How to Count the Omer
A guide.
By Jill Jacobs
MyJewishLearning's omer calendar counts the days between
Passover and Shavuot. The omer counter changes daily at 8:00pm.
The omer refers to the forty-nine day period between
the second night of Passover (Pesach) and the holiday of Shavuot. This period
marks the beginning of the barley harvest when, in ancient times, Jews would
bring the first sheaves to the Temple as a means of thanking God for the
harvest. The word omer literally means "sheaf" and refers to these
early offerings.
The Torah itself dictates the counting of the seven weeks
following Pesach:
"You shall count from the eve of the second day of
Pesach, when an omer of grain is to be brought as an offering, seven complete
weeks. The day after the seventh week of your counting will make fifty days,
and you shall present a new meal offering to God (Leviticus 23:15-16)."
In its biblical context, this counting appears only to
connect the first grain offering to the offering made at the peak of the
harvest. As the holiday of Shavuot became associated with the giving of the
Torah, and not only with a celebration of agricultural bounty, the omer period
began to symbolize the thematic link between Peach and Shavuot.
While Pesach celebrates the initial liberation of the Jewish
people from slavery in Egypt, Shavuot marks the culmination of the process of
liberation, when the Jews became an autonomous community with their own laws
and standards. Counting up to Shavuot reminds us of this process of moving from
a slave mentality to a more liberated one.
When to Count the Omer
The counting of the omer begins on the second night of
Pesach. Jews in the Diaspora generally integrate this counting into the second
seder.
The omer is counted each evening after sundown. The counting
of the omer is generally appended to the end of Ma'ariv (the evening
service), as well.
What to Say. . . and What Not to Say
One stands when counting the omer, and begins by reciting
the following blessing:
Barukh ata Adonai Eloheinu Melekh ha'Olam asher kid'shanu
b'mitzvotav v'tizivanu al sefirat ha'omer.
Blessed are you, Adonai our God, Sovereign of the Universe,
who has sanctified us with your commandments and commanded us to count the
omer.
After the blessing, one recites the appropriate day of the
count. For example:
Hayom yom echad la'omer
Today is the first day of the omer.
After the first six days, one also includes the number of
weeks that one has counted. For example:
Hayom sh'losha asar yom, she'hem shavuah echad v'shisha
yamim la'omer
Today is thirteen days, which is one week and six days of
the omer
The inclusion of both the day (thirteen) and the week (one
week and six days) stems from a rabbinic argument about whether the Torah
mandates counting days or weeks. On the one hand, the biblical text instructs, "you
shall count fifty days;" on the other hand, the text also says to "count.
. . seven complete weeks." The
compromise position, manifested in the ritual, is to count both days and weeks.
The blessing for counting the omer, as well as the language
for each day of counting, appears in most prayer books at the end of the text
for the evening service.
Because the blessing should precede the counting (and not
the other way around), many Jews will not say what day of the omer it is until
after the ritual counting. Thus, the reminder about what day to count is often
phrased as "yesterday was the fifth day of the omer."
Many people precede the counting of the omer with a
meditation that states one's intention to fulfill the commandment. This
meditation serves to focus the individual on the task at hand and to remind
him/her of the biblical basis of the commandment:
Hineni muchan um'zuman l'kayem mitzvat aseh shel s'firat
ha'omer k'mo shekatuv baTorah: Us'fartem
lakhem mimaharat hashabbat miyom havi'echem et omer hat'nufa, sheva shabbatot t'mimot
tihiyenah. Ad mimaharat hashabbat hash'vi'it tisp'ru chamishim yom.
Behold, I am ready and prepared to fulfill the mitzvah
of counting the omer, as it says in the Torah: You shall count from the eve of
the second day of Pesach, when an omer of grain is to be brought as an
offering, seven complete weeks. The day after the seventh week of your counting
will make fifty days.
Whoops. . .
One rabbinic debate considers whether there is one cohesive mitzvah
to count seven weeks and fifty days or whether each night of counting
constitutes a separate mitzvah. This debate would seem immaterial, if
not for the proscription against reciting a blessing "in vain"--that
is, not for the purpose of doing a mitzvah.
If there is a separate mitzvah to count each night, then
forgetting one night would have no effect on one's ability to count subsequent
nights. If, however, there is one collective mitzvah to count the entire
period, then missing one night disrupts the entire count.
The rabbis effectively split the difference, and conclude
that a person who forgets to count the omer on a particular night may count the
next morning without reciting a blessing, and then may continue counting as
usual--with a blessing--that night.
If, however, one forgets to count the omerat night
and also forgets to count in the morning, one should still count the omer on
every subsequent night, but should no longer recite a blessing before counting.
Rabbi Jill Jacobs is
the Rabbi-in-Residence for the Jewish FundS for Justice.