CHUMASH CANDESCENCE
PARASHA BO 
EXODUS  10:01-13:16
DR. ARTHUR SEGAL
Rabbi Arthur Segal_
www.jewishspiritualrenewal.org_ (http://www.jewishspiritualrenewal.org/ )
Jewish Renewal_
www.jewishrenewal.info(http://www.jewishrenewal.info/ )
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Eco Judaism
Hilton Head Island, SC, Bluffton, SC, Savannah, GA
''TIME, TIME, TIME IS ON MY SIDE, YES IT  IS.''
''The Mitzvah of  Keeping Time''
''People say 'Time is money,' but I say  'Money is Time,' for every luxury
costs so many precious hours of your life,"  so says Rabbi Israel Meir
Kagan in his book Chofetz Chaim (Pursuing  Life).
In this week's fascinating Parasha we read of the last three of  the ten
plagues and of our redemption from Egypt. Also included are the  mitzvoth
concerning the celebration of Passover and the events that took  place on
that glorious night so long ago that we remember each day and  each
Shabbat in our prayers.
The first commandment, however, in the  book of Exodus, which is also
the first commandment given to us as a freed  nation (and the fourth one
of the 613 listed in the Torah) is the mitzvah of  the sanctification of
the new moon. It also involves setting our lunar  calendar in motion as
well as its continued modification (Ex  12:02).
Traditionally, the Jewish concept of the Rosh Chodesh is very  meaningful.
Its meaning to our religious life in setting our holidays in  motion was
well known to our oppressors. One thousand years after Sinai when  the
Syrian Greeks persecuted us, this mitzvah, as well as the mitzvoth  of
circumcision and Shabbat were the three that were denied to  us--under
penalty of death.
Our lunar calendar is so important to us  traditionally that only a lesser
Sanhedrin Bait Din (Jewish court) could  declare a new month and in
order to do so at least two witnesses had to  observe the new moon.
Without a calendar the holidays could not be observed .  Other mitzvoth,
as well as those that promoted the sacrificial cult of the  priestly class,
could not be performed. Religious chaos would follow.  
Our calendar is based on the Moon but regulated by the Sun. The  time
between each new moon is 29 days, 12 hours, 44 minutes, and 3.5  seconds.
Since months must have complete days, Jewish months have either 29  or 30
days. We have 12 months, so our year is 354 days. Since our holidays  are
seasonal and agriculturally based (Pesach is the spring holiday), we  have
a leap month called Adar II seven times in every 19-year cycle. This  way
Rosh Hashanah and Sukkoth are in the fall, sometimes early fall,  and
sometimes late fall, but always in the harvest season of autumn.  Passover
is always in the spring time as per the mitzvah in Deuteronomy  16:01. 
So important was the accuracy of our calendar that only special  rabbis
could serve on this calendar Sanhedrin (those with semichah  [ordination],
that is believed traditionally to have been passed down by  Moses
himself).
By the time of the destruction of the second Temple in 70  CE, during
Roman occupation, the level of scholarship had decreased due to  the
Diaspora and confusion. In 358 CE Hillel II (the Second)
preset a  lunar calendar for the future, which was based on calculations
that one can  read today in the Talmud. Because of Hillel II, a monthly Bait Din,
as well  as the court needed to intercalate the leap month of Adar II,
would no longer  be needed.
Ironically, Maimonides in his text Hilchot Kiddush Hachodesh  11:04 says
that the arithmetic of the Hebrew calendar does not require any  major
mathematical skills, and the method is one in which an average  school
child can master in three or four days. Many rules must be followed.  For
example, Rosh Hashanah can only be on a Saturday, Monday, Tuesday,  or
Thursday. This is to prevent Yom Kippur from falling ten days later  on
the day before (Friday) or after (Sunday) Shabbat. And this rule  keeps
Hoshanna Rabbah from being on Shabbat. This keeps the first night  of
Sukkoth at a full moon in the middle of its month.
Traditionally we  are taught that the oral law (Mishna + Gemora = Talmud)
was given to Moshe  (Moses) on Sinai by God, and these rules for setting
up the calendar were  included. These rules were passed on to future generations
via oral  transmission until the Mishna was written circa 200 CE and the
Talmud circa  500 CE. Hillel II assured us that if we follow the rules 
of leap years with  Adar II in 19-year cycles all would be well, as this
is the Word of God to  Moses on Sinai.
However, it is a myth to look upon the Hebrew calendar as  some kind of
celestial clock capable of keeping the Jewish holidays in their  season,
says Remy Landau in his ''Hebrew Calendar: Science and Myths.''  The
accuracy of the Hebrew calendar is fixed by the value of the  mean
lunation period coupled to the 19-year cycle of 235 lunar months.  That
leads to an average Hebrew year length of 365.2468 days. The  mean
tropical solar year is 365.2422 days. Hence, the average Hebrew year  is
slower than the average solar year by about one day in every 216  years.
That means that today we celebrate the holidays, on average, about 8  days
later than did our ancestors in 359 CE when Hillel II's fixed  calendar
rules were published. 
Should no NEW calendar REFORM take place, then  over
the next few millennia all of our holidays will have drifted out of  their
appropriate seasons and Pesach--our spring holiday--would be  observed
in the winter! 
(Perhaps at the Union of American Hebrew  Congregation's
Reform biennial in 11/2999, a committee will be appointed for  this task. Then we
liberal Jews will have a spring Passover and our Orthodox  brethren, who won't change
the "word of God," will be celebrating a winter  Pesach.)
The beauty of our traditions and the brilliance of our ancestors  gets
lost if we assign mathematical wizardry to the word of God in oral  law
to Moses at Sinai. If indeed this is the word of God, His order would  be
off base as the universal clock ticks forward. The first thing we did  as
a free nation, after years of having our days' activities set for us  by
our Egyptian task masters, was to take back control of our TIME.  
Taking control of our daily time today is just as important as it  was
3,500 years ago. Perhaps that is a good definition of freedom: being  able
to set your own pace and define your time commitments. Are we slaves  to
our jobs and our mortgages and our luxuries as the Chofetz Chaim  alludes
to in my opening quote? Do we wish to make slaves of our rabbis  by
suggesting that we, as lay leaders of our congregations, know better  than
he or she does on how rabbinic time should be spent? Do we want our  rabbis on
beepers, signing in and out of our temples?
There are many  levels of slavery, some of our own making and some that we
can set upon  others. Rabbi Ashi says in Talmud Sanhedrin on Daf 29A,
''Though a plague  lasts seven years, no one dies before his time.'' And
Rabbi Hillel I (the  First) said, "If not now, when?" When will our "now"
be?
The "now" that is "now" the Chassidic rebbe said, this  moment, never
existed before--from the time the Earth was created; and this  moment will
never exist again. Formerly there was another "now," and later  there will
be another "now," and every "now" has its own special import  and
function.
We read in Parasha Bo of our freedom, and of time, in  the form of our
calendar, being given by God to us. This is a gift of  freedom, and this
gift is one that we squander regularly. Carpe Diem! Seize  the day! Seize
your lives back from the shackles of impossible time  restraints. We can
not be in two places at once. Family, Torah, friends,  God--all need to be
placed before petty administrative tasks that society's  bureaucrats
place into our laps routinely. Yes, we have to earn our daily  bread and
pay the tax man. But when Shabbat comes, let us try to remember  this
gift of rest and the gift of freedom of our time being ours to  use
wisely.
Shabbat Shalom!
RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL
Shabbat Shalom:
Rabbi Arthur Segal_
www.jewishspiritualrenewal.org_ (http://www.jewishspiritualrenewal.org/ )
Jewish Renewal_
www.jewishrenewal.info(http://www.jewishrenewal.info/ )
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Eco Judaism
Hilton Head Island, SC, Bluffton, SC, Savannah, GA
If visiting SC's Low Country, contact us for a Shabbat meal, in our home by the sea, our beth yam.
Maker of Shalom (Oseh Shalom) help make us deserving of Shalom beyond all human comprehension!!