Search
Close this search box.

HaRav Zev Leff: Parshas Vayeitzei


The Jewish Home:

Not like Avraham who called it [the Beis Hamikdash] “mountain,” and not like Yitzchak who called it “field,” but rather like Yaukov who called it “house. . .” (Pesachim 88a).

Rambam in the beginning of Hilchos Beis HaBechirah lists three functions of the Beis Hamikdash: (1) to be a bayis LaHashem- literally, God’s house; (2) to be the place where sacrifices will be offered; and (3) to be the place to which the Jewish people will ascend three times yearly to celebrate the Festivals.

The Beis Hamikdash serves as a mountain (har), a place to ascend to, to look up to, a place that inspires one to feel that he is in the shadow of the Shechinah, the Divine Presence. That is the function of the Beis Hamikdash emphasized by Avraham Avinu “Har Hashem yera’eh-the mountain upon which God will be seen” and from which the Jewish people will be observed by God. This refers to the first Beis Hamikdash, on which the Shechinah devolved and which made a profound impression on those who stood in its shadow.

Yitzchak emphasized the second function of the Beis Hamikdash by calling it “field (sadeh),” a place for growth and development, an environment conducive to bringing out all man’s various emotions and expressing them in Hashem’s service. This was the essence of the second Beis HamiLdash, which lacked the full measure of Shechinah, but which still served as a place for prayer and the bringing of the sacrifices.

It was left to Yaakov Avinu, however, to perceive the all-encompassing nature of the Beis Hamikdash as the House of God. Yaakov clearly knew the place of the future Mikdash as one where his forefathers prayed. That is why he returned after having passed by on his way to Charan. Nevertheless after awakening from his dream, he exclaimed, “… verily God is in this place and I did not know it…. How awesome is this place. This is none other than God’s House, and this is the Gateway to Heaven” (Bereishis 28:16-17). Although he knew of the distinction of this site as a mountain and a field, its significance as a house, which he perceived at that moment, overshadowed either of those designations. That designation applies to the third Beis Hamikdash, which will be eternal and influence the entire world.

Yaakov perceived this aspect of the Beis Hamikdash as he was ready to descend into galus, where his children would be as the dust of the earth, trod upon by all the nations of the world, yet, at the same time, a source of inspiration and blessing to the entire world. In galus the concept of Beis Hashem would be embodied in the House of Prayer, House of Study, and the Jewish Home. These three would preserve the Jewish people in galus and enable them to return to Eretz Yisrael and receive the ultimate Beis Hashem, the third Temple.

To appreciate the precise function of the Beis Hashem, we must understand what a house is. A house is basically four walls, a door, and perhaps a window. The four walls serve three functions. First, they create an interior area, a private inner domain, separated from the public domain. The Jewish home must create an environment of Jewish values and morals, an inner sanctum of spirituality that serves as the foundation of Torah learning and observance.

Secondly, the walls form a partition that encompass and unite all the individuals who occupy this inner area. Shalom bayis refers to the perfect harmony that the home engenders, where each individual feels himself part of a unit that must function together-each using their unique talents for a common goal. And finally, the walls of the house serve as buffers against destructive foreign influences, hostile to Torah values.

Once the inner area is infused with sanctity and purpose, then the light from the inside can be projected from the windows, and the intense sanctity of this home environment can be exposed to the outside world

There are several mitzvos that apply specifically to a house. The mitzvah of Shabbos lights symbolizes the sanctity that the house must engender and the enlightenment of Torah values and ethics. In addition, the Shabbos lights symbolize the harmony that is produced when each member takes care not to step on others in the darkness of ignorance and selfishness. The mezuzah and ma’akeh (guard-rail) represent the protection the house offers from the physical and spiritual dangers of the outside world. Bedikas chametz (checking for chametz prior to Pesach) teaches us that we must from time to time check to see if foreign influences have succeeded in invading the house and remove them. Lastly, the mitzvah of Chanukah lights placed outside the door or in the window symbolizes the influence that the Jewish home can have on the outside world.

The letters of the word bais itself hint to its function. Bais represents binah, understanding-understanding of what to let in and what to keep outside. Yud is a letter of holiness, but it also represents the unity of all the separate integers that unite to form one unit of ten. The yud represents the holiness that pervades the home when all of the individuals unite in service of Hashem with a common goal. And finally, the suf is a sign-a sign to the outside world of the Jewish home’s influence on the entire world.

It is significant that the parashah that depicts Yaakov’s first galus deals primarily with our Mothers. The woman is the akeres habayis, and more specifically the essence of the bayis itself (Shabbos 118b). To survive in galus and prepare for the Bayis Hagadol Vehakadosh -the Third Temple-we must strengthen our public houses, shuls, study houses, as well as our individual homes, to reflect the ultimate functions of that future house of God.



Leave a Reply


Popular Posts