ESSAY: The Eighth Dimension
Where seven times seven makes fifty
INSIGHTS: Communication
The most important thing is not what to say or how to say
it, but why we are saying it

Six years you shall sow your field, and six years you
shall prune your vineyard and gather its fruit. And the seventh
year shall be a sabbath of rest for the land, a sabbath for
G-d...
And you shall count for yourselves seven sabbaths of
years, seven times seven years... a total of forty-nine years....
And you shall sanctify the fiftieth year, and proclaim liberty
throughout the land and to all inhabitants thereof....
Leviticus 25:3-10
The number seven figures prominently in our reckoning
and experience of time. Most familiar, of course, is the seven-day
work/rest cycle that comprises our week, in reenactment of
the original Seven Days of Creation when in six days,
G-d made the heavens and the earth... and on the seventh day
He rested.[1]
Each Shabbat thus completes a full revolution times
original cycle, following which we start anew from yom
rishon, the first dayas Sunday
is called in the Holy Tongue.
This is why many Jewish life-cycle observances are seven-day
affairs. Two seven-day festivals[2]
frame our yearPassover, which runs from the 15th to
the 21st of Nissan, and Sukkot, occurring exactly six months
later, on Tishrei 15-21. A marriage is celebrated for a full
week of sheva berachot (seven blessings),
and the death of a loved one, G-d forbid, is mourned for seven
(shivah) days.[3]
Thus the freedom of Passover, the joy of Sukkot, the bond
of marriage and the coming to terms with loss are assimilated
in all seven dimensions of created time.
Our years, too, follow the cycle of creation: six workday
years are succeeded by a sabbatical year of shemittah (suspension).
In the Land of Israel, all agricultural work is suspended
on the seventh year and the lands produce is declared
free for the taking for all. Also suspended on the shemittah
year are all private debts and the terms of servitude of indentured
servants.
Finally, our sages describe the whole of human history as
a seven-millennia week, consisting of 6,000 years
of human labor in developing G-ds world and a seventh
millennium that is wholly Shabbat and rest, for life
everlasting [4]-
the era of Moshiach.[5]
The Kabbalists explain that the Seven Days of Creation embody
the seven sefirot (divine attributes) which G-d emanated
from Himself to define and characterize His relationship with
our existence.[6] So seven is not only the elemental number of time, but of every
created thing and of the created reality as a whole. This
is especially true of the human being, who was created in
the image of G-d[7] : the human character is comprised of seven drives
(love, restraint, harmony, ambition, devotion, connection
and receptiveness), mirroring the seven attributes
which G-d assumed as creator of the universe.
Matter and Spirit
Each of the seven units of the week embodies
the particular characteristics of its respective sefirah.
But in more general terms, the cycle consists of two primary
phases: mundanity (chol) and holiness
(kedushah). Six days of mundane labor are followed
by a day of spiritual rest; six years of working the earth,
by a year of suspension and disinvolvement from
the material; six millennia devoted to struggling with and
developing the physical world, by a seventh millennium in
which the sole occupation of the entire world will be
to know G-d.[8]
The Torahs word for holy, kedushah,
literally means removed and apart.
Its names for the seventh day, shabbat, and for the
seventh year, shemittah, respectively mean cessation
and suspension. For holiness requires complete
disengagement from all material involvements. In order to
experience the holiness and spirituality of Shabbat, we must
cease all material labor; in order to touch base with the
holiness of the land in the shemittah year, we must
suspend all physical work upon its soil and all claims of
ownership on its produce; in order to experience the divine
goodness and perfection of our world in the age of Moshiach,
we must first achieve a state in which there is no jealousy
and no competition[9]
over its material wealth.[10]
Yet despite their transcendent nature, the seventh day, year
and millennium are constituent parts of the cycles of creation.
Materiality and spirituality might differ greatlyto
the point, even, of mutual exclusivityyet both are part
of nature: both are governed by the framework
of laws which define the created reality.
Indeed, the very fact that holiness demands the
cessation and suspension of all things mundane, indicates
that it, too, has its limits. It means that just as there
exists a physical nature which defines and delimits the scope
of physical things and forces, so, too, does the realm of
the spiritual have its natureits own set
of laws which define what it is and what it is not, where
it can exist and where it cannot, and how, and in what manner,
it can make itself felt beyond its inviolate boundaries. So
while the concept of transcendence seems the antithesis
of definition, transcendence is itself a definition, for it
defines (and thus confines) itself as beyond and distinct
from the material.
This offers insight into of a key passage in the Torahs
account of creation. In Genesis 2:2 we read: And G-d
concluded on the seventh day the work that He had done.
This seems to contradict the second part of that very verse,
which reads: And He rested on the seventh day from all
the work that He had done. If the work of creation was
concluded on the seventh day, then the seventh day
was one of the days of creation; but if the seventh day is
the day on which G-d rested from all the work that He
had done, there were only six days of creation, and
a seventh day of Shabbatcessation from work.
Our sages explain: What was the world lacking? Rest.
When Shabbat came, rest came.[11]
Resttranscendence and spiritualityis itself
a creation. Though removed from the nature of the material,
it is part of a greater naturethe nature
of the created reality, which includes the realm of the spiritual
as well as the realm of the material.
Eight
If the seven defines the natural reality, eight
represents that which is higher than nature, the circumference
that encompasses the circle of creation.[12]
Seven includes both matter and spirit, both mundanity
and holiness, both involvement and transcendence, but as separate,
distinct components of the cycle of creation; the seventh
dimension will exert its influence on the other six,
but only in a transcendent wayas a spiritual,
other-worldly reality that will never be truly
internalized and integrated within the system. In contrast,
eight represents the introduction of a reality
that is beyond all nature and definition, including the definition
transcendence. This eighth dimension
(if we can call it a dimension) has no limitations
at all: it transcends and pervades, being beyond nature yet
also fully present within it, being equally beyond matter
and spirit and equally within them.
So the covenant of circumcision, which binds the Jew to G-d
in a bond that supersedes all nature and convention even as
it pervades every nook and cranny of life, is entered into
on the eighth day of life. The Sanctuary,[13] whose role was to make the infinite
reality of G-d an indwelling presence in the physical
world, was inaugurated on the eighth day[14]
following a seven-day training period. The festival
of Shemini Atzeret (Eighth Day of Retention),
whose function is to internalize the transcendent
encompassing light of the sukkah, occurs
on the eighth day that follows Sukkots seven
days.[15]
Seven shemittah cycles are followed by a jubilee
year characterized by liberty (i.e. freedom from
all bounds) rather than just suspension. And the
messianic seventh millennium of history will be followed by
the supra-historical World to Come (Olam HaBa),
in which the divine reality will unite with the created reality
in ways that we cannot even speculate upon in a world in which
finite and infinite are mutually exclusive.
In the words of the Talmud, All prophets prophesied
only regarding the days of Moshiach; regarding the World to
Come, No eye can behold it, O G-d, save Yours.[16]
Fifty
The eights in our lives come in two forms: eight
and fifty.
For example, the two seven-day festivals, Sukkot and Passover,
each culminate in an Atzereta one-day festival
of retention whose function is to internalize the festivals
achievements. But while the Atzeret of Sukkot immediately
follows the festival, in effect constituting its eighth
day, the Atzeret of Passover is the festival of Shavuot,
observed fifty days after Passover, culminating a 49 (7x7)
- day counting of the Omer.
For each of the seven components of the natural system has
a natural system of its ownits own seven-phased
cycle of immanence and transcendence, making a total of 49
elements and phases in the cycle of nature.[17] Fifty is an eight which
follows a thoroughly detailed development of the seven dimensions
of nature in all its 49 sub-dimensions. Shavuot, the Atzeret
of Passover, is such an eight: our exodus from
Egypt marked the onset of a 49-day process in which we refined
and perfected the 49 drives and impulses of our souls, thereby
liberating ourselves from the forty-nine gates of impurity
into which we sunk in the course of our enslavement to the
most debased society in the history of mankind and entering
into the forty-nine gates of understanding of
awareness of and commitment to G-d. This 49-day process (re-experienced
each year with our seven-week Counting of the Omer)
culminated in the revelation at Sinai on Shavuot, when we
were granted the Torahthe divine 50th dimension which
supersedes and integrates all 49 dimensions of creation.
Another fifty is yovel, the Jubilee
year. Seven seven-year shemittah cycles, each culminating
in a year of suspension and transcendence of the
material, are followed by a fiftieth year of liberty
in which all servants, including those who had sold themselves
for lifetime labor, were set free, and all ancestral lands
that had been sold reverted to their original owners. The
Jubilee year represents a state of true freedom in which,
rather than just suspending the earthliness of
the land, we free it of all the restraints of materiality.
Thus our experience of time (which defines practically everything
we do and achieve) comes in various forms and configurations.
There are times and situations in which we live our lives
completely within the natural cycle of seven.
There are times and circumstances in which we relate to the
supra-natural eighth dimension, but only in a
general, abstract way. Finally, there are times and circumstances
in which we access an eight that is a fiftyan
eight that is experienced in all particulars and
sub-particulars of our existence.[18]
Three States of Jubilee
The shemitta/yovel cycle itself comes in three different
forms, as dictated by the variant spiritual climates of different
epochs in our history.
The Torah instructs that the Jubilee year is to be proclaimed
throughout the land and to all inhabitants thereof.[19] The Talmud interprets this as a stipulation that the special
laws of the 50th year are enacted only when the land of Israel
is fully populated by the Jewish people.[20]
The only period in our history when this was the case was
from the year 2503 from creation (1258 BCE), when the Jewish
people under Joshua completed their conquest and settlement
of the Holy Land, until they were driven from it by Babylons
armies 836 years later, with the destruction of the First
Temple in the year 3339 (422 bce).
Seventy-six years later, with the partial return of the Jewish
people to their land under Ezra (six years after the building
of the Second Temple) the yovel count resumedbut
this time only for the sake of calculating and implementing
the sabbatical year seven times in each 50-year period. Since
much of the Holy Land was not resettled, and a large part
of the Jewish nation remained in exile, the Jubilee year could
not be observed. Nevertheless, a fiftieth year was counted
following each seven shemittah-cycles, so that
the sabbatical years should fall at their proper time.[21] In other words, after the seventh sabbatical
year, on year 49, of Ezras count, the next seven-year
cycle could not begin until after a theoretical Jubilee was
proclaimed; thus, the next sabbatical year came eight years
later (on year 57), not seven years later (on year
56).
Upon the Second Temples destruction in the year 3829
from creation (69 CE), this yovel count also ceased.
The sabbatical year continues to be observed every seventh
year (5754 (1994) was a shemittah year); but because
we are in a state of galut (exile), deprived of the
divine presence that manifested itself in the Holy Temple,
we lack even the theoretical Jubilee of the Second
Temple Era. Today (as was the case in the period between the
two Temples), our seven-year cycles run consecutively, without
the half-century landmark of yovel.
Applied to the miniature universe that is man
and the 49 chambers of his soul, these three eras represent
three levels in our quest towards self-refinement and self-perfection.
The ideal model, which defined the lives of our ancestors
in the First Temple Era, is one of seven shemittah-cycles
which yield a 50th Jubilee year. On the individual level,
this means that a persons struggles to suspend
and transcend the negative in himself are experienced as stages
in the process of the complete transformation and liberation
of his soul.
A lesser state was that of the Second Temple Era, which represented
a intermediate state between galut and redemption.
While a large segment of the Jewish people lived in the Holy
Land, for much of these 420 years they were under the dominion
of other nations. And while the Holy Temple facilitated G-ds
presence in their lives, it was a lesser expression of the
divine reality than the First Temple.[22]
Thus, the shemittah-cycles were not of the caliber
to produce a full-fledged liberation. Nevertheless,
they were permeated by the vision of perfection that the Jubilee
year represents, as expressed by the fact that while the yovel
was not actually observed, it set and defined the shemittah-cycles.
But in the more than nineteen centuries since the Holy Temples
destruction, we have been fully engulfed in galut:
ours is an existence that obscures all but the faintest glimmer
of purpose and direction. Our lives are, by and large, consumed
by the struggle with evil; not only are our efforts at self-improvement
confined to the narrow, seven-phased cycle of naturewe
lack even the vision to see and appreciate their place within
the context of a liberating Jubilee.
Today, our lives are a seemingly endless chain of shemittah-cycles,
with nary a Jubilee in sight. Yet this blind struggle
will yield the final and ultimate Redemption, when Moshiach
will arise and restore the sovereignty of David to it former
glory and power, build the Holy Temple and gather the dispersed
of Israel. In his days, all the laws will be restored: we
will offer the sacrifices, and enact the Sabbatical and Jubilee
years as commanded by the Torah.[23]
Then, our cycles of seven will yield the ultimate eightthe
all-embracing perfection of the World to Come.
Based on an address by the Rebbe, Purim 5726 (1966), and
on various other occasions[24]

Our sages have said: Words that come from the heart,
enter the heart.
Said the Lubavitcher Rebbe: It therefore follows that if
you seek to correct a failing of your fellow and are unsuccessful,
the fault lies not with him, but with yourself. Had you truly
been sincere, your words would certainly have had an effect.
Adapted from the teachings of the Rebbe by Yanki Tauber
[2] Observed for eight days outside of the Land of Israel.
[3] Also: the seven clean days of the niddah
(menstruating woman); the seven-day training
(shivat yemei milluim) of the Sanctuary (see
below); the seven-day purification period from ritual impurity,
and numerous other.
[4] Shabbat addendum to Grace After Meals.
[5] Nachmanides on Genesis 2:3.
[6] See Inside Time, WIR vol IX, no. 28, and
The Third Millennium, to be published in our upcoming
Shavuot issue (#35).
[8] Mishneh Torah, Laws of Kings 12:5.
[10] This is not to say that Shabbat has no effect
upon the rest of the week, that the shemittah year does
not profoundly influence the farmers relationship
with his land during the other six years of the cycle, or
that the age of Moshiach is divorced from the workday
generations of history. On the contrary: the primary function
of these sabbaths is to provide spiritual vision,
fortitude and purpose to the mundane periods
of their cycle. But in order to do so, they must be kept
distinct and apart. It is only when the boundaries between
the holy and the mundane are strictly enforced that we can
experience holiness in our lives, and then extend its vision
and influence to our mundane endeavors (see Havdallah,
in this past Acharon Shel Pesach issue of Week In
Review (#29)).
[11] Rashi on Genesis 2:2.
[12] Keli Yakar on Leviticus 9:1.
[13] Mishkanthe portable Tabernacle
built by the children of Israel to accompany them in their
journeys in the desert, which was the forerunner of the
Holy Temple.
[15] See A Non-Parting Party, WIR, vol VII,
no. 4.
[16] Isaiah 64:3; Talmud, Berachot 34b.
[17] See A Speck of Flour, in this years
Passover issue of WIR (#28).
[18] Also see Daughters Near and Far, WIR, vol.
X, no. 3.
[21] Rashi on Talmud, ibid.
[22] See Talmud, Yuma 21b.
[23] Mishneh Torah, Laws of Kings, 11:1.
[24] Likkutei Sichot, vol. VII, pp. 170-174; Sefer
HaSichot 5751, p. 437 ff.; et al.
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