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Amongst all other holidays, Yom Kippur is acknowledged as
the most holy and sublime. On a simple level, it appears that
Yom Kippur is a day dedicated to repentance, but is this really
the case? Think of it, first is Rosh Hashanah, the "day
of judgment" and then Yom Kippur a day of repentance. Does
the following sequence make any sense:
Imagine someone is about to be judged, wanting to ease the
judgment wouldn't they first attempt to come in front of the
judge or jurors, confess their wrong doing, and then be asked
to be judge accordingly instead of waiting for judgment and then
afterwards confess. So why would a day of repentance follow a
day dedicated to judgment?
Wrestling with Dirt
How does the holiest day tangle with a day to recount all
one's wrong doing? Can it be that on this holiest of holy times
there's nothing better to talk about than all the garbage one
has collected over the preceding year?
Understandably, the negative is brought up to memory for the
purpose of purging oneself, as we cannot forget and let go that
which we do not remember and own, yet it is equally true "that
one who wrestles with a muddied person is bound to become muddied
himself."
Although there is a place for penetrating involved awareness
of your negative behavior, perhaps Yom Kippur would not be the
time. And indeed it is not. Yom Kippur is not about recounting,
recalling, bringing to memory all your negative baggage, for
that there is the entire month of Elul.
Elul is a time when we honestly do a soul searching, a self
examination and aspire to right the wrongs. It is a time where
we sincerely analyze our behavior, repair, if there is any damage,
and firmly resolve to better our future. After the month of Elul
comes to a close we are then ready Rosh Hashanah, the "day
of judgment."
What than is Yom Kippur?
Separated Time/Space/ Consciousness
This universe is comprised of time, space, and consciousness.
There are three properties to creation; olam -space, shana
- time and nefesh -soul. Whatever and wherever we are,
we are always in some location, at a certain time, and in a particular
state of mind. These three are so intensely linked that one cannot
and does not exist without the others; time and space only become
'absolutes' when a consciousness, an observer observes them as
such.
Time space and consciousness expand from a focal point, meaning
the flow of time, the origin of space, and the extension of consciousness
evolves from a point of reference. Time/Space/Normative Consciousness
function in a universe of polarity, separateness, diversity and
fragmentation. In linear time, there is a past which imprints
upon a present which in turn effect a future, the same is with
space. Space has defined dimensions, a width, height, and depth.
The observer, the consciousness who perceives time and space
in this fragmented manner is precisely the creator of all this
diversity as he is merely projectinghis own inner polarity, duality
and inner rift onto the life that surrounds him.
Unified Time/Space/ Consciousness
Yet, for all the multiplicity and division there is central
point, that is one, unified and whole, from where all separation
and diversity emanate. Cleary, the center of all reality and
existence is the Creator, but as a manifestation and representation
of this oneness, there is an expression of oneness in time, space
and consciousness, a point from which all duality flows. There
is a time/space/soul reality in which the infinite oneness begins
to stream outward into finite reality and where the finite separate,
and infinite oneness are unified and inseparable.
Yom Kippur reflects oneness and unification on all three levels,
in time, space and consciousness.
With respect to time, Yom Kippur is referred to as achas ba'shana
- the Oneness of the Year. Year-in Hebrew shana, is a
word related to the word shinui, meaning change, as the flow
of the year cycle bespeaks of diversity and the changing of seasons.
And in the midst of this multiplicity, Yom Kippur stands as achas
ba'shana, the focal point of time expressing the ultimate
oneness of time from where all multiple time reality emerges.
Likewise, Yom Kippur is associated with the oneness and unification
of space. When the bies ha'mikdash - the Temple in Jerusalem
still stood, it was only on Yom Kippur that the High Priest was
permitted to enter the sacred space of kadosh kadoshim
- Holy of Holies. There, the Ark of the Covenant stood over the
even hashesiya - the foundation stone, the mystical mysterious
rock from which the entire physical space extended, as the Talmud
relates.
The Ark of the Covenant was as physical as anything else,
a manifestation of this material existence with physical properties,
and yet, when placed in the Holy of Holies, it did not consume
any space. If one were to measure from the outside wall of the
Ark in any direction, the sum total of the empty areas would
be the same as the sum total of the entire space of the Holy
of Holies.
Paradoxically, the Ark contained a definite measurement, and
yet did not take up any space, a total melding, unification and
reintegration of dimension into the dimensionless, of space into
spacelessness, though all the while the Ark itself retained its
dimension and 'spaceness.'
Revealing Our Essential Self
And finally, and most importantly, Yom Kippur reveals the
oneness of our deepest self.
Sadly, hopefully infrequently, it may occur that the way we
act and behave-our outer reflection is not consistent with our
inner truth. We may stray from our inner path and in the process
eclipse our inner light, yet, no matter how far or alienated
we may have become, our inner light can never be extinguished.
At our core we are pure and transcendent, and any negativity
we engage in is not who we are, rather what we may have done.
The essence of who we are remains unscathed. The consequences
of our negative actions can penetrate but the surface, and can
attach themselves to us merely as appendages. True they may weigh
us down, burden us, cloud our vision, but they cannot affect
nor influence the deepest infinite part of ourselves-the soul
which is always one, pure and unified.
Yom Kippur give us the power to top into our deepest, infinite,
non-dualistic selves. It is a day when we rise above our ego
and fully tap into the deepest recesses of our free soul.
Comic Empowerment for teshuvah
Meta-historically, Yom Kippur was chosen as a day of teshuvah
because it was the original day of forgiveness at the time of
the birth of the Jewish nation.
A mere six weeks following the monumental Divine encounter
at Sinai, when the absolute Oneness was clear and transparent,
the Ancient Hebrews danced around the Golden Calf and proclaimed,
"this is the god that took us out of Egypt." The desire
to idolize and worship an image was so powerful, the human binary
need to conceptualize and contextualize was so overwhelming that
they were not able to assimilate Sinai properly.
Some eighty days later, after much prayer and beseeching Moshe-
Moses secured forgiveness, a means to re-access the highest levels
even after one has fallen. That day was the tenth day of the
seventh month of Tishrei, the day to be designated by the Torah
as Yom Kippur.
On Yom Kippur, the Talmud says "the essence of the day
brings atonement." The day of Yom Kippur calls forth sublime
measures of transcendence which overshadows and eliminates all
externalities and thus all negativities. Whether we fully consciously
participate or not makes little difference, so long as we minimally
accept the healing power of the day, and certainly don't interfere.
Inspiration & Perspiration
Yet, if we wish to live Yom Kippurdik -in the consciousness
of Yom Kippur each day of the year, to integrate the 'high' of
Yom Kippur in the "lows' of daily mundane life we need to
aspire to fuse the inspiration from above with the perspiration
from below.
Indeed Yom Kippur includes both these aspects, on the one
hand it is a time when "the essence of the day brings atonement",
yet, Yom Kippur follows the intense personal development of Elul.
Yom Kippur comes about on the calendar only after we have attained
the full potential of our own activities during Elul. Elul culminates
with Yom Kippur.
As a reflection of this joining of heaven and earth, inspiration
and participation, "arousal from above" and "arousal
from below" these two complimentary ideas are alluded to
in the two verses in the Torah which mention Yom Kippur as a
day that is a Shabbas Shabbason-a Shabbas of total rest;
- "Shabbas Shabbason he lachem "(Leviticus
16:31), which means "A total day of rest it (literally she)
will be to you"
- "Shabbas Shabbason hu lachem" (Leviticus
23:32), which means "A total day of rest it (literally he)
will be to you"
So there is the feminine and the masculine form of Yom Kippur.
On a cosmic level the feminine represents the receiver, whereas
the masculine the giver. The feminine reflects a passive mood
of receiving, whereas the masculine is the proactive. On Yom
Kippur there is a total melding of the two into one, beyond duality,
beyond separation of inspiration and perspiration.
A Day of Transcendence- A Time of Immanence
On Yom Kippur we have the ability to attain transcendence,
and become angel-like. Yom Kippur is a day of rest from normative
bodily necessities. The restrictions of the day are not primarily
intended to cause a suffering to the body-if inflicting pain
was the intention there would be many much more effective ways
of doing so-rather, the focus here is to cease operating in the
normative physical sphere and ascend to function angelically.
It is a day dedicated to the achievement of transcendence of
the physical, as well as a transcendence of all negativity and
indiscretion.
While every other day of the year we may struggle internally,
sense a deep dichotomy between the vying forces within us, battle
our own inner satan, on Yom Kippur, we experience a transcendence
of all separations, and thus all negativity and deprecation.
The Hebrew word for the Satan - ha'satan, which describes
dividing, confining ego-consciousness, has the numerical value
of 364. hie -5, shin-300, tes-9, nun-50=
364. From this the sages of the Talmud understood that on 364
of 365 days of the year, we may struggle with our ego-oriented
self, but on one day-on Yom Kippur-we are given the power to
completely transcend all limitations, restrictions and division
and be angelic.
On Yom Kippur total transcendence takes place. This is a day
when we refrain-we are shoves "rest", as the
root word of Shabbas, from eating, drinking and satisfying other
bodily needs. There is a complete materialistic transcendence-a
rest from all things physical as we become angelic.
We rest from all physical activities, such as eating, drinking,
marital relationships, even from walking/movement, represented
by the prohibition against wearing leather shoes. Many have the
custom to stand as much as possible during the prayers, also
to mimic angelic activity. As angles are peaceful towards each
other, we too, ask forgiveness from one another. During the course
of the prayers, a white robe (kittel) and white prayer
shawl (talis) are worn in imitation of angels who are
"dressed" in pure immaculate white.
Ratzu & Shuve
And yet, the point of elevation of Yom Kippur is in the downward
return-when we are able to draw down the inspiration into our
day-to-day lives, within the here and now of the year that follows.
On Yom Kippur, we are asked to remind ourselves of the sons
of Aharon who died on Yom Kippur "when they approached God."
The sons of Aharon died in ecstatic rapture. They transcended
material form in divine ecstasy, in a state of "withdrawal
without return." By recalling their deaths, we are reminded
that the most important part of the transcendent experience of
Yom Kippur is drawing the inspiration down into our everyday
reality. To experience a ratzu, an urge and deep desire to transcend
and be angelic, together with shuve,-the root word of teshuvah,
the great awareness that the purpose is in the return.
Liability into Assets
The ultimate return, teshuvah is when we can inspire
a radical shift of our past, even the negative past, and transform
all of our past into a positive context within the present. In
the language of the Talmud, teshuvah of love transforms
"willful transgression into positive virtue."
How can this happen?
For one, it is precisely our previous negative actions that
motivate our current deep yearning to return, and attain a more
profound level of teshuvah. Our negative behavior of the
past may act as a spring-propelling us forward to positive behavior
in the present. This, from the new vantage point, is the kernel
of goodness and light within the seemingly negative and darkness.
Retroactively speaking, the divine goodness within negative
actions is that it can, and often does, awaken within the person
a deeper want to return and alter one's ways.
For this reason in Hebrew the word for "misdeed"
is chet, spelled ches,-tes,-aleph.
Technically, the word chet can be written without the
final letter aleph, which is silent and thus apparently superfluous.
And yet chet has an aleph-the first letter of the Hebrew
alphabet and the phonetic opening of all sound, a letter which
represents the First, the One and the Only.
May we consciously be aware of this day of achas ba'shana
- oneness of time, and attain a sweetening of our entire selves
within in the newly discovered self.
May we merit to top into the awesomeness of Yom Kippur, and
reveal our deepest self. May the effects of our personal inner
transformation be felt throughout the entire world. May we allow
for the "essence of the day" to bring us to a real
teshuvah, and through our own teshuvah inspire
a teshuvah for the entire world, as the world becomes
healed and repaired of its fragmentations, splinteredness, and
apparent senselessness.
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