The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
Individual Repentance and National Repair
By Harav Yehuda Amital
Translated by Kaeren Fish
THE SHOFAR IN ELUL
The Shulchan Arukh (Orach Chaim 571:1)
states:
It is customary to arise at midnight to recite
Selichot and supplications from Rosh Chodesh Elul onwards, until Yom
Kippur. However, the Ashkenazi
custom is different: from Rosh Chodesh onwards they begin sounding the
shofar after the morning prayer.
This is based on the Tur (ad
loc.):
We learn in Pirkei de-Rabbi Eliezer: On
Rosh Chodesh Elul, the Holy One told Moshe, "Ascend the mountain to Me" and it
was then that he ascended to receive the second set of tablets, and the
shofar was sounded throughout the camp. Moshe ascended the mountain in order
that they would not be led astray again to idolatry, and the Holy One was
exalted by that shofar, as it is written (Tehillim 47), "God goes
up with a teru'a
"
Therefore, the Sages ruled that we should sound the shofar on Rosh
Chodesh Elul every year, and throughout the month, in order to urge Israel to
repent, as it is written (Amos 3), "Shall a shofar be sounded in
the city [and the people not be afraid?]"
THE MONTH OF ELUL IN THE ISRAELITE
CAMP
Let us attempt to recreate the scene during that
month in the Israelite camp. The
distance between "You shall be chosen unto Me" and "Leave Me, that I may
annihilate them," was very short. A
sense of failure had pervaded Israel from the 17th of Tammuz, when
Moshe shattered the tablets, until Rosh Chodesh Elul. Benei Yisrael could not forget
the moment when Moshe stood and prayed for them, while they were in seized by
profound frustration. Then Rosh
Chodesh arrived, and God told Moshe to ascend Mount Sinai once again. However, the anxieties were still
present. It appeared that God had
forgiven them and was prepared to "forget" the sin of the golden calf, but the
nation still worried: just as God could put aside the sin of the golden calf,
perhaps He could also put aside the great revelation of "I am the Lord your
God."
She said to Him: "Master of the Universe if
there is no forgetfulness before Your throne of glory, perhaps You will never
forget my part in the episode of the golden calf?"
[God] answered, "These, too, shall be forgotten"
(Yeshayahu 49:15).
Then she said to Him: "Master of the Universe if
there is indeed forgetfulness before Your throne of glory, perhaps You will
forget my part in the Revelation at Sinai?"
He answered: "And I shall not forget you"
(ibid.).
This is what Rabbi Elazar said in the name of Rav
Oshaya: What is the meaning of the words, "These, too, shall be forgotten?" This
refers to the episode of the golden calf.
"And I shall not forget you" this refers to the Revelation at Sinai."
(Berakhot 32a)
THE SOUNDING OF THE SHOFAR IN THE ISRAELITE
CAMP
From this midrash in Pirkei de-Rabbi
Eliezer we learn an interesting lesson. The midrash teaches that the
shofar was sounded when Moshe ascended for the third time, in order that
the nation would not go astray after idolatry. How is it possible that there was still
any danger of idolatry? Forty days had passed since the debacle of the golden
calf, and Am Yisrael had already undergone a process of
teshuva, repentance. Their
only concern, at this stage, was what would become of the experience of the
Revelation. How, then, is it
possible that it was now necessary to sound in shofar in order that they
would not be led astray after idolatry?
It seems that in order to understand this midrash,
we must first understand the motivation for the golden calf. According to the view of many of the
Rishonim especially Rabbi Yehuda ha-Levi Benei Yisrael were
certain that they were on the correct path; they felt a need to do
something. Rabbi Yehuda ha-Levi
explains that they possessed an overabundance of initiative; they regarded
themselves as especially religious.
How could they keep silent for forty days after the Revelation at Sinai?
Benei Yisrael sought something tangible; they were looking for religious
experience. The giving of the Torah
was not a spiritual experience. It
was prophecy, transmitted to them in awe and terror. They were now looking for an experience,
and they followed their feelings.
It was for this reason that Moshe was afraid that
the nation would sin. He already
knew that they would not fashion another calf but perhaps they would make
something else, based on a feeling that they had to find some way of expressing
their emotion. Perhaps they would
find some other means of expression that would also be idolatry. Therefore God commanded that the
shofar be sounded, telling them: Every form of idolatry is wrong! It is
not religious experience that you should seek, but rather to fulfill what God
commands. Kavana (intention)
is not enough; one must carry out the actions that God tells us to
perform.
REPAIRING FAILURES
The Torah explains how we should go about
repairing past failures. The
process involves two stages, corresponding to God's commands to Moshe to ascend
the mountain to receive the second tablets.
First, God told "Carve for yourself two tablets of stone." While the first tablets were inscribed
by God Himself "engraved by the finger of God" here we are told that Moshe
had to carve them himself. The same
applies to teshuva. You
cannot just rely on the atmosphere around you; you cannot suffice with the
"Elul" feeling. Carve for yourself!
From now, the tablets are no longer a Divine creation. And the engraving upon them is not
Divine script. Thinking about
teshuva is admittedly a positive thing, but in order to turn a process
around, to change a personal trait, to chart a different course one must hew
deeply into oneself.
The second stage is "No one shall ascend with you, nor shall anyone be
seen anywhere about the mountain."
For the giving of the first tablets, God commands: "You shall ascend, and
Aharon;" now "no one shall ascend with you." The first tablets were given amidst
thunder and lightning; now there is silence. Everything emanates from the deepest
recesses of the soul; everything takes place quietly, in
private.
Moshe is ready to ascend Mount Sinai, thinking
that he has already remedied Benei Yisrael's sin. He believes that they will no longer
have any desire to go off seeking religious experiences; that all they will be
interested in now is what God says.
He ascends to receive the second set of tablets, which he is supposed to
bring down on Yom Kippur. But
before God gives him the tablets, He tells him that there is an important
message that he must pass on to the people:
God passed over before him, and proclaimed: "The
Lord, the Lord; mighty God, merciful and compassionate, long-suffering, and
abundant in kindness and truth, preserving kindness to thousands, forgiving sin
and wrongdoing, but by no means clearing iniquity, visiting the sins of the
fathers upon the children and upon the children's children, to the third and the
fourth generation." And Moshe made haste and bowed to the ground and prostrated
himself. (Shemot 34:6-8)
"God passed over before him and proclaimed"
Rabbi Yochanan said: Were it not for the fact that this is written in the Torah,
it would be impossible to say! This
teaches us that the Holy One wrapped Himself like a prayer leader and showed
Moshe the order of prayer. He told
him, "Whenever Israel sins, LET THEM PERFORM this order before Me, and I shall
forgive them." (Rosh Ha-shana 17a)
What is the meaning of the expression, "Let them perform this order
before Me?" The ancient Sages taught: It is not enough to talk; one must
do. We must cleave to God's
attributes. Each personal attribute
and trait must be translated into practical action, and everything begins with
inter-personal relations. Benei
Yisrael thought that only the relationship between man and God was
important, that the problem was only idolatry, and that avoiding this was the
most critical thing. But it is
impossible to achieve full atonement and forgiveness from God, and to receive
the Torah, if these thirteen attributes do not penetrate the consciousness of
the nation and of the individual.
Concerning R. Yishmael's dictum, "Receive every
person joyfully" (Avot 3:12), Rambam teaches: "One must receive every
person whether small or great, whether a free man or a slave, every member of
the human race joyfully
"
Teshuva begins between man and his fellow. It starts at home, and in the way I act
towards other people whether they are great or small, whether they share my
culture or not.
People are so good at criticizing and analyzing,
judging everything that happens. On
the other hand, they are also good at whitewashing, at justifying their own
behavior. When it comes to other
people and what they do, it's the ability to criticize that comes to the
fore. When it comes to my own
actions, I have a long list of excuses.
During these days, we must reverse this situation! We must be critical of
ourselves, and excusing of others.
We must receive everyone joyfully.
The Gemara in Ketubot (111b) teaches:
Rabbi Yochanan said: One who shows the whites of
his teeth [i.e., smiles] to his friend is better than one who gives him milk to
drink, as it is written: "
and teeth are whiter (lavan shinayim) than
milk" - do not read "lavan" but rather "libun shinayim," i.e.,
whitening [or showing the white of] one's teeth.
We live in an alienated world. The way out of alienation must begin
with us.
Now, during these days of Selichot and
Divine compassion, we must relive that first Elul that awareness of failure,
the hewing of the tablets, the inwardness.
Let us therefore begin to recite and internalize the attributes God
taught Moshe.
Allow me to share with you a personal
feeling. I have experienced the
Days of Repentance during three very different periods in my life.
The first period was one in which Jews in the
Diaspora lived in peace and quiet.
The level of anti-Semitism was bearable. No one worried about what was going to
happen in the future. There were
some Zionists who spoke about the Jewish collective, but only as an ideal. Everyone worried mainly about himself
who would live and who would die, who in his time and who before his
time.
Then came the Holocaust, when everyone focused on
his own personal survival. Who
spoke about the Jewish collective, the Jewish nation? People were worried about
living to the next day.
Afterwards, when the State of Israel was founded,
people turned their attention to the survival and condition of the People of
Israel. This year especially, we
are in a period in which our concern is not for our own personal survival. Despite the constant threat of terrorism
may the Holy One protect us in Israel we aren't worried about "What will
happen to me?" Our main worry is:
What will happen to Am Yisrael? What will happen to the State of Israel?
What about Eretz Yisrael?
In such a period, a person thinks: When there are
such great worries, what does it matter if I'm a little better or a little
worse? Is that really the issue my personal problems? There are huge national
problems! We don't want to feel that we are putting aside all of Am
Yisrael's worries and focusing only on ourselves.
We must be strong, and remember the Gemara that
teaches:
Rabbi Yochanan said: Great is teshuva, for
it brings redemption. As it is
written (Yishayahu 59), "A redeemer shall come to Tzion, and to those who
turn from sin amongst Yaakov": What is the reason that "a redeemer shall come to
Tzion"? Because of "those who turn from sin amongst Yaakov." (Yoma
86)
Here the prophet speaks of redemption, but not
the full and final redemption.
There is also everyday redemption.
The final redemption is an exalted level, but first there is the
redemption on the everyday level.
We, with our personal teshuva, are doing something for all of
Israel. Our teshuva is not
cut off from what is happening to Am Yisrael; it is all
connected!
Therefore, our personal introspection is not
divorced from national concerns. It
represents, in fact, active participation in the issues and concerns of the
nation as a whole.
Let us pray to God that He give us the strength to
remedy our faults and to return to Him wholeheartedly. May the Holy One send forgiveness,
pardon and atonement to us and to all of Israel, and inscribe both Am
Yisrael and each one of us for a good year.
(This sicha was delivered on the first night of
Selichot, Elul 5764 [2004].)