New year, new light, new life

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New year, new light, new life
Image by Ri Butov from Pixabay

JNS

Can we really get out of the rut?

Hey, does anybody still make New Year’s resolutions?

Maybe you do, and yours goes something like mine, “My New Year’s resolution this year is to keep the resolutions I made last year!”

My friend said that his goes like this, “My New Year’s resolution is to have a fat bank account and a skinny body. Last year, I got mixed up.”

Most people I know have long stopped making New Year’s resolutions because they know it doesn’t work. They just go “in one year and out the other!”

In much of the world today, especially for us Jews in Israel and around the world, people are living with uncertainty and confusion. We hope and pray for a victory, and a long-lasting, peaceful outcome. But we’re still anxious—and with good reason. We are so preoccupied with the latest news from Israel that we can hardly think about Rosh Hashanah or ourselves. But we must. So, let me share an idea about Rosh Hashanah that I believe can help us confront the confusion and find some clarity.

In Jewish thought, the New Year is not only when we need to buy a new calendar, dress or a seat in shul. It means a new light. According to the mystics, every new year, a Divine light comes into the world for the very first time since Creation. Implicit in this new light is the potential for new opportunities on every level. 

A new year with its infinite new light means there really can be a new Me and a new You. Yes, believe it or not, we really can reinvent ourselves. How? Good question. But that’s not what Rosh Hashanah is about. It’s not about the details. It’s about the potential, the hope, the commitment and the resolve to do better than we did last year. How? We will have to figure that out. But first things first.

I recall that back in my yeshivah days in Montreal, there was a moment when the mashpia, my spiritual mentor, made a deep impression on me with an idea culled from one of the philosophical treatises we were studying at the time.

In the second section of Tanya, the author, Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, explains the concept of “Continuous Creation.” Briefly, it goes something like this: God created the universe from nothing way back when it obviously required a powerful flash of Divine energy to bring the world into being from nothingness. It follows that this creative force can never be removed from the universe, or the world would simply cease to exist. Without the creative force of God, which brought the world into existence originally, it would simply revert to its original state of … nothingness.

This is the deeper meaning of the expression used in our morning services, describing the wonders of the Creator, how God “in His goodness, renews daily, continuously, the work of Creation.”

Not only does the Creator renew our world every morning; He does it perpetually, continuously—hence the concept of Continuous Creation. God didn’t create the world all those years ago and then go on a permanent vacation to the Caribbean. He hasn’t retired or even semi-retired. And He doesn’t suffer from midlife crises either. His involvement with His world—our world—is continuous and constant. If the Creator would forget about us, even for a second, we would cease to exist. Taking His eye off the ball is equivalent to pulling the plug on the universe. It would simply go back to its default position, which was nonexistence.

Isn’t it encouraging to know that God has us in mind and that we haven’t been forgotten or left to our own devices? This is the real meaning of the term Divine Providence: that the world isn’t working randomly or even on autopilot. There is a Higher Plan—or in the words of Tevye the Fiddler, a “vast eternal plan.” He is involved and looking after us, then, now and forever.

And if He renews the work of Creation every day, every hour, every minute, second and nanosecond, then effectively, this means that every day it’s a brand-new world. And not only every day but every moment. Every second, the world has just been recreated. And if it’s a new world, then this presents us with a brilliant new opportunity. It’s a new world now, and I needn’t be burdened by the past. That was an old world. I can make a new beginning today, this hour, this second. “Hey, I really can start again!”

A new world brings with it the opportunity of a new you, personally, psychologically, physically and spiritually. We can reinvent ourselves at any given moment. We can change our attitude at any given moment. And we can change the way we look at our surroundings, wherever we may be, any time we want to. In a second, things can improve. If we would only be a little more objective, we would see the many positive and encouraging things going on around us instead of only focusing on the negative. 

I know about all the problems in the world. Israel is on our minds every moment of the day. I’m not wearing blinkers, and I’m not naive. But the world is too beautiful and too precious to let it slip away into oblivion because of negativity and pessimism. I realize that it’s not easy this year because of what’s going on in the world, but let us renew ourselves, our families, our community, our country and our world.

There’s a new light coming this Rosh Hashanah. And with it comes a new world with new life, new beginnings, new opportunities and new blessings for all of us. God knows we need it!

I wish all my readers and all of Israel Shanah Tovah with peace of mind, health, happiness, success, nachas and all of the Almighty’s abundant blessings!


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