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Night Of No Moon – Thoughts on Parshat Ha-Chodesh

[additional-authors]
April 5, 2019

Night of No Moon

Look up in the sky tonight. You won’t see much, or any, of a moon. Astronomically, Rosh Chodesh, the “new moon” in the Jewish calendar, occurs when we see no moon in the sky. On other nights, we only see the moon when the sun shines on a part of it that we can actually see. When the moon is right between the earth and sun, we can only “see” the dark side of the moon. The other side, facing the sun, gets all the sunlight. In ancient times, from what I have read, those moonless nights were terrifying, as if something had died in the heavens. Ancient peoples, we are told, made noises and blew horns, to chase away evil spirits, or perhaps to awaken the deceased moon back to life. The new moon is actually “no moon”; it is the darkest night of the month.

This Shabbat, called Shabbat Ha-Chodesh, is the fourth of the four special Sabbaths that lead up to Pesach. This special Sabbath commemorates the “no moon” before Passover. This Shabbat is also the actual first day of Nisan, Rosh Chodesh.  “Rosh” is “beginning of” and “Chodesh” means month. The word “Chodesh” is clearly connected to the word “chadash” which means “new.”

I find myself fascinated by the image of the dark side of the moon facing us, a moon we cannot see, because the other side is fully illuminated. This night of no light is Rosh Chodesh, interpreted in the Chasidic tradition as the “beginning of the new”.

The spiritual-psychological meaning jumps out – transformation takes place when we experience an inner obscurity. The firmness of the ego self is undermined. We become a bit unknown to ourselves, the world is shifting. A new self is trying to birth out of dark inner regions. There is a new clarity on the other side of the darkness that awaits us.

I think of those ancient people, making all kinds of noise because of the darkness. I think of the noise in our own heads, a noise that distracts us from a troubling inner obscurity that might portend a new light. Maybe we are falling apart. Maybe we are coming together. Maybe both.

Spiritual liberation means being liberated from forces within that prevent our becoming whole persons. The image of giving a half shekel in the census, described in Ex. 30, is intriguing. The half shekel stands for us; we are only “half” – completed by others, by God, and by a self that is emerging from within. That self can only emerge when forces that impede that birth can be outfoxed. Those forces that want the emerging self to be still born are cunning, and can rob us of our well-being. I know of so many people whom I have counseled (and from my own inner work) that we find ourselves thinking and doing things that seem so contrary to how we see ourselves, our finer vision of ourselves.

Well, those patterns are part of us. We can’t get rid of them. Those forces within have a voice. Sometimes, disturbingly, it is a voice of truth. We are disturbed because we are not living true lives, or at least lives that integrate many truths within. Maybe we are avoiding and repressing. Maybe there is truth within that we just can’t live, right now at least.

Maybe, however, some of that inner noise is a voice of distraction. Maybe destruction. We can’t know unless we become conscious of that noise and engage with the voices that live on the dark side of the moon.

In that inner dialogue, confusing and distressing at first, we can discern much. One thing we can discern, hopefully, are the forces and voices that clearly belong to less mature, less whole, parts of us. When we listen to the voices on the dark side of the moon, we can sometimes hear voices of pettiness, catastrophizing, judgmentalism, entropy, fear, etc., voices that can prevent a new self from arising. Here is a mystery: by engaging with the voices from the darkness, a self emerges that is not from the darkness, but knows how to speak to the darkness.

At the times when I have been ensconced in utter darkness, a moonless, cloudy night in the desert, for example, at first the darkness seemed impenetrable. But when I would just sit in the darkness, and allow my eyes to adjust, I felt that some ancient part of myself emerged, some part of me that knew how to navigate the terrain of a thick, black night. I remember that during one of those nights, a poem I studied in high school rose out of my memory, “Invictus” by William Ernest Henley:

“I am the master of my fate / I am the captain of my soul”

This Shabbat is the Shabbat of “chadash”, the dark beginning of newness as we approach the liberation of Passover. The inner work so far has taken us to a level of great obscurity, the night of no moon. Which is the voice of truth?  Which is the voice that must heard but from which we ought not take counsel? We cannot grow without going through this moonless night, mastering our souls on our way to the full moon of liberation.

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