Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

Download print

Parashat Vayakhel: Building the Mishkan With Clean Money

The Torah in Parashat Vayakhel tells of Beneh Yisrael’s generous donation of materials towards the construction of the Mishkan. They eagerly and happily parted with much of the gold, silver and other riches which they had taken with them from Egypt for the purpose of building the Mishkan where the Divine Presence would reside.

One the most important principles that apply in the area of charitable donations is known as "Soneh Gazel Be’ola" (Yeshayahu 61:8) – G-d despises donations of stolen funds. Donations for noble and sacred purposes must be made with "clean money," assets that have been acquired legally and appropriately. If a person earns money through devious, corrupt means and donates it to charity or to a religious institution, this donation is "despised" by the Almighty.

In light of this, we might question how Beneh Yisrael were allowed to donate the riches taken from the Egyptians for the Mishkan. Before the Exodus, they were commanded by G-d to "borrow" clothing and utensils from the Egyptians (Shemot 11:2). If the Egyptians thought they were lending, and not giving, these materials, then they obviously expected them back at some point. Of course, Beneh Yisrael never returned these assets. How, then, could they have been used for the Mishkan? Did these materials not violate the fundamental rule of "Saneh Gezel Be’ola," that donations must be made with "clean money"?

The answer, seemingly, is that Beneh Yisrael rightfully deserved these riches, and much more, as back pay for the slave labor they performed for centuries. They were forced to perform back-breaking work all day, every day, for 210 years, without pay. Certainly, they had the right to demand payment for all this work, and so we might explain that the Egyptians’ possessions which they took with them at the time of Exodus were their due payment, rightfully and legally obtained.

The question, however, arises as to why the Egyptian citizens needed to pay for this labor. Beneh Yisrael worked not for them, but for Pharaoh, for the government. Presumably, then, it was Pharaoh’s responsibility to pay them from his treasury, and not the responsibility of the country’s citizens.

The answer to this question can be found in the Book of Bereshit, in Parashat Vayigash (47:20), where we read of Yosef’s management of Egypt during the harsh famine that struck the country. The Torah tells that Yosef, the vizier of Egypt, purchased all property in Egypt. He effectively put an end to private property in the country, as the government acquired all the land, and the people worked the land as sharecroppers, giving a percentage to the government and then keeping the rest. In essence, then, the entire country was the government’s property, and the people’s possessions were on loan, so-to-speak, from the government.

This is why Beneh Yisrael were justified in taking the riches from Egypt with them when they left the country. Since the government owed them two centuries’ worth of back pay for the slave labor they performed, and the government legally owned all the country’s wealth, Beneh Yisrael were entitled to the property of ordinary Egyptian civilians.

On this basis, we can perhaps explain an otherwise perplexing comment in the Midrash regarding Keri’at Yam Suf – the miracle of the splitting of the sea. When Beneh Yisrael found themselves trapped against the sea, the Midrash relates, the sea refused to split and let them escape – until it saw Yosef’s coffin, which Beneh Yisrael carried with them as they left Egypt. It was only in the merit of Yosef, the Midrash tells, that the sea split and allowed Beneh Yisrael to escape from the pursuing Egyptian army. Why did the sea initially refuse to split, and why did it agree only in Yosef’s merit?

Beneh Yisrael were destined to encamp at Mount Sinai and construct the Mishkan with the materials they had taken from the Egyptians. But this could happen only because of Yosef – meaning, because Yosef, who ran Pharaoh’s government, had purchased all property in Egypt. It was only because of Yosef’s overhaul of the country’s economic structure that it was legitimate for Beneh Yisrael to proceed to build a residence for G-d with the spoils of Egypt. Otherwise, this would have been stolen property, which could not possibly be used to build the site where the Divine Presence would reside. And thus the sea split, allowing Beneh Yisrael to cross and proceed to their destiny, only once it was verified that the riches they brought with them were legally obtained and thus suitable for the Mishkan.


Sefer/Parasha:
Shabbat Shuba: The Easiest Misva
Parashat Nisavim- Outreach by Default
Shabbat Morning Class - Parasha Chayei Sarah
Parashat Ki-Tabo: Reading the Curses
Parashat Ki-Teseh: Misvot and the Potato Chip Syndrome
Parashat Shofetim: The Knock on the Door
Parashat Re'eh: Mount Gerizim and Mount Ebal
Parashat Ekeb- Putting Life Into Our Berachot
Parashat Vaethanan- Attitude Matters
Parashat Debarim: Is it Worth it?
Parashat Matot- Words are Not Cheap
Parashat Pinhas: Appreciating Other People’s Needs
Parashat Balak: The Three Regalim and the Sin of the Calf
Parashat Hukat: Appreciate it While You Have it
Parashat Korah: Korah’s Mistakes
1002 Parashot found