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Maintaining the Cosmic Balance
The Pregnant Year
On the secular Gregorian calendar, every four years an extra day
is added to the month of February, since the solar revolution takes nearly 365
plus one-quarter days. The Jewish leap-year system is much more dramatic - it
has to be!  | | " In order for the festivals to retain their position relative to the seasons, an adjustment must be made...." |  |  |
On one hand, the Torah commands to track the new moons and to
keep a lunar calendar (see Ex. 12:2). Since the lunar cycle is about 29.5
days, a lunar year of 12 months contains 354 days (the months alternate between
29 and 30 days in length - a month couldn't be 29.5 days anymore than a
calendar year could be 365 ¼ days). One consequence of keeping a lunar
calendar would be that our festivals (like the Islamic holy days) would occur 11
or so days earlier each year in relation to the solar cycle, and thus, every
three years would fall more than a solar month earlier, and every nine years, a
whole season earlier.
However, it is also specified in the Torah that Passover must
always be celebrated in the spring time (Deut. 16:1) and Sukkot during autumn
(ibid.16:12).
In order for the festivals to retain their position relative to
the seasons, an adjustment must be made to enable the lunar calendar to maintain
harmony with the solar cycle, and indeed an extraordinary provision is taken. In
the 3rd, 6th, 8th, 11th, 14th, 17th, and 19th year of every 19 year cycle an
entire month is added before the month in which Passover falls - not just a day. Such a year is called "shana m'uberret" - literally, "a pregnant
year."  | | " This year, 5765, is such a year, pregnant with a thirteenth month and also with extra meaning...." |  |  |
This year, 5765, is such a year, pregnant with a thirteenth
month and also with extra meaning and growth potential. Let's look at one of the
interesting lessons that may be drawn from the "reconciliation" of the sun and
the moon and consider its practical applications for our personal lives:
The lunar and solar cycles symbolize two basic spiritual
principles, namely, consistency and innovation.
The sun symbolizes stability in that the amount of light it
radiates each day is constant. The "sun pole" in our lives is our regular
pattern of observance and our basic principles and goals, areas where it is
important to be consistent, and unwavering.
The moon symbolizes change in that the amount of light it
reflects varies continuously. As such, the "moon pole" in our lives is the
striving for improvement, progress and growth, and utilization of one's
creativity.  | | " One's service to G-d is whole when these opposing poles become complementary...." |  |  |
Each type of service - constant and changing - possesses certain
advantages. When mitzvot are carried out with constancy over a period of time,
the repetitiveness itself leads to the service becoming part of our very nature
(see Mishna Avot 4:2).
One's service to G-d is whole when these opposing poles become
complementary, just as the sun and moon play an equal role in fixing the Jewish
calendar and its holidays. The new mitzvot observances (or higher levels of
observance of the ones already in our mitzvot repertoire) which we attain should
become enduring commitments, and those which we have already become accustomed
to should still be done each time with the eagerness that is usually reserved
for first-time events.
The Thirteenth Month
Now, let's consider the added month itself. Interestingly, it
has the same name as the twelfth month: Adar. Thus, every "pregnant" year we
have an Adar I and an Adar II. Two full months of all that Adar implies. How
extraordinary!  | | " Adar...is the official lucky month of the Jewish people...." |  |  |
Adar, which contains the festival of Purim, is the official
lucky month of the Jewish people. That's even built into Jewish law, where it is
recommended that litigation with a non-Jew should be scheduled for Adar. It's
also the official happy month, as is written, "As soon as Adar begins, increase
in joy!"
Should something happen that seems unlucky or unhappy, don't be
disillusioned. Just as, for example, chicken soup is not rendered unkosher by
milk that spills into it if the proportion of soup to milk is sixty or more to
one, and therefore the entire mixture including the milk is considered fit to
eat and should not be thrown away, so too the sixty consecutive days of lucky,
happy Adar not only "swallow up" any seemingly unpleasant occurrences during
that time period, but can even make them digestible and, ultimately, tasty.
For sixty days (Feb. 9, 6pm - April 9) it is a mitzvah to be
extra happy. May all our readers take this mitzvah seriously. If you want to be
super-religious about it, you should be increasingly happy each day even in
comparison with the previous day of Adar. May G-d help all of us to accomplish
this by hastening our ultimate joy, the complete redemption of the Jewish
people.
Visitor Comments: 2
Anonymous, 3/2/2005
I injoy so much your articles<Anonymous, 2/28/2005
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