Showing posts with label Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan. Show all posts

Friday, July 18, 2014

A Double Minyan for Peace, or, Seeing the Holiness in Others - Mattot 5774

On Tuesday evening, I experienced an evening minyan like no other. I was not here at Temple Israel, where there was the regular evening minyan at 8 PM, thanks to those who made the effort to come.

No, this minyan was unique. It was at Temple Sinai in Roslyn, and it was part of a Long Island Board of Rabbis (LIBOR) program that brought together Jews and Muslims from the area for learning and prayer. It was part of a world-wide program called Boharim BaHayyim, Choose Life, and such meetings were held all over the world: in Israel (where there were four such meetups in Jerusalem alone), in Kuwait, in the US and Canada, in several European countries. 



Tuesday was Shiv’ah Asar beTammuz, the 17th of Tammuz, which is one of the five minor fast days of the Jewish calendar, a sun-up to sundown fast, commemorating (among other things) the day upon which Moshe broke the tablets of Torah that he received on Mt. Sinai, and the breaching of the walls of Jerusalem by the Babylonians after the siege of 586 BCE. It was also the eighteenth day of Ramadan. So observant Jews and Muslims around the world were fasting together on this day, and given the current situation in Israel and Gaza, some of us took this as an opportunity to meet, learn, pray, and break bread together after the fast. (An article about the international event also appeared on the Israeli newspaper Yediot Aharonot’s website, and Nechama Liss-Levenson, a Great Neck writer and member of Great Neck Synagogue, blogged about the event for the Forward.)

The meeting at Temple Sinai attracted about 60 people, about half Jews and half Muslims. Among the Jews, there were representatives of Reform, Conservative, and Orthodox communities.

So, after some introductory speeches, Rabbi Lina Zerbarini of the Sid Jacobson JCC taught a passage from our textual tradition, which we discussed as a group. The text, from the Talmud Yerushalmi (30b), raises the question of the greatest principle found in the Torah:
ואהבת לרעך כמוך ר' עקיבה או' זהו כלל גדול בתורה
בן עזאי אומ' זה ספר תולדות אדם זה כלל גדול מזה
Rabbi Akiva taught: “‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ [Leviticus, 19:18] This is the most important rule in the Torah.” Ben Azzai says: “’This is the record of Adam’s line. When God created man, He made him in the likeness of God,’ [Gen. 5:1] And this is an even more important rule.”
Why does Ben Azzai argue that this statement regarding the creation of human in God’s image is greater than loving your neighbor? Because it is essential to acknowledge the spark of Divine holiness that is present in each of us on this Earth - rich and poor, black and white, American and Pakistani, Jewish and Christian and Hindu and Buddhist and Muslim and secular and, yes, even the atheists. This latter principle should lead to the first one; that is, seeing the holiness in others should enable us to love them as we love ourselves.

A visiting Islamic scholar, Imam Ibrahim Negm, who is a special advisor to the Grand Mufti of Al-Azhar University in Cairo, invoked a similar principle from Muslim tradition. He said that you cannot call yourself truly faithful until you understand and appreciate the value of the faith of others. This fits nicely in-between the two Torah principles identified in the Talmud.

And then that minyan. The Jews went first. Temple Sinai’s bimah faces west, but the Jewish custom is that if there is a sefer Torah in the room, we face the Torah. So we gathered on the bimah together and recited the traditional ma’ariv, while the Muslims in the room sat patiently and observed in their seats. After we concluded with Mourner’s Qaddish, we returned to our seats while the Muslims, men and women, removed their shoes, gathered at the back of the room, and performed their evening prayer, known in Arabic by the name maghrib, a cognate to our ma’ariv.

I wonder how often it has happened that Muslims have gathered to pray in a synagogue? (It is worth pointing out here that both Muslims and Jews acknowledge each other’s tradition as purely monotheistic, and therefore that neither a synagogue nor a mosque is a place of avodah zarah, of idol worship. Not all Jewish authorities agree that this is the case for Christian houses of worship.)

At the end of both the Jewish and Muslim prayers is, interestingly enough, a prayer for peace. Just as we say “Oseh shalom bimromav,” they conclude by saying, “As-salaam aleikum.” How ironic, and yet not so.

****

Some of you may have noticed that Rabbi Zalman Shachter-Shalomi passed away a little more than two weeks ago. Reb Zalman, as he was generally known, was a key figure in the Jewish Renewal movement. He came from the Chabad-Lubavitch fold, but left them to forge his own path in the middle of the 20th century, drawing on a variety of religious traditions that brought him away from his Hasidic background. His obit in the New York Times said the following:

"His exposure to Eastern religion, medieval Christian mysticism and LSD... helped him formulate some of the innovations he brought to contemporary Jewish practice...

[Reb Zalman] “realized that all forms of religion are masks that the divine wears to communicate with us,” [a friend was quoted as saying]. “Behind all religions there’s a reality, and this reality wears whatever clothes it needs to speak to a particular people.”

Speaking as one who stands up and advocates for Jewish tradition on a daily basis, I must confess that some of his ideas were too far beyond the pale of what is normative in Judaism to be appealing to me. But what does indeed resonate with me is the idea that all religious traditions have similar objectives: to get us in touch with the Divine, to encourage us reach out to one another in healthy, inspiring ways, to spur us to do good works in this world.

He was, in this regard, not too far away from Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan, from whose work the Reconstructionist movement emerged. Rabbi Kaplan rejected the idea of Jewish chosenness, arguing instead that all religious paths to God are effectively equal.

Now, I know that these sorts of ideas make some of us uncomfortable. If all religions serve the same goals, why should we be in any way particularistic? In other words, why be Jewish, when being Christian might be just as good and much easier? Kaplan’s response to this is that the Torah is ours; our ancestors have carried it with them for centuries and given it to us. I would add the rhetorical question, “Who are we to leave such a rich, glorious tradition? Who are we to deny our own heritage, to abandon what we have received from our parents and grandparents and all who preceded them?”

But the larger point here is that just as our tradition is rich and glorious and valuable and meaningful, inspiring centuries of Jews and, let’s face it, launching other religious traditions, so too are the teachings of the other great religions. And while we differ over dogma and rituals, the goals are ultimately the same. Love your neighbor as yourself. See the holiness in yourself as well as others. Pursue peace with all your being. Our tradition teaches this, and we should learn it and live it; and likewise for everybody else.

We need not fear the other. On the contrary, we should strive to see the divinity in each human being on this Earth. We cannot live a holy life until we understand and value the needs of everybody else around us, and appreciate their life and faith and fundamental human rights.

We must instead cooperate with all of the good, open, moderate people in this world, the ones who are willing to talk, and to bypass and constrain the bad actors. In our own corner, we have to work to eliminate the Jewish extremists like the group that carried out the brutal murder of 16-year-old Muhammed Abu Khdeir. And across the border, we have to reach out beyond Hamas to the people of Palestine and Gaza. (A credible poll from the past week by Palestinian pollsters indicated that roughly 70% of Gaza’s population does NOT support Hamas.)

Let’s face it. Just as Gaza has been hijacked by terrorists, who are more insistent on shooting rockets into Israel then taking care of their own people, so too have certain parts of the Muslim world been hijacked. And parts of Judaism and Christianity. There are even violent Buddhist nationalists in Myanmar and Sri Lanka, and Hindu nationalists in India who have persecuted Muslim minorities there.

But about 30 Muslims came the other night to break bread with Jews right here on Long Island, and hundreds more around the world did the same. We need to find more ways of bringing people together, not just one day a year, not just in the 30 or so gatherings that were held on Tuesday evening around the world, but again and again in more places and more contexts, in synagogues, in mosques, in churches, in ashrams, in temples of all sorts. We need to seek and appreciate the divinity in others.

As I wrote these words, I received the not-particularly-surprising news that Israel has launched its ground invasion. I hope and pray with all my being that our valiant IDF forces are able to take out terrorist infrastructure with a minimum of pain and loss and suffering on both sides, a minimum of lives lost. But we know that people will die, some ordinary people, some good people, some civilians. We should not lose sight of the divinity of a single person who loses a life or is injured, and we should continue to pray that this round will pass quickly.

But we should further pray that a long-term solution is found more quickly, that the good people of Gaza throw off the yoke of Hamas, that the good people of Israel are safe and secure and never again subject to hourly bombardment by terrorists of any stripe.

As a part of the illustrious tradition that God gave to us, every weekday, three times a day, we offer in the Shemoneh Esreh, the weekday Amidah, a series of berakhot / blessings that follow the pattern of: Praise - Request - Thanks - Peace.

I really wish, some times more than others, that we could save those thanks to God for when we get the peace. But tefillah / prayer does not work that way. On the contrary, it’s a blueprint for what could be. We thank God in advance for what we hope will be a better world.

And that goes double for the ma’ariv / maghrib minyan in which I participated on Tuesday evening. A blueprint. An aspiration. A hope.

I assure you that I am not as naive as I might seem. But I am filled with hope. We have to keep hoping for peace, concluding every service with a plea to God for peace, and taking baby steps toward peace, even in our darkest hours.

Shabbat shalom.


~
Rabbi Seth Adelson
(Originally delivered at Temple Israel of Great Neck, Shabbat morning, 7/19/2014.)

Friday, September 2, 2011

Irene and Theodicy - Jewish answers to difficult questions


(Originally delivered at Temple Israel of Great Neck, Shabbat morning, September 3, 2011.)

This week, I saw a few videos of my hometown, Williamstown, Massachusetts, and of other Western New England locations - Connecticut and Vermont, places that I think of as being my greater homeland, the “old country.” They were taken during and after Tropical Storm Irene had blown through, dumping buckets of rain on the region, far more than fell here. One of them was particularly striking: it showed the soccer fields where I had practiced and played as a 10-year-old boy, completely flooded as a nearby river, really not more than a glorified stream, had risen 10 feet or more over its banks. Another showed one of the iconic covered bridges of Vermont, in a town called Bartonsville, being swept away in a flood as onlookers cursed in disbelief.

I was also shocked to learn yesterday that there are 273 newly-homeless people in Williamstown, because a retirement-age mobile home park was flooded.

In the past two weeks, we have experienced an earthquake and a hurricane. There was a time, not too long ago I think, when we thought of those kinds of natural disasters as happening elsewhere, far away. As my family and I sat in the basement on Sunday morning with candles, flashlights, toddler toys, and a guitar, I thought, “Well, how on earth am I supposed to explain this?” Not to the children, mind you - they were having fun. But to us. To the people who would see the storm damage on television, would hear the rising body count, and say, “Rabbi, what do we make of all this?”

And I wanted to avoid it. In fact, I had about ¾ of a sermon on an unrelated topic written by Thursday morning. And then I saw those videos, and I tossed it out and started over. We’ll talk about building relationships another time.

Rather, I think that this is as good a day as any to take on the question, even if only briefly, of why there are hurricanes to begin with. Or, writ large, why does God allow such destruction? Why is there evil in the world at all, human or otherwise?

The problem of theodicy, that is, answering the question of why God allows suffering, is an ancient one. Here is the problem in a nutshell:

1. We believe God to be all-good.
2. We believe God to be all-powerful
3. There is evil in this world.

It is not possible for all of these statements to be true.
If God is all-good and all-powerful, then how can there be evil?
If God is all-good and there is evil, then how can God be all-powerful?
If God is all-powerful and there is evil, then how can God be all-good?

So you see the problem. We’re going to look now at a few sources from various periods in Jewish history to examine how we have handled this problem. And, I am afraid to say, there is not a completely satisfying answer in the lot.


Job, Chapter 38 - Job, a righteous man who has lost everything, asks God why. God answers Job from a whirlwind:

Who dares speak darkly words with no sense?
Where were you when I founded the earth?
Speak if you have any wisdom:
Who set its measurements, if you know, laid out the building lot, stretching the plumb line?
Where was the ground where He sank its foundations?
Who was setting the cornerstone
when the morning stars were all singing, when the gods were all shouting, triumphant?
Have you beheld the earth’s expanses?
Tell me, if you know everything!--
Where is the path to where light dwells, and darkness, where does it belong?
Can you conduct them to their regions, or even imagine their homeward paths?
You must know, you were born long ago! So many years you have counted!

****

God is saying, how dare you? Who are you to question the way that I conduct myself. You weren’t there when I created the world, and your perspective of the way things work is insignificantly small compared to mine. In other words, humans cannot understand God’s choices, in matters of life and death or otherwise.

Not very satisfying, right?


Babylonian Talmud, Massekhet Berakhot 7a
אמר לפניו רבש"ע מפני מה יש צדיק וטוב לו ויש צדיק ורע לו יש רשע וטוב לו ויש רשע ורע לו
Moses said before Him: Lord of the Universe, why is it that some righteous men prosper and others are in adversity, some wicked men prosper and others are in adversity?

(The Talmud then provides three “answers.”)
1.
אמר לו משה צדיק וטוב לו צדיק בן צדיק צדיק ורע לו צדיק בן רשע
He replied to him: Moses, the righteous man who prospers is the righteous man the son of a righteous man; the righteous man who is in adversity is a righteous man the son of a wicked man.

רשע וטוב לו רשע בן צדיק רשע ורע לו רשע בן רשע:
The wicked man who prospers is a wicked man son of a righteous man; the wicked man who is in adversity is a wicked man son of a wicked man.

2.
אלא הכי קא"ל צדיק וטוב לו צדיק גמור צדיק ורע לו צדיק שאינו גמור
The Lord said thus to Moses: A righteous man who prospers is a perfectly righteous man; the righteous man in adversity is not a perfectly righteous man.

רשע וטוב לו רשע שאינו גמור רשע ורע לו רשע גמור
The wicked man who prospers is not a perfectly wicked man; the wicked man who is in adversity is a perfectly wicked man.

3.
ופליגא דר' מאיר דא"ר מאיר שתים נתנו לו ואחת לא נתנו לו
Now this is in opposition to the saying of R. Meir. For R. Meir said: only two [requests] were granted to him, and one was not granted to him.

שנא' (שמות לג) וחנתי את אשר אחון אע"פ שאינו הגון ורחמתי את אשר ארחם אע"פ שאינו הגון
For it is said (Exodus 33:19): And I will be gracious to whom I will be gracious, although he may not deserve it, And I will show mercy on whom I will show mercy, although he may not deserve it.

The Talmud answers the question with three possible answers:
1. That your parents’ actions may dictate your fortune (the Talmud goes on to disagree with this, specifically because it says in the Torah that children are not held responsible for their parents' actions).
2. That you must be completely righteous in order for only good things to happen to you all the time.
3. That God doles out verdicts according to God’s whim.


Rabbi Harold S. Kushner, When Bad Things Happen to Good People, Schocken, 1981, pp. 44-45.

Innocent people do suffer misfortunes in this life. Things happen to them far worse than they deserve -- they lose their jobs, they get sick, their children suffer or make them suffer. But when it happens, it does not represent God punishing them for something they did wrong. The misfortunes do not come from God at all.

… [I]f we can bring ourselves to acknowledge that there are some things that God does not control, many good things become possible.

We will be able to turn to God for things He can do to help us, instead of holding on to unrealistic expectations of Him which will never come about...

We can maintain our own self-respect and sense of goodness without having to feel that God has judged us and condemned us. We can be angry at what has happened to us, without feeling that we are angry at God. More than that, we can recognize our anger at life’s unfairness, our instinctive compassion at seeing people suffer, as coming from God who teaches us to be angry at injustice and to feel compassion for the afflicted. Instead of feeling that we are opposed to God, we can feel that our indignation is God’s anger at unfairness working through us, that when we cry out, we are still on God’s side, and He is still on ours.

****

Rabbi Kushner’s God is a limited God. That is, God is indeed NOT all-powerful. Some of the things that happen in this world simply cannot be attributed to God.


Rabbi Mordecai M. Kaplan, Basic Values in Jewish Religion, Reconstructionist Press, 1957, pp. 100-101.

The question why evil exists is one to which the human mind should never expect to find an answer. It seems to be a necessary condition of life which we accept as part of existence. For, as human beings, we can never really know why anything exists. But if the existence of evil is part of the mystery of the world that baffles human understanding, the existence of the good is no less a part of that mystery. We know, as a matter of experience, with a knowledge as positive as any data supplied by the senses, that there are matters that give us deep and immediate satisfaction, that there are times when we feel in the depth of our being that it is good to be alive. There is goodness in the world that flows in on us sometimes, when we least expect it. This, too, is part of the mystery of life and this, too, is real. By focusing on this reality, this possibility of experiencing salvation, we transcend those doubts that are born of human suffering.

This does not mean that we lose sight of the evil in the world. It merely means that we do not permit it to represent for us the essential and ineradicable nature of reality, in whole or in part.

****

Rabbi Kaplan admits that there is simply no good answer to the problem of theodicy. But his approach is also to affirm that even though we cannot understand the reasoning behind either bad or good things that happen, that we should emphasize the good, because it is through focusing on this that we are open to personal salvation, which he describes as removing obstacles to our own personal fulfillment.

****

There really are no good answers to this question, and this is hardly reassuring, especially considering that hurricane season has just begun, and a new storm is working up in the Gulf of Mexico. Given that, which approach do you like the best, and why?