Teshuva is a command of the heart and of the soul. Most mitzvot summon us to perform tangible actions. The emotions we bring to these acts may enrich the mitzvah, deepening the experience, but they are not necessary for the deed itself.
Teshuva [repentance and returning to God] is strikingly different. It cannot be reduced to ritual or gesture. It demands intent, sincerity, and inner upheaval. Its weight and measure are determined by the depth of emotional investment.
Teshuva is a dark and harrowing descent into the self, a journey through the hidden recesses of personality. It demands that we confront our failures and flaws without disguise. We gaze into the mirror and see ourselves as we truly are. The protective fictions and comforting narratives we weave throughout the year – stories that shield us from despair and allow us to cope with disappointment – must be shattered. Only by dismantling these illusions can we face the raw truth of our condition. We can then begin the work of renewal.
Yom Kippur is not a day of delusion. It summons us to break free from the shadows of avoidance and to confront the core of the soul. Stripped of pretense, we encounter our innermost being with raw honesty. We are ready to begin the arduous work of change.
Passion, not just procedure
Classically, teshuva is outlined as a three-stage process: confession, regret, and a pledge for future change. These steps provide a necessary framework, but they can also feel mechanical and hollow. It is tempting to slot teshuva into our calendars, to check off each stage with the neat efficiency of ritual. When approached in this fashion, teshuva begins to resemble a New Year’s resolution – tidy but superficial. It is drained of the emotional intensity and inner upheaval that an authentic return to God demands.
What emotions should be evoked during this journey? How can we map the inner emotional landscape of teshuva? What are the coordinates of this inward voyage?
Sadness and sorrow
In the book of Eichah, Yirmiya laments the human response to sin: “A person should mourn for his wrongdoings.” Teshuva calls for sadness and sorrow. We reflect on our mistakes, our poor choices, and the opportunities we let slip away. We grieve over the moments we could have moved closer to God and become better people. Every missed opportunity, every flawed action, represents a real loss – a fragment of potential that, once gone, may never be recovered. For this, we mourn.
Without feeling this sorrow, teshuva can become practiced and clinical, stripped of the moral and developmental weight that comes from fully absorbing the consequences of our past decisions. It is through this encounter with loss that the heart is tested. The conscience is shaped, guiding us toward authentic growth.
Guilt
However, sorrow and sadness alone are not enough. Longing for what has been lost may stir a bittersweet melancholy, tinged with nostalgia, only to fade as we move on. Such reflective sorrow can cleanse, but it does not always bear moral weight.
True moral conscience comes with feelings of guilt. In Psalms, Chapter 38, King David – who wrote the book on teshuva – describes his own guilt: “My sins have passed over my head like a heavy weight, too heavy for me to bear.” Guilt is heavier than longing. When we feel guilty, we replay our failures, seeking understanding, testing justifications, and ultimately confronting the responsibility we cannot deny. We carry it fully with us.
The modern world has largely expelled guilt from the human heart. Too much guilt, of course, can lead to despair and even depression. However, healthy guilt is the whisper of a functioning moral conscience. It does more than mourn what we have lost – it internalizes responsibility, sears the soul, and guides us toward better choices.
Shame
After guilt comes shame. While shame can feel similar to guilt, it is quite different. Guilt focuses on the past decision – where we went wrong and why we are accountable. Shame, by contrast, arises after we have accepted that responsibility. It is the emotional residue, the weight that lingers once guilt has done its work, often felt as a mixture of pain, frustration, and self-reproach.
In Chapter 9 of the book bearing his name, the prophet Daniel declares, “O Lord, righteousness belongs to You, but we face shame, as at this day.” His generation, the one expelled from Jerusalem after the destruction of the First Temple, had much to be ashamed of, and he confronts that shame rather than turning away from it.
Shame becomes unhealthy when driven by social standing or posturing. Unfortunately, social media has weaponized shame, using it to erode self-esteem and control perception.
But shame arises internally, as a response to our own deeds, it can cut deeply and shape us from within. It compels us to reassess our identity. It recalibrates our self-worth, even in the face of flaws. In this way, shame touches the deepest layers of human nature, shaping conscience and character in a way few other emotions can.
Be dizzy
In Chapter 38 of Psalms, King David expresses his shame as dizziness: “My heart is dizzy, and my strength has left me.” He does not suffer from vertigo; rather, his sins have penetrated the deepest chambers of his identity, leaving him existentially unsteady. This dizziness is not destructive – it is necessary and constructive. From it comes reassessment, recalibration, and progress. Following the churn of shame within, we are compelled to carve out genuine worthiness, even as we confront and accept flaws.
Light, hope, and faith
However, teshuva is not all darkness. While King David often describes it in somber tones, accompanied by tears, Rav Kook authored the book The Lights of Teshuvah, which conveys the radiant and triumphant moments of teshuva.
Too much darkness, too much melancholy, can make religion feel stifling and suffocating. Teshuva, by contrast, is a celebration of free will. It embraces the human capacity for error as the source of renewal.
Teshuva is a moment of profound faith – faith that God offers a path to return; faith that the past can be transformed; faith that though we are flawed, we are not irreparably broken, and we can recover. It is a moment of hope and trust in life and in our relationship with God.
Teshuva should also be empowering. It calls for courage and boldness. We are granted free will, which we exercise in the choices we make in life – for better or for worse. In teshuva, however, we turn that free will inward, examining ourselves and using it to define who we are. We use it to shape our identity.
Teshuva is a gift from God, meant to inspire joy, not sorrow or darkness.
Two-dimensional confession
The Hebrew term for confession is “viduy.” This word is most often used in the context of confessing sins. However, the Talmud also applies it to the confession of ma’aserot (tithes) and other monetary obligations. Every three years, a person acknowledges having fulfilled these duties. Confession, then, is a moment not only to admit failure but also to recognize accomplishment.
For the journey of teshuva to be genuine, it must be honest. Do not forget to acknowledge your successes and personal growth. Do not forget to recognize that we are part of a remarkable generation – a generation that has risen from the depths of the Holocaust and is building the Jewish future, even in a world often hostile to our presence in the Land of God.
Visit the inner emotional world of teshuva. It will purify character and build spirit. It is the path back to God.
The writer, a rabbi at the hesder pre-military Yeshivat Har Etzion/Gush, received his ordination from Yeshiva University and has an MA in English literature. His books include To Be Holy but Human: Reflections Upon My Rebbe, HaRav Yehuda Amital, available at mtaraginbooks.com.