The message is the same. Let's take advantage of the wealth and power of Sivan, so that we can make the most of Tammuz and Av, which are around the corner.
THE KABBALAH OF TIME: The Jewish Calendar is the master key to unlock the hidden rationale behind the formal structure of ancient sacred texts, as well as to understand and experience the most profound mystical concepts, which reveal the spiritual energy of each week, serving as a practical guide for self-analysis and development.
Daily Insight
Weekly Cycle
Tuesday, June 18, 2019
The Lion - Rabbi Yonatan Connection (Week 38)
Notice the connection between the Lion and the saying of Rabbi Yonatan: those that connect to truth in "poverty" (spiritual , intellectual, or physical) will be connected to it in "wealth." While those that disconnect in wealth, become disconnected in poverty. The Lion brings its tail (the "poor") to its head ("wealth"), while the Fox brings its head down to its tail.
Sunday, June 16, 2019
Week 28 (from the Book): To Recognize our Limits in order to Free Ourselves from Them
The pig [and rabbit] is saying:[1]
"G-d is good to the good, and to the straight-hearted." (Psalms
128:2)
Rabbi Eliezer
the son of Azariah would say: If there is no Torah, there is no common decency; if there
is no common decency, there is no Torah. If there is no wisdom, there is no
fear of G-d; if there is no fear of G-d, there is no wisdom. If there is no
applied knowledge, there is no analytical knowledge; if there is no analytical
knowledge, there is no applied knowledge. If there is no flour, there is no
Torah; if there is no Torah, there is no flour.
He would also say: One whose wisdom is greater
than his deeds, what is he comparable to? To a tree with many branches and few
roots; comes a storm and uproots it, and turns it on its face. As is stated,
"He shall be as a lone tree in a wasteland, and shall not see when good
comes; he shall dwell parched in the desert, a salt land, uninhabited"
(Jeremiah 17:6). But one whose deeds are greater than his wisdom, to what is he
compared? To a tree with many roots and few branches, whom all the storms in
the world cannot budge from its place. As is stated: "He shall be as a
tree planted upon water, who spreads his roots by the river; who fears not when
comes heat, whose leaf is ever lush; who worries not in a year of drought, and
ceases not to yield fruit" (ibid., v. 8).
Malchut
shebeNetzach (kingship
within the context of victory and endurance)
On this twenty-eighth week, which
includes the first night of Passover, in Perek
Shirah, the small impure (non-kosher) domestic animal sings that, “G-d is
good to those that are good, and to those that are upright of heart. (Psalm
125:4) Some translations believe this to be a reference to the pig, while
others to the rabbit. This week also includes the yahrzeit of
the Third Lubavitcher Rebbe, Menachem Mendel (the Tzemach Tzedek), and the
birthday of the Seventh Rebbe, who carries the same name of the Third, his
ancestor through direct patrilineal descent.[2]
The pig is considered
by the sages to be a hypocrite, because it proudly displays the external
characteristics of being kosher, split hooves, but internally, its intestines,
make it a non-kosher animal. The physical makeup of the rabbit and other
animals of its kind (such as the hare and the hyrax) is the exact
opposite. These animals do not have split hooves, yet their intestines are that
of a kosher animal. Internally, they are "upright of heart," but
their actions and external characteristics are clearly not so.
Aside from the pig and the camel
(Week Thirty), the hyrax and the hare are the only other two animals explicitly
mentioned in the Torah as not being kosher. The Midrash in Vaikra Rabbah 13:5 explains that the hyrax represents the Persian
exile, while the hare represents the Greek one. The pig represents the Roman
exile, connected to Esau and his descendants. This is the exile we are
currently in. The song these animals sing is a reference to the final
redemption, when even the pig will be "upright of heart,” and all these
animals will be kosher.
Alpha
The Tzemach Tzedek and the Rebbe
represent the main thrust of the message of Passover: redemption. The name
“Tzemach Tzedek” is actually one of the names of Mashiach, as is also the name “Menachem.” As we see from the
animals above, redemption has two major aspects: internal traits (intellectual,
emotional) and external ones (material, physical). In relation to “internal”
redemption, both the Tzemach Tzedek and the Rebbe introduced very important new
concepts in Chassidic thought and were finally able to publish and disseminate
the works of previous Rebbes. At the same time, both were extremely successful
externally, in the realm of action. The Tzemach Tzedek established agricultural
settlements that saved many Jews from dire poverty, and also rescued thousands
upon thousands of children forced to enlist in the Russian army. Similarly, the
Rebbe was able to establish Jewish centers all over world, and helped save
thousands of Jews trapped in the "iron curtain" of the Soviet Union.
The number twenty-eight represents
twice the value of fourteen, yad, a
reference to the strong and outstretched arm of G-d that took us out of Egypt.
(See Week 14) Here, that concept is doubled, representing two outstretched
arms. On Passover, we celebrate that
Hashem saved us then, while fully
believing that He will soon save us again, in a way that is even more
miraculous than what took place in Egypt.
Twenty eight is formed by the letters
kaf and chet, forming the word koach,
which means strength. Koach also
means potential energy, that which is yet to be revealed. The pig seems to have
the possibility and potential to be kosher, but ultimately it is not – at least
not yet. As mentioned earlier, the pig represents Esau, the brother of Jacob,
who had enormous potential; that potential made Isaac believe that Esau would
ultimately be worthy of the rights and blessings of the firstborn. Like the
pig, Esau would also pretend to be a tzadik before his father, so much so that
the Midrash relates that Esau would ask Isaac
how to tithe salt and straw. Salt and straw do not need to be tithed, and
therefore Esau’s request made him look like he was ready to go beyond the
letter of the law. The Rebbe explains that salt is an example of potential
energy. Salt by itself is just salt, but when combined with other food it can
enhance its flavor, and even preserve it from spoiling.
This week, the lesson from Pirkei Avot comes from Rabbi Elazar the
son of Azariah. Interestingly, rabbinical discussion in the Passover Haggadah begins with this rabbi’s
remarks. In Pirkei Avot, Rabbi Elazar
teaches us that without Torah there is no work (also translated as proper
social conduct), and without work (or proper social conduct) there is no Torah.
Without wisdom there is no fear of G-d, and without fear of G-d, there is no
wisdom. Without knowledge, there is no understanding, and without
understanding, there is no knowledge. Without flour (sustenance) there is no
Torah, and without Torah there is no flour.
Rabbi Elazar also states that anyone whose knowledge exceeds his good
deeds is like a tree with many branches and few roots, but one whose good deeds
exceed his knowledge is like a tree that has few branches but many roots.
In Rabbi Elazar the son of Azariah’s
words we also see the duality and relationship between required internal and
external kosher characteristics. Knowledge requires action, and vice versa.
Rabbi Elazar does make clear, however, that action must take priority. This was
also something emphasized by the Rebbe, who stressed that the main thing is
action, “HaMa’aseh Hu HaIkar.”
The flour mentioned here is perhaps
also reference to matzah and also to
the custom of providing flour to the poor (Maot
Chitim, literally “wheat” money), so that they can also properly celebrate
Passover. Furthermore, in order to prepare for Passover, we must rid ourselves
of our own chametz, both the external
leavened (self-inflated) bread, as well as our “internal” chametz, our inflated ego.
This week we complete one more cycle
of seven weeks. This week’s sefirah
combination is malchut shebenetzach.
During the Passover Seder, we experience victory, humility, and redemption, all
expressed openly in this physical world. Through the song of the pig and
rabbit, we learn to aspire to a life of complete integrity and complete
redemption.
Sunday, June 9, 2019
Week 29 (From the Book): After the Initial Inspiration, To Get to Work
PEREK SHIRAH: The beast of
burden is saying, "When you eat the fruit
of your labors, happy are you and good is your lot." (Psalms 128:2)
PIRKEI AVOT:
Rabbi Eliezer [the son of] Chisma would say: the laws of kinin (bird offerings) and the laws of menstrual
periods---these, these are the meat of Halachah (Torah law). The
calculations of solar seasons and gematria are the condiments of wisdom.
SEFIRAH COMBINATION: Chesed shebeHod (kindness within the context of glory and
gratefulness)
As we enter the twenty-ninth week,
the week of Passover, in Perek Shirah,
the large impure (non-kosher) domestic animal sings that those that eat from
the work of their own hands are praiseworthy and are blessed with good. (Psalm 128:2) This animal has been
translated by Rabbi Slifkin simply as the “beast of burden.”[1]
On Passover, we feel the influx of Hashem’s
blessings and redemption. At the same time, from the second day of Passover
onwards, the Jewish people begin counting the omer and begin working towards self-improvement. Thus, by the time Shavuot arrives, we will have merited to
receive the Torah, at least in part through the work of our own hands.
This week’s animal appears to be a
reference to Yishmael and his descendants. This son of Abraham was known for
his great capacity for praying and for trusting in G-d’s blessings and
salvation.[2]
In fact, Yishmael did receive great blessings, although part of the blessings
showed that there were aspects of his lifestyle that still needed to be
improved. The angel tells Hagar, Yishmael’s mother, that "his hand would
be on everyone.”[3]
Later in life, Yishmael repents, returns to G-d, and has a good relationship
with Isaac.[4] In
messianic times, Isaac and Yishmael will coexist in peace.
Our sages interpret the verse of the
beast of burden to be a dual blessing, “praiseworthy” – in this world, and
“good for you” - in the world to come. There is a custom in Chassidic circles, instituted by the
Ba’al Shem Tov, to make a meal on the eighth day of Passover called Moshiach Seudah, in honor of Mashiach and the world to come.
The number twenty-nine is connected
to the cycle of the moon (29.5 days to be exact), on which the Jewish month is
based. Muslims, who consider themselves descendants of Yishmael, follow a
purely lunar calendar. Twenty-nine is also the number of days in a woman’s
menstrual cycle. (See Pirkei Avot
below)
The lesson in Pirkei Avot for this week is found in the teaching of Rabbi Elazar
the son of Chismah. He explains that the laws relating to bird sacrifices and
menstrual cycles are essential, while astronomy and numerological calculations
(gematria) are the spice of wisdom.
(III:18) On Passover, we do not eat chametz,
leavened bread. Spiritually, this represents the notion that on Passover we set
aside everything that makes us feel “inflated” and takes away from our essence,
our core identity as reflected in our relationship with G-d and with each
other.
Furthermore, on Passover, G-d
connects to us on a deeply personal level, primarily as our Redeemer, instead
of as the Creator of the Universe. (See Appendix I) This appears to be taught
in this week’s Pirkei Avot: G-d does
not want us to lose ourselves in grandiose and esoteric topics, such as
astronomy and gematria. He would
rather see us involved also in the details of properly serving Him in how we
conduct ourselves on a daily basis.
The two sets of laws mentioned in Pirkei Avot are particularly important
to daily conduct. They are fundamental to the relationship between G-d and the
Jewish People, and between husband and wife (which is also a metaphor for our
relationship with G-d, as expressed in Solomon’s Song of Songs). Bird
sacrifices are related to our ability to come closer to G-d. The word for sacrifice in Hebrew is korban, from the word karov, which means close (nowadays,
because we cannot bring sacrifices, prayer and study serve as substitutes).
Similarly, the laws related to the female menstrual cycle are essential in
order to make wives permissible to their husbands.[5]
This week, the combination of sefirot results in chesed shebehod. This week, we work on ourselves in order to
properly receive and appreciate G-d’s blessings that we receive during
Passover. (This week would also represent the “eighth week” of Shavuot and “Shivah Yemei Miluim” of the cycle of Netzach. This is appropriate, as Pessach is the
festival of redemption)
We learn from the beast of burden
that in our path towards righteousness, Hashem
helps us and journeys with us along the way. Nevertheless, we should not want
or expect our spiritual development to be "spoon-fed." Even if
ultimately everything comes from G-d, we must work hard to achieve spiritual
elevation ourselves.
[1] Slifkin, p. 11
[2] Genesis 21:10,
48:22, Targum
[3] Ibid.
[4] Genesis 25:9, Rashi
[5] The Torah sets forth
laws regarding times during a woman’s menses in which husband and wife do not
touch, and instead interact primarily on a spiritual plane. These essential
laws help preserve a higher level intimacy and attraction, since the physical
side of the relationship is renewed each month.
Sunday, June 2, 2019
Week 30 (from the Book): To Know that the World Needs More Love and Respect
PEREK SHIRAH: The camel is saying, “G-d shall roar from upon high and cause His voice to sound forth from
His holy place, His shout echoes profoundly over His dwelling place. (Jeremiah
25:30)
PIRKEI AVOT: Ben Zoma would
say: Who is
wise? One who learns from every man. As is stated (Psalms 119:99): "From
all my teachers I have grown wise, for Your testimonials are my
meditation."
Who is strong? One who overpowers his
inclinations. As is stated (Proverbs 16:32), "Better one who is slow to
anger than one with might, one who rules his spirit than the captor of a
city."
Who is rich? One who is satisfied with his lot.
As is stated (Psalms 128:2): "If you eat of toil of your hands, fortunate
are you, and good is to you"; "fortunate are you" in this world,
"and good is to you" in the World to Come.
Who is honorable? One who honors his fellows.
As is stated (I Samuel 2:30): "For to those who honor me, I accord honor;
those who scorn me shall be demeaned."
SEFIRAH: Gevurah shebeHod (discipline
and judgment within the context of glory and gratefulness)
In the thirtieth week, the last week
of Nissan and the week of Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, it
is the turn of the camel in Perek Shirah
to proclaim that, “the Lord roars from upon high; His voice is heard from His
holy place; His roar echoes loudly over His dwelling place. (Jeremiah 25:30)
The verse of the camel describes how Hashem
strongly laments the destruction of the Temple. Due to its destruction, the
Jewish people have had to survive for a very long period of time without its
basic source of spiritual sustenance, just like the camel survives for long
periods without water. Nissan is the
month of redemption, both the redemption from Egypt as well as the future
redemption. However, even on Passover itself we have an egg on the Seder plate
as a sign of mourning to remember the destruction of the Temple and that the
final redemption has not yet taken place. This week also marks the yahrzeit of Yehoshua Bin Nun, on the 26th day of this month.
As is explained in the same Midrash cited in week twenty-eight, the
camel represents the Babylonian exile, when the First Temple was destroyed.
Moreover, like the beast of burden, the camel also appears to be a reference to
Yishmael.[1]
As we complete the month of Nissan,
we relive all the exiles and the redemptions that the Jewish people experienced
throughout history, while hoping to soon experience the final redemption that
will take us out of the current exile.
Thirty is an intensification of the
qualities of balance represented by the number three. The number thirty also
has the numerical value of the name Yehudah.
As mentioned previously, Nissan is
represented by the Tribe of Judah. Pirkei
Avot teaches that thirty is also the age of koach, strength and potential. (See
Week 28) At thirty, one is at the height of his or her physical and intellectual
capacity. It was at the age of thirty that the kohanim would begin serving in the Temple. Such strength and
potential are associated with Judah and his descendant, King David, who unlike
Esau, acknowledged and repented from their mistakes, and were able to fully tap
into their capacity for good.
In Pirkei Avot this week, Ben Zoma teaches: "Who is wise? One who
learns from every person; Who is strong? He who conquers his evil inclination
... Who is rich? He who is satisfied with his portion.” This teaching is
closely related to the tragic events that took place during the time of the
Counting of the Omer. The death of Rabbi Akiva’s 24,000
disciples was caused by the difficulty they had in respecting, accepting, and
learning from each other’s interpretations and applications of their master’s
teachings.
The destruction of the Temple and the
exile in which we find ourselves to this day (which includes also the events of
the Holocaust) is due to sinat chinam,
baseless hatred. We will be redeemed from this final exile through ahavat chinam, baseless love for each
individual.
Ben Zoma’s lesson is closely related Yehoshua Bin Nun. He was Moses’ closest
disciple and successor, and yet also could relate to everyone: “on the verse
describing Joshua as ‘a man in whom there is
spirit,’ Sifrei explains “that he was able to meet the spirit of every man.”[2]
Ben Zoma’s second question and
answer, “Who is strong? He who conquers his evil inclination,” also appears
related to the yahrzeit of Joshua.
The Rebbe once said regarding his yahrzeit
that, “On this day, assistance from heaven is granted to become a conqueror,
like Yehoshua Bin Nun, ‘the most prominent of the
conquerors.’"[3]
During this week, we prepare for the conquests related to the following month (Iyar), and learn to become strong
conquerors like Joshua.
In this week, the combination of sefirot results in gevurah shebehod. The Counting of the Omer,
especially after the end if Passover and the month of Nissan, marks a period of service to G-d that can be potentially
difficult, requiring both strength and discipline in order to conquer our evil
inclination.
An additional lesson that we can
extract from the words of the camel is that we must always remember our mission
in the world: to create a dwelling place for G-d in this world, starting by
creating a sacred space for Him within ourselves.
[1] Talmud, Brachot 56b (where the description of a
dream with a camel follows description of a dream with Yishmael); Midrash Asseret Melachim, Midrash Pitron Torah
[2] Tanya, Compiler’s
forward
[3] From the Rebbe’s
Letters, available at: http://www.sichosinenglish.org/books/letters-rebbe-2/07.htm
Sunday, May 26, 2019
Week 31 (From the Book): To Be Proud of Our Humble Connection with G-d
PEREK SHIRAH: The horse is saying, "Behold, as the eyes of
the servants to the hand of their master, as the eyes of the maidservant to the
hand of her mistress, so are our eyes to G-d our Lord until He will favor
us." (Psalms 123:2)
PIRKEI AVOT: Ben Azzai
would say: Run to pursue a minor
mitzvah, and flee from a transgression. For a mitzvah brings another mitzvah,
and a transgression brings another transgression. For the reward of a mitzvah
is a mitzvah, and the reward of transgression is transgression.
He would also say: Do not scorn any man, and do not
discount any thing. For there is no man who has not his hour, and no thing that
has not its place.
SEFIRAH: Tiferet shebeHod (beauty
and balance within the context of glory and gratefulness)
The thirty-first week of the year is
the week of Rosh Chodesh Iyar. It
also includes the day of remembrance of the fallen soldiers of Israel and
victims of terror, as well as the fifth of Iyar, which marks the miraculous victory of Israel in its
War of Independence. In this week, the horse in Perek Shirah sings about how like servants, our eyes are fixed on
the Lord our G-d, until He has compassion over us. (Psalm 123:2) From beginning
to end, during this month we are involved in the mitzvah of counting the omer. As mentioned previously, this month
is also known as a month of healing, and is formed by the Hebrew letters alef, yud, and reish, which serve as an acronym for the verse “Ani Hashem Rofecha,” "I am G-d your
Healer," in which each word begins with one of these three letters.
The month of Iyar is represented by the Tribe of Issachar. The Torah describes
Issachar as, "a strong-boned donkey" (similar to the horse), which
takes upon itself the yoke of Torah study. Issachar and Zevulun had a
partnership in which Zevulun was involved in commerce and supported Issachar in
its total dedication to Torah. This dedication to Torah is symbolized by Rabbi
Shimon Bar Yochai, whose yahrzeit is in this month, and of whom it is said, “Toratoh Emunatoh,” that his Torah study was his profession.
There is a clear connection between
this week, the fifth of Iyar and the
War of Independence. The horse, especially in ancient times, symbolizes
military might. An example of this is found in the Song of the Sea, which
describes how when Pharaoh came with his chariots to attack the Jewish people,
G-d threw “horse and rider into the sea.” (This is actually the song of the ox,
later this month, in week 34)[1]
Despite being a symbol of power, the
horse sings of constantly looking to Hashem
for mercy. During the War of Independence, the Jewish people truly fought
mightily and heroically, like horses, and yet their victory was only possible
due to its miraculous nature, a product of Hashem’s
great mercy.
A horse loyally follows the
directions of its rider. Like the horse, the Jewish people waited a long time
and suffered greatly until Hashem
showed us favor and made it possible for us to live in our Holy Land again.
The horse’s song also reflects the
feelings of one who is ill or injured and prays to G-d for healing. This is
connected to the day of remembrance, as well as to the fifth of Iyar itself. One must not forget that
the miracle of Israel’s War of Independence occurred shortly after the
Holocaust, when the Jewish people as a whole was like a sick person in urgent
need.
The number thirty-one contains the
same numerals as thirteen, which, as explained above, represent G-d’s thirteen
attributes of mercy. Furthermore, the number thirty-one is also connected to
the conquest of the Land of Israel. At the end of the conquest of the Land in
the times of Joshua, the Tanach lists
all the kings that were defeated at that time, thirty-one in all.[2]
The number thirty-one is formed by
the Hebrew letters lamed and alef, which in turn spell the word E-l, one of the names of G-d. The name E-l is an expression of infinite power,
but also of infinite mercy.[3]
The word el appears many times in the
horse’s song.
In the Pirkei Avot for this week, Ben Azzai teaches that one must be fast
to perform a mitzvah and to flee from
a transgression; for a mitzvah draws
another mitzvah, while a
transgression draws another. The reward for a mitzvah is a mitzvah,
while the reward for a transgression is a transgression. Similarly, just as one
mitzvah leads to another, physical
and spiritual healing also comes slowly, one step at a time, like the Counting
of the Omer.
Furthermore, Ben Azzai teaches not to
scorn anyone and not to reject any thing, because there is no one who does not
have his moment and there is no thing that does not have its place. This
teaching’s connection with Yom
Ha’Atzma’ut is similar to that of the song of the horse: the Jewish people
and the Land of Israel finally had their moment!
This week’s sefirot combination results in tiferet
shebehod. With patience and balance, step by step, we serve G-d and climb
the ladder to spiritual fulfillment, getting closer and closer to Hashem. In order to perform this task,
we inspire ourselves in the horse’s example, understanding that despite our
strength we are nothing more (and nothing less) than servants of G-d. We should
be proud of our humble connection with G-d and know that the journey towards
Him may at times be slow, but that the arrival at its destination is certain.
[1] See also the last chapters of the Book of Job.
[2] Book of Joshua, Ch.
12
[3] Vedibarta Bam,
available at: http://www.sichosinenglish.org/books/vedibarta-bam/144.htm
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