וַיֹּאמֶר מֹשֶׁה אֶל בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל רְאוּ קָרָא ה' בְּשֵׁם בְּצַלְאֵל בֶּן אוּרִי בֶן חוּר לְמַטֵּה יְהוּדָה
Moshe said to Bnei Yisrael, “See, Hashem has appointed by name, Betzalel son of Uri son of Chur, of the tribe of Yehudah” (35:30)
A Standard – and Unusual – Introduction
With these words, Moshe introduces the individual charged with overseeing the construction of the Mishkan and its vessels as well as the manufacture of the bigdei kehuna – the priestly garments.
It is interesting to examine this pasuk and consider whether there is anything unusual about the way Betzalel is introduced.
- On the one hand, it is common for the Torah to mention which tribe a person comes from.
- What is uncommon, however, is for the Torah to mention the person’s father and grandfather – normally the father alone suffices.
In this instance, the Meshech Chochmah explains that the mention both of the grandfather and the tribe are significant and, indeed, they both represent the same idea.
The Roots of Wisdom
After introducing Betzalel, the following pasuk relates that Hashem filled him with “חכמה תבונה ודעת – wisdom, understanding and knowledge,” all assets that he would need for the items he needed to make. We may ask, from where did Betzalel merit this level of wisdom and understanding? The answer, says the Meshech Chochmah, lies in his roots, for Betzalel’s wisdom derived from an attribute which was embodied both by his tribe in general and one of his forbears in particular.
The tribe from which Betzalel came was Yehudah. Chazal[1] relate that when Bnei Yisrael stood at the banks of the Yam Suf and saw that they were being pursued by the Egyptians, it was representatives of the tribe of Yehudah who risked their lives and entered the sea even before it had split, thereby sanctifying Hashem’s name.
This same attribute of mesirus nefesh was exhibited much later on by a scion of the tribe of Yehudah, namely, Chur – Betzalel’s grandfather. The Gemara[2] recounts that when the people were constructing the Golden Calf, Chur publicly opposed them and was killed as a result.
The quality of mesirus nefesh demands – among other things – a suspension of one’s faculty of daas. If one were to employ one’s daas, it is possible to rationalize avoiding offering one’s life in almost any situation. Indeed, most telling in this regard is the observation of R’ Yosef Yaavetz,[3] known as the Chassid Yaavetz, who states that in the times of the Inquisition, it was generally the unlearned Jews who remained steadfast in their faith, even to the point of sacrificing their lives, while it was the more scholarly and philosophically inclined who were prepared to rationalize and justify an abdication of their religious beliefs under pressure.
This, then, is the background to Betzalel’s extraordinary wisdom. It derives from the Divine system of midah keneged midah – measure for measure. The tribe of Yehudah generally and Chur specifically were prepared to suspend their faculty of daas in order to offer their lives al kiddush Hashem. In response, the Source of all wisdom rewarded the heir of such sacrifice – Betzalel, with an abundance of daas such as would allow him to build the Mishkan through a profound understanding of the cosmic significance of each of its component parts.
Betzalel and the Aron
Indeed, bearing in mind Betzalel’s unique background, the Meshech Chochmah explains what appears to be an anomaly in the pesukim describing the construction of the Mishkan and its vessels.
Having introduced Betzalel in our pasuk, the Torah proceeds to describe him constructing – or overseeing the construction of – the various aspects of the Mishkan with the word “ויעש – he made,” with the word “he” referring to Betzalel. This is true in almost all case, with one exception. With regards to the construction of the Aron, the pasuk states[4]
וַיַּעַשׂ בְּצַלְאֵל אֶת הָאָרֹן
Betzalel made the Aron
- Why is the Torah prepared to refer to Betzalel with the pronoun “he” with regards to every aspect of the Mishkan and its vessels except for the Aron?
The answer, says the Meshech Chochmah, is that whereas with regards to the other parts of the Mishkan it is sufficient for Betzalel to be involved generally in a supervisory capacity, when it came to the Aron, Hashem insisted the he be involved personally. The reason for this is that the Aron contains an element which only Betzalel could be relied upon to approach with absolute integrity.
The Gemara[5] informs us that the Keruvim which were on top of the Aron functioned as an indicator as to whether or not Bnei Yisrael were fulfilling Hashem’s will properly. If the nation was acting as they should, the Keruvim faced one another; while if the people where not acting as Hashem desired of them, the Keruvim faced away from each other.
The benefit of this indicator is that it provided direct and compelling evidence of Bnei Yisrael’s spiritual state. The potential danger, however, is that with such a visual response on the part of the Keruvim, the People could come to ascribe to them independent judgment – as well as other attributes. As we have seen,[6] part of what was behind the making of the Egel was the people’s propensity to ascribing independent qualities and power to physical objects. Without clarity of vision and correct perspective, the fashioning of the Keruvim could potentially bear the very same risk!
There was, however, one individual who could be relied upon to fashion the Keruvim with purity of intent and clarity of vision, and that was Betzalel. Being descended from Chur, the very person who stood up to those who sought to make the Egel, and sacrificed his life in the process,[7] Betzalel would surely have none of the tendencies which led to the Egel.[8] Hence, while he may have been involved in most other parts of the Mishkan generally, the Torah insists that when it comes to the Aron, Betzalel construct it personally. That is why the pasuk mentions his name explicitly in connection with making the Aron.
Indeed, in this regard, the Meshech Chochmah points out that whereas prior to the Chet ha’Egel, Betzalel s introduced as someone who is qualified “לַעֲשׂוֹת בְּכָל מְלָאכָה – to perform all manner of labor,”[9] in our Parsha he is referred to as one who is qualified “לַעֲשׂוֹת בְּכָל מְלֶאכֶת מַחֲשָׁבֶת – to perform all manner of thought-out labor.”[10] The added element of correct “thought” within the construction of the Mishkan became an essential requirement in light of the potential pitfalls that were revealed at the time of the Egel.
Thus, Betzalel, grandson of Chur who sacrificed his life while opposing the making of the Egel, was the one whose God-given wisdom led Bnei Yisrael in their recovery from that episode and whose efforts were rewarded in the Shechinah once again residing among the Jewish People – to which the Mishkan was living testimony.
[1] Tosefta Berachos 4:16.
[2] Sanhedrin 7a, quoted in Rashi to Shemos 32:5.
[3] In his work Ohr HaChaim, chap. 5.
[4] 37:1.
[5] Bava Basra 99b.
[6] See essay on Parshas Ki Tisa.
[7] Sanhedrin 7a, quoted in Rashi to Shemos 32:5.
[8] The Gemara (Sanhedrin 64a) relates that when the Jewish People returned under Ezra to rebuild the Beis Hamikdash, the Anshei Knesses Hagedolah prayed that the inclination towards avodah zarah be removed, whereupon fire in the form of a lion-cub emerged from the Kodesh Hakodashim. The Meshech Chochmah suggests that with these words Chazal are indicating that the potential for avodah zarah existed within the Kodesh Hakodashim as well, with relation to the Keruvim. Hence, when the inclination towards avodah zarah was removed, it exited the Kodesh Hakodashim as well. [Perhaps we may add that since Betzalel personally undertook the construction of the Keruvim, his purity of thought ensured that they would never become the actual object of avodah zarah. Hence, the fire representing the inclination toward avodah zarah which emerged from the Kodesh Hakodashim had the form, not of a full-grown lion, but of an [undeveloped] lion-cub.
[9] Shemos 31:5.
[10] Ibid. 35:33.