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Sukkot
Rabbi
Avrohom Gordimer
At face value, the mitzvah of "Taking the
Four Species" begs explanation. On the one hand, Halachah
stipulates that once a person has lifted the Species (for the sake
of performing the mitzvah), he has fulfilled his obligation (Sukkah
42a). On the other hand, after lifting the Species, one should
wave them right away, as well as later on during Hallel. (Orach
Chaim 651:8.) What is the function of waving the Species? Why are
they waved in particular during Hallel?
The Talmud (Sukkah 37b) addresses the symbolism of waving the
Species. Rabbi Yochanan explained that, "One moves (the Species)
back and forth for the sake of Him to Whom the four winds belong;
one lifts and lowers (them) for the sake of Him to Whom are the
heavens and the earth." Others quote Rabbi Chama bar Ukva in the
name of Rabbi Yose bar Rabbi Chanina as explaining that, "One
brings (the Species in supplication) back and forth to prevent bad
winds; one lifts and lowers (them in supplication) to prevent bad
precipitation." (See Rashi ibid.)
Although the Talmud's elaboration addresses the message conveyed
by waving the Species, it does not indicate the relationship
between Hallel and the Species. Furthermore, it should be noted
that waving the Species is not merely a symbolic rite. Rather, the
waving is an integral component of the mitzvah of taking the
Species, to the extent that one who failed to recite the berachah
before taking the Species may still recite it prior to waving them
(Mishnah Berurah 651:26), as the waving procedure is an extension
of the mitzvah of taking the Species. Why is waving the Species so
important from an halachic perspective? Again, why is it done
during Hallel?
As noted in the dvar Torah, "Why
is Sukkos Different", Sukkos gives the Jew the opportunity to
enter the inner sanctums of kedushah (the Sukkah, representative
of the Beis Ha-Mikdash) after having been spiritually cleansed on
Yom Kippur. On
Sukkos,
we are privileged to spend a week in the realm of the Shechinah,
replicative of the experience which our ancestors had in the
Midbar (Desert). For this reason, many communities which do not
normally recite Kabbalistic prayers do so on Sukkos, as on Sukkos
we are all "insiders", dwelling in Hashem's sanctuary and thus
more privy to the internal spheres of spirituality.
This is where the role of the Four Species fits in. The Species
are all features of inanimate nature. Inherently, they have no
spiritual value. However, on Sukkos, the theme of living under
Hashgachah (Divine Providence) is applied to its fullest. Not only
do we enter the protective veil of the Sukkah; we also proclaim
that the entire universe - even the seemingly stoic and
disinterested features of nature - are precisely manipulated by
God for His purposes. In the Midbar, nature was utilized by Hashem
in most stupefying ways to achieve His goals for His nation. We
celebrate God's miraculous protection of the Jewish nation on
Sukkos, in which natural objects and forces were specifically
geared to shield us. So, too, on a daily basis, all that occurs in
our seemingly mundane world is part of Hashem's scheme for the
universe and is testimony to His Hashgachah. This outward
recognition of Divine Providence is expressed on Sukkos by the
Four Species.
Thus, the Species are waved during Hallel when we thank Hashem for
His goodness (the verses of "Hodu...") and when we beseech Him
("Ana Hashem..."), as we affirm God's extensive Hashgachah as
epitomized on Sukkos, such that the entire natural order is
manipulated by Hashem for His purposes and is therefore testimony
of praise to Him. So, too, is waving the Species essential to the
mitzvah of taking them, as waving the Species symbolizes the
themes expressed by Rabbi Yochanan or Rabbi Yose bar Chanina;
these themes are manifestations of God's universal Hashgachah,
which is at the crux of the message of Sukkos and is therefore -
by definition - integral to its mitzvos.
In light of the concept that the Four Species represent God's
external Hashgachah, in which nature and the universe as a whole
are subservient and function to fulfill the Divine plan, we can
understand the Midrashic symbolism of the Species. Chazal (our
Sages) relate that the Species signify the components of a
person's body which serve God or that the Species are reflective
of different types of Jews, all of whom must be bound together to
do God's will. The underlying theme of both sets of symbols is
that the Species express performance of God's mission, such that
we realize that even bare nature is utilized as part of the Divine
system and Providence.
This also explains the Kabbalistic practice of taking the Species
each morning in the Sukkah, even though it may be halachically
preferable to take the Species right before Hallel instead. By
taking the Species in the Sukkah, one merges the inner Hashgachah
of the Sukkah, which consists of God enabling Man to enter and
dwell in the Shadow of the Divine, with God's outward Hashgachah
in the universe as a whole, where God's Hand in immanent and
all-involved, working through nature and lifeless forms to
accomplish the Divine mission.
May we soon merit to enter the permanent Sukkah in Yerushalayim
and experience God's Hashgachah on all levels.
More on Sukkot...
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