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Shabbat Chol HaMoed Pesach
Rabbi
Avrohom Gordimer
The morning Torah reading
of Shabbos Chol Ha-moed consists of selected portions from Parshas
Ki Sisa. The conclusion of the kriah summarily addresses the
Shalosh Regalim, and this would seem to be the relevance of the
reading to the day. However, the first six aliyos have nothing to
do with Yom Tov; rather, they deal with Moshe's supplication to
Hashem to forgive the Jews for the Chet Ha-egel and the grand
rapprochement between God and His people. Is there thus any other
connection between the Torah reading and the Moed?
Shabbos Chol Ha-moed (as well as Shabbos which coincides with Yom
Tov) is unique, for the character of the day is not just that of
Shabbos as its own day alongside that of Moed, in which the two
days and their respective themes exist on their own. On the
contrary, when Shabbos and Moed are joined, they fuse to create a
new, unparalleled kedushah and status. Please allow me to explain.
Shabbos is symbolized by its coming to the Jews. We go out to
greet the Shabbos Queen, who is already on her way to us, and we
welcome malachim to our homes on Friday night. Yom Tov is quite
the opposite, for it requires that we ascend to Yerushalayim and
enter the realm of the Shechinah. Rather than God sending his
kedusha our way, we must go up to it and greet Hashem at His
place.
Thus, when Shabbos and Yom Tov coincide, we rise and approach God
(in the kedusha of Yom Tov), and He also comes to us (Shabbos).
The closeness between Hashem and the Jew which is precipitated is
qualitatively different than that which is created by the separate
kedushos of Shabbos or Yom Tov on their own. It is, rather, a new
closeness, and this closeness is mirrored precisely by the grand
rapprochement between God and the Jews in Parshas Ki Sisa, when
Hashem agrees to forgive His people and share with them a
relationship heretofore unheard of.
It is based on the above that we reserve the public reading of
Shir Ha-Shirim for Shabbos-Pesach and Koheles for Shabbos-Sukkos/Shmini
Atzeres, for these megillos reflect on our relationship with
Hashem and provide deep insight into His avodah as depicted by
each Tom Tov. Thus, it is specifically on these Shabbos/Yom Tov
days of special closeness between Hashem and Bnei Yisroel that we
are able to have a greater understanding of our relationship with
Hashem and immerse ourselves in the deeper avodah message of the
Yom Tov.
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