ב"ה
icon BecomingJewish.Org
Jewish Information & Education

Add to My Yahoo!
  Av 5769 (July-August, 2009) | Volume I, Issue XI  

 

Chokhmah

In this issue...
Torah Readings
Upcoming Holidays
Main Article
Biblical Archaeology News
Place of the Tanach
This Month's Holidays
Biblical Quote
Person of the Tanach
Book of the Month
Website of the Month
Chairty of the Month
Hebrew Words
Upcoming 10 Minute Topics
Newsletter Dates of Issue



[larger image]
Model of the Temple of Jerusalem
 
Torah Readings
July 25: Devarim (Deuteronomy 1:1-3:22)
August 1: Vaetchannan (Deuteronomy 3:23-7:11)
August 8: Eikev (Deuteronomy 7:12-11:25)
August 15: Re'eh (Deuteronomy 11:26-16:17)
Upcoming Holidays
July 30: Tish B'Av
August 5: Tu B'Av
September 19-20: Rosh Hashannah
September 21: Tzom Gedaliah
September 28: Yom Kippur
Main Article
Tikkun olam is a Hebrew phrase that means, "repairing the world" or "perfecting the world." In Judaism, the concept of tikkun olam originated in the early rabbinic period. The concept was given new meanings in the kabbalah of the medieval period and further connotations in modern Judaism.[1]

The expression tikkun olam is used in the Mishnah in the phrase mip'nei tikkun ha-olam ("for the sake of tikkun of the world") to indicate that a practice should be followed not because it is required by Biblical law, but because it helps avoid social chaos.[2] One example is in Gittin 4:2.

At first a person used to convene a Court in another place and cancel it. Rabban Gamliel the Elder enacted in the public interest (mip'nei tikkun ha-olam) that they should not do so. At first a person used to change his name and her name, the name of his city and the name of her city, and Rabban Gamliel the Elder enacted in the public interest (mip'nei tikkun ha-olam) that he should write, "The man so-and-so and every name that he has," "The woman so-and-so and every name that she has."[3]

The rabbis made this rule because they were concerned that a woman might receive a get (divorce document) and think she was divorced when in fact she was not. She might then remarry in good faith not knowing that she was not yet a free woman. In Jewish tradition there are severe consequences if a married woman engages in sexual relations outside of her marriage. She may not marry the man with whom she had sex and her children are ineligible to marry most other Jews because they acquire the technical status of mamzerim.[4]

As an explanation of rabbinic laws, the phrase mip'nei tikkun ha-olam is also invoked for laws about the collection of the ketubah money for a widow (Gittin 4:3), the limit on payments to redeem captives (Gitten 4:6), purchasing religious articles from non-Jews (Gittin 4:6), divorce threatened by vows (Gittin 4:7), and the bringing of first fruits for land purchased from non-Jews (Gitten 4:9). Several additional uses are found in Gittin 5:3.[1]

During Talmudic period, the principle of mip'nei tikkun ha-olam is applied to a very limited number of additional cases. (For example, see Pesahim 88b.) In both the Mishnah (Gittin 4:6) and the Talmud, applications of the principle are contested at times.[1]

The phrase tikkun olam is included in the Aleinu, a Jewish prayer that is traditionally recited three times daily. The Aleinu praises God for allowing the Jewish people to serve God, and expresses hope that the whole world one day will recognize God and abandon idolatry. The phrase tikkun olam is used in the longer expression l'takken olam b'malkhut Shaddai, "to perfect the world under God's sovereignty." In other words, when all people of the world abandon false gods and recognize God, the world will have been perfected.[1]

Some Jews believe that performing of ritual mitzvot is a means of tikkun olam, helping to perfect the world, and that the performance of more mitzvot will hasten the coming of the Messiah and the Messianic Age. This belief dates back at least to the early Talmudic period. According to Rabbi Yochanan, a rabbi who lived during that period, the Jewish people will be redeemed when every Jew observes Shabbat (the Sabbath) in two consecutive weeks.[1]

In Jewish thought ethical mitzvot as well as ritual mitzvot are important to the process of tikkun olam. Some Jews believe that performing mitzvot will create a model society among the Jewish people, which will in turn influence the rest of the world. By perfecting themselves, their local Jewish community or the state of Israel, the Jews set an example for the rest of the world. The theme is frequently repeated in the sermons and writings of across the Jewish spectrum: Reconstructionist, Reform, Conservative, and Orthodox.[1]

 
Biblical Archaeology News
After 13 Years of Being Covered – One of the Most Impressive and Largest Mosaics in the Country will be Re-exposed
A Large Stone Quarry from the End of the Second Temple Period was Exposed
Huge Roman-era Cave Found by Jericho
Intact Ancient Tomb Uncovered in Bethlehem
Israeli Archeologists Unearth Herod’s Quarry
Extraordinary Finds at the Mt Zion Excavation
Place of the Tanach
Abarim - Summit of Mount Nebo where Moses saw the Holy Land (Deuteronomy 32:49)


Image courtesy of Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page)
 
This Month's Holidays
This month we celebrate Tish B'Av and Tu B'Av.
Biblical Quote
Your children will roam in the Wilderness for forty years and bear your guilt, until the last of your carcasses in the Wilderness. (Numbers 14:33)
Person of the Tanach
Sarai (Saray) (aka Sarah) Prophet, Matriarch, Wife of Abraham, Mother of Isaac, Grandmother of Jacob
 
Book of the Month
Tishah B'av: Texts, Readings, And Insights
"The Ninth of Av - On this black day in history, both the First and Second Holy Temples of Jerusalem were destroyed and the surviving Jews brutally sent into exile. Tishah B'Av became a day of repeated tragedies. How was the Jewish nation meant to endure this phase of its history, the stage intended to bring us to the Final Redemption?"
Website of the Month
Medieval Sourcebook: Maimonides: The 13 Principles and the Resurrection of the Dead
"Maimonides, in his commentary on the Mishnah, compiles what he refers to as the Shloshah-Asar Ikkarim, the Thirteen Articles of Faith, compiled from Judaism's 613 commandments found in the Torah."
Charity of the Month
Ethiopian National Project
"The Ethiopian National Project (ENP) is a unique endeavor that unites organizations assisting the Ethiopian-Israeli community, in true cooperation and partnership with the Ethiopian community in Israel itself. "
Hebrew Words
Ba'al Koray - Hebrew Person who reads from the Sefer Torah

Daled - Hebrew 1. Fourth letter of the Hebrew alphabet; 2. Represents the number four

HaChoshech - Hebrew The darkness

Od - Hebrew Again

Sabra - Hebrew 1. Fruit that is tough on the outside and sweet on the inside; 2. Describes a native-born Israeli

Wimpel - Hebrew Cloth binding that encircles the Torah Scroll and holds it closed

Zavah - Hebrew Extended or unusual uterine bleeding

Upcoming 10 Minute Topics
July 19: Angels, Demons, and the Afterlife
July 26: B’nei Noach and Non-Jews
August 2: Conversion to Judaism
August 9: Sects of Judaism
Newsletter Dates of Issue
Elul, 5769 (August-September, 2009) - Available August 16, 2009
Tishrei, 5769 (September-October, 2009) - Available September 13, 2009
Cheshvan, 5769 (October-November, 2009) - Available October 18, 2009
Kislev, 5769 - (November-Devember, 2009) - Available November 15, 2009
© becomingjewish.org 2003-2009 - Creative Commons License