The Ten Days of Repentance
The
days in between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur are an important component in the
process of repentance.
By Rabbi Reuven Hammer
This article is
excerpted with permission from Entering the High Holy Days, published by the Jewish Publication Society.
The period of time from Rosh
Hashanah to Yom Kippur is known as the Ten Days of Penitence. This name appears
in sources from the Land of Israel, including the Jerusalem Talmud.
The concept of these days as a
special unit of time in the Jewish year dates at least to the third century
BCE. Rabbi Yohanan, who lived in the Land of Israel during that period,
describes his conception of divine judgment and inscription in this season:
"Three books are opened in heaven on Rosh Hashanah, one for the completely
wicked, one for the completely righteous and one for those in between. The
completely righteous are immediately inscribed in the book of Life. The
completely wicked are immediately inscribed in the book of death. The fate of
those in between is suspended until Yom Kippur. If they do well, they are
inscribed in the book of life. If not, in the book of death" (B.Rosh
Hashanah l6b).
The
Ten Days of Penitence are seen as an opportunity for change. And since the
extremes of complete righteousness and complete wickedness are few and far
between, Rosh Hashanah functions, for the majority of people, as the opening of
a trial that extends until Yom Kippur. It is an unusual trial. Most trials are
intended to determine responsibility for past deeds. This one, however, has an
added dimension: determining what can be done about future deeds. The Ten Days
of Penitence are crucial to the outcome of the trial, since our verdict is
determined both by our attitude toward our misdeeds and by our attempts to
rectify them by changing ourselves.
The
famous piyyut [religious poem] Unetanah tokef discusses the fact that
between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur there is an opportunity "to avert the
severe decree" through three actions: repentance, prayer, and charity. The
requirements for repentance include a change of mind, a feeling of regret, and
a determination to change, along with an effort to repair the effects of one's
misdeed.
The
efficacy of repentance and prayer were the subject of a debate between Rabbi
Judah and Rabbi Joshua ben Levi, two early third‑century sages from the
Land of Israel. Rabbi Judah teaches that "repentance cancels half the
punishment for sin while prayer cancels all the punishment," while Rabbi
Joshua takes the opposite viewpoint. Another early Amora [Talmudic sage], Rabbi
Hanana bar Yitzhak, recounted a legend of a meeting between Adam and Cain.
Adam
said to him, "What happened regarding your punishment?" Cain replied,
"I repented and it was mitigated." When Primal Adam heard this he
banged his head and said, "So great is the power of repentance and I did
not know about it!"'
The
extremes to which rabbinic Judaism has gone to convince people of the
possibility of repentance is illustrated in the Talmud by the story of Elazar
ben Durdaya, a man who "sought out every harlot in the world."
Once he traveled far just to enjoy the favors of one
particular woman who spit in his face and said to him, "Just as this
spittle will never return whence it came, so will Elazar ben Durdaya never
achieve repentance!" He was so startled and troubled by this that he
immediately attempted to repent. He went and sat between two mountains and
hills and said, "Mountains and hills, beg mercy for me!" They
replied, "Before we can do this for you, we must beg mercy for ourselves,
as it is said, 'For the mountains may move and the hills be shaken"' (Isa.
54: 10).
He said, "Heaven and earth, beg mercy for me!"
They replied, "Before we can do this for you, we must beg mercy for
ourselves, as it is said, 'Though the heavens should melt away like smoke, and
the earth wear out like a garment'" (Isa. 51:6). He said, "Sun and
moon, beg mercy for me!" They replied, "Before we can do this for you
we must beg mercy for ourselves, as it is said, 'Then the moon shall be ashamed
and the sun shall be abashed"' (Isa. 24:23). He said, "Stars and
planets, beg mercy for me!" They replied, "Before we can do this for
you we must beg mercy for ourselves, as it is said, 'All the host of heaven
shall molder"' (Isa. 34:4). He said, "This is dependent upon me
alone!" He placed his head between his knees and cried bitterly until he
expired. At that moment a voice from heaven declared, "Rabbi Elazar ben
Durdaya has been received in the world to come" (B. Avodah Zarah 17a).
Another important rabbinic tale about repentance concerns
the famous apostate Elisha ben Abuya (of the first to second century CE), who
was urged by his pupil Rabbi Meir to repent, but replied that he could not.
When asked why that was so, he explained that he had once ridden by the Holy of
Holies on Yom Kippur and had heard a voice proclaim, "Return, O rebellious
children, I will heal your afflictions [Jer. 3:22], except for Elisha ben Abuya
who knew My power and rebelled against Me" (J. Hagigah 2.1, 77b). Saul
Lieberman once remarked that this was Elisha's greatest apostasy, since
repentance is always open to everyone.
While repentance is the primary act to be performed during
the Ten Days of Penitence, charity and prayer are no less important. Tzedakah, charity or acts of
righteousness, requires that we look outside ourselves and see the needs of
others. What can we do to help those who need us, financially or otherwise? In
many synagogues, charity plates are put at the door before Yom Kippur so that
people can make donations at that time if they have not yet done so. It is
important to point out that the emphasis placed on tzedakah during this crucial time in the Jewish year merely serves
to impress upon us the need to make charity a part of our lives in general.
Prayer, the other action that can mitigate our sentence, as it were, is a
further method of introspection and change of character. The daily prayers and
the special Sabbath between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur intensify the usual
services in a special way.
Rabbi Reuven Hammer
holds a PhD in theology from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. He
teaches Jewish studies and special education in Jerusalem.