|
Opportunity Lost
November 9, 2002
John Milton wrote an epic
poem – “Paradise Lost.” The topic for my sermon
today is “Opportunity Lost.” The lost opportunity I
am referring to – which could have lead to better understanding
among Jews – resulted from the cancellation of a nationwide
Jewish book tour. This tour was to feature two rabbis, Ammiel Hirsch
and Yosef Reinman, co-authors of One people: Two Worlds. What is
unique about their collaboration is that they inhabit opposite ends
of the religious spectrum. Rabbi Yosef Reinman wears the long black
kaftan and large black kippah that is the traditional male garb
of the ultra-orthodox world where Rabbi Reinman is a leading scholar.
Ammiel Hirsch is a well known Reform rabbi and serves as the executive
director of the Association of Reform Zionists of America.
The book they co-authored is based on their 18-month e-mail correspondence
on a wide range of religious issues such as: the authorship of the
Torah; the question of who is a Jew; homosexuality; interfaith marriages;
the role of women; and support for the State of Israel. One review
of this book observed that it offers not only a refreshingly candid
look at differing ideologies but also shows how two people gradually
moved from suspicion of each other to mutual respect and friendship.
What aborted the book promotion, that was to reach seventeen cities
throughout the country, was pressure on Rabbi Reinman by his ultra-orthodox
colleagues. Specifically the pressure came from Moetzet Gedolay
Ha’Torah which in English is known as the Council of Sages.
In the ultra-orthodox world, their word is law. In explaining why
he withdrew from the book tour, Rabbi Reinman said, “I have
acted on the advice of people older and wiser than I. . . I accept
the declaration of the Council of Sages without reservation.”
Gary Rosenblatt, the editor of the Jewish Week, and himself an orthodox
Jew, wrote an editorial in which he severely criticized the Council
of Sages for their actions. He points out that many non-orthodox
Jews feel that their orthodox brethren look down on them and on
the style of Judaism they practice – a perception that leads
to misunderstanding, resentment and even anger. Trying to heal that
wound, Rosenblatt writes, was no doubt a reason that these two rabbis
wrote their book in the first place. But now that wound has been
further aggravated by the book tour cancellation. Someone will have
to explain to thousands of unaffiliated and non-orthodox Jews why
the opportunity to meet and talk with Yosef Reinman, a brilliant
scholar and an articulate spokesman for orthodoxy, suddenly has
been taken away from them.
That resentment is further inflamed by the statement issued by the
Council of Sages explaining their reasons for commanding Rabbi Reinman
to cancel his tour with Rabbi Hirsch: “Light cannot exist
together with darkness,” they said. “Nor can falsehood
be peddled along with truth.”
It is the claim of all orthodoxies, religious and secular, that
they alone possess the truth, which makes harmonious relations and
dialogue with them difficult if not impossible. Pluralism has no
legitimacy in the eyes of fervently Orthodox Jews. Their attitude
is “You can pray to God in your way and we will pray to God
in His. The idea of there being many paths to the top of the mountain
lacks currency with them. The claim of the fervently orthodox is
that there is only one right way - all the others are wrong.
Just last month, a book written by Jonathan Sacks, the chief rabbi
of Great Britain, was labeled as heresy by several of his orthodox
colleagues. One of sentences they found offensive states “no
one creed has a monopoly on spiritual truth.” After meeting
with some of his critics, Rabbi Sacks, who is orthodox, agreed to
make appropriate amendments in the next edition of his book.
I wish that Rabbi Sacks had stood up to his colleagues and stood
by his statement that no creed has a monopoly on spiritual truth.
Why close ours minds to the ideas of other denominations in Judaism
or to the insights of other religions. Everyone benefits from openness
and interaction.
Within Judaism, each one of our denominations has a unique strength,
which other branches of Judaism would do well to emulate. Orthodox
Jews, for example, exhibit enviable devotion to the study of Judaism’s
sacred texts. Orthodox children, who almost exclusively attend yeshivot,
devote hours each day to learning Bible and Talmud. Orthodox Jew
also place great emphasis on observing Jewish traditions and performing
mitzvot. For them, more than for any other group, Judaism is an
all encompassing way of life. Jewish traditions and values play
a role in their lives every hour of every day.
Reform Jews are to be esteemed for their commitment to tikkun olam
– social action. They originated the concept of mitzvah day
where congregants spend a day doing a variety of social action oriented
mitzvot. They go to soup kitchens, homes for the elderly, children’s
hospitals and battered women shelters. They bring gifts, provide
entertainment and demonstrate caring by just being there. Reform
Jews have been leaders in the fight for civil rights and fair labor
practices.
Our own Conservative Movement has made a significant contribution
to Jewish life today. It has a unique approach to the issue of tradition
versus change. To those who say nothing in Judaism can change, we
must stick to our age-old traditions, Conservative Judaism says:
the modern world we live in is different from the world of our ancestors.
Therefore, sometimes Judaism must seek accommodation to life as
it is lived today.
At the other extreme, to those who say that the traditions of Judaism
are outmoded and must be totally reformed, Conservative Judaism
says not so fast. Our traditions are what unite us as a people and
what connect us to our past. Most of our customs and rituals are
meaningful and relevant even today. However, should change be deemed
necessary, it must be undertaken with circumspect deliberation,
guided by the halachic, the Jewish legal process.
Rabbi Avraham Yitzhak Kook, was the first chief rabbi of Israel.
And though he was fervently orthodox, he taught that every Jew of
every stripe – even one who is a non-believer and non-practicing,
has a role to play in the drama of Jewish life. He wrote: “The
eedifice of the Jewish people is constructed from various parts
and approaches. All the different points of view are the living
word of God. It is precisely this multiplicity of opinions, deriving
from a variety of souls and backgrounds, that enriches wisdom and
brings about its growth.”
Rabbi Kook’s insight is profound. He recognizes that each
Jew, with his own unique soul and background, each branch of Judaism
with its own wisdom, enriches the Jewish people collectively. It
is an idea that finds further amplification in a beautiful midrash
on this morning’s torah reading. You may recall that Jacob,
who has just had a bitter fight with his brother Esau, flees the
land of Israel heading toward his mother’s ancestral home
in Mesopotamia. Just as he is about to leave the holy land, he lies
down to sleep and places nearby stones under his head. It doesn’t
sound like a very comfortable pillow to me, but the Torah says that
is what Jacob did. Upon waking, Jacob takes the stone he had slept
on and makes it into a shrine he named Beth El.
Did you happen to notice a discrepancy as I told the story? First
the torah says that Jacob took stones, plural, and slept on them,
but when he wakes up there is one stone. The midrash provides an
explanation that teaches us an important lesson for today. It says
that the stones Jacob collected were twelve in number and represented
the twelve tribes of Israel. As soon as Jacob assembled them, they
began arguing among themselves, each declaring that it, alone, had
the right to serve as Jacob’s pillow. The tribe of Reuben
claimed priority as descendants of Jacob’s first born son.
But the tribe of Levi claimed it was more important because it provided
the religious leaders of the Israelites – the Cohayns and
Levites. The tribe of Yisachar claimed priority because one day
it would raise many great scholars, but then the tribe of Zevulun
chimed in saying they were the most important tribe because as successful
merchants, they would provide financial support for the students
of torah. God listened to all this talk and then He acted. He gathered
the twelve stones and forged them into one, declaring that no one
tribe is superior to the others. Each benefitted from the contribution
of the other tribes.
I firmly believe that today, too, God wants to see the Jews unified
as one people. Instead of isolating ourselves from one another,
instead of seeing ourselves as opposing camps, instead of denigrating
the other, let us try to learn from each other, emulate the best
values from each branch of Judaism and work together to forge and
shape a more vibrant religious experience for all the Jews of America.
Shabbat Shalom.
|