TTTSukkot 72
TTTSukkot 72
TTTSukkot 72
PaRDeS
1. Pshat Understanding the plain sense meaning of the text
You shall rejoice before the Lord your God: This is the only festival prescribed in chapter 23 on which rejoicing is explicitly commanded. In the festival calendar of Deuteronomy 16, rejoicing is also mentioned in connection with the Feast of Weeks. Elsewhere we read that sacrificial worship in the Temple is an occasion for rejoicing. It is not clear just why the Sukkot festival is singled out here, although it may be because Sukkot was the most prominent of the ancient pilgrimage festivals. (Baruch Levine, The JPS Torah Commentary, Leviticus) My Commentary: While the prominence of joy on the festival of Sukkot is certainly clear from the biblical passages above, I found Professor Levine's suggestion that Sukkot is, "the most prominent of the ancient pilgrimage festivals," to be surprising. Was Sukkot really more 'prominent' than Passover? While Simchat Beit Hashoeva, the ceremony for the drawing of water, was certainly one of the most joyous celebrations in the Jewish calendar, each of the pilgrimage festivals had a colorful ceremony which set it apart from the rest of the year. In the Second Temple period Simchat Beit Hashoeva was a major part of the celebration of Sukkot. The Sages noted that "Whoever never witnessed the Simchat Beit Hashoeva has never in his life seen true joy." In this ceremony a gold pitcher of water was brought up from the Siloam pool in lower Jerusalem to the Temple Mount where it was used as an offering. In some ways this ceremony was replaced by Simchat Torah as one of the high points of the year. But this ceremony was not the only memorable moment of rejoicing in ancient times: it was paralleled by the offering of the Pesah offering on Passover and the Bikkurim, the first fruit ceremony on Shavuot. In the end, we are left with the textual emphasis on Sukkot rejoicing but no real explanation for the emphasis on joy on this festival.
feeling self satisfied with ones accomplishments, Maimonides suggests we need to take some of the goodness and share it with others in society. This idea was carried on through Jewish law which suggests that we need to open our homes and Sukkot to others as a way of experiencing the true joy of the festival.
Questions to Ponder
1. Why are we told to rejoice on Sukkot and Shavuot but not on Passover? What is it about Sukkot that makes it different from the other holidays? 2. What is the connection between Israels wilderness sojourn and happiness? What is the connection between happiness and the harvest? 3. Why are most Jews more likely to celebrate Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur which are somewhat somber holy days rather Sukkot which is a celebration of joy? 4. How is Sukkot connected to the High Holy Days and how is it connected to the larger Jewish calendar? 5. What makes you happy? How do you experience happiness on the festival of Sukkot?
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All it takes to study Torah is an open heart, a curious mind and a desire to grow a Jewish soul.
Copyright 2011 Rabbi Mark B Greenspan