On the Shofar

by Alan Lucas
Excerpted from The Observant Life

In some ways, the shofar is the most characteristic mitzvah of Rosh Hashanah. Indeed, one of the scriptural names of this holiday (found at Numbers 29:1) is yom teruah, the Day of Sounding the Shofar. The mitzvah, however, need not be fulfilled personally by blowing the shofar oneself, but simply by hearing it blown. It is an art and a great privilege to be the ba’al tekiah, that is, the individual chosen to sound the shofar for the larger community. Before the notes are sounded, a special blessing acknowledging God as the Author of the commandment to sound the shofar is recited, followed by the Shehecheyanu blessing.

A shofar is the natural horn of a kosher animal and, with the exception of a cow or an ox, any kosher animal’s horn may be used (SA Orach Chayim 586:1). Customarily, however, a ram’s horn is used to connect the sounding of the shofar with the story of the Binding of Isaac and specifically with its climactic detail: when Abraham’s hand is stayed, his attention is drawn to a ram caught in the thicket and he offers this animal as a sacrifice instead. By using the horn of a kosher animal, we may fulfill the mitzvah of blowing the shofar. But by using a ram’s horn, we subtly remind God of the supreme merit of our forefather Abraham. The Talmud also explains that the shofar should be curved, not straight. This is intended to symbolize the spirit of humility appropriate for the season of national repentance (BT Rosh Hashanah 26b).

Although the sound of the shofar is meant to pierce the heart and ought not require any elaborate explanation, this has not stopped generations of rabbis and scholars from commenting on the reason the ritual is so effective. The most famous of these is probably Maimonides’ comment (MT Hilkhot Teshuvah 3:4) that the shofar calls to each of us and says: “Awake, you sleepers from your sleep. Arouse you slumberers from your slumber and ponder your deeds; remember your Creator and return to God in repentance. Do not be like those who miss the truth in pursuit of shadows and waste their years seeking vanity. Look well to your souls and consider your deeds; turn away from your wrong ways and improper thoughts.”

Generations of the Jewish people have found the sounding of the shofar to be one of the peak moments of the entire Jewish year. As such, it resonates with generations’ worth of associations, bringing contemporary worshipers back to the wilderness in which the Israelites wandered and to the foot of Mount Sinai where they received God’s Torah as the sound of the shofar was heard from on high (Exodus 19:19). Its sound does not solely pierce through the generations, however. It also pierces the layers of indifference that separate even the most willing supplicant from embracing wholehearted, unfettered faith in God. To respond to the sound of the shofar requires neither formal training nor any knowledge of complex Hebrew texts, only the most basic of any supplicant’s tools: an open heart and a willing spirit.

Tradition dictates that there are to be one hundred separate blasts of the shofar on each day of Rosh Hashanah (cf. the comment of the Tosafot to BT Rosh Hashanah 33b, s.v. shei’ur teru’ah). The notes are divided into three types: the teki’ah (a long, strong blast), the shevarim (a series of three short broken blasts), and the teru’ah (nine short staccato notes). The teki’ah, the three-part shevarim, and the nine-part teru’ah should each be of similar length. These are the only three notes, but they are combined in various ways to result in the one hundred requisite blasts. Different communities, however, have different customs as to how and when the notes are sounded to arrive at the desired total. The first time the shofar is sounded is right after the Torah service at the conclusion of the haftarah and its blessings. The shofar is also sounded during each of the three parts of the repetition of the Amidah during the Musaf Service. Some congregations sound a final set of blasts in the Full Kaddish at the end of the service to arrive at the total of one hundred. An alternate custom included as an option in some Conservative prayerbooks for the High Holy Days is to blow the shofar during each of the three sections of the silent recitation of the Musaf Amidah and then again during the repetition.

The shofar is such an important mitzvah that those who are ill or incapacitated and cannot come to synagogue to hear the blasts should still arrange to have someone sound the shofar for them at home or in the hospital. Most synagogues are glad to assist in arranging volunteers to help fulfill this important mitzvah.

The shofar is not sounded when Rosh Hashanah coincides with Shabbat (BT Rosh Hashanah 29b). Since Rosh Hashanah is always a two-day holiday, however, the mitzvah will never be completely eliminated in any given year.

If the shofar is such an important mitzvah, one might ask why it does not supersede the laws that govern Shabbat rest. And this is even more pointed a question when we note that the sounding of the shofar would not actually involve any direct violation of the laws of Shabbat, but was forbidden out of the fear that it might lead indirectly to such a violation. Indeed, it was precisely because the mitzvah was so important and so beloved that the rabbis feared that a community without a shofar might arrange for someone to retrieve one from some distant place, thus carrying and possibly traveling on Shabbat. (Dispensing with the sounding of the shofar when the festival coincided with Shabbat eliminated even the possibility of such an eventuality.) And thus the ancients taught a valuable and profound lesson: that Shabbat takes precedence even over something as important as sounding the shofar on Rosh Hashanah. As a result, congregations that faithfully omit the shofar service when Rosh Hashanah falls on Shabbat experience a renewed awareness of the ineffable sanctity of Shabbat and the unreasonableness of risking its even inadvertent neglect.