TWO SHOFROT
One of the main aspects of Rosh Hashanah as you are all aware is the sounding of the shofar. This ceremony is the main commandment of the day and Rosh Hashanah in the liturgy and in the Torah is called a “day of teruah – of sounding the shofar.”
In the prayer itself one of the three main components of the awe inspiring musaf service is that of shofrot – verses of the Bible that refer to the sounding of the shofar. The sounding of the shofar on Rosh Hashanah, as are all other Jewish rituals, is intended to touch our collective memory and to stir our souls to a closer relationship with eternity and our Creator.
The sound of the shofar that we hear in our synagogues on Rosh Hashanah is not meant to be an isolated sound and incident. Rather, its true and overriding purpose is to remind us of the two great shofrot that essentially can be considered the bookends of Jewish thought, belief and history.
These two shofrot are described in the Bible of Israel as being the great shofar that was sounded at Mount Sinai – the sound of that shofar became exceedingly stronger unlike a human shofar sound that eventually must waver and weaken – and the second shofar is the shofar of the final redemption of Israel – the shofar of the Messiah, if you will – that will signal the coming of the great era at the end of days.
Our shofar sound on Rosh Hashanah comes to complement these eternal sounds of the two shofrot of Jewish life – the shofar of Sinai and the shofar of redemption.
The shofar of Sinai is that of the granting of the Torah to Israel. This shofar’s sound is ongoing. In fact it gains strength throughout Jewish history. Its sound gains volume as time passes. There is no record of any type of scholarship in human history or society that equals the scholarship devoted to Torah study and interpretation by the Jewish people over the ages.
One of the saddest aspects of the overriding Jewish experience in current Jewish society is its abysmal ignorance of Torah scholarship and its importance in the Jewish story of survival and accomplishment. The sound of the shofar of Sinai is muted except for a certain section of Jewish society that continues to insist that Torah is and should be the main component of Jewish education and life.
But without the shofar of Sinai being heard and its echo constantly reverberating within the Jewish world, we are doomed. Assimilation today is not so much born out of malice or ideology – the old time apikorsim are long since gone from the Jewish scene, victims of their desertion of Jewish tradition and practice. Assimilation is more a product of ignorance of everything Jewish. Non-Jewish values have been adapted to be the new Jewish religion, adorned with fancy slogans such as tikun olam.
But, if the shofar of Sinai is not heard, then all of these innovations, attractive as they may seem, are soon to be consigned to the dustbin of Jewish history as so many other “good progressive” ideas of times past have been. A concerted effort to hear the shofar of Sinai is certainly one that should be high on our list of intentions for the new year.
The shofar of redemption initially sounds very softly – one has to strain to hear it. But it eventually it becomes stronger and more vibrant. The land and State of Israel continues to grow and in many ways prosper no matter its military, political, diplomatic and economic obstacles. It contains within it the prospect of great accomplishment for the Jewish people and the world generally.
Just as there are Torah and Sinai deniers, there are Israel and redemption deniers. The sound of that shofar is also not heard in large sections of Jewish society. It is fashionable in many Jewish circles to support Israel’s enemies with money and media attention. Somehow, certain groups of Jews hear the siren song of exile and belonging in non-Jewish societies and are deaf to the sound of the shofar of redemption.
In the height of hypocrisy they campaign against Israel and Jewish values while stating piously that everything they do is really for the benefit of the Jewish people and the State of Israel itself. One needs a clear mind and perceptive ears to hear the two shofrot of Jewish life. They can be heard on this Rosh Hashanah if we only listen carefully to the sound of the shofar of the day and internalize its meaning and message within our mind and hearts.
Shabat shalom.
Shana tova.
Berel Wein