Over the past couple of years, I've internalized the sequence of the seven patriarchs associated with the seven lower sefirot - Avraham/Chesed, Yitzchok/Gevurah, Yaakov/Tiferet, Moshe/Netzach, Aharon/Hod, Yosef/Yesod, and David/Malchut - and I tend to think of them whenever a 1/?
sequence of seven comes up, for example, in the Amidah. *
Since I've become Jewish and started wrapping tefillin, I have silently in my mind gone through the list of patriarchs as I wrap seven times around my arm, a name with each wrapping, as a way of counting but in a more 2/?
mindful and spiritually resonant way.
Today, as I did so, the signficant losses each patriarch experienced loomed large in my mind- Avraham losing Hagar, Yishmael, almost sacrificing Yitzchok, and Sarah; Yitzchok almost being sacrificed and experiencing the heartache 3/?
associated with his sons; Yaakov fleeing his home, losing Rachel, and being separated from Yosef; Moshe not being able to go into the Promised Land; Aharon losing Nadav and Abihu and not being able to mourn; Yosef being betrayed by his brothers and falsely imprisoned; and 4/?
David losing Yonatan and Avshalom. (This list is not comprehensive.
And this experience immersed my more deeply in the Nine Days.
* I realize that this is a very masculine association - several proposals have been made to associate matriarchs with the sefirot, but it is not 5/?
uniform. The one that resonates with me is Tamar - since my Hebrew name is Tomer Yitzchok - and she is associated with Yosef and Yesod - Yosef is the only man in the Torah described as HaTzadik - the Righteous - and Yehudah says that Tamar is tzadkah mimeni - more righteous 6/?
than I. I think that those wanting to adopt this practice with matriarchs will likely find the practice revealing great insight. 7/7
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
@ShlomoFelber With the obligatory caveat about Judaism and Christianity being different religions, there being no such thing as "Judeo-Christian", etc. - this reminds me of growing up evangelical - in addition to faith healers, there were doctors hawking particular vitamins, drugs, etc. 1/?
@ShlomoFelber that were "wonder drugs/vitamins" that could cure a wide variety of illnesses (allegedly), multilevel marketing schemes were popular - Amway famously - friends of my parents got into Shaklee vitamins, emergency prep supplies (depending on the sect), etc. I'm sure the exact 2/?
@ShlomoFelber scams are different, but there is something about being part of a fervent religious group that sees itself as being persecuted (Chasidim are correct in this viewpoint, evangelicals are completely incorrect but nonetheless believe it about themselves) that makes one open to 3/?