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Listen to the Flames
If we look closely at the details of Chanukah - the Menorah,
the history, the number of flames - they can reveal the nature
of our soul.
As the sun sets and the shadows of night descend, we kindle
the Menorah creating light in the darkness. Listen carefully
to the flames and they will tell you a story, a story that
will empower you to live a more profound meaningful life,
enabling you to rise up toward challenge and overcome difficulty.
Sit near the flames and study them quietly.
"The flame of God is the soul of a human being," says the
Torah. As flames warm and illuminate their environment, so too you can
use your soul to infuse life with warmth and light. Unlike all other
physical entities that are drawn earthward, the dancing flames flicker
upward defying gravity. Likewise your soul, not satisfied with mere
physical comforts, aspires up toward something beyond.
Chanukah is not just about lighting up our own lives. By placing the
Menorah in the window of your home or at your doorpost, you allow the
light to radiate into the dark street, illuminating your surroundings.
Chanukah reminds us of our ability and responsibility to effect the
world around us and prompts us to shine light into the lives of others
with daily acts of goodness and kindness. Just as a flame lights another
without diminishing itself, so too by sharing yourself you become enhanced
rather than diminished. Every day we must increase illumination of ourselves
and our environment - each day adding another good deed, lighting an
additional flame.
Chanukah tells yet a deeper story, a story that penetrates the darker
shadows of our lives. The Menorah shines a tunnel back through time
to the aftermath of a great victory in which a small band of Jews defeated
the might of the Greek Empire. In amongst the debris of the desecrated
Temple the Maccabees searched ceaselessly until they found a single
sealed cruse of oil that miraculously burnt for eight days. When you
are defiled, when your inner Temple has been desecrated and there is
no oil to be found, you have the power to reach deeper inside and discover
light. The soul always remains intact like a "pilot light."
When you light your Menorah under such difficult circumstances, creating
light in the darkest moment, that light can never be extinguished. The
light that has dealt with challenge, that has transformed pain into
growth, is a light that transcends nature and transforms darkness into
light.
This power to transform darkness must come from a place beyond the
conventional. We therefore light eight candles, the mystical number
of transcendence and infinity, one beyond the number seven that represents
the natural cycle. In order to pierce darkness with light, you can't
just rely on the natural, you need to reach a deeper resource which
is the eighth dimension.
These elements of Chanukah - the eight flickering flames, the miracle
of the oil, the light shining into the dark street - beckon us to connect
to the power of our soul. Our soul rises like a flame toward that which
transcends itself, not only repelling darkness as is the nature of all
light, but transforming the darkness into light.
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