Parsha Q&A - Parshat Pekudei
Parshat Pekudei
This publication is also available in the following formats: Explanation of these symbols
Parsha Questions
- Why is the word Mishkan stated twice in verse 38:21?
- Why is the Mishkan called the "Mishkan of Testimony"?
- Who was appointed to carry the vessels of the Mishkan in the midbar?
- Who was the officer in charge of the levi’im?
- What is the meaning of the name Betzalel?
- How many people contributed a half-shekel to the Mishkan? Who contributed?
- Which material used in the bigdei kehuna was not used in the coverings of the sacred vessels?
- How were the gold threads made?
- What was inscribed on the stones on the shoulders of the ephod?
- What was on the hem of the me’il?
- What did the kohen gadol wear between the mitznefet and the tzitz?
- What role did Moshe play in the construction of the Mishkan?
- Which date was the first time that the Mishkan was erected and not dismantled?
- What was the "tent" which Moshe spread over the Mishkan (40:19)?
- What "testimony" did Moshe place in the aron?
- What function did the parochet serve?
- Where was the shulchan placed in the Mishkan?
- Where was the menorah placed in the Mishkan?
- Who offered the communal sacrifices during the eight days of the dedication of the Mishkan?
- On which day did both Moshe and Aharon serve as kohanim?
Megilas Esther What's Bothering Rashi
Contents |
Rashi comments: "Of all his offspring:" This refers back to "his people;" the seed of the people. Rashi interprets his of the phrase "his offspring" to refer to the people’s (its) offspring and not the more likely interpretation, his own (Mordechai’s) offspring. This is strange because Mordechai is the subject of the entire verse. So when it say "his offspring" one would assume it means Mordechai’s offspring. Why then does Rashi say "the people’s offspring?" What’s Bothering Rashi? Answer: The verse has a certain structure of going from less to more: The verse says three things about Mordechai:
The verse goes from less to more: Most of his brothers, his people, and then all of his offspring (even future generations). Now if this last phrase refers only to Mordechai’s own offspring, then it would be referring to a smaller group. But if it refers to the future generations of all Jews, then it follows the structure of the verse, for it refers to an even larger group. Rabbi Avigdor Bonchek, Author of "What’s Bothering Rashi," Feldheim Publishers |
---|
I Did Not Know That!
The words "as Hashem commanded" appear 18 times regarding the Mishkan’s construction. The Sages instituted 18 blessings in the Shemone Esrei prayer to correspond to these 18 commands. Today, when we have no Beit Hamikdash, the 18 blessings of the Shemone Esrei substitute for the sacrifices offered in the Mishkan.
Vayikra Rabba 1:18 (thanks to Rabbi Sholem Fishbane)
Contents
|
|
Answers to this Week's Questions
Questions | ContentsAll references are to the verses and Rashi's commentary, unless otherwise stated
- Why is the word Mishkan stated twice in verse 38:21?
- Why is the Mishkan called the "Mishkan of Testimony"?
- Who was appointed to carry the vessels of the Mishkan in the midbar?
- Who was the officer in charge of the levi’im?
- What is the meaning of the name Betzalel?
- How many people contributed a half-shekel to the Mishkan? Who contributed?
- Which material used in the bigdei kehuna was not used in the coverings of the sacred vessels?
- How were the gold threads made?
- What was inscribed on the stones on the shoulders of the ephod?
- What was on the hem of the me’il?
- What did the kohen gadol wear between the mitznefet and the tzitz?
- What role did Moshe play in the construction of the Mishkan?
- Which date was the first time that the Mishkan was erected and not dismantled?
- What was the "tent" which Moshe spread over the Mishkan (40:19)?
- What "testimony" did Moshe place in the aron?
- What function did the parochet serve?
- Where was the shulchan placed in the Mishkan?
- Where was the menorah placed in the Mishkan?
- Who offered the communal sacrifices during the eight days of the dedication of the Mishkan?
- On which day did both Moshe and Aharon serve as kohanim?
38:21 - To allude to the Beit Hamikdash that would twice be taken as a "mashkon" (pledge) for the sins of the Jewish People until the nation repents.
38:21 - It was testimony for the Jewish People that Hashem forgave them for the golden calf and allowed His Shechina to dwell among them.
38:21 - The levi’im.
38:21 - Itamar ben Aharon.
38:22 - "In the shadow of G-d."
38:26 - 603,550. Every man age twenty and over (except the levi’im).
39:1 - Linen (See Rashi 31:10).
39:3 - The gold was beaten into thin plates from which threads were cut. (See Rashi 28:6).
39:6, 39:7 - The names of the tribes.
39:24,25 - Woven pomegranates and golden bells.
39:31 - Tefillin.
39:33 - He stood it up.
40:17 - Rosh Chodesh Nissan of the second year in the desert. For seven days before this, during the consecration of Aharon and his sons, Moshe erected and dismantled the Mishkan. (Rashi 39:29)
40:19 - The curtain of goat-skin.
40:20 - The Luchot Habrit.
40:21 - It served as a partition for the aron.
40:22 - On the northern side of the Ohel Mo’ed, outside the parochet.
40:24 - On the southern side of the Ohel Mo’ed opposite the shulchan.
40:29 - Moshe.
40:31 - On the eighth day of the consecration of the Mishkan
Written and Compiled by Rabbi Eliyahu Kane &
Rabbi Reuven Subar
General Editor: Rabbi Moshe Newman
Production Design: Michael Treblow
© 2000 Ohr Somayach International - All rights reserved. This publication may be distributed to another person intact without prior permission. We also encourage you to include this material in other publications, such as synagogue newsletters. However, we ask that you contact us beforehand for permission, and then send us a sample issue.
This publication is available via E-Mail
Ohr Somayach Institutions is an international network of Yeshivot and outreach centers, with branches in North America, Europe, South Africa and South America. The Central Campus in Jerusalem provides a full range of educational services for over 685 full-time students.
The Jewish Learning Exchange (JLE) of Ohr Somayach offers summer and winter programs in Israel that attract hundreds of university students from around the world for 3 to 8 weeks of study and touring.
Copyright © 2000 Ohr Somayach International. Send us Feedback.
Dedication opportunities are available for Parsha Q&A. Please contact us for details.