From Darkness to Light By Tali
Loewenthal
Understanding darkness when we allow the Bible to interpret itself opens our spirit to the ways God works. The following article is a great follow to the previous study on darkness. Until man transitions from darkness to light he is a lost soul.
A central theme in life is
the transition from darkness to light. It is often there in one's experience as
an individual: a patch of darkness, tinged with gloom and misery, which seems
to swallow up everything. And then one moves on, making a step forward, and the
darkness gives way to light.
A hint of this transition is
seen in the way the Book of Leviticus connects with the preceding Torah
reading, the final words of the Book of Exodus. The final verses of Exodus
describe the completion of the Sanctuary, the wonderful portable Temple which
was built at the foot of Mount Sinai, which was to accompany the Jewish people
throughout their long journey in the wilderness, and which was to be set up in
the Land of Israel when they finally got there.
A thick cloud then covered
the Sanctuary. In fact, on account of the cloud, Moses himself was unable to
enter the Sanctuary. After all the effort which had gone into building it, it
was covered by a mysterious cloud and inaccessible. Then comes the beginning of
Leviticus: "And G-d called to Moses..!" The cloud cleared, and Moses
was now able to enter the Sanctuary and be instructed by G-d.
This, comments the
Lubavitcher Rebbe, expresses the revelation which came after the darkness. The
fact that it was preceded by a period of inaccessibility, when Moses could not
enter the Sanctuary due to the thick cloud, heightens the power of the Divine
revelation when it came. Torah teachings are eternal, and apply to each
individual. One way the process of transition from darkness to light relates to
each person is in terms of the step of teshuvah, repentance.
The person strayed, or fell,
into a realm of darkness. G-d is concealed. The person feels remote from the
Divine, unable to enter the Sanctuary. Then he or she makes a step forward,
towards G-d, returning to their own essence. This is teshuvah,
repentance, return. The person makes a single tiny step, and G-d
"calls" to him or to her, like G-d calling to Moses, meaning: you are
Mine.
The new closeness with G-d is
greater than it was previously. For this reason the Talmud comments that
"the place where the repentant stand, cannot be reached by those who are
always righteous." This process of personally entering the Sanctuary after
the period of dark cloud and concealment has different modes. It can be so
powerful that it is not only a transition from darkness to light, but a total
transformation of darkness itself. One does not simply put the gloom and misery
behind one, the negativity and darkness are themselves transformed into
radiance.
We start to see our problems
and frustrations as opportunities for growth. The negative becomes a
springboard for the positive. Somehow, paradoxically, joyfully, the ultimate
effect of all the ups and downs is goodness. This personal transformation is a
taste of the goal for the Jewish people as a whole, and for all humanity, when
the darkness of exile will be transformed into the radiance of Redemption. Then
truly the gloom of night will shine like day.
No comments:
Post a Comment