Seasons Of The Moon
The Jewish Year seen through its months 
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Sivan 5759
16 May - 14 June 1999
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The Ultimate Message

The Last Frontier

Very soon, only the speed of light will limit our ability to communicate a 
thought, a picture, a sound or a sentence from one side of the world to the 
other, and beyond.
The meaning of the word "distance" has changed forever.

	Just as the electron has shrunk our world, so has there been a quiet 
and maybe even more fundamental revolution in the way we look at traveling.  
We see nothing special in the fact that several hundred people can walk 
into a large metal room and find themselves on the other side of the world 
in a matter of hours.  In fact, the major drawback in circling the earth in 
a jet-plane may be an aching back from sitting is a reclining chair that 
doesn't quite live up to its name.  A little more than a hundred years ago, 
to circumnavigate the globe would have required months of arduous, 
dangerous and expensive effort, almost beyond our imagining.   

	We have breached the last frontier.  Distance has become no more than 
a function of time spent in a chair.

In The Fast Lane

	The electron and the 747 have had their impact on our culture in 
other ways:  Our cultural mindset mandates that speed is of the essence.  
Where am I going? is now less important than How fast can I get there?  
Immediacy has become a yardstick of worth.  How fast is your car?  Your 
computer?  Our age has sought to devour distance and time, rendering 
everything in a constant and immediate present.  Now this.  Now this.  Now 
this.  (Interestingly the languages of the age -- film and television, 
computer graphics -- are languages which have trouble expressing the past 
and the future.  They only have a present tense.  Everything happens in a 
continuous present.)

	All of which makes it very difficult for us to understand what it 
means to receive the Torah.

On The Beach

	Why did G-d give the Torah to the Jewish People in the middle of a 
desert?  Why didn't He give it on the other side of the Yam Suf (Sea of 
Reeds)?  Once the Egyptian army had been safely dispatched and the Jewish 
People had finished singing the Song at the Sea, wouldn't that have been an 
appropriate time to give the Torah?  And even if you'll say that the Jewish 
People weren't ready for the Torah at that point, that they were too 
steeped in the fleshpots of Egypt, that they needed time to purify 
themselves; fine, so why didn't they just camp there on the beach for seven 
weeks?  On the beach, their biggest problem would have been sunburn.  Why 
did they have to schlep hundreds of miles through an inhospitable desert to 
some small mountain in the middle of nowhere?

The Path Of The Just

	We talk of spirituality as being a path.  The spiritual path.  For, 
in truth, travel is a no more than a physical paradigm of the spiritual 
road.  The quest for spirituality demands that we travel; if not 
physically, then certainly in our soul we must notch up the miles.  If we 
refuse this invitation to journey, the groove of our lives becomes a rut.  
We think we are traveling, but we are just wearing down the same circular 
path.  The spiritual road requires us to forsake the comfortable, the 
familiar ever-repeating landmarks of our personalities, and set out with an 
open mind and a humble soul.  We must divest ourselves of the fawning icons 
of our own egos by which we have defined and confined ourselves,  and 
journey.  Physical traveling is no more than the concretization of this 
internal process.  The physical journey gives expression to the spiritual 
progress.

Journey To The Center

	In Hebrew, the word for the imperative "Go!"  is written with exactly 
the same two letters as the phrase "to yourself."  When G-d took Avraham 
out of Ur Kasdim and sent him to the Land of Israel, He used those two 
identical words, Lech Lecha, which can be translated:  "Go to yourself."  
The spiritual path is always a process of going.  Of moving, of 
progressing.  And inevitably, as in any journey, when we conquer the 
obstacles that lie in our path, we grow in stature.  By overcoming the 
difficulties along the way, we connect with the fundamental purpose of the 
journey:  To travel inward, to reach inside to our true selves.  We "go to 
ourselves."

Beneath And Beyond

	But the spiritual path is not just a journey inside.  It is a path to 
a world beyond.  Avraham traveled the length and breadth of Eretz Yisrael.  
There is an Eretz Yisrael of the body and there is an Eretz Yisrael of the 
soul.  To experience that higher reality, Avraham had to travel throughout 
its physical counterpart.  Similarly, when the Jews left Egypt, they needed 
to travel a spiritual road which would lead them not just to a physical 
place called Har Sinai, but to its spiritual doppelganger as well.

	But why a desert?

	The Jewish People needed to travel through a desert because they 
needed to become like the desert, devoid of preconceptions, unencumbered by 
the spiritual baggage of Egypt.  Sitting on the beach would never have 
brought them to that spiritual state.

Sivan, Mercury, And The Ultimate Message

	The month of Sivan is associated with the planet Mercury.  Mercury 
symbolizes communication.  Thus it is that the Torah was given in the month 
of Sivan.  Because The Torah is the Ultimate Communication.  Every 
communication, every message must come from one place and arrive at 
another, from "there" to "here."  The Torah is the Ultimate Message. Thus 
it can only be received by way of a journey.  For a journey is always from 
"there" to "here."  The seven weeks of journeying in the desert, from Egypt 
to Sinai, are a paradigm of the Ultimate Communication from There to here.

Space Eaters

	Our age seeks to devour distance.  To make it into nothing.  We live 
in a world which has no patience.  A world which cannot wait.  A world 
which has no time for physical travel and even less with its spiritual 
counterpart.  We live in an era of "instant spirituality," a contradiction 
in terms.  There is no such thing as instant spirituality.  Spirituality is 
a path.  A path contains a myriad of small individual steps.  And if we are 
ever to reach our destination, each one of those steps must be guided by G-
d's "Guidebook for the Human Race," the Holy Torah.  It must be followed 
step by step.

	If we want to travel the pathway of the soul, we must know that life 
is a journey, that we must move.  If, however, we want to lie on the beach 
in a spiritual deckchair, reading a paperback "Kabbala in Four or Five Easy 
Lessons," we will never make it to our own individual rendezvous at Sinai.

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Trains
I love trains.
I love the message of their wheels
chattering hope
and what's in store
around the bend.

When I was a child,
every train had a face
and a chimney belching smoke.
Every train had a smile.
Every train chuffed out its message
over and over:
"Wherever you go  -- 
there you are.
Wherever you go  -- 
there you are."
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Written and Compiled by Rabbi Yaakov Asher Sinclair 
General Editor: Rabbi Moshe Newman 
Production Design: Eli Ballon 
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