the Sages tell us that G-d shows His great love for us via "the ten
perpetual miracles in the Temple" (Avot 5), and just as the Western Lamp
attests to His presence there (Shabbat 22b) – so too we must act upon our desire
to rebuild the Holy Temple. We may not allow ourselves to be distracted from
this vision and dream, and we may not have weakness of spirit as if many long
years will yet pass (Heaven forbid) before the Divine King's palace is
re-established. Rather, we must take the following practical steps:
The
Government of Israel must forbid non-Jews from entering the holiest locations
of the Temple, as is Halakhically ruled in the Mishna (Kelim 1). After the
battles of the Six Day War died down, no Arab set foot on the Temple site,
until then-Defense Minister Moshe Day gave them the keys. How could it have
happened that not one of the religious parties protested this disgrace? How can
it be that they all did not protest it? How did the rabbis not cry out
in opposition? And even now, Jewish prayer on the Mount is very restricted; is
this not a great disgrace that we cave in to the Gentiles, instead of ruling
there as we should?
But
the general populace are lovers of G-d and greatly desire and long to restore
the Divine Presence to Its place. "For your salvation we have pined all
day long," we say thrice daily in our prayers.
We
conclude with these words of inspiration from the Tanna D'vei Eliyahu Rabba:
"Every wise man in Israel who learns true words and ideas of Torah; and who sighs in pain at the [degraded] honor of G-d in the world, and regarding that of Israel, all his days; and who pines intensely for the honor of Jerusalem and the Holy Temple and the Salvation that it may sprout speedily in our times; and for the Ingathering of the Exiles – immediately, the Holy Spirit dwells within him."
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