Rab Schwab in Maayan Beis Hashoeiva in Emor (Vayikra 23:22) discusses the Medrash brought there by Rashi.
ובקצרכם. .......... אָמַר ר' אַבְדִּימֵי בְּרַבִּי יוֹסֵף, מָה רָאָה הַכָּתוּב לִתְּנָהּ בְאֶמְצַע הָרְגָלִים — פֶּסַח וַעֲצֶרֶת מִכָּאן וְרֹאשׁ הַשָּׁנָה וְיוֹם הַכִּפּוּרִים וְחַג מִכָּאן — ? לְלַמֶּדְךָ שֶׁכָּל הַנּוֹתֵן לֶקֶט שִׁכְחָה וּפֵאָה לֶעָנִי כָּרָאוּי, מַעֲלִין עָלָיו כְּאִלּוּ בָּנָה בֵּית הַמִּקְדָּשׁ וְהִקְרִיב קָרְבְּנוֹתָיו בְּתוֹכוֹ (ספרא):
Why does the Torah see fit to interpose the laws of Leket, Shikchah, and Pei'ah, here, in middle of the description of the holidays of the year? To teach you that one who gives matanos properly to aniyim, it is as if the Mikdash was built in his days and he brought his korbanos in the Beis Hamikdash.
Rav Schwab asks, what is the connection between matnos aniyim and binyan habayis? And whatever the connection is, why is it taught specifically here?
He answers the second question first. These seemingly incongruous pesukim actually fit here perfectly, because they refer to a holiday that occurs between Shavuos and Rosh HaShannah. That holiday is Tisha Ba'av.
The passuk in Zechariah (8:19) says
כה אמר יהוה צבאות צום הרביעי וצום החמישי וצום השביעי וצום העשירי יהיה לבית יהודה לששון ולשמחה ולמעדים טובים והאמת והשלום אהבו
What we experience as a day of mourning for the destruction of the Mikdash will transform into a celebration, because the Mikdash will be rebuilt on that very day.
Who will rebuild it? Mashiach ben David. David Hamelech owes his existence to Rus and Boaz. We see in Megillas Rus that their relationship stemmed from the mitzva of Leket Shikcha and Pei'ah, the Matnos Aniyim that are mentioned in this no-longer-incongruous passuk. Thus, the Binyan Habayis directly relates to Matnos Aniyim.
(Liberties taken, not all from Rav Schwab.) The point is that there is a holiday between Shavuos and Rosh Hashannah, where the Torah inserts these pesukim. But it is a phantom holiday, amorphous and mutable. If Klal Yisrael lovingly cares for the poor and friendless, then it will be a joyful holiday of Binyan Beis Hamikdash. Unfortunately, in our current circumstances, it is a lugubrious commemoration of the consequences of selfishness and sinas chinam.
With this, he says, we understand the old minhag of the young women dancing in the vineyards on Yom Kippur and the fifteenth of Av. Bishlema Yom Kippur, we understand that the men will not have improper thoughts, and their interest in a good shidduch will be l'sheim shamayim. But the fifteenth of Av? Isn't this an invitation to improper thoughts and sin?
The answer is that Tu Ba'av will be the seventh day of a holiday that begins on Tisha Ba'av, with intermediate days of Chol Hamoed, just like Pesach and Sukkos. At the finale of this wonderful holiday, young men and women will be inspired to seek a match that will enable a lifetime of Zikui Harabbim and Avodas Hashem. (Yes, I know that this minhag from the Mishna predates Mashiach by several millenia. So Tzorich Iyun.)
This is a wonderful pshat. I just saw something from the Ari zal that while slightly different, is essentially the same and also fits perfectly into Rashi's Sifra in Emor. The Ari zal in LIkutei Torah Ki Sisa, Shemos 32:5, says
ויאמר חג לה' מחר הנה תימא גדולה בדבר זה וכבר תרצו ז"ל מלת ויבן מזבח לה' שכונתו לש"ש הי' אך החג הזה מה יאמר בו ואיך כתבה תורה פלסתר ואיך יצאו דברים כאלה מפי אהרן אמנם סוד הנמרץ בזה כי העגל נעשה בי"ו בתמוז ובי"ז נשתברו הלוחות ועתיר הקב"ה להפכם ליו"ט נמצא כי חג לה' מחר כי יש מחר לאחר זמן וכ"מ בדרז"ל
So the Ari is saying that the yomtov will begin on Shiva Asar and end on Tisha Ba'av, while Rav Schwab is saying that it will begin on Shiva Asar and end on Tisha. Many ask that it is odd that the ikkar yomtov, Tisha Ba'av, would end the holiday, because on the Yamim Tovim that we have, the ikkar simcha is at the beginning. In any case, Rav Schwab was unaware of the this Kisvei HaAri, but his view of the future yomtov is more understandable, that it begins on Tisha Ba'av and ends on Tes Vov Ba'av.
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