Why Did Rashi Say That?
Why is the inauguration of the Mishkan called Hashem's greatest joy — even above the giving of the Torah? What does it mean that wedding language appears twice in the Torah, once at Sinai and once at the Mishkan, as if the two events complete a single sentence? And if the whole point of creation was Hashem dwelling in this world — where does that leave us right now? Rabbi Klapper uncovers a thread running from the Rambam through the Mishnah in Maseches Taanis that reframes everything we thought we knew about Shavuos. Yes, the giving of the Torah was the wedding — Yom Chasunaso. But the Mishnah reserves a separate category for Yom Simchas Libo, the day of deepest joy: the moment the Mishkan was completed and the Shekhinah actually descended into this world. Rashi's commentary on the Nasi Yissachar's korban traces the entire sweep of history forward to that moment — Adam, Noach, the seventy nations, the Avos, Moshe, all of them hinted at in a single korban — because every generation was one step in the same long courtship. Har Sinai was not the destination. It was the commitment. The Mishkan was when Hashem finally came home. Discover that Sinai was the wedding, but the Mishkan was when Hashem moved in — and those are two very different things. Learn that bringing Torah into your home isn't extra credit; it's the architecture that invites the Shekhinah in. Uncover what Chazal knew and we keep forgetting: the presence of Hashem in a home isn't a miracle waiting to happen — it's a choice you can make tonight. Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!
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