Shalom members and friends,

It’s the beginning of spring. In the midst of everything shutting down, the daffodils have just risen from their death to bloom for another life cycle. This cycle has meaning at this time of coronavirus, and many spiritual Jewish inferences can be drawn. Sometimes, God shakes up the foundations to wake us. The 2020 person, who has everything, is forced to go back to default, to restart. Everything we knew has changed so quickly.

The Biblical term for pandemic is Magefa or Pur’anut. The Talmud tells us, “Every pur’anut comes to wake us up.” (BT Yevamot 63) The element of fear ought to propel us to self-reflection. The preferred outcome is that we move forward from that experience. The word fear in Hebrew — Pachad, comprises the same three letters of Dachaf — to be propelled. We look up to heaven and we pray: “A song for ascents. I turn my eyes to the mountains; from where will my help come?” And we answer: “My help comes from the Lord, Maker of heaven and earth.” (Ps. 121)

What does God want from us? One of the answers is found in the Book of Deuteronomy, where God tells us the reason for pandemics He brings into the world: “Because you would not serve the Lord your God in joy and gladness over the abundance of everything.” (Duet. 28:47) When we have everything and still are not grateful. As an example, the Israelites sojourning in the desert for a time forgot how bad it was for them in Egypt. Despite being cared for by God, the people grew restive and murmured against God and against Moses. “Why did you make us leave Egypt to die in the wilderness? …we have come to loathe this miserable food.”

In response, God sends seraph serpents against the people. They bite the people, and many of the Israelites die. Then the people come to Moses, realizing they had sinned. God then commands Moses to make a seraph figure and to mount it on a standard. “And if anyone who is bitten looks at it, he shall recover.” (Num. 21:5-9) The Talmud then asks: “Did the serpent kill, or did the serpent bring back to life? Rather, when Israel would look upward and subject their hearts to their Father in heaven, they were healed; and if not, their [flesh] would melt away.” (Mishna RH 3:8) This is the essence of a spiritual virus. Healing it is moving from self-centered to God-centered. The physical death begins with a spiritual death.

In the month between Purim and Pesach, we experience this transition. We come out of the shadows, as the daffodils, to bloom in the spring. We are made well-aware of the spiritual virus that may loom large. The Shabbat before Purim is called Shabbat Zakhor — remember.  “Remember what Amalek did to you on your journey, after you left Egypt — how, undeterred by fear of God, he surprised you on the march, when you were famished and weary, and cut down all the stranglers in your rear. Therefore …you shall blot out the memory of Amalek from under heaven. Do not forget!” (Duet. 25:17-19)

Amalek is the spirit of the serpent in the Garden of Eden, and it comes back to attack us like a virus, over and over, until we blot it out. In the story of Purim, it’s Haman who is a descendant of Amalek, plotting to destroy us entirely, like a pandemic. And like a pandemic, we are commanded to wash it away from us assiduously. When King Saul does not adhere to this commandment, when he has the opportunity to wipe out Amalek but decides he will not, he loses his kingship. To cure ourselves from a virus, physical or spiritual, we have to separate ourselves.

Samuel had conveyed God’s directive to King Saul: “Now go, attack Amalek, and proscribe all that belongs to him. Spare no one, but kill alike men and women, infants and sucklings, oxen and sheep, camels and asses! …But Saul and the troops spared Agag and the best of the sheep, the oxen, the second-born, the lambs, and all else that was of value. They would not proscribe them; they proscribed only what was cheap and worthless. (1 Samuel 15:3, 9)  Since King Saul did not proscribed Amalek entirely, it gave birth later to Haman.

The key to fighting a physical or a spiritual virus is to work together. From Shabbat Zakhor (to remember), we end this period with Shabbat Vayakhel (congregation), the Shabbat before the month of Nissan. We are all one Adam. No matter where this body is attacked, from China, Italy, Iran, Israel, or the US, the whole body, the whole world will suffer. And now, we come together online, we come together by staying apart. Eventually, God will help us understand that we are one Adam: “For then I will make the peoples pure of speech, so that they all invoke the Lord by name and serve him with one accord.” (Zephania 3:9)  A world of holding hands six feet apart. This could help us correct the horrific history we caused each other — an opportunity in the making. After 5780 years of practice, lets make the third world war against a virus. And they won’t learn war anymore. They will convert their swords into plowshares, says the Prophet Isaiah. Pointing the sword towards elements of nature will make it a valuable plowshare. This is showtime for humanity. Pandemics and evil know no border or fence. Now, we must learn to look over the fence and take care of our neighbor. Together, we will make it.

What the world is going through now is a forced Shabbat experience. We should use the time of social distancing and isolation to elevate. A Midrash tells us that after two Shabbatot in a row that all Israel observe together, the third Shabbat is redemption — the arrival of the Messiah. It sounds easy, but our tradition tells us that the time of the Messiah will not be easy for everyone. Another Midrash teaches us that a person who eats the third meal on Shabbat (Seuda Shlisheet) will be protected during those days. What? All we have to do is eat a lot on Shabbat? No. What it means is that a person who practices Shabbat will not suffer being quiet at home for a long period of time. Be still and believe God is holding things together. “Be still and know that I am God” (Ps. 46:10)

As we enter the month of Nissan — meaning the month of “miracle,” let’s acknowledge that we are in the midst of a miracle. As one of our members told me, “We can’t control the wind of life, but we can adjust the sails.” (Arnold Gans) We look forward to an especially liberating experience of Passover. We will have life after this break. This is not the end of the world! (Perhaps only as we know it…) Take the precautions, but be calm. Show God that we get it. Let’s transform the social distancing into social engagement. Let us be grateful for what has been, and be open to the future. Like the rebirth of the daffodils, we will come back to a new life. But we don’t want the world to be the same again. Unity is first — praying that we can all succeed together. It’s showtime for humanity!

A healthy month of Nissan and Happy Passover.

—Rabbi Gadi Capela