Shabbat of Vision
And I, Daniel, alone saw the vision, but the people
with me did not see it; yet a great terror befell
them, and they fled into hiding.
Daniel 10:7
But if they did not see the vision, why were they
terrified? Because though they themselves did not
see, their souls saw.
Talmud, Megillah 3a
On the ninth day of the month of Av ("Tishah
B’Av") we fast and mourn the destruction of the
Holy Temple in Jerusalem. Both the First Temple (833–423
bce) and the Second Temple (353 bce–69 ce) were destroyed
on this date. The Shabbat preceding the fast day is
called the "Shabbat of Vision," for on this
Shabbat we read a chapter from the Prophets entitled
"The Vision of Isaiah."[i]
But there is also a deeper significance to the name
"Shabbat of Vision," expressed by Chassidic
master Rabbi Levi Yitzchak of Berdichev[ii]
with the following metaphor:
A father once prepared a beautiful suit of clothes
for his son. But the child neglected his father’s
gift and soon the suit was in tatters. The father
gave the child a second suit of clothes, but this
one, too, was ruined by the child’s carelessness.
So the father made a third suit. This time, however,
he withheld it from his son.
Every once in a while, in special and opportune
times, he shows the suit to the child, explaining
that when the child learns to appreciate and properly
care for the suit, it will be given to him. This induces
the child to improve his behavior, until it gradually
becomes second nature to him—at which time he will
be worthy of his father’s gift.
On the "Shabbat of Vision," says Rabbi
Levi Yitzchak, each and every one of us is granted
a vision of the third and final Temple—a vision that,
to paraphrase the Talmud, "though we do not see
ourselves, our souls see." This vision evokes
a profound response in us, even if we are not consciously
aware of the cause of our sudden inspiration.
The Divine Dwelling
The Holy Temple in Jerusalem was the seat of G-d’s
manifest presence in the physical world.
A basic tenet of our faith is that "The entire
earth is filled with His presence"[iii]
and "There is no place void of Him."[iv] But G-d’s presence and involvement
in His creation are masked by the seemingly independent
and arbitrary workings of nature and history. The
Holy Temple was a breach in this mask, a window through
which G-d radiated His light into the world. Here
G-d’s involvement in our world was openly displayed
by an edifice in which miracles were a "natural"
part of its daily operation[v]
and whose very space expressed the infinity and all-pervasiveness
of the Creator.[vi]
Here G-d showed Himself to man and man presented himself
to G-d.[vii]
Twice we were given the gift of a Divine dwelling
in our midst. Twice we failed to prove worthy of this
gift and banished the Divine presence from our lives.
So G-d built us a third temple. Unlike its two predecessors,
which were of human construction and therefore subject
to debasement by man’s misdeeds, the Third Temple
is as eternal and invincible as its Architect. But
G-d has withheld this "third suit of clothes"
from us, confining its reality to a higher, heavenly
sphere, beyond the sight and experience of our earthly
selves.
Each year, on the "Shabbat of Vision,"
G-d shows us the Third Temple. Our souls behold a
vision of a world at peace with itself and its Creator,
a world suffused with the knowledge and awareness
of G-d, a world that has realized its Divine potential
for goodness and perfection. It is a vision of the
Third Temple in heaven—in its spiritual and elusive
state—like the third set of clothes in the analogy,
which the child sees but cannot have. But it is also
a vision with a promise: a vision of a heavenly temple
poised to descend to earth, a vision that inspires
us to correct our behavior and hasten the day when
the spiritual Temple becomes tactual reality.
Through these repeated visions, living in the Divine
presence becomes more and more "second nature"
to us (as Rabbi Levi Yitzchak says in his analogy),
progressively elevating us to the state of worthiness
to experience the Divine in our daily lives.
The Wearable House
The metaphors of our sages continue to speak to us
long after the gist of their message has been assimilated.
Beneath the surface of the metaphor’s most obvious
import lies layer upon layer of meaning, in which
each and every detail of the narrative is significant.
The same applies to Rabbi Levi Yitzchak’s analogy.
Its basic meaning is clear, but many subtle insights
are enfolded within its details. For example: Why,
we might ask, are the three Temples portrayed as three
suits of clothes? Would not the example of a building
or house[viii] have been more appropriate?
The house and the garment both "house"
and contain the person. But the garment does so in
a much more personal and individualized manner. While
it is true that the dimensions and style of a home
reflect the nature of its occupant, they do so in
a more generalized way—not as specifically and as
intimately as a garment suits its wearer.
On the other hand, the individual nature of the garment
limits its function to one’s personal use. A home
can house many; a garment can clothe only one. I can
invite you into my home, but I cannot share my garment
with you: even if I give it to you, it will not clothe
you as it clothes me, for it "fits" only
myself.
G-d chose to reveal His presence in our world in
a "dwelling"—a communal structure that goes
beyond the personal to embrace an entire people and
the entire community of man.[ix]
Yet the Holy Temple in Jerusalem also had certain
garment-like features. It is these features that Rabbi
Levi Yitzchak wishes to emphasize by portraying the
Holy Temple as a suit of clothes.
For the Holy Temple was also a highly compartmentalized
structure. There was a "Women’s Court" and
a courtyard reserved for men, an area restricted to
the kohanim (priests), a "Sanctuary"
(heichal) imbued with a greater sanctity than
the "courtyards," and the "Holy of
Holies"—a chamber into which only the High Priest
could enter and only on Yom Kippur, the holiest day
of the year. The Talmud enumerates eight domains of
varying sanctity within the Temple complex, each with
its distinct function and purpose.[x]
In other words, although the Temple expressed a single
truth—the all-pervasive presence of G-d in our world—it
did so to each individual in a personalized manner.
Although it was a "house" in the sense that
it served many individuals—indeed the entire world—as
their meeting point with the infinite, each and every
individual found it a tailor-made "garment"
for his or her specific spiritual needs, according
him or her a personal and intimate relationship with
G-d.
Each year, on the Shabbat before Tishah B’Av, we
are shown a vision of our world as a Divine home—a
place where all G-d’s creatures will experience His
presence. But this is also a vision of a G-dly "garment"—the
distinctly personal relationship with G-d, particularly
suited to our individual character and individual
aspirations, that we will each enjoy when the Third
Temple descends to earth.[xi]
[i]. Isaiah 1:1-27. This reading is the third of a series
of readings, called the "Three of Rebuke,"
that are read on the three Shabbatot preceding the
9th of Av.
[iv]. Tikkunei Zohar, Tikkun 57.
[v]. Ethics of the Fathers 5:5.
[vi]. The Talmud (Yoma 21a) relates that the Temple and
its furnishings defied the most fundamental characteristic
of physical objects—that they take up space—in that
"The space of the Ark was not part of the measurement."
The Holy of Holies measured 20 cubits (approx. 30
feet) by 20 cubits; the Ark which stood in its the
center measured 2.5 x 1.5 cubits; yet the distance
from each of the outside walls of the Ark to the
walls of the chamber was a full 10 cubits. In other
words, the Ark, though itself a physical object
with spatial dimensions, did not take up any of
the space in the room.
[vii]. Exodus 23:17, as per Talmud, Sanhedrin 4b.
[viii]. As in the analogy given by the Midrash quoted
on p. ==== below.
[ix]. The "dwelling" also represents "a
place that houses a person’s very essence"—see
p. ==== above. [Real Estate]
[xi]. Based on the Rebbe’s talks on Shabbat
Chazon, 5742 (1982) and 5744 (1984), (Likkutei Sichot,
vol. XXIX, pp. 18-25).