The Month Of Elul
A month of spiritual preparation for the High Holidays
By Rabbi Reuven Hammer
This article is excerpted with permission from Entering
the High Holy Days, published by the Jewish
Publication Society.
Although the month of Elul--the sixth month of the year,
which immediately precedes Rosh Hashanah--has no special importance in the
Bible or in early rabbinic writings, various customs arose sometime during the
first millennium that designated Elul as the time to prepare for the High Holy
Days. Because these days are filled with so much meaning and potency, they
require a special measure of readiness. We are called upon to enter them
thoughtfully and to consider what they mean. As the Maharal of Prague said, "All
the month of Elul, before eating and sleeping, a person should look into his
soul and search his deeds, that he may make confession."
Jewish
tradition points to the name of the month as symbolically appropriate--the
letters of Elul form an acronym for the words in the verse Ani le‑dodi ve‑dodi li--"I
am my beloved's and my beloved is mine" (Song of Songs 6:3). Believing
that the "beloved" refers to God, the sages take this verse to
describe the particularly loving and close relationship between God and Israel.
Elul, then, is our time to establish this closeness so that we can approach the
Yamim Noraim in trusting acceptance
of God's judgment. We approach the trial not out of fear, but out of love.
Rabbi Reuven Hammer
holds a Ph.D in theology from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. He
teaches Jewish studies and special education in Jerusalem.