Time Capsules
Posted on October 6, 2006 (5767) By Rabbi
Naftali Reich | Series: Legacy |
Level: Beginner
Philosophy
is an intimidating subject. Most of us would rather deal with concrete
intellectual and emotional issues, something into which we can get our teeth –
and our hearts. And yet, during the Festival of Sukkoth, amidst our most joyous
celebrations, our Sages instituted the reading of King Solomon’s Koheleth
(Ecclesiastes), an often brooding work that agonizes over the philosophical
problems of existence. What is the connection between this work and the
transcendent joy of Sukkoth? What message does it carry that could not have
been delivered in a more conventional form?
Let
us take a brief look into this penetrating book. In its recurring theme,
Solomon declares, “All is emptiness,” the pleasures of the world are all
without value. More than any other Jewish king in history, Solomon enjoyed
virtually limitless honor, wealth and luxury. He had vast properties, numerous
slaves and one thousand wives and concubines. His palaces were adorned with the
most exquisite works of art, and his tables were laden with the finest foods
and wines. No material pleasures were denied to him, and no one was in a better
position to assess their true value. Having sampled everything that the material
world had to offer, he was able to step back and take an honest look at it. And
he concluded that all was emptiness. The only reality was to fear and obey
Hashem.
So
what are we meant to derive from this philosophical evaluation? How can we
relate to concepts of extreme unreality when we’ve just taken out a mortgage on
a house and the car needs a new brake job?
Let
us look a little further into the words of King Solomon. “For everything there
is a season, and a time for every purpose under Heaven, a time to be born, a
time to die, a time to plant, a time to uproot, a time to weep, a time to
laugh, a time to grieve, a time to dance.” These lines, so clearly profound and
meaningful, have been quoted and paraphrased and borrowed for poems and songs the
world over. But what do they really mean? What insight into the meaning of time
is immortalized in King Solomon’s enigmatic words?
Time,
if we stop to think about it, is an inexorable current which sweeps us along
through the passages of life. It is the framework in which we live, the
receptacle of our experiences. We create terms and classifications – years,
days, hours, minutes, seconds – in a vain attempt to gain a modicum of control
over time, but it remains uncontrollable. We feel its relentless flow through
our very beings. There is no stop button, no pause button. The unstoppable tick
of the clock controls our lives. But what is this thing called time? Is it
merely the passive blank canvas on which we paint the stories of our lives? Or
is it something of far deeper significance?
These
are the questions King Solomon is addressing. “For everything there is a
season.” Time is more than a path upon which we tread. Time is Hashem’s most
amazing creation in the natural world. It is a dynamic force, the source of all
life energies. The mystical sources point out that time is not defined by
the artificial units we assign to it but by the different energies and
emanations that infuse it. One particular block of time may be charged with the
energies of planting, and that activity is therefore most suited to it. Another
block may be charged with the energies of uprooting, and so forth. Each moment
has its distinctive challenges and opportunities, and therefore, only by
tapping into the correct energy source of each moment of time can we utilize it
to its fullest and capture it.
“All
is emptiness,” King Solomon tells us. The only reality is that which can be
contained and preserved in time. The accumulation of material possessions has
no real value. It does not connect with the synergies of time. It is no better
than a boulder by the riverside, left behind by the rampaging current. Only the way we live and the things we do penetrate to the
core of time and are carried along with us through and beyond our lifetimes.
On
the Festival of Sukkoth, when we begin the new year with a clean slate, King
Solomon’s profound message shines for us like a beacon in the dark. Throughout
the year, we have been caught up in the mad rush of the daily grind, pummeled
by the spinning hands of the clock. We have allowed ourselves to be subjected
to the tyranny of time. But with our new insight into time, we can harness and
control this relentless flow. If we can perceive the nature of time as it
passes, if we do not plant in a time of uprooting nor weep in a time of
laughing, we can spare ourselves the frustrations of futility and find serenity
and peace of mind. Only then can we capture and preserve the capsules of time
for all eternity. Text Copyright © 2006 by Rabbi
Naftali Reich and Torah.org.
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