~ Rabbi Shefa Gold's Torah Journeys ~
Massei
(Journeys)
NUMBERS 33:1 - 36:13
Massei outlines the forty-two stops along the way on our wilderness journey.
SOMETIMES I THINK OF MY LIFE as one long interesting journey. Massei reminds me that every journey takes place in stages and each stage carries
its own distinct blessing to be unwrapped and savored, its own messages
to be gleaned and digested. The word Massei really refers to the "setting
forths" we do. As each stage of a journey comes to an end, we pull up
our stakes and move on, initiating a new adventure. At each stage of the
journey I become aware of my own transformation. I’m never the same
adventurer who set forth the last time.
Forty-two stops or stages along the Israelites path are enumerated
and named. Each stopping point on the journey holds a blessing for us.
The Ba'al Shem Tov reminds us, "Whatever happened to the people as a
whole will happen to each individual. All the forty-two journeys of the
children of Israel will occur to each person between the time he is born
and the time he dies."
We recount the itinerary of our wanderings in order to receive the lessons
and blessings of each stage of our journey. As we become aware of
the significance of each stage, we can receive its benefit. It is our awareness
and appreciation that transform our story into a blessing.
THE SPIRITUAL CHALLENGE
IT IS IMPORTANT TO REMEMBER at each stage of our journey that we will
encounter some obstacle or resistance. However annoying, difficult or
devastating that obstacle is, its presence can call forth a particular power
that lies hidden within us. The way in which the obstacle compels us to
transform demonstrates the exact transformation our soul needs for its
growth. In fact, the potentials that lie buried within us often require an
appropriate challenge in order to be released and manifested.
It is more than a strange coincidence that the secret, unpronounceable
name of God that can dissolve the obstacles in our lives has forty-two
letters. Perhaps each letter represents one stage in our journey and the
magic power of this name lies in its potential to embrace all the stages
at once.
RABBI NECHUNIAH BEN HAKANAH, who lived in the second half of the
first century C.E., wrote a special prayer with forty-two words, the initials
of which comprise the forty-two letter Divine name. The first line is: "Ana B'choach Gedulat Y'mincha Tatir Tz'rurah" (Please, with the strength
of your right hand, untie our tangles). Rabbi Nechuniah wanted to be
able to pronounce the unpronounceable, to call out and call forth the
reality of the whole in order to deal with the stubborn tangles that keep
us stuck.
We move through our obstacles by knowing them in the context of our
life's journey. The spiritual challenge of Massei lies in seeing the big picture,
even as we are stopped along the way by seemingly insurmountable
resistances or difficulties. Those "impossible" challenges that we face represent
the work of our soul's growth. Understanding that the obstacles
are the point of the journey may help us to manage the pain or despair
that we may experience as we encounter these inevitable difficulties along
the way.
AT THE TIME of my divorce years ago, the pain of my broken heart seemed
unbearable. My tears filled up every crevice of my being and overflowed
until I could barely imagine ever feeling happy again. At some point, a
small wise voice spoke inside me and said, "In a year you'll feel just fine,
maybe even better than fine." I believed that voice, embraced its promise
and had a moment's vision of myself a year from then, filled with joy.
Then I saw the year ahead during which I knew I would be doing the
hard work of grieving and healing from not only this divorce, but from
every loss I had ever suffered. "Can't I just skip this year?" I whined.
We learn from Massei that every stage is essential to the journey. There
are no short-cuts; no way to skip over the challenges. Even what seem
like mistakes or dead-ends or wrong turns along the way can provide us
with the necessary raw ingredients for wisdom. Those ingredients must
be prepared with self-compassion and unwavering attention, cooked with
patience and humility, and served up with a sense of humor.
GUIDANCE FOR PRACTICE
A RITUAL FOR HONORING THE JOURNEY
I originally conceived this ritual to honor a friend's 50th birthday, that she
might look back and receive the blessings and lessons of her journey thus far, and
release whatever might be weighing her down from the past.
PREPARATION: Invite friends and loved ones and set a beautiful table.
Prepare a special cup for each decade of life and fill each cup with your
most favorite drink from that era. For example you might fill your 0-10
cup with chocolate milk, your 10-20 cup with root beer, your 20-30 cup
with coffee, your 30-40 cup with fine brandy, etc.
BEGIN THE RITUAL BY WELCOMING EVERYONE and chanting:
"Kosi R'vaya" 1
My cup overflows
THE CUP OF THE FIRST DECADE is then passed around the table. Each
person reflects on that decade of their own life and shares what it is they
learned from that stage of the journey. If the ritual is honoring a specific
person's passage, he or she receives the cup last to drink in the blessings
of wisdom that the others have gathered. The cup can then be passed
around once more, and if someone would like to let go of a shame or
blame or regret that they may yet be carrying from that time in their life,
they can release it into the cup, either aloud or silently.
AFTER EACH CUP, EVERYONE CHANTS, Kosi R'vaya. As you pass from
decade to decade, only those who have lived in that decade can take the
cup and share... so gradually the younger people become silent and may
benefit from listening to the wisdom and experience of their elders.
AT THE END OF THE RITUAL each person can choose to sip from the cup
that represents a time from their life that holds a lesson they need to
remember and integrate right now.
1 From Psalm 23
Mattot
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Rabbi Shefa can be reached by email at: Shefa@RabbiShefaGold.com
Rachmiel O'Regan can be reached by email at: CDEEP@RabbiShefaGold.com
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