Growing A Synagogue Part E – Staff and the Modern Shul
There are kehillot (communities) that have a wealth of talented members who don’t need the guidance of a rabbi or cantor in their congregations. If rabbis are involved, they are teachers in the adult studies program or advisers to the leadership team.
Full disclosure: I am a pulpit rabbi and have worked in and with a variety of congregations that have used my talents in different ways.
There are some today who think that rabbis should no longer be the spiritual leaders of congregations. I disagree with that but I do agree that the basic role of the rabbi in a congregation has changed and continues to change. There are some rabbis who have been able to work in this different environment and some who feel that they need to hang on to the older style of synagogue. Some of my colleagues have told me directly, that they are uncomfortable with new ways of leading a congregation and want to keep things the same for as long as they can. While I understand the need to sometimes be the one who holds the line to changes in halacha, as we have discovered, the issue is not halachaat all; it is the very nature of the organization that is changing. I have tried to show many times that there is still a great respect among Jews for rabbis and for Jewish tradition. Young Jews who create meaningful communities do not reject Judaism; they embrace it in some very traditional ways. I think that issues like egalitarianism and pluralism are crucial concepts in the creation of new communities, and once these communities come together, they retain traditional observances, like keeping kosher and observing Shabbat.
If I were to talk to my colleagues, I would tell them that the halachicissues that are being presented as things that need to be changed are not the crux of the problem, only the symptoms. When people are unhappy with programming and prayer in our congregations they may say things like “Services are boring” or “Why do we have to pay so much for X?” or “Why can’t you talk about current events?” The fact is, many of our current members really don’t know at all what they want, only that they are unhappy with what they have. If we press them to tell us exactly what they are looking for, they usually don’t have an answer or tell us that they want us to do what we are already doing but somehow to do it differently.
I believe that a rabbi must be constantly looking at what successful models of congregations look like and creating new ways to bring the successful models to their synagogues. Naturally there will be those who don’t want anything to change and those who want everything to change. Reality is still somewhere between those two poles. Leadership is not easy. My sister is a hazzanand long ago she told me that a hazzan that is not introducing new melodies and new liturgical configurations and changing up the service is just being lazy. The same applies to rabbis (I know, I know, who am I calling lazy?!) I don’t mean this with disrespect for my colleagues, both those who are my senior and those who are junior colleagues. We have a lot of things that we must do as rabbis. But growing our congregations is one of the most crucial. If you look at congregations that are looking for new rabbis, it does not take long to see that all of them want help with “change”. They want to change and they don’t want to change (“change what I don’t like and don’t change what I do like”) but that, we know is impossible. An executive director once reminded me that “nobody likes all the focus on the Bar Mitzvah boy at Saturday services, except the members of the family. Yet the family makes up over 75% of the congregation that morning, and they want the focus to be on the boy.” So how do you make the regulars happy without angering 75% of the people in shul that morning? When we give blessings at the Torah for those with a birthday or anniversary, everyone tells me that it takes too long, except those who are getting the blessings. (It is always too long unless it involves me.)
Congregations have a history. Congregations like to write their history and invite others to read it. Often synagogue websites have links to the history of their communities. These histories often point back to the wonderful days when the congregations were small, or when they were in their heyday. Sometimes, however, there are darker secrets in the history of a congregation that the members don’t like to recall or don’t want to recall; problems with clergy, financial problems, members and staff who are arrested and the synagogue is implicated, sexual harassment of a employee, sexual abuse of a child in the school, embezzlement, misappropriation of funds, the sudden death of beloved rabbi or president. All of these can devastate a congregation and produce years of upheaval. When a congregation faces these kinds of serious issues the officers and members of the congregation want to quickly get past their problems and return to the way things used to be. But going backwards is impossible. Things will never be the way they used to be because we only see the past through the rose tinted glasses that will not let us acknowledge the problems and difficulties that we also endured. In synagogue life, the past is interesting, but we can’t live there. We need to constantly have vision and focus on what lies ahead.
One colleague reminded me that this is the reason that cars have a large windshield and a small rear view mirror, so we can see more of where we are going and less of where we have been. What would success look like in the twenty-first century? It will not be the same as it was in the twentieth century. Life does move on and we must not let our history cloud our vision of the future. The questions we need to ask are what are we doing now that we want to continue and what needs to be changed/updated/renewed or created? This is not a challenge just to synagogues. All modern organizations and businesses have to look to the future or face difficult consequences that come from living in the past. As rabbis we need to encourage these questions and we must be prepared to answer them.
Jack and Suzi Welch in the article I mentioned earlier, write, When a team is infused with trust, people play to their better angels. They share ideas freely. They help their colleagues when they are stuck and need an insight. What they do every day then becomes about the group’s success, not their own. They’re not worried about not getting the credit for some big win; they know a teammate will say something like “Hey, don’t thank me. Cary was the one with the eureka moment that set the whole thing in motion.” and Cary will say, “Thanks. I may have had the idea, but you executed.” The candor-trust connection has another benefit: it promotes an environment of risk-taking. Who wants to try something new if they sense they’ll get a stick in the eye (or worse) should they fall? Leaders of winning teams encourage their people to take on huge challenges and let them know that they’re safe no matter what happens. And then they make good on their word.
I have seen boards that are so risk adverse that they quash every new idea that should arise. I have seen rabbis and directors tell excited lay leadership that what they propose can’t be done. Anyone who has ever served on a synagogue board or who has served on the professional staff has heard the phrases that kill new ideas, “We tried that once and it didn’t work.” “Who will you get to chair that project?” “That may work in big cities but in our town it would never fly.” “That is not what our congregation is about, if you want to do that, you should join a different synagogue that does stuff like that.” We have thousands of ways that leadership, both lay and professional, can kill new ideas. What we need is a culture that encourages new ideas, new programs and forward thinking. It is not about who gets the credit, but what is for the good of the congregation. If we try something and it fails, then we have learned something and, if we think the idea is still good, we can try again with an eye to overcoming the obstacles. If it just doesn’t work, well, then we will try something different. The payoff of an idea that does work is worth the previous failures that have helped set the foundation for the success. We can find new ideas in the talent that we already have, and in searching for ideas that have worked elsewhere. All we need to do to make these ideas our own is to be open to possibilities.
I therefore believe that the best approach is for both rabbi/staff and lay leadership to create a working dialogue. Often the rabbi only hears good things and the president hears all the complaints. That needs to change. Both rabbi and president need to share their points of view with one another. Together they need to identify the real needs of the congregation (not just the personal needs of those who complain all the time) and then look into how other congregations deal with these issues; what may be working and what clearly is not working (and what would never work here!). Complaints about things being too long (services, religious school) are symptoms of programs that do not engage the participants. “Boring” (services, programming) is the symptom of the lack of change. Dropping membership is the symptom of people who are voting with their feet to find something meaningful somewhere else. It means we have missed their needs. If young Jews are not joining, it is because they don’t see anything for them in our congregation. And that is why you are reading this book.
Cantors have an even harder time. New hazzanimare trained to be not just singers, but auxiliary staff members. They are often trained to be teachers, education directors and even executive directors. Older hazzanimwere trained to lead services with classical cantorial melodies. The problem is that many of those melodies are anywhere from 50-150 years old and are not appealing to most contemporary audiences. In the documentary, “100 Voices: A Journey Home” the hazzanimin the film understand that these old classic melodies, many of which came from Europe, are not meaningful to younger Jewish audiences. I recently wrote in my congregation’s bulletin, “I still love the song that Michelle and I danced to at our wedding. Sometimes, if we are out dancing, and I feel really romantic, I ask the band to play it for us to dance to. I would never expect my radio station to play it anymore. Music has moved on and while there are still some of us who like “oldies” it is not the way for a radio station to stay on the air. Even my favorite station that played music from the 1950’s, now plays “oldies” from the 60’s and 70’s. My music is now older than the “oldies”!” Musical styles change. That is a fact of life. A cantorial concert can be the showcase for classical hazzanut, but the liturgy deserves more modern influences. Hazzanimwho can’t keep up may find themselves left behind.
It is crucial that the rabbi and hazzanwork together to create a meaningful service. There should be no reason for rabbis and hazzanimto be feuding or working at cross purposes. While each needs to respect the role of the other, and must treat each other as colleagues, there will not always be agreement on everything. What is important is to try new things, and then come back and assess how it is going. What is important is to talk each week as to what will make that service unique. Sometimes it may be a reaction to something in the news. Rabbi Sharon Braus said after the 2004 tsunami that devastated the countries of the eastern Indian Ocean, “If your service before the tsunami is the same as the service after the tsunami, then something is very wrong.” We have to be sensitive to what is happening in our world and how it affects those who are worshiping with us in our sanctuary. Our service has to reflect whatever is important and on the minds of the congregation.Sometimes a service may be built around a moral issue in the community; sometimes it will be built around getting more participation from the congregation. When the rabbi and hazzanwork together, it creates a better atmosphere for really good things to happen.
If we are to change the focus of learning in the synagogue from school for children to educating adults, this will mean a change in education staffing as well. Rather than an “education director” what will be needed is a “director of life-long learning”. Certainly we will need to oversee the Jewish education of children, but the main focus has to be on adults. There will need to be a movement away from lectures and more to “hevruta” learning. There will need to be more texts and more discussion. There will have to be higher level learning and ways for those who are just beginning to “catch up” without dragging the whole program down. Education programs must also reflect that some learning will be in people’s homes and perhaps in the work environment as well. Coordinating study groups can be a full time job alone once the program takes off. There can be ongoing study programs that feature evening learning for those who work during the day. There can be special week long programs of learning based on the “Limmud” program that takes place each winter in England. There can be weekend programs and Shabbaton programs that can offer a wide range of topics to give everyone a chance to try something new. These shorter programs should kick off a longer program if enough people show an interest in the topic.
Teachers can be the rabbi and cantor and any other staff member with an educational background. Often the same teachers who do so well with our children may be able to teach adults. Many congregations are blessed with lay members who have solid education backgrounds or strong Judaic backgrounds who can also lead these study sessions. Many communities have colleges and universities with a Judaic Studies department that can be the source of teachers and the students in the program may also be able to lend a hand. All of this, of course, takes investment of money as well as time. Just as the religious school for children has school fees, so too adult education, if it is to be credible and challenging, will also require fees from the participants. It may be possible to find outside money from foundations and funders, and a fund raiser in the community on behalf of adult studies could involve a patrons’ program, where people with an interest in adult studies can help fund the program. There are opportunities for endowments and legacy gifts as well. There may even be corporations who would sponsor events in exchange for publicity that could help raise money for the adult studies program. The key to the program is to create it with high caliber talent so that adults will want to join in the study program. Clearly we need educators who are up to the task of creating serious adult learning.
Finally, we need to insure that the entire synagogue staff are involved in the overall program and are adding in their own way to the goal of engagement of the membership. We are no longer in an age where peoplesay, “you should hear my Rabbi/Cantor,” etc. In the future, we will want to hear: “This is what Ilearned/taught in shul this week. It is important that our professionals be able to put their own egos aside and let the learners learn and the members sing.It is not about the staff; the purpose of the synagogue is to teach Judaism, spirituality and how to find God and meaning in life.

Hello Again

It has been a while since I last posted to this site. I have not forgotten which negative commandment comes next, nor have I abandoned the blog. These past months have  been a time of reassessing what I want to accomplish with this forum. For eight years now I have written about Liturgy, Halacha, Mishna and Mitzvot. There are still plenty of topics to cover but the world of Jewish education has changed over the years, and I have changed over the years as well. What started out as a new opportunity for me to teach a wider Jewish audience, is now in need of a facelift. I dedicated this forum to the memory of my father after his death and one of the many legacies he left me was never to be afraid to reinvent myself.
In 2003 blogging was new and exciting. Today we live in a world of Facebook, Twitter and Google+. In 2003 Jewish education was built around religious school and day school. Now we have Hebrew language charter schools, home schooling and private tutors. The world of Jewish education grapples with parents who are much older when they start having children and who don’t see themselves as part of the world of the synagogue anymore. If you are a follower of my other blog, “Jewish Common Sense” you know that even the very essence of the synagogue is changing. If the synagogue is the primary location of Jewish education, then how can these changes impact the way we deliver information about our faith?
I find myself grappling more and more with theology. What do we know about God? What difference does our understanding of God have in our lives? How does prayer, meditation and spirituality fit into this picture? I have been writing about Mitzvot for a long time but I never thought to talk about the whole notion of what it means to be commanded; a challenge made by the chancellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary a few years ago and a topic I have been teaching as part of my adult studies seminars.
Now you see why I have not written for awhile. I have been contemplating not only this blog, but the very foundation of what I am trying to share with my students. Over the past months I have taught bible in a new way, spent ten days on a silent retreat, began to prepare for my first lessons in the field of mysticism and offered my synagogue students the chance to explore in a deeper manner, the latest discussions in understanding about what we mean when we talk about God.
In one way or the other, it all goes back to how we understand Torah. What is the nature of these five books? What did they mean to our ancestors and how do we learn from these words today? I hope to use this blog to travel, chapter by chapter through the Torah and share with you some of the insights I have learned from my teachers, colleagues and students.
Forgive me if I do not complete the study of Mitzvot. I hope to make this new venture a chance to go back to the source of all that is Jewish, to learn not only Mitzvot but the entire range of what Judaism has to offer us as individuals, as Jews and as human beings.
I hope you will find this new journey interesting and compelling and that you will want to share your ideas and comments as well.

How Does The Book End?

It has been awhile since I last posted a chapter of my book. I was working on it one chapter at a time and as I approached the end of the book I needed to draw it all together. I have continued to work on the book, trying to update the chapters, tie it all together and get it ready for prime time. I did not count on this process taking so long. My usual proofreaders now need to cull the entire book, looking for redundancies, and work on ways to edit the long run on sentences I have a tendency to use.  My usual writing style is for sermons. I am not as skilled to write for reading.  So this process has been a learning process for me as well.
Over the next few weeks, I will get the final chapters out on this blog and I hope that you will take the time to read them and to comment on them. I am also looking for comments on the entire enterprise and what I may have missed. I know it is easier to challenge what I have written and much harder to identify what is missing. I am sure that you, my readers, will share your ideas and comments so I can include your thoughts in the final draft.
Don’t be afraid to tell me what you really think. We are all adults. Be kind, but you can tell me what you feel. I promise not to get snippy in return. I do value your comments. I thank you in advance for your help in my quest to change the face and approach of American synagogues.

Parshat Re’eh Saturday Morning 2011

  1. Shabbat Shalom

  1. Parshat Re’eh begins by offering us a choice, blessing or curse; a blessing if we observe the Mitzvot and a curse if we do not. This is one of the verses upon which the sages declared the principle of free will. We always have the choice to do the will of God or not, and if we choose not, then we will have to suffer the consequences of our decision.

  1. Of course, if we pause to think about this choice, it really is not much of a choice at all. It is more like “Do what I say …or else…! One would have to be either very foolish or very wicked to choose to disobey God and risk facing the curses, curses that will be described in very gory detail in Parshat Ki Tavo in just a few more weeks. Clearly the Torah is telling us that the wise choice, the only real choice, is to choose to obey the commandments of God.

  1. In the Mishna, in Pirke Avot, the collection of wisdom from the Sages of the Talmud, Ben Zoma, asks a series of very strange questions. He asks “Who is Wise? Who is Strong? Who is Rich? and Who is Honored? The questions are strange because we already know the answers to his questions. The answers are obvious. We all know the definitions of wealth, strength, wisdom and honor. Wise people are those who have many degrees from prestigious universities. They are the people we turn to when we don’t know what we are supposed to do. The strong person is the one who can lift the most weights and has the largest muscles. The rich man is the one who invests with Berkshire Hathaway, and who makes money even in a down market. The one who is honored is the one who gives up his or her life on behalf of others.

  1. What makes the teaching of Ben Zoma so interesting is that he does not answer the questions the way we expect. His definitions of Wisdom, Strength, Wealth and Honor are not at all what we expect, in fact they are virtually the opposite of the definitions we are so sure of. According to Ben Zoma, the wise person is not the one who knows the most; wisdom comes when we are prepared to learn from everyone else. Strength does not come from lifting weights; but real strength comes when we are able to overcome our evil impulses. Wealth is measured not by how much money we control, but how happy we are with what we already have. Honor does not come from others; it comes when we honor others.

  1. When we think about what Ben Zoma is teaching, we realize, of course, that what he says is true in a deeper way than the definitions that we first contemplated. We don’t have to think too hard to find people with many degrees who still act foolishly. How many athletes can we think of who are strong physically but underdeveloped morally. Rich people seem to only want to get more wealth but a poor person, who is happy is wealthier in the ways that really matter. Real honor comes from humility in our public service, not from a sense of getting what we deserve.

  1. What Ben Zoma is really saying is that in each of these four areas, what we first thought of as a blessing, can really be, if we are not careful a curse. If we are too full of ourselves, too enamored of our abilities and believe that we are better than anyone else, then no matter how smart we may be, how strong we may be or how rich we may be, we are, in the end without any resources at all. All that we own is not enough, and it will never be enough if we don’t learn how to control ourselves and our impulses.

  1. We like to think of Wisdom, Strength, Wealth and Honor as the blessings of life, but for all too many people, they are not blessings but a curse. Many smart people were duped by Bernie Madoff. Baseball, football, basketball and even golf have seen star performers fall to sex and drugs. Martha Stewart went to jail because she lied about a stock trade that involved an amount of money that, compared to her vast wealth, was pocket change. She just couldn’t let it go, no matter how insignificant the amount was. We may honor those politicians who have served this country as President of the United States, but that is an insignificant honor compared to the honor we show to people like Nelson Mandela and Mother Theresa. They earned their honors by giving honor freely to others.

  1. Clearly, when our Parsha is talking about blessings and curses, it is not giving us the choice of following God or not, it is telling us that everything that we do can be a blessing or a curse, and the final determination is made not by others but through our own actions.

  1. Take the Mitzvot, for example; we can do Mitzvot because we want to feel honored. We like the way our observance makes us feel pious and righteous. We like it when we are honored for our commitment to Judaism and Jewish traditions. Ben Zoma would tell us, however, that this is not the path to true piety. This kind of piety is a kind of curse, and it is why so many people who seem so pious are discovered to be not so pious in the privacy of their own homes. True piety, Ben Zoma would say, comes from a love of God. If we do what God commands because we love what God stands for and want to bring the understanding of God out into the rest of the world; if we act at every moment to bring honor, not to ourselves, but to God, then we won’t need to worry if our public life and our private life are the same. Both are the result of a mind set that makes it impossible to act in a hypocritical manner.

  1. We may be proud that, over the course of our lives, we have never received a traffic citation. not one speeding ticket, not one accident; we never ran a red light. It is not that we never speed or cut corners in traffic, it is just that we are too smart to get caught. We may even be proud that we got a reduction in our car insurance because of our “spotless” record. But the fact that we may have never been caught does not mean that we are a safe driver. In fact, we may be responsible for creating dangers for other drivers who have the misfortune to be in the same intersection with us. Our daredevil driving may be unknown to Law Enforcement but it is still a curse in our lives and in the lives of others. Why should we drive safely? Because it is the right thing to do. It is better for preserving our life and the lives of others.

  1. We may even be proud of our thriftiness. We make very dollar go the full distance for us. We bargain with every sales person, and get reductions even when the sign says that there are no discounts; that we have returned items we don’t need even when it says that there are no returns. We like to brag around the pool that we got a better bargain on the TV, the car, on our eggs and on our produce. But if we are leaving in our wake, angry, frustrated and hurt sales clerks, what have we really accomplished? We may be proud of our savings but we are reviled when we return to the store for all the trouble we have caused. Our actions may be our curse if we leave in our wake people we have bullied into submission. Is saving a few cents worth the anger and resentment we leave behind? True blessings come when everyone leaves a deal happy, not just the buyer.

  1. The sign may say, “The person who dies with the most toys, wins” but it is a false winning. The people who are long remembered are those who are the kindest and most compassionate. I have done thousands of funerals but at the top of my memory is the funeral of the father who left this memory to his children. They told me that one day the father saw a homeless man who had no shoes. He stopped his car, and asked the man to tell him his shoe size. The man told him he was a size nine. The father turned to the children in the car and said, “Who here wears a size nine?” and he then took the shoes off the feet of his son to give them to the homeless man. The boy had other sneakers at home. But he never forgot that one act of kindness of his father. And to this day I have never forgotten it either.

  1. If our lives can be a blessing or a curse, it will only be because of the way we act every minute of every day. If we bring blessings into the world, our life will be a blessing. If we work for our own gain at the expense of everyone else, then our lives will be a curse, not just for others but for ourselves too. We will know, deep in our hearts, that we are not anywhere near the kind of person we want to be. Every decision we make will add to the total, whether our life will be a blessing or a curse.

  1. That is not to say that we have to be perfect. Nobody is perfect. Every one of us has slipped from time to time and been a bit selfish, careless and maybe a bit cruel from time to time. We don’t really mean to be that way but there are so many reasons that spoil our best intentions. A momentary bit of greed, an unintentional slight, or a morally questionable decision. Some of these sins may be accidental. Some, we are ashamed to admit, were done with intention. This week, as we begin the month of Elul, the final month of the Jewish year, we get our chance to repair these sins. Each day of Elul we blow the shofar to remind us that the end of the year is coming and we need to apologize, repent and resolve to do better in the year ahead. This season tells us that we don’t have to be perfect, we only need to try harder to do the right thing and to leave our bad intentions behind.

  1. The blessings and curses in life are of our own making. The choice we have is to do the right things for the right reasons. The Torah gives us the reinforcement we need to overcome our evil inclination and stay on the path that will bring us true wisdom, strength, wealth and honor. We don’t need anything more than Ben Zoma to remind us that all we value can be either a blessing or a curse and it all depends on how we feel about what we are doing and the memories that we are leaving behind.

As we said just a few minutes ago during the prayer for the new month, “May God bless us in this new month with life and peace, joy and gladness, deliverance and consolation and may we have these blessing every day of every month of the year as we say… Amen and Shabbat Shalom

Ekev 2011s

Parshat Ekev Saturday Morning 2011

  1. Shabbat Shalom

  1. In this week’s Parsha, Moses reminds the people of Israel that, no matter what they may think about their enemies and the military that is arrayed against them, no matter how many people the Canaanites may put in the field to oppose them, even if their opponents are the eight foot tall giant Anakites, no matter what the Israelites might see in battle, they should never forget that God fights with them and that, as long as they are faithful to God, God will be faithful to them and they will achieve victory.

  1. This is the core promise behind the idea of a “promised land”. It is the promise on which the modern state of Israel was founded. Israel was the land and the Jews were returning home. As the theme song from the movie “Exodus” reminded Americans, “This land is mine; God gave this land to me.” For two thousand years the few Jews who remained in the Promised Land were despised and persecuted. They suffered bigotry and attack as well as famine and disease. No matter who conquered that land, Romans, Byzantines, Crusaders, Arabs, Turks or the British, the land promised to the Jews remained a difficult place to live, and to earn a living. Over the centuries the other nations used up the soil and denuded the mountains of their trees. They took all the resources and left precious little for anyone who remained behind to use to earn a living.

  1. But from the beginning of the twentieth century, when the Jews began to return to the land, suddenly it was possible to drain swamps and plant forests. Suddenly new cities could be founded and farms could produce food not only for the country but to export to Europe. The Jews who returned to their Promised Land found that the land was not a desert and a swamp; it was fertile land waiting for those with vision to restore her to her beauty and glory. When the State of Israel was founded, the land was already well on its way to be the miracle that it is today.

  1. But in 1948, and even as early as 1929, there were those who wished to derail the miracle. There were people in Europe and in the Middle East who wanted to see the Jews fail. They attacked Jewish settlements forcing the Jews to fight back. There were civilians killed, doctors and nurses ambushed and a university under siege. But the Jews in Israel understood that if they failed in their determination to settle the land, there was no place else for them to go. World War II made it very clear that Jews were not welcome anymore in Europe. Israel was the nation that just had to be a success, where every other nation who tried to settle there, was not.

  1. In 1947, the British were in charge of the “holy land”. But the fighting between Jews and Arabs continued to get worse. The British took the side of the Arabs so the Jews began to fight against the British. Many soldiers and even civilian administrators died in that conflict. Great Britain finally had enough of the fighting and told the United Nations to sort out what they should do with this land of conflict. The UN came and held public meetings. They interviewed British, Jewish and Arab leadership. They created a partition plan; they would divide the land between the Arabs and the Jews who wanted to live there; a two state solution that was adopted on November 29, 1947 and was set to take effect on May 15, 1948. The Arabs and the British tried many tactics to undermine the Jewish side of the state. Both of them were resentful of the Jewish success in the land and their inability to push them out like others had been pushed out before.

  1. In 1948 the Jewish part of the state came into existence. The Arab state never came to be. The Arabs were so intent on stopping a Jewish state that they never prepared at all to create the Arab state mandated by the UN declaration. Arab refugees found themselves in refugee camps unable to win control of the land from the Jews and no other nation would take these Arabs in. Many of these refugee camps from 1948 are still in operation today. In 1946 and 1947, it was the Jews who were in refugee camps in Europe. None of the nations there wanted them so they founded their own state and left Europe behind. Could you imagine what Europe would look like today if there were still Jewish refugee camps from World War II?

  1. I remind everyone of this history because in the next few weeks, sometime in mid September, the refugees from the war of 1948 who have lived in refugee camps these past 63 years finally will go back to the United Nations and ask for a state of their own. Why the long delay? Why did they wait so long to take their case to the United Nations? Why ask for a new nation, why now demand what they once refused? The answer to that question is very important.

  1. To this day, the Arab refugees, who have become known as Palestinians, have never accepted the State of Israel. They have worked for over 50 years to destroy Israel by war, by terror and by increasingly audacious demands. Israel has survived every attempt to undermine the country and undermine the government. In spite of all of this, of all the nations in the Middle East, Israel is clearly the most prosperous and democratic. Through it all, Israel has demanded that if there is to be a two state solution, it has to be a Palestinian state that is not a threat to Israel and the Palestinian leadership have to negotiate the details of the peace with the Israeli government. Other countries can help, support and push along the process, but in the end, the issues are between Israel and the Palestinians and these two parties must resolve their differences in order that the two states will be able to live together in peace.

  1. This is why the unilateral declaration of independence is opposed by almost every western government, including the United States. In order for there to be a credible country, it has to be born of credible negotiations, not unilateral declarations. The Palestinian leadership, unable to bring themselves to accept the State of Israel wants the world to recognize their own state while they still refuse to recognize the right of Israel to exist. The declaration is a ploy to further evade meaningful negotiations. The fear in Israel and the United States is that this declaration will become like many of the other resolutions of the United Nations, another one sided document that will have to be pushed aside when the two parties finally gather to negotiate. It is an artificial negotiation strategy that takes fictions and makes them into facts that will make future negotiations more complicated. It does not resolve any of the important issues of Jerusalem, refugees, borders and settlements. In fact, this UN resolution may actually undermine previous peace agreements between the Palestinian leadership and Israel.

  1. For this reason there is a petition going around that asks Americans to oppose this unilateral declaration of the Palestinians and to support the position of Israel and the position of the United States (affirmed unanimously in both houses of Congress and by President Obama and Secretary of State Clinton) that the UN is not the place anymore for the Palestinians to demand a state. The petition affirms that the Palestinians should sit down to negotiate a peace plan with Israel in good faith. We do not seek to deny the Palestinians their right to their own state, only that the path to that state begins in the Middle East and not in New York. The petition has been created by the Jewish Community Relations Council in New York and is being presented to all the counsel generals who have embassies in this country, asking them to affirm that the Palestinian dream of homeland depends on their willingness to open meaningful negotiations with Israel.

  1. Please go to the petition online, either at home or at the public library, or come into our office this week and put your name on the petition. It is not often we are called upon to do something this easy and this important to help our Jewish state. Since 1948 everyone has known that there will eventually be a Palestinian state in the Middle East. But it will be born of direct negotiations and not through unilateral declarations. Our goal is peace in the Middle East and this declaration will take us further from that goal. Sign the petition and put your name on the line demanding not a unilateral declaration but meaningful negotiations in order to bring peace and prosperity to all. Arab and Jews living in peace; that is a dream worth becoming a reality. This declaration, coming to the United Nations in September, will not bring us closer to realizing our dream.

  1. May God help us make peace with our neighbors the old fashioned way, through building trust, negotiating the issues and making the difficult decisions with our enemies. The blessings come from conversations and compromise. May these be the blessings that bring us to peace as we say…. Amen and Shabbat Shalom

devarim 2011s

Parshat Devarim

Sermon Saturday Morning

2011

  1. Shabbat Shalom

  1. What do you say at a retirement party? You are presented with a gold watch; the boss says lots of nice things about you and your work. Your colleagues and co-workers share wonderful anecdotes about how they enjoyed working with you and then you have a chance to say a few words of your own.

  1. That must be how Moses felt as he stands, one last time, in front of the people of Israel before he leaves them to enter the Promised Land and he prepares to travel to a different Promised Land. Moses will soon die. His leadership will be transferred to others; his place in history is secure and he will ride off into the mountains, into the sunset. What should he say? How should he say it? What should be the last words that his followers will remember when they think of Moses and his legacy? The answer is the book of Devarim, this final book of the Bible, the last word and testament of Moses at the end of his long and extraordinary career.

  1. There is another ending this week. In just a couple of days we will observe the great black fast of Tisha B’Av. The date that we mark the end of Israelite history and the beginning of the Judaism we know today. Israelites were led by a hereditary priesthood that officiated over animal sacrifices in the Temple of Jerusalem. Judaism is led by rabbis in synagogues and they officiate over prayer and life cycle rituals. What did the people of Israel say when the only religion they knew was destroyed and their Temple burned to the ground? They wrote the book of, Eicha, Lamentations, a collection of eulogies for Judea and the Temple. What is remarkable about their laments is that along with their cries of agony and pain, they included at the end, a verse of hope for the future. The ending of the Temple and the sacrificial service was a trauma that we today can only guess at, but through their trauma, they still held out hope for tomorrow. That is not too bad a lesson for us to take away from our observance of the Ninth of Av, this dark day on Judaism’s calendar. What would we have said if we were the survivors of such a great catastrophe? Israel speaks words as the Temple burns and they conclude their eulogy with words of hope. Moses speaks words at the end of his life and he ends with words of hope. What would we say as the end of life as we know it is at hand? Could we speak words of hope as our last words?

  1. Don’t think that this is a rhetorical question. Moses is not just speaking to the people he once led, he is speaking to us. What he says is not just important for Jewish Law, what he says is important for our lives as well. His words are important for two reasons. First of all, there is good reason to believe that Moses did not write these last words. That the book was composed later, much later, as someone’s idea of what Moses would have said had his words been recorded. Almost like a modern historical novel, the book of Devarim is a mythological account of what the people of Israel thought about when they thought about Moses. This is why the whole series of speeches seem so larger than life. Hundreds of years after his death, Moses had indeed become larger than life and this is how later Israelites viewed Moses from the vantage point of history. It is an amazing book and I think that is why it had to be included in the selections that would eventually become the Torah that we study and teach from today.

  1. But I believe, as I have said many times, that the questions of the Torah are questions for us. If the Book of Devarim asks what we would say if we were Moses; if Devarim is about how our ancestors saw Moses at the end of his career; then this is also a chance for us to comment on the endings that we encounter in our lives. The Torah here is calling to all of us to contemplate the end of our own lives. Not to be sad that we will be gone, but to help us focus, like Moses, on what kind of a legacy we will leave behind.

  1. There is a famous poem by Linda Ellison about how we should contemplate our lives. She calls her poem, “The Dash”

The Dash Poem

by Linda Ellis

I read of a man who stood to speak

At the funeral of a friend

He referred to the dates on her tombstone

From the beginning to the end

He noted that first came the date of her birth

And spoke the following date with tears,

But he said what mattered most of all

Was the dash between those years

For that dash represents all the time

That she spent alive on earth.

And now only those who loved her

Know what that little line is worth.

For it matters not how much we own;

The cars, the house, the cash,

What matters is how we live and love

And how we spend our dash.

So think about this long and hard.

Are there things you’d like to change?

For you never know how much time is left,

That can still be rearranged.

If we could just slow down enough

To consider what’s true and real

And always try to understand

The way other people feel.

And be less quick to anger,

And show appreciation more

And love the people in our lives

Like we’ve never loved before.

If we treat each other with respect,

And more often wear a smile

Remembering that this special dash

Might only last a little while.

So, when your eulogy is being read

With your life’s actions to rehash

Would you be proud of the things they say

About how you spent your dash?

  1. Devarim however, does not just call upon us to think about what wisdom we might share at the end of our lives, Devarim implies that there are other endings we can contemplate as well.

When I talk to a family about a loved one who has died and I want information about their life for a eulogy, I often ask about their career. Some people work in several different careers over the span of their lives. Some work in the same place for over 40 years. Some children can define a father or mother by the career that they chose, and others say that the career was just an interruption in their real love of being a parent, friend or community activist. It can be telling how the skills used in a career can also be transferred to other aspects of life as well. It is also telling if we are defined only by the way we earned a living. What would we want our children to say to the Rabbi about how we managed the boundaries between our personal and professional lives?

  1. Are there other times in our lives when we realize that a door has closed and that part of our life is over? What about when we sent our last child off to college? What about when others danced a Mazinka for us as we married off our last child? What did we say to ourselves, our spouse or our friends as we sat shiva for our last parent and realized that we were now orphans in the world? What did we say at these turns of life? Did we slip away in our pain or did we find words to give us hope?

  1. Not all endings are sad, however. Do we remember the day we quit a job to go out on our own in a new business? There was the anxiety of not knowing the future and leaving behind a secure and reliable past. Do we remember the time when we realized that our bodies, once so young and vibrant, bodies that we believed, in the innocence of youth, were indestructible and eternal, that our body would now need medications and support to get us through the rest of our lives? What about the day we went in for important surgery, and we stood between illness and health and wondered what the future had in store? What did we say when we went in for that important test that would tell us once and for all what we had and what we would be able to do about it? What about the day we were told we would need a cane in order to walk, or a hearing aide in order to hear? Did we speak words of worry and concern or did we speak words of hope?

  1. In less than 60 days, just eight weeks from today, we will, God willing, stand at the entrance to another new year. In just three weeks we will hear the first calls of the Shofar reminding us that we need to examine our souls as we prepare to transition from 5771 to 5772. What do we plan to bring with us into the new year and what baggage do we intend to leave behind? The time we have to contemplate the passage of time is growing short. I know rabbis who use this time to consider how our lives have changed over the course of this year. What new inventions and new ideas challenged us and what tragedies and disasters plagued us? Some rabbis bring out a list of obituaries of those famous people who did not make it to the Jewish New Year. It is all an attempt to get us to focus on how quickly time passes and why it is so important not to waste even a moment in time.

  1. Soon we will be having the retirement party for 5771. Each of us has lived this year in different ways. What are we prepared to say about it as it comes to its end? Was the past year kind to you? Were you kind to others in the past year? Was the past year full of joyful moments? Were you a joyful person to your friends and to strangers in the past year? Was the past year filled with tragedies? Did you, in the past year, comfort those who suffered tragedies? What do you have to say about the past year and what does the past year have to say about you?

  1. As Devarim unfolds we see all the facets of Moses’ life. The good moments, the moments of anger, the times of frustrations and the stunning moments of success. We don’t see Moses as a superhuman hero, we see him in all his beauty and flaws. And yet Moses ends with words of hope. Tisha B’Av has unfolded as a day of many tragic moments in Jewish history. Each time tragedy struck, who could blame us if we wrote verses of pain and sorrow? And yet Eicha ends with words of hope. Another year is coming to an end. It was a year of remarkable success and of indescribable disasters. What does this year mean to us and will we do all we can to have it end with words of hope? Moses and our ancestors never let a story end on a sad note. We should learn from their example and always find the words of hope when a door closes, a life closes and when a year closes.

May we learn and grow from all our experiences in the year that is ending and may God help us as we assess this year, to find not just good times and bad times, but always a reason to look to the future with hope as we say….

AMEN AND SHABBAT SHALOM

Parshat Maasai

Parshat Maasai
Saturday Morning
2011
  1. Shabbat Shalom
  1. As the Torah winds down to its end, as the Book of Bamidbar lists the many stops along the way for the People of Israel, we begin to see that there is a transition taking place. The leadership of Moses is ending. This Parsha is a review of all that Moses has accomplished with the understanding that there will be no new accomplishments for Moses. It will now be Joshua’s turn to lead the people. The future of Israel and all the history that is yet to be written, will be about Joshua and not Moses.
  1. While the Torah seems to indicate that Moses makes a gracious and elegant exit, appointing Joshua and giving him a charge on how to lead in the future, there are some signs that Moses will not “go quietly into that dark night”. In the Book of Devarim, Moses recounts how he begged God to change the divine mind and let him enter the promised land. It is recorded there that God replies “My mind is made up. Don’t even bring up this topic again.” This exchange between God and Moses opens the door for the Rabbis to speculate on Moses’s attitude as the end came near.
  1. The Midrash has an extensive account of the last days of Moses. It has Moses drawing a circle in the sand and refusing to move until God annuls the decree of death for Moses. God then shuts all the entrances to Heaven so the prayer of Moses cannot enter. Moses pleads with all of nature to speak out on behalf of the prophet, but each one cites a verse from the Bible as to why their plea will not be heard by God. God tells Moses that God wanted to destroy both Moses and the People of Israel but Moses convinced God to save the people of Israel and now he can’t have it both ways. He saved Israel but he will not be able to save himself.
  1. Then there is a fascinating exchange where Moses asserts that if Joshua is to be the leader, that God should let Moses go into the Promised Land as the servant of Joshua. As I read this section I almost felt as if God was humoring Moses. God allows Moses to be the servant of Joshua. The next day Moses gets up early to serve Joshua. The people come to learn from Moses but he is gone. They find him with Joshua and want Moses to teach them but he tells them that it is forbidden and they have to learn from Joshua. The people refuse until God comes and tells them to learn from Joshua. Moses sits at Joshua’s right hand as he teaches.  When the lesson is done, Moses follows behind Joshua as he goes toward the Mishkan. The cloud of God descends and Joshua has a conversation with God. When it is over, Moses asks, “What did God say to you?” Joshua tells him, “When I served you, did you tell me everything that God said to you?” At that moment Moses says, “I would prefer to die 100 times rather than have one moment of envy. Rebono Shel Olam, until now I sought life, but now my soul is surrendered to You.”
  1. God teaches Moses a valuable lesson about letting go. There are things that are worse than death. The legacy of Moses is eternal. There is no more that Moses could ask from life. It is time to let go and leave the leadership to Joshua and Aaron’s son, the High priest Eliezer. It does no good to envy their new positions. Moses has done it all and now is the time to let others lead.
  1. There is a lot of discussion among the commentators of the Torah about why Moses had to die before entering the Promised Land. Why was it so important that he die in the wilderness? God clearly states that the reason is because of the way he acted at the rock in the wilderness where he was supposed to talk to the rock but he struck the rock with his rod instead. Some say that Moses’s sin was disobeying the instruction of God. Some say it is because he belittled a miracle. Some say it is because he lost his temper. Some say that the sin of Moses was that he insulted Israel, God’s chosen people. Modern commentators take a different approach. They see the incident at the rock showing how Moses was so impatient with the people. We have seen this kind of an attitude from Moses before and we will see more of it as we read in the coming weeks from the book of Devarim. Moses does have a temper. Moses does get impatient. Moses has a long history of pointing out the flaws of the people. Moses may be a humble man but he has a short fuse and the people often take the brunt of his anger.
  1. So what makes this rock different from all the other times Moses gets angry? The problem here is that he is not talking to the same people he is used to reprimanding. Those former slaves in Egypt are now all dead. Except for Caleb and Joshua, and Moses, that entire generation has died in the desert. Moses keeps seeing them as if they were their parents. Look at last week’s parsha. He gets angry that the people bring the women back from the battle against the command of God and refuses to even hear the explanation from the soldiers as to why they spared their lives. Moses gets angry again when the tribes of Reuvan, Menashe and Gad explain that they want to stay on the east bank of the Jordan River in the newly conquered territory. They have to calm him down before they can suggest a compromise. According to the modern commentators, the reason Moses has to die in the wilderness is because he is a wilderness leader. When the people will enter the Promised Land, they will need a new leader who will lead them as a general, who will lead them in battle and not an old leader who does not have the skills needed for the battles ahead.
  1. My friend and colleague, Rabbi Howard Siegel of Santa Clara, California recently wrote, “Among the most difficult tasks in life is “letting go” Whether it is sending children into the world as young adults or retiring from a job that defined one’s existence for so many years, we all have to eventually “let go”. Everyone says how wonderful it will be to move on in life, begin anew, face new challenges, set out for new horizons. Unfortunately, these are only words. Too often our actions, like those of the biblical giant, Moses …. betray our words.
  1. If there were a modern example of this fear of letting go, we need only think of the Green Bay Packer football team and their famous quarterback, Brett Favre. He was one of the most successful quarterbacks in team history. Several seasons ago he announced his intention to retire from football. It was time to let younger quarterbacks take the field. Then, suddenly, Brett Favre changed his mind; he did not want to retire. But the team did not want him back. They had decided to move on without him. Brett had such a hard time letting go that he went on to play for Green Bay’s rivals and he would retire twice more before he “really meant it”. Bret Favre had real problems letting go.
  1. I am told that the hardest transition in the world is going from President of the United States to being the Past President. It is the custom that past presidents of this country do not comment on the politics or the policies of their successor, no matter which party may win the White House. It is not that George Bush does not care about what is happening today, nor that he is unconcerned about his legacy. George Bush understands that he needs to let go of his former job, as commander in chief of the greatest army in the world, as leader of the free world and the man with his finger on the nuclear button, in whose hand is the fate of the entire world. It is not that George Bush was a failure nor has his political skills faded. He has accepted his place in the world, and someday they may even ask him to serve this country again, as his father and Bill Clinton have done. But all three of these past presidents understand that the world has now moved on and that they need to move on as well.
  1. Yes, it is hard to step out of the lives of our children. It is hard to let them make the mistakes and suffer the consequences of their choices. I cried all day after I left my daughter on her college campus. She asked me, “Why are you sad? Did you not prepare me to live my own life?” I answered her, “Of course I know that you are not only capable of living your own life; I know that you are more prepared than many other young adults to make the difficult decisions about life. I am just sad that you will no longer have the same presence in my life.”
  1. It is hard to let go of our parents as well. No matter how sick or feeble they may become, we always want just one more day with them. We want them to be present in our lives. But we all have to let go of our parents as well. We have to internalize their lessons and continue to grow without them.
  1. It is hard to retire and let others take on the responsibilities of our work. We know all the tricks of the trade. We know all the quirks of the customers and how to get them what they want. How could someone else ever fill in for all the experience we have in our work? But now we have computers and smart phones. Now we market on social media and on websites. Customers are not just in town but all over the globe. We need to let go and let others tackle this new world in which we live.
  1. If our congregation wishes to have a place in the Jewish world of tomorrow, we also will need to tackle the realities of the Jewish world. A world in which a young retiree is in his mid 70’s and not his mid 60’s. A world where retirement is extreme sports and exotic travel destinations. A world in which families stay in touch on Skype and Google chat. Who are the leaders who will see this congregation into the years ahead? The answer depends on our ability to let go and let new leaders take us into the future. This does not mean that our past presidents are no longer useful. It only means that their role in synagogue life will change. Everyone needs the wisdom of experience. But, like Moses, we have to admit that a new world needs a new generation of leadership. If we don’t let go, the young leaders will go elsewhere, to a place where others have made room for them, and we will be forever stuck in the past.
  1. I understand very well the difficulties of moving on. For Moses, it was the green monster of envy that convinced him to let go. For Brett Favre, he had to tarnish his extraordinarily reputation with several losing seasons before he understood it was time to retire. It is not easy for the man who was once President of the United States to go back to being just another citizen, but if they love this country, they learn to step aside. We can only teach our children so much before they have to learn to walk for themselves, and we have to bite our lips and say nothing as they learn the hard lessons of experience. It is very hard to give up a seat on the bima, our name on the stationary, and our seat on the board. Who else could lead this congregation into the future? But just as Joshua followed Moses, so too will we find new leadership to guide us into the future.
  1. Letting go is one of the great gifts that we can give to the future. Not because we are useless, but we need to continue to grow with new challenges and learn to leave the old ones to the generation just behind us. I have often said that it is better to leave and have people wish we would stay than to stay and have people wish we would leave. How else will future leaders know of our extensive wisdom in life, if we can’t show them we are wise enough to move on?
May God help us serve our community wisely and may God give us the wisdom to graciously make way for others to serve when our time to let go arrives. As we say, Amen and Shabbat Shalom.

Parshat Mattot

Parshat Mattot
Saturday Morning
2011
1. Shabbat Shalom
2. The beginning of this week’s parsha is about vows and oaths. It is about the requirement that our word must be our bond. If you happened to see the Broadway play, “Jersey Boys” about the singing group, “The Four Seasons” you know that they had a string of musical hits in the early 1960’s and the agreement between them was never anything more than a handshake. There were no contracts nor obligations. From the beginning to the end, Frankie Vallie’s word was his bond.
3. Those days were different from today. Today, a verbal agreement is not worth the paper it is printed on. If you don’t have it in writing, you don’t have anything. And even if our agreement is written down, there are so many loopholes and legal dodges that even then we can’t really be sure that someone will fulfill his word. The local news is filled with horror stories of contractors and venders who signed contracts, took the money and skipped town.
4. But usually we don’t think about the U.S. Congress this way. Over the years, Congress has had all kinds of names thrown at it. Will Rogers used to say, “Hold on to your wallet, Congress is in session!” Others have compared Congress’s control of the National Budget as “putting the fox in charge of the hen house!” I am sure that we all remember, not very fondly, of the time that Congress shut down the government during the presidency of Bill Clinton and that the favor-ability rating of Congress was in the single digits. I have to tell you, that what we have seen over the past few months has been some of Congress’s most terrible times, and the country hovers near the brink of new financial meltdowns because of the mess they have created.
5. Television and radio, as well as our mailboxes, have been full of the foolishness that Congress has been producing lately. There was the Ryan plan that would make drastic cuts in Medicare. There are the changes in Medicaid that would affect health care for the poor and for children. There is talk about Social Security being near bankruptcy. All this in a series of attempts to balance the Federal budget and reduce the national debt. Now it seems that we are nearing, finally, the end of the debt limit talks. Where do we stand with all these issues that mean so much to us and to our families?
6. So if you listen to the dueling pundits on Fox News and MSNBC, you either think that the entitlements of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid are the cause of our troubles or the only things that stand between us and the end of civilization as we know it. Day after day members of Congress and political commentators come out to tell us that either the only way to fix our country’s financial problems is to reduce the entitlements or to raise taxes. And it seems that neither option will be good for the country. If Congress is so split on the issues is there no way to really know what is the truth and what is exaggeration?
7. Do you know that Judaism has a lot to say about this entire process? Our faith already has the outline of a structure that can help us navigate the difficult waters ahead. If you think about it, the purpose of religion is to help us make difficult decisions and there are teachings in Judaism that can guide us as we try to resolve the stickiest financial problems that our country faces. Clearly, rabbis can’t tell Congress how to act nor can or should we be advising the President. But if we believe in the simple solutions of our faith, then we can and should speak to those who represent us and tell them we want to see some of these common sense solutions to restore our country’s financial footing.
8. Judaism looks at the entire entitlement picture differently. Judaism declares in many places, that we have obligations to others. The Talmud reminds us that saving a life is the same as saving the entire world. Jews are not allowed to live in a community that does not have adequate health care for all. Rambam teaches that if we find a person who is dying, we have an obligation to save him no matter if what we need to cure him physically, is with money or with knowledge. Rambam goes on to say that the reason there are drugs and cures is so that we may use them to heal those who are ill. The Shulchan Aruch teaches that you can sell the drugs to those in need but you are forbidden to raise the prices beyond what is appropriate, just because they are needed.
9. In modern times, the posek, “Tzitz Eliezer” teaches that every place a Jew lives, there must be set aside a fund to care for the sick. And when the poor need medical attention, the doctor is summoned and paid for out of this fund. The Torah teaches “Do not stand idly by the blood of your neighbor”, which is taken to mean that we have to do everything to save someone from illness. Rabbi David Bleich, the famous Orthodox posek in the United States has written. “The community clearly has an obligation to provide for the medical needs of the indigent. This establishment of a fund to defray medical expenses represents both a needed social amenity as well a a charitable obligation, and the community is fully empowered to levy a tax for either purpose.”
10. When Judaism talks about “entitlements”, we are talking about what the poor and vulnerable in our society are entitled to. It is as simple as that. These programs are a vital part of a security web that insures that those most likely to fail will not fall though the cracks and suffer, due to the stinginess of those in power. The Torah teaches that God defends those who society will not defend and societies that do not look out for the poor and the weak, are soon undermined by these very elements of society that they have ignored. A fair tax to provide these services to those in need is not only appropriate, but an obligation for all members of society.
11. That being said, this does not mean that there is not waste and fraud in these programs. Remember, Social Security is almost 80 years old. Medicare and Medicaid date to the 1960’s. The world has changed a lot over these years. People live longer, There are many breakthroughs in medicine and technology that have changed the way we look at medical care. There are people who have long scammed these federal programs to illegally obtain federal funding that should go to those in need.
12. There is much waste in the way the funds are delivered. Both Social Security and Medicare have bloated bureaucracies that waste time and the money that should be going to help those in need. The health care bill that passed Congress last year is another example of how this legislation was cobbled together with the idea of political needs rather than the needs of those who require the services. A major overhaul of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid is certainly something that we should welcome. But the overhaul needs to be conducted by those who are serving those in need. Politicians, seniors and service agencies should work together to craft a new way of providing Social Security. Politicians, doctors, and medical agencies need to streamline the Medicare, Medicaid and Health Care programs to provide a full range of coverage that takes into account the needs of all Americans. These programs should not be designed to make anyone wealthy, but to provide needed care at affordable prices to all citizens. We should also remember that if we exclude any segment of society from health care, including immigrants, the poor or those with severe medical conditions, we will be creating breeding grounds for many known and unknown communicable diseases. We would be well advised to cover everyone lest we all suffer an epidemic.
13. These programs need to be adequately funded. Frankly the tax structure in this country is as badly cobbled together as the social services are. If everyone paid their fair share of taxes, without exemptions and loopholes, we could all pay taxes at a lesser rate and it would not take two weeks to fill in the tax forms. A simpler system could mean that our fair share could be less than what we may pay today, although some who pay very little might find that they may have to pay more than they did in the past. I find it interesting that there are many famous wealthy people, led by Warren Buffet, who say that they really don’t mind paying more if it will help those in need and help the country.
14. Clearly the problem with entitlements is not the idea of society looking out for those who are in need; it is in the way our country has slapped together the system that is in place today. We must first affirm our vow to look after the weakest elements of society, an oath that their very lives depend upon. We should also take a new vow to be more deliberate in the way we provide for those in need and in the way we pay for them. In this manner we can fulfill our obligations to the elderly, poor, and defenseless in our communities and we can honestly fulfill our financial obligations to our country. The path to this kind of change will be long, hard and we must be persistent but the rewards for ourselves, for society and for those in need more than pay for the time and energy they may require. Let us live up to our commitments but let us do it smarter, better and fairly.
May God grant us the wisdom, faith and endurance to see our society change each day for the betterment of all citizens as we say….AMEN AND SHABBAT SHALOM

Parshat Korach

Parshat Korach

Sermon Saturday Morning

2011

1. Shabbat Shalom

2. The rebellion of Korach is not the only topic in this week’s parsha, but it certainly is the most important part of it. Korach seems to have no real reason for his rebellion. He is a Levite and according to one tradition, he was privileged to carry on his shoulders the Ark. He was a wealthy man; to this day we say that someone who is wealthy is “as rich as Korach”. So we are left with a question. Why did Korach lead a rebellion against Moses and Aaron? He already had wealth, power and honor. What more did he want from life?

3. Aaron, who was Korach’s cousin, was known as a man who loved and pursued peace. He would do everything in his power to bring peace between those who were angry and locked in a feud. According to the Sefat Emet, the first Rebbe of the Gur Hasidim, the reason Aaron was chosen to be the first High Priest was because he gave so much of himself to bringing peace to others. It is said that Aaron made no division between himself and the people he served. But our Parsha begins with the verse “Korach took” that is, he took for himself, he was not acting on behalf of others.

4. This is what prompts the Rabbis of the Talmud to say; “Controversy that is for the sake of heaven will come to fruition. Controversy that is not for the sake of heaven will not.” What is a rebellion “for the sake of heaven”? The controversy between Hillel and Shammai. What is a controversy that is “not for the sake of heaven” the controversy of Korach and his colleagues. Hillel and Shammai argued for many years and their arguments went on for several generations among their students. But they were not arguing for personal prestige or to raise money. They argued so that everyone would understand what God requires of them. But Korach only was taking “For himself.” He was only interested in what he planned to get out of his rebellion, no less than the leadership of the entire nation.

5. We hear a lot of talk about rebellions today. There are active rebellions going on in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Syria, Yemen, Bahrain, Sudan and maybe a new one starting in Saudi Arabia where women are protesting to gain the right to drive a car. As you might imagine, Israel and the United States are very concerned about these rebellions. First of all, they could disrupt the flow of oil around the world. It also places the oil in the hands of unknown and untested governments. Are we seeing the beginning of a new era of Arab democracy or will they end up with another dictatorship, maybe worse, maybe better than the one that came before?

6. We American’s like to think about our own rebellion against England. Our war of independence took only a couple of years to end, but it took another ten years for us to settle on a form of government that we have today. It was not an easy process nor was everyone in agreement about what we should do. In the end, we wrote a constitution and somehow it became the foundation of what our democracy is all about. We have every right to be proud of what this country has accomplished, even with all our problems, over the past 230 or so years. But don’t think it came easy. We did fight a civil war, assassinated a number of presidents, and our history is filled with war and scandal. Our democracy is a success but it is also a work in progress.

7. Most other countries who have had rebellions have not fared so well. France followed us with her own rebellion against the French royalty and it started a reign of terror where thousands of people were executed for all kinds of petty treasons. The Russian Revolution in 1917 unleashed a war that put the communists in power for most of the last century. The many revolutions in South America over the past 200 years basically replaced one dictatorship with another. Only recently have some of the South American countries finally found a way to embrace democracy and end the cycle of violence.

8. The British rock band, “The Who” described these kinds of revolutions in the song, “We Won’t Be Fooled Again”:

We’ll be fighting in the streets

With our children at our feet
And the morals when they worship will be gone
And the men who spurred us on
Sit in judgment of all wrong
They decide and the shotgun sings the song

I’ll tip my hat to the new constitution
Take a bow for the new revolution
Smile and grin at the change all around
Pick up my guitar and play
Just like yesterday
Then I’ll get on my knees and pray
We don’t get fooled again

9. If history is any indication, we are not in for an “Arab Spring” of democracy, but a long period of instability. Israel and the United States are justified in moving slowly and carefully in these uncertain times in the Middle East. The rebellion of Korach teaches us that we have to be very careful when it comes to rebellions. We have to know if there is a wider purpose than just one group trying to establish their hegemony over all the other groups.

10. My teacher, Rabbi Neil Gillman has another lesson for us to learn from Korach and his rebellion. After Korach and his party died, Moses was told to take the firepans used by the rebels and use the metal from the pans to make a bronze plating for the Altar in the Mishkan. It clearly is to be a memorial about what happens when people rebel against God. But there is more to this lesson and to the plating on the altar than just a reminder of a rebellion. Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, the first chief Rabbi of Palestine, says that this plating serves as a reminder to the community of believers, a rebuke to the inevitable corruption that accumulates around faith and religion: the tendency to anthropomorphize; to conceive of God in narrow and unrefined ways; to concentrate on the words and letters of Torah instead of on the thoughts and feelings that it expresses, and on its ultimate moral thrust.”

11. Rabbi Gilman goes on to say, “The plating on the altar, then, is not simply a reminder of Korach’s sin. It is even more a reminder of the sin that lurks in the heart of the pious, within all of us, a perpetual warning that it is not at all clear who is the saint and who is the sinner, that each of us is both saint and sinner, and the line separating the two is very murky indeed.” It seems that the sin of Korach can all too easily be our sin, that we think that we are better than everyone else, we are more pious and our way of doing religion is more correct than what anyone else does. “And the men who spurred us on, sit in judgment of all wrong. They decided and a shotgun sings the song”. We are not better than anyone else. We may be different and we may have other ideas, but we are all saints and sinners and where we stand on the line between these two poles in our hearts will determine if our work is for the sake of Heaven or not.

12. Like everything else in this world, religion can be used for great good or great evil. History has shown us how religion can be a source of knowledge, information, learning, understanding and human advancement. Religion gives us the encouragement to reach out to each other, to help each other along the way and to support each other in our times of distress. But religion has also been used to foster hate, bigotry, war, ignorance and greed. The difference is not in what we believe, but in how we translate that belief into our daily actions. The plating on the altar reminds us that at any moment, our faith can go either way and we have to be vigilant to keep our faith on the right track. We must always remember that when religion is not about love, it is not really religion anymore.

13. Leviticus reminds us that we need to “Love our neighbor as our self. But the Sefat Emet says that if we love God, we will see that our neighbor is our self. We will see ourselves in our neighbor and not hold him or her out as some “other person” who is not worthy of our love. If we love God, we cannot love only ourselves; our hearts have to be open to not just our neighbor, but to all other human beings on the planet. Or perhaps Rabbi Gillman would say that we all have to choose every minute of every day who it is that we love; do we love only ourselves or do we love God and love others as well?

14. We can be saints and we can be sinners. We can follow our inclination to do evil or our inclination to do good. We can be for ourselves and we can be for everyone. Controversy and rebellion are not good or bad in themselves; what makes all the difference is what is inside of us. If we only are interested in taking for ourselves, our controversies will be like the rebellion of Korach, and destined for disaster. If we seek to raise up and improve the lives of all people, those we know and those we do not know, our controversy will be like that of Hillel and Shammai, for the sake of heaven and destined to change the course of history.

Let us keep our minds focused on what is best for the world and may God always support us when we choose to spend our lives working for the good of all people, as we say …

AMEN AND SHABBAT SHALOM