This has been a very busy season for observant Jews. One holiday follows another, Rosh Hashanah with its mixture of joy and trembling at the beginning of another year, Yom Kippur, a day of abstinence, of distancing oneself from worldly and bodily concerns to reach a time of spiritual cleansing and renewal followed by the complete opposite – Sukkot, which is very much concerned with normal activities of life. It involves building a structure, temporary though it may be, holding symbols of all that grows from the ground, eating and rejoicing – “and you shall be completely happy.” If Yom Kippur takes you up to heaven, Sukkot brings you down to earth.
I have often wondered if there is an orderly sequence to these days or if each one is simply a different phase of human experience. As celebrated today, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur are indeed tied together in the package known as “Ten Days of Repentance.” Judgment begins on the one and ends on the other. But what about Sukkot? Is it a let-down from the spiritual peak of Yom Kippur, or is this another instance of the principle that “we ascend in holiness and do not descend”?
Originally, in biblical times, Yom Kippur was the day set aside for purifying the sanctuary and ourselves so that we could celebrate Sukkot there in a state of ritual purity. Therefore five days before Sukkot we have these rites of purification. But even today it seems to me that we do “ascend in holiness” when we come to Sukkot following Yom Kippur. After all, it is not so difficult to live a life of purity and holiness when you are cut off from this world and all its concerns on Yom Kippur, but how can one attain holiness when living immersed in this physical world of everyday life? Building, eating, drinking – are they not distractions from the holy? Yes – but that is exactly the point. It is easy to be a tzadik in an ivory tower. Not so easy in everyday life when decisions have to be made constantly about what is right and wrong, how to deal with making a living, how to treat other people, what to say and what not to say. Yet mainstream Judaism, unlike some other religions, never encouraged people to divorce themselves from society and from the difficulties of everyday life. The closest we ever came to that was with the Essenes and the Dead Sea sect, but they ceased to exist. I think the very message of Sukkot is that one must learn to remain connected to God and to the values that Judaism teaches while doing ordinary things as well. In that sense Yom Kippur is a step on the way to Sukkot – leading us toward the ultimate goal, which is holiness in down-to-earth living.
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