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The Monthly eRosh

A collection of articles focusing on the Hebrew month and the Appointed Times, remembering events of the past that shape our future.

From the month of: שבט : Shevat

 

The Trees of Shevat

As winter drones on, one often feels that the cold will never end. Thoughts of the warm sunshine and colors of vegetation seem like a distant memory. For those in more snowy climates, cabin fever takes effect.

But as we enter into the month of Shevat, particularly those in the Land of Israel, we know that winter is coming to an end. Typically, the rainy season in Israel is over by Shevat and crops and plant life begin to emerge once again.

It was for this reason that the sages of old declared Tu B'Shevat (15th of Shevat) as a New Year. Not in the sense that the calendar starts over or the years change. Rather, Tu B'Shevat is a new year for trees. The Torah requires that the fruit of trees planted in the Land of Israel remain forbidden for three years (Lev. 19:23-25). Instead of counting the years for each individual tree, all trees were given a singular date which they would be counted from.

Another date of significance during this month is the 1st day of the eleventh month (Shevat). It was on this date that Moses began his giving of the Torah to the generation that would enter the Land of Promise (Deuteronomy 1:3). We have this teaching of Moses recorded in the book of Deuteronomy. Since the previous generation had perished in the wilderness, the next generation had to renew their covenant with God and accept his Torah as the rule of their lives.

There is a wonderful interconnection between trees, fruit and Torah described in Psalm 1:

How blessed is the man who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked, nor stand in the path of sinners, nor sit in the seat of scoffers! But his delight is in the Torah of the LORD, and in His Torah he meditates day and night. He will be like a tree firmly planted by streams of water, which yields fruit in its season and its leaf does not wither; and in whatever he does, he prospers. (Psalm 1:1-3)

Like the generation crouched on the banks of the Jordan, we too must accept upon ourselves the ways of the Torah. For many, the Torah is not a family heirloom. The Torah is an ancient treasure that we have uncovered for ourselves; something our father's lost and did not realize it was theirs.

And yet, the Torah is not simply an item we can possess. Once we have discovered it, we must walk in it. We must root ourselves in the soil of the Word saturated by the water of the Spirit. When we do so, we find life. We bear fruit. We stand firm in the face of adversity. We become like trees. As we grow, we grow into the image of Yeshua the Messiah, the Tree of Life (Revelation 22:2).

May your month be filled with fruit and prosperity!

 

Print eDrash : The Trees of Shevat

Current Month | 5773 (2013)

Sivan: סיון | May – June

 

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