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Rabbi John Rosove's Blog

Category Archives: Divrei Torah

Into My Children’s Cups – A Poem for Parashat Toldot

25 Friday Nov 2011

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Divrei Torah, Inuyim - Prayer reflections and ruminations, Musings about God/Faith/Religious life, Poetry

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Isaac is the most misunderstood and underappreciated Patriarch. So often he is cast by commentators as feeble-minded and weak, a passive victim to his father’s zealotry, manipulated by his mother Sarah and his wife Rebecca, taken as the fool by his son Jacob, passed off as a simpleton and follower minus the revolutionary fervor of Abraham and the dream visions of Jacob.

I believe this view of him is unfortunate and wrong. Indeed, without Isaac Abraham would have passed into oblivion because Isaac re-dug his father’s wells (Genesis 26:18+), an act of profound yearning and faith. After he did so God gave this blessing: Al tira, ki it’cha Anochi u-vei-rach’ti-cha v’hir’bei-ti et zar’a-cha ba-a-vur Avraham av’di – “Fear not, for I am with you, and I will bless you and increase your offspring for the sake of My servant Abraham.” (Genesis 26:24)

Like his father Abraham and his son Jacob, Isaac recognized the significance of his Divine-human encounter. The Midrash and mystical traditions understand his re-digging his father’s wells as Isaac’s own spiritual search for God.

The well, with its hidden waters, is a symbol of soul-light covered over by physicality (i.e. klipot), and Isaac’s “digging” and seeking that Ineffable light became the central organizing motif of his adult life and a sign of his spiritual maturity.

Though Isaac broke no new ground, by re-digging Abraham’s wells the son embodies spiritual continuity and the virtue of perseverance, each a core necessity for the perpetuation of the Jewish people and tradition.

Not all of us are revolutionaries digging new wells and forging new spiritual paths, or visionaries intuiting God’s presence and calling us to God, but our role as re-diggers of our forebears’ wells needs always to be appreciated as essential to life itself and the sustenance and future of Judaism and the Jewish people.

The following is my poetic tribute to Isaac, one of my favorite figures in all of Torah, because he was a pre-eminent “digger” of faith.

I am Isaac. / Tradition doesn’t esteem me / as my father and son. / To our people’s cynics / I’m a passive place holder, / set between two visionaries / one hearing God’s voice, / the other communing with angels.

To them I’m the do-nothing / dull-witted middle-man, / neither here nor there, / coerced into submission by a father, / tricked by a son and abandoned by God, / who willed me slain / to test my father’s faith, / and thus become / history’s most misunderstood near-victim.

My father was driven by voices, / left home on a promise / and journeyed to a Place he’d never seen, / a low-lying mountain shielded round about by a cloud / beneath heavenly fire.

My son dreamed of angels / ascending ladder rungs / from land and form / into spirit and spheres.

Tradition diminishes me / insinuating that I merely built a worldly fortune / on my father’s wealth.

Ancestors all / I’m far more than this / for you see / the wellsprings I’ve uncovered / are more than you know / greater that waters deep, calm, cool, and tranquil / their streams flow to the Source of souls.

I dug anew these, my father’s wells / the same the Philistines / with stopped-up hearts / and clogged souls / filled in when he died.

I and my servants dug and dug / our thirst unquenchable / passions unleashing / hearts expecting / souls soaring / on angels’ wings.

And after all our digging / we found the well and the spring / flowing in earthly and heavenly wetness.

The inflowing fountain never dries up. / The well is replenished / continually / and whoever drinks from its waters / merges through supernal faith.

The wells I have dug / are the same as my father’s. / That is our gift to you!

All I yearn for / is to pour the waters into your cups / that you carry on and dig anew / and pour out the same / into your own children’s cups.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Isaac and Rebekah – a poem for Parashat Chayei Sarah

17 Thursday Nov 2011

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Divrei Torah, Poetry

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My father Abraham set out alone, / leaving everything he knew, / seeking a better place / where he’d never been / because God promised him / blessing and the future.

I am in mourning / ever since my mother died / after my father stole me away / before dawn / while she slept / to slay me / and destroy his blessing / and my future.

When she awoke / her servants told her / that he placed me upon the pyre / as a burnt-offering / to his God.

An angel stayed his hand, / but my mother never knew / so she died / with a broken heart.

How she loved me, / filling me up as a goblet / with her tears and laughter.

And now I am alone, quiet / amidst the wheat and rocks, / beneath the sun / and stirred-up clouds / swirling like disturbed angels.

Can You hear me / O merciless God? / Bend Your world, if You do / and reverse time / that my mother / may be here with me / and we be / as we were.

…Looking up / a camel caravan – / the people appear / as tiny sticks stuck / in sand / in desert heat-waves-dancing.

There is my father’s servant Eliezer / and a young girl / growing larger / before my eyes.

-Lasuach basadeh- / I pray and weep / beneath this sun / and swirling clouds.

Rebekah to Eliezer: / ‘Who is that man / crying there / in the field?’

‘He is my master Isaac, / your intended one, / whose seed you will carry forward / as God promised his father.’

-Vatipol min hagamal- / She alighted from her camel / and veiled herself / for she understood / that this was her wedding day.

I entered her / in my mother’s tent, / and she comforted me.

Abraham’s Last Test – Did He Pass or Fail? D’var Torah Vayera

10 Thursday Nov 2011

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Divrei Torah, Musings about God/Faith/Religious life

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In our post-World War II world there is no aspect of the story of the Akedah (the Binding of Isaac) that is not jarring and disturbing. We ask, how could any father agree to slay his own son on God’s command and claim this as essential to faith?

This Torah portion (Vayera) confronts our relationship with God as none other in our tradition. In this age of skepticism, doubt and tentative belief we ask what kind of a human being was Abraham who was prepared to kill his son? Did Abraham “hear” God correctly, and if so, could any of us have said “Hineni” (Here I am) as Abraham did when God called him to demonstrate how far his faith would take him?

The mystics tell us that Abraham’s willingness to do God’s will reflects an ideal man of faith, that there are times when (per Kierkegaard) we have to suspend the ethical and nullify completely the individual ego, even if it means destroying everything we love and our future. The 20th century Israeli scholar and thinker Yeshayahu Liebowitz has written that we are not supposed to extract an ethical message from Abraham’s behavior. In effect, he says, human beings are not commanded by the Torah to be ethical; they are commanded to serve God!

I wonder. My understanding of the Torah and prophetic traditions is that a covenant of justice and compassion is what God requires of us, not heartless self-destruction.

The key Hebrew command relative to Abraham’s near slaughter of his son reads: Kach na et bin’cha, et y’chid’cha, asher a-hav’ta et Yitzchak v’lech l’cha el eretz ha-Moriah v’ha-a-le-hu sham l’olah al echad he-harim asher omar elecha (“God said, ‘Take your son, your only one, the one you love, Isaac, and go to the land of Moriah. Offer him there as a burnt-offering, on one of the mountains that I will show you.” (Genesis 22:2).

One midrash says that Abraham’s understanding of the event was wrong from the start and based on a mistaken perception of the original order. Abraham should have tried to find out, the midrash argues, what God wanted of him and not do anything until he was certain about what he was being asked to do.

Rashi explained that Abraham did not, in fact, understand God’s words and command. God didn’t say “slaughter your son – v’tish’chat et bin’cha.” He said, “Lift up your son to the service of God – v’ha-a-le-hu sham l’olah.”

Yes, the word “olah” can be rendered as a burnt offering; but it literally means “that which is lifted up.”

Recall Kunte Kinte from the 1977 TV Mini-Series “Roots” as he, following his tribal custom, took his son to the top of a mountain and lifted him in thanksgiving and dedication to the spirit world. Recall, as well, “The Lion King” doing the same by presenting his son and future King to his spiritual relatives among the stars.

In the Genesis story, just as Abraham lifted the knife to slay his son God sent the angel rather than speak directly to Abraham to stay his hand. God never spoke to Abraham again. Was God devastated by Abraham’s mishearing of his call to dedicate his son? Did Abraham fail that tenth and most crucial final test of faith? Did Abraham really understand the meaning of the Divine-human partnership?

The end of the story is clear. God did not want human sacrifice and we do not have to give up our humanity to serve God. What Abraham did earlier at Sodom and Gomorrah and what Moses did at the sin of the Golden Calf – namely, challenge God to live up to God’s own standards of justice and compassion – that is the lesson of the Biblical tradition. That is our Jewish legacy!

Shabbat shalom.

Go Forth – Amir Or for Lech L’cha

04 Friday Nov 2011

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Divrei Torah, Inuyim - Prayer reflections and ruminations, Poetry, Quote of the Day

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Go forth from your land, my Lord, / Go forth, come to me, / travel my skin with your lips. / Come dark, come night, / touch all of me, touch, / leave no soundness. / Rise in omens within me, grant / on everlasting inheritance, a multitude / of seed, my Lord, / because I grant it to you / I will increase your hire.

Go forth from your body, my Lord, / go forth, come to me, / wound my heart, smooth of teeth. / Touch my face, touch my eyes, / truly kill, leave nothing. / Rise within me to the fingers of tears, rise / to the man, until before you / I / shall end.

Go forth from yourself, my Lord, / go forth, come to me, / travel my length, my width, / travel my horizon / I / will burn before you, not consumed. / See my spirit / but some face to your void, see / here I am / no more.

(Translated from the Hebrew by the author. From “Modern Poems on the Bible: An Anthology” – edited with an Introduction by David Curzon, publ. JPS, 1994)

Amir Or was born in Tel Aviv in 1956. He is an editor, translator and poet whose works have been published in more than 30 languages. Or is the recipient of the Prime Minister’s Prize for poetry.

 

How Abraham Healed God’s 4-Lettered Holy Name – D’var Torah for Parashat Lech L’cha

03 Thursday Nov 2011

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Divrei Torah, Musings about God/Faith/Religious life

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The greatest Jewish theological revolution since the destruction of the Temple (70 CE) has been brought about by Kabbalah. The greatest new idea about the relationship between God and humankind to appear during the past 2000 years was introduced by Jewish mystics who boldly asserted that we humans actually have the ability to restore God’s wholeness and effect the end of God’s exile within the Divine Self. Much of this new thinking was stimulated by Rabbi Isaac Luria (15th century, Safed) whose ideas about the origins of the universe led to the belief that the Jewish people has the capacity to create the conditions necessary for the Messiah to come.

Isaac Luria’s cosmology is brilliant and simple. He explains that when God contemplated creating the universe the Creator realized that there was no room for anything except God’s Self, Who filled all time and space. In order to accommodate the new creation God underwent contraction (tzimtzum). Before the beginning God’s essence was light, and so God took away some of the light and placed it in giant vessels (keilim), but the vessels were not strong enough to contain the light and an explosion shattered the vessels (sh’virat ha-keilim) flinging the shards (kelipot) to the four corners of the universe. Trapped in the shards were sparks (n’tzitzot). Whenever a Jew performs a mitzvah (commandment), a spark is released from a shard. When all Jews perform all the mitzvot, all the sparks are released, the Messiah (Mashiach – lit. “anointed one”) is ‘awakened,’ and Tikun Olam (restoration of the world) results. When this occurs God too undergoes Tikun and the holiest Name (YHVH or Yod–Heh–Vav–Heh) is reunified.

Jewish mystics explain that the Yod–Heh (the first two letters of the 4-letter Name) represents the “highest” and purest of God’s ten emanations (Sefirot), but were separated from the Vav–Heh (the third and fourth letters of the Name) when the vessels shattered. The Vav-Heh represents the “lower” Divine Sefirot. As such, the “upper” and “lower” worlds were split apart (i.e. going into exile from themselves) reflecting the brokenness of our own world.

Enter Abraham, who in this week’s Parashat Lech L’cha (Genesis 12:1-17:27), receives the Divine call. That call and Abraham’s receptive response was a necessary stage leading to the unification (Yihud) of God’s holiest 4-letter Name. How so?

In Genesis 12:2 we read of God’s promise to Avram (he became Avraham in Genesis 18 after the Brit Milah):

“I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you; I will make your name great, and You shall be a blessing (Veh’yeh b’rachah).”

Note that God’s 4-letter Name (Yod-Heh-Vav-Heh) is comprised of the same 4 letters as Veh’yeh (“…and be a blessing”), but appear in a different order (Vav-Heh-Yod-Heh).

Rabbi Levi Yitzhak of Berditchev (1740-1809, Ukraine), teaching that nothing is to be overlooked in Torah and that every word and letter have deeper metaphysical significance, wrote:

“The letter Yod-Heh [the ‘higher’ Divine emanations] in the word Veh’yeh is an allusion to God, whereas the letters Vav-heh [the ‘lower’ Divine emanations] is an allusion to the Jewish people. As long as Abraham had not existed, there had not been a human being who tried to ‘awaken’ God’s largesse to be dispensed in the lower regions. God’s largesse, whenever the Eternal One dispensed it for the good of humankind, owed this exclusively to the Creator’s goodwill [i.e. meritless Grace]. As soon as Abraham became active on earth, there were deeds on earth that ‘awakened’ God to dispense the Divine largesse as a result of acts performed by human beings. In other words, prior to Abraham, God’s Name could be spelled in the order Yod-Heh-Vav-Heh, whereas this order had now been reversed and God’s Name could be spelled as Vav-Heh-Yod-Heh… The reversal of the sequence of the letters Vav-Heh hints at this largesse having its origin in the ‘lower,’ rather than the celestial regions.” (Kedushat Levi, translation and commentary by Rabbi Eliahu Monk, Lambda Press, volume 1, pages 43-44)

What is the meaning of this complicated understanding of the 4 letters in God’s Name? Until Abraham appeared, Levi Yitzhak taught, there was no mutual relationship between God and humankind. However, with Abraham all that changed. Abraham’s capacity to “hear” God’s call (i.e. prophesy) and respond augured well not only for the future spiritual development of the Jewish people, but also signaled the beginning of Divine Tikun.

The Torah’s reversing the order of the letters represents Abraham reversing the direction of largesse that had exclusively come from God to humankind to a new paradigm that moved from humankind to God.

The idea that Jews can actually effect the internal life of God is revolutionary, not only in Judaism but in the history of religion. This is why, according to Jewish mystics, Abraham was the world’s first Jew. As a Jew, each one of us carries a burden, responsibility, opportunity, and profound privilege to work towards tikun olam, the restoration of a shattered universe. When that occurs so too is there a Tikun Shem M’forash (a restoration of God’s holiest 4-letter Name).

Shabbat Shalom.

 

 

 

The Sign – A Midrash on the Rainbow – D’var Torah for Parashat Noach

28 Friday Oct 2011

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Divrei Torah, Ethics, Musings about God/Faith/Religious life, Poetry, Stories

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God looked out upon creation and saw violence and chaos engulfing humankind and the earth. There was neither kindness nor justice. Empathy had ceased, eclipsed by fear and hatred. In Divine rage God determined to destroy everything and return creation to primordial darkness.

The Eternal mourned what He had once called “good” and recalled how great an effort He had made to create the heavens and the earth, to give life to growing things, to design and fashion the birds, sea creatures and animals. Sadness grew within the Divine heart. The Creator stepped back from the brink and wondered; ‘Is there perhaps one human being on earth, different from the rest, who fathoms Me, and for whose sake I can begin anew?’

In a blink of the Divine eye, God peered into every human soul seeking that one person, better than the rest, who might be good and pure enough to hear the Divine voice.

To His relief, God found one man named Noah, and he told him to build an ark, save his own family and two of every creature, for the rest would be destroyed. As the Eternal contemplated the devastation that would soon come, Divine tears flooded the earth for forty days and nights. When, at last, God’s tear ducts were dry the waters receded, land reappeared and the ark docked. God then spoke to Noah:

‘I am God, Noah, Who created you and brought you to this place. Look now and see the cleansed earth. The world is once again new. There is no rage nor hatred, violence nor hubris corrupting the human heart. I will make with you a covenant marked by a sign that will remind us both how I created the world in peace, destroyed it, and allowed it to begin anew that it might be a place of love and peace.

The sign of this covenant will be a smile that will stretch across the heavens and fill the sky. It will be an arc of light shining through the flood waters, a vision of loveliness that will inspire love and awe for Me. This promise, Noah, shall be called the ‘rainbow,’ and it will be My promise that never again will such devastation engulf the earth. Yours and your children’s responsibility will be to protect and nurture My creation, for if you destroy it there will come no one after you to set it right.’

Then God bent towards the earth and stretched the Divine arm across the sky and formed an arc. Where God’s hand had been there appeared a sheltering bow of every color spread out across a blue canvas of sky. And God spoke of the colors and the sign of the rainbow:

‘First comes red for the blood pulsing through human veins that carries My Godly soul and the life of humankind; orange is for the warmth of fire and its power to create, build and improve upon what I created; yellow is for the sun that lights the earth and gives vision to earthly eyes that they might see Me in all things; green is for the leaves of trees, their fruit and the grass that all creatures might feed and be sustained in life; blue is for the sky, sea and rivers that join air and ground and reveal that all is One, divinely linked and a reflection of Me; indigo appears each day at dusk and dawn to signal evening and morning, the passage of time and the seasons, the ever-renewing life-force in all things; violet is for the coming of night when the world rests and is renewed, carrying the hope that all might awake each morning and utter words of thanksgiving and praise.’

God explained to Noah that the rainbow appears to the human eye as a half circle; ‘Do not be fooled! There is more to life than what the eye can see. There is both the revealed and the hidden. The hidden half of the bow extends deep into earth that you and those who yearn for Me might come and discover vision and Truth, and reveal the message of love and peace to all the earth.’

God told Noah, ‘Remember this blessing, My child, and you will remember My promise – Baruch Atah Adonai Eloheinu Melech ha-olam, zo-cheir ha-brit v’ne-e-man biv’ri-to v’ka-yam b’ma-a-ma-ro.

Praised are You, Eternal our God, Sovereign of the revealed and the hidden, Who remembers, is faithful to and fulfills the Divine covenant and promise.

Inspired by classic Midrashim

A Message to our Politicians from Rashi and Genesis – from Parashat Noach

26 Wednesday Oct 2011

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in American Politics and Life, Divrei Torah, Israel and Palestine

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In viewing the behavior of some politicians and government officials in the United States, particularly those running for president in the Republican party, as well as the government of Israel, Rashi’s commentary (11th century France) on Avram towards the very end of the Torah portion Noach this week is relevant. His comments appear relative to Genesis 11:26-28, as follows:

“When Terach had lived seventy years, he begot Avram, Nahor, and Haran. Now these are the begettings of Terah: Terah begot Avram, Nahor, and Haran; and Haran begot Lot. Haran died in the living presence of Terah his father (al p’nei Terach aviv) in the land of his kindred, in Ur of the Chaldeans.”

Here is Rashi’s commentary on the above passage: “Al p’nei Terach aviv -The words al p’nei denote “during the lifetime of his father.” And the aggadic intepretation says: The words al p’nei denote that “on account of his father did he die.” For Terach complained against Avram his son before King Nimrod because Avram had crushed his [Terach] idols; and King Nimrod cast him [Avram] into a fiery furnace, while Haran sat and said to himself, “If Avram wins I shall be on his side, and if Nimrod wins I shall be on his side.” And when Avram was saved they said to Haran, ‘On whose side are you?’ Then Haran said to them, ‘I am on Avram’s side.’ Whereupon they cast him into the fiery furnace and he was burned. And that is the significance of Ur Chaldees [lit, “The fire of the Chaldees” – B’reishit Rabba]…”

What is the lesson? To our political candidates here and in Israel, stop pandering to the most extreme elements or to the winds of popular sentiment for the sake of your holding onto or winning office. Find your true voice and speak it based on reason, the facts, heart, soul, and the interest of the common good and avoid being thrown into the furnaces of whim, stupidity and short-sighted gain!

The Serpent(s) of Our Dreams – D’var Torah – Parashat B’reishit

21 Friday Oct 2011

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Divrei Torah, Musings about God/Faith/Religious life

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13] And the Lord God said to the woman, “What is this you have done!” The woman replied, “The serpent duped me, and I ate.” 14] Then the Lord God said to the serpent, “Because you did this / More cursed shall you be / than all cattle / and all the wild beasts: On your belly shall you crawl / and dirt shall you eat / all the days of your life. 15] I will put enmity / between you and the woman, / and between your offspring and hers; They shall strike at your head, and you shall strike at their heel.” (Genesis 3:13-15)

Who is this serpent? In the broadest sense, Rabbi Bachya ben Asher (15th century, Spain) explained that the serpent foretells the future moral and spiritual calamity of humankind. In the more limited sense in the Garden of Eden, the serpent, seemed initially to have held an exalted position as the ‘Lord of the Central Two Trees’. He was among the most intelligent of creatures, so much so that God gave him the ability to speak. However, he was so jealous of the human’s special gifts and status with God, that with deceit and cunning he sought to cause a breach between them by instigating the first sin in the Bible, resulting in Adam and Eve’s expulsion from paradise. The serpent would pay dearly for his lies, deceit and deception. He lost his legs and speech, was forced to eat dirt, and became the enemy for all time with humankind.

The Chatam Sofer (19th century, Slovakia) noted that the serpent’s greatest sin was that he sought deliberately to undermine God’s uniqueness as the Creator and Sovereign of the Garden by referring to the Holy One only by the name Elohim, whereas throughout the Eden narrative God is referred to always as Adonai Elohim. In doing this the serpent demoted God by comparing him with lesser entities, such as angels and judges, and he planted doubt about God’s Ineffable power in the minds of the first humans.

The Zohar identifies the serpent’s soul with God’s and Israel’s greatest enemy Amalek who attacked the Israelites from behind as they left Egypt where the most vulnerable people were marching. Amalek’s attack was timed in the period before the people had a chance to meet God at Mount Sinai and receive Torah thus enabling Israel to represent holiness in the world. This is why Amalek came to represent all of Israel’s and God’s most vicious enemies (i.e. Rome, the Inquisitors, the Nazis, etc.). Amalek’s name equals 240 the same as is the Hebrew word safek (doubt).

The mystical tradition adds complexity to the meaning of the serpent by suggesting that there are not one but two serpents – a holy serpent and an evil one. As evidence, Kabbalah points to the numerical value of nachash (serpent) as 358, just as is the numerical value of mashiach (messiah). This suggests that the only path to redemption lies through a battle between good and evil, between the yetzer tov and yetzer ha-ra. In this final battle the Zohar says that the “holy serpent” will kill the evil one and merit marrying the Divine princess, thus uniting with the origin of the souls of Israel and bringing about redemption to the world.

This remarkable myth explains much about human nature and our complex and often difficult relationship with God. The serpent is a potent symbol of the attractions of the physical world, of temptation and particularly sexual temptation, which was uncovered when Adam and Eve ate from the forbidden tree, recognized their nakedness, and covered themselves out of shame.

In a conversation with Bill Moyers towards the end of his life, Joseph Campbell explained that this story represents duality in the world, the world of physicality on the one hand and the eternal nature of the soul on the other. For many commentators the story is about the nature of the afterlife. Campbell, however, retells the story by explaining that “the ability to throw off life and to continue to survive is represented by the snake who sheds its skin [and is renewed]… just as the moon sheds its shadow [and a new moon emerges]. The snake isn’t good or bad,” he said. “It’s necessary.”

He continued: “I don’t think [this story is about] seeking meaning for life [in the hereafter, as has been suggested by many]. Rather, I think what we are seeking is the experience of being alive [in the here and now], so that the experiences we have on purely the physical plane will have resonances within our innermost being and reality…[affording us] the rapturous experience of being alive… [Life’s meaning doesn’t come when you] peak your head under a rock or [consider a new] philosophy…. Rather, the meaning of life is about the experience of realizing that your dreams have come true, that your make-believe world has become reality.” And he concluded that we should all “envision our dreams and embrace them.”

Shabbat Shalom.

 

 

 

When God First Said – a poem by Natan Zach

17 Monday Oct 2011

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Divrei Torah, Poetry, Quote of the Day

≈ 1 Comment

Simchat Torah comes this week and with it on Shabbat the Torah cycle begins anew with the reading of Parashat B’reishit (Genesis 1-6:8).

This first parashah of the year is so rich, so multi-layered, so provocative in symbolism, metaphor, and myth about the nature of origins, God’s purpose for us humans, and the nature of the human being that it is always an exciting challenge to choose a theme for a D’var Torah. I am working on something now about the meaning of the snake (nachash) in the Garden of Eden, and will post that later in the week.

In the meantime, Natan Zach, one of Israel’s greatest poets, offers this provocative poem about God’s first intentions when contemplating creation. Born in Berlin in 1930, Zach was taken to Palestine by his family in 1935. He fought in the War of Independence and is regarded today as one of Israel’s greatest citizens. He is not alone among Israel’s poets. What other country in the world lifts its poets to the exalted status of greatness as does Israel? None!

“When God first said Let there be light/ He meant it would not be dark for Him./ In that moment He didn’t think about the sky,/ but the trees already were filling with water,/ the birds receiving air and body./ Then the first wind touched God’s eyes/ and He saw it in all His glory/ and thought It is good. He didn’t think then/ about people, people in their multitude,/ but they already were standing apart from the fig leaves,/ unraveling in their hearts/ a scheme about pain./ When God first thought of night/ He didn’t think about sleep./ So be it, God said, I will be happy./ But they were multitudes.”

Translated from the Hebrew by Peter Everwine and Shulamit Yasny-Starman, Modern Poems on the Bible – an Anthology, Edited with an Introduction by David Curzon, 1994, pages 31-32

Z’man Simchateinu – The Messianic Thrust of Sukkot

14 Friday Oct 2011

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Divrei Torah, Holidays, Inuyim - Prayer reflections and ruminations, Musings about God/Faith/Religious life

≈ 1 Comment

The Kotzker rebbe was asked once if he had the power to revive the dead. He answered: “Reviving the dead isn’t the problem; reviving the living is far more difficult.”

On Sukkot we are told to build temporary dwellings in which to reside for 7 days to remind us of life’s frailty and our dependence on God for physical and spiritual sustenance. As we build these flimsy dwellings, the festival reminds us of our duty to take action, rebuild our lives and not default to passivity nor fail to work to heal a shattered world. In this sense Sukkot is a messianic holiday, and the four species of plants in the lulav-etrog bundle present a messianic ideal.

The tradition of the Lulav and Etrog is based on a verse from Leviticus (23:40); “On the first day you shall take the product of Hadar trees (the etrog), branches of palm trees (lulav), boughs of leafy trees (myrtle – hadas), and the willows of the brook (aravah) and you shall rejoice before Adonai your God seven days.”

The Midrash (Vayikra Rabba 30:12-13) to Leviticus compares each plant to a different kind of Jew:

“THE FRUIT OF THE HADAR TREE symbolizes Israel; just as the etrog has taste as well as fragrance, so Israel have among them those with learning and good deeds. BRANCHES OF PALM TREES, too applies to Israel; as the palm-tree (lulav) has taste [i.e. the dates of the palm] but no fragrance, so Israel has among them such as possess learning but not good deeds. AND BOUGHS OF THICK TREES I likewise apply to Israel; just as the myrtle (hadas) has fragrance but no taste, so Israel have among them such as possess good deeds but not learning. AND WILLOWS OF THE BROOK also applies to Israel; just as the willow (aravah) has no taste and no fragrance, so Israel have among them people who possess neither learning nor good deeds. What then does the Holy One, blessed be God, do to them? … says God, let them all be tied together in one band … If you have done so [says God], then at that instant I am exalted…”

The Jewish messianic ideal requires that the Jewish community as a whole be united. The four species bundled together symbolize a unity not yet achieved, but inclusive of every kind of Jew, regardless of knowledge, ethical and ritual behavior.

The four species represent Jews from the most learned and diligent in the performance of the mitzvot to the most unlettered and negligent. The lesson of the lulav and etrog lies in the fact that as long as all four are part of the whole, even Jews with little knowledge of Judaism and little observance of the mitzvot, have a role to play in our community. When we exclude anyone from the fabric of Jewish society, we are essentially incomplete. The message is clear. We need everyone, and though we are so often at odds with each other, Sukkot reminds us that enmity and alienation from one another cannot be allowed to stand.

At the same time, Rabbi Yitzhak Arama (15th century Spain) teaches that Sukkot is far more than a holyday only for Jews. It is also universal in scope and vision embracing all of humankind. When we look at the “four species,” he taught, we are reminded of the four types of existence in the universe:

[1] The etrog is held apart from the other three and is not bound up with it. We hold it in the left hand opposite the heart. The etrog represents the highest form of existence, that which is perfect in all its aspects – namely, God;

[2] The lulav/palm branch represents purely spiritual creatures, the angels (mal’a-chim), and is the most honored of the remaining three species of plants and the tallest;

[3] The hadas/myrtle represents the stars and planets, luminary bodies of an enduring nature;

[4] The aravah/willow represents the world of humankind replete with all our inadequacies and imperfections.

The prophet Zechariah, which is read on the first day of Sukkot, tells of the nations coming to Jerusalem to celebrate Sukkot, for it is more universally messianic than any other holiday in the Jewish calendar year uniting the Jewish people, humankind, nature, the heavenly bodies, the angels, and God.

We call this festival of Sukkot – Z’man Sim’cha-tei-nu – the Season of our Joy – and when considering the universal and messianic nature of the chag is it any wonder why? This kind of joy is our response to the vision of a perfected world in the image of the dominion of God.

May that vision be our hope and our blessing. Chag Sukkot Sameach!

 

 

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