Have Questions or Comments?
Leave us some feedback and we'll reply back!

    Your Name (required)

    Your Email (required)

    Phone Number)

    In Reference to

    Your Message


    ROSH HASHANAH: UNDERSTANDING THE SHOFAR’S CALL

    The Midrash (Vayikra
    Rabba) teaches that on
    Rosh Hashanah, G-d
    sits on the “throne of
    judgment,” ready to
    carefully judge and scrutinize every individual.
    But when we sound the shofar, G-d rises from
    the “throne of judgment” and sits on the “throne
    of compassion.” It is thus through the sounding
    of the shofar that we avoid strict judgment and
    earn G-d’s mercy for a favorable sentence.
    How does this work? How does the sounding of
    the shofar have such an effect?
    The Ran (Rabbenu Nissom of Gerona, Spain,
    1320-1380), in his commentary to the Rif
    (Masechet Rosh Hashanah), cites a different
    passage in the Midrash explaining the origins
    of Rosh Hashanah. The Midrash tells that Adam
    and Hava were created on the first of Tishreh,
    and already on that day, they committed the sin
    of partaking of the forbidden fruit. G-d judged
    them on that day, forgiving them and allowing
    them to live. And so every year henceforth,
    this day – the first of Tishreh – is the day of
    judgment, when all people on earth are judged
    for the coming year.
    But if this is the case, then we should expect
    to find the shofar mentioned somewhere in

    the story of Adam and Hava’s sin and their
    judgment. After all, if our observance of Rosh
    Hashanah – in which the sounding of the shofar
    plays such a prominent role – is rooted in the
    judgment of Adam and Hava after they ate from
    the forbidden tree, we would naturally assume
    that their judgment also involved a shofar.
    Sure enough, although neither the text of the
    Torah nor the Midrashim makes an explicit
    reference to the shofar in the context of
    Adam and Hava’s sin, we indeed find a subtle
    reference. The Torah tells that after Adam and
    Hava’s sin, they heard Hashem’s voice. Rav
    Shlomo Kluger (Ukraine, 1785-1869) explains
    that as this day was Rosh Hashanah, Hashem
    sounded the shofar for Adam and Havah. The
    sound they heard was the sound of the shofar.
    Indeed, the Torah says that Adam and Hava
    were frightened by the sound – “Va’yira’u”
    – and Rav Saadia Gaon (882-942) writes that
    one of the purposes of the shofar sound is to
    instill within us fear, to make us frightened of
    the judgment we are now facing.
    If so, then we can gain new insight into
    the significance of the shofar sound – and,
    specifically, what the shofar is saying to us.
    The Torah tells that G-d then called out to
    Adam and Hava and asked, “Ayeka” – “Where
    are you?”
    Of course, G-d knew where Adam and Hava
    were. The question of “Ayeka” is – “Where
    have you brought yourselves!” “Look how far
    you have fallen!” “What happened to you?”
    “How could you have done this?”
    This is what the sound of the shofar is calling
    out to us: “Ayeka!” It is asking: “Another year
    has gone by. Where are you? How much have
    you accomplished and achieved over the past
    year? Look how far you are from where you
    could be! How could you have failed to use all
    the opportunities presented to you!!”
    This is how the sounding of the shofar has the
    effect of “moving” Hashem from the “throne of
    judgment” to the “throne of mercy.” This is not
    just a “magical” effect. When we understand
    what the shofar is saying to us, and we
    internalize its message, then we earn Hashem’s
    compassion. When Hashem sees that we are
    looking into ourselves, recognizing where we
    have gone wrong and trying to improve, He
    compassionately pardons our sins and judges
    us favorably, giving us another chance for the
    coming year.
    Just before beginning the shofar blowing, the
    Toke’a (one blowing the shofar) recites the
    Beracha over the Misva: “Baruch…Li’shmo’a

    Kol Shofar” – “to hear the sound of the shofar.”
    But the word “Li’shmo’a” actually means
    more than “hear.” It means to understand,
    to perceive, just as “Shema Yisrael Hashem
    Elokenu Hashem Ehad” does not mean that we
    should just “hear” that Hashem is one – but that
    we need to fully comprehend and internalize
    this belief. Likewise, the Misva of the shofar is
    not simply to hear the sound, but to understand
    what it’s saying to us, to hear the call of
    “Ayeka,” and to think seriously about where we
    are, what we should be doing better, and how
    we are going to change in the new year.
    If we understand this sound properly, and
    respond accordingly, then we will be worthy
    of Hashem’s unlimited compassion, and a year
    of good health, happiness, peace and prosperity
    for ourselves, our families, and all Am Yisrael,
    Amen.