MEANING IN MITZVOT Each week we discuss one familiar halakhic practice and try to show its beauty and meaning. The columns are based on the commentary “Meaning in Mitzvot” on Kitzur Shulchan Arukh, which is serialized on Yeshivat Har Etzion’s Virtual Beit Midrash, www.vbm-torah.org. KOL NIDREI The original form of the Kol Nidrei involved a release from vows made during the previous year. While some Rishonim questioned the legal validity of this release and encouraged viewing Kol Nidrei as a condition to pre-empt certain future vows only, most congregations continue to mention the nullification of existing vows. Why does the nullification of vows have special relevance to Yom Kippur? SIN - A LASTING STAIN ON THE SPIRIT The related ideas of sin and guilt, while unpleasant to experience, testify to the unity and continuity of the human spirit, in particular to that unique spiritual capacity we call “conscience”. If I am a moral person, then when I commit a sin I feel keenly that the misdeed remains with me; I ask myself, how could I have done such a thing? Before committing a sin, I am likely to ask myself, how will I be able to live with myself afterwards? However, this unity and continuity do not condemn us to a life of bitterness and anguish over our sins. HaShem provides us with an opportunity to purify ourselves, to bleach out the stain on the spirit, through the process of kappara or atonement. There are many cathartic experiences which bring kappara, including fasting, charity, and sacrifices, and of course the atonement of Yom Kippur. OATHS - A LASTING OBLIGATION Yet here also, a careless vow does not condemn us to a life of regret and anguish. HaShem provides us with the opportunity to wipe the slate clean, to uproot the vow at its source, through the process of hatara, the annulment of vows. Again, mere regret is not enough; it is necessary to go through a formal process of confronting the vow and articulating the basis for the annulment. TRANSFORMING THE PAST Atonement and annulment of vows do not free us from the past by vitiating the conscience, by weakening the unity and continuity of the spirit. The lasting impact of sin and of vows is affirmed; the connection between past and future is maintained. It is the past itself which is altered! In these two instances our Sages taught us that we can actually change the past. It is a fundamental principle that vows that are permitted because of regret are uprooted retroactively. (Nedarim 21b and elsewhere, Shulchan Arukh YD 228:7.) And our Sages inform us that teshuva is capable of transforming our misdeeds into merits! (Yoma 86b.) In effect the same continuity of spirit which allows the past to affect the future, through the taint of sin or the binding force of vows, is activated in the opposite direction. The human spirit grows and attains insight; our past acts are then reinterpreted from the vantage point of our new perception. The past is not denied or erased, but rather is integrated into our new self in a constructive way. The introspection of Elul and the Ten Days of Repentance, followed by the contrition and afflictions of Yom Kippur, reinforce Yom Kippur’s status as a day of spiritual elevation and insight which is uniquely suited to this recasting of the past. On this day we have special power to transform our misdeeds in such a way that they advance, rather than impede, our continuing spiritual growth. Rabbi Meir is in the process of writing a monumental companion to Kitzur Shulchan Aruch which beautifully presents the meanings in our mitzvot and halacha. He is also directing the Jewish Business Response Forum at the Center for Business Ethics and Social Responsibility, Jerusalem College of Technology - Machon Lev. The forum aims to help business people run their firms according to Torah, by obtaining prompt, relevant responses to their questions. [Yom Kippur Homepage]
|