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Yom Kippur
The Path of Repentance
From: The Jewish Experience of Time: Philosophical Dimensions
of the Jewish Holy Days
By Eliezer Schweid
The common ideational basis of atonement and repentance
is reflected in confession. Confession is a central theme
in both the ritual of atonement and in repentance, stressing
the primary moral significance of atonement. In order to be
cleansed of sin, one must acknowledge that they have sinned.
Such a statement might appear simplistic and superfluous -
could a human being knowingly commit an act that is contrary
to what they have been commanded to do without "acknowledging
that they have sinned"? It is important to note that
the reference here is not to acts committed in error such
as an unknown prohibition or something meant to lead to a
different result. The purview here is those cases that were
committed deliberately, through conscious choice. Nevertheless,
"recognizing that one has sinned" is a highly significant
step, but can not be overcome and the individual cleansed
until this step is actually taken. If one considers the psychological
state of the sinner a highly complex mechanism of concealment
can be seen to be employed. Human beings conceal their acts
from the eyes of others and, in so doing represses it or represses
acknowledgement of it from their own consciousness. The sinner
chooses not to see, or chooses to rationalize the act in a
manner that relieves the sinner of full responsibility of
what he or she has done: circumstances led them to do it,
or it was the fault of others, as well as other ways in which
the issue of the sinner's guilt can be skirted. Even if the
sinner is aware of their connection to the forbidden act,
even if they know that the act is indeed forbidden, it does
not mean that they have "recognized that they have sinned".
Such recognition comes only when complete responsibility is
accepted by the sinner for their act, without concealment,
without hiding, and without excuses. This is the essence of
confession. The sinner confesses their sins aloud in the presence
of others. Doing this, the sinner establishes their own responsibility
as an objective fact that can not be evaded, even by themselves.
This is the explanation of the statement made by Maimonides,
in the halakhic definition quoted above: "
and he
must confess aloud and speak aloud these things that he has
resolved in his heart." In other words, until the words
have emerged from the hiding place in the soul of the sinner
and have been stated before others, they are not a total and
binding fact for the sinner themselves. The sinners can still
hide from their own responsibility. However, if the sinner
does not recognize that they have sinned and takes responsibility,
a possibility is opened that was not present until now. Only
now, when the sinner no longer hides their sins, can they
be freed from it. Those who hide their sin can never be freed
from the double guilt they bear- the guilt of the sin itself
and the guilt of it's concealment. In this respect, confession
is indeed a decisive step.
However, confession may lead to two distinct options- the
path of atonement and the path of repentance. The path of
atonement involves a ritual act of physical cleansing, as
if the individual has washed their soul of it's abomination
as he washes his body in water; the water takes the filth
and carries it away. The person who confesses by placing his
hands on the head of a sacrificial animal eliminates his sins
as if they were foreign objects that had adhered to him from
within himself. The priest then sprinkles the blood of the
sacrifice on the altar and, in the presence of sanctity, cleanses
the sinner of the impurity that has been eliminated along
with his sin. The description of these acts in the chapter
of the Priestly code appears to be mechanistic and external,
with no place for the soul itself. Can this really be the
case? Can a person confess and be cleansed without feeling
guilt and remorse and a desire to be purified? It is difficult
to see sacrifice as anything other than a symbolic act, which,
for its completion, requires a psychological process of involvement
on the part of the sinner.
The fact remains, however, that in the legal description a
psychological process is neither mentioned nor required, and
that this act is perceived as part of the ongoing routine
of life. The offering of the sacrifice and the atonement are
not seen as a form of change, or as an effort to achieve change
in an individual's life. Humans sin and atone, sin and atones,
accepting as a fact of life that sin is part of ordinary reality
and can not be changed. The sinner's emotional participation
in the act of atonement is therefore minimal, confined to
recognition of the obligation to do something in order to
atone for sin. It is this fact that appears to provoke the
criticism of the prophets. They are not opposed to the ritual
itself; they are furious at a ritualistic act with a mechanical
perception of sin as part of a taken-for-granted routine of
individual and communal life.
The path of repentance goes in a different direction. Repentance,
as understood by the prophets, is an internal, psychological
process that aims to achieve comprehensive change in human
behavior and thus change the personality that develops through
an individual's acts. While ritual atonement is a permanent
and cyclical base in the routine of life, and effectively
accepts sin, repentance is an attempt to take a different
path-the path of good deeds and purity, free from sin. Can
humankind free themselves completely from the natural tendency
to sin? Is there in the world " a just man who will do
only good and will not sin"? The Hebrew prophets and
Sages knew full well what in the temporal life there is no
complete expurgation of the tendency to sin. So, repentance
itself, as the ongoing effort to proceed along the path of
good deeds and purity, was seen as the alternate route. Repentance,
as distinct from atonement, was seen as a single act within
a complex of several acts. Repentance is defined as an entire
way of life, and the repentance is present in every segment
of the path. An act of atonement is always an ongoing psychological
process rather than a single event.
Once again the reference to Maimonides's summary of the Sages'
opinion. Repentance begins with confession, as the sinner
accepts responsibility for their sin; it continues with an
expression of remorse: the sinner rejects what they have done
and actually changes their will. The sinner no longer wants
what was desired when they sinned. The sinner then tests the
sincerity of their remorse through a decision not to sin any
more. The sinner now faces the future with a psychological
intention that is different from it was at the time when they
sinned. The contrast with the act of atonement is shown once
more: in atonement, the human concentrates on the atoning
act itself- on the present; in repentance, humans face the
future. The sinner recognizes that the future is the test.
As Maimonides concludes in his halakhic language, "What
is complete repentance? It occurs when a person has the opportunity
to commit a transgression that they committed in the past
and determines not to do so because of their repentance. Not
because of fear and not because of inability.
If an individual is indeed ready to stand the test, then a
genuine change has taken place in their behavior and in themselves.
There is an essential difference between ritual atonement
and repentance-the manner in which the sinner is freed from
his sin. Atonement removes the infection of the soul caused
by sin, whereas repentance is a psychological immunization
process by which the sinner distances themselves from sin.
Through repentance, the sinner becomes a new person. If their
innermost will is changed, they are no longer the same person
they were when they sinned. Maimonides: "It is characteristic
of repentance that the person who repents always cries out
before the Lord in supplication, and does good deeds according
to his ability, and distances himself completely from the
matter in which he sinned, changing his name, as if to say
'I am someone else, I am not the person who committed that
act' changing all his acts to the path which is good and just"
(Chap. 2, IV). Thus, the trial is in choosing the path that
consistently seeks a tireless effort toward a wholeness of
life, of good deeds, and of purity. Ad it emerged in the tradition
of the Sages, Yom Kippur is the day on which the community
and all its individuals place themselves of the path of repentance.
It is not an isolated event, but rather the beginning of a
trajectory.
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