Why are we here?
This, the mother of all questions, is addressed in turn by the various streams of Torah thought, each after its own style.
The Talmud states, simply and succinctly, âI was created to serve my Creator.â The moralistic-oriented works of Mussar describe the purpose of life as the refinement of oneâs character traits. The Zohar says that Gâd created us âin order that His creations should know Him.â Master Kabbalist Rabbi Isaac Luria offered the following reason for creation: Gâd is the essence of good, and the nature of good is to bestow goodness. But goodness cannot be bestowed when there is no one to receive it. To this end Gâd created our worldâso that there should be recipients of His goodness.
Chassidic teaching explains that these reasons, as well as the reasons given by other Kabbalistic and philosophical works, are but the various faces of a singular Divine desire for creation, as expressed in the various âworldsâ or realms of Gâdâs creation. Chassidism also offers its own formulation of this Divine desire: that we âmake a home for Gâd in the material world.â
A Home For Gâd
What does it mean to make our world a home for Gâd?
A basic tenet of our faith is that âthe entire world is filled with His presenceâ and âthere is no place void of Him.â So itâs not that we have to bring Gâd into the material worldâHe is already there. But Gâd can be in the world without being at home in it.
Being âat homeâ means being in a place that is receptive to your presence, a place devoted to serving your needs and desires. It means being in a place where you are your true, private self, as opposed to the public self you assume in other environments.
The material world, in its natural state, is not an environment hospitable to Gâd. If there is one common feature to all things material, it is their intrinsic egocentrism, their placement of the self as the foundation and purpose of existence. With every iota of its mass, the stone proclaims: âI am.â In the tree and in the animal, the preservation and propagation of the self is the focus of every instinct and the aim of every achievement. And who more than the human being has elevated ambition to an art and self-advancement to an all-consuming ideal?
The only thing wrong with all this selfishness is that it blurs the truth of what lies behind it: the truth that creation is not an end in itself, but a product of and vehicle for its Creator. And this selfishness is not an incidental or secondary characteristic of our world, but its most basic feature. So to make our world a âhomeâ for Gâd, we must transform its very nature. We must recast the very foundations of its identity from a self-oriented entity into something that exists for a purpose that is greater than itself.
Every time we take a material object or resource and enlist it in the service of Gâd, we are effecting such a transformation. When we take a piece of leather and make a pair of tefillin out of it, when we take a dollar bill and give it to charity, when we employ our minds to study a chapter of Torahâwe are effecting such a transformation. In its initial state the piece of leather proclaimed âI existâ; now it says âI exist to serve my Creator.â A dollar in pocket says âGreed is goodâ; in the charity box it says âThe purpose of life is not to receive, but to give.â The human brain says âEnrich thyselfâ; the brain studying Torah says âKnow thy Gâd.â
The Frontier of Self
There are two basic steps to the endeavor of making our world a home for Gâd. The first step involves priming the material resource as a âvessel for Gâdlinessâ: shaping the leather into tefillin, donating the money to charity, scheduling time for Torah study. The second step is the actual employment of these âvesselsâ to serve the Divine will: binding the tefillin on the arm and head, using the donated money to feed the hungry, studying Torah, etc.
At first glance it would seem that the second step is the more significant one, while the first step is merely an enabler of the second, a means to its end. But the Torahâs account of the first home for Gâd built in our world places the greater emphasis on the construction of the âhome,â rather than its actual employment as a Divine dwelling.
A sizable portion of the book of Exodus is devoted to the construction of the Sanctuary built by the children of Israel in the desert. The Torah, which is usually so sparing with words that many of its laws are contained within a single word or letter, is uncharacteristically elaborate. The fifteen materials used in the Sanctuaryâs construction are listed no less than three times; the components and furnishings of the Sanctuary are listed eight times; and every minute detail of the Sanctuaryâs construction, down to the dimensions of every wall panel and pillar and the colors in every tapestry, is spelled out not once, but twiceâin the account of Gâdâs instructions to Moses, and again in the account of the Sanctuaryâs construction.
All in all, thirteen chapters are devoted to describing how certain physical materials were fashioned into an edifice dedicated to the service of Gâd, and the training of the kohanim (priests) who were to officiate there. (In contrast, the Torah devotes one chapter to its account of the creation of the universe, three chapters to its description of the revelation at Mount Sinai, and eleven chapters to the story of the Exodus.)
The Sanctuary is the model and prototype for all subsequent homes for Gâd constructed on physical earth. So the overwhelming emphasis on its âconstructionâ stage (as opposed to the âimplementationâ stage) implies that in our lives, too, there is something very special about forging our personal resources into things that have the potential to serve Gâd. Making ourselves âvesselsâ for Gâdliness is, in a certain sense, a greater feat than actually bringing Gâdliness into our lives.
For this is where the true point of transformation liesâthe transformation from a self-oriented object to a thing committed to something greater than itself. If Gâd had merely desired a hospitable environment, He need not have bothered with a material world; a spiritual world could just as easily have been enlisted to serve Him. What Gâd desired was the transformation itself: the challenge and achievement of selfhood transcended and materiality redefined. This transformation and redefinition occurs in the first stage, when something material is forged into an instrument of the Divine. The second stage is only a matter of actualizing an already established potential, of putting a thing to its now natural use.
Making Vessels
You meet a person who has yet to invite Gâd into his or her life. A person whose endeavors and accomplishmentsâno matter how successful and laudableâhave yet to transcend the self and self-oriented goals.
You wish to expand her horizonsâto show him a life beyond the strictures of self. You wish to put on tefillin with him, to share with her the Divine wisdom of Torah.
But heâs not ready yet. You know that the concept of serving Gâd is still alien to a life trained and conditioned to view everything through the lens of self. You know that before you can introduce her to the world of Torah and mitzvot, you must first make her receptive to Gâdliness, receptive to a life of intimacy with the Divine.
So when you meet him on the street, you simply smile and say, âGood morning!â You invite her to your home for a cup of coffee or a Shabbat dinner. You make small talk. You donât at this point suggest any changes in his lifestyle. You just want her to become open to you and what you represent.
Ostensibly, you havenât âdoneâ anything. But in essence, a most profound and radical transformation has taken place. The person has become a vessel for Gâdliness.
Of course, the purpose of a vessel is that it be filled with content; the purpose of a home is that it be inhabited. The Sanctuary was built to house the presence of Gâd. But it is the making of vessels for Gâdliness that is lifeâs greatest challenge and its most revolutionary achievement.1

Join the Discussion