(Material below is adapted from Mesorah Publications' Stone Edition of the Chumash)
"This is the very first commandment given to the nation as a whole, an indication that the concept of Rosh Chodesh, or the New Moon, is very meaningful. Moreover, a thousand years later in Eretz Yisrael, during the period of Syrian-Greek persecution that culminated in the miracle of Chanukah, Rosh Chodesh was one of only three commandments whose observance the oppressors prohibited. The other two forbidden commandments were the Sabbath and circumcision; that Rosh Chodesh was on a plane with those central observances is sufficient indication of its great significance."
"This can be understood on two levels. As will be noted below, only the court can proclaim Rosh Chodesh based on the testimony of witnesses who observed the re-appearance of the moon, and upon this proclamation, the Jewish calendar is based. Unless the new months can be proclaimed, there is no calendar, and without a calendar, there can be no festivals. Thus, if the Syrian-Greeks had succeeded in eradicating the observance of Rosh Chodesh, they would have succeeded in eliminating large numbers of other mitzvot, as well."
"On a deeper level, Rosh Chodesh symbolizes renewal, the ability of the Jewish People to rise up from oblivion and restore itself to its past greatness. Just as the moon disappears at the end of each month, but returns and grows to fullness, so Israel may suffer exile and decline, but it always renews itself - until the coming of the Messiah, when the promise of the Exodus and the Revelation at Sinai will be fulfilled, never to be dimmed again."
"This essential characteristic of Jewish history was first exhibited in Egypt, when, in the simile of the Sages, the nation had fallen to the forty-ninth level of impurity - one level above spiritual extermination - only to renew itself so breathtakingly that after seven weeks it was able to stand at Mount Sinai and experience prophecy."
"This concept of Jewish renewal was what the Syrian-Greeks attempted to eradicate by ending the observance of Rosh Chodesh. Instead, the Jewish People rose up in defense of the Torah and the Temple, and their triumph is commemorated through Chanukah, the festival of renewal."
Jewish days begin at night. The Jewish calendar counts time from sundown rather than sunrise.
To people who think in English, this doesn't make sense. We've been conditioned to think about the dawn of a new day. We think of twilight as the beginning of the end. For us, mornings seem to be beginnings and evenings are endings. We think that a day should begin during the day. Hebrew thinks differently. In Hebrew, an Erev (an evening) is a start. One influence is the Torah. It tells us that creation began at night.
BEGINNINGS
God created the heavens and the earth.
The earth was unformed.
Darkness was over the deep.
God said: "Let there be light."
And there was light.
God saw that the light was good.
God called the light: "Day."
God called the darkness: "Night."
There was evening.
There was morning.
Day one.
While you could read this passage and think that everything was dark until God made light, that's not the way the rabbis read it. They believed that darkness was part of the first step in creation, light was the first modification. That is why the Torah says, "There was evening" before it say "There was morning." The other influence was the moon. The moon tells her story at night. Moon time is counted after dark. The Hebrew root H*D*Sh means "new." The word Hodesh means "month." It comes from the root H*D*Sh. In Hebrew thinking, every month is a "newness."
The word Rosh means "head," (In other words, "beginning.) Rosh Hodesh is the night when the New moon can first be seen and when the New Month begins.
Rosh Hodesh is the beginning of the newness. Rosh Hodesh isn't a major celebration. It doesn't take up a lot of time or demand a lot of special activity; instead, it just makes a couple of minor changes in the way things usually happen in synagogue.
Exerpted from an unpublished lesson by Joel Lurie Grishaver