The Poles of the Aron
that Carries its Carriers
The Torah makes a curious
distinction between the poles of the Aron (Ark of the Covenant) and the poles
of the Mizbeiach (incense altar) and Shulchan (table of the showbreads). It is forbidden to ever remove the poles
from the Aron, as it says, "The poles should be in the rings of the Aron
and not leave it,” (Shemot 25:15 according to the Sages on Yoma 72a), but
there is no such prohibition with regards to the Mizbeiach and Shulchan. When there was a need to transport the
Mizbeiach and Shulchan, they inserted the poles, but the Aron’s poles stayed
there permanently. Why the difference?
Why the poles could never
leave the Aron can be understood similarly to the Rambam’s approach to lighting
the menora. According to the Rambam (Hilkhot Temidin Umusafin 3:10) the candles
were lit both at night and in the morning.
There is a powerful lesson
behind the Rambam’s approach. The
Gemara comments: “Does He (G-d)
need the menora’s light? Of course
not. Rather, the Menorah’s light
was testimony that the Divine Presence rests in Israel. (Shabbat 22b)” This might be what is behind
the Rambam’s understanding of the mitzvah of lighting the Menora. Candles lit during the day are
clearly not there to illuminate the darkness. They are a sign of the Divine Presence.
The poles of the Aron might
serve a similar purpose. The
Talmud tells us the Aron’s weight was not carried by those holding onto the
poles. “The Aron lifted up those
who carried it (Sota 35a).” Its
poles were not there to enable it to be carried, but for its transporters
to hold onto as it was miraculously moving from place to place. The Aron is the dwelling place of the
Divine Glory, which itself carries all the worlds.
Therefore the poles are always
to remain in the rings of the Aron. This makes a powerful statement. Just as the poles do not serve to transport the Aron
when it is stationary, so they do not when the Aron is being “held” on the
shoulders of those who “carry” it. It
carries them; they do not carry it.
Just as candles lit during
the day are not just there for illumination, so poles that remain in a stationary
Aron are not just there to facilitate transportation.
from
Classic Divrei Torah on Parshat Shavua
Print Version of http://www.darchenoam.org/articles/web/parsha/ar_teruma.htm
Copyright 2003 Darche
Noam Institutions
