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    PARASHAT TERUMA: AUTHENTIC GOODNESS

    The Torah in Parashat
    Teruma discusses the
    construction of the
    Mishkan and its
    furnishings. Undoubtedly
    the most sacred of all the
    furnishings of the Mishkan
    was the aron – the ark, which was kept
    hidden in the Kodesh Hakidashim, the
    inner section of the Mishkan and, later,
    the Bet Ha’mikdash. The aron was made
    from wood, but it was plated inside and
    outside with gold. The Gemara (Yoma
    72b) sees this quality of the aron as
    symbolic of the way a Torah Jew is
    supposed to be, stating: “Any Torah
    scholar whose inside is not like his
    outside is not a Torah scholar.” Just as
    the aron was golden inside and out, so
    must a Torah Jew be “gold” inside and
    out. The Gemara here is teaching us
    about the importance of authenticity, the
    need to be authentically good. The Torah
    is concerned far less with the way we
    outwardly appear, with our image, than
    with who we truly are. Living a Torah life
    means not that we are “golden”

    outwardly, not that we simply make a
    good impression and appear like we are
    good, but rather that we are truly “golden”
    both inside and outside, that we are real,
    that we are authentic.
    The Gemara in Masechet Pesahim
    (68b) says that Rav Yosef would explain
    the special significance of the holiday of
    Shavuot, when we celebrate our receiving
    the Torah, by exclaiming, “If not for this
    day, there are many Yosefs out in the
    marketplace.” Meaning, it was the event
    of Matan Torah, which we celebrate on
    Shavuot, that made Rav Yosef unique
    and special. Because he was able to learn
    and master the Torah, he became distinct,
    different from all the other “Yosefs” out
    there. Rashi explains that Rav Yosef
    saying, “because I learned Torah and was
    elevated.” Rav Yosef did not just learn
    Torah; he was elevated by the Torah.
    The Torah penetrated his being. It made
    him “golden” both inside and out. Our
    Torah commitment must be real and
    genuine, something that is part of who
    we truly are, something that elevates us,

    that brings us to a higher
    level of refinement. If we
    look around today, it
    seems that everyone is
    putting on a show. On
    social media, people put
    on a façade, showing
    their lives to be
    something that they’re
    not. People are getting
    tattoos, piercings, and all
    kinds of strange haircuts
    in order to look a certain
    way, to project a certain
    image. This is because
    we live in a society that
    is obsessed with the
    outside, instead of the inside. People are
    focused on appearing a certain way, not
    with being the type of people that they
    are really supposed to be. They are
    preoccupied with the way other people
    view them, instead of with being truly
    good people. It isn’t hard to be “golden”
    on the outside, to go through the motions,
    to say the right things, to look the right
    way, and to post pictures that get “likes”

    and compliments.
    The real work is to be “golden” on the
    inside. It is relatively easy to look good;
    it a lot more difficult to be authentically
    good. At the center of the Bet Ha’mikdash
    stood the aron, which contained the
    original Sefer Torah, and which
    represented what a Torah Jew is –
    someone who not only appears “golden,”
    but truly is “golden,” as pure and good
    inside as he or she appears on the outside.