A hand points at a line in a Talmud.

Passover’s over. Egypt is behind us. That first glimpse of liberation is exhilarating. You’re free! At least that’s the story we’re taught. But the journey to liberation can also be scary. Really scary. As every one of us knows, getting free isn’t a one-and-done. It never happens all at once. That first step is the most important, for sure, but then, after that, what’s next? How do we move from that first step to really rooting that liberation in our bodies, and in our lives?

This is where our stories can help us. This is where we can lean on the practices that our ancestors came up with to help us through those experiences that they knew we were going to have—because they had them, too. As the philosopher and Bible scholar Leon Kass says, “Our stories are so powerful not because they tell us what happened, but because they tell us what always happens.” 

After leaving Egypt, our ancestors had no idea how long they would be wandering in the open desert—there was no way to count “down”–they had no destination. And our stories tell us that, when faced with the possibility of aimless, endless journeying, so many wanted to just go back because, well… that’s what always happens. That’s what people tend to do. It’s hard to be in the Wilderness. It’s a vast, empty place of nothingness, and there’s no map. No structure, no schedule, no end in sight. You’re not even sure what it’s going to look like when you get there. Sound familiar? 

But our tradition knows how hard this desert moment is and that’s why, as soon as that first seder is over and we’ve left (our very own) Egypt, the tradition gives us a spiritual practice to hold onto until we get to our final destination—and even if we don’t. It’s a practice designed to strengthen our ability to take it one day at a time, and to use each day to get stronger and more resilient, and more loving, kind, and compassionate. It’s called “Counting the Omer,” counting the sheaves of the first grain harvest in the weeks between Passover and Shavuot.

As they did with so many of their newly imagined Option 3 practices, our ancestors took an agricultural mitzvah about harvesting grain and turned it into a spiritual practice. Forget the “omer,” part, they said. It’s the counting that counts. It’s the daily reminder that we’re moving forward, toward something real even if we don’t know exactly what, something that will be there for us when we’re done counting, something that will help us hold onto the conviction that leaving our familiar but tight place into an infinite state of un-knowing-ness, into a vast desert with no clear path to stability and comfort, was the right thing to do. 

And one of the many ways the tradition has developed to really enhance the power of this process of counting is the practice of using each of the 49 days from Pesach to Shavuot—from Exodus to receiving the Torah at Mount Sinai—to learn, each day, a line of a text from the Mishnah, Masechet Avot, called kinyan torah. Kinyan torah literally means “acquisition of Torah.” Outside, let’s call it “Ways to Become a Torah-Person.” And there are 48 of ‘em! [Which gives you one day at the end to do a review of all 48.] And on “Day 50,” the practice teaches us, you’re ready for Mt. Sinai. Freedom from becomes freedom to, freedom to be bound to a way of life that binds us to each other, and to God. 

We’ve been learning the text of kinyan torah in our daily Mishnah Collective for the last month, diving deep into each of these 48 paths/steps/values/traits that our tradition has sifted out and put into a simple, but really quite profound and all-encompassing list. The practice is to meditate on, focus on, and work on, one each day. Or, pick and choose a handful of the 48 that speak to you and spread them out. Or maybe even pick just one! But work on them—or your one—every day during this 49-day period when our little baby plant of a redeemed self is still so fragile and could use the support of a community and a daily reminder to hang in there, and to keep going as we move through the Wilderness. 

OK, so here’s the list! One comes to acquire Torah…

  1. Through learning 
  2. Through careful listening
  3. Through deliberate speech
  4. Through a discerning heart
  5. Through a reflective heart
  6. Through wonder 
  7. Through awe 
  8. Through humility 
  9. Through joy 
  10. By serving the sages
  11. By checking your chevruta 
  12. Through the sharpness of learning with students
  13. By sitting / contemplation
  14. By learning Torah 
  15. By learning Mishnah
  16. By limiting sleep
  17. By limiting idle conversation
  18. By limiting pleasure
  19. By limiting jest
  20. By limiting concern for politeness & decorum
  21. By being slow to anger
  22. Through a good heart
  23. Through faith of (or in) the sages
  24. Through the acceptance of suffering
  25. By knowing your God-Place 
  26. By being content with your portion
  27. By making a fence around your words
  28. By not grabbing credit for yourself
  29. By being beloved
  30. By loving God
  31. By loving all creations and by loving justice
  32. By loving compassionate critique
  33. By loving directness
  34. By distancing yourself from honor 
  35. By not swelling with pride in your learning 
  36. By taking no joy in making rulings
  37. By carrying your friend’s burden with them 
  38. By giving your friend the benefit of the doubt 
  39. By placing your friend on the path of truth 
  40. By placing your friend on the path of peace
  41. By putting your heart into your learning 
  42. By asking and helping others to answer
  43. By listening and adding
  44. By learning in order to teach
  45. By learning in order to act
  46. By wisening your teacher
  47. By having direction in your learning
  48. By saying something in the name of the one who said it, for one who repeats something in the name of the one who said it brings redemption to the world.

Today is Friday, April 17, the 23rd day of Nissan, and tonight begins the 9th day of the Omer. Start at #9, or go back to #1 and catch up, or start with whatever jumps out at you!

Let’s use this practice together to help us connect to who we are, and to who we want to be while we’re in this Wilderness. Even when there is no end in sight, we can count. We can hope that we’ll get there, and that we’ll do it together. This practice, our tradition, and our yeshiva, is here for you as you move through these next days of counting. Our bodies may be sheltering in place but, remember, we are moving through this Wilderness of quarantine, together. One day at a time.

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