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Exodus 10:1-13:16
Parshah in a Nutshell
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You say that you want to go serve your G-d? says Pharaoh. Ill
let the men go, as long as the women and children stay behind.
No, says Moses,
Bo
Exodus 10:1-13:16
We will go with our young and with our old, with our sons and
with our daughters; with our flocks and with our herds will we
go.
Come in to Pharaoh, says G-d to Moses in the opening verse
of Bo (come), for I have hardened his heart and the heart of
his servants, that I might show these my signs before him.
Pharaoh warns Moses that his efforts will only bring tragedy
upon his people, and orders him from the palace. All that night,
a strong east wind blows; in the morning,
The locusts went up over all the land of Egypt... And they covered the surface of the whole earth, so that the land was darkened; and they did eat every plant of the land... and there
remained no green thing through all the land of Egypt...
Once again, Pharaoh begs Moses to pray to G-d that the plague
be removed; once again, he promises to let them go; and once
again, no sooner did the plague end that G-d hardened
Pharaohs heart, and he would not let the children of Israel go.
Darkness
Commentary
to Jewish tradition, that is perfectly acceptable; but the youth should be raised in
the spirit of the times ...
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Says Moses: You have spoken well; I will see your face again
no more.
Bo
Exodus 10:1-13:16
Commentary
OVER THE LAND OF
EGYPT (10:21)
Why did G-d... bring darkness upon the Egyptians? Because there were transgressors in Israel who had Egyptian patrons and lived in affluence and honor, and were
unwilling to leave. So G-d said: If I bring upon them publicly a plague from which
they will die, the Egyptians will say: Just as it has passed over us, so has it passed
over them. Therefore He brought darkness upon the Egyptians for three days, so
that the [Israelites] should bury their dead without their enemies seeing them.
(Midrash Rabbah)
A
MAN SAW NOT HIS FELLOW, NEITHER ROSE ANY FROM HIS PLACE FOR THREE
DAYS
(10:23)
SPOKE TO
MOSES... PLEASE,
THAT EVERY MAN ASK OF HIS NEIGHBOR, AND EVERY WOMAN OF HER NEIGHBOR,
ARTICLES OF SILVER, AND ARTICLES OF GOLD...
(11:2)
There were seven days of darkness... during the first three, a man saw not his fellow; during the last three days, he who sat could not stand up, he who stood could
not sit down, and he who was lying down could not raise himself upright.
[But G-d had said to Abraham at the Covenant Between the Pieces: Know thee
that your children shall be strangers in a foreign land, [where] they will be enslaved
and afflicted ... and afterwards they will go out with great wealth (Genesis 15:23).]
(Midrash Rabbah)
So G-d had to plead with them: Please! Ask the Egyptians for gold and silver, so
that the Righteous One should not say: They will be enslaved and afflicted He fulfilled, but He did not fulfill and afterwards they will go out with great wealth.
There is no greater darkness than one in which a man saw not his fellow in
which a person becomes oblivious to the needs of his fellow man. When that happens, a person becomes stymied in his personal development as well neither
rose any from his place.
(Chidushei HaRim)
AND G-D SAID TO MOSES: YET
PHARAOH... (11:1)
WILL
Ordinarily, G-d spoke with Moses only outside of the city, which was full of idols
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ments: I am G-d.
Exodus 10:1-13:16
You shall keep it until the fourteenth day of the same
month; and the entire community of the congregation of
Israel shall slaughter it towards evening.
The First Seder
They shall take the blood, and put it on the two side posts and
on the upper door post of the houses in which they shall eat it.
And they shall eat the meat in that night, roast with fire, and
unleavened bread: and with bitter herbs they shall eat it...
Thus shall you eat it: with your loins girded, your shoes on
your feet, and your staff in your band; you shall eat it in haste,
it is G-ds passover.
For I will pass through the land of Egypt this night, and will
smite all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, both man and
beast: and against all the gods of Egypt I will execute judg-
Commentary
by realizing its function within G-ds overall purpose for creation, he redeems and
elevates the divine spark at its core.
Every soul has its own sparks scattered about in the world, which actually form
an integral part of itself: no soul is complete until it has redeemed those sparks
which belong to its mission in life. Therein lies the purpose of galut in all its forms:
the exile of the soul from its sublime origins to the physical world, and the various
exiles that nations and individuals experience in the course of their history,
impelled from place to place and from occupation to occupation by seemingly random forces. All is by Divine Providence, which guides every man to those possessions and opportunities whose spark is intimately connected with his.
As the father and prototype of all exiles, the Egyptian galut was a highly concentrated period of history, in which the foundations were laid for all that was to unfold
in subsequent centuries. The material world contains 288 general sparks (each of
which includes innumerable offshoots and particles); of these, 202 were taken out
of Egypt, redeemed and elevated when the Jewish people carried off its gold and
silver and used it to construct a Sanctuary for G-d in the desert (see Exodus 25).
(The Chassidic Masters)
And the blood shall be to you for a sign upon the houses where
you are: when I see the blood, I will pass over you, and the
plague shall not be upon you to destroy you, when I smite the
land of Egypt.
The event shall be established a festival for all generations,
for on this very day I have brought your hosts out of the land
of Egypt... Seven days shall there be no leaven found in your
houses... in all your habitations shall you eat matzot (unleavened bread).
The Exodus
And it came to pass at midnight, that G-d smote all the firstborn in the land of Egypt: from the firstborn of Pharaoh that sat
on his throne to the firstborn of the captive that was in the dungeon; and all the firstborn of cattle.
And Pharaoh rose up in the night, he, and all his servants, and
all Egypt; and there was a great cry in Egypt; for there was not
a house where there was not one dead.
them was brought in and they said to him: Tell us how you saw the moon in
front of the sun or behind the sun? to the north of it or the south? how big was it,
and in which direction was it inclined? and how broad was it? ... Rabban Gamaliel
used to have diagrams of the phases of the moon on a tablet on the wall of his upper
chamber, and he used to show them to the unlearned and ask, Did it look like this
or this? ...
After that they would bring in the second witness and question him. If their
accounts tallied, their evidence was accepted. The other pairs were questioned
briefly not because they were required at all, but so that they should not be disappointed and discouraged from coming (the next time).
The head of the bet-din would then proclaim: Sanctified!, and all the people
would repeat after him, Sanctified! Sanctified!
(Talmud, Rosh Hashanah ch. 2)
What blessing was to be recited by one who beholds the new moon, in the period
when Israel used to sanctify the new month? Some of the Sages hold: Blessed be
He who renews the months. Others say: Blessed be He who consecrates the
months. And others say: Blessed be He who hallows Israel, since unless Israel
sanctify it, it is not sanctified at all.
THIS CHODESH (NEW MOON, MONTH) SHALL BE TO YOU THE HEAD OF MONTHS;
IT SHALL BE FOR YOU THE FIRST OF THE MONTHS OF THE YEAR (12:2)
G-d showed Moses the new moon at its moment of rebirth, and said to him: When
the moon is reborn, mark the beginning of a new month.
(Midrash Rabbah)
The people of Israel set their calendar by the moon, because they are the moon of
the world.
(Zohar)
(Mechilta)
There was a large courtyard in Jerusalem called Beth Yaazek, where all the witnesses (who had seen the appearance of the new moon) used to assemble, and the
bet-din (rabbinical court) used to examine them. They used to entertain them lavishly there, so that they should have an inducement to come...
The pair of witnesses who arrived first were cross-examined first. The senior of
The moon begins to shine on the first of the month and increases in luminance till
the fifteenth day, when her orb becomes full; from the fifteenth till the thirtieth day,
her light wanes, till on the thirtieth it is not seen at all. With Israel too, there were
fifteen generations from Abraham to Solomon. Abraham began to shine... Jacob
added to this light... and after them came Judah, Perez, Chetzron, Ram, Aminadav,
Nachshon, Salmon, Boaz, Obed, Jesse, David. When Solomon appeared, the
moons orb was full... Henceforth the kings began to diminish in power... With
Zedekiah [in whose time the Holy Temple was destroyed] the light of the moon
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herds, very much cattle.
Bo
Exodus 10:1-13:16
And he called for Moses and Aaron by night, and said: Rise
up, and get you out from among my people, both you and the
children of Israel; and go, serve G-d, as you have said. Also
take your flocks and your herds, as you have said, and be
gone; and bless me also.
And Egypt was urgent upon the people, that they might send
them out of the land in haste; for they said: We are all dead
men.
So hastily were the Children of Israel driven out by the
Egyptians that the people took their dough before it was leavened, their kneading troughs being bound up in their clothes
upon their shoulders.
Nor did they forget to take the wealth of Egypt with them, as
G-d had requested. They requested of the Egyptians articles
of silver, and articles of gold, and garments. G-d gave the people favor in the sight of Egypt, so that they gave them such
things as they required; and they despoiled Egypt.
And the children of Israel journeyed from Raameses to
Sukkoth, about six hundred thousand men on foot, besides children.
Commentary
dimmed entirely.
(Midrash Rabbah)
It is written (Genesis 1:16), And G-d made the two great luminaries; but then it
says, The great luminary& and the small luminary?
[Indeed, at first they were both great; but then] the moon said to G-d: Master of the
Universe! Can two kings wear the same crown?
Said G-d to her: Go diminish yourself.
Said she to Him: Master of the Universe! Because I have said a proper thing, I must
diminish myself?
Still G-d saw that the moon was not appeased. So G-d said: Offer an atonement for
My sake, for My having diminished the moon. This is the significance of what
Reish Lakish said: Why does the he-goat offered on Rosh Chodesh (the first of the
month) differ from the others in that it is specified as for G-d? G-d is saying: This
he-goat shall atone for My diminishing of the moon.
The months of the year are lunar months, as it is written: .... This chodesh shall be
to you the head of months. So said our sages: G-d showed Moses the figure of the
[new] moon in a prophetic vision, and said to him: Thus you should see and sanctify.
However, the years which we figure are solar years, as it is written: Keep the
month of spring (i.e., ensure that the month of Passover is always in the spring
season).
Said He to her: You may rule both during the day and at night.
Said she to Him: What advantage is there in that? What does a lamp accomplish at
high noon?
Said He to her: The people of Israel shall calculate their dates and years by you.
Said she to Him: But the sun, too, shall have a part in that, for they shall calculate
the seasons by him.
The solar year is eleven days longer than a year of [twelve] lunar months.
Therefore, when this surplus accumulates to the amount of 30 days either a little more or a little less one adds an extra month so that the year has 13 months;
this is what is called a shanah meuberet (pregnant year). Because one cannot
make the year to consist of so many months plus so many days, since the verse
says, [It shall be for you the first of] the months of the year implying that the
year should consist of months, and months only.
The moon is concealed each month, and remains invisible for approximately two
Said G-d: The righteous shall be called by your nameJacob the Small, Samuel
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AND
Bo
LAND OF
Exodus 10:1-13:16
days for about one day before it is closest to the sun and about one day after it is
closest to the sun, after which it can be seen in the west in the evening. The night on
which it is visible in the west marks the beginning of the month, and one counts from
that day 29 days. If the moon is visible on the eve of the 30th, then the 30th day is
Rosh Chodesh (head of the month); if not, then the 31st day is Rosh Chodesh, and
the 30th day belongs to the previous month.
(Mishneh Torah, Laws of the Sanctification of the Month)
Time is the first creation (see Sforno on Genesis 1:1); thus, the sanctification of time
is the first mitzvah commanded to Israel.
(The Lubavitcher Rebbe)
On the tenth day of this month, they shall take to them every man a lamb& You shall
keep it until the 14th day of the same month; and the whole assembly of the congregation of Israel shall slaughter it towards evening (12:3-6)
When G-d told Moses to slay the paschal lamb, Moses said: Master of the Universe!
How can I possibly do this thing? Dont You know the lamb is the Egyptian god?
Lo, if we sacrifice the abomination of the Egyptians before their eyes, will they not
stone us?
Said G-d: By your life, Israel will not depart from here before they slaughter the
Egyptian gods before their very eyes, that I may teach them that their gods are really nothing at all. This is what He actually did; for on that night He slew the Egyptian
firstborn, and on that night the Israelites slaughtered their paschal lamb and ate it.
(Midrash Rabbah)
That year, the 10th of Nissan was a Shabbat; this is why the Shabbat before Passover
is called Shabbat HaGadol (The Great Shabbat) because a great miracle happened on that day. For when the Children of Israel took their paschal lambs on that
Shabbat, the Egyptian firstborn converged on them and asked them: Why are you
doing this? They replied: It is a passover sacrifice to G-d, for He will kill the firstborn of Egypt. The firstborn approached their fathers and Pharaoh to request that
Israel be allowed to go, but they refused; so the firstborn waged war against them,
killing many of them. Thus the verse (Psalms 136:10) proclaims: [Offer thanks] to
He who smote the Egyptian with their firstborn.
(Tosofot on Talmud, Shabbat 87b)
I WILL PASS THROUGH THE LAND OF EGYPT THIS NIGHT, AND WILL SMITE ALL THE
G-D
EGYPT (12:29)
The Jews in Egypt had sunk to the forty-nine gates of impurity so that, morally and
spiritually, they were virtually indistinguishable from the Egyptians. Thus, when G-d
passed over the Jewish firstborn to kill the Egyptian firstborn, the divine attribute of justice argued: How are these any different from these? These are idol-worshippers, and
these are idol-worshippers! Nevertheless, G-d chose to extract the Children of Israel
from the bowels of Egypt and acquire them as His chosen people.
This is why the plague of the firstborn occurred precisely at midnight. The first half of
the night embodies the divine attribute of gevurah (justice), and its second half, the
divine attribute of chessed (benevolence). Midnight is the juncture that fuses and supersedes them both, since the power to join two opposites can only come from a point that
transcends their differences. Midnight is thus an expression of a divine involvement in
creation that transcends all standard criteria for punishment or reward.
(Ohr HaTorah)
A MIXED MULTITUDE WENT UP ALSO WITH THEM (12:38)
The Hebrew word rav (multitude) has a numerical value of 202; the mixed multitude represents the 202 sparks of holiness that the Jewish people extracted from Egypt
(see commentary on 11:2 above)
(The Kabbalists)
AND IT CAME TO PASS ON THAT VERY DAY, THAT G-D TOOK THE CHILDREN OF ISRAEL
EGYPT (12:51)
OUT OF
In the Passover Haggadah we say: If G-d had not taken our forefathers out of Egypt,
we, our children, and our childrens children, would still be enslaved to Pharaoh in
Egypt...
Our sages explain that the Children of Israel had become so entrenched in the paganism
and depravity of Egypt, that the Exodus came at the very last possible moment, as they
approached the very brink of total indistinguishability from the Egyptians. Had they
remained slaves in Egypt a moment longer, there would have been no Children of
Israel to redeem.
(Rebbes Haggadah)
Egypt rejoiced when they went (Psalms 105:38). Said Rabbi Berechia: This is comparable to a fat man who is riding on a donkey. The donkey longs: O when will he get
off me; and he longs: O when will I get off the donkey. As soon as he gets off, the
man is happy and the donkey is happy. Still I do not know: who is the happier?
So, too, when the Jews were in Egypt, and the plagues were befalling the Egyptians, the
Egyptian were longing: O when will the Jews get out! And the Jews were longing: O
when will G-d redeem us! As soon as they went out and were redeemed, these were
happy and these were happy. Still, I did not know: which was the happier? Until King
David came and said: Egypt rejoiced when they went.
FIRSTBORN IN THE LAND OF EGYPT... AND AGAINST ALL THE GODS OF EGYPT I WILL
EXECUTE JUDGMENTS:
(Midrash Tehillim)
I AM G-D (12:12)
I will pass I, and no angel; I will smite I, and no seraph; I will execute
I, and no messenger; I am G-d I am He, and no other.
(Passover Haggadah)
AND AGAINST ALL THE GODS OF EGYPT I WILL EXECUTE JUDGMENTS (12:12)
AND YOU SHALL RELATE TO YOUR SON ON THAT DAY, SAYING: THIS IS DONE BECAUSE
G-D DID TO ME WHEN I CAME OUT OF EGYPT (13:8)
OF THAT WHICH
Those that were of wood rotted; those that were of metal melted.
(Rashi)
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FROM THE CHASSIDIC MASTERS
continued
For this is the root of all evil. Self-centeredness might seem
a benign sin compared to the acts of cruelty and depravity
to which man can sink, but it is the source and essence of
them all. When a person considers the self and its needs to
be the ultimate arbiter of right and wrong, his morality--and
he might initially be a very moral person--is a sham. Such a
person is ultimately capable of committing any act, should
he regard it as crucial to himself or to his self-defined vision
of reality.
Ultimately, every good deed is an act of self-abnegation,
and every evil deed is an act of self-deification. When a person does a good deed--whether it involves contributing a
single coin to charity or devoting an entire lifetime to a Gdly cause--he is saying: there is something greater than
myself to which I am committed. When a person violates
the divine will--whether with a minor transgression or with
the most heinous of crimes--he is saying: "My river is my
own, and I have made myself"; good is what is good to me,
evil is what is contrary to my will; I am the master of my
reality, I am god.
The Soul of Evil
So is the ego evil? Is this fundamental component of our
soul an alien implant that must be uprooted and discarded in
our quest for goodness and truth?
In the final analysis, it is not. For the cardinal law of reality is that "There is none else besides Him" (Deuteronomy
4:35)--that nothing is contrary to, or even separate from, the
Creator and Source of all. The ego, the sense of self with
which we are born, also derives from G-d; indeed, it is a
reflection of the divine "ego." Because G-d knows Himself
as the only true existence, we, who were created in His
image, possess an intimation of His "sense of self" in the
form of our own concept of the self as the core of all existence.
It is not the ego that is evil, but the divorcing of the ego
from its source. When we recognize our own ego as a
reflection of G-d's "ego" and make it subservient to His, it
becomes the driving force in our efforts to make the world
a better, more G-dly place. But the same ego, severed from
its divine moorings, begets the most monstrous of evils.
This, explains the Lubavitcher Rebbe, is the deeper significance of the opening verses of the Parshah of Bo. When GParshah in a Nutshell | Parshah in Depth | Chassidic Masters
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first mitzvah commanded to Israel.
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FROM THE CHASSIDIC MASTERS
continued
purpose of his creation and the creation of all the worlds -that we transform the lower realms (i.e., the natural, material world which, by its nature, conceals the face of its
Creator) into an environment receptive to the divine truth,
into a place in which the goodness and perfection of G-d is
at home and is the dominant reality.
But here comes the paradox, a seemingly closed logical circle: are we ourselves part of this "lower realm" we are to
transform, or are we a step above it? If we are part and parcel of the material world, how can we truly change it and
uplift it? As the Talmudic axiom goes, "A prisoner cannot
release himself from prison" -- if he himself is bound by its
parameters, from where might derive his ability to supersede them? On the other hand, if we are, in essence, transcendent beings, existing beyond the confines of the natural
reality, then whatever effect we have upon the world cannot
truly be considered "a dwelling for G-d in the lower
realms." For the world per se has not been transformed -- it
has only been overwhelmed by a superior force. The true
meaning of "a dwelling in the lower realms" is that the
lowly realms themselves change, from within.
So to achieve His aim in creation for a dwelling in the lower
realms, G-d created the Jew, a hybrid of the Tishrei and
Nissan realities. For only in incorporating both these timecycles in our lives, combining a norm-defying approach
with a natural-pragmatic modus operandi, can we achieve
the redemption of ourselves and our world. Only by drawing from above to change from within can we make our
world a home for G-d.
Footnotes:
1. The Talmud (Rosh Hashanah 10b-11a) cites a debate
between two sages: "Rabbi Eliezer says: The world was created in Tishrei... Rabbi Joshua says: The world was created
in Nissan." The Kabbalists explain that Rabbi Eliezer and
Rabbi Joshua are not debating the date of G-d's actual creation of the universe, which, after all, is a matter of historical fact. Rather, both sages agree that the physical world
was created in Tishrei, and that the idea of creation was created in the month of Nissan; where they differ is on the
question of priority and emphasis: is the day that the physical universe was completed to be regarded as the primary
anniversary of creation, or is the world's true date of birth
the day that it was conceived in the divine mind?
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11
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FROM THE CHASSIDIC MASTERS
continued
is the first of the Jewish month (hence the Hebrew word for
month, chodesh, from the root chadash, new). The month
consists of 29 or 30 days, until the next new moon marks
the onset of a new month. The first half of the Jewish month
is thus marked by a nightly growing moon, which reaches
its full luminescent potential on the night of the 15th; but on
the 16th of the month the moon is already diminished, and
continues to shrink nightly until a new moon and month are
born.
[At the time that the Sanhedrin (Supreme Court of Torah
law) existed, the onset of a new month was proclaimed each
month based on the actual sighting of the new moon -- a
practice which will be resumed with the coming of
Moshiach and the re-establishment of a central Torah
authority for all of Israel. Today, our pre-set calendar is not
as exact, with the first of the month falling within a day or
two of the new moon's "birth".]
The people of Israel, says the Zohar, mark time with the
moon because they emulate the moon. Like the moon, the
Jewish people dip and soar through history, our regressions
and defeats but preludes to yet another rebirth, yet another
renewal. The story of the moon is the story of a nation, and
the story of every productive life: lack fuels initiative, setbacks stimulate growth, and one's highest achievements are
born out of moments of diminution and depreciation.
Going Moon
In its account of the creation of the universe, the Torah
speaks of "the two great luminaries" created by G-d to shed
light upon the earth and set "the signs, times, days and
years" of life on earth. In the very same verse, however, the
two great luminaries become "the great luminary to rule the
day and the small luminary to rule the night." The Talmud
explains: initially, the sun and moon were indeed two great
luminaries, equal in size and luminescence. But the moon
objected that "two kings cannot share the same crown." So
G-d commanded it: "Go, diminish yourself."
Thus was born the month. For not only was the moon
reduced to a pale reflector of another's light, it was further
diminished in that its illumination of the earth would be curtailed by the constant changes in its juxtaposition with the
source and the recipient of its light. For two weeks of each
month, the moon faithfully fulfills the divine decree "Go,
diminish yourself," steadily reducing itself to the point in
Parshah in a Nutshell | Parshah in Depth | Chassidic Masters
"Go, diminish yourself," is the Creator's perpetual injunction to His lunar creation. For it is only by diminishing itself
that the human soul can "go." Only by making itself vulnerable to the mortality and pitfalls of the physical state can
the soul of man become a "goer," a being with the power to
make of itself more than it is.
David's Absence
This is the message implicit in the haftorah (reading from
the prophets) read in the synagogue when Shabbat falls on
the day before Rosh Chodesh, as the first of the month is
called. The opening verse of this haftorah reads: "And
Jonathan said to [David]: Tomorrow is the new month. You
will be remembered, for your seat will be vacant." David
has reason to suspect that King Saul wishes him harm, so he
plans to avoid the royal palace. Jonathan tells him that his
very absence will attract Saul's notice, inducing the king to
reveal his intentions toward him.
2
12
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FROM THE CHASSIDIC MASTERS
continued
At first glance, the connection between the haftorah and the
new month seems merely incidental -- the reading begins by
relating a conversation that took place on the day before
Rosh Chodesh, so we read it on the day before Rosh
Chodesh. But upon closer examination, Jonathan's words to
David express the deeper significance of the lunar month,
and particularly of the day before Rosh Chodesh -- the day
of the moon's disappearance. Jonathan tells David that you
will be remembered because your seat will be vacant. The
key word in the Hebrew original of this sentence is pakod,
which is the root of both v'nifkadta, "you will be remembered," and yipaked, "will be vacant." Indeed, the two are
intertwined: we are remembered when we are missed. Like
the vacuum which draws liquid into a syringe, it is the voids
and absences of life that compel its greatest achievements
and fulfillments.
This is the essence of lunar time, to which the Jew sets the
rhythm of his individual and communal life: oblivion as the
harbinger of renewal; darkness as the impetus for reborn
light.
The Sixteenth Increment
Thus the fifteenth of the Jewish month, the day on which
the moon achieves the pinnacle of its luminary potential,
marks the high point of that month's particular contribution
to Jewish life.
Nissan is the "month of redemption," and it is on the first
day of Nissan that the process of our liberation from Egypt
began; but the results of this process were fully manifest
only on the 15th of Nissan, the day of the Exodus, which we
celebrate each year as the festival of Passover and and on
which re-experience the divine gift of freedom through the
observances and customs of the seder. By the same token,
the first of Tishrei is the day on which we crown G-d as
king of the universe, rededicating the entirety of creation to
the purpose for which it was created and evoking in G-d the
desire to continue to create and sustain it; but the celebration of the divine coronation is eclipsed by days of solemnity and awe which occupy the first part of Tishrei, coming
to fruition only on the joyous festival of Sukkot which commences on the fifteenth of the month.
The same is true of each of the twelve months of the Jewish
year. Each has its own unique import and quality, and each
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