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Today is forty-nine days of the Omer, seven weeks

5/22/2015

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Malchut of Malchut, Nobility in Nobility. We're almost there! The final day! Concentrate on your true inner self, settling peacefully into the awareness that God created you to serve a specific, sacred purpose in Reality.

Marc Chagall, “Self-Portrait with Clock,” (1947), via The Jewish Museum:
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Today is forty-eight days of the Omer, six weeks and six days

5/21/2015

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Yesod of Malchut, Bonding in Nobility. Express your authority, your authenticity, by deepening your bond with someone close to you.
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Today is forty-seven days of the Omer, six weeks and five days

5/20/2015

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Hod of Malchut, Humility in Nobility. Thank God for creating you and all being with individual dignity.
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Today is forty-six days of the Omer, six weeks and four days

5/19/2015

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Netzach of Malchut, Endurance in Nobility. Act on something you believe in, but have not yet claimed as a commitment.
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Today is forty-five days of the Omer, six weeks and three days

5/18/2015

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Tiferet of Malchut, Harmony in Nobility. Review an area where you have authority and look for ways to increase your effectiveness by curtailing excesses.

Learn how faith communities across the state are promoting energy efficiency and environmental stewardship:
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Today forty-four days of the Omer, six weeks and two days

5/17/2015

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Gevurah of Malchut, Discipline in Nobility. Before claiming authority in a particular situation, pause to reflect on the appropriateness of your exercising it under these circumstances.

From the Omer Calendar of Biblical Women (Rabbi Jill Hammer)
http://www.ritualwell.org/ritu…/omer-calendar-biblical-women:

"Michal is the daughter of King Saul, and King Saul promises Michal to his rival David as a wife, thinking that his daughter will help him keep an eye on David. Michal refuses her father's commands. Instead, Michal helps David escape her murderous father, using the clever ruse of putting a stone idol in David's bed, with goat hair on top. David runs off to the wilderness, and Saul forces Michal to marry another man. When Saul dies and David becomes king, David demands Michal as part of the nation's peace settlement. Michal's husband Paltiel follows her, weeping. Michal says nothing, and she does not weep. Once she is in David's house, she remains proud. When David dances and whirls before the Ark as it is brought into Jerusalem, Michal despises him for what she regards as an obscene display. The text records that to her dying day Michal had no children—either because she was barren or because David refused to have sex with her.

There is something untouchable about Michal's pride. The Talmud records that she put on tefillin, and the sages did not stop her from doing so. She chose to perform a ritual normally denied women, and no one dared to tell her she should not. Michal shows courage in defending her husband from her father, and later shows considerable strength in standing up to her husband when she does not like his behavior. Michal represents gevurah shebe'malkhut—the “strength of majesty,” or the “limits on royal power.” We are most like her when we are willing to question the improper behavior of the powerful."

Below - woodcut of Saul, David, and Michal.

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Today is forty-three days of the Omer, six weeks and one day

5/16/2015

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Chesed of Malchut, Lovingkindness in Nobility. Do something kind for those under your care or direction.
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Today is forty-two days of the Omer, six weeks

5/15/2015

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Malchut of Yesod, Nobility in Bonding. Highlight the strengths of someone with whom you bond.
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Today is forty-one days of the Omer, five weeks and six days.

5/14/2015

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Yesod of Yesod, Bonding in Bonding. Begin bonding with a new person (or experience) by committing designated time to develop the bond.
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Today is forty days of the Omer, five weeks and five days

5/13/2015

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Hod of Yesod, Humility in Bonding. When praying, thank God for helping you bond with others.
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    Counting the Omer - 

    These brief reflections are based on A Spiritual Guide to the Counting of the Omer, by Rabbi Simon Jacobson. You can read more here.


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