6/16/2023 0 Comments Counting of the omerJourney through the human genome! It will change your life and empower you to achieve a state of spiritual fulfillment and emotional refinement in 49 simple yet profound steps. The Counting of the Omer comes alive in all its mystical poetry in Rabbi Simon Jacobson’s accessible day-by-day program. The Spiritual Guide to Counting the Omer by Rabbi Simon Jacobson It’s timeless and timely – offering a proven 3300 year system applied to contemporary life. The spectrum of human emotions divide into 49 different attributes, each one corresponding to one day in this 49-day period. May we learn how to make our lives easier, yet more meaningful as we celebrate in a small way each day, focusing on the important moments of life.The 7 week period between Passover and Shavuot, called Counting the Omer, is a powerful span of time, which empowers us to refine our lives and elevate our souls. Let each day of the 50 days bring us a moment of meditation, to work on our best selves and ready ourselves for receiving rules to live by (Torah) on Shavuot. It reminds us of the liberation we celebrated during Passover, and just how easy it is for us to slip back into slavery. The counting of the omer serves us as a link between Passover and Shavuot. Day Eight focus on chesed within g’vurah (the love inside judgement). Day two: g’vurah within chesed (the anger within our love). On the first day of the counting, work on chesed within chesed (the purest love within yourself). Malkhut: Majesty, God’s Earthly Realm How to Focus Each Day of the Omer Y’sod: Foundation, Intimacy, Generativityħ. Netzakh: Victory, Efficiency, PrevailingĦ. Associations with the Seven Sefirot of the Omer PeriodĤ. And each day of the 49 is a combination of two aspects. ![]() According to the mystics, each week of the seven is represented by a mystical aspect of the divine to focus on. Today counting the omer can be a time of meditation where we can renew our spirits as we prepare for Shavuot. Each day we must take one more step away from the impurities of Egypt that have remained within us. Kabbalists saw the omer period as a preparation for receiving the Torah on Mount Sinai. Rambam even said that the commandment for us to count today comes directly from Torah! While there is no longer a Temple or an omer offering, the rabbis declared that we should still count the days between Passover and Shavuot. Since the Temple no longer stands, and most of us are no longer involved in agriculture, what’s the point of counting the omer today? Shavuot in the Bible was not connected with the giving of the Torah on Mount Sinai, as it is now. Why was it important to count the days from the bringing of the omer until Shavuot?Ģ. This is a law for all time in all your settlements, throughout the ages.ġ. On that same day you shall hold a celebration it shall be a sacred occasion for you you shall not work at your occupations. You shall bring from your settlements two loaves of bread as an elevation offering…Ģ1. You must count until the day after the seventh week fifty days then you shall bring an offering of new grain to YHWH.ġ7. From the day on which you bring the sheaf of elevation offering the day after the Sabbath you shall count off seven weeks. ![]() The Torah commanded that seven weeks be counted for the omer. Literally translated, omer means “a sheaf.” It refers to the measure of grain that was once offered at the Temple in Jerusalem. The period of “the omer” begins the second night of Passover and continues until Shavuot. Count every last day until Shavuot - 50 in all. ![]() Now that Passover seders are over, and we are eating matzah and are full of affliction, one might ask, “What’s a good Jewish professional to do during these days?” The answer? Count them. Reprinted with permission from Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life. My Jewish Learning is a not-for-profit and relies on your help Donate
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