Judaism |
Adar 28, 5770 / March 14, '10 | |
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Published: 04/17/09, 1:56 PM
Shemini: By Human Handsby Rabbi Dr. Shlomo Riskin
Fire is the human response to G-d's light. "And it happened on the eighth day, that Moses called Aaron and his sons, and the elders of Israel..." (Leviticus 9:1) One of the most moving rituals of the Jewish week, at the advent of the eight day, is the Havdalah (lit., Our Biblical portion of Shemini opens, "And it happened on the eighth day," with Rashi commenting, "The eighth day of the consecration ceremonies of the Sanctuary, the first day of the month of Nissan, the very day on which the Sanctuary was erected." And it was on this very same eighth day - in the midst of the exultant celebration following the descent of a Divinely-sent fire which consumed the offering on the altar as a sign of heavenly acceptance - that Nadav and Avihu were also consumed by a Divine fire. What occasioned such Divine wrath, and what is the significance of the eighth day, which gives the Biblical portion its name? The "eighth day" is indeed fraught with significance. Let us return to the initial seven days of creation, when the Almighty created the heavens and the earth, and all of their hosts. On the sixth day He created the human being and placed him - Adam together with his wife Eve - in the Garden of Eden. The first couple sinned by plucking the fruit of Knowledge of Good and Evil from off the tree and eating it, severing good and evil from their Divine source, thereby reducing morality into a subjective experience, relative to the "flavor of the day." From that moment in the Garden, good and evil were no longer rooted in a Divine objective morality created by G-d; good and evil became whatever the human being believed is good or evil for him or her. That is why our mystical literature refers to Adam's sin as his having "severed the plantings" (kitzetz banetiyot), removing the seed from its source. And so, Adam and Eve were banished from the Garden of Eden. Then came the first Sabbath Day, the specific span of time when each individual can find refuge and comfort under the wings of the Divine Presence, the day when the Almighty especially extends His "arms" to embrace the penitent. Indeed the Midrash (Bereishit Rabbah) teaches us that Adam recited the psalm for the Sabbath day for the first time, genuinely uplifted by the understanding that there truly existed a road back to Eden, and that it was paved with stones of repentance and repair. And then came the first Saturday night, the beginning of the first eighth day. "This was the first time that darkness began to descend upon the world.... And the Almighty prepared two flint stones for Adam; Adam rubbed them together and there emerged fire." (Bereishit Rabbah 11:2) But it goes much deeper than that. On the seven days of creation, G-d created a world for the human being to live in; on the eighth day Adam discovered - through fire - how he could repair and improve that world, re-create that world as a true picture of the Divine. And if on the primordial seven days of creation, G-d made a world for humanity, on the eighth day of the consecration of the Sanctuary the Israelites made a Sacred Space - an improved world - in miniature, in which G-d could dwell together with humanity: "They shall make for Me a Sanctuary so that I may dwell in their midst." (Exodus, Trumah) Nisan 23, 5769 / 17 April 09
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