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Orchard of Delights                                                                                                                                                     Tzav


               God calls (“vayikra”) Moses on Rosh Chodesh Nisan from this place.                           Even the appellation “Jew” – derived from the name “Yehudah”
               The alef instead of appearing at the beginning of the Torah, as the                        (Judah) – means “thanks” and “praise.” When Judah was born,
               first letter of creation, adopts a central role on this day in the holiest                 Leah exclaimed: “This time I will praise God!”  (Genesis 29:35).
               of places.                                                                                 More  than  a  mere  ritualistic  expression  or  superficial  lip  service,
                                                                                                          a  constant  state of  praise, thanks, and acknowledgment pervades
                 The alef being written especially small in the word “vayikra” also
               alludes to the great secret of tzimtzum revealed by the Kabbalah.                          Jewish  consciousness  and,  in  fact,  defines  the  very  nature  of  the
               When God “thought” of creating the world, an existential problem                           Jew and the essential nature of his or her relationship with God.
               became immediately apparent. Since no reality can exist beyond (or
               outside) the infiniteness of God, where could a finite, “independent”
               world possibly find “space” to exist? The Arizal explains that God
               “contracted” Himself, as it were, in order to create, a “vacuum” or
               womb-like space in which a finite world could then be created. Into
               the “vacuum” God shone a ray of light and the world came into being.
               The letter alef, which has the numerical value of one, represents the
               oneness and unity of  God,  while the second letter of  the Hebrew
               alphabet, beit, signifies the duality of the world and God’s seeming
               act of contraction to make “space” for the world. (See “One Becomes
               Two in Order to Become One” above.)

                 The act of tzimtzum, which allowed the world to come into existence,
               is the sod, the foundational secret, of the Temple in Jerusalem. Just
               as God contracted Himself in order to allow the world to come into
               existence, He likewise contracted His infinite presence, as it were, in
               order to allow the Jewish people (and the world) to perceive Him in a
               finite place. The small alef alludes to our ability to actually experience
               and comprehend this paradox.
                 In a sense, we spend our lives trying to live within the paradoxical
               context  of God both revealing and hiding  Himself in the  world.
               Jacob called the ladder – stretching from the earth to the heavens,
               in the very place where the Temple was eventually built – the “gate
               to heaven” (Genesis 28:10-17). A Jew must constantly be a ladder
               between eternal and temporal time, between infinite and finite space.
               “Who is the wise one? One who sees that which is born.” The small
               alef, representing the paradox of  creation, beckons us to connect
               ourselves to the mystery of all life.






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