Ohr Chadash - New Horizons in Jewish Experience

Impressions Made in the Fabric of Time

Bamidbar: Numbers

Upon hearing the spies’ report, their description of the well-fortified cities and the giants who inhabited them, “the entire congregation lifted up their voice and cried; and the people wept that night” (Numbers 14:1). The Talmud discusses the ramifications of their crying: “Rabbah said in the name of Rabbi Yochanan: ‘That night was the ninth of Av. The Holy One Blessed Is He said to them: You cried for no reason – I will establish for you [on this night] a crying for generations'” (Ta’anit 29a).

There are two possible valid approaches to interpreting God’s decision to establish on this night “a crying for generations”: a rational approach and a mystical one. From a rational perspective, we could understand God’s words to indicate that the people’s rejection of His promise to bring them into the Promised Land will have ramifications for future generations. This began with the generation that died in the desert (the males between the ages of twenty and sixty, except for Joshua and Caleb) and continued with their children’s generation, which had to wander for forty years in the desert until the time came to enter the Promised Land. Furthermore, God could be stating that the majority of the Jews in the future would repeat the same error.

There would be many times in the future when the Jewish people would have the opportunity to return to Israel, but only a minority would grasp the opportunity and have the faith to actually return. For example, when Cyrus presented the Jews with the opportunity to return to Israel and rebuild the Second Temple, only a pitiful few returned to Israel. The majority of Jews remained in Babylonia. (This story is recounted in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah). This same opportunity has arisen today, as the Zionist enterprise has encouraged Jews to return to Israel for over one hundred years. While this time almost half the Jewish population of the world has returned, the majority of Jews still resides outside of Israel.

The mystical approach proposes that events which transpire at any given moment leave deep impressions on that moment in the very fabric of time, or to use the Talmud’s phrase, “for generations.” Somehow the crying on that ninth of Av was embedded in all future occurrences of the same calendar date. If time is viewed as strictly linear this proposition makes no apparent sense. Though one might admit that cause and effect demand that the crying on that night have a profound effect on the future, it would not necessarily be felt on every ninth of Av in the future. However, if time is envisioned as a spiral, the notion that what occurs on a particular calendar date will effect the same date in the future makes more sense, for if time spirals ever upwards then the same point is passed every year, albeit on ever higher levels of the spiral. Thus, every moment in time is both entirely new and yet profoundly influenced by the past which it echoes.

The Talmudic discussion actually takes place in the context of the statement that over the course of history five misfortunes took place on the ninth of Av, including the destruction of both Temples (Ta’anit 29a). Since this statement was written in the Talmud, many more terrible events have occurred on this date, including the expulsions from England in 1290 and Spain in 1492, as well as key events during World War One and Two. The uncanny number of calamities that have befallen the Jewish people throughout history on the ninth of Av leaves no doubt as to God’s harsh response to the crying on that auspicious night. It does leave us though to contemplate and try to comprehend the spiritual and material truth underlying this phenomenon and how it impacts on time and history.

One way of explaining this phenomenon is by comparing time to space. According to Einstein gravity operates through the curvature of space. The greater the mass the more space is curved, thus creating the pull of gravity. This explains how the planets’ rotation around the sun and the moon’s orbit around the earth actually works. The pull of gravity caused by the sun’s tremendous mass warps space in a manner that creates the planets’ orderly circuits around it. The same holds true for the moon’s rotation around the earth.

Einstein further revealed that space and time are intrinsically connected. Consequently, if we apply the same paradigm of how gravity is created to time, we can surmise that certain actions, whether for good or evil, create a “mass,” as it were, of energy that marks future time. The more intense the thought, speech, or action is, the greater the impression made on the fabric of time will be. Thus contemporary actions can make their mark on the future through the spiral of time.

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