This is the d’var Torah I delivered at Congregation Neveh Shalom on February 21, 2026.
If you’ve ever been part of a building project, a synagogue renovation, a school fundraiser, or even organizing a big family event, you know it’s rarely about the bricks or logistics alone. It’s about trust. It’s about a shared purpose. The quiet question underneath it all is, do we really believe in this enough to build it together? When the world feels fractured by ongoing wars and geopolitical instability, that question feels especially urgent. What does it mean to build something sacred together when the world around us often feels broken or unsettled?
Parshat Terumah marks a turning point in the Torah. After revelation at Sinai, God invites the Israelites to create a physical space for holiness, the Mishkan, the portable sanctuary. The people are asked to bring gifts: gold, silver, fabrics, acacia wood, oil, and spices. These aren’t taxes or other obligations exactly; they’re offerings of the heart. The detailed instructions that follow are less about architecture than about relationship and a community partnering with God to make space for presence.
One commentary I always find striking comes from the Ramban (Nachmanides), who teaches that the Mishkan was essentially a continuation of Sinai, a way to carry revelation with them wherever they traveled. Holiness wasn’t meant to stay on the mountain; it had to be built into daily life.
And notice how it happens: collectively. No single person could build the Mishkan. The Torah’s repeated emphasis on contributions reminds us that sacred community emerges not from uniformity, but from shared commitment. Each person brought what they could. That message resonates now. It feels a little too easy to be tempted toward despair, but the Torah quietly insists that building together is itself a spiritual act. Community doesn’t eliminate the world’s pain, but it gives us the strength to face it without losing hope.
So, our invitation in Terumah is both simple and challenging. Keep building. Build community even when the world feels unstable. Show up for one another. Offer what you can through your time, kindness, presence, resources, and prayer. Why? Because none of us carries the whole weight alone.
The Mishkan was never just a structure. It was a declaration that even in uncertain times, we choose connection over fragmentation, purpose over fear, sacred partnership over going it alone. May we continue to build spaces, in our congregation, our homes, and our world, where holiness can dwell among us.