Why Shavuot Has
Few Rituals
The focus is
theological.
By Rabbi Ismar Schorsch
Reprinted with permission from the Jewish Theological Seminary.
If observance were a function of theology, Shavuot would be
the most widely observed of Jewish holidays. But precisely the opposite is the
case among modern Jews. No major festival suffers from greater neglect. Yet
Shavuot, which caps the period of seven weeks since the second Passover Seder
and simply means "weeks," is rife with gravity. As the liturgy for
the day constantly reminds us, Shavuot commemorates the divine gift of Torah
received at Mount Sinai, in consequence of which Judaism spawned a
text-centered religious community, possibly the first in human history. Shavuot,
then, is about the essential and unique nature of Judaism, a portable religion
based on a canon susceptible to unending interpretation. At Sinai, freedom from
slavery was recast into fidelity to law and literacy.
But that defining content is not enough to imbue Shavuot
with power or popularity. And the reason tells us something about the workings
of Judaism. Shavuot is ritually bereft. Unlike Pesach or Sukkot, it lacks a set
of distinctive practices that would convey experientially its meaning and
message. There is nothing comparable to the seder or Sukkah for Shavuot, no
absorbing home ritual that might unite family and friends in preparation and
observance.
The commemoration of revelation is largely confined to the
synagogue. The few paragraphs devoted to Shavuot in the Shulhan Arukh [Jewish
Code of Law] deal solely with the adjustment of the liturgy (Orah Hayyim,
494). Nothing ever came to replace the bringing of first fruits to the Temple
on Shavuot, which expressed the festival's older agricultural meaning. To shift
the impact of Shavuot from nature to history did preserve its character as a
day of thanksgiving, but without the ritual choreography that could engage the
solitary Jew. Disembodied theology has never been the fare of popular religion.
In short, Shavuot begged for ritual enhancement and this is
the need increasingly met by the custom of Tikkun Leil Shavuot, the
practice of spending the first night of Shavuot awake in the study of Torah in
heightened anticipation of the anniversary of its revelation. Usually done
together with at least a minyan
[quorum] of participants, the rite, like the seder, is one of re-enactment.
With the first crack of dawn, group study turns to communal prayer, culminating
in the reading of the Ten Commandments given at Sinai in the unnamed third
month of Sivan after the exodus (Exodus 19:1). The combination of extraordinary
acts--an all-nighter followed by a sunrise service--created exactly the kind of
experiential ritual able to express the particularity of Shavuot. In the last
decade both in Israel and America, the ritual in one form or another has caught
on among non-Orthodox Jews in ever widening circles. Many synagogues are now
lit throughout the night and have multiple services in the morning for early
birds and regulars.
The ritual itself is post-talmudic, originating most likely
in kabbalistic [mystical] circles in medieval Spain. The Zohar, which seems to
know of the practice, attributes it to early pietists who perhaps sought to
distinguish themselves from their ancient ancestors. According to one midrash [commentary], the latter slept
nonchalantly through the night preceding the event and had to be roused by
lightning and thunder. Forcing ourselves to go sleepless the night before the
commemoration of that momentous event thus constitutes an act of rectification
(hence Tikkun). Another Zoharic explanation suggests the image of marriage. At
Sinai, the Torah as bride and Israel as groom were joined in eternal union. To
recall the feverish preparation of the night before the wedding, pietists
reenacted the vigil and labor by studying through the night (Magen Avraham,
O.H. 494; J.D. Eisenstein, Otzar Dinim u-Minhagim, p. 393).
In time, the ritual gave rise to an extensive collection of
texts, which stressed completeness rather than appropriateness. During the
course of the night, the group was to recite (rather than study) a few verses
from every parashah in the Torah and every book of the Tanakh, including all of
Ruth, a few passages from every tractate of the Mishnah, and the passage from
the Zohar describing revelation as union. The final text of the Tikkun lists
the 613 commandments of the Torah as compiled by Maimonides. What is unfurled
in this sprawling canvas teeming with texts is the implicit affirmation that
each and every aspect of Judaism is but a branch of the original tree of life
planted by God at Sinai. The freedom to interpret the infinite meaning of God's
words is the sap that has sustained and yielded this luxuriant growth.
Indeed, the Torah became the bedrock of Judaism not so much
by assertion as by ritual. Liturgy reinforced the claim to canonical status.
The progressive chanting (not reading) of Torah from beginning to end every
Shabbat in the synagogue, whether annually as in Babylonia or triennially as in
Palestine, transformed the Jews into a people imprinted by a book. Its
narrative functioned as the unifying metahistory of the nation and the building
blocks of public discourse, even as its legislation garnered widespread
acceptance and adherence. The synagogue developed into the national theater in
which Scripture and liturgy converged to reenact weekly the awesome
transmission of Torah at Sinai. Every aspect of the ritual was meant to convey
the numinous quality of the original drama.
In the Ashkenazic rite [which is practiced by Jews with
Eastern European roots], after the Torah has been set down to read, but before
the first aliyah, the gabbai recites four verses from Scripture (Psalm 19:8-9,
29:1, 2 Samuel 22:31) that enunciate the conviction that our Torah is just,
pure, and perfect, and its divine author without blemish. As he finishes, the
congregation affirms in unison with another verse that "Those of you who
hold fast to the Lord your God are still alive this day" (Deuteronomy
4:4). This prologue amounts to a creedal declaration explaining the ritual.
Nothing less than the embodiment of God's will, the Torah is the Jewish key to
salvation.
The constant reading of Torah in the synagogue made of every
Shabbat Shavuot. It is inconceivable to me that the Torah would ever have
become the dominant and pervasive text of Jewish life without it. The diffusion
of theology requires ritual. Modern Jews are at risk not because they have lost
their faith, but because they have lost their appreciation for ritual.
Ismar Schorsch served as the chancellor of the Jewish
Theological Seminary.