The Meaning of Tisha B’Av
The destruction of
The Exile of the Shekhinah
Ezekiel 10-11
10:15The cherubim mounted up: this is the living creature that I saw by the river Chebar. 10:16When the cherubim went, the wheels went beside them; and when the cherubim lifted up their wings to mount up from the earth, the wheels also didn't turn from beside them. 10:17When they stood, these stood; and when they mounted up, these mounted up with them: for the spirit of the living creature was in them. 10:18The glory of the LORD went forth from over the threshold of the house, and stood over the cherubim. 10:19The cherubim lifted up their wings, and mounted up from the earth in my sight when they went forth, and the wheels beside them: and they stood at the door of the east gate of the LORD's house; and the glory of the God of Israel was over them above.
11:14The word of the LORD came to me, saying, 11:15Son of man, your brothers, even your brothers, the men of your relatives, and all the house of Israel, all of them, are they to whom the inhabitants of Jerusalem have said, Get you far from the LORD; to us is this land given for a possession. 11:16Therefore say, Thus says the Lord God: Whereas I have removed them far off among the nations, and whereas I have scattered them among the countries, yet will I be to them a sanctuary for a little while in the countries where they are come.
11:22Then did the cherubim lift up their wings, and the wheels were beside them; and the glory of the God of Israel was over them above. 11:23The glory of the LORD went up from the midst of the city, and stood on the mountain which is on the east side of the city.
Sadness of god’s presence departing
Even if
Megillah 29a
It has been taught: R. Simon b. Yohai said: Come and see how beloved are
Where [is the Shechinah] in
The father of Samuel and Levi were sitting in the synagogue which ‘moved and settled’ in Nehardea. The Shechinah came and they heard a sound of tumult and rose and went out. R. Shesheth was once sitting in the synagogue which ‘moved and settled’ in Nehardea, when the Shechinah came. He did not go out, and the ministering angels came and threatened him. He turned to him and said: Sovereign of the Universe, if one is afflicted and one is not afflicted, who gives way to whom? God thereupon said to them: Leave him.
How does this text view exile of shekhinah? (positive thing-blessing)
Mishnah Sotah 9
WHEN [THE SECOND]
R. SIMEON B. ELEAZAR SAYS; [THE CESSATION OF] PURITY HAS REMOVED TASTE AND FRAGRANCE [FROM FRUITS]; [THE CESSATION OF] THE TITHES HAS REMOVED THE FATNESS OF CORN. BUT THE SAGES SAY: IMMORALITY AND WITCHCRAFT DESTROYED EVERYTHING.
Connected to removal of divine presence: full flavor o world lacking
Divine absence is palpable
How else does divine absence manifest itself?
What is purpose of remembering destruction according to this text?
--remember: life can be better—we can have more full relation to reality
Lamentations 1:8
What does it mean here by “niddah”?
Targum Yonatan & rashi: nidah from nad=exile, wandering
Meshech Hohmah: [sinning] became something regular and she no longer felt embarrassment, like a woman in Niddah who is dirty, nevertheless she does not feel shame because her period is regular and it is something natural. So too because of our sins was
Nb negative connotation of niddah (not how I understand it)
Metaphor: dirty with sin, causes separation from husband
Mystics: Human niddah is metaphor for divine niddah
Niddah: separation from husband—does this apply?
Shekhinah=divine immanence in us, world
Separated from transcendent aspect of god
Rupture/separation within godhead
If this is the case, what is the meaning to our own exile? [feel pain of separation from God]
Zohar I: 182a:
"As many were appalled at you -- so marred was his visage unlike that of a man, and his form unlike that of the sons of men" (Isaiah 52: 14). Come and see. It has already been explained that when the Temple was destroyed, and the Shekhinah went into exile into the lands of the nations, it is written it is written "Behold the Arelim cry openly, and the angels of peace weep bitterly" (Isaiah 38: 71) They all wept over this, and composed dirges and lamentations, and all tin- the Shekhinah who had been exiled from her place. And just as she suffered a change from her earlier state, so too her husband: his light no longer shone, and lie was changed from what he was before, as it is written, “Sun was darkened as it rose" (Isaiah 18: 10), and of this it is written, "so marred was his visage unlike that of a man.- Another interpretation: "So marred was his visage unlike that of a man" it refers to the servant, whose countenance and form were changed from what they were before. Another interpretation: "So marred was his visage unlike that of a man" as it is said "I clothe the heavens with blackness, and I make sackcloth their covering" (Isaiah 50: 3), for from the day that the
Plays out metaphor of family drama—divorce
God is exiled from himself—exile is rupture within god
God is exiled from world
The divine within us doesn’t shine, also: the divine in higher spheres
Even god affected by the separation
What does this add?
Tragic element
Emotional aspect (relational)
What are ramifications for reality? [back to sotah text]
Divine Crying & Human Crying
Berachot 3a, as paraphrased by www.aish.com
One day Rabbi Yossi went on a journey. He saw that the time for prayer had arrived, and he did not want to be disturbed. He knew that if he would stand at the side of the road passersby might disturb him, so he looked for a quiet place near the road. He found an old ruin that was close by. The walls looked old and black, the ceiling looked like it might fall, the door was torn off its hinges, and the inside had a frightening dim appearance.
But all of this did not stop Rabbi Yossi. He went into the ruin and spent a long time praying to the Almighty. When he finished, he wanted to leave and continue on his way, but at the entrance he was startled to see somebody waiting for him. Rabbi Yossi took a good look and immediately realized that this could only be the Prophet Eliyahu.
"My greetings to you, Rabbi," Eliyahu began. And Rabbi Yossi replied with trembling in his voice, "My greetings to you, my rabbi and my teacher." Eliyahu said to him, "I have been standing here and guarding you for a long time, Rabbi Yossi. Why did you come into this ruined building?" Rabbi Yossi replied, "I wanted to pray in quiet." But Eliyahu told him, "That is not good. It is dangerous to enter this type of ruin. However, if you did enter and stay for a while anyway, please tell me if you heard any noise in the ruin."
"Indeed I did hear a sound, my teacher. When I entered I began to hear a quiet and mysterious voice, deep and quiet, a voice from heaven that pierced straight into my heart. I understood that I was hearing the sound of the Divine Shechina, G-d's voice, hiding as it were in this ruin. The voice became stronger and stronger, all the while weeping and full of yearning. This is what it said: 'Woe to the children who caused their father to be angry. Woe to the children who have been sent to exile, away from their father's table. Woe to Yisrael, who made me angry with their sins and caused me to vent my anger on them. Woe to Yisrael, whose holy Temple has been destroyed, and whose land was consumed, and who were exiled from their land. Woe to the father who was forced to do all of this. Woe to the father who destroyed His own house and expelled His sons and drove them from their land.'"
"You heard very well," Eliyahu told the rabbi. "You should know that this voice which you were privileged to hear has been echoing through the world for many years. And it was not heard once, or for just one hour, one day, or one week. Ever since the Temple was destroyed, every day and every hour, the Shechina weeps about her children, who are missing, and the Almighty is sorry for the destruction and the loss, and yearns for redemption. From the time that Bnei Yisrael went into exile they did not go alone, for G-d went into exile with them. Every time Yisrael praise G-d in their prayers and show G-d that they have not lost hope, G-d nods his head in agreement, and says, 'Why did I destroy my house and my land? Why did I send my people into exile? How good it will be when everything returns to the way it was, when mankind will improve their ways, and when Yisrael will return in full to their land and to the Temple.'"
When Eliyahu finished what he had to say, he left.
--purpose of our crying?
get god to cry too
yearning makes us remember brokenness
Mishnah Sanhedrin 6:5 (BT Sanhedrin 46a; Hagiga 15b)
R. MEIR SAID: 34 WHEN MAN SUFFERS [e.g. from execution] WHAT DOES THE SHECHINAH SAY? — MY HEAD IS TOO HEAVY FOR ME, MY ARM IS TOO HEAVY FOR ME. AND IF GOD IS SO GRIEVED OVER THE BLOOD OF THE WICKED THAT IS SHED, HOW MUCH MORE SO OVER THE BLOOD OF THE RIGHTEOUS!
--what is relation of our experience and god’s experience?
--how would we experience the world the way god does? Can we?
--what is the purpose of human crying? [expand our consciousness]; Gilligan’s thy of moral development; tikkun olam; fasting: experience hunger of the poor, give that money to the poor—act & feel on behalf of needy
Kalonymous Kalman Shapira,
Now the Jew who is tormented by his afflictions thinks that he alone suffers, as if all his personal afflictions and those of all Israel do not affect [god] above, God forbid. Scripture says, however, “In all their troubles He was troubled.” [Is 63:9] and the Talmud states, “When a person suffers, what does the Shekhinah say? 'My head is too heavy for me, my arm is too heavy for me.” Our sacred literature tells us that when a Jew is afflicted, God blessed be he suffers (as it were) much more than the person does.
It may be that since He, blessed be He, is not subject to any limitation—for which reason no conception of Him is possible in the world—therefore His suffering from Israel's troubles is also boundless...
Now since His suffering is, as it were, boundless and vaster than all the world-- for which reason it has never penetrated the world and the world does not shudder from it-therefore the angel said, 'let me weep so that you won't need to weep.' [The angel Metatron wanted] the divine weeping to be manifested in the world. For then God would no longer need to weep; once the sound of divine weeping would be heard in the world, the world would hear it and explode. A spark of his suffering, as it were, would penetrate the world and would consume all His enemies...
God wanted to atone for
The weeping which a person does together with God—that strengthens him. He weeps—and is strengthened; he is broken—but finds courage to study and teach.
Why does god cry? What do you think of this concept?
--why do we cry? What does it accomplish? [gives us strength]