Parshas Ki Tisa: Meaning Comes Later
Earlier this week I shared a longer reflection for Purim about shame, masks, and the tools we sometimes lean on to steady ourselves. Writing something like that always leaves a quiet moment afterward. Teachers feel it after a class. Speakers after a talk. Writers after they publish something that mattered to them. Not the question of whether people read it, but something subtler: did anything actually move? Did something shift for someone? That question isn’t so different from something Moshe asks in this week’s parsha, Ki Tisa. After the chaos of the Golden Calf and the breaking of the Luchos, Moshe turns to Hashem and says: הַרְאֵנִי נָא אֶת כְּבוֹדֶךָ “Show me Your glory.” Moshe isn’t asking to see something physical. He is asking to understand what he is part of — how Hashem leads the world through moments like this. After everything that has just happened, he wants to see the meaning of the moment clearly. Hashem answers him with surprising tenderness. The request itse...