Rabbi Ephraim Sprecher, Dean of Students and Senior Lecturer at Diaspora Yeshiva, is not only a popular speaker and teacher, but also a dynamic thinker and writer. A student of Harav Yaakov Kamenetsky and Harav Gedalia Schorr, Rabbi Sprecher was granted smicha (rabbinical ordination) by Torah Vodaath Yeshiva. Prior to his current position, Rabbi Sprecher was a professor of Judaic studies at Touro College in New York. In addition to his duties at Diaspora Yeshiva, Rabbi Sprecher writes a regular column on various Judaic topics in the Jewish Press, and lectures regularly at the OU Israel Center in Jerusalem.
Chanukah – Symbol of the G-dly, Eternal Soul
Published: Thursday, November 29, 2012 02:14:10 PM
Number of views: 2876

The Festival of Chanukah celebrates two miracles – the miraculous military victory over the Syrian Greeks and the supernatural phenomenon of one small cruse of oil supply for one day providing light for eight days. The miracle of the light, however, is the main focus and central theme of this Festival.

Thus, according to Halacha, when we light the candles in celebration of Chanukah, we are prohibited from using their light for any tasks. We are commanded to simply look at the light. All year long we are looking at what we see in the light, but on Chanukah we are to focus solely on seeing the light itself.

What is so special about the light of Chanukah? What is the Chanukah Menorah’s message for us in our personal lives? Why does the Rambam call Chanukah, “the most beloved and precious Mitzvah” after all it’s not even a Torah Mitzvah. Chanukah is only one of the seven Rabbinic Mitzvot.

The answer to these questions is that the Chanukah lights help us to focus on who we really are. We are not our body suits, but we are a part of G-d’s Endless Light. Chanukah lights are the symbol of the Divine spark of the human soul, as Shlomo Hamelech says in Mishlei, “Ner Hashem Nishmat Adam”, which means, “The candle of G-d is the soul of the human being”.

The Mishna in Avot, Ch. 4 teaches, “There are three crowns: The crown of the Torah, the crown of Kehuna [priesthood] and the crown of Monarchy.” Corresponding to these three crowns, with which Israel were crowned, there were three crowns on the Temple vessels. The crown of Torah corresponds to the gold crown, which was set on the Ark of Testimony (Containing the Two Tablets). The crown of Kehuna corresponds to the Incense Altar, for only regarding the Kohanim, [priests], does it say, “They shall place incense in Your Presence, and consume sacrifices on Your altar.” (Devarim33:10). Finally, the crown of Monarchy corresponds to the Table in the Sanctuary, for tables, which in Biblical and later Hebrew can symbolize wealth and bounty (See Psalm 23), may here be viewed as evoking the economic and political power of the state.

However, the Mishna adds that there is yet another crown, “the crown of a good name”, which the Mishna says “surpasses them all.” This crown is not enumerated among the others. Rather, it is kept separate from them, and it stands on its own. To what does this crown correspond in the Temple?

The Maharal MiPrague associates “the crown of a good name” with the fourth vessel of the Temple – the solid pure gold Menorah. The Menorah has no gold crown encompassing it. Neither was it made of acacia wood inlaid with gold like the three Temple vessels, mentioned above. Rather, the whole Menorah is like a pure golden crown, embellished with golden cups, knobs and flowers. The crown of the Menorah is not something extrinsic to it. The entire pure gold Menorah itself is a crown.

It is the same with a person’s good name. It is not an external crown that is placed upon one’s head. A person’s good name touches on his very essence. A good name includes one’s entire personality in all its components. It is not an external image, fashioned by public relations professionals, photographers and newsmen. A person’s good name is the reputation that he earns for himself through his whole life’s work, all his deeds and ventures. That is why the Mishna says that the “crown of a good name surpasses all the others”.

A person’s good name does not find expression at the beginning of his life. Rather, it is acquired through strenuous, daily toil over the course of one’s whole life. Shlomo Hamelech therefore said, “A good name is better than precious oil.” (Kohelet 7:1). However good it may be, oil is applied externally to a person’s body, while a good name is that person himself.

As we light the Menorah on Chanukah, that is a time to focus and reflect on the light of G-d, which is our eternal soul.

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