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                                                                                                                                                                               Masei
                                                                                                            As each place along the journey is mentioned in the Torah the
                                                                                                          same formula is repeated: “They journeyed from ... and they camped
                                                                                                          in …” This pattern alludes to how all process and progress works in
                                                                                                          a dynamic ebb and flow of starts and stops, activity and rest, taking
                                                                                                          the initiative and passively receiving. This same dynamic forms
                                                                                                          the basic structure of Jewish time as six days of work are followed
                                                                                                          by Shabbat and six years of  agricultural work are followed by a
                                                                                                          Sabbatical year.
                                                                                                            In Kabbalah this energetic ebb and flow is referred to as “run and
                                                                                                          return,” a phrase borrowed from the vibrant movement of the angels
                                                                                                          in Ezekiel’s vision (Ezekiel 1:14). The dualistic pulsation of run and
                                                                                                          return manifests in countless ways throughout creation: from  the
                                                                                                          contraction and expansion at the very origins of the universe to the
                                                                                                          beating of our hearts and the pulse of the blood running through
                                                                                                          our arteries and veins; from the exhalation and inhalation of breath
                                                                                                          to the highs and lows of human emotions; from the cycles of the
                                                                                                          seasons to the ebb and flow of the tides; from the give and take of
                                                                                                          relationships to the cycle of life and death mirrored by the pulsating
                                                                                                          rhythm  of motion within every  cell and atom. The  journeys and
                                                                                                          encampments  in the  desert  allude to a further manifestation of
                                                                                                          this dynamic: the ongoing cycles of exile and redemption that have
                                                                                                          formed the parameters of Jewish history and left a deep impression
                                                                                                          on all Jews.

                                                                                                            A beautiful remez to the pulse of life encoded in these journeys
                                                                                                          is found  in the numerical value of  the very word “masei,”  which
                                                                                                          is 180 (ten times eighteen). Eighteen is the numerical value of the
                                                                                                          Hebrew word for life (chai), and ten times a number symbolizes the
                                                                                                          activation of that word or concept’s inherent potential. Thus, this
                                                                                                          portion’s journeys represent the manner in which the Jewish people’s
                                                                                                          latent potential became activated and realized when Israel became a
                                                                                                          nation. This activation of potential also holds true for each person as
                                                                                                          he or she makes their way through life’s journeys.

                                                                                                            The inverse construction of the verse introducing the journeys, as
                                                                                                          well as the juxtaposition of journeys and encampments, provides us
                                                                                                          with deep insight into the nature of process and progress, especially
                                                                                                          when viewed retrospectively. Sometimes, those very periods in life


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