Keeping the Light of Torah burning bright

Parshat Tetzaveh / Shabbat Zachor 2025
Rabbi Neal Borovitz
Rabbi Emeritus Kol Dorot River Edge NJ

The opening words of Parshat Tetzaveh are:
“You shall further instruct the Israelites to bring you clear oil of beaten olives for lighting, for kindling a Ner Tamid” (Exodus 27:20)

The Ner Tamid of the Bible refers to the continuous fire which symbolized God’s Presence in the portable Tabernacle, and later the First and Second Temples in Jerusalem. Since the destruction of the Temple in 70c.e. it has been a custom that a Ner Tamid, an Eternal Light, shines in the Sanctuary of every Synagogue. Both the Continuing fire that burned in the Sanctuary, in Biblical times, and the synagogue lamp, which carries its name today are the symbol of God’s Presence.

In looking back upon the many Divre Torah, I have written on this Parsha, I found that the most recurring theme for me has been my understanding that the Ner Tamid, the Eternal Light, is not only an affirmation of the Presence of God, but also a confirmation of the presence of a Jewish community. If there are no Jews tending to the Ner Tamid, the light will go out. In biblical days someone had to bring the oil. In modern times where electric light bulbs have replaced olive oil someone still has to change the bulb and someone or some community has to pay the electric bill. For me, the emphasis in the opening verse of our torah portion has been that “Bnai Yisrael”, referring to WE the Jewish People, have a responsibility to God, in the words of Tom Bodett’s old “Motel 6” commercial, “keep the light on for You”

This Shabbat, the Sabbath preceding Purim, has a special name. It is called Shabbat Zachor, the Sabbath of Remembrance. In addition to our weekly Torah portion from Exodus, which opens with the command to keep an Eternal Light burning in our Sanctuaries , we will also read Deuteronomy 25:17-19: “ Remember what Amalek did to you on your journey, after you left Egypt. How, undeterred by Awe of God, he surprised you on the march, when you famished and weary, and cut down all the stragglers in the rear, Therefore when God grants you safety from all your enemies around you, in the land that your God is giving you as a hereditary portion, you shall blot out the memory of Amalek from under heaven. Do not forget”

In the Megillah of Esther, Haman is identified for us as an Amalekite, which is the source of the tradition of reading this passage this Shabbat.

There are no non -Biblical references to Amalek as an actual ancient Middle Eastern People. My professor of Bible at HUC-JIR, Rabbi Chanan Brichto, of blessed memory, taught us that he believed that Amalek,whom the Bible refers to living in multiple geographic areas, was the Biblical word for terrorist, rather than an ethno-religious identity. Therefore the command to wipe out the Amalekites, in Deuteronomy 25 is not a justification for “ ethnic cleansing,” but rather, a call to stand up to terror and terrorists wherever and whenever they appear. Counter to the lies of Israel’s enemies, this has remained the policy of Israel throughout this long and terrible war, which began on October 7th 2023 with the slaughter of innocent Israelis in their homes along the Israel- Gaza border.

Rabbi Brichto first shared this lesson during the early 1970s when terrorism against Israel and against Jews around the world was rampant. His message then, which remains both relevant and salient to me, post October 7th is that we Jews have a responsibility to both stand up and fight against terrorists such as Hamas, while continuing to reach out a hand of peace to Palestinians.

For me this year, The command to light a Ner Tamid, with which Parshat Tetzaveh begins is both a symbol of our responsibility of We The Jewish People, to open our communities to the Transcendent Light of God, and also a call to search for the Ner Tamid, the light of God, that is imminent in myself and in every other human being. The greatness of Torah is that it speaks to each of us as individuals to search for the ‘light’ of God’s Presence, within myself, while simultaneously commanding us as a community to in the spirit of Tom Bodett to keep the Light of God’s Presence burning brightly in our midst. The Ner Tamid is a source of both illumination and enlightenment. Torah is not only a covenant between, “We”, the People and God, but simultaneously, a contract between every individual, every “me” and God. The challenge for 21st century Judaism is to teach that there is a powerful truth in the fact that the Parsha begins with “Atah” the singular form of the second person adjective. “Atah Tetzaveh” is, for me, a command to use the Ner Tamid, the Light of God’s Presence, as both a flashlight to illuminate our search for God within us, and as a beacon to see God’s Presence in the world beyond us. Moreover, each of us is commanded to not only see this as a responsibility of “Bnai Yisrael”, the community as a whole, but also, as a personal obligation.

Sforno, the great Italian Jewish scholar of the 15th century, confirms this last challenge, in his commentary on the word ”atah” with which our Parsha opens. He notes that this is one of only three places in the Torah narrative on the building of the sanctuary, where Moses is commanded to do this Mitzvah himself, rather than merely delegate its fulfillment to others.
Sforno’s commentary from half a millennium ago, and the message of Mordechai to the reluctant Esther to stand up and speak up to Power on behalf of her People, found in the Megillah of Esther teach me, that You and I are Tetzaveh , commanded to not only keeping the Ner Tamid burning, by continually re-creating Jewish community, but that each of us are personally commanded to find the Divine Light within us and to use it both as a mirror to see the beauty of our individual souls, and as a beacon, to brighten the world beyond.

In a time when our world, including America and Israel , are darkened by clouds of War and of social and political upheaval, that are all attempting to eclipse the Light of the Divine, on this Shabbat Zachor, we are reminded of the foreboding presence of Haman like Amalekites threatening our very existence, The command to light the ner Tamid here in Parshat Tetzaveh, reminds me that as powerless as we often feel to make a difference in our world, we actually can, if we just keep the Light of God shining through, not only for ourselves but for future generations.

To quote from the Chanukah song of the American Jewish folk singer, Peter Yarrow , who recently died , let us all on this Sabbath of Remembrance commit ourselves to:” Don’t Let The Light Go Out”. On Purim, as we celebrate the liberation of the Jews of ancient Persia, may we also celebrate the liberation of all the hostages of October 7th and the liberation of the Palestinans of Gaza who remain hostage to the terrorization of Hamas.

About the Author
Rabbi Borovitz was elected the Rabbi Emeritus of Temple Avodat Shalom in River Edge in June 2013 after serving the synagogue as rabbi for the previous 25 years. Prior to assuming his position in River Edge in the summer of 1988 Rabbi Borovitz served as Hillel Rabbi and Instructor in Biblical and Religious Studies at the University of Texas in Austin (1975-82), the Executive Director of the Labor Zionist Alliance on the United States, (1982-83) and as the Rabbi of Union Temple in Brooklyn, New York (1983-88). Rabbi Borovitz, a native of Cleveland, Ohio, received his B.A. from Vanderbilt University in 1970, his M.A. from Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religious (HUC-JIR) in 1973 and was ordained at HUC-JIR in June 1975. In March of 2000, he was awarded an honorary Doctor of Divinity from HUC-JIR. Rabbi Borovitz is an active leader in community affairs. He has been a member of the Bergen County Interfaith Brotherhood Sisterhood committee for 25 years. He is the immediate past chair of Jewish Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey and has also served on the Jewish Federation Board. He currently serves on the National Board of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs; the Rabbinic cabinet of the Jewish Federations of North America and on the Foundation Board of Bergen Regional Medical Center, the county hospital in Bergen County NJ. He is past President of the Bergen County Board of Rabbis and the North Jersey Board of Rabbis as well as the founding chairman of the Jewish Learning Project of Bergen County Rabbi Borovitz is a frequent contributor to the Jewish Standard and the Bergen Record and a frequent lecturer on Judaism; The Middle East and Interfaith cooperation.
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