~ Rabbi Shefa Gold's Torah Journeys ~
Behar
(In the Mountain)
LEVITICUS 25:1 - 26:2
Behar extends the meaning of Shabbat by legislating the Shemitah, a resting
year for the Land every seventh year. The land is to lie fallow, released from
cultivation. After seven times seven years, a Jubilee Year is proclaimed in the
fiftieth year. At the time of the Jubilee, slaves are freed and property reverts
to its original owner. The laws of Jubilee are instituted to correct the drastic
inequality of rich and poor.
AFTER EVERY SEVEN YEARS, Behar tells us, the earth itself shall celebrate
Shabbat. The land remembers its freedom. And the year after seven times
seven years there shall be a proclamation of Freedom. Everyone goes
home. Slaves go free. The rigid separations of class and wealth are softened
and dissolved. The rich and the poor meet again and remember that
they are equal.
The blessing of Behar is the lesson that the process of accumulating
wealth and of owning property is all an elaborate game. God reminds
us, "The land is Mine; it always has been and always will be. You are just
passing through." The Sabbatical Year and the Jubilee are God's way of
insuring that this game doesn't get out of hand, that we play fair, that no
one suffers too much for our ambition, that we remember that it is supposed
to be fun.
WHEN THE LAND RESTS, we get to hear its voice. We get to experience
its wild restless beauty beneath the surface of our cultivation. When we
stop looking at the earth asking what-can-it-do-for-me-how-can-I-use-it?
and instead open ourselves to its essential nature, we can begin to
know the land and hear its voice. When we hear its voice, we can respond
and become responsible stewards. As we respond, the earth becomes
responsive to us in return, pouring forth its mystery and abundance.
The blessing of Behar is the promise that when we keep these sacred
rhythms, we are granted safety, security, a sense of being at home.
THE SPIRITUAL CHALLENGE
THE SECURITY THAT WE ARE PROMISED contains a spiritual challenge.
The word in Hebrew is la-betach, which means "security," "safety," or "trust."
So often we try to build a sense of security by acquiring possessions.
Our search for security often becomes an impossible drama of "never
enough." As we acquire more wealth, nicer clothes, better computers,
bigger homes, more knowledge - security continues to elude us. We
are conditioned to become consumers as insecurity pushes us to acquire
MORE.
Behar teaches us about a different kind of security that comes not from
having, but from forging a deep relationship. During the seventh year
when we let the land lie fallow and the earth experiences Shabbat, it
celebrates its freedom. When the earth is no longer enslaved by our obsession
for MORE, then we can truly come into relationship with her. We
step into mutuality and trust is born.
ONCE WE HAVE HEARD THE VOICE OF THE LAND we will never be the
same, even when we begin to play the game of possessions again. Once
there is that flash of self-awareness that this is a game and all that we see
is really God-in-disguise, our playing will be transformed.
And perhaps once, maybe twice in a lifetime, at the time of the Jubilee,
all masks, all roles will for a time, fall away. Then we will know that
we are loved by God not for the role we play or the work we do, or the
knowledge or things we have acquired, but for our true essence alone.
Knowing this allows us to see and love each other in the same essential
way.
The Jubilee strips us down and teaches us the pure joy of existence.
Behar challenges us and asks, "Are you ready to sound the shofar and call
forth the consciousness of Jubilee? Are you ready to let go of everything
and return to your true home in God?"
GUIDANCE FOR PRACTICE
CONVERSATIONS WITH THE LAND
CHOOSE A SMALL PIECE OF LAND - it could be your yard, or a wild corner
of a county park, or an overgrown city lot, or a piece of woods down the
road.
SLOWLY WALK AROUND ITS PERIMETER tuning in to the "spirit of the
place." Let that spirit begin to speak to you through the soles of your feet
as you walk. Open up and fine-tune all of your senses.
THEN SIT AT THE CENTER of the delineated space and send your roots
down into the depths of the earth.
WHEN YOU FEEL ROOTED AND COMFORTABLE, begin to speak your words
of commitment to the indwelling Presence of God that is in that place.
I ALWAYS BEGIN BY VOWING that I will clean up any garbage that I find
there. I talk to the rocks, to the plants, to the creatures large and small
that call this their home.
I TALK TO THE ANCIENT ONES who have walked this land before me and
to all future generations. I talk to the birds that fly over and the clouds
that float by. I speak to the bedrock and to the underground rivers that
flow unseen. To each of these I pledge my loving attention and care.
WHEN YOU FINISH SPEAKING, SIT QUIETLY, listen and watch for signs.
Each breeze, each insect, each cloud, every sound and fragrance holds a
message for you to receive and discern.
TAKE EVERYTHING PERSONALLY, knowing that when you do this practice
of conversation with the land, it will speak to you in its own language.
Bechukotai
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Rabbi Shefa can be reached by email at: Shefa@RabbiShefaGold.com
Rachmiel O'Regan can be reached by email at: CDEEP@RabbiShefaGold.com
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