An Elul Love Story
Author:
Rabbi Schusterman
Date:
August 13, 2021
Tags:
Elul, Faith, Holidays, Loving-Kindness, New Year
It is spring in the Land of Israel. The rain has stopped, the sun is shining, the birds are chirping and the smell of spring wafts through the air. A young maiden goes out to the vineyards for some fresh air and encounters a handsome-looking shepherd. A conversation ensues, and he promises to meet her again. With a sparkle in her eye, she returns to the city with these words on her lips: “My beloved is for me, and I am for himā (2:16). He will come visit my home, and I will be his.
But day turns to night, and he doesnāt come. She is devastated, looking for him all over the city, āIn the marketplaces and in the city squares. I will seek him whom my soul loves; I sought him, but I did not find himā (2:2). She asks the watchmen at the city gates,Ā “Have you seen him whom my soul loves?” (2:3). She implores, āI adjure you, O daughters of Jerusalem, if you find my beloved, what will you tell him? That I am lovesickā (5:8). But everyone mocks her innocent naivetĆ©. āYour beloved isnāt coming; he forgot about you the minute you left.āĀ
Night comes, and she goes to bed, terribly upset and offended. But suddenly, “My beloved is knocking!ā (5:2) The shepherd suddenly remembered her. She hesitates; how can she let him in after what heās done to her? But again he knocks, pleading, “Open for me, my sister, my wife, my dove, my perfect oneā (ibid.) She calls back, Donāt you understand? āI have taken off my tunic; how can I put it on? I have bathed my feet; how can I soil them?ā (5:3). Iām already in a different place, the relationship is over. We cannot be together. But the shepherd refuses to give up. He āstretches forth his hand from the hole,ā he sticks his hand through a hole in the door, attempting to open it from within.
Finally, her emotions are awakened, and she gets up to open the door. But suddenly, he disappears again; she has lost him. But now she decides that instead of waiting for him to come to the city, she will go out to the fields. “I am for my beloved,ā and only then, āmy beloved is for me.ā I must be the one to find him, and then he will follow me.Ā
The well known acronym of the month ofĀ Elul and a love line that Jews the world over have used in many a wedding invitation is – Ani LidodiĀ VidodiĀ Li, I am for my beloved and my beloved is for me.
The young woman is me, the Jewish People. The shepherdĀ is G-d, Hashem.
It’s a touching story.Ā It’s a story that brings me to tears, wakes up my insides and makes me want to stop fighting.Ā To stop fighting with G-d. To stop fighting with myself.Ā To accept that Hashem really loves me.
It’s a story that pulls on my deep inner child and tells me to let go of all the stuff that I’ve adopted over the years that has soothed my inner child, that have become the shell of my identity, that has framed my interaction with the world.
It tells me to let go and let G-d, fall into the Divine embrace.
And not only because I need it, which I do, but because Hashem, the ShepherdĀ also needs it and is asking for it.
In her podcast interview with Krista Tippett, Esther Perel talks about Erotic Intelligence. She explains that we each have a side of us that is fiercelyĀ independent and a side of us that desperately needs connection with our loved one(s).
Understanding this within ourselves, frees us from needing to always protect ourselves and ensure we play the tension game of being wanted and wanting. Being needed and needing.Ā And then we can release the erotic side of us, which as she explains includes anything that makes us feel alive.
This my friends is Teshuva. It’s coming back to G-d because we don’t want to be separated any longer.
It’s a game changer for this season.Ā It’s not a dark or ominous time. It ought not be a time of fear. It ought to be a time of profound connection, an awakening of the deepest parts of ourselves a time of coming back together, transcending our pains and hurts, hurts received and hurts caused.
Let it go and fall into Hashem’s embrace, He’s waiting for us.
Good Shabbos and Shana Tova!
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