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So said G-d: I remember the kindness of your youth,
your bridal love; your following Me in the desert, in an
unsown land
Jeremiah 2:2
In this world, [G-ds bond with His people] was a
betrothalas it is written, I shall betroth you
to Me forever[1]and G-d gave them the moon
only, as it is written, This new month shall be to you...[2]
But in the days of Moshiach there shall be the marriageas
it is written, Your husband, your maker[3]and then G-d shall give them everything, as it is written:
And the wise shall shine like the brightness of the
heavens, and they who bring righteousness to the many as the
stars forever.[4]
Midrash Rabbah, Shemot 15:30
We inhabit a reality defined by two basic states: being and
naught. A thing either is or is not, is either manifest or
repressed, in motion or at rest, positive (charged with energy)
or negative (not charged with energy). Even the most complex
phenomena are the sum of many gradations of presence and absence.
After all is said and done, everything boils down to the confluence
of so many times yes and so many times no.
The nos delineate the parameters of a thing, establishing
what it is not, while the yesses are the essence
of what it is. (A three-foot red piece of wood is not
three feet and one inch long, not green, blue or yellow,
not stone or iron, etc. The nots form the
boundaries of the piece of wood, marking the limits of its
being and its distinction from other objects, while the yesses
relate to what lies within these boundariesthe nature
and qualities of the piece of wood itself).
G-d looked into the Torah and created the world.[5] Thus, the binary nature of creation reflects
the division of Torah into positive and negative realms. I
am the L-rd your G-d,[6] the most fundamental of the positive
commandments (mitzvot assei), is complemented by You
shall have no other gods before Me[7]the
essence of all divine prohibitions (mitzvot lo taaseh);
Love your fellow as yourself[8] is the positive counterpart to You shall not hate your
brother in your heart,[9]
and Remember the Shabbat day[10] mirrors Do not do any work... on the
seventh day.[11]
The Torah commands to create life[12] and forbids destroying it[13]; it commands to aid the needy[14] and forbids pressing them for their debts[15]; it instructs to eat unleavened
bread on Passover,[16] and forbids all leavened foods
for the duration of the festival[17];
and so on.
The Torah institution of marriage also includes both an affirmative
and a negative component. According to Torah law,
a marriage consists of two distinct steps. First comes the
kiddushin (consecration, also called eirusin,
betrothal[18]):
the groom gives the bride something of value (by common practice,
a ring), in return for which the bride consecrates herself
to him, with the effect that she becomes forbidden to
the rest of the world.[19] From this point on, for another
man to have relations with her constitutes adultery, and to
dissolve the kiddushin requires a get (writ
of divorce), as for a full-fledged marriage. Yet the purpose
of marriage is not to preclude the rest of world
from living with her, but to effect a union between two people.
This is the function of the nissuin (marriage)achieved
by the chupah (wedding canopy), yichud (private
seclusion) and sheva berachot (seven marriage benedictions)which
renders man and wife one flesh.[20] Otherwise stated, the kiddushin defines
the parameters of the relationship, clearing a space
in which it might exist, while the nissuin fills
this space with the essence of the relationship itself.
Manning the Borders
As we said, kiddushin and nissuin are
two distinct phases in the marriage process. Indeed, originally,
the kiddushin would be held at an earlier date, after
which the bride continued to live with her parents as the
couple prepared for the nissuin, which
was usually held one year later. (It was only in recent centuries,
when the tribulations of exile undermined the stability of
Jewish life and often caused the sudden dispersion of communities
that it was deemed unwise to create a marriage-bond between
a man and woman who would not actually be living together.
Hence the present-day practice of conducting the nissuin
immediately following the kiddushin, combining the
two stages of marriage in a single ceremony.)
Our sages tell us that at Mount Sinai, where G-d revealed
Himself to us and gave us the Torah, we consecrated ourselves
to Him as His bride. This, however, was only the kiddushin
stage of our marriage. Our bond with Him shall be complete
only in the era of Moshiach, at which time G-d and Israel
shall unite in nissuin.
This is not to say that our relationship with G-d today is
a wholly negative oneas noted above, our
commitment to Him includes both positive commandments
and prohibitions. But today we are only capable
of establishing the parameters of the relationship,
not of realizing its quintessential content. Today, our relationship
with G-d is defined by our commitment to Him and by our striving
to unite with Him, but without the tactual experience of the
union itself. We yearn for Him as a bride yearns for her betrothed,
but whose most rapturous feelings are but a faint intimation
of post-marriage love.
For thirty-three centuries, we have been creating the space
of our marriage with G-d and zealously defending its borders.
We have remained faithful to Him in the face of all the cultures
and isms that have sought to seduce us. We have
established our identity as His people, consecrated to Him
alone. Now we are ready for the real thingfor an actual
experience of the divine as the most intimate truth of our
lives.
Based on the Rebbes talks[21]
Adapted from the teachings of the Rebbe by
Yanki Tauber
_______________________
[2]. Exodus 12:2the first mitzvah given to the
people of Israel.
[5]. Midrash Rabbah, Bereishit 1:2.
[6]. The first of the Ten Commandments, Exodus 20:2.
[7]. The second of the Ten Commandments, ibid., verse
3.
[12]. Be fruitful and multiplyGenesis
1:28.
[13]. Do not killExodus 20:13.
[18]. The term eirusin is often erroneously
applied to an engagement, which is merely the
pledging of the two parties to marry at some future date.
On one occasion, the Rebbe urged that this errorwhich
can also be halachically problematicbe corrected,
and that engagements should be referred to only by their
correct Hebrew term, shidduchin.
[19]. Talmud, Kiddushin 2b.
[21]. Hitvaaduyot 5711, vol. II, p. 142; Likkutei Sichot,
vol. XIX, 215-220; Sefer Hamaamarim Melukat, vol. IV, pp.
237-241.
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