Exodus 35,1. “these are the things that the Lord ‎commanded to be done. For six days work shall be ‎performed, etc.” Our sages in Shabbat 70 see in the ‎numerical value of the letters in the word: ‎אלה‎ i.e. 39, an allusion ‎to the 39 categories of “work” prohibited to be performed by ‎Israelites on the Sabbath. These categories of work are understood ‎as especially mundane in nature, the Ari z’al pointing out ‎that when the prophet Jeremiah (Lamentations 1,16) says: ‎על אלה ‏אני בוכיה‎, “on account of these things I weep,” he meant that ‎violation of these prohibited activities of the Sabbath require the ‎Jewish people to collectively rehabilitate themselves by a special ‎activity, ‎מלאכה‎, and this is why the positive instruction ‎לעשות‎, ‎‎“to perform,” [and not as “to desist from” Ed.] has ‎been added.‎ ‎Baal Haturim points out already that the numerical ‎value of the letters in the word ‎אלה‎ is 36 and not 39.

He explains ‎that the word ‎דברים‎, minimum plural for “words,” adds another 2, ‎and that the prefix ‎ה‎ in that word adds another 1 making a total ‎of 39. He adds that though the expression ‎הדברים‎ occurs in the ‎Torah repeatedly and the commentators saw nothing noteworthy ‎in that expression, so that we must wonder why it is considered ‎out of place here, the reason is that in connection with the ‎Tabernacle itself, [the basis for the forbidden work ‎categories on the Sabbath, Ed.] the Torah uses the ‎expression: ‎זה הדבר‎ in the singular mode, whereas here it uses the ‎plural mode, ‎אלה הדברים‎.‎ Elaborating on the words of the Baal Haturim, our ‎author continues: although in connection with the Tabernacle ‎the reference was to physical work performed in the construction ‎of that building, on the Sabbath, although our “activities” are ‎restricted primarily to the mind and the expressions of our ‎thoughts by words, i.e. making Kiddush, praying, reading ‎from the Torah, etc., nonetheless these “activities” are considered ‎as even more significant than the actual deeds when building the ‎Tabernacle.

This “superiority” of the Sabbath to the performance ‎of the commandment to build the Tabernacle is hinted at by the ‎word ‎דברים‎ here being used in the plural mode, whereas in the ‎parallel paragraph dealing with the construction of the ‎Tabernacle it is in the singular mode. (Compare 35,4). When ‎observing the Sabbath by studying Torah, etc., the contribution ‎we make to ‎תקון העולם‎, “repairing any damage” to the world we ‎live in, is even greater than the contribution made by Betzalel ‎when he built the Tabernacle using his hands to perform physical ‎tasks. ‎ Exodus 35,2. “but as far as the seventh day is concerned, it ‎shall be holy for you;” it ‎is to be understood as similar to what the sages said ‎‎(Pessachim 68) concerning the festival days, which they ‎view as ‎חציו לה' וחציו לכם‎, “half for G-d and half for you.”

On the Sabbath, even the לכם (“for you”) is for G-d. “...it ‎shall be holy for you,” the for you is to be made holy. Exodus 36,7. “for the stuff (materials contributed) they ‎had was sufficient for all the work to make it, even too ‎much.” [Clearly the meaning of the word ‎מלאכה‎, ‎used twice in this verse must have a different meaning each time. ‎Ed.] The statement that the materials donated for ‎construction of the Tabernacle first described as adequate, and, as ‎an afterthought, as more than sufficient, poses a problem.

Either ‎it was adequate or it was overabundant.‎The Or hachayim already deals with this problem, ‎‎(compare this editor’s translation of that commentary on pages ‎‎906/7). Our author approaches the anomaly from a different ‎angle.One of the names of G’d is ‎א-ל שדי‎, this name of G’d also ‎appears to contain a contradiction within itself, seeing that the ‎word ‎א-ל‎ refers to strength, power, as in Ezekiel 17,13 ‎אילי הארץ‎, ‎‎“the mighty ones of the land,” whereas the word ‎שדי‎ is a ‎derivative of ‎שדים‎ (compare Genesis 49,25) a word used to ‎describe the provision of sustenance for all living creatures. ‎Seeing that the largesse emanating from G’d in His capacity as the ‎‎Eyn Sof, will automatically keep increasing unless stopped, ‎this term for G’d is used to describe Him as also the One Who ‎called ‎די‎, “enough,” to an ever expanding universe during the ‎process of creation.

A term comprising apparent contradictions is ‎by itself not unique, therefore. [It might not be acceptable ‎when applied to G’d’s creatures, but is certainly not strange when ‎applied to the Creator, Who is the source of all phenomena in His ‎universe. It nevertheless remains our duty to explore how the ‎Torah could apply apparently contradictory terms to ‎contributions made by man rather than by G’d.

Ed.] The ‎Talmud in Chagigah 12 sees in the word ‎שדי‎, the attribute of ‎G’d in His capacity of being able to call a halt to His initiatives, ‎many of which had been assigned to His creatures such as to the ‎oceans and the earth when they received instructions to produce ‎living creatures in the waters and also vegetation on earth. ‎‎(Compare Genesis 1,20 and 1,24 respectively) It was natural for ‎these “agents” of G’d to use the powers entrusted to them freely, ‎without restriction, so that G’d had to impose limits in order to ‎prevent possible new “chaos” in the universe, one which He had ‎set out to replace by order on the first day of creation.

This is all ‎part of the concept of ‎צמצום‎, “restraint,” imposed by G’d both ‎upon Himself and on those of His creatures not granted ‎בחירה‎, ‎free will, i.e. human beings. G’d had to impose these limits on His ‎agents, as precisely because they were only agents, ‎מלאכים‎, they ‎had not been equipped with the ability to understand what G’d ‎had intended in parts of the universe that were not within their ‎parameters.

When a creature is showered with too much largesse, ‎it is not a blessing but is liable to prove destructive unless ‎checked. (Compare Yevamot 47 where we are told that even ‎the Israelites while living in their mortal shells on earth are not ‎able to absorb all the goodness or punishment they deserve)‎‎ Construction of the Tabernacle in the desert was an act that ‎paralleled the creation of heaven and earth and corresponded to ‎all known aspects of the order in which G’d created the universe, ‎‎(B’rachot 55).

Seeing that this was so, Betzalel, the chief ‎architect of the project was granted the wisdom to understand ‎how the letters of the aleph bet were to be used in carrying ‎out all the details of the task entrusted to him.Nowadays, this ‎ability of Betzalel at the time of his building the Tabernacle, has ‎been granted to the righteous Torah scholars of varying degrees, ‎who are able to reveal insights into the Torah that have not ‎previously been revealed.

By doing so, they become partners of ‎G’d in His creation of the universe. Betzalel also imposed ‎restrictions on himself in his use of the gift G’d gave him, so as ‎not to preempt the Torah scholars throughout the ages and to ‎thereby prevent them from revealing new insights. This is what is ‎meant by the word ‎והותר‎, “there was an overabundance,” i.e. ‎there was enough holy spirit that had been provided to enable ‎Betzalel and his assistants to build the Tabernacle, but instead of ‎exhausting it at the time, Betzalel, in his modesty, was content to ‎leave a surfeit of it to be used by Torah scholars, who in a way are ‎also Torah “architects,” to delight their audiences with their ‎insights in their respective generations.‎