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IYAR: It's Never Too Late

For more about the month of Iyar and the Counting of the Omer see:  Every Day Counts

How was your Pesach Seder? Did you fully participate or were your thoughts far away from what was being said and done? Did you feel spiritually uplifted, or did you crash from tiredness and depression? Did you leave your personal Egypt by the end of the evening, or did you just leave behind a few matza crumbs on the table?

If your Seder was not as spiritually inspiring as you had hoped, and you didn't accomplish all that you wanted to, don't despair. On Pesach Sheni (Second Passover), which is observed on the 14th of Iyar, you have a second chance.

What is Pesach Sheni? We read about it in the Torah in Numbers 9:1-14. A year had already passed since the Children of Israel left Egypt. As the people began to prepare their Korban Pesach (Passover sacrifice), a group of men who had been in contact with a dead body and were, therefore, in a state of ritual impurity approached Moses and Aaron with a question/demand:

"We are unclean …, but why should we be held back from bringing the offering of the Lord in its proper time, among the Children of Israel?"

Moses inquired of God as to what he should answer these men, and the reply was:

"If any man of you or of your generations be unclean because of a dead body, or be on a journey far away, he shall yet keep the Passover of the Lord, in the second month on the fourteenth day … But the man that is clean, and is not on a journey, and does not keep the Passover, that soul shall be cut off from his people."

What is interesting about God's reply is the addition of another class of people who will be permitted to bring a Korban Pesach on Pesach Sheni: people who are on journey far away.

Literally, this means people who found themselves in a distant land on Pesach and therefore were unable to bring the Korban Pesach. Chassidut, however, understands this to mean a person who is distant in a spiritual sense.

According to Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, the previous Lubavitcher Rebbe, "Pesach Sheni teaches us that 'Nothing is ever lost: it's never too late!' Our conduct can always be rectified. Even someone who was impure, who was far away and even desired to be so, can still correct himself" (HaYom Yom, page 53).

And during the month of Iyar, we learn how to accomplish this rectification.

One Day at a Time

During the month of Nissan, all of the Jewish people - whether they were worthy or not - received a spectacular spiritual revelation from Above. They experienced God's awesome power on the night of the Exodus when some 3 million of them were taken out of Egypt "in the blink of an eye." Seven days later at the time of the splitting of the Reed Sea, every Jew - from the greatest leaders of that generation to the lowliest maidservant - witnessed even more incredible miracles.

All of the people were on such a spiritual high that they just had to sing God's praises, which can be found in the "Song of the Sea" (Exodus 15:1-18). They believed in God and His promises. They believed in Moses and his mission. They believed that they were on top of the world.

And then they crashed.

They had been traveling in the barren wilderness of Sinai for several weeks and they were beginning to have some serious worries about their food supply - and the whole Exodus "business". The words of song and praise now turned into a bitter lament against Moses.

"Would that we had died by the Hand of God in the Land of Egypt, when we sat by the flesh-pots, when we ate bread to the full; for you have brought us into this wilderness, to kill this entire assembly with hunger" (Exodus 16:3).

God heard their complaint in the wilderness, just as He had heard their complaint in Egypt, and He once again responded with a miracle - this time in the form of the Manna that rained down from Heaven. But instead of wowing the Children of Israel with a spectacular amount of Manna that dropped down from the Heavens in the blink of an eye, God gave them just a small supply that would last only one day.

The Manna continued to fall from Heaven for the entire time that they were in the wilderness, but every morning the people had to go outside and collect their daily ration (except for Friday mornings, when they received a portion for that day and Shabbat). And thus they learned how to have a different relationship with God - not one that was solely based upon experiencing mind-blowing, awe-inspiring special effects, but a relationship that was also built by taking small steps forward one day at a time.

Taking small, daily spiritual steps in an effort to come to close to God is what the month of Iyar is all about. In Iyar, we count the Omer every day in commemoration of the daily barley offering that was brought to the Temple from the second day of Pesach until Shavuot. Each day that we count represents a rectification of one particular spiritual attribute, and this is slow, painstaking work that we have to do ourselves. It is not a gift that is given to us from Above, whether we are worthy or not. It is an awakening from Below - from us - and we become worthy of receiving the gift of closeness to God by virtue of the effort that we put into perfecting ourselves.

Pesach Sheni is also a reflection of this awakening from Below. The commandment to offer the Korban Pesach came from God - from Above. The word korban - sacrifice - comes from the same root (k-r-v) of the word karov, which means to be "close". A korban is, therefore, a way for us to come close to God. God told the Children of Israel to offer a Korban Pesach because He knew, so to speak, that this offering would be the fuel that would enable us to become catapulted into true freedom - the freedom that comes from serving Him and only Him. When the Israelite men who were in a state of ritual impurity realized that they would be barred from taking part in this experience, they cried out in protest - and they were answered with the new mitzva of Pesach Sheni.

Today we are all barred from offering the Korban Pesach, and so now, especially, there is a need to cry out. Trapped in our own spiritual wilderness, we are hungry for real sustenance. Yet even though we want to come close to God, we don't know how. Which is why we have the mitzva of counting the Omer, which shows us how to leave the wilderness and activate this awakening from Below.

One Step at a Time

As mentioned above, each day of the period known as Sefirat HaOmer (Counting of the Omer), we work on rectifying a different spiritual attribute. On Pesach Sheni we work on rectifying the quality of Chessed of Hod, or Lovingkindness in Humility.

Humility is a misunderstood word in today's world. In Jewish thought, humility has absolutely nothing to do with feelings of low self-esteem or weakness. Instead, humility is associated with modesty - a modesty that comes from knowing that all of a person's talents and gifts come from God and that they have therefore been given to a person for a purpose. So rather than make a person feel small and insignificant, true humility makes a person become filled with awe at the greatness of the task that has been entrusted to him or her.

Lovingkindness is the basis of all human relationships. Through giving and receiving (it can sometimes be a great kindness to receive from someone who needs to give), we are able to go beyond the limits of self and reach higher spiritual levels than we can achieve on our own.

On Pesach Sheni, when we rectify the attribute of Lovingkindness in Humility, we rectify our relationship with both God and with others. We recognize that we do not - that we can not - exist alone. We recognize that we need to have a relationship with God, and that this relationship has to come from within a place that is "among the Children of Israel" - a place where we will be able to grow through giving to and receiving from others.

To prepare for Pesach Sheni, we don't have to turn our houses upside down in a search for chametz (leavened products), because we are allowed to eat chametz on this day. It is customary to eat matza on Pesach Sheni, but even this is not the principal way we observe the day now that the Temple is no longer standing.

Instead, the way we observe Pesach Sheni is to do teshuva. Teshuva (repentance) is a cleansing process that removes spiritual impurities from the soul. The desire to do teshuva comes about when we realize that we have misused the gifts that God gave us and, in the process, created a barrier between ourselves and God and ourselves and other people.

Breaking down the barriers that keep us separate from God and the Jewish people - and finding ways to give to others with lovingkindness and use God's gifts with humility - is the work of Iyar. By doing this work in its "proper time," each one of us will be able to stand "among the Children of Israel" when it is time to receive the Torah on Shavuot.

And what happens if, God forbid, we ignore both the Pesach of Nissan and the spiritual work of Iyar? The discussion of Pesach Sheni in the Torah ends with the following pronouncement of God:

"But the man that is clean, and is not on a journey, and does not keep the Passover, that soul shall be cut off from his people."

God wants us to come close to Him. Sometimes He does it all for us: He moves mountains for us in an instant so that we can experience that closeness with an intense fire. And sometimes He shows us a narrow path that we have to climb one painstaking step at a time. Yet even if we should lose our footing - slow down or even fall backwards - as long as we stay on the path and continue to try to reach Him, God is willing to give us a second chance.

However, for the person who "is not on a journey" - the one who thinks that his talents and gifts come from his own efforts and so he doesn't need to "waste" precious time on attempts to come close to God - there is no Pesach Sheni. Because he thinks he can get through life on his own, his "reward" is that he is, indeed, cut off from his people and from God.

May we therefore use this month of Iyar to progress, one day at a time, along the path that will bring us closer to God and to others. And may we continue to be inspired by the message of Pesach Sheni, which tells us that no effort in the spiritual realm is ever lost and that we always have a second chance to start anew.

 

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