~ Rabbi Shefa Gold's Torah Journeys ~
Shelach Lekha
(Send for Yourself)
NUMBERS 13:1 - 15:41
This Torah portion tells the story of the spies that are sent forth to survey the
Land of Canaan in preparation for its conquest. They return with a mixed
message. The Land is superb but too well-fortified to be conquered. Moses is bitterly
disappointed with their fearful report and so decides that the people must
wander another 40 years (until the generation of slavery has died out) before
they can enter the Land.
Shelach Lekha concludes with the instruction to wear fringes of blue as reminders
of holiness.
GOD SAYS TO MOSES: "Shelach Lekha" (send for yourself) spies to scout
out the Land. The spies sent by Moses return both enraptured by the
land and terrified at the prospect of making their permanent home in
that elevated state of consciousness.
So too, this portion blesses us with a mission: Spy out the Land of our
Inheritance, taste the milk and honey that flows from the Land of Promise,
and let that taste guide us on your journey. The blessing we receive is
a glimpse. What we do with that glimpse becomes the challenge.
Over a lifetime we are given glimpses, flashes, and hints that open our
awareness to the Reality of paradise and unity that underlies this world
of constant flux. We are graced with a timeless moment in which the
infinite is revealed as the source of our finite world. We are sent to that
land of expanded consciousness through imagination, practice and grace.
We return from this taste of enlightenment either empowered to receive
and integrate the supreme blessing into our lives, or completely terrorized
by the incomprehensible immensity of what we feel is beyond our grasp.
"The land eats up its inhabitants," report the spies. And they are correct.
The small ego-driven separate self cannot survive in the pure air of that
land. The "I" will be dissolved, called beyond itself, merging with the
beauty and the mystery of that place.
The spies return from their mission divided.
AFTER A PEAK EXPERIENCE, we return to our life shaken. Whatever negativity
is in us, born of grief or conditioning, is still there. Yet some part
of us remembers that immensity, that taste of the infinite... or tries to
remember.
That is our work: to remember what we have glimpsed and to plant the
glimpse like a seed in the soil of our lives.
Shelach Lekha blesses us with both the mitzvah of remembering and a
technology for fulfilling that mitzvah. We are instructed to put "tzitzit"
(fringes) on the corners of our garments and to place at each corner a
thread of the purest blue. Looking upon that color we will be reminded
of the Sea, and the Sea will remind us of the Heavens, and the Heavens
will remind us of the Throne of Glory that we glimpsed in a moment of
clarity.1
THE SPIRITUAL CHALLENGE
THE BLESSING WE RECEIVE IS A GLIMPSE. What we do with that glimpse
becomes the challenge.
When I was in my twenties, I read Be Here Now by Ram Dass and I
thought, "How simple! And how wonderful! That is how I will live my
life."
And then I had a dream. The dream gave me a glimpse into the state
of consciousness that I was asking for - one of complete openness and
presence. The dream showed me just a few minutes of that state. I saw the
brilliance of every color, the symphony in every sound; each breath was
breathed as a miracle; each moment held a lifetime of experience. I woke
up totally overwhelmed… and sobered.
I knew for sure that I was not ready to enter the Land. I understood
how naïve I had been to think I could attain that state without preparation.
And I began to get a sense of the work that would have to be done
in the wilderness during the next 40 years. I would need to build the
strength of the container that might receive my inheritance: the fullness,
the richness, the beauty, the mystery of each moment.
WE GLIMPSE THE PROMISED LAND, the place that is flowing with milk
and honey, and then must return to the wilderness of our lives. This
circuitous journey sets up a tension within us. We know the taste of perfection
and yet the urge to reach for it calls us to battle again and again.
We know that beneath the mask of suffering, there is grace. We have
seen the light that is imprisoned within the shell of the world, the shell
whose stubborn opacity shields us from the power of the truth within.
The memory of our glimpse fuels our journey and keeps us from succumbing to the illusion and tyranny of this-is-all-there-is physical reality.
That memory guides us through the wilderness.
SHELACH LEKHA GIVES ME THIS SPIRITUAL CHALLENGE: to remember what
I have glimpsed and to plant the glimpse, like a seed, in the soil of my
life. And Shelach Lekha warns me that if I deny that glimpse - if I doubt-
its validity - then I will be denied entrance to the Land of Promise - the
state of consciousness that witnesses Divine Presence filling the whole
world. To plant the seed of that glimpse requires that I acknowledge and
celebrate it, and that I nurture its growth with my loving attention.
GUIDANCE FOR PRACTICE
PLANTING THE MEMORY OF THE GLIMPSE
OUR PRACTICE FOR THIS WEEK of Shelach Lekha is to remember and honor
a moment of glimpse. It may have happened last week or 40 years ago. In
that moment you experienced the perfection of the universe; you drank
from the flow of milk and honey that is your inheritance. (If you cannot
remember such a moment, then imagine one. Trust your imagination to
lead you to the memory.)
TAKE A MENTAL PICTURE of the scene of that memory and put a frame
around it.
NOW OPEN UP A HOLE at the right bottom corner of the picture and drain
out all the color from it. Replace the plug.
OPEN UP A HOLE at the left top corner of your picture and pour in the
purest blue light that you can imagine. Stay with that picture filled with
blue light and feel the glory of that moment within you.
NOTICE THE FEELINGS in your body.
NOW WHEN YOU LOOK AT THE BLUE of the tzitzit or the blue of the sky
or the sea, you can be reminded of the glimpse of promise that you were
given.
LET THE FORCE OF THAT GLIMPSE guide you through the wilderness.
1Talmud Menachot 43b
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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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