Unlocking Your Potential
31/08/2012 01:02:02 PM
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![]() Guidelines for a Meaningful Experience
Every year, men and women are drawn to Shule on Rosh HaShana and Yom Kippur, souls wishing to be inspired on these holiest days of the Jewish calendar.
Often, however, they come away disappointed, voicing a litany of complaints about the quality of the service. While not understating the need for the synagogue to provide an inspiring service, it must be pointed out that it takes more than this to make the High Holy Days meaningful in any real sense.
Over the next few weeks I will be offering some guidelines to help you get the most from your Shule experience this Yom Tov.
The Importance of Preparation
Attendance at the synagogue should not be compared to a night out at the theatre or opera where one sits as a passive observer, offering criticism or acclaim for the quality of the “show”. Prayer demands personal involvement; even labour. On the verse in the shema: “And you shall work for Him with all your heart,” the Talmud comments, “What is the work of the heart? Prayer.” As with anything worthwhile in life, the amount of lasting inspiration which one receives from prayer is proportional to the time and effort invested.
In the Mishna we are told that those for whom prayer was a serious affair would commit three hours to each service even on an ordinary weekday. What is even more instructive is that of these three hours, only one was devoted to prayer itself.
The first hour was for meditation, while the final hour was for translating spiritual experience into concrete resolutions. Put differently, they gradually ascended the ladder of prayer, achieving spiritual heights, and then descended applying those same heights to their daily lives. This is the inner meaning of the ladder in Jacob’s dream, “which stood firmly on the ground, while its top reached the heavens... and behold angels of G-d ascended and descended on it.”
Whereas this level of devotion is beyond the reach of most of us, it does give us some idea of the importance of spiritual preparation on the one hand, and of the need to connect prayer to our daily lives on the other.
Forty Days of Preparation
The forty day period, commencing on the first of Elul and culminating on Yom Kippur, parallels the period when Moses ascended Mount Sinai for the third time and beseeched Gd’s forgiveness for the sin of the golden calf. When this was finally granted, YomKippur became a day of forgiveness for all generations, and the period preceding it a time of soul-searching and introspection. To underline the importance of this period, each weekday morning throughout the month of Elul, the shofar is sounded.
In the not too distant past, and even today in many circles, there is a tangible atmosphere of spirituality during the entire month of Elul. I had an uncle who, though not very religious, had come from Poland from a very devout family. I remember visiting him one year a couple of weeks before Rosh HaShana and being asked how I was. When I answered that I felt well, he responded, “What?! Two weeks before Rosh Hashana, the Day of Judgment, and that’s all you can say?!”
In Eastern Europe they used to say that during Elul even a fish in the sea would shake with apprehension. Some people would fast forty days before Rosh HaShana. Others, and this was a very widespread custom, would fast on at least ten days prior to Yom Kippur. Nearly everyone would fast on Erev Rosh HaShana.
Whatever the custom, the sense of awe, of earnestness, could almost be touched. Fasting is no longer favoured as a means of penance in orthodox circles. As we are not as strong as in the past, the ill-effect on our health would be considerable. Yet, if we wish the experience of the Days of Awe to be meaningful and lasting, it is up to us to make it so by appropriate preparation.
With best wishes for a wonderful Shabbos. Rabbi Benzion Milecki OAM
Can You Help?
South Head's Simchas Yom Tov Fund supports 75 local families - so that they can have the kind of enjoyable Yom Tov that every Jew deserves. If you haven't already done so, please consider making a contribution. And may you in turn be blessed with material and spiritual abundance in the coming year.
Unlocking Your Potential
A Mystical Roadmap
We have a sense that there is goodness and that we are meant to be aligned with it. The Jewish mystics teach that we have a drive towards the good and the G-dly because that is who we are—nothing less than G-dliness in disguise. This means that we have boundless possibilities; our limitations are but symptoms of the disguise that we are meant to shed. Want to know more? Register now for the new JLI Course The Kabbalah of You. Call Helen on 9371 7300 ext 4 or email secretary@southhead.org
Bless the Kids
This Shabbat Come to Shule - receive a blessing and a treat from the Rabbi and create your very own EDIBLE Tzeddakah box for Elul!! Children aged 0 - 10 please be in Shule by 10.15 on Shabbat morning.
Volunteers Required
Can you Spare an Hour?
If you are able to volunteer an hour or even half an hour of your day on erev Rosh Hashana or erev Yom Kippur, your help will be greatly appreciated! Please let me know if you can help out!! Call me on 0404-055-643 or email youth@southhead.org
Parsha Sheet
Ki Teitze Moshe is still explaining many different laws to the Jewish people. Some of the laws which we discuss in this week's Parasha sheet are the Mitzvot of Hashavat Aveida, Shiluach Hakan and Tzitzit. Please share our Parsha sheet around your Shabbat table and let your family and friends explore the Parsha of the week together with you ------ Looking forward to seeing you in Shule. On behalf of Rebbetzin Henya and the South Head family wishing you a Good Shabbos. Rabbi Benzion Milecki OAM
Communal Events
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666 Old South Head Rd Rose Bay, NSW 2029 (02) 9371 7300 |
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SHMINI
Rose Bay, NSW 2029
(02) 9371 7300