SONG
OF SONGS:
5.
Sustain me with flagons of wine, spread my bed with apples, for I am lovesick.
6.
His left hand was under my head, and his right hand would embrace me.
7.
I adjure you, O daughters of Jerusalem, by the gazelles or by the hinds of the
field, that you neither awaken nor arouse the love while it is desirous.
70
SOULS THAT DESCENDED TO EGYPT: Jamin
TALMUD
SHEVUOTH: Daf 8 – atonement for grave sins and abominations
BOOK
OF JEREMIAH: Chapter 8
Week
8 in the Jewish calendar is the nearing the last week of Cheshvan. The
Song of Songs verses for this week include two verses from the People of Israel
to G-d, and one verse in which the Jewish people address the other nations.
As
explained in Book 1, as we go deeper into the month of Cheshvan, deeper
into the year, we feel ourselves getting more entrenched in our daily affairs,
and we become “sick,” yearning for spirituality, and fighting not to lose our
connection with Hashem. This attitude, again is expressed in Rashi’s
comments to the first verse:
Sustain
me: now
as is the manner of the sick, with flagons of grape wine or with cakes of pure
white flour.
spread
my bed: Spread my bed around me with apples for a good
fragrance, in the manner of the sick, for I am sick for his love, for I thirst
for Him here in my exile.
The
second verse reminisces of a time when G-d’s kindness towards us as we fight to
make a living, was even more evident. Here’s Rashi again:
His
left hand was under my head: in the
desert.
and
his right hand would embrace me: He traveled a
three-days’ journey; to search out a rest for them [as in Num. 10: 33], and in
the place of the rest, He brought down manna and quails for them. All this I
remember now in my exile, and I am sick for His love.
G-d’s
left hand represents his attribute of discipline (under our head, perhaps to
mean that he was keeping us in line), while his right hand symbolizes kindness,
in an embrace. In Book 1, this is the week of Chesed shebeGevurah, kindness
within the context of discipline and severity, marking the beginning of the
cycle of seven weeks connected to Gevurah.
The
third verse also points to a more confrontational attitude towards the other
nations. As we feel perhaps the greater weight of the physical world, we make
clear that we are not willing to give up our special relationship with Hashem.
The
above verses also appear to hint to the events of the Flood. For example, when
Noah leaves the Ark and “re-enters” the world, he is overwhelmed. He plants a
vineyard, and falls in a similar manner as Adam. In the Talmud, one of the
major opinions is that the grape (wine) was in fact the Fruit of the Tree of
Knowledge.
Of
the seventy souls of the Jewish people that descended to Egypt, the eighth
mentioned is Jamin. Jamin in Hebrew is “Yemin” – right, or right hand,
representing kindness as mentioned above. As also mentioned above, this is a
time of the year where we feel that we must rely more and more on his kindness.
Daf Chet (Folio
8) of Shvuot continues to discuss the atonement of the goat offering,
whose blood was sacrificed in the Holy of Holies. The sins mentioned in this daf are
much more serious, and include the greatest sins of all: idolatry, certain
sexual sins (such as incest) and murder, although the Talmud clarifies that it
is discussing when these sins were committed unwittingly. It also mentions
atonement for certain impurities, as well as the atonement of the goat offered
outside the Temple. As Israel is more steeped in exile, it requires more
atonements.
Chapter
8 of the Book of Jeremiah contains similar themes to the above. The chapter
shows how, when steeped into exile, the sins begin to mount, even greater
abominations, but we start to fail to see the severity of the sins we commit.
They become second nature and even acceptable in our eyes. We even come to
believe that we are doing G-d’s will. It is interesting that this chapter
includes references to various birds that sing around this time of the year in Perek
Shirah (See Book 1). The crane and the swallow both sing in the month
of Cheshvan.
7. Even the stork in
the heaven knows her seasons, and the turtledoves and the crane and the swallow
await the time of their coming, but My people do not know the ordinance of the
Lord.
8. How do you say,
"We are wise, and the Law of the Lord is with us"? Verily, behold it
is in vain, he made a false scribes' pen.
9. Wise men were ashamed,
they were broken and caught; behold they rejected the word of the Lord, now
what wisdom have they?
10. Therefore, I will
give their wives to others, their fields to those who possess them for from the
smallest to the greatest, they all commit robbery, from prophet to priest, they
all deal falsely.
11. And they healed the
breach of My people easily, saying, "Peace, peace," but there is no
peace.
12. They shall be put
to shame since they have committed abomination. Neither are they ashamed nor do
they know to feel disgrace. They will, therefore, fall among the slain; at the
time I have visited upon them, they will stumble, says the Lord.