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In
Our Own Handwriting
Kol Nidre - September, 1999
There is a phrase that runs through
my mind every now and then when I am praying. It is "Say what
you mean and mean what you say." That aphorism takes me back
to one of my first experiences in rabbinical school and also one
of the most painful. This is what happened. At an opening dinner,
I was asked to lead birkat ha'mazon, the prayer after meals. One
of the last lines of the prayer is sung to a hauntingly beautiful
tune. Its Hebrew words are na'ar hayiti v'kam zakanti v'lo raiti
tzadik ne'ezav v'zaro mivakesh lachem. It means "I have lived
my life, yet, I have never seen a righteous person abandoned and
his children going without food."
As soon as I finished singing
this sentence, Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan, one of the greatest Jewish
thinkers of the twentieth century, arose, banged on the table and
exclaimed: how can you sing those words. "Say what you mean
and mean what you say." The point he was forcefully making
is how can we truthfully claim in a prayer that the righteous are
never abandoned by God nor their children lack food? This was back
in 1965, a scant twenty years after the holocaust killed 6 million
Jews among whom were the greatest rabbis of their day and many of
the most pious Jews of their generation. Was it true of them that
the righteous are not abandoned nor their children lack for bread?
I have never forgotten Rabbi Kaplan's words nor his admonishment
to be honest in prayer.
I must make a confession to you
at this season of confession. The High Holiday prayers not infrequently
raise the red flag "of say what you mean and mean what you
say." There are moments in the service when I think to myself,
"Do I really believe that? Do I want my congregants to believe
it? And do I want people out there to think that I believe it?"
Ironically, the most troubling
moment for me used to come at what is probably the emotional highlight
of the High Holiday service - the Unetaneh Tokef prayer. The melody
is beautiful and the words are moving but are they true?
Do we really believe brosh hashanah yeekatayvoon u'v'yom tzom kippur
yahhatamun - that "On Rosh Hashanah, it is determined and on
Yom Kippur, confirmed, who shall live and who shall die, who shall
prosper and who shall fail?" If life is predetermined on the
High Holidays - or at any other time for that matter - why wear
seat belts, why watch what we eat, why go through chemo and radiation
to fight cancer since it is already decided who shall live and who
shall die? The theology of Unetaneh Tokef seems dissonant with reality
as we know it and every year verbalizing the words would bother
me.
This year, however, I found myself
at peace with this prayer. The reason is an explanation of Unetaneh
Tokef by Rabbi Harold Kushner that turns its words into an invaluable
lesson especially for this season of the year. Rabbi Kushner points
out that there are really two parts to Unetaneh Tokef - each of
which describes a different, even contradictory reality. Yet, interestingly,
both points of view are correct. The key image of its first part
is the "book of life," sefer ha'hayim. God opens this
book on Rosh Hashanah and reviews the detailed record of our doings
- good and bad. Then comes the most important statement of this
prayer: v'hotem yad kol adam bo - this record of our deeds has our
own seal. It is written in our own handwriting. We are its indisputable
author. We, alone, are responsible for our actions and for their
consequences. We can't resort to the "Twinkie" defense
that the sugar in my junk food made me do it. This is the very point
of a story in the Talmud concerning Rabbi Eliezer. This famous rabbi
came from a distinguished background and a great future was predicted
for him. Regrettably, though, he strayed from the path of Jewish
life. He became addicted to the allurements of lust and passion
and immersed himself in sinful ways. One day, he heard a voice from
heaven (his conscience, if you will) tell him, "Eliezer, you
have no share in the world to come." Overwhelmed by this verdict,
he cried out these strange words. "Kochavim u'mazalos - stars
and planets, plead for me."
Now why was Rabbi Eliezer appealing
to the stars and planets? Because he was looking for an excuse to
explain and rationalize his failures. Does the Hebrew word for planets,
mazalot, sound somewhat familiar? Its root is "mazal"
which means luck, fortune, destiny. Rabbi Eliezer was saying, "Don't
blame me for what I did. It's not my fault. It's mazel, it's predestined,
it's all in the stars. There's nothing I can do about it!"
Rabbi Eliezer is not alone in
seizing upon destiny to rationalize mistakes and misjudgments. When
John F. Kennedy, Jr. died in a plane crash many people lumped together
his death with the many other tragedies that have fallen upon the
Kennedy family. And they concluded that the Kennedy's are cursed.
Senator Kennedy in his beautiful words of eulogy, gave support to
this thinking when he said that his nephew -like John, Sr., his
father - was not destined for long years. But it was John F. Kennedy,
Jr. who chose of his own free will to fly his plane on that dark
and foggy night. And it turned out to be a tragic mistake! I don't
say this critically. Each and every one of us is constantly making
choices. On occasions, we choose to drive when we're a little too
tired. We usually get away with it, but some people don't. And some
choose to drive too fast or take risks. We are constantly making
choices. And once in a while there is a drastic price to pay for
them.
Returning to the story of Rabbi
Eliezer, the Talmud tells us that after much soul-searching, he
realized he couldn't blame the planets, or fate or destiny for the
conduct of his life. He melted in tears and said, "Ein hadavar
taluee elah bi" - everything that has happened is the result
of my own decisions. My handwriting is on all my deeds. With that
confession, a voice from heaven proclaimed, "M'zuman hu l'chaye
olam ha-ba - Rabbi Eliezer has now earned the right to a place in
the world to come."
Rabbi Eliezer came to realize
that "Ein hadavar taluee elah bi" - that everything that
happened was the result of his own actions. Yet, there is another
reality, a contradictory one. The truth is that not everything that
happens to us is the result of our behavior. There are forces and
events beyond our control. A deranged man goes into a church and
shoots and kills teenagers and adults at prayer. That is a fate
beyond one's control. Several years ago whenever I would exercise
at the Mid Island Y, I would see a man in his thirties who was in
great physical shape. He was lean and mean and obviously worked
out vigorously and carefully watched what he ate. Then a long span
of time elapsed and I didn't see him. I learned that he had contracted
cancer and had died within months. Why? He did everything right.
Of course, you could respond, echoing traditional theology, that
his illness was a punishment for some serious sin that was not obvious
to a mere acquaintance like me. But do you really believe that people
who get a terminal illness suffer because they have sinned - that
this is God's way of punishing them? I think not. Look to the second
paragraph of Unetaneh Tokef. It reminds us, "Who shall live
and who shall die, me yihye u'me lo yihye, who shall prosper and
who shall fail, me yaroom ume yishafel," is on occasions determined
by erratic forces we cannot master.
The Unetaneh Tokef prayer speaks,
then, of two different situations. Its first paragraph reminds us
that in great measure, it is our own behavior that determines what
rewards and punishments come our way. "Ein hadavar talu elah
bi." If we are too lazy or obstinate to put on our seat belt,
we may well die or be serious injured in an accident from which
we would have emerged unscathed had we strapped ourselves in. On
the other hand, sometimes our fate is out of our hands. We can be
a cautious driver and secured by our seat belt but if a drunk driver
plows his RV into our little Neon, our caution and safeguards are
to no avail.
Understood in this way, Unetaneh
Tokef is a profound prayer that accurately reflects our experience
of life. Sometimes things happen to us - good and bad - for which
we are solely responsible. But there are others things - bad and
some good - that come our way - despite what we do or deserve.
Where we get into trouble - spiritually
and morally - is when we get these two realms mixed up, attributing
to fate and forces beyond our control what, in reality, is the consequence
of our own actions and decisions. By failing to see the mark of
our own handwriting in what is happening to us, by seeing ourselves
as victims of circumstances instead of partners and accomplices
in creating them, we let ourselves off the hook too easily. More
significantly, because of our self-delusion, we deny ourselves the
benefit of teshuva, of repentance. We deprive ourselves of its power
to change our behavior and thereby create a more rewarding and fulfilling
life.
Let me give an illistration.
When, I will see a child in our Hebrew School sitting in the hall,
frequently, I will ask the child to come into my office and tell
me what happened. Usually, the story is the same. I wasn't doing
anything wrong, but everyone else was. Yet, the teacher picked on
me.
Now it could be that the teacher
unfairly chastised the child, and I am careful to tell the child
I am sorry if this is what, in fact, happened. However, upon investigating
these incidents, I have found that only on rare occasions has an
injustice been perpetrated. Most often the youngster is minimally
an accomplice to the deed but is unwilling to own up to it. I see
my roll as helping this child understand this. I might say, "Why
do you think your teacher suspected you were involved? Over the
course of the year, have your actions been such that your teacher
might have properly assumed you were part of the group responsible
for the problem? You know that as long as you regard yourself as
a victim, you are not going to learn from this experience and grow
into a better person. Why don't you try changing your behavior so
that in the future you will be an unlikely candidate for suspicion?
My friend, your fate in the classroom is in your hands.
Another example. It is no secret
that after Yom Kippur, our custodians are going to put all the chairs
in the back two-thirds of the room away until next Rosh Hashanah,
because the rest of the year we won't need that many chairs for
our services - not for Succot that arrives in five days, nor for
Shabbat that comes every week. On any of these occasions, there
is no need to look at the cantor and me on the TV monitors over
there. Plenty of seats are available right up front in the main
sanctuary. You don't even have to come early. Just come.
But the vast majority of you
have decided that while Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur are important
to you, during the rest of the year, the synagogue and Jewish traditions
will be marginal to your lives.
Some of your lack of involvement
is my fault, the cantor's fault, the synagogue leadership's fault.
We haven't yet succeeded in making Judaism compelling enough - not
the part that happens in the synagogue building and not the part
that should happen in your home. We haven't been able to convince
you that the existential questions you have about life find answers
in our worship and in the study of our sacred texts. We haven't
been able to convince you that Jewish practices bring what should
be a welcomed spirituality into your home. We have let you down
and I admit it, even though we really try very hard to present Judaism
in a way that is meaningful and compelling.
On the other hand, you have let
us down, too. So often you act like detached consumers of Judaism
rather than as eager partners in producing a spiritually satisfying
Jewish way of life. Instead of wanting earnestly to create a synagogue
of excellence, you have sought to have standards that demand as
little as possible. Not infrequently, you have been takers instead
of givers, allowing the work to be done by too few volunteers and
then complaining that it isn't being done well. So your handwriting
- along with mine and that of the synagogue leadership - are found
together on the list of our failures. And once all of us admit our
culpability, we can take control of our synagogue's destiny. The
truth is that we have to see the synagogue as a place where each
of us must contribute our own particular gifts. Because with our
combined talents - and only with all of them, can we make the Woodbury
Jewish Center a synagogue of excellence.
There is much in life - more
than we readily admit to - over which we have control. We have to
recognize that we are in the drivers seat and we have to accept
responsibility for steering in the direction we have set. And once
we do, we are the ones who ultimately benefit. This point is powerfully
made in an unlikely place - an article that appeared several years
ago on people with spinal cord injuries. The authors found that
the patients who did best at physical therapy were those who had
caused their own injuries, for example, by falling asleep at the
wheel of a car, by diving into the shallow end of the swimming pool
or by carelessly falling off a ladder. They fared far better than
patients who were innocent victims of someone else's mistake. The
authors' proposed explanation is that people who are victims of
other people actions feel powerless. Somebody had gotten them into
this mess and somebody had better get them out of it. But those
who held themselves responsible for their predicament felt that
they also had the power to do something to remedy it.
My friends, the purpose of Yom
Kippur is to bring home the truth that we have power over our lives.
Because as long as we insist on seeing ourselves as victims, as
long as we persist in assigning the cause of our problems to others,
we place our well-being and our happiness in other people's hands.
Only when we accept part of the responsibility, only when we recognize
our own handwriting somewhere on the record, can we take control
of our lives and hope to experience change that will result in our
happiness and contentment. This self-awareness helps us in so many
ways. It enables us to realize that if our marriage is to be better,
it is not just my spouse who has to change. I have to change too.
If my health is going to improve, it will not happen only because
God listens to my prayers or because I am hoping that by the time
I get really bad, medicine will have discovered a cure. It will
be because I take upon myself a healthy life style. If I want my
relationship with my estranged sister or brother to be healed, I
can't just sit back with my hands folded and wait until they decided
to say "I'm sorry." It will happen because I took the
initiative and deliberately created an opportunity for healing to
begin. If I want my synagogue to have more activities or perform
better those it is already engaged in, I can't just wait around
for someone else to do it. I need to get involved myself. This is
the self-knowledge I hope we can all come to through our experience
in the synagogue this holy day. And if we do, when we leave the
synagogue at Yom Kippur's conclusion, we will not feel helpless
about our problems and the things we know are wrong. Rather we will
take control of our lives and meet the challenges of living it in
a healthy, honest, caring and loving way.
L'shana tova.
Have a good new year and may God bless you.
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