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Eliyahu Safran

Seven: the power of numbers

Numbers have power and significance. Some numbers have greater significance than others, often due to their properties as primes or unique, or their role in anchoring our numbering system. The number one is unique. It is the identity number. It is, by definition, singular. “Who Knows One?” goes the Passover song. “One is our God Who is in the Heavens and on Earth.” The number two defines the concept of evenness. Three, an ideal balance, whether in geometry or the world. Ten is the basis for our numbering system. These numbers resonate in our consciousness and our world but no number has the power and significance of the number seven.

It is the perfect number. More than that, it is Judaism’s most sacred number. Seven is completeness and wholesomeness. My uncle, Rabbi Alexandre Safran Z’L, concludes his prolific discussion of “Jewish time /Sabbath time” in his Israel in Time & Space by noting that, the number seven thus joins for all eternity the Creator and His Creation, God and His people; and the hyphen uniting them, is the holy Shabbat.” For, as we know, the Sabbath is the seventh day. Shemittah, the seventh year. Yovel, the culmination of seven cycles of seven years.

Rabbi Shraga Simmons underscores the power of seven when he considers Shavuot. He finds ‘Shavuot” – literally, “weeks” a curious name  for the holiday. While the name does highlight the seven-week period between Passover and Shavuot in which we count each day (and week) in anticipation and preparation for re-living the Sinai revelation, he remains troubled by the name. “Why not call the holiday ‘Torah,’ or ‘Sinai,’ ‘Commandments,’ or ‘Tablets’?”

He asks a good question.

He goes on, “Time contains many different entities. Nearly all of them are related to natural phenomena. Days, nights, months, seasons and years are all directly determined, in some way, by the constellations. There is one exception – the week. The formulation of a week seems to be totally arbitrary. Who needs it? Let one day just follow the previous one. And why seven days”

“The concept of a week and its constitution of 7 days is one that is strictly God-invented and human-adopted. While we may quibble about creation – how, when, by whom, why – the world has consensually agreed to the concept of a week. And whenever a week is completed it is yet another reminder to mankind (or should be) that God created the world in seven days. (Only six days were required to manufacture the physical structures, but the process was not complete until the spiritual realm, Shabbat, was added.)

Call it the ‘week link.'”

The significance of “seven” is woven throughout our lives and experience. The seven branches of the Temple Menorah. The sprinkling of the blood seven times in the Temple. The seven days of shiva. The seven days of celebration for chatan and kalah. Seven aliyot. Seven mitzvoth required on Sukkot. Seven major days of celebration in Jewish calendar. Seven days of nidah…and on and on.

Seven completes a cycle fully and wholly. Brit Milah, which lifts the newborn son from a mere physical existence into meaningful, goal oriented Jewish life, takes place on the eighth day. Why eight days? Rav Hirsch explains that this is because the “young being must pass through a full period of seven days as a creature in body; and only on the eighth day must the seal of Israel be impressed upon him.”

Rav Kook finds in Shemittah and Yovel a completeness of life’s spiritual qualities. Too soon, the fruit is not ripened. Too late, it is overripe and rotted. At its time…Without the fulness of “seven” there is an emptiness, an unripeness, still awaiting its time. “Quality of life can be improved through the affording of a breathing space from the bustle of everyday affairs… What the Sabbath achieves regarding the individual, the Shemittah achieves with regard to the nation as a whole.” Shemittah and Yovel are not mere mechanisms of ensuing equality, freedom from poverty and slavery. More importantly, they are a means of attaining a fullness and wholeness, of attaining holiness complete.

In Nitzavim, the Parasah read on Shabbat Shuva or the Shabbat prior to Rosh Hashanah, the word shuv, “to turn or to return” occurs seven times in various forms, all underlining the theme of repentance, of teshuva (itself, a form of shuv). This speaks to the deep relationship between the number seven, connoting completeness, to teshuva, repenting and returning.

The Torah source of teshuva, “You shall then return to God your Lord, and will obey Him,” is one of these seven verses.

Because man has free will and has the choice of attaining wholeness and completion or remaining incomplete, the Rambam writes, he “should strive to repent” of all sins, as well as investigate and repent of any evil disposition. “Great is repentance, for it brings man near, back to the Divine Presence.”

Teshuva turns back to completion, to a state of wholeness and completeness. To perform teshuva  is to arrive at one’s full potential and real self. Without teshuva, one’s life is lived as a series of discrete moments, with good and evil, success and failure intimately related. Without teshuva, the week is seven days, not a grand march toward the glory of Shabbat.

Seven.

Marriage is nothing but a cohabitative partnership without the fulfillment of the sheva (seven) brachot ideals. Faith, without the completeness of the seven mitzvoth enunciated in the Shema, an empty proclamation. Agriculture is backbreaking labor without the peace and tranquility of the Shemittah year.

The Zohar teaches that twenty six generations before the creation of the world, the twenty two letters of the alphabet descended from the Crown of God whereon they were engraved with a pen of flaming fire. They gathered around God and each entreated that the world be created through him. The resh was rejected, for it introduces the words ra and rasha – evil. The mem was rejected, for it is the first letter of mehuma, confusion.  Each letter, in its turn, presented itself as the one worthy to be the vessel through which the world would come into being. All fell short until finally, the aleph was selected. Why? It modestly made no claim at all.

While zayin, numeric equivalent to seven, argued that it should have been chosen because it begins the verse [zachor] which ordains the observance of the Sabbath, God said, no. “You may not help me in the work of Creation, for zayin is the word for weapon.”

Seven. The perfect number. The most sacred number. Whole. Complete. The quality and value of seven is found in Shabbat, Shemittah, and Yovel. Seven. It calls us to holiness. Each one of us is endowed with the free will and inner strength to attain that completeness and holiness. But, like the letter zayin, we not only have the potential for holiness but also for evil. Each day, each moment, we do battle with the zayin weapon.

Our lifetime is made up of these battles. We fight with ourselves and with others. Even the seven Noachide laws no longer hold sway.

If we entered our battles with zayin only with our free will and animal strength, we would be crushed as the dust. But we are gifted with teshuva. Teshuva, called for seven times, so that each of us can find our path to “return to God…and obey Him.”

In honor of my RJJ classmates, as we celebrate our Yovel anniversary this coming Sunday. 

About the Author
Rabbi Dr. Eliyahu Safran is an educator, lecturer and author. He has devoted many years in the rabbinate, Jewish education, and as vice president of marketing and communications at OU Kosher. He resides in New York, while enjoying his long stays in Jerusalem. His highly acclaimed "Something Old, Something New - Pearls from the Torah" has been published by KTAV, July 2018.
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