Let My People Know

The Seven Shepherds do not roam the fields; they roam our souls.

 

The Seven Shepherds mentioned by the Prophet are seven eminent figures in our history. 

Of course, they are also much more than that. 

They are personalities who continue to lead the Children of Israel, even in our times, in an invisible fashion. 

We invite them to our sukkah because we really feel that they are present among us and are not figments of the past. 

Men fall into two categories. 

The first is composed of men who act at one point in history. 

They belong to the past and their actions have come to a close. 

The Seven Shepherds, however, belong to the second category of men: those who have a permanent impact on the Jewish soul, an impact that has lasted up to this very day. 

First, these Shepherds are more than archetypal figures.

A more fitting description is that we, as their descendants, have undergone their influence and have integrated part of their personalities. 

The Seven Shepherds are not figures or role models, but rather seven facets, or seven fundamental features of our identity. 

These Shepherds do not roam the fields; they roam our souls. 

–Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz
 

From The Seven Lights, p. 270, by Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz