CONGREGATION SHIR TIKVAH 3633 W. Big Beaver, Troy, 643-6520. Rabbi: Arnie Sleutelberg. HUMANISTIC: THE BIRMINGHAM TEMPLE 28611 West 12 Mile Rd., Farmington Hills, 477-1410. Rabbi: Sherwin T. Wine. Services: Friday 8:30 p.m. The Birmingham Temple drama group will share readings of favorite Jewish humorists. RECONSTRUCTIONIST: T'CHIYAH St. Antoine at Monroe, Detroit, 393-1089. UNAFFILIATED: SEPHARDIC COMMUNITY OF GREATER DETROIT 15751 W. Lincoln. Southfield. 545-8945. !TORAH PORTION I Temple Emanu-El Presents Meeting In The Mishkan Of Jewish Identity RABBI EFRY SPECTRE Special to The Jewish News T he Torah this week be- gins a thorough, fully detailed description of the construction and inven- tory of the Mishkan, the first institution of community wor- ship of the Jewish people. We have an unsparing account of the materials, furniture and religious appurtenances our ancestors shaped for their desert service. Holiness was to emanate from this taber- nacle where the Shekhina, the presence of God, would be most keenly apprehended. The Ohel Mo'ed, that part protected by a tent-like struc- ture, was to be the meeting Shabbat Teruma: Exodus 25:1-27:19, Kings 1 5:26-6:13. place of God and Moses. Within the holy of holies, just above the Ark of the Cove- nant, God would speak to him. There are authors, we know, who revel in painting a com- plete picture. Proust can go on for pages savoring the ap- pointments of a room; Tom Wolfe can skewer the values of a disintegrating society with a satiric designer's ap- proach to the snobbish dinner party in The Bonfire of the Vanities. Even the Megillah, which we shall soon consider, draws the reader's attention to a highly itemized account of the wealth in the palace at Shushan. But the Torah's purpose, after all, is to teach us how to live. Our commentators were momentarily perplexed. The Mishkan was not a perma- nent institution. Upon Israel's entering the promised land it disappeared. When Efry Spectre is senior rabbi of Adat Shalom Synagogue. Solomon, centuries later, built the Temple in Jerusalem, dimensions cited in the Torah were changed. Why did the Bible, then, have to detail so precisely that which would soon not to be forever an active part of our people's lives? Forty years later, what was the relevance of community worship, of regulated sacrifice, to a people newly ar- rived in their land? Now that the manna no longer was fall- ing from heaven and a living had to be eked out of a resisting environment, how important was Shiloh where the Ark now rested? Who had time to consider the vestiges of earlier history? The rabbis saw a metaphor in the painstaking descrip- tion. Each part of the Mishkan could be equated with parts of the human anatomy. When the Taber- nacle, itself, no longer ex- isted, its symbolic meaning would make possible an ap- proach to God, a spiritual renewal when the lesson was caught. Moreover, the proliferation of detail enabled our sages to give needed direction in the ever-ongoing struggle bet- ween permanence and change: In today's sedra it is specifically written, "And I will speak with you above the ark-cover" (Exodus XXV:22). Yet, in the Sifa (LXXXII:4) and in Rashi's Commentary we find that Rabbi Nathan states that God spoke to Moses from the altar of in- cense and a student of Rabbi Ishmael locates the phenomenon near the altar of burnt offerings, each citing appropriate sources in next week's reading. How marvelous! How rele- vant! How alive and impor- tant is the loving detail! For what are the rabbis em- phasizing? Rabbi Nathan is saying that God didn't speak to Moses from the holy of holies where the Ark is, but vLsa y 111-e In Kip Detroit Premier of "Jewish Qoots and the Classics" 6aturday ♦ March 24 ♦ 8:00 p.m. ♦ $12.50 per person Patron Deception and concert ♦ 7:00 p.m. ♦ 650.00 per person VISA' Call Temple Emanu-El for further information, 967-4020 Bright Lights MasterCard THREE WAYS TO BUY A CAR The newest lighting showroom featuring: • lamps • fixtures • bulbs Colony Interiors 851-1881 West Bloomfield ARNIE WEISS inside bruce m. weiss MIKE GERMANSKY TAMAROFF Custom Jewelry BUICK • HONDA • NISSAN • IZUZU • YUGO 26325 Twelve Mile Rd. in the Mayfair Shops At Northwestern Hwy. New Used or Leasing Monday-Saturday 10-5:30 Thursday 10-8:30 353-1424 Open Mon. & Thurs. Til 9 28565 TELEGRAPH ROAD ACROSS FROM TEL-12 Southfield Open Tres., Wed., Fri. Til 6 353-1300 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 49