The standard pre-Rosh Hashana greeting of “K’tiva v’chatima tova” (“May you be written and sealed for good”) is deduced from a Talmudic discussion concerning the three heavenly books that are opened during the High Holidays.
Rabbi Jochanan (as quoted by Rabbi Kruspedai) clarified that on the New Year, three books – a book for the completely wicked, a book for the completely righteous and a book for those in the middle – are opened. According to Rabbi Avin, the existence of these books is alluded to in Psalms 69:29: “Let them be blotted out of the book of the living, and not be written with the righteous.” According to Rabbi Nahman ben Isaac, Moses actually refers to one of these books in Exodus 32:32: “…blot me, I pray You, out of Your book which You have written” (Rosh Hashana 16b).
Both of the proof-texts brought in the Talmud appear to refer only to a Book of the Righteous. Since tradition has it that the world is balancedbetween extremes (prophecy was balanced by idolatry, Moses was balanced by Balaam), a Book of the Wicked must also exist. This, of course, leaves a gap for those who are neither completely righteous nor completely wicked…in other words, the majority of humanity. Thus it could only be assumed that there was a third book.
Rabbi Kruspedai further explains that, on Rosh Hashana, the completely righteous and the completely wicked are immediately written into their respective books, but “the judgement of the intermediate group is written but not finalized from the New Year till the Day of Atonement” [when it is sealed].
Because of the “suspended” status of most people between Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur, after Rosh Hashana the greeting is altered to “G’mar chatima tova” (“May it finish with you being sealed for good”).
Jewish Treats wishes all of its readers l’shana tova tikatayhvu v’taychataymu (that’s the plural form).
This Treat is reposted in honor of Rosh Hashana.
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