2/10/2007

FIREWORKS

Sinai’s Sounds and Lights: Suprasensory Senses


Do our senses help or impede our ability to experience reality?

Many schools of mysticism insist that to enter the sublime we need to shut down, or at least blunt, our senses. When you are overstimulated by the things you see, hear, taste, touch and smell, you become distracted from your inner voice. By closing your eyes (as we do when we recite the Shema) and quieting down the other senses, you can meditate and concentrate on the soul within yourself and others.

Witness how our level of focus is diminished when we are distracted by our ringing cell phones and buzzing blackberries. Just the other day, I was sitting in a meeting and could not believe how people throughout were busy peeking at their various gadgets. Besides the disrespect, how in heaven could anybody truly apply the necessary attention to the issues at hand? How would we feel if a surgeon operating on our loved one was e-mailing his dinners plans while holding a scalpel in his other hand?! (Obviously, a pedestrian office meeting cannot be compared to surgery, but the point is still the same).

Thus, the case is made that in order to allow our souls to speak we need to subdue our senses. We need to escape the “rush hour” and quiet down our lives. Silence and serenity create a conducive environment for the soulful experience.

Some go a step further and assert that our senses actually distort true reality – the inner truth within. Sight, sound, smell, taste and touch are superficial tools that can only relate to and access superficial, external experiences. Intimacy requires intimate tools. Sublime experiences require sublime tools.

The naked eye, or even a microscope, cannot see sub-atomic particles, nor can it see love or pain. Basically, the level of our experience is in direct proportion to the tools we use.

In The Philosophy of Physical Science Sir Arthur Eddington offers an excellent analogy to explain phenomenon beyond the scope of our conventional measuring instruments:

“Let us suppose that an ichthyologist is exploring the life of the ocean. He casts a net into the water and brings up a fishy assortment. Surveying his catch, he proceeds in the usual manner of a scientist to systematize what it reveals. He arrives at” a generalization: “No sea-creature is less than two inches long.” This is “true of his catch, and he assumes tentatively that… [it] will remain true however often he repeats it.

”In applying this analogy, the catch stands for the body of knowledge which constitutes physical science, and the net for the sensory and intellectual equipment which we use in obtaining it. The casting of the net corresponds to observation; for knowledge which has not been or could not be obtained by observation is not admitted into physical science.

“An onlooker may object that the first generalization is wrong. “There are plenty of sea-creatures under two inches long, only your net is not adapted to catch them.” The ichthyologist dismisses this objection contemptuously. “Anything uncatchable by my net is ipso facto outside the scope of ichthyological knowledge.” In short, “what my net can't catch isn't fish.” Or – to translate the analogy – “If you are not simply guessing, you are claiming a knowledge of the physical universe discovered in some other way than by the methods of physical science, and admittedly unverifiable by such methods. You are a metaphysician. Bah!”

If our sensory tools are limited in perceiving the inner nature of the physical universe – from quantum mechanics to the human unconscious, from intangible subatomic particles to microscopic DNA and supra-nano cellular structures – how much more so is their inability to experience the metaphysical.

The mystics explain that to reach deeper states of consciousness we need to learn to get beyond our limited senses – which process experiences in linear fashion – and even beyond our natural logic. Indeed, some mystical systems use paradoxes and counterintuitive exercises (“what is the sound of one hand clapping?”) to access inner dimensions that transcend the limited nature of outer, external consciousness.

The Divine is experienced not through the senses but in silence. G-d was not in the wind, earthquake, or fire that Elijah saw on Mt. Horeb, but in the still, subtle voice (Kings 1 19:11-12).

Parallels have been drawn between the mystical experience and the experience of the quantum state in modern physics, where one also needs to use a new set of sublime tools, altogether different and even antithetical to the intuitive tools of our ordinary language which takes its images from our conventional senses and logical mechanisms.

All this establishes a very strong case against the senses helping us reach the inner world of spirituality: The senses are simply too inadequate and limited. Their obsession with the tangible actually creates an illusion that distracts us. It distorts the true nature of matter (on the microscopic level) and spirit, thus hampering our ability to achieve a higher state of consciousness.

But there is another side to the story.

These same senses very often allow us to experience the sublime. To look at a sight of beauty, to hear the exquisite sound of music, to smell the subtle fragrance of perfume, to taste the intricacies of a rich wine, to touch the soft skin of your beloved – all open us up to the sublime world we call sensuality, a very close sister to spirituality.

Certain sensual stimuli can evoke transcendental feelings and passions, accessing intimate levels of your emotions and soul.

So which one is it: Do our senses support or weaken our spiritual experiences?

This week’s Torah portion provides us with a revolutionary answer:

Here is the Bible’s description of the most momentous event in history – the revelation at Sinai:

“The third day arrived. There was thunder and lightning in the morning, with a heavy cloud on the mountain, and an extremely loud blast of a ram's horn. The people in the camp trembled. Moses led the people out of the camp toward the Divine Presence. They stood transfixed at the foot of the mountain.

“Mount Sinai was all in smoke because of the Presence that had come down on it. G-d was in the fire, and its smoke went up like the smoke of a lime kiln. The entire mountain trembled violently. There was the sound of a ram's horn, increasing in volume to a great degree. Moses spoke, and G-d replied with a Voice” (Exodus 19:16-19).

Sinai was both a profoundly mystical experience and simultaneously an intense sensual experience – a multi-sensory event that stimulated all the human senses: Thunder and lightning, the escalating shofar blast, smoke and trembling.
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Indeed, the people actually had an overstimulated sensory experience – a state of synesthesia: “All the people saw the sounds, the flames, the blast of the ram's horn, and the mountain smoking. The people trembled when they saw it, keeping their distance” (20:15). “They saw what is ordinarily heard, and they heard what is ordinarily seen” (Mechilta on the verse).

The ultimate Divine experience is not to escape our sensory earth and travel to heaven - indeed, the people were told to remain below and “be careful not to climb the mountain” (19:12; 21; 23-24) – but to integrate the suprasensory into the sensory.

The reason for this is fundamental: The cardinal principle of faith is Divine unity (G-d is One), which means that there is only one seamless reality that permeates all of existence – the innermost recesses of the soul as well as the outermost layers of surface existence – in heaven above and on the earth beneath (Deuteronomy 4:39). Thus, to state that truth can be experienced exclusively by transcending or ignoring our senses, questions the Divine unity connecting all dimensions of experience.

Reality is reality; it is real through and through, from the depths to the shallows. If reality can be experienced only by denying the sensory world, the Divine unity is fundamentally compromised, by stating that the Divine truth cannot be felt in our senses and superficial experiences.

Initially, left to our own faculties, our senses alone can distract us from our inner lives. The sensory stimulation of everyday life – not to mention our being inundated in every which way by marketers hawking their merchandise – is a constant reminder of the formidable forces consuming our lives which we must contend with. We therefore need moments of silence and spaces of solitude to access our soul’s inner journey. Too many extracurricular noises will drown out our ability to hear the subtle hum within.

Indeed, due to the fireworks at Sinai (the greatest “light and sound show” ever displayed), the people became overconfident and ended up worshiping the Golden Calf. Sometimes when you experience the Divine on your own terms – in ways that your sensory tools can relate to – you can become arrogant and feel invulnerable, and then fall from your high perch. Thus, the Second Tablets were given to Moses in the silence and awe of Yom Kippur.

But within sensual stimuli lie reminders – sparks – of Divine glory. Via our sensory experiences we can access profound heights of spirit, albeit with the limits that tangible experience imposes on the undefined passion of true intimacy.

The ultimate goal is to bridge both “worlds” – to express the unexpressable: To see the unseeable, hear the unhearable, smell the unsmellable, taste the untastable and touch the untouchable.

Sinai fused heaven and earth – the higher and the lower. As the Midrash explains: At Sinai “that which was above could now descend below, that which was below could now ascend above” – it fused matter and spirit, the suprasensory and the sensory, the invisible became visible, and the visible became invisible.

Sinai gave us the power to fuse our senses with that which is beyond all senses. To experience transcendence while we are immersed in the minutia of our sights and sounds.

How do we achieve this synthesis in our own lives? By spiritualizing our material investments and sublimating our sensory experiences. We have to see our external lives as a means, a stepping stone to achieve a higher sense of awareness and growth.

In every life experience we have two choices: To indulge in the experience and move on. Or top see it as a tool, a vehicle for an act of virtue or a deeper insight.

When we see a beautiful sight, for instance, we can either just take it in, be stimulated and there it ends. Or we can learn a lesson from the beauty that can help us understand the symmetry of life, the grand Divine design and our responsibility to bring beauty and balance into our lives and surroundings. The same with our other senses – sound, taste, touch and smell: They are not merely instruments for our entertainment and delight, but metaphors and vehicles to take us on an inner journey – where our senses meet that which is beyond the senses.

Each of the 613 mitzvoth tackles another aspect of our material and sensory lives (1), with the objective of refining each respective segment of our material world.

Ultimately, the simple mitzvah – an act of transforming the physical into fuel for virtue – creates the ultimate fireworks: The fusion of the suprasensory and the sensory.

Consider: The powerful sights and sounds of Sinai 3319 years ago changed the world forever.

Quite awesome.

We now have the ability to bridge the most tangible senses with the most intangible sublime.

Quite a gift.

How you and I act today affects us all. Now and forever.

Quite a responsibility.

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(1) Most mitzvoth are performed with one or more of the five senses. There are certain mitzvoth that relate specifically to one of the senses. For example – sight: looking at tzitzit. Sound: shofar. Taste: eating a sacred meal. Touch: semicha, grasping the etrog and the other three species. Smell: spices, incense.
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2/08/2007

SINAI AND JERUSALEM

“Showing steadfast love to thousands of those who love me Uleshomre and keep my commandments” (Ex.20.6)



Yerushalayim is the crossroads of the universe and the point where heaven meets earth, so why did the divine revelation not take place there?



Many answers are given. For example, the wilderness is a no-man’s-land, and the Torah is meant for mankind as a whole. The wilderness has no bounds, neither does the Torah. With water the wilderness flourishes, so does the world with Torah.



The Sifte Kohen points out that there is an allusion to Yerushalayim in the Decalogue. The letters of the Hebrew Uleshomre – who keep [my commandments], may be rearranged to read Yerushalayim. Because many of the commandments of the Torah may be observed only in the Land of Israel, Jerusalem is the ideal place for both the spiritual and physical life.



Sinai is awesome. The divine revelation was terrifying The mere thought of Sinai invokes fear. In strong contrast, Yerushalayim is endearing. Those who live in the city are in love with it.



Physically, Sinai is not in Yerushalayim.

In spirit Yerushalayim is at Sinai.



The Torah revealed with fear should be kept with love.

2/05/2007

SONG

Soul Transportation


This weekend has a special name: “Shabbat Shirah” – the Shabbat of Song, so called because this week’s Torah portion contains the song sung by Israel after the parting of the Red Sea. Accordingly, this week’s essay addresses the soul of song – the power it has to transform our lives.

What gives music its power? How does it have the ability to transport us to another time and place? To lift a broken spirit? To bring a tear to a happy soul? Why does a song have the capacity to reach the depths of our heart, bring old memories alive, awaken our deepest aspirations and naturally cause us to dance to its beat?

What type of language is this language of song, and where did it originate? We learn the spoken language at home and at school. But who taught us how to sing?

What is the soul of song?

The mystics explain it this way:

How do souls travel? Bodies move about on legs or in vehicles. But what moves a soul? A soul doesn’t have legs and cannot be contained in an automobile or other vehicle. What carries our souls from one place to another?

The Kabbalah offers a fascinating answer: The only way a soul can move about is through a song. Without song the soul remains stuck in one place.

In the Holy Temple in Jerusalem there were fifteen steps corresponding to the fifteen Shir HaMaalos (song of ascents) in the book of Psalms (120-135), which the Levites would sing as they stood on the steps. In order to climb from one step to the next a song had to be sung.

In our material world we can convince ourselves that we are mobile – movers and shakers – even if our souls never budge an inch. There are people who chalk up millions of frequent flyer miles, others who move around in all the high circles, and yet others who are climbing the corporate ladder. But are they truly moving? Their bodies may be traveling places, but are their souls in flight? Then there are people who perhaps sit in the same place, praying or meditating, but spiritually they are moving millions of miles.

But in the spiritually intact Holy Temple, where spirit met matter and the physical was seamlessly aligned with its inner purpose, you simply could not move from one step to the next unless your soul was lifted through song.

Why do songs have this power? Because they are the language of the Divine.

A parable:

When G-d created the universe, He consulted the angels: “Should I bestow upon the human race the gift of music?” The elitist angels unanimously replied with a resounding “no.” “The human race will not appreciate the sublime power of melody. They will abuse and commercialize it. They won’t know how to appreciate angelic, divine nature of song.

“Give us your gift of music,” the angels said, “and we will sing Your praises, we will sing Your songs. We will know how to use the power of melody to reach great spiritual heights.”

G-d considered their opinion, but then overruled them. “No. I will give the gift of music to humans. Because I want them to have something to remember Me with.

“Sometimes life will be difficult. In such times the pressures can be overbearing. Man can feel depressed and hopeless. I therefore want them to have song to remind them, that even you’re stuck in the dire straits of material existence, even when you are experiencing existential loneliness and “quiet desperation,” you can break out in song, which will lift your spirits.

“Sometimes life will be comfortable, too comfortable. Let man then sing to remember that there is more to life than instant gratification.

“Yes indeed,” G-d concluded, “I will give the human being My unique tongue – the language of music and song, so that he can use it to discover transcendence.”

The reason song has the ability to transport the soul is because its true nature and the source of its power is its Divine language: Song is a dialect from another plane. If the conventional word is the language of man, music is the language of the Divine.

Songs, therefore, are the wings of the soul. They have the ability to lift our spirits to unprecedented heights. They allow us to fly; to soar away to far-away places – places that are beyond pedestrian life and mundane monotony.

Song is spiritual transportation. As one Rebbe put it: The spoken and written word is the “quill of the mind;” Music is the “quill of the heart.” If a soul looks like a flame, it sounds like a song.

Ahh, who hasn’t been drawn by the wish to just go out and sing, unfettered, unbound, to the open heavens. To get away from it all and sing away, with your hands waving free, like there is no tomorrow. To close your eyes, and allow the music to take you to unknown places beyond the anguish and pain of life’s tribulations?

This may explain the compelling power of music in the last 50 years. Why youth today are drawn to music – in ways that are unprecedented in history. Being a language of the soul, music fills the deep spiritual void left by corrupt or irrelevant religion and other belief systems. For good or for bad, music has become the “hymns” of today’s souls and concerts their cathedrals. Starting back in the 50’s music represented the voice of rebellion, the expression of individuality, the challenge to the status-quo of the conformist “man in the grey flannel suit.” The soul found its expression in song – to free itself from the materialistic bondage of the body; a way for us to dialogue with G-d (whether we know it or not).

Unfortunately, like any powerful force, music too, untamed and unfocused, can be hijacked and turned into another hedonistic vehicle of indulgence rather than transcendence, narcissism rather than selflessness, entertainment instead of inspiration.

But at its heart song has a hold on our souls because it is ultimately Divine language – the natural language of the soul. (No accident that music is called “soul”).

Our challenge is to recognize the true nature of song’s power and the reason this gift was given to us: To allow us to touch the Divine and integrate it into our lives. Now just to listen to the pleasant harmonies and dance to its beat, but to allow the soulful language of music to refine our personalities, strengthen our commitments, connect with our higher calling, help us build healthy homes and families and illuminate each of our respective corners of the world with our unique light.

We live in a dichotomous, fragmented world. Matter and spirit compartmentalized make it terribly difficult to hear the music of our souls. Instead, we fabricate a superficial language to maneuver in our mundane lives. Music then becomes an exotic escape to an island. In search of some relief from the quotidian, you plug in your headphones, and block out the world around you – and you soar on music’s wings. But then you have to return, and then the music dies…

In truth, however, an inner hum fills all of existence. Every creature, every molecule, every atom emits its own unique sound. Every soul pulsates and purrs. Even when the “rush hour” of our lives with all its extraneous noise drowns out the “gentle, subtle voice” within, the music continues to play (even if you’re not plugged in).

In a seamless world all our experiences would sound like a song, all our movements would look like a dance. If our insides and outsides would be aligned, we would be singing all the time, and we wouldn’t be able to move unless we had a song to sing us along (as it was in the Temple).

Imagine: What would it be like to hear the music of the cosmos? How would it feel the song of your soul? Of other souls? How would life be different if you could generate a song at will?

Every time you experience a moment of truth – an experience that resonates – we are hearing the inner music of existence.

How do we access the music within at all times? By getting in touch with your life’s purpose, and recognizing that every moment of your day, every activity, every interaction is a spiritual opportunity. You are charged with the mission to realize each of these opportunities by ensuring that all the material gain is simply a means to express higher spiritual truths and bring more virtue into this world.

This attitude taps into the very fabric of the harmonic chords of existence, which allow us to hear the music within.

In every life experience you have two options to choose from: To serve your own needs, or to serve a higher cause. When you touch the surface of the experience it usually will result in narcissistic results. But when you tap into the inner meaning of the experience, its music will play.

In every experience we can either just ride through the experience, or we can learn to play the inner chords that release a song.

There are people in this world that turn every thing they touch into music, every thing they come into contact with into a dance. They are alive, brimming with energy. They are electric, and everything that they touch becomes electrified.

Some people deaden every thing they touch. Some people bring every thing alive.


Imagine a world in which music is playing all the time. Imagine hearing a song in every breath you take, in every step you make. Imagine a life in which every move you feel the inner rhythm.

As we enter the “Shabbat of song” we are imbued with the power to turn our lives into one extended symphony.

High time to start singing.

Will you electrify your corner of the world or will you dampen it?

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