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My favorite kippah, or sacred head
covering, is black velvet, with a burnished gold woven headband, and
Hebrew words inscribed on its metallic clasp. When I place it on my
head, I feel some of the awe and power ascribed to the Kohen Gadol, the
High Priest described in Exodus 39:30. "And they made the plate of of
the holy crown of pure gold and wrote upon it a writing, like the
engravings of a signet: Holy to the Lord."
Immersing myself in the ancient imagery connects me to the mysteries of
the Kohen Gadol, the High Priest of Israel. Carolyn Myss, the well
known healer, explains that all of us come into this world with
contracts to express a variety of archetypes, although we may have one
that is most prominent at a given time.
For me, the the archetype of the High Priest has been a prominent theme
during the last quarter century of my life. It represents for me the
Spiritual Transformer and Healer. When I was invited to be the head of
a seminary training rabbis and cantors,* I was at first overwhelmed. No
woman before had been head of such an institution. But drawing on my
inner connection to Israel’s High Priest and to Divine Wisdom gave me
the courage to take the challenge.
This connection is not something for a select few. Rather, it is a
quality imbedded in all Jewish souls. Torah states, in Ex. 19:6, "you
shall be to Me a mamlechet kohanim, a kingdom of priests, and a holy
nation." That is, all Jews have the potential to be spiritual
transformers. Special garments help make this possible.
The ancient priests of Israel wore headpieces that bore the inscription
"Kodesh l’Adonai," holy to G*d. This engraving was worn on their
foreheads, in the position of the third eye. Can you imagine what it
would be like to see everything as if it were holy to G*d?
In the mystical tradition of Kaballah, the head is the seat of three
energy centers connected to wisdom. Chochmah represents the seat of
inspiration. Binah is the place of intellectual conceptualization. Da’at
is the home of balanced knowledge or wisdom. As divine
energy flows into our heads it courses through the centers of Chochmah
and Binah, and balances out in Da’at, the site of the tzits, the golden
plate with the inscription, "Holy to G*d." Da’at, wisdom, then shines
forth from this forehead center. At the same time, golden energy
radiates from the crown, the nezer ha-kodesh.
When we imagine wearing this crown, we can connect with these highest
sources of wisdom. This gift is available to all of us because we are "b’tzelem
Elohim," in the image of G*d.
Remember the old saying, "Clothes make the man." There is more
than a kernel of truth in it. When we put on something that makes us
feel special, we are capable of going beyond our usual abilities.
When I feel that I am wearing a headdress of holiness, I see the world
in a different light. It gives me hope; it brings me cheer. The nezer
ha-kodesh is my Jewish equivalent of rose-colored glasses. When I see
through G*d's light, I feel I can shine G*d’s light out into the world,
and to the people and places in need.
I especially love to share this teaching with elders, and with those who
are no longer mobile due to illness or age, because as long as we have
consciousness, we have the power to make a difference. Indeed, it is
often those who have the wisdom of maturity who can send the clearest,
brightest light.
In these days filled with so much darkness, let us all reclaim our power
to send light. It may only be through our combined focusing of light
that we can save the world from the destructive course on which we are
now riding. Through our efforts as descendants of the Kohen Gadol, we
can transform the world with the light of holiness.
Ken yehi ratzon. May this come to be.
*The Academy for Jewish Religion, campuses in
Riverdale,NY and Los Angeles, CA
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