Shabbat | Tishrei 3, Shabbat Teshuva | 5704 | Kabalat Shabbat services begin Mizmor l'David (p. 131) not L'chu n'ran'na (p. 128). This applies to every Festival ending on Friday evening. Haftora: Shuva until yikashlu vam, then Mi Keil kamocha until mimei kedem. | Torah lessons: | Chumash: Ha'azinu, Shevi'i with Rashi. | Tehillim: 18-22. Also 94-96. | Tanya: But the souls (p. 501) ...limitation and finitude. (p. 503). | |
The Tzemach Tzedek had yechidus with the Alter Rebbe on Monday of Teitzei, 6 Elul 5564 (1804); the Rebbe told him: "On Shabbat Tavo 5528 (1768), my Rebbe (the Maggid of Mezritch) said a "Torah" beginning V'shavta ad Havayeh Elokecha1 He explained that the avoda of teshuva must attain a level at which Havayeh, transcendent Divinity beyond worlds, becomes Elokecha - Elokim being numerically equivalent to hateva (nature), and as we find, "in the beginning Elokim created the heavens and the earth etc."2 All the Holy Society (disciples of the Maggid) were profoundly stirred by this teaching. The tzadik R. Meshulam Zusya of Anipoli said that he could not attain the heights of such a teshuva; he would therefore break down teshuva to its components, for each letter of the word teshuva is the initial of a verse:
T: Tamim - "Be sincere with the Eternal your G-d."3
Sh: Shiviti - "I have set G-d before me always."4
U: V'ahavta - "Love your fellow as yourself."5
V: B'chol - "In all your ways, know Him."6
H: Hatznei'a - "Walk discreetly with your G-d."7
When my father told me this, he concluded: "The word teshuva comprises five (Hebrew) letters, each letter a path and a method in the avoda of teshuva." (He explained each method at length).8 Each moves from a potential state to actuality through the avoda of davening.9