This week’s Parshah is almost entirely devoted to listing the many physical details of the Mishkan. Why does the Torah, which never wastes a single letter, spend so much time discussing even the most “trivial” details of the Mishkan? Furthermore, the Mishkan will never again be reconstructed. If so, why does the Torah need to list every painstaking detail, down to the very measurements of each board, of how it was built?

Sometimes we may feel that our “small” mitzvos aren’t important. We may even question why Hashem would care whether or not a “small” mitzvah is done. One lesson from the Mishkan is to dispel this notion. For, on one hand, we don’t understand the purpose of many of the acts of serving Hashem that happened within it. Why would Hashem care if the board of the Mishkan was an inch longer or shorter? What difference did it make which ingredients were in the Ketores? Yet, it is well-known know that every aspect of the Mishkan was of immeasurable importance and brought legendary physical and spiritual blessing to the world. Similarly, when we question why our “small” mitzvos are important, let us look at the Mishkan and consider that perhaps we don’t really understand what are “big” and “small” mitzvos. Rather, every aspect of fulfilling Hashem's Will is a BIG deal.

Living Inspired

Perhaps there is another reason behind why Hashem wrote out every detail of the Mishkan’s construction within the Torah. Consider the following true story:

Thomas Alva Edison is one of history’s greatest inventors. He developed many devices that greatly influenced life around the world, including the record player, the motion picture camera, and the long-lasting, practical, electric light bulb. In fact, he held 1,093 patents in his name just in the USA alone, as well as many more in other countries as well.

When Thomas Edison was a young child, he once came home from school holding a note from his teacher in his hand. He said to his mother worriedly “my teacher gave it to me. What does it say?”. His mother read the note, looked into his eyes, and said with a proud smile: “it says ‘Thomas Alva Edison is a brilliant genius. Our school is not gifted enough to teach him. We recommend that you homeschool him instead, to best tap into his full potential’”.

Decades later, after his mother passed away, Thomas Edison was going through his storage attic when he happened upon the very note that he had brought back from school to his mother years earlier. What he saw shocked him. The note read: "Thomas Edison is a complete imbecile. He will never amount to anything. He is expelled from our school”. Thomas paused for a few moments, took out his private diary and wrote “My mother was an incredibly special and clever woman. By telling her son that he is capable, she took 'an imbecile' and single-handedly transformed him into one of history’s greatest inventors”.

Hashem utilizes a powerful technique to bring out the very best in us: He reminds us constantly just how infinitely important we are to Him and how capable we are. For example: He created each and every one of us with our own unique appearance, to remind us that we are unique and special to Hashem and that we are so capable that He would have created the entire world for just one of us (Sanhedrin 37a). Perhaps our parshah is yet another demonstration of this concept. Think about it: The Mishkan was a beautiful manifestation of the Jewish nation coming together to attempt the impossible - to build a “house” for Hashem. Many Jews wondered, however, if Hashem would be interested in resting His presence within a structure built by mere man (see Rashi Vayikra 9:23); for why would the Master of The Universe be interested in the feeble works and actions of mankind? Hashem responded by not only publicly resting His Clouds of Glory within the Mishkan (40:34-38), but by also recording even the most trivial details, for all of eternity, in the holy Torah. By not skipping even the smallest detail of our construction efforts, Hashem was demonstrating to us just how truly capable we are - for every action that we performed indeed succeeded in being cherished and valued with the highest level of significance by G-d Almighty Himself*.

As we read the many verses that Hashem wrote in this week’s parshah to discuss every aspect of the Mishkan’s construction, may we take to heart that Hashem did so to demonstrate just how important every action that we do to serve Him is and how capable we are. Similarly, within our own lives as well, Hashem is proudly recording our every mitzvah within a special book, down to the very last detail (as our actions carry paramount significance)**. Our mitzvos have always been, and continue to be, infinitely more precious and significant than they may appear to the untrained eye.

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*- See Rashi, Bereishis 24:42, where he points out that when the Torah discusses an event at length, it is a clear demonstration of just how important those actions were to Him.

**- See Pirkei Avos 3:3