Our
highest knowledge of the Creator enables us to bond with Him. It
sounds obvious that the more we know someone or something, the more
we are related to it. The point here is to apply this obvious fact
into real practice. This means that there are times in which our
knowledge of something doesn't necessarily imply that we are close
enough to it.
In this sense we refer to the knowledge of God as our
continuing connection with Him. This is what we mean when we call
Moses our highest knowledge of God, because he personifies our
relationship with the Creator. This explains the role of Moses
throughout his life along with the children of Israel, as it is
recalled in the narrative of the last two portions of the book
Exodus.
“All the work of the Tabernacle of the Tent of Meeting was
completed; the children of Israel had done [it]; according to all
that the Lord had commanded Moses, so they had done.”, “In
accordance with all that the Lord had commanded Moses, so did the
children of Israel do all the work. Moses
saw the entire work, and lo! they had done it as the Lord had
commanded, so had they done. So Moses blessed them.” (Exodus 39:32,
42-43)
Moses
our teacher shows us how the connection with the Creator works.
“Thus
Moses did according to all that the Lord had commanded him, so he
did.” (40:16)
Our connection with God is the
entire reason of our life because we come from Him, and to Him we
return from ego's fantasies and illusions. Our knowledge of God is
directly proportional to our separation from ego's agenda. In other
words, the more we live in our own delusions of grandeur, the more we
are far away from our true Essence and identity.
It may sound obvious
and logical the way we should approach our relationship with God, but
it indeed depends on our knowledge of the ways and attributes in
which He relates to us and His entire Creation. These are the ways He
reveals His Presence in us, because our Essence and true identity
emanate from His ways and attributes we call here God's Love.
There
is a practical approach to this, because our relationship with God is
not theoretical at all. The Torah shows us the ways and means to
fully live our permanent bond with God, and in the first Commandment
He gave us in the Exodus from Egypt is the starting point.
“It came
to pass in the first month, in the second year, on the first day of
the month, that the Tabernacle was set up.” (40:17)
We said in
other commentaries on this blog that the renewal the
Moon also represents our renewal as individuals and as a Nation. This
implies that there are no beginnings and endings but constant
renewals in our lives when we consecrate them to our Creator.
This
explains the inauguration of the Tabernacle in the New Moon of the
month in which God delivered us from Egypt, from the house of
slavery. There is a connection between our permanent bond with God
(represented by the Tabernacle) and the constant renewal of our
relationship with Him, as the premise to approach life in the
material world.
The Torah reminds us many times that once we
establish our permanent connection with God, He is also constantly
with us.
“For the cloud of the Lord was upon the Tabernacle by day,
and there was fire within it at night, before the eyes of the entire
house of Israel in all their journeys.” (40:38)
Vayekhel and Pekudei narrate
again the details of the construction of the Tabernacle to emphasize
the importance of our relationship with God, because without it there
is no real meaning in our life. The details seem to be even redundant
but we must understand them in their meanings regarding the aspects
and dimensions of consciousness we must direct and dedicate to our
relationship with God.
The idea is not repetition for the sake or
repetition but to remark and highlight the whole point of our
existence. The Tabernacle as our permanent connection with the
Creator is precisely such point. Hence we also have to repeat what we
have said before regarding this.
As a matter of fact, that has been
and is the point of our blog. We
want to call our attention about the Jewish identity, its origins,
its meanings, and especially its purpose. The Torah contains and
integrates all of them for us as Jews to recognize, embrace and
perform. Our Essence and true identity in sharp contrast to ego's
illusions and fantasies as the idols we are destined to defeat in
order to enthrone Love's ways and attributes in all levels and
dimensions of consciousness.
We
must insist that our relationship with God is based on Love as our
common bond with Him. We proclaim this principle before and after
reciting “Hear [understand] Israel, the Lord is our God, the
Lord is One”. So let's quote the Jewish prayer book with the
introductory blessing to this fundamental statement.
“You love us
with an everlasting love,
O Lord our God (...) Allow our hearts to understand, hear, learn,
teach, guard, do, and uphold all the matters of Your Torah's
instruction, with love (…)
And You have brought us close to Your great Name forever en truth, to
thank You, and proclaim Your Oneness with love.
Bless are You, Lord, who chooses His people Israel with love.”
In the evening we say,
“With endless love you
have loved the house of Israel. (…) May Your love never depart from
us. Blessed are You, Lord, who loves His
people Israel.”
And immediately we say,
“You shall love the
Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all
your might.”
As we proclaim God's Oneness we are also proclaiming
ourselves as part of Him with [in] Love.
Thus
we have to understand the Tabernacle as the time and space beyond
comprehension in which we know our Essence and identity as part of
our Creator. We realize this through Love as our common bond with
Him.
In this awareness there are no illusions or fantasies, because
the only Truth in which we live is God. And nothing else. Hence we
must know Him as the Source from where all emanates. This is why we
are here. This is our identity. This is our destiny.