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Judaism

Ringing the praises on the world's birthday

'It will be a day of shofar blowing for you' (Numbers 29:1)

September 7, 2010 12:25
Sounding the shofar at Rosh Hashanah in Jerusalem

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

3 min read

But why? Why is a blast on a horn the best expression of the national mood at the start of a New Year? And a ram's horn at that?

The talmudic sage Rabbi Avahu elucidates Rosh Hashanah 16a), but in a way that raises as many questions as it solves. He says that the ram's horn recalls the ram which Abraham offered instead of his son Isaac (Genesis 22:13). God tested Abraham, asking him to offer his only son as a sacrifice, but then stopping him at the last moment. Abraham sacrificed a ram instead of his son, and we blow a ram's horn to remember that story. But what does the memory of this story contribute to our shofar experience?

Another talmudic sage, Rabbi Eliezer, says that the world was created on Rosh Hashanah (Rosh Hashanah 10b). The Maharsha (Rabbi Shmuel Eidels, 1555 – 1631) clarifies this, saying that most things were made beforehand, but Adam and Eve, the raisons d'être of creation, were made on this day. Our New Year is the birthday of our very humanity.

We can understand this more deeply by looking at the biblical account of the creation of Adam: "Then God formed the man out of the dust of the ground and He breathed into his nose a breath of life, and the man became a living soul" (Genesis 2:7).The defining, life-giving act for all human beings was the receipt of that breath from God.