Rosh Hashanah

Rosh Hashanah 2025 – by Marc Brenman

The Jewish New Year is upon us, but may not feel like new, with vaccines being banned and Trump destroying democracy, making Americans hungrier, dumber, sicker, less safe, and more prone to natural disasters. He’s facing more days in court, alas with a Get Out of Jail Free card form the Supreme Court, which has absented itself from the Constitution. The book of Proverbs says, “To do righteousness and justice is preferred by God above sacrifice” (Proverbs 21:3). The psalmist exhorts: “Give justice to the weak and the fatherless; maintain the right of the afflicted and the destitute” (Psalms 82:3).

Fall is the beginning of the Jewish High Holy day of Rosh Hashanah. It means “the head of the year.” Some say it’s the birthday of the universe, the day God created Eve and Adam. 

On this day the Book of Life is opened for ten days. We’re supposed to examine ourselves and our society, confess our sins, and ask to be inscribed in the Book of Life for another year. The Hebrew Bible says, “In the seventh month, on the first of the month, there shall be a sabbath for you, a remembrance with shofar blasts, a holy convocation“(Leviticus 16:24). The shofar is a ram’s horn, hollowed out and blown. The blasts of the shofar are wakeup calls. The sound of the Big Bang is that of the blown ram’s horn.

This is the time to shake off our spiritual slumber, reconnect to our source, and recommit to our divine mission. In one of the Jewish books that interprets the Bible, the Mishnah, we’re introduced to the theme of the holiday, that of judgment: “On Rosh Hashanah all human beings pass before him [God] as sheep before a shepherd” (Tractate Rosh Hashanah 2). Curiously, there is virtually no mention of our own personal judgment in the prayers. Instead, they’re about the condition of the world. Judaism says there is a way to minimize or even eliminate the bad effects of our mistakes on eternity. This is “teshuva” (return) and the result is called “kaparah,” a spiritual cleansing.

In the Talmud, Rabbi Kruspedai of 3rd century Palestine quotes his teacher Rabbi Johanan: “Three books are opened on Rosh Hashanah: One for the utterly wicked, one for the wholly good, and one for average person. The wholly righteous are at once inscribed and life is decreed for them; the entirely wicked are at once inscribed and destruction destined for them; the average person is held in the balance from Rosh Hashanah until Yom Kippur. If they prove themselves worthy they’re inscribed for life, if not they’re inscribed for destruction.” (15b) Yom Kippur is the Day of Atonement, ending the ten day period starting with Rosh Hashonah. These are also called the Book of Life, for those judged to be completely righteous; the Book of Death, for those judged completely wicked; and the Middle Book for those in between. This may resonate with the Middle Way of Buddhism. 

Rebbe Yitzchak in the Talmud, the body of Jewish civil and ceremonial law and legend said, “A person is not judged (on Rosh Hashanah) except according to his actions of that exact moment.”

The Kabbalists (students of the mystical branch of Judaism) teach that the continued existence of the universe depends on God’s desire for a world, one renewed when we accept her kingship each year. How nice that desire fuels the world. She creates us anew with a blank slate at the beginning of each year. We can ask ourselves, “If I were born this very instant, without the limits of my habits, patterns, and actions, what would I do? How would I want to live this brand-new year?” 

Every seven years, the Jewish concept of Shemittah, the Biblically mandated Sabbatical year, requires us to discharge debt. Creditors are supposed to release debtors from loans. The release – called Shemittat Kesafim (release of monies) – is triggered on Rosh Hashanah following the Sabbatical Year. Deuteronomy 15:10 says, “Your heart shall not be resentful when you give to him.” Extending credit to the needy is a form of charity. Today the Europeans are extending credit to the Ukrainians, as they try to repel a Russian invasion. 

The motivation to repair is described as mipnei tikkun ha-‘olam, for the sake of order of the world. Today, Tikkun Olam has become a popular phrase—healing the world. 

The debt forgiveness is often symbolic. For example, the Baghdadi scholar Rabbi Yosef Hayim discussed debt relief in his Ben Ish Hai : “It’s good if a woman loans a loaf of bread or two or three to her friend on the day before Rosh Hashanah, and after, when the borrower pays her back, she‘ll say to her: “I cancel [the debt],” and thus this woman fulfills the commandment of Shemittah.” But really, a loaf of bread? That gets stale soon after you buy it? 

We’re given free will on this day. Opportunity knocks. Or blows like a ram’s horn. The issue is not Henderson the Rain King’s “I want, I want,” but rather whether we’ll appreciate what is  valuable and make proper choices for the coming year. We’re being taught to recognize the needs of others, see ourselves as responsible for them, and understand that the greatest need any of us have is to appreciate reality more deeply. Democracy is aspirational, and is in grave danger, the worst of our lifetimes. It may not survive this Trump presidency. 

The Jewish model of time is a spiral. Time progresses through a seasonal cycle. Each year we pass through the same seasonal coordinates that contain the spiritual potentials created within them. The Jewish holidays are signposts on this spiral to teach us which quality has been embedded in that particular season. When our cyclical journey encounters a holiday, we re-experience the quality of that time. Whatever it is that originally occurred then occurs every year. Thus every holiday is a metaphysical window of opportunity. The key question about them is what particular opportunity they present? Jewish holidays have physicality, which is emphasized over metaphysics. 

Typically on this holiday, one lights candles, saying the blessing over them:

Blessed are You, Lord our God, King of the Universe, who has sanctified us with His commandments and has commanded us to light the candle of the Day of Remembrance.

The Shekekheyanu blessing is also recited:

Blessed are You Lord Our God, Ruler of the Universe, who has given us life, sustained us, and allowed us to reach this day.

A popular observance during the holiday is eating apples dipped in honey, a symbol of our wish for a sweet new year. Challah, the bread usually eaten on the Sabbath (not braided as at regular meals but instead baked in a circle or spiral- a wish that the coming year will roll around smoothly without unhappiness or sorrow) is also dipped in honey before eating. 

Another popular practice is Tashlikh (“casting off”). We walk to flowing water such as a creek or river on the afternoon of the first day and empty our pockets into the water, symbolically casting off our sins. Small pieces of bread are taken out and cast away. Symbolically, the fish devour the sins. But what happens to the poor fish?

The common greeting is L’shanah tovah (“for a good year”), a shortening of “L’shanah tovah tikatev v’taihatem”, which means “May you be inscribed and sealed for a good year.” The Hebrew word for “sin” is “chet,” derived from a term used when an archer “misses the mark.” This informs the Jewish view of sin: all people are essentially good and sin is a product of our errors, or missing the mark, since we’re all imperfect. 

A critical part of Rosh Hashanah is making amends for these sins and seeking forgiveness. It’s hard for me to admit sin, seek forgiveness, and make amends. Antisemitism is being used by the Trump Administration to attack higher education. Alas, some Jews are allowing ourselves to be used as a stalking horse by Trump. Others are very upset by the tragedy in Gaza. No one has clean hands. Apocalyptic views are easier right now, with a plague, hurricanes, forest fires, and a President who embodies hate and threatens civil war and everything he doesn’t like, including democracy. Worldviews are clashing and the authoritarian forces of nihilism and denial temporarily winning. The Golems (the Jewish version of Zombies) appear to have prevailed. 

Is this the End of Days? I’m not a disciple of hope; nor am I without hope. The philosopher Hannah Arendt didn’t believe in hope; she believed in starting again, anew. The playwright Samuel Beckett had the right attitude: “Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better.”

According to Joshua 6:1-27, the Walls of Jericho fell after Joshua’s army marched around the city blowing trumpets made of ram’s horns. Joshua commanded the army, “Don’t give a war cry, don’t raise your voices, don’t say a word until the day I tell you to shout. Then shout!” Shout like the protestors against ICE. We’re informed by the past but we won’t go back. Resist. Silence equals death. 

L’Shana Tovah!

Photo by Olga Drach on Unsplash

Marc Brenman

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *