There is a mitzvah to build a Mikdash, an abode, as it were, for the Shechinah. The Rambam, in Sefer Hamitzvos (mitzvah 20), describes the mitzvah as follows: “We are commanded to build a house of worship in which there will be sacrifices and a constantly-burning fire, and [will serve as] a central, go-to place [for] festival pilgrimage and [general] gathering year-round. As it says (Shmos 25:8), ‘and you shall make for Me a Mikdash’. This pasuk is referring to the building of the Mishkan, but it equally applies to the building of a Beis Ha’Mikdash as well.” This wording is a classic example of the Rambam’s style in which he enumerates the mitzvah and succinctly describes its practical application.
Thursday, February 21, 2019
OU TORAH Terumah 5778 By Rav Moshe Twersky, HY"D
There is a mitzvah to build a Mikdash, an abode, as it were, for the Shechinah. The Rambam, in Sefer Hamitzvos (mitzvah 20), describes the mitzvah as follows: “We are commanded to build a house of worship in which there will be sacrifices and a constantly-burning fire, and [will serve as] a central, go-to place [for] festival pilgrimage and [general] gathering year-round. As it says (Shmos 25:8), ‘and you shall make for Me a Mikdash’. This pasuk is referring to the building of the Mishkan, but it equally applies to the building of a Beis Ha’Mikdash as well.” This wording is a classic example of the Rambam’s style in which he enumerates the mitzvah and succinctly describes its practical application.
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