Tents of Mercy Congregation
Kiryat Yam, Israel

Summer Rain
This year in Israel with all the social and political upheaval, the weather has not been a topic of interest. However, a few weeks ago, the “early rain” came very early as a thunderstorm downpour (Deuteronomy 11:14). Usually, the early rain comes during Sukkot, the Feast of Tabernacles, ruining our decorations and surprising the faithful and adventurous who are sleeping in the temporary dwelling places. So having the long summer dryness quenched many weeks prematurely, was surprising. So surprising that for a minute it trumped all the other dramatic things going on, and for a moment we felt like the British, gasping and commenting in disbelief over the weather. Heat and rain just don’t go together in our minds.
Israel is used to the dusty sheen that covers everything throughout the six warm, dry months of the year – the sidewalks, the trees and especially the cars. Typically, we try to time our car washing so that it is not directly before a particularly dusty heatwave – when the sands are blown over from the Arabian Deserts.
These clean and dirty cycles are a very good and present metaphor for the overriding theme of the fall feasts we are now celebrating. As Rosh Hashanah, the Feast of Trumpets begins, we enter into the ten "days of awe" approaching the Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur). During those ten days we are called to a time of personal assessment, to quiet the heart and open the ears for the sound of the shofar. We eat apples and honey and bless one another with promises of a sweet year – counting on God’s gracious forgiveness, the same way we count on the rain to wash away the summer dust.
“You will again have compassion on us; you will tread our sins underfoot and hurl all our iniquities into the depths of the sea.” (Micah 7:19 NIV)
A Shofar “Siren”
The shofar, the central character during Rosh Hashanah, has different voices. You can hear each clearly, if you listen carefully and if the person blowing it has some finesse.
It can sound like a battle cry.
It can sound like grief and mourning.
It can sound like rejoicing and jubilee, and
it can sound like a very important announcement.
In Biblical times, Israelites were adept at identifying the various messages of the shofar. It was after all, their main mass-communication tool.
Today we are saturated with multiple types of communication: television commercials, billboards, cell phones, radio advertisements, and so many more. Yet, one sound that Israelis immediately pay attention to is the homeland security siren. Especially after a tense season or in a tense area of the country where the sirens go off a lot, our senses are attuned to that sound, and we are instantly on alert if we hear anything in that frequency.
If it wasn’t so sad and serious, it would be funny, and still is, in fact, to see how a group of people respond when somewhere in the distance a high-pitched sound is heard. Immediately they stop talking and cock their heads, listening to see if it is actually a siren. Israelis learn at a young age listen for the sound of the siren. And we have seen evidence of the life-saving power of citizens being attuned and obedient to its call.
The shofar is no longer used as a civic communication tool, but its spiritual significance remains. It is a special and moving part of the celebration of the Fall Feasts, and a sound that even secular Israelis acknowledge as special, symbolic and even sacred.
“On the first day of the seventh month hold a sacred assembly and do no regular work. It is a day for you to sound the trumpets.” (Numbers 29:1 NIV)
A Gift with No Strings Attached
During the Fall Feasts it is customary for friends and family to give and receive gifts. Even employees typically receive gifts from their employers at this season. To this end, many stores advertise special deals and discounts. But only humanitarian aid efforts offer something for free. In fact, the scriptures give this direct instruction:
“Go your way, eat the fat, drink the sweet, and send portions to those for whom nothing is prepared; for this day is holy to our Lord.” (Nehemiah 8:10 NKJV)
We are blessed to have been able to carry out this instruction literally, by distributing 900 holiday food bags in this season to needy and struggling families in our city.
A free pass, a free give away, something for nothing – are things no Israeli expects to receive. We are suspicious of free handouts, free trials and gifts with supposedly no strings attached. When we succeed in working the system, and get something for nothing we celebrate, but receiving something genuinely for free is shocking.
The closing lines of the traditional Rabbinical prayer “al cheit” recited on Yom Kippur, sum up the thorough and meticulous repentance of past sins with these words:
“[For] those of which we are aware and those of which we are not aware… Those of which we are aware – we have already declared them before You and confessed them to You. And those of which we are not aware – before You they are revealed and known…”
It's like receiving a traffic report for an offense you didn’t even realize you committed, and then having the fine covered or cancelled. The traditional prayer covers all the bases, repenting and asking for forgiveness.
However, Leviticus 17:11 tells us that it is blood that makes atonement. The striving and fasting and praying and the commandment-keeping is not sufficient payment for forgiveness of sin. And Yeshua has paid that price in our place:
“For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Messiah Yeshua our Lord.” (Romans 6:23 ESV)
We send warm greetings to you from Tents of Mercy for a Happy Fall Feast Season and solicit your prayers for us and our nation at this time! May your name be written in the Book of Life!
