Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Vayetzei 2019: Ladders



How many love to climb to the top of a ladder to do work, on the house, on outdoor projects?

I’m personally not a big fan of this activity.  I enjoy doing the work, but not the feeling of seeing the ground far away, of feeling unbalanced perching on the ladder steps, and of the strange disconnect between reaching up with my hands to work while my feet feel far below.

This week in our Torah portion our ancestor Jacob sees a ladder in his dream, and this ladder inspires him, makes him feel connected with God, as he sees angels ascending and descending the ladder to the heavens.  

What is potentially uncomfortable in using a ladder here on earth disappears in this image.  Here, our ancestor Jacob is escaping from home, hoping to find extended family where he can live, and praying God will guide and protect him on the way.

At a moment when his life is all turbulence, disconnected from home, alone at night on a road, the ladder is the symbol of connection and comfort.

Ibn Ezra explains how the great Rabbi Yehoshua believed the ladder serves Jacob as a way of sending his prayers upward to God with God’s promise of help and guidance flowing down, just as the angels ascend and descend.  

At moments of struggle and loss, at times when we can summon up neither the right questions nor the right answers, the image of the ladder reassures us of our eternal link between ourselves and God, that God’s angels are always cycling out of our world and back into our world.

We called to the angels at the beginning of our service tonight as we said Shalom alechem malachey ha’shalom, welcome to you, angels of peace, because we may find at times that much as we pray, as we call out to God, we feel our prayers are hitting the ceiling and not going further, and the angels carry our prayers, or perhaps when we pray we create an angel who travels up the ladder with our prayer.

As we continue our service tonight, let’s focus on which prayers are speaking to our hearts tonight, and when we find those words that we’re focusing on, that are catching our attention, let’s take a moment to see those words, those feelings, rising up through the ceiling and out into the world.  Whether we’re sending a prayer to someone we know who’s in need, or wishing protection for our military servicepeople after the two horrific shootings on naval bases this week, or we simply need to hand over a burden to God that we’re carrying, see the prayer lift up and out – see the image of the ladder.

And remember that in the classic wonderful stories of the wise people of Chelm, they built their synagogue without a roof, why did they do such a thing?  To make sure their prayers could rise up and reach God.

Thursday, October 17, 2019

"We're all in this together" Kol Nidre - Yom Kippur 2019/5780


A story is told about Fiorello LaGuardia mayor of New York city from 1934-1945 during the worst days of the Great Depression and all of World War 2, a story I think helps us focus on our goals for tonight and the next 24 hours.  On a bitterly cold night in January of 1935, he turned up at a night court that  served the poorest ward of the city.  He dismissed the judge for the evening and took the bench himself.  Within a few minutes, a tattered  old woman was brought before him, charged with stealing a loaf of bread.  She told LaGuardia, and all those assembled there, her daughter was sick, and her 2 grandchildren were starving.  But the shopkeeper refused to drop the charges.  The shopkeeper said in anger, “It’s a bad neighborhood your Honor, he told the mayor, she’s got to be punished to teach other people around here a lesson.”

La Guardia sighed.  He turned to the woman and said, “I’ve got to punish you.  The law makes no exceptions—ten dollars or ten days in jail.”  

But even as he pronounced sentence, the mayor was reaching into his pocket.  He took out a bill saying, “Here is the 10 dollar fine which I now remit; and furthermore I am going to fine everyone in this courtroom  50 cents for living in a town where a person has to  steal bread so that her grandchildren can eat.  Mr. Bailiff, collect the fines and give them to the defendant.”

And so the following day the papers reported  that 47 dollars and 50 cents were turned over to a bewildered old lady who had  stolen a loaf of bread to feed her starving family, 50 cents of that being contributed by the red-faced grocery store owner, while some 70 petty criminals, traffic violators, and NY police, each of whom had paid 50 cents for the privilege, gave the mayor a standing ovation.*

For a shining moment in the dark of night in New York, everyone was equal in their responsibility to their fellow citizen, everyone was complicit:  those who had broken the law and the police who maintained it, the judge paid the penalty for the wrongdoer, and a message went out that injustice against one is injustice against all.  

As we welcome Yom Kippur this year, I’m particularly amazed and delighted the way this story that reminds us all that we’re all human, all mortal, all responsible, all complicit.  For one full day, sundown to sundown, there are no distinctions among us at all.  We are the old woman in the story, and we’re the shopkeeper, and we’re the mayor.  No one’s more holy or more virtuous than anyone else.  There are no political parties, we’re not divided into nationals and orioles fans, into redskins and ravens fans.  We are all human and we’re all here as imperfect, flawed and fallible.  It sounds harsh since we don’t use the word sin so often but we are all sinners, all of us struggling and striving to confront what we’ve done wrong.  We do this while also recognizing so many of us sitting here tonight have been wronged and are sitting here in pain.   How do we find the path again?   We can’t do it alone.

Our ancestors knew that we need each other’s support and help not only doing the painful times when we can’t help ourselves, but all the time, every day, knowing we’re there for each other.  And nothing is worse than going through Yom Kippur feeling as though we’re alone.  For some of us, we may be surrounded by hundreds of other people tonight and still feel alone.  Knowing we’re there for each other, even if we feel alone someone’s there for us,  is vital for our Yom Kippur holiday that begins tonight, and our Rabbis made sure to explain this very clearly before we hear Kol Nidre lest we begin Yom Kippur frustrated, angry, and lonely.  

And so just before the Kol Nidre Cantor Kappell recited in such a moving way, we recite, “Bishivah shel malah…by the authority of the court on high and of this court below, with divine consent and with the consent of this congregation, anu matirin lehitpalel im ha’avaryanim…we grant permission to pray with those who have transgressed.”

At first  pass it may not seem to be the most community building, ‘love your fellow human being’ message to hear before Kol Nidre.  

But that’s exactly what happens tonight through tomorrow night – we’re all here together.  We realize we’ve all missed the mark, all of us in some way or another, and this is then highlighted even more surprisingly  immediately after  Yom Kippur.  After a day of self-reflection, prayer, and fasting we finish at Neilah, and then in the short weekday Mariv service after Neilah that follows we say slach lanu Avinu ki chatanu and hit our chest again – what could we possibly have done wrong between the end of Neilah and Mariv?  We didn’t even leave shul yet!  Still, there’s something there, at the very least our pride in thinking that we were completely cleansed.  We’re all in this together.

The Rabbis explain Ta’anit sha’ayn bah mi’poshey Yisrael aynah ta’anit (Keritot 6b) – a fast in which no sinners of Israel participate is not considered a fast and our prayers will not be accepted.

And so in truth, even if we all were clean as a whistle and free from sin, we’d have to ship in some sinners from somewhere else.

Our Machzor suggests the permission to pray with Avaryanim is a way of making us all feel welcome as we come here tonight burdened with guilt and perhaps a sense of being unworthy to join with our community in prayer.

Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik underlines the importance of all of us praying together in a lecture he gave in Boston 50 years ago, where he taught, “The communal atonement effected by the very day of Yom Kippur is compromised if any members of the Jewish people are excluded.  We therefore make this declaration that we are permitted to pray with those who have sinned…” (Machzor Masoret Ha Rav Yom Kippur, p. 66)

Then in our morning prayers, we will ask God to help us become agudah achat, one people, one nation bound together.  The word agudah takes us to Sukkot, the binding that holds the lulav pieces together is called an Egged, like the bus service in Israel that ties one location to the next.  The Rabbis teach us that each of us is like one piece of the lulav and etrog combination, and all the pieces together resemble the entire nation of Israel, none of the pieces can be left out and the Rabbis conclude that each person then, whatever his or her misdeeds, whatever he or she is struggling with now, that each of us michaprin zeh et zeh, that each of us atones for each other.  It’s like the game where we stand in a circle facing in, then turn to face the back of the person in front of us, pull the circle a little tighter, and then we all sit down, each of us supporting the next person in the circle.  We’re all involved in supporting each other and balancing the whole community.  We need everyone’s voice, everyone’s presence, everyone’s input, everyone’s energy and the holy power of each person’s soul otherwise our Yom Kippur just doesn’t work.

But with all this said, Avaryanim, the word used in the paragraph before the Kol Nidre prayer, is a strange word to use for sinners.  There are other more common words for the same thing.  Rabbi Alan Lew notices this unique word and he believes it “suggests an even deeper reality that all of us share.  Not only are we all imperfect.  We are all impermanent, all of us mortal.  In its simplest meaning avar(from the word AVAR-yanim) means ‘to pass’.  We are the Avaryanim.  We are the ones who are just passing through, every one of us…”  We must confront this reality first before we can renew ourselves, and what better way to recognize our humanity, our fragility, than surrounded by friends, family, and fellow community members.

This Yom Kippur, this year, I pray we see the people around us, the people we know, the people we don’t know yet, as our fellow travelers in our passing through this life, through this world.  Today there are no distinctions among us, we are each other’s keepers, we are responsible for each other, and if we could think this way for one full day then what miracles could we accomplish together in the days ahead knowing in our hearts, in the depths of our being, that we’re connected to each other by invisible lines?

We will not ever all agree with each other of course, and that is a good thing, too much unity begins to become uniformity and God topples the Tower of Babbel in the days after Noah’s ark lands and makes us all speak different languages for just that reason  -- but we also cannot continue to be as polarized as we are, otherwise we risk cutting those invisible lines of connection between us.  We once visited a synagogue in New Jersey where some members mentioned to us that they recently moved their seats because they did not want to sit next to other synagogue members nearby who held to different political views.  The ancient Rabbis were familiar with dissension in communities and the houses of the Great Rabbis Hillel and Shammai, who vehemently disagreed on nearly all matters of Jewish thought and practice, still maintained social relationships with each other – they were friends, their children married each other.  

Tonight each of us can be like LaGuardia at the night court, recognizing how we’re all tied together by links of tradition, family, friendship, and being part of this community we’re creating every moment we gather – all of us here, guests, extended family members, people of all faiths with us.  Hearing Kol Nidre tonight reminds us of a critical lesson from our Sages that just as a person lights one candle from another and the original flame is not diminished, so too we are strengthened when we pass our internal flame to another.  May our observance of Yom Kippur strengthen us to do so every day of this New Year.

Tzom Kal u-mash-ma-u-ti, an easy and meaningful fast for those who are fasting, and  ketivah ve’hatima tovah, may we all be written and sealed in the Book of Life.  Amen.

*I  initially heard this story from a pastor friend in  New Jersey.  He quoted the  La Guardia story from the book The Ragamuffin Gospel by Brennan Manning.  




Friday, October 4, 2019

Erev Rosh Hashanah 2019/5780: The Whale


There was a front-page article in the San Francisco Chronicle that told the story of a female humpback whale who had become entangled in a spider's web of crab traps and lines. She was weighted down by hundreds of pounds of traps that caused her to struggle to stay afloat. She also had hundreds of yards of line rope wrapped around her body, her tail, her torso, and a line tugging in her mouth.

A fisherman spotted her just east of the Farallon Islands (not far from the Golden Gate) and radioed an environmental group for help. Within a few hours, the rescue team arrived and determined that she was so badly off, the only way to save her was to dive in and untangle her. They worked for hours with curved knives and eventually freed her.

When she was free, the divers say she swam in what seemed like joyous circles. She then came back to each and every diver, one at a time, and nudged them, pushed them gently around as she was thanking them. Some said it was the most incredibly beautiful experience of their lives. The guy who cut the rope out of her mouth said her eyes were following him the whole time, and he will never be the same.

May you, and all those we love, be so blessed and fortunate to be surrounded by people who will help us get untangled from the things that are binding us, helping to enable all of us to enter the New Year having grown and matured with our past experience but unburdened by its weight. And, may we always know the joy of gratitude, as our Rabbis teach us, the word ve’natnu, meaning “and they gave” -- this word is a palindrome in Hebrew – it reads the same way forwards and backwards, because in every sincere act of giving, we also receive blessings in return, as the divers did when they helped the whale to be free.

The story of the whale is also an appreciation of life and the ability of love to cut through differences between human and animal, between one person and another, and to create in their place ties that bind us closer together, with this spirit we wish each other Shana Tovah, a year of goodness, happiness, good health and blessings.  Amen.

Friday, September 27, 2019

Parshat Nitzavim: You will be found

How many of us played hide and seek growing up?  How many of us still like playing?

There’s a story of a Hasidic Rebbe who is walking through the town with his students.  As they’re passing a narrow alleyway between two buildings they notice a little girl leaning on one of the buildings and crying. 

The Rebbe approaches her and asks, “Little girl, why are you crying?”  The little girl responds, “We are playing hide and seek, and I’ve been here so long, and I don’t think they’re looking for me anymore.”  He reached out his hand and walked her home.

In that moment, the Rebbe took a valuable lesson from this wise little girl about the meaning and message of Rosh Hashanah.  At this time of year the Shofar calls us to make sure we’re still looking for God.  God, in a sense, is lonely, hoping we’ll be searching, as our the Prophet Isaiah teaches us, dirshu Ado-nai be-hi-matz-oh, k-ra-u-hu bi-hyoto karov(55:6), search for God when God is to be found, call out to God when God is close.  And that moment is right now, as the New Year begins.

And this time of year is also about searching for each other.  Throughout the year we may lose contact with each other, even our families, through the grind of routines and busy schedules and staying afloat while working, caring for family, taking care of ourselves, we, and the people we care about, may feel lonely even if we’re traveling the same circles even living in the same house. 

The Torah shouts out this message to us in its own quiet but forceful way in our Torah reading today.  We will see in Chapter 29, verse 28, of our reading today the following message, “The hidden things are for Ado-nai our God, and the visible are for us and for the next generations forever for us to fulfill the words of our Torah.”

Over the Hebrew words lanu ulvanenu, for us and the next generations, we find 10 small circles handwritten into the Torah scroll and printed in our chumashim.  The great Rashi explains that prior to crossing the Jordan our ancestors are liable for neither the hidden things, the darkness inside, nor for the visible, the wrongs we commit out in the open.  When we cross the Jordan and seal the agreement between God and us forever, only then we become fully arevim ze lazeh, responsible for one another.

With these specially written marks in the Torah scroll, the Torah shouts out to us we’ve crossed the Jordan, which for us is the New Year, the boundary between  the old year and the new, and now, like the game of hide and seek, we’re fully responsible for each other and it’s time to repair, rebuild, and renew.  It’s time to search for and find each other – who have we lost touch with?  Is there someone sitting nearby us at synagogue we haven’t met yet?  What is one way we may want to connect in and grow in our Judaism and spiritual growth this year?  

One of the more powerful current stories that speaks of loneliness and the hope of reconnection is the play Dear Evan Hansen.  In the music of this show, we find a statement that would make the little girl playing hide and seek feel better, a message that can remind us to avoid despair and avoid giving up when life hits us hard.


Have you ever felt like nobody was there?
Have you ever felt forgotten in the middle of nowhere?
Have you ever felt like you could disappear?
Like you could fall, and no one would hear?
Well, let that lonely feeling wash away
Maybe there's a reason to believe you'll be okay
'Cause when you don't feel strong enough to stand
You can reach, reach out your hand
And oh, someone will coming running
And I know, they'll take you home
Even when the dark comes crashing through
When you need a friend to carry you
And when you're broken on the ground
You will be found

May we all be found in this New Year.  Shabbat Shalom.

Friday, September 6, 2019

Yarika and Ollie Live...

Yarika and Ollie Live - the beginning of a fun new resource for sharing with kids the meaning and message of the weekly Torah portion and more - written by Rabbi Rachel Schwartz & performed by Rabbi Rachel and Rabbi Neil Tow -- This week's video is about Parshat Shoftim -- "Show off your team"

Click here to watch the first video:  https://youtu.be/Q8wDydibB7g


Friday, August 23, 2019

Getting ready for Elul: Season of Love - For ourselves, for our community

525,600 minutes, 525,000 moments so dear. 525,600 minutes - how do you measure,
measure a year? In daylights, in sunsets, in midnights, in cups of coffee. In
inches, in miles, in laughter, in strife. In 525,600 minutes - how do you
measure a year in the life?
How about love? How about love? How about love? Measure in love. Seasons of
love.

Dodi Li, Va’ani Lo ha’roeh bashoshanim…

As we discussed last week, T’u B’Av, the holiday 6 days after Tisha B’Av is about love.  And now, as we get ready to turn the corner into Elul, we find Elul is also about love.  The Rabbis observe that the word Elul, spelled Aleph, Lamed, Vav, Lamed can be read as shorthand for the words Ani Ledodi Ve’dodi Li, the verse from the Song of Songs meaning, I am my beloved’s, and my beloved is mine, a phrase we often hear in song and in speaking at weddings.  Elul, the new Hebrew month that begins next Friday is a time of love and caring, a time of reaching inward for self-reflection and reaching outward as we strive to show appreciation for those we care about and to begin to rebuild relationships that are broken.

Elul comes around as our world stands in the throes of hate speech, anti-Semitism, a prevented attack on an Ohio Jewish center, trade wars, Brexit and the future of Europe in debate, mass protests in Hong Kong, rising tension in the South China Sea and in the Persian Gulf.  Let’s have faith though that our personal and community journeys through Elul, the month of teshuvah, the month of turning, can ripple out into the world and have a meaningful impact.
            
 Rabbi Alan Lew explains teshuvah time comes around now, at this time every year, since Tisha B’Av was the moment, like in the kids song, all falls down.  Now’s the time we have a look around as the dust settles and figure out our next steps. The challenge is that like Tisha B’Av, we tend to find ourselves often in the same patterns.  Rabbi Lew teaches us, “The unresolved elements of our lives – the unconscious patterns, the conflict and problems that seem to arise no matter where we go or with whom we find ourselves – continue to pull us into the same moral and spiritual circumstances over and over again until we figure out how to resolve them.”(Lew, 2003, p. 42)

And so now it would seem to be the time to focus on ourselves, cheshbon ha’nefesh, a thorough accounting of ourselves, our souls, figuring out who we are, who we hope to be in the New Year, what are our priorities, our goals, our dreams, our plans.  

Then, we read this week’s Torah portion, especially the part toward the end of the reading that we may recognize as the second paragraph of the Shema, a passage written about the nation, about all of us, about our collective responsibility.  
            
It’s hard enough to summon up the courage to examine our faults, our flaws and growing edges.  How can we possibly check in with and be responsible for everyone else, literally the entire People of Israel?  
            
As Tevye says, “It isn’t easy.”
            
Just as hearing the Shofar during Elul is a first step toward the full cavalcade of Shofar blasts on Rosh Hashanah, in the spirit of celebrating 50 years since Neil Armstrong walked on the moon, let’s take one small step.  Over the next weeks prior to the New Year, let’s commit to introducing ourselves to one or two people we see at synagogue whom we don’t know.  And if we’re blessed to know most or everyone we see, let’s commit to going one step beyond surface conversations and ask each other some open ended questions that can help us chart our own personal, and communal, pathways into the New Year.
    

After Tisha B'Av: All you need is love!

All you need is love…

Today is a day of love in the Jewish calendar.  

Tu B’av, the 15thday of Av,  a day of matchmaking in the Jewish calendar, a Sadie Hawkins day, a day of dancing and celebration, a day of love.

It’s an uncanny coincidence we’re celebrating Tu B’Av today and then reading from our  weekly parsha Va’etchanan tomorrow that includes the Shema and V’eahavta, you shall love the Lord Your God with all your heart, soul and might.

It’s an uncanny coincidence that this Shabbat is Shabbat Nachamu, the first Shabbat after Tisha B’Av, the day of remembering the tragedies of Jewish history, now, we turn toward hopefulness, toward a New Year on the way, and this first Shabbat is Nachamu, the Shabbat of comfort – a Shabbat of love between God and us, as tomorrow’s special Haftarah tells us, “Speak to the heart of Jerusalem -- God will gather the lambs and lead them gently.”

We celebrate a time of love and hope, a time of moving toward renewal.

The Torah tells us 3 times “You shall love”

First, Ve’ahavta lireacha kamocha – love your neighbor, your fellow human being.

Next, love the stranger, the ger, who lives among you.

Finally, in our portion this week, Ve’ahavta et Ado-nai, love God.

There is a wisdom in this order, a progression.

It’s easiest to love the people who are closest to us, who we see most often, who we know best.  If they are good people, kind and caring, of course, they are the easiest to love.

The stranger though is more difficult.  They are outside our immediate lives, also created in God’s image but not as familiar to us, and we rightly need to establish trust first before we are closer with them.

And finally, love God – God is in our hearts, is everywhere all at once, but unlike the previous two categories of people, God is invisible, eternal, energy without form, intangible, and so possibly the most difficult to love.

Ben Yair Ha’kohen explains we can’t love God unless we first love our fellow community members.  

Why not?

If we only love God, we may not pay much attention to the people around us except as necessary for life.

But if we love people first, and we see them as God’s image, as part of the masterwork of God’s creation, then we have tangible evidence of God’s Presence, and God becomes easier to relate to.

Think of someone you care about, what about that person is holy, special, and an amazing gift in our world.  Think for a moment.


These qualities are all qualities our tradition teaches us are essential qualities of God – and so at this moment in our calendar, 7 weeks until Rosh Hashanah, let’s take inspiration from Ve’ahavta and focus on caring for and nurturing the people we care about and also nurturing and nourishing ourselves and our spirits, so that when we come to Rosh Hashanah, we’re ready to share our love and care with so many others and knit our community together into a wonderful whole that is greater than the sum of its parts.

One way to do this is to say each morning as Rabbi Isaac Luria recommends, “I accept upon myself the mitzvah of loving my fellow human beings as myself.”

Thursday, July 18, 2019

The Healing Team: Doctors & Priests (Parshat Tazria)

I imagine the students at any medical school would be a little suspicious if they would read our Torah portion for this week, Parshat Tazria.

There are likely doctors and nurses among us right now, and I include myself among those who find it perplexing the way God instructs Moses and Aaron that when the skin disease tza’ra’at appears on a person, the individual must go not to an urgent care, or to Moses Taylor hospital, but to the kohen, the priest.  

Why should an individual who has a disease go to a religious figure rather than a medical professional?  

Our Rabbis explain there are 3 causes for the tza’ra’at that may affect a person.  The first is lashon ha’rah, speaking about other people, sharing information, and gossip. The second is haughtiness, and the third is stinginess.

According to the Kli Yakar, Rabbi Ephraim of Luntshitz, the reason we go to the kohen, and not a doctor in the case of tza’ra’at, is the kohanim, the priests, they were virtuous in all three of these qualities – they didn’t speak lashon ha’rah, they were humble, and they were willing to give.  So they were the right people to approach.

However, there were doctors or healers in the ancient world, and even though they were seen ultimately as instruments of God’s healing power, they had expertise that the priests did not.

Menachem Chizkuni clarifies to us that although the priests were the final authority on purity and impurity, they worked together with doctors at the time.  Chizkuni explains:  

Are then all priests experts by birth? The system works as follows: When the problem of tzoraat arises, someone who has studied the subject is consulted. The priest accepts the superior knowledge of this expert, and makes his ruling based on what he has been told by the expert who has examined the afflicted person. It is irrelevant whether the priest is truly familiar or not with the symptoms the Torah has taught us.

We see here a wonderful collaboration between faith and science, between experts of different disciplines who both recognize that, in the end, God is the true healer, as we read in the Torah, ani Ado-nai rof-echa.

But, as we know too well, the healing doesn’t always happen.  Our Rabbis teach us that when we visit someone who is sick we take away 1/60thof their illness.  We lighten their load, remind them they’re not alone, remind them they’re still part of the community.  

Think for a moment about someone in your life who is not well, take a moment to see their face, we pray that the joyfulness of Shabbat, the light, the prayers, the singing, will energize us to reach out and support those who are suffering, suffering physical illness, mental illness, and those who are feeling sad, left out, or isolated. May the light of the Shabbat candles shine even brighter for them & as we celebrate the creation of the world on Shabbat, may God help restore and renew all those we are praying for.  And we say:  Amen.

Friday, March 8, 2019

Pikudey: When is anything "finished"?

Growing up in our house, we always had to watch our plates at the dinner table.  If we didn’t pay attention, Mom would start to clear the plates before we finished, and, literally, we’d look down and the plate would be gone.  “But I wasn’t finished” was pretty frequent at our table.

When is something complete, finished, done?

The great Dutch artist Rembrandt was once asked why so many of his works look half-finished. He replied: "A work of art is complete when in it the artist has realized his intention."(Quoted from:  https://www.npr.org/2016/05/31/479584758/you-gonna-finish-that-what-we-can-learn-from-artworks-in-progress)

As we read the end of Exodus today, we look back at Genesis, when God finishes creating the world, “Vaychulu ha’shamayim ve’ha’aretz…”  When God completed creation of heaven and earth…How does God choose that point in time to stop and reflect?  Does God ‘realize God’s intention’ then, looking over everything saying “Tov me’od”, it is all very good?

Today we read very similar language in our parsha, in Genesis we read ‘Vay’chulu’, today we read, “Vay’chal Moshe et ha’mlachah…’ The same verb, this time, Moses completed the work, the work of assembling the Mishkan, the Tabernacle, the portable holy place for our ancestors in the wilderness.

How does Moses know that the Mishkan is complete?  The Mishkan is a holy tent, one designed to be set up and then dismantled, time after time, and so is our parsha teaching us that the first assembly represents the completion?

The Spanish philosopher Rabbi Isaac ben Moshe Arama offers us a way to make sense of when a project is complete, and he explains it to us in reference to the creation of the world, the 7thday, Shabbat, as God looks back on the week of creation.

I’d like to quote him in full here:
It is a well known fact that a period of motion is usually followed by a period of rest. The Sabbath at the end of six days of creative activity, during which something had been created out of nothing, was such a period of constructive rest, tachlit. The purpose of all creative activity had been to attain this goal, the Sabbath. Once completed, the universe could be shown to have been a successful creation only, if it were able to function on its own, without constant directives from its Creator.Moving into a new home, living in it, testifies that the building process has been completed successfully, even though already during the various stages of erecting the structure there may have been many moments of satisfaction, pride, and sense of achievement for the builder.

Arama observes that we know something is complete when it stands on its own, no longer tethered to its Creator.

The world is complete on day 7 since it now functions on its own: tides, sunsets, animals eating food, giving birth to young, human beings living on their own with all the privileges and responsibilities.
The Mishkan is complete since it’s now assembled and ready for use.  The craftspeople who created it step aside and admire it, and the priests begin their work there.

While philosophically we might (or might not) agree on Rembrandt’s definition of completion, we know all too well the feeling that few things in life ever feel truly complete.  We write a letter, go over it a hundred times, edit it, and then send it in only to think of a perfect turn of phrase that would have made it clearer just a few minutes after it’s out there.  We go shopping and buy a cart full of groceries only to recognize when we’re unpacking that we forgot to buy one key ingredient.  

If Rembrandt is right, then all evidence shows us the moment of completion is a decision each of us makes in the moment, often on the fly, because either the due date compels us to, or the conditions are right for us at the time. 

How often do historians argue about when a time period begins and ends? 
How often do scientists say ‘further testing is needed’?

The best comfort we can take in a world in which completion or a sense of fulfillment is subjective and so also temporary is that God is fulfillment and harmony itself.  The fact that God is invisible means God’s Presence, inspiration, and holiness are spread fully and completely throughout the universe.

And our parsha hints at this truth for us when we notice as soon as Moses finishes assembling the Mishkan, God’s Presence fills it up.

And so when we feel troubled by that feeling of incompleteness, when there is indecision and when we’re undecided about where we stand, and when a question we think we’ve answered lingers inside us, we can remember this moment at the end of Exodus, and at the end of Creation, and say, ‘Vaychulu hashamayim ve’haaretz’, like a mantra, if God can create a moment of closure, a moment of reflection, then hopefully we can also find that moment within ourselves, just as our Rabbis teach us about Shabbat, that on Shabbat we must think and act as though all our work is done, that nothing is left undone, and even if the host clears our Shabbat dinner plate before we take the last few bites, we’re content, and we’re satisfied.



Friday, February 22, 2019

Ki Tissa: Hear the World Through Heaven's Ears

When we think of God giving the 10 commandments at Sinai, we tend to focus on gratitude, celebration, and maybe the image of Mel Brooks as Moses, dropping a 3rdtablet so that instead of 15 we have just 10 commandments.

But it’s neither smooth nor an easy moment either for Moses or the people.  

The people get nervous, with Aaron’s help they create the golden calf.

But the defining moment here is a quieter one that’s usually overshadowed.

Joshua, hearing the people at the golden calf, says, “There’s a sound of war in the camp!”  Joshua, the warrior, hears war.  Moses responds, it’s not the sound of triumph or defeat it’s the sound of song.”
Neither Joshua nor Moses know about the Golden Calf yet.  They only hear a sound.  As with the moment God reveals the Torah to the entire nation, Joshua and Moses don’t see anything, they only hear the commotion, or the boisterousness as it’s sometimes translated.  
As the leaders of the newly freed nation, Moses recognizes that they must change their mindset, not just their geography.  In other words, we can take the Israelites out of Egypt, but it’s going to take much longer to take Egypt out of the Israelites.  

To become a holy people, our ancestors not only have to free themselves from slavery, they have to start with a fresh perspective, challenge their assumptions, and practice lessons they never had the chance to learn during slavery – like real listening and finding the courage to advocate for each other. Joshua responds to the sounds he hears like the warrior he is.  He hears through a warrior’s lens.  To achieve empathy, he must recalibrate and open himself up to alternatives. Similarly, a slave is stuck in the perspective of oppression and requires leadership to find his or her way out of this condition, again, not only out of the place where he or she is enslaved but out of the mindset as well – as our ancestors teach us in the Talmud, ayn chavush matir et atzmo bi’bayt ha’asurim, the slave cannot on his own liberate himself from the house of slavery.   And Moses also teaches Joshua about empathy, something the Egyptians clearly were not concerned about with regard to the Israelites. While it’s not in the Torah, the scene from the 10 Commandments in which Moses stops a large stone block from trampling a helpless slave suggests the type of empathy that God wishes for us to achieve.  And, we find also in the wisdom of the Ramban – Moses also doesn’t want Joshua to develop a negative view of the people Joshua will one day lead. Wants to keep an open mind, to keep hope alive, also a challenge for a former slave!  

May Moses’ wisdom remind us always we build community by seeing and hearing each other as fully as possible, since, as our ancestors teach us, kol yisrael arevin ze ba zeh, each of us is responsible for each other.  The new Tablets the people will carry with them for 40 years in the wilderness will remind the entire people to strive to reshape themselves into a free, strong people, able to listen and show empathy to one another, and the short spoken wisdom of Moses to Joshua will also stand forever of the need to constantly strive to see the world through a fresh set of eyes, as Jethro sings in the animated version of the Exodus story, may we “See the world through heaven’s eyes, " and may we hear the world through Heaven's ears.
Shabbat Shalom.