This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and share this Dvar from Dan Lifshitz...
Parshat Emor contains the commandment to count 49 days from the bringing of
the omer barley offering on the day after Passover to the holiday of
Shavuot. Although the Torah does not spell out the rationale for this
mitzvah, the later Rabbinic literature identifies this 49 day period as a
time for personal development; just as the Jews needed 49 days to rise from
the level of impurity they reached in Egypt to the level of holiness
required to receive the Torah on the first Shavuot, so too every individual
should utilize the 49 days to ready themselves to commemorate the giving of
the Torah on each Shavuot.
There is a famous legal dispute as to whether counting the omer is one
mitzvah (commandment) with 49 parts or 49 separate mitzvot. Practically,
both opinions are respected: If one forgot to count on a given day, they
continue to count on the next day, in accord with the second view, but they
no longer recite a blessing because according to the first view they have
spoiled their fulfillment of the commandment.
Perhaps each of these positions is relevant not just to the counting
itself, but to the spiritual development for which we strive during this
period of time. On the one hand, spiritual accomplishments must be
approached one step at a time. Each of the 49 days stands on its own and
each step we take has great value. On the other hand, individual steps
that are intermittent are not enough to reach the goal. For true success,
continuity is needed as well, maintaining the effort for 49 days without
fail. May we merit to use the remaining days of this year's counting of
the omer (and beyond) to reach new heights.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the Week:
"Every day may not be good, but there is something good in every day."
This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and share this Dvar from Dan Lifshitz...
_______________________________________________
Parshat Emor contains the commandment to count 49 days from the bringing of
the omer barley offering on the day after Passover to the holiday of
Shavuot. Although the Torah does not spell out the rationale for this
mitzvah, the later Rabbinic literature identifies this 49 day period as a
time for personal development; just as the Jews needed 49 days to rise from
the level of impurity they reached in Egypt to the level of holiness
required to receive the Torah on the first Shavuot, so too every individual
should utilize the 49 days to ready themselves to commemorate the giving of
the Torah on each Shavuot.
There is a famous legal dispute as to whether counting the omer is one
mitzvah (commandment) with 49 parts or 49 separate mitzvot. Practically,
both opinions are respected: If one forgot to count on a given day, they
continue to count on the next day, in accord with the second view, but they
no longer recite a blessing because according to the first view they have
spoiled their fulfillment of the commandment.
Perhaps each of these positions is relevant not just to the counting
itself, but to the spiritual development for which we strive during this
period of time. On the one hand, spiritual accomplishments must be
approached one step at a time. Each of the 49 days stands on its own and
each step we take has great value. On the other hand, individual steps
that are intermittent are not enough to reach the goal. For true success,
continuity is needed as well, maintaining the effort for 49 days without
fail. May we merit to use the remaining days of this year's counting of
the omer (and beyond) to reach new heights.
Shlomo Ressler
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the Week:
"Every day may not be good, but there is something good in every day."