A Rare Convergence
As our economy spirals out of control, with everyone shooting
in the dark groping for solutions, a very remarkable contrast
is emerging: While our systems and institutions have destabilized;
and our trust, our lives and our economy have lost their
balance, the Jewish calendar is entering an extremely rare
phase of perfect balance.
Our calendar is general is a fascinating study in balance.
It honors both the lunar cycle, which designates the Hebrew
months and holidays, as well as the solar cycle, which defines
the seven days of the week and the annual seasons. It insists
on reconciling both cycles with a special leap month added
every two-three years (seven times in nineteen years), to
compensate for the 11.5-day discrepancy between the lunar
year (354 days) and the solar year (365 days), ensuring
that holidays will always fall in their appropriate seasons.
This is in stark contrast to, say, the Gregorian calendar,
which follows the solar cycle, and the Muslim calendar,
which is exclusively driven by the lunar cycle.
The calendar itself reflects the vicissitudes of life’s
ebb and flow: The diametric opposite months of Adar and
Av, parallel, respectively, the joy and pain of our lives.
Each of the other months manifests another vital dimension
of life, from love to redemption, light to healing, all
together mirroring the entire spectrum of life experiences.
Shabbat, concluding the seven-day weekly cycle, is perhaps
the ultimate testimony to creating balance in our lives:
The human body, like any hard-working machine, needs time
off to rejuvenate itself. To maintain healthy balance between
body and soul both need to be nurtured. When one is nourished
more than the other, the disparity will compromise our mental,
emotional and even physical well-being. The Jewish calendar
insists that we maintain a well oiled-machine: After six
days of the body’s immersion in material life, comes
the seventh “day of rest,” which focuses on
feeding the soul.
Time’s structure is comprised of many levels. The Sabbatical
year, the leap year, the differences between a “complete”
year, a “full” year and a “simple” year; the complex astronomical
calculations around sunrises, sunsets, dawns and dusks,
lunar cycles and planetary movements; solar and lunar eclipses;
– and hundreds of other nuances that make up the Jewish
way of counting and measuring time – are all meant to balance
the multitude forces driving our lives.
In short, our Torah-based calendar is much more than a
calendar; it is a balancing compass, a map and living guide
that helps us navigate and align our lives with the cycles
of time and space which we occupy and travel through. Sanctifying
time – the essence of the Shabbat and holidays –
is the perfect coordination, achieving total balance, between
our lives and the dynamics of our universe. Imagine yourself
on a speeding train, being thrown from side to side, unable
to maintain steady balance. The flow and movement of time
and space can also upset our equilibriums. The calendar
directs us to configure our bearings and synchronize them
with the coordinates of the universe in which we live.
The interplay of space, time and spirit (olam, shonoh,
nefesh) defines all of existence. And the Jewish
calendar fuses them into one harmonic unit.
Of all times in history, we now stand at a rare juncture
when a series of balancing forces converge, in all three
dimensions: space, time and life (spirit).
Today is the new month of Nissan in the Hebrew year 5769.
On this day, 3321 years ago, in the dark streets of Egypt,
G-d showed Moses the new moon and instructed him to from
then on establish the calendar that would guide their lives.
“This month shall be to you the head of the months;
to you it shall be the first of the months of the year.”
In two weeks, G-d told Moses, you will lead the Jewish people
out of Egypt. And from here on you will always be a free,
transcendent nation.
And thus, every year on this day we celebrate the new moon
and the new month – the month of Redemption –
and we align ourselves to the lunar cycle of renewal.
Passover, too, is about balance – between our bodies
and souls, between humility and freedom, between celebrating
individuality and our union. Passover, the Festival of Redemption,
teaches us how to redeem ourselves from our confusing, distorted
surroundings, to free ourselves of the inhibitions and fears
(the constraints of mitzrayim) imposed upon us by
an oppressive material life, and realign ourselves to the
configuration of our uninhibited and unfettered souls.
But of all Nissan’s this year is unique: In two weeks (April
8), on the day before Passover, we will also make a blessing
on the sun – a once in-a-28-year event – which aligns us
with the sun’s cycle at its point of conception.
What does this mean? The Talmud states: “One who
sees the Sun at its turning point…should say, ‘Blessed
is He who reenacts the works of Creation.’ And when
is this? Abaye said: every 28th year” (Tractate Berachot
59b). Every 28 years the sun returns to the same position,
at the same time of the week and same time of day that it
occupied at the time of its creation – Wednesday morning,
at the beginning of the fourth day of creation. (For a detailed
breakdown of the calculations involved please go here).
Why is this confluence of events so significant? Why should
we care about the sun’s position at the time of creation?
Think of it as if you were going back to the moment of your
birth – when everything in your life was perfectly
aligned, before you lots your innocence and your psyche
tarnished by life’s trials and tribulations.
That is what makes this year – a once-in-a-28-year
phenomenon – so unique: Every 28 years, the powerful
sun, which gives life to our planet and affects so much
of our existence, returns to its quintessential place and
position – when it was shining on a clean and healthy
Earth, before all the tragedies that have befallen the human
race. {28, intrestingly, is also the gematria of
koach – energy}. This cosmic convergence, a restaging
of the heavens as they were at the beginning of time, calls
for a celebration: We honor it by reenacting this moment
every 28 years, at the spring equinox, as we will do this
coming April 8th in the morning. And we do so
by gathering together and declaring “Blessed is He
who reenacts the works of Creation” – thus connecting
to the perfect alignment of existence, and drawing down
(blessing, brocho, means to draw down) this balance
into our daily lives today.
Even more rare is the fact that this year’s sun blessing
occurs on Nissan 14, the day before Passover: This will
be only the eleventh time in history, among the 206 sun
cycles since the traditional time of creation, that the
sun blessing is happening on Erev Pesach,* preparing the
way and leading us right into the Holiday of Redemption.
And this is the last time that this convergence will
occur during our present six-millennia cycle.
Just as we are achieving balance in time and space, this
year also marks the ultimate balance of life/spirit (human
beings): Our current year is a Hakhel year – a year
of gathering. At the end of every seven-year cycle, following
the Sabbatical year (Shemitah), the Torah instructs:
Assemble the people: the men, the women, the children...
and read before them the Torah, in order that they
hear, and in order that they learn and stand in awe before
G‑d, and they will observe all the words of this Torah…all
the days that you live… (Deuteronomy 31:10).
Gathering, uniting and synchronizing souls – men,
women and children – of all backgrounds creates the
ultimate balance between the diverse segments of our population.
Indeed, no two people are alike. No two people’s “faces
are alike,” no people’s “minds are alike.”
Yet, despite our differences, we are all one integral unit.
This year – the hakhel year – beckons us to
actualize our commonality. Gather together a wide variety
of people toward one spiritual focus. By doing so we discover
the harmony within diversity, appreciating the essential
contribution of each individual. We recognize how each of
us, without exception, is like a unique and indispensable
musical note in a grand cosmic composition, each absolutely
necessary, each in need of and complementing the other,
all uniting in one exquisite harmony.
As we are surrounded by this unique convergence of balance
in time, space and spirit, our unstable economy jumps out
at us with a glaring inconsistency, like a jagged iceberg
jutting out of a silent sea.
The good news is that nature always gravitates toward balance.
We cannot deny the dazzling effect of nature’s natural
balance. Time, space and spirit all tick with an inherent
synchronicity.
The challenging news is that when these three rendezvous,
when the human being meets his time/space destiny, mans’
free will is not revoked; we always are allowed the power
to choose: To determine whether we will take control over
the winds of change and balance our lives, or we will allow
the material forces blowing every which way carry us away
in their uncertainty? Will your soul – and its inner
compass – drive your body, or will your body –
and its volatile needs – drive your soul?
How then do we restore the balance when so much seems unstable?
We turn back to the beginning of it all – when things
were in perfect balance.
And to effectively do so – and this is the second piece
of good news – we have a navigator, a calendar, that guides
us in rebalancing our lives. Follow its coordinates and
you will discover an underlying pattern of order, which
can help us steer our ships even amidst the crashing waves
in the stormy seas around us.
This period in time, and particularly these days of the
year, offers us, if we only bother to pay attention, an
unprecedented opportunity to regain, reclaim our balance:
All we need to do is to return to the source. The source
of time, the source of space, the source of life. We revisit
the birth of our sun – the source of our light and
warmth – as the sun stood when it was first planted
into the heavens. We reconnect to the original state of
affairs of our universe and of our lives – our conception
and our birth – when things were seamless and complete,
before duplicity set in.
But it’s not just the sun. The moon too, the redemptive
month of Nissan, the holiday of Passover itself, all happening
in the unifying hakhel year, energizes us to reconnect
to the source that integrates, rather than fragments, all
the pieces of our lives, restoring its original balance.
When we are able to revisit our birthing, prior to the
scars we gathered through life, we achieve two things: We
see how things ought to be, and we are empowered to realign
who we have become today with who we truly are.
And above all, we return to the source of all sources:
Blessed is He who reenacts the works of Creation. Instead
of investing our hope and trust in men and their fickle
institutions, we place our trust in the eternal –
In God We Trust. Which includes trust in the Divine Image
in which we are all created – the quintessential Divine
spirit that cannot be felled or wounded by mere mortal systems.
So, just as some are about to give up hope, throwing up
their arms in resignation, we enter the new month of Nissan,
offering us all its promises and hopes.
Nothing, absolutely nothing, can stop the indomitable spirit
of man. We each have the power to emancipate ourselves from
our shackles, including the most fearful one of all –
the shackles of fear and uncertainty.
But to do so requires strength and courage. And that too
is available to us. All we must do is revisit the “turning
point” and restore our original configurations –
before they wandered off course.
“One who sees the Sun at its turning point…” Would this
not include the “sun” in each one of us – the part of ourselves
that has the power to warm and illuminate, to nourish and
sustain, those around us?
What a gift. What an honor to be able to revisit the birthing.
What a blessing to live at this moment in time.
Something to think about as we enter the new month and
prepare for April 8th and Passover.
__________
*) Some have noted the words stated by the Ostrovtzer
Rebbe in 1925 (printed in his Meir Enei Chachamim), that
the sun blessing on Erev Pesach occurred three times in
history. The first before the Jews were redeemed from Egypt,
the second the year they were redeemed on Purim, and the
third, in preparation to the final imminent redemption.
However, there is a controversy around these words, being
that since creation the sun blessing has taken place on
Erev Pesach 11 times, including the last time in 1925. For
more discussion on this go here.