How to Count the Omer
What Do You Mean,
“Counting the Omer”?
“Count off seven full weeks. Count off fifty days” (Lev.23:15, NIV).
“Count off seven weeks . . . Then celebrate the Feast of Weeks”
(Deut.16:9-10). What is the significance of this commandment of
God? Does it have real meaning for us today? How should true
Christians view this command? How is it relevant to our lives?
Here is new understanding which will help you to become a true
OVERCOMER and to qualify to enter God’s Kingdom as one of
His “first-fruits” at the coming of the Messiah!
William F. Dankenbring
“You shall then COUNT seven
complete weeks after the day following the Passover holiday when you brought
the Omer as a wave offering” (Lev.23:15).
Notice that there are actually TWO
commands in counting the Omer! First, we
are commanded to “count off” the weeks, week by week. Then we are commanded to count off the DAYS,
till we come to fifty – the fiftieth day being Pentecost!
“Sefirat Ha’Omer” – counting the
Omer – refers to the forty-nine days from the second day of the Passover
festival, and recounts the journey of the Israelites from Egypt, through the
desert wastes, to the revelation of God at Mount Sinai, when the Commandments
of God were set forth from heaven, and God made a Covenant with His people
Israel, and “married” His bride – a “marriage covenant” (Jer.3:14).
This step-by-step journey through
the wilderness was a time of trial and testing.
God revealed to His people the Sabbath day (Exo.16), and satisfied their
hunger with manna from heaven. When they
complained of thirst, He caused water to spring forth. When the Amalekites attacked, He intervened
for them and helped them fight off the vicious hordes (known as the Hyksos in
Egyptian history).
Each day the Israelites – the people
of God – were commanded to count the Omer, as they experienced their journey
from captivity (
When
They left Egypt on the day of
Passover, Nisan 15, after the night when the first born of Egypt were all put
to death supernaturally (Exodus 12:29).
Says Avraham Yaakov Finkel in The
Essence of the Holy Days,
“When the
Israelites were in
forty-ninth
Gate of Impurity. God wanted to extract
forty-nine
gates in stages, by illuminating on each day between
Passover
and Shavuot the Gate of Holiness that is the counterpart
of
its opposite Gate of Impurity. This tikkum,
correction or restor-
ation,
comes to life each year in the counting of the Omer, on the
forty-nine
days between Passover – the day of the Exodus – and
Shavuot
– the day of the Giving of the Torah” (p.165, quoting
Rabbi
Moshe Chaim Luzzatto).
Another Jewish rabbi, Samson Raphael Hirsch, offers another
profound insight into the counting of the Omer.
Writes Avraham Finkel:
“He notes the
seven-day periods in the laws of uncleanness and purity
as
periods during which the individual strives to bring uncleanness to a
close
in order to enter a state of purity on the eighth day.
“Thus,
a sevenfold counting of seven-day periods, that is, a counting
of forty-nine days, would symbolize
the complete elimination of unclean-
ness,
namely, of bondage, to our senses. The fiftieth day [Pentecost or
Shavuot]
would mark our final entry into purity, that is, into the realm
of
moral freedom. The Omer count
thus symbolizes the idea that we
can
acquire moral freedom only through sevenfold intensive work on
ourselves”
(p.166).
How does this apply to God’s people, today?
Today, this daily count is
associated with the experience of a toddler (the newly born “child of God”, as
it were) exploring and gaining understanding of his life’s new environment (the
wilderness) and the protective nature of his parent (God) who nurtures him, and
provides structures and rules to safeguard him from evil.
This journey through the wilderness
is a TYPE of the Christian life of overcoming – from baptism and leaving sin
behind (Egypt), marching and struggling through the spiritual wilderness (this
evil world, and our human nature), until we reach the Kingdom of God – typified
by Mount Zion.
As we go through our Christian
lives, we meet obstacles, encounter problems, face trials and
difficulties. All these are reflected in
the “counting of the Omer,” a task which identifies with our progress in
“overcoming” our sins, faults, and human nature, putting sin out of our lives,
and developing the holy attributes of God, from the moment of conversion and
baptism, until that final time when we are changed into spirit beings, the sons
of the Father, and inherit the promises of the New Covenant, at the coming of
the Messiah!
As we go through life, we encounter
problems, bad habits, and trials which we need to overcome and “work
through.” We come upon “old habits”
which must be rooted out and changed. As
the apostle Paul wrote, “Now this I affirm and insist on in the Lord: you must no longer live as the Gentiles live,
in the futility of their minds. They are
darkened in their understanding, alienated from the life of God because of
their ignorance and hardness of heart.
They have lost all sensitivity and have abandoned themselves to
licentiousness, greedy to practice every kind of impurity. That is not the way you learned Christ!”
(Eph.4:17-20, NRSV).
Paul goes on, explaining, “You were
taught to put away your former way of life, your old self, corrupt
and deluded by its lusts, and to be RENEWED in the spirit of your MINDS, and to
clothe yourself with the NEW SELF, CREATED ACCORDING TO THE LIKENESS OF GOD in
true righteousness and holiness” (Eph.4:22-24).
Paul wrote to the Colossians in like
manner, saying, “So if you have been raised with Christ, seek the things that
are above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your mind on things that are above, not
on things that are on earth, for you have died, and your life is hidden with
Christ in God. . . Put to death, therefore, whatever in you that is earthly:
fornication, impurity, passion, evil desire, and greed (which is idolatry). On account of these the wrath of God is
coming on those who are disobedient.
These are the ways you also once followed, when you were living that
life. But now you must get rid of all
such things – anger, wrath, malice, slander, and abusive language from your
mouth. Do not lie to one another, seeing
that you have stripped off the old self with its practices and have clothed
yourselves with the NEW SELF, which is being renewed in knowledge according
to the image of its creator” (Col.3:1-10).
Paul sums up this process of
overcoming the sinful pulls of the flesh, and inculcating the very righteous
character of God, saying, “As God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, clothe
yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience. Bear with one another and, if anyone has
a complaint against another, forgive each other; just as the Lord has forgiven
you, so you also must forgive. Above
all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds everything together in
perfect harmony. And let the peace of
Christ rule in your hearts, to which indeed you were called in the one
body. And be thankful. Let the word of Christ dwell in you
richly; teach and admonish one another in all wisdom; and with gratitude in
your hearts sing psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs to God. And whatever you do, in word or deed, do
everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father
through him” (Col.3:12-17).
We find out that life has its ups
and downs, like a roller coaster. As we
fight and struggle against our human nature, and the downward pulls of the
flesh, we find it is a painful process.
Nevertheless, we endure to the end, we keep on keeping on, till that
final day when victory shall be ours, and our triumph shall be complete. Counting the Omer pictures our life’s
experiences and the process of overcoming and purifying ourselves from the
contamination and sins of the flesh, until we reach that final day of
Pentecost, which pictures the great day of the coming of the Messiah – the day
when Revelation is complete, and the Plan of God is finished, and there is
“time no more” and the Messiah Himself appears from heaven to inaugurate the
Messianic Age, taking us to Himself as His spiritual Bride (Rev.19:7).
The Christian life is a life of
spiritual struggle. We must learn to
keep our eyes on the goal. The apostle
Paul knew this.
Paul understood that we must endure to the end – that we must be FAITHFUL till our dying day, or till Christ returns (whichever comes first!). Paul wrote, of his own spiritual battle: “Do you not know that in a race the runners all compete, but only one receives the prize? RUN in such a way that you may WIN it. Athletes exercise self-control in all things; they do it to receive a perishable wreathe, but we an imperishable one. So I do not run aimlessly, nor do I box as though beating the air; but I punish my body and enslave it, so that after proclaiming to others I myself should not be disqualified” (I Cor.9:24-27, NRSV).
Notice this in the Amplified Parallel Bible: “Do you not know that in a race all the runners compete, but [only] one receives the prize? So RUN [your race] so that you may lay hold [of the prize] and make it yours. . .
“Therefore I do not run uncertainly (without definite aim). I do not box like one beating the air and striking without an adversary. But [like a boxer] I buffet my body [handle it roughly, discipline it by hardships] and subdue it, for fear that after proclaiming to others the Gospel and things pertaining to it, I MYSELF SHOULD BECOME UNFIT [not stand the test, be unapproved and rejected as a counterfeit].”
It is a remarkable fact that there
are “seven weeks” that we count the Omer.
These provide us seven optimal weeks to work on ourselves – seven weeks
of concentrated, distilled “overcoming.”
Paul also wrote about this battle in the second letter to the Corinthians. He declared, “For though we walk (live) in the flesh, we are not carrying on our warfare according to the flesh and using mere human weapons. For the weapons of our WARFARE are not physical [weapons of flesh and blood], but they are mighty before God for the overthrow and destruction of strongholds, [inasmuch as we] refute arguments and theories and reasonings and every proud and lofty thing that sets itself up against the [true] knowledge of God; and we lead every thought and purpose away captive into the OBEDIENCE of Christ (the Messiah, the Anointed One), being in readiness to punish every [insubordinate for his] disobedience, when your own submission and OBEDIENCE [as a church] are fully secure and complete” (II Cor.10:3-6).
Notice! We are not yet “fully secure and complete.”
Rather, as Paul himself wrote to the Philippians, again quoting the Amplified Parallel Bible, “[For my determined purpose is] that I may know Him [that I may progressively become more deeply and intimately acquainted with Him, perceiving and recognizing and understanding the wonders of His Person more strongly and clearly], and that I may in that same say come to know the power outflowing from His resurrection [which it exerts over believers], and that I may so share His sufferings as to be continually TRANSFORMED [in spirit into His likeness even] to His death, [in the hope] that IF POSSIBLE I may attain to the [personal and moral] RESURRECTION . . . Not that I have now attained [this ideal], or have already been made perfect, but I PRESS ON TO LAY HOLD OF (GRASP) and make my own, that for which Christ Jesus (the Messiah) has laid hold of me and made me His own.” (Phil.3:10-12).
Notice Paul’s attitude! He did not believe or claim to already have salvation, but sought to progressively GROW up into the likeness of Christ, so that “IF POSSIBLE” he may attain to the resurrection of the righteous dead, or salvation!
Paul goes on, saying, “I do not consider, brethren, that I have captured and made it my own [yet]; but one thing I do [it is my one aspiration]: forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, I PRESS ON TOWARD THE GOAL TO WIN the [supreme and heavenly] prize to which God in Christ Jesus is calling us upward.” So, Paul declares, “So let those [of us] who are spiritually mature and full-grown have this mind and these convictions; and if in any respect you have a different attitude of mind, God will make that clear to you also” (verses 13-15).
Once we begin
the Christian life, there is a lot of overcoming to do – straining forward to
make sure that we will enter the
The apostle Peter also declared that we must escape the moral decay and rottenness of human nature and become partakers of “the divine nature” (II Pet.1:4). He wrote, “For this very reason, adding your diligence [to the divine promises], employ every effort in exercising your faith to develop virtue (excellence, resolution, Christian energy), and in [exercising] virtue [develop] knowledge (intelligence), and in [exercising] knowledge [develop] self-control, and in [exercising] self-control [develop] steadfastness (patience, endurance), and in [exercising] steadfastness [develop] godliness (piety), and in [exercising] piety [develop] brotherly affection, and in [exercising] brotherly affection [develop] Christian love. For as these qualities are yours and increasingly abound in you, they will keep [you] from being idle or unfruitful unto the [full personal] knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ (the Messiah, the Anointed One)” (verses 5-8).
“Overcoming” human nature, the pulls of the flesh, the temptations of the world, and the seduction of Satan, involves a “whole lifetime” of work, diligent effort, growth, and steadfast endurance, to the very end – till either death comes, or the Messiah Himself returns!
Peter summarizes the situation, saying, “For whoever lacks these qualities is blind, [spiritually] short-sighted, seeing only what is near to him, and has become oblivious [to the fact] that he was cleansed from his old sins. Because of this, brethren, be all the more solicitous and eager to MAKE SURE (to ratify, to strengthen, to make steadfast) YOUR CALLING AND ELECTION, for IF YOU DO THIS, you will never stumble or fall. Thus there will be richly and abundantly provided for you entry into the eternal kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ” (verses 9-11).
Therefore, as the apostle Paul also reminds us, we must constantly, diligently “work out” our own salvation. He declared to the church in Philippi, “Therefore, my dear ones, as you have always obeyed [my suggestions], so now, not only [with enthusiasm you would show] in my presence but much more because I am absent, WORK OUT (cultivate, carry out to the goal, and fully complete) YOUR OWN SALVATION with reverence and awe and trembling (self-distrust, with serious caution, tenderness of conscience, watchfulness against temptation, timidly shrinking from whatever might offend God and discredit the name of Christ)” (Phil.2:12).
This is clearly a life-long process of overcoming, fighting the pulls of the flesh, and striving to become like Christ in every way!
Our “counting the omer” is like a
microcosm of the life of God’s people.
It is like a spiritual “template” or “pattern” which shows us the WAY of
OVERCOMING! What we do and how we do
during the counting of the omer will very likely be reflected in how we live
our lives and overcome during the rest of the year! If we don’t take it seriously, then very
likely we won’t take the spiritual struggle we have against the flesh very
seriously the rest of the year, either!
We are commanded to “count the
weeks.” The Hebrew word for “weeks” is shavua
(see Deut.16:9). But in Leviticus
23:15, God inspired Moses to write, “you shall count off seven weeks; they
shall be complete” (NRSV). Here, for
“weeks,” God inspired Moses to use the word shabbatot which is usually
translated as “Sabbaths.” Why the
change – the difference in wording?
Evidently, God intends us to LEARN a LESSON from this! The word shabbat in Hebrew literally
means “rest, interruption, cessation” – “intermission” (see Strong’s
Concordance, #7673 and 7676). Gesenius
Hebrew Lexicon defines the word further:
“l) to rest, to keep as a day of rest . . . The primary idea appears to
be that of to sit down, to sit still. . . 2) to cease, to desist, to
leave off . . . 3) to celebrate the Sabbath . . .” It also sometimes means “week,” as the
word does in the Syriac and Greek (compare Matthew 28:1 and Deut.16:9).
Therefore,
the basic meaning of this word is a cessation from labor, a rest, an
intermission, an interruption, a ceasing from something.
It is also the name for the seventh
day of the week, and the name of each of the annual holy days -- all of which
are “days of REST,” and therefore qualify as shabbatot. But as we are to “count the Omer,” then,
when we come to seven days of counting, we come to a shabbat, that is, a
“cessation from labor,” an “intermission.”
This tells us that after each seven-day period we have completed that
“week” of counting – that week of “overcoming.”
In essence, at the end of each seven days, we have a special day of
“rest,” of “integration,” “an intermission,” when we “leave off” that week’s
counting and begin the next week’s counting.
When we “fulfill” each week, we then go on to the next week.
Why are there “seven” such periods
in the Omer count – seven “weeks”? What does the number “seven” refer to in
this relationship? “Seven,” of course,
is the number of COMPLETION, of PERFECTION!
It is God’s number -- the number of complete perfection and
fulfillment. The Omer count is a period
of 7 7s – seven weeks of seven days each – or a total of 49 days (7 x 7) –
which essentially refers to ultimate completion or ultimate perfection! La crème de la crème!
Seven
is also the number of divine attributes which summarize the holy, righteous
character of God – attributes we should be working on to integrate into our own
character! The seven weeks of counting
the Omer, therefore, can be viewed as “seven stages” of developing the seven
characteristics of God into our lives and minds, hearts, and beings – working
on one particular characteristic or attribute each week!
In Leviticus 23:13, the Hebrew word
for “count” is “safar.” There are
several different meanings for “safar.”
Although safar can mean to count up the total in order to arrive
at a sum, it can also just as easily and accurately mean to inscribe by making
a mark, to enumerate, or to celebrate.
Says Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance, “to score with a mark as a
tally or record.”
How should we do this “counting”?
The
intended meaning of safar in Leviticus 23:15 is “to ritually inscribe by
celebrating, i.e., to inscribe to ritual celebration.” Jewish author and historian Chaim Raphael, in
Festival Days: A History of Jewish
Celebrations (c.1990, Grove Weidenfeld: New York), informs us that:
“In the Jewish
practice, an Omer (sheaf) of the new barley was offered
to the Temple every day after Passover
to be ‘waved’ ceremonially by
the priest. The Omer began to be counted daily from the
second day
of Passover for seven weeks, at which
point the festival of Shavuot
(‘weeks’) was celebrated. ‘Counting the Omer’ until the seven weeks
were concluded became a recognizable
stretch of Jewish life with its
own traditions . . .” (p.69).
This same author adds:
“The seven-week
period from Passover to Shavuot had a ritual in which
a sheaf of grain from the new harvest
was offered to the priest every day.
Every offering was COUNTED OFF DAILY
until the forty-ninth day,
after which Shavuot was celebrated”
(p.71).
It should be clear that “counting the omer” was performed
EVERY YEAR, as a special aspect of the Passover celebration, beginning the day
after Passover. This was the very day
that the spring harvest of barley BEGAN, and continued for forty nine days,
until Pentecost, when the spring harvest was completed!
The “omer
offering” every day for 49 days during the spring harvest is a TYPE of the
“firstfruits” of God’s creation – true converted people of God, from the time
of the patriarchs down to true Christians of our day, today. The “omer” was the FIRST FRUITS! Likewise, “we ourselves [are those] who have
the first fruits of the Spirit” (Romans 8:23).
James calls Christians “a kind of first fruits of his creatures” (James
1:18). John in Revelation speaks of
those who “have been redeemed from humankind as FIRST FRUITS for God and the
Lamb” (Rev.14:4).
The
Messiah Himself was the original “first fruit”, by resurrection from the dead
(I Cor.15:20). True saints of God during
this age will join Him as the rest of the “first fruits” when He returns.
At
Christ’s coming, He will MARRY the Church, the “firstfruits” (Rev.19:6-9), just
as He married Israel when He came down to Mount Sinai on that first Pentecost,
or Feast of Weeks (Exodus 19-20; 24:9-11).
Thus the daily “counting of the omer” is a ritual which REFLECTS THE
SPRING HARVEST OF TRUE CHRISTIANS and all the holy men and women of old who
will be in the FIRST RESURRECTION, and who will MARRY Christ at His coming!
The vast,
overwhelming majority of Christians do not even begin to realize or recognize
this amazing, wonderful TRUTH!
Every day,
then, from Passover to Pentecost, we should “count the omer.”
How should
we do this? The blessing in Hebrew goes
like this:
“Barukh Attah,
Adonai Eloheinu, Melek Ha Olam,
Asher
Kidshanu b’Mitzvotav, Vitzivanu al Sefirat
Ha Omer.
“Ha Yom
Echad L’Omer.”
In
English:
“Blessed are
You, O Lord our God, King of the Universe,
Who has
separated us by Your commandments, and Who
has
commanded us to count the Omer.
“Today is
the first day of the Omer.”
When each
day begins, after sunset, we should set aside a time in prayer when when WE
COUNT THE OMER, as we pray to God, during the period between Passover and
Pentecost. After reciting the customary
blessing, we should continue, reciting
each week and day of the Omer count as it comes. We should recite something like the
following:
“Today is the
____ week of the Omer count, and the
____
day of the
week, making _____ days in all.
Therefore, there
are _____
days till the Feast of Pentecost [Shavuot].”
We give
the number of the week first, as in “first,” “second,” “third,” “fourth,”
“fifth,” “sixth,” and finally “seventh.”
We then enumerate the day of the week, as in “first,” “second,” and so
forth. Then we give the total number of
days in the count to the
day we utter the prayer.
Some
follow the count by reciting or reviewing Psalm 67, since it contains 7 verses
and a total of 49 words (in Hebrew).
Many also pray a prayer for the final Redemption of God’s people at this
time, praying for the Messiah to come quickly, to restore the Temple speedily,
to make it possible to reinstate the true Biblical observance of the Omer
offering and counting at the Temple.
Since
counting the Omer pictures overcoming sin and developing the righteous-ness and
character of God in our lives, and becoming more and more Christ-like (see
Gal.4:19), we should use these days to pray about overcoming and growing in
God’s holiness and righteous character.
Each day
it is helpful to pray that day especially about the characteristic of God which
we are working on developing in our lives, pertinent to that day. For example, the Jews derive seven major
characteristics of God which are mentioned in the Old Testament, which can be
applied to the Omer count. These seven
attributes are also characteristic of the “seven patriarchs” mentioned in the
Scriptures – Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, Aaron, Joseph, and David. The characteristics are:
Chesed Loving-kindness Abraham
Gevurah Strength, Power Isaac
Tiferet Harmony, Peace Jacob
Netzach Victory, Triumph Moses
Hod Glory, Majesty Aaron
Yesod Foundation Joseph
Malkut Sovereignty David
We can also use each day to work on one of the attributes of God’s Holy Spirit in our lives. Paul wrote to the brethren in Galatia, these plain and instructive words:
“But the fruit of the
Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness,
goodness, faith,
meekness, temperance: against such there is no law.
And they that are
Christ’s have crucified the flesh with the affections
[or, “passions,”
marginal reading] and lusts. If we live
in the Spirit, let
us also walk in the Spirit. Let us not be desirous of vain glory, pro-
voking one another,
envying one another” (Galatians 5:22-26).
There are
actually nine fruits of the Spirit listed here. But if we combine gentleness and meekness,
which go together, and faith and self-control (temperance), then we have seven
combinations of Divine Attributes. The apostle Paul lists them in Galatians
5:19-20.
1.
Love
2.
Joy
3.
Peace
4.
Patience
(Long-suffering)
5.
Gentleness, Goodness
6.
Faith (Faithfulness)
7.
Meekness, Self Control
Counting the Omer, for forty-nine
days, till Pentecost, helps us to concentrate during this period and focus our
minds on overcoming our sins and weaknesses and developing the attributes of
God in our lives. This helps us to have
a PLAN of overcoming! It is
Biblically-based! And it will help you
to be a true overcomer in your life!
To make
the most of the Omer season, and the days of counting the Omer, it is vital to
spend extra time in earnest, heartfelt prayer every day, to put your heart into
your prayers for spiritual growth and overcoming. As Jeremiah wrote, “Arise, cry out in the
night, at the beginning of the watches, pour out your heart like water before
the presence of the LORD!” (Lamentations 2:19).
Become the embodiment of prayer like David who wrote, “I am all prayer”
(Psalm 109:4, Tanakh, marginal reading).
The apostle James wrote, “The prayer of the righteous is powerful and
effective” (James 5:16, NRSV).
Put your
heart into your prayers, as you count the Omer!
Omer Count Calendar
The Seven Characteristics of God
Hebrew |
Quality |
Strong’s Number |
Character |
CHESED |
Loving Kindness |
2617 |
Abraham |
GEVURAH |
Strength Of
Character, Fortitude |
1369 |
Isaac |
TIFERET |
Beauty, Harmony |
8597 |
Jacob |
NETZACH |
Victory,
Eternity |
5331 |
Moses |
HOD (HADAR) |
Splendour,
Majesty Glory |
1926 |
Aaron |
YESOD (YASAD) |
Foundation,
Beginning |
3246 |
Joseph |
MALCHUT |
Kingdom,
Sovereignty |
4438 |
David |
In the book The Book of Our Heritage, volume 2, by
Eliyahu Kitov, the section on “Nisan – Pesach and the Omer,” we read the
following:
“Our
sages, who delved into the deeper meanings of the Torah, meanings that are
hidden from ordinary understanding, have associated this period of seven weeks
with seven attributes which are personified by our great ancestors. These
characteristics are essential to the continued existence of the world and help
mankind to rise from its lowly state, as the days which elapsed from the time
of the Exodus to the giving of the Torah, enabled the Children of Israel to
rise from being makers of bricks and garments of straw for Pharaoh, to become a
people specially chosen by God, a nation of cohanim, kings and princes, all
devoted to His service . . .
“Avraham
personifies the virtue of ‘Loving Kindness’. Through
his selfless love of mankind, the whole world was brought nearer to God . . .
“Itzchak
personifies ‘Strength Of Character’, and from him the world learned
to fear God. His whole being was devoted to the service of God and to the fear
of Him. In this he neither faltered nor flagged . . .
“Yaakov
was the personification of ‘Glory’. All his actions, whether
towards God or towards his parents, towards Esav or Lavan, whether they concern
the struggle with the Angel, his treatment of his children or his attitude to
Pharaoh; all were perfect . . .
“Moshe
typifies ‘Eternity’, the eternity of the Torah. All earthly
possessions, those we give to others and those we accept from them, are of
transient value. The Torah alone is of permanent worth . . .
“Aharon’s
special characteristic was ‘Splendour’ . He loved peace and pursued
peace, he loved mankind and brought them near to the Torah. Anyone who saw the
splendour and sanctity of Aharon, how he absorbed the teachings of his younger
brother and, free from all envy, rejoiced over his greatness, could not help
but be influenced by him and his teachings . . .
Yosef
typifies that virtue which lies at the ‘Foundation’
of all morality. The righteousness of Yosef’s life was such that he rose to the
greatest possible heights of sanctity . . .
“King
David typifies ‘Sovereignty’. It was not David’s wisdom or
strength that brought him to kingship, nor did he achieve it simply by
inheritance. His kingdom was granted him by the King of Kings. God took him
from the sheepfolds, from tending the flocks of lambs, to tend the flock of
Israel. God chose him for this task for He knew that even were he to rise to
the greatest heights, in his own eyes, he would always be a humble servant.
David was of lowly origin, yet all the kings from east and west, came to do him
homage. He taught the world that God is the Supreme King. He taught mankind to
sing songs of praise to the Master of the Universe . . .
“Each of
these seven qualities is closely intertwined with the others and all are
inter-dependent. None exists in isolation…Each characteristic has a light of
its own which it sheds on the others even while it absorbs their light…Our
sages have designated the seven weeks of counting as an opportunity for
correcting the various defects of character, by stressing these seven special
qualities . . .
“When we
count the forty-nine days of the Omer from the second night of the festival, it
reminds us that each day marks a step away from the defilement of Egypt, and a
step towards spiritual purity. At the end of this period the Israelites were
worthy of receiving the Torah . . .” (The Book of Our Heritage, volume
2, by Eliyahu Kitov).
Now let’s
put these days in their proper order, listing each major characteristic for
each week, and each day of each week.
This shows us graphically what characteristic we should be working on
each week, and which combination of characteristics on each day of that week,
until we complete the Omer count at the end of the 49 days.
For
example, week 1 is “chesed” or “loving-kindness.” Day one of that week is also “chesed”
(“loving-kindness”). Thus it represents “chesed” X “chesed” (“loving-kindess”
multiplied), or the concentrated and emphasized quality of chesed and its
wholeness. Day 2 of week one is “gevurah” (“strength”) as it relates to
“chesed” (“loving-kindness”).
The last
week of the count is “Malchut” (“Kingship”) and the seventh day of the last
week is also “Malchut” (“Kingship”) – thus it is “malchut X malchut”
(multiplied by it self) – kingship itself concentrated, emphasized and made
whole. Thus we go from loving-kindness
to kingship in 49 meaningful stages of spiritual growth!
WEEK 1 - “CHESED” - LOVING KINDNESS
DAY 1 |
DAY 2 |
DAY 3 |
DAY 4 |
DAY 5 |
DAY 6 |
DAY 7 |
CHESED |
GEVURAH
|
TIFERET |
NETZACH |
HOD |
YESOD |
MALKUT |
ABIB 16 |
ABIB 17
|
ABIB 18 |
ABIB 19 |
ABIB 20 |
ABIB 21 |
ABIB 22 |
WEEK 2 - “GEVURAH” - STRENGTH OF CHARACTER
DAY 8 |
DAY 9 |
DAY 10 |
DAY 11 |
DAY 12 |
DAY 13 |
DAY 14 |
CHESED |
GEVURAH
|
TIFERET |
NETZACH |
HOD |
YESOD |
MALKUT |
ABIB 23 |
ABIB 24
|
ABIB 25 |
ABIB 26 |
ABIB 27 |
ABIB 28 |
ABIB 29 |
WEEK 3 - “TIFERET” - BEAUTY, HARMONY
DAY 15 |
DAY 16 |
DAY 17 |
DAY 18 |
DAY 19 |
DAY 20 |
DAY 21 |
CHESED |
GEVURAH
|
TIFERET |
NETZACH |
HOD |
YESOD |
MALKUT |
IYAR 1 |
IYAR 2
|
IYAR 3 |
IYAR 4 |
IYAR 5 |
IYAR 6 |
IYAR 7 |
WEEK 4 - “NETZACH” - VICTORY, ETERNITY
DAY 22 |
DAY 23 |
DAY 24 |
DAY 25 |
DAY 26 |
DAY 27 |
DAY 28 |
CHESED |
GEVURAH
|
TIFERET |
NETZACH |
HOD |
YESOD |
MALKUT |
IYAR 8 |
IYAR 9
|
IYAR 10 |
IYAR 11 |
IYAR 12 |
IYAR 13 |
IYAR 14 |
WEEK 5 - “HOD” - SPLENDOR, MAJESTY, GLORY
DAY 29 |
DAY 30 |
DAY 31 |
DAY 32 |
DAY 33 |
DAY 34 |
DAY 35 |
CHESED |
GEVURAH
|
TIFERET |
NETZACH |
HOD |
YESOD |
MALKUT |
IYAR 15 |
IYAR 16
|
IYAR 17 |
IYAR 18 |
IYAR 19 |
IYAR 20 |
IYAR 21 |
WEEK 6 - “YESOD” - FOUNDATION, STRONG BEGINNING
DAY 36 |
DAY 37 |
DAY 38 |
DAY 39 |
DAY 40 |
DAY 41 |
DAY 42 |
CHESED |
GEVURAH
|
TIFERET |
NETZACH |
HOD |
YESOD |
MALKUT |
IYAR 22 |
IYAR 23
|
IYAR 24 |
IYAR 25 |
IYAR 26 |
IYAR 27 |
IYAR 28 |
WEEK 7 - “MALCHUT” - KINGSHIP, SOVEREIGNTY
DAY 43 |
DAY 44 |
DAY 45 |
DAY 46 |
DAY 47 |
DAY 48 |
DAY 49 |
CHESED |
GEVURAH
|
TIFERET |
NETZACH |
HOD |
YESOD |
MALKUT |
IYAR 29 |
IYAR 30
|
SIVAN 1 |
SIVAN 2 |
SIVAN 3 |
SIVAN 4 |
SIVAN 5 |
Works Of The Flesh To OvercomeNIV |
Fruit Of The Spirit To Live And Walk By - NIV |
SEXUAL IMMORALITY IMPURITY AND DEBAUCHERY IDOLATRY AND WITCHCRAFT HATRED DISCORD JEALOUSY FITS OF RAGE SELFISH AMBITION DISSENSIONS FACTIONS AND ENVY DRUNKENNESS ORGIES AND THE LIKE Those Who Live Like This
Will Not Inherit The Kingdom Of God |
LOVEJOY PEACE PATIENCE KINDNESS GOODNESS FAITHFULNESS GENTLENESS SELF-CONTROL Against Such Things There
Is No Law |
“Now the
works of the flesh are obvious: fornication, impurity, licentiousness,
idolatry, sorcery, enmities, strife, jealousy, anger, quarrels, dissentions,
factions, envy, drunkenness, carousing and things like these. I am warning you, as I warned you
before: those who do such things will
not inherit the kingdom of God” (Gal.5:19-21, NRSV).
“Do you
not know that wrongdoers will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived! Fornicators, idolaters, adulterers, male
prostitutes, sodomites, thieves, the greedy, drunkards, revilers, robbers –
none of these will inherit the kingdom of God” (I Corinthians 6:9-10).
“By
contrast, the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness,
generosity, faithfulness, gentleness and self control. There is no law against such things. And those who belong to Jesus Christ have
crucified the flesh with its passions and desires. If we live by the Spirit, let us also be
guided by the Spirit. Let us not become
conceited, competing against one another, envying one another” (Gal.5:22-26).
Let us use
this opportunity of “counting the Omer” and overcoming the flesh, to march
forward, and push onward, toward the great goal of the Kingdom of God!