Wednesday, March 25, 2009

NISAN, NISSAN OR AVIV

ADAR 29,5769

At sunset we begin a new Jewish month...Nissan or as I think I'd rather call it...Aviv. This is, according to Exodus 12:2...the first of months. The following is a teaching about Aviv..or as it is in the article..Nisan.

What I want you to see is the meaning....of the closeness of our Savior in this month. My friends, it is all about Him!
Look and you will see....ask and it will be given to you.....

Nisan is the first month of the Jewish calendar.
The first commandment given to the newly born nation of Israel before the Exodus from Egypt was: "This month [the month of Nisan] shall be for you the first of the months" (Exodus 12:2).

The month of Nisan begins, in particular, the period (tekufah) of the spring. The three months of this period--Nisan, Iyar, Sivan--correspond to the three tribes of the camp of Judah--Judah, Issachar, Zebulun--who were situated to the east of the Tabernacle. In the Torah, Nisan is referred to as "the month of the spring" (חודש האביב).

In addition, Nisan is the first of the six summer months, which correspond to six levels of direct light (in Divine service--"arousal from above"). This is alluded to in its synonym "the month of spring" (אביב), whose first two letters, alef (א) and beit (ב),are in the direct or straight order of the Hebrew alphabet.

Nisan is also referred to as "the month of the redemption." According to the accepted opinion of our sages: "In Nisan our forefathers were redeemed from Egypt and in Nisan we will be redeemed" (Rosh Hashanah 11a).

Nisan is a month of miracles, as its name stems from the Hebrew word for "miracles" (ניסים). The fact that the name Nisan (ניסן) possesses two nuns (נ and ן) implies according to the sages to "miracles of miracles" (ניסי ניסים). Of the future redemption, it is said: "As the days of your exodus from Egypt, I shall reveal to him wonders." In Chassidut this verse is explained to mean that the wonders of the redemption of the future will be wondrous and miraculous even relative to the miracles of the Exodus from Egypt--hence "miracles of miracles."

Letter: Hei (ה)
The letter hei is the phonetic source for all 22 letters of the alef-beit.

The sages teach us that "with the letter hei God created this world." As it says in the beginning of the second account of Creation (which corresponds to the Jewish calender, beginning from Nisan): "When they were created" (בהבראם) and this word is written in a manner that it means "with [the letter] hei, they were created." Thus, the month of Nisan signifies the annual renewal of the creation of this world.

Mazal: Aries (Lamb)
The lamb symbolizes the Pesach sacrifice, the first sacrifice of the Jewish people to God just before their redemption. The Jewish people itself is symbolized by a lamb (surrounded by seventy wolves). Of all of God's creations, the lamb possesses the innate ability to arouse mercy by its voice (the origin of the sense of speech of the month of Nisan).

Tribe: Judah
Judah is the king (the "first") of the tribes of Israel. His name means to give thanks, in speech (the sense of Nisan).
The king rules his people by the power of his speech, an idea found in the verse, "For the king's word is his sovereign power." The month of Nisan is "the new year for kings"

Sense: Speech
The sense of speech implies ones ability to express one's deepest feelings and insights. Therefore, conceptually, all forms of expression are referred to generically as "speech."
"This world" (created by the letter hei of Nisan) is one that is founded upon (verbal) communication. Personifying the sefirah of kingdom, our present reality is often referred to as "the world of speech" (or "the revealed world").

The very root of the Hebrew word for "speech" (דבור) means "to lead" (לדבר), as in the verse, "He will cause us to lead many nations" (Psalms 47:4). Thus the sense of speech is in essence the sense of leadership.

The central mitzvah of the month of Nisan, which occurs on the Seder night (the eve of the 15th of Nisan), is the telling of the story of the Exodus--"the more one tells of the Exodus from Egypt, the more one is praiseworthy." This is the foremost mitzvah requiring speech of the entire year. Of the 15 stages of the seder (15 = 5, the sum of all numbers from 1 to 5, where 5 is the value of the letter hei, ה, the letter of the month of Nisan), magid--the telling of the story of the Exodus--is the 5th stage (again, 5 is the value of the letter hei, which, as noted is the phonetic source of all speech). Indeed, even the telling of the story of the Exodus, the magid, begins with the word "hei" (hei lachma anya, "this is the poor-mans bread").

Thus, the redemption from Egypt (the existential state of "confinement," the inability to truly express oneself--"all exiles are referred to as Egypt") symbolizes freedom of speech.

Controller: Right Foot
Just as "speaking" means "to lead," so does one's gait (with one's right foot, the foot of trust and confidence) direct and control one's sense of speech, as is said: "walkers on the way, speak" (Judges 5:10). Speaking words of Torah while walking on the way inspires new insights into the secrets of the Torah. For this reason, we find that many of the secrets of the holy Zohar were revealed in the context of "walking on the way."

No comments:

Post a Comment