BH
Parshat Pekudei recounts the final stages of the Mishkan’s construction and the exact accounting of all the donations of gold, silver, and copper. But beneath the straightforward narrative lies a deep spiritual mystery revealed through a subtle exchange between Moshe Rabbeinu and Betzalel.
The Discrepancy in Order
The Torah states that Betzalel ben Uri, ben Chur from the tribe of Yehudah, “did everything that Hashem commanded Moshe” (Shemot 38:22). Rashi picks up on the unusual wording: it doesn’t say that Betzalel did what Moshe commanded him, but rather what Hashem commanded Moshe. From here, Chazal derive that Betzalel intuitively carried out Hashem’s will—even in areas where Moshe had seemingly relayed different instructions.
Rashi brings the example of the order in which the Mishkan and its vessels were to be constructed. Moshe told Betzalel to begin with the keilim—the vessels like the Aron, Menorah, and Shulchan—and only afterward build the Mishkan, the physical structure. But Betzalel questioned this, pointing out that normally one builds a house before furnishing it. Moshe then admitted that this is in fact what he heard from Hashem: Betzalel had intuited the Divine intention even without being told.
This alone is remarkable—but the deeper question is: why did Moshe reverse the order when relaying the instructions? And what was he really testing Betzalel for?
Mishkan and Keilim: Desire and Wisdom
Drawing from the Zohar and Kabbalah, the Mishkan and the keilim represent two different aspects of spiritual life. The Mishkan—the physical structure—represents desire, yearning, and will to connect to Hashe’s Infinite Light. The keilim—the vessels—represent the means to attain Divine wisdom and understanding emanating from Hashem’s Infinite Light.
The verse in Shir HaShirim says, “Moshcheni (similar to the Mishkan) acharecha narutzah—Draw me after You and we will run [to You]” (1:4). The word narutzah (we will run) is etymologically tied to ratzon—will and desire. The Mishkan reflects this idea of ratzon—the deep yearning to be close to Hashem. The vessels, on the other hand, represent the containers of that light: clarity, function, order—the goal and directive of that desire.
Moshe was testing Betzalel: when you’re building a sanctuary for the Divine Presence, what comes first—desire or wisdom? The keilim represent vessels for Divine knowledge and functionality, and Moshe’s order reflected a spiritual ideal: the light and wisdom of the vessels is the starting point. But Betzalel, whose name means in the shadow of God, understood something even deeper. In the world of building, in the realm of action, the house—the Mishkan—comes first. Without a prerequisite of yearning and desire there is no container for Divine wisdom. And without a home, wisdom has nowhere to settle.
Moshe, upon hearing Betzalel’s logic, realized that Betzalel wasn’t just responding practically—he had aligned with the very will of Hashem. In this way, Betzalel represents someone whose inner clarity matches the deepest spiritual truths, even when they’re unsaid.
The Mishkan as Yearning, the Keilim as Vessels
The Mishkan wasn’t just a building—it was a gravitational field of holiness, designed to awaken yearning in every Jew. Rebbe Nachman explains that the Mishkan represents ratzon—desire, the pull toward Hashem. The keilim (vessels), by contrast, represent the spiritual containers we build through our avodah, our personal Divine service, in order to receive Hashem’s light.
The placement of the keilim within the Mishkan mirrors the structure of the human body, and by extension, the structure of the sefirot. The Aron represents the head, the Menorah and Shulchan correspond to the right and left arms, the golden Mizbeach to the heart, and so on. The Zohar points out that the layout of the Mishkan aligns with the inner anatomy of the soul. In other words, the Mishkan is also a map of how Divine energy flows through a person.
Yearning as the First Vessel
In Likutey Moharan 24, Rebbe Nachman describes how a person rises in spiritual levels until encountering the wall of the Keter—the crown, the highest sefirah separating the Infinite Light of Hashem from creation. At this point, the person experiences a betishah—a pushback. But that setback isn’t a rejection—it’s an invitation to yearn. And it is this yearning, born of distance and concealment, that forms the true vessels for the Infinite Light.
Now the earlier disagreement between Moshe Rabbeinu and Betzalel comes into focus. Moshe tells Betzalel to build the keilim first—implying that wisdom and spiritual capacity are the necessary starting point. But Betzalel responds that one must first build the structure—the Mishkan, the yearning, the gravitational field—before building the vessels. You don’t acquire vessels and leave them on the street; you prepare a space to house them.
Betzalel in the Shadow of God
Moshe then says to Betzalel, “This is your name! Betzel Kel—in the shadow of God you stood.” In the shadow—meaning not in the light, but in the distance, in the place of yearning. Moshe recognizes that Betzalel’s spiritual clarity came not from revelation but from alignment with Divine will even in darkness. Betzalel wasn’t chasing light—he was building from shadow, similar to the setbacks created by the Keter mentioned earlier. And from that place of tzel, of shade, come the first stirrings of the lower sefirot, beginning with chesed, which corresponds to the Divine name Kel.
This is the order of authentic spiritual growth. First, when we finally pick ourselves up and advance towards our sincere goals and aspirations in life, we are pushed back. We experience distance. And it is precisely from that darkness that true yearning is born. That yearning becomes the Mishkan—the space where the keilim, the real vessels of wisdom and Divine service, can then be placed.
Knowing When to Run, When to Stop
Most people begin their spiritual journey by chasing the light. But the light doesn’t come from running—it comes from pausing. From accepting the setback. From standing in the shadow and yearning. That’s the message of Betzalel: true avodah begins not with keilim but with ratzon, not with structure but with desire.
May we merit to build our Mishkan from this place of longing. May we accept the moments when we are pushed back as the very source of our future vessels. And may we know when to stop, when to wait, and when to run after Hashem with all our hearts.
This article also appears on the BRI Breslov.org website: https://breslov.org/the-shade-over-betzalel/
For a video presentation of this article: https://youtu.be/QiXJxQ8wLiU
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Meir Elkabas