fbpx
Back to Stories & Articles

Digging Deeper: What is Teshuvah?

Often translated as “repentance,” teshuvah literally means “to return”: returning to the version of ourselves that is most true and holy, no matter how far we may have strayed from it. This spiritual process isn’t about becoming a better version of ourselves; it’s about returning to the goodness that has always been within us.

The 12th-century scholar Moses Maimonides (also known by the acronym Rambam) taught that there are four crucial steps we need to take in order to engage in teshuvah:

  1. Haratah (regret): understand the hurtful impact of our actions and truly experience regret.
  2. Azivat hahet (cease the transgression): put an immediate end to this hurtful action.
  3. Viddui (confession): verbally acknowledge what we have done, and ask for forgiveness.
  4. Kabbalah lehaba-ah (a resolution for the future): commit to never repeating this destructive behavior in the future.

Going further, Maimonides taught that complete teshuvah is not achieved until one finds oneself in the same circumstances in which they’ve transgressed in the past and instead fulfill this commitment by choosing a better path.Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, Orot Hateshuvah 15:10

 

When we forget the essence of our own soul, everything becomes confused and in doubt. The primary teshuvah, that which immediately lights the darkness, is when a person returns to themself, to the root of their soul. Then, they will immediately return to God, to the soul of all souls.

And We Return

By Kohenet Keshira HaLev Fife
And We Return…
And we return, and we move on
Let go the past, and greet the dawn
We cycle and we circle and we spiral and return
To love ourselves and be the ones for which Becoming yearns
And we return, and we move on
Let go the past, and greet the dawn
We cycle and we circle and we spiral and release
To align ourselves with our hearts so that we can live in peace.