Shemot - Terumah (Exodus 25:1–27:19)
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概要
All recordings are created by copying Sefaria using the Kehot Chumash from Chabad english translation. The Text to Voice is using English AI... sorry for any weird speech.
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Shemot
Terumah (Exodus 25:1–27:19)
God invites the people to bring freewill gifts—gold and silver, yarns of blue, purple, and crimson, fine linen and skins, wood and oil—so a sanctuary can be made “that I may dwell among them.” What follows is a detailed blueprint for the Mishkan, a portable meeting place where heaven touches earth. At its heart stands the Ark of the Covenant, overlaid with gold, with cherubim facing one another above the cover; there, between the wings, God’s voice will meet Moses. The table holds the bread of presence, signaling a continual offering of sustenance, and the seven-branched menorah is hammered from a single piece of pure gold, its cups shaped like almond blossoms to cast light inward.
The portion then steps outward from holy core to holy space: curtains of fine linen embroidered with cherubim, layered coverings, and upright acacia boards fitted with silver sockets form the Tabernacle’s structure. A richly woven veil separates the Holy of Holies from the Holy, and a screen at the entrance marks the threshold. Finally, the bronze altar for burnt offerings, with its grating and horns, stands in the courtyard surrounded by linen hangings and pillars. Terumah shows holiness built from generous hearts and careful craftsmanship—beauty, order, and precise measurements turning everyday materials into a dwelling for the Divine. Themes to listen for: giving that becomes presence, light that reveals sacred work, and a holiness that radiates from the innermost center out into the camp.