Monday, February 28, 2022

Transposition and Tabernacle

“More like the real thing.” 

 (Lord Digory, The Last Battle)

Almost two years ago the world shut down, a week before my younger son’s bar-mitzvah. A lot has happened during that time, and though my son has been nothing but gracious, accepting and understanding, my wife and I are still trying to commemorate the momentous occasion that God, in his goodness, has granted us. The latest of these attempts has been this past Shabbos where our son again read (part of) his bar-mitzvah portion (he’ll read the rest this Shabbos), this time actually inside the synagogue (as opposed to outside in the freezing cold as he did last year).

In this post I would like to share the (relevant parts of the) talk that I was to give at my son’s bar-mitzvah, parts of which I’ve already given in our synagogue. As context, the weekly Torah portions for this past Shabbos described how the Jews built the Tabernacle in the desert.

“And make for Me a sanctuary and I will dwell among them.” (Exodus 25:8)

How can finite man build a sanctuary for the infinite God? What engineering or architectural schemes can be used for such a structure? What materials and designs are geared towards this purpose?

Of course, the Torah itself goes into great detail answering these questions, providing careful, exquisite detail of all aspects of the Tabernacle and its vessels. However, though the Torah is long on detail, it provides nothing in the way of explanation as to why the specific designs or vessels or materials are appropriate in providing a structure for God.

Biblical commentaries throughout the ages attempt to solve this riddle. Here I would like to expand on the approach of R’ Naftali Tzvi Yehudah Berlin (Ha'amek Davar, Exodus 25:8), the famed head of the Yeshiva in Volozhin known as the Netziv. He explains that “All details of the Tabernacle are parallel to the details of the world that the Creator, may He be blessed, fashioned. God dwells in the world as a whole and He commanded that the Jews make a microcosm of the entire world in the Tabernacle and its vessels.”

This remark requires some analysis.

From one perspective the Netziv’s approach answers our above question. How can finite man build a home for the Infinite? By copying the design of a place where God is known to reside. We know that God resides in our world. Hence, if we build our Tabernacle to reflect our world, we can trust that God will inhabit the Tabernacle as well.

From another perspective, however, the explanation of the Netziv is questionable. What point is there in simply copying the world which we are already familiar with? Will one who sojourns to the Tabernacle be inspired simply by seeing a model of what he or she already knows? If God already resides in the world, what point is there in building a Tabernacle to reflect the world?

In The Last Battle the Narnian heroes enter nirvana, the afterlife, the World to Come and they are quite surprised by what they see:
“Those hills," said Lucy, "the nice woody ones and the blue ones behind - aren't they very like the Southern border of Narnia?"

"Like!" cried Edmund after a moment's silence. "Why, they're exactly like. Look, there's Mount Pire with his forked head, and there's the pass into Archenland and everything!"

"And yet they're not like," said Lucy. "They're different. They have more colours on them and they look further away than I remembered and they're more .. . more . . . oh, I don't know..."

"More like the real thing," said the Lord Digory softly.
The Lord Digory goes on to explain that the Narnia the children knew and loved “was only a shadow or a copy of the real Narnia”:
All of the old Narnia that mattered, all the dear creatures, have been drawn into the real Narnia through the Door. And of course it is different; as different as a real thing is from a shadow or as waking life is from a dream.
This description of the real Narnia and its relationship to the old Narnia is a parable for Lewis’ concept of “Transposition.” In his aptly entitled essay, Lewis explains that transposition occurs when a richer system is to be represented by a poorer system, for example when we try to draw a three-dimensional scene on a two-dimensional piece of paper. We can try to give a feeling of the third dimension by drawing in an appropriate fashion. However, a being who has never experienced a third-dimension could never comprehend what the drawing is meant to represent.

So too with the real Narnia. The Narnia of the Chronicles was merely a shadow-world, an attempt at representing the true Narnia in two-dimensions or as mere shadows. In the true Narnia where every stone has meaning, and every blade of grass reflects the handiwork of God and no good is ever lost.

One can understand the purpose of the Tabernacle in a similar way.

When the Jews built the Tabernacle their goal was not to build a model of our world, rather they built the true world, the world as it is meant to be. One who visits the Tabernacle will experience this true world: they will see how each element and detail of the true world reflects the will of God. They will come to understand how those elements fit together in the service of God. They will see angels marking the path, and they will see that word of God comes forth calling out to man. Our world is the shadow-world, the dream, the attempt to take the real world and draw it on a piece of paper.

Furthermore, the Tabernacle is not the end of days. One reaches the true Narnia only after death, but one visits the Tabernacle and returns to the shadow-world. To what end?

The Tabernacle imbues the visitor with understanding and insight. After seeing the real world, the shadow-world makes sense. The parts of our world may be more clouded and less vibrant, but they still reflect the one God. The angels of God are still here but enveloped in mist, and the word of God still rings forth, but muted and more difficult to hear.

One visits the Tabernacle in hopes of a rendezvous with God. One returns from the visit with the realization that God was really here, in our world, the whole time.

The destruction of the Tabernacle and, later, the Temple, leaves us without means to experience the true world. Nevertheless, we can attempt to recreate that experience by studying the Tabernacles blueprints and learning the ritual that surrounds it. More importantly, we can work towards constantly making our world a better reflection of the true world. This is the mission of the Jewish People, a mission every Jew takes part in when they reach majority: “to perfect the world under the sovereignty of God,” to transform the world we inhabit into the world of the Tabernacle.

Tuesday, February 8, 2022

Till We Have Faces (Part 4)

In our last post we discussed how Orual transformed the three pillars of Glome society and thus made the gods beautiful. The three pillars she transformed were Glome’s government, economy, and the House of Ungit itself, and the efforts of transforming them paralleled the three tasks of Psyche. Unlike Psyche who performed her tasks with joy, Orual did them without knowing why and even without the knowledge that her efforts would bring beauty to the gods. Nonetheless, this was her destiny as pronounced by the god of the West Wind, “You also shall be Psyche.”

There is one final task of Psyche, however, that Orual sees in her vision to get beauty in a casket from the Queen of the Deadlands and bring it back to Ungit. Here Orual does not assist Psyche, she fights against her. Why?

Orual’s efforts can very much be cast, not as religious, but as Hellenizing. Her efforts were not to make the gods beautiful, but to civilize Glome. Certainly, had Orual been asked the purpose of her efforts she would have given that, or something similar, as her answer. How could it then be claimed that her efforts were for godly purposes?

Let’s pause for a moment to note that the Talmud addressed the very same question. 

The Talmud foretells that at the end of time the various nations will come before the Almighty to claim how righteous they were in the toil of God’s Torah. Rome will come first before God:
The Holy One, Blessed be He, says to them: With what did you occupy yourselves? They say before Him: Master of the Universe, we have established many marketplaces, we have built many bathhouses, and we have increased much silver and gold. And we did all of this only for the sake of the Jewish people, so that they would be free to engage in Torah study.
However, God doesn’t buy it:
Fools! Are you attempting to deceive Me? Everything that you did, you did for your own needs. You established marketplaces to place prostitutes in them; you built bathhouses for your own enjoyment; and as for the silver and gold that you claim to have increased, it is Mine.
Is Orual any different? She too did everything for herself, to keep herself busy and not pay attention to her true nature, and certainly not for the gods!

But there is hope for Orual just as there is hope for Ungit. If, due to Orual’s actions, Glome is prepared to recognize the beauty of the gods, everything she did will be redeemed. Orual will have accomplished the purpose of beautifying the gods and be beautified herself.

The Jews could have redeemed Rome. Had they not assimilated into Roman culture, fallen to divisiveness, but rather adhered to their own religion and engaged in Torah study. Rome’s assertion that they did everything for the Jewish people would have been proven de facto. But they didn’t…

Psyche is the parallel to the Jewish people in the Talmud’s vision. It is she who must be the bearer of truth and beauty. It is she, as the one chosen by the gods, who will inspire others and catalyze the beautification of the gods.

And Psyche succeeds. She is not influenced by the philosophy of the Greeks or the materialism of the everyday world. Through her dedication and single-mindedness, Psyche brings beauty to the gods, inspiring Orual, and, presumably, the rest of Glome. The true religion is to emerge, and the divine nature will be revealed to all.

Sunday, February 6, 2022

Revisiting Till We Have Faces

Apologies for the lack of posts recently. I've been updating the Till We Have Faces posts to, hopefully, make them more readable. I have one more post (also in the works) on Till We Have Faces before returning to world of Narnia. 

Does Aslan Choose Only the Pevensies?

Our last post ended with a couple of questions attempting to understand the connection between Aslan and Jesus. Specifically, if Aslan's...