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The commandment to count the omer is one of the more curious prescriptions of the Torah. We are told to count the 49 days between Passover and Shavuot even though, of course, the number of days never changes. Therefore, it is very much an effort in which the process is in and of itself a value. The word for "number" in Hebrew is mispar. Its root is closely related to the word for "story" -- sipur. What is the relationship between the two? A collection of events becomes a story -- as opposed to a random anthology of events -- when there is a beginning in which the characters are introduced, a middle in which conflict takes place, and an end in which there is resolution. Our lives flow by so quickly that we frequently lose awareness of the awesome power of our own stories. The metamorphosis of today into tomorrow is subtle enough for us to lose consciousness of beginnings and ends. The commandment to count teaches us mindfulness, and it re-opens our hearts to hearing stories. There are two stories that are intertwined. One is the story of a transformation of a people who at Passover become physically free into a people who at Shavuot become spiritually free as well. The day we left Egypt was one in which we rejected the Egyptian definition of what our lives can hold. We were free to be who we wanted to be. But we didn't yet know our own story. It is only when we received the Torah that we found the channels that could give our souls expression. It was then that we learned the mechanics of meeting challenges that are genuine and enduring. Our story began to evolve. BARLEY AND WHEAT The rituals that define this time of year reflect this change. The sacrifice that was offered on Passover was made out of barley. In ancient times, barley was used as fodder for animals. The sacrifice that was offered on Shavuot was made of wheat. Wheat is often used as an allegory for the human capacity for using our intelligence. While an animal can eat a fruit or a leaf, it requires human intelligence and creativity to make bread. The Jewish people were transformed from those seeking freedom to those seeking humanity. What makes us truly human? The mystic literature discusses the bonds that we share with God as being the humanizing factor. These bonds are called sefirot, a name which, as is obvious, also has the same root as number and story. This common root conveys the fact that our beginning, middle and end are ultimately measured and finite, but nonetheless touched by the infinite spark of Godliness within us. The earliest mention of this mystic concept is presented in the Kabbalistic work called Sefer Yetzirah, literally the "Book of Formation," which is attributed to Abraham. There are over a thousand commentaries on Sefer Yetzirah, yet it remains nonetheless one of the most esoteric of the Jewish works on God's nature. In the 1500's, Rav Yitzchak Luria -- a mystic from Egypt who settled in Safed and who is known widely by the acrostic of his name as the Ari,(literally "the Lion") -- elucidated the most enigmatic sections of Kabbalah to a select group of disciples with unsurpassed clarity. Subsequently, the mystic teachings of Judaism became far more accessible than they had ever been in the past. One of the most central of his teachings is the significance of gaining awareness of the bond that we share with God, the sefirot of our spiritual souls. THE SEVEN ASPECTS OF GODLINESS Let us now examine the bonds with God that make us human --- the seven expressive aspects of Godliness.
The seven weeks between Passover and Shavuot have the spiritually potency to give us the ability to let our stories unfold. We can make every day count, and emerge more human than we ever could have imagined. Published: Thursday, May 08, 2003
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