Monthly Archives: February 2014

Tetzaveh 2014

Light and Purity?  Urim and Thumim?  How troubling?  Why would a game of chance or worse – a form of divining – be used to make important decisions by a High Priest?  It seems so antithetical to our tradition as we know it today, so offensive to our current sensibilities.  Our modern compass insists that we find the right answers using our G-d given talents and abilities of logic, empathy, fairness, compassion.    Moving from “why” to “when” helps.  When might it make sense to use games of chance to make important decisions?

In elementary schools, educators often help students find the right answers to academic questions in the classroom using our minds and hearts.  On the yard, we often help students see better solutions to social conflicts that arise and more humane methods of interacting with each other.  When one person has hurt another, we help them figure out how to begin to make it right and make a plan for how to respond differently should a similar situation arise in the future.

Yet there are times when there is no right answer.   When the ball in a four-square game lands in an indeterminate spot and no adult saw it;  when two students would like to play with the same ball for two different purposes and run and reach it at approximately the same time; when students disagree about whether a soccer ball hit a player’s hand.  There are myriad of these types of situations without a clear right answer.  In these situations, we teach students to play rock, paper, scissors, a game of chance they can play with their hands.  Most of the time, it solves these minor conflicts with no fall out.  Before I knew this method for solving minor disputes, I saw small matters escalate to yelling and even to violence.

Consider that the beginning of many major sporting events – NFL games, tennis matches, basketball games start with the toss of a coin, because it just seems the fair way to determine slight advantage in a high stakes game.

I remember hearing about state legislators from opposite parties in yester-decades who would play cards at night to decide details of important legislation.  I found this totally offensive.  In today’s gridlocked political climate, though, it makes more sense.  When people hold very different ideas about what should be, but agree that even the solution they like least would be better than no solution, a card game allows work to continue and constituencies to have faith that government can work even when principled politicians differ.

As adults, we often find ourselves agreeing with each other politely to avoid uncomfortable disagreements.  How much lighter we might feel if we knew we could always speak truth because should agreement remain elusive, a system was available for deciding the matter?  It might allow us to hold more closely the adage from the grandmother of my friend and mentor, Susan Audap:  “If we agree on everything, one of us isn’t necessary.”  When we allow this truth to outweigh our preference to avoid temporary discomfort, better ideas often arise that allow all parties to see matters in entirely new light.

Purity in this construction is not demagoguery but systematic progress despite disagreement with the potential for great light.   Light is synergy that comes from thought partnership among those who see differently but trust each others’ wisdom enough to engage in moments of co-creation rather than antagonistic intellectual and emotional battle.  The availability of a game of chance if the tide turns against synergy or if time-boundness requires a quick answer offers the freedom needed for this creativity.  Chance when used as a tool then, paradoxically serves purity and the light of greater wisdom.

A Terumah Parable

The following is as recorded in A Treasury of Jewish Folklore edited by Nathan Ausubel:

The Preacher of Dubno, Jacob Krantz, was once asked why the parable has such persuasive power over people.  The Preacher replied, “I will explain this by means of a parable.

“It happened once that Truth walked about as naked as his mother bore him.  Naturally, people were scandalized and wouldn’t let him into their houses.  Whoever saw him got frightened and ran away.

“And so as Truth wandered the streets brooding over his troubles he met Parable.  Parable was gaily decked out in fine clothes and was a sight to see.  He asked, ‘Tell me, what is the meaning of all this?  Why do you walk about naked and looking so woebegone?’

Truth shook his head sadly and replied, ‘Everything is going downhill with me, brother.  I’ve gotten so old and decrepit that everybody avoids me.’

“‘What you’re saying makes no sense,’ said Parable.  ‘People are not giving you a wide berth because you are old.  Take me, for instance, I am no younger than you.  Nonetheless, the older I get, the more attractive people find me.  Just let me confide a secret to you about people.  They don’t like things plain and bare but dressed up prettily and a little artificial.  I’ll tell you what.  I’ll lend you some fine clothes like mine and you’ll soon see how people will take to you.’

“Truth took this advice and decked himself out in Parable’s fine clothes.  And lo and behold!   People no longer shunned him but welcomed him heartily.  Since that time, Truth and Parable are to be seen as inseparable companions, esteemed and loved by all.”

Terumah 2014

I had the opportunity this weekend to hear four rabbis discuss parashah Terumah.

Former President of the World Union for Progessive Judaism, Rabbi Stephen Fuchs, taught that we learn that the ark is to be gilded on the inside and the outside to indicate that we must work to develop ourselves on the inside and not just on how we appear on the outside; that we should strive to make who we are on the inside of pure proverbial gold.

Co-Senior Rabbi of Congregation Emanuel in San Francisco, Rabbi Jonathan Singer, commented that G-d has given us a blueprint, but it is our job to follow it to build the society G-d wants; that if we follow all of the instructions that have been given to us we can come closer to G-d.

Director of the Religious Action Center, Rabbi David Saperstein, said that the punchline of this parashah is at the beginning:   וְעָשׂוּ לִי מִקְדָּשׁ וְשָׁכַנְתִּי בְּתוֹכָם

“and they will make me a mikdash and I will dwell among them.” The “them” here is the Israelites. G-d dwells not in the mikdash but among the people.  G-d is not out of reach, but among us.

Senior Rabbi of Netivot Shalom in Berkeley, Rabbi Menachem Creditor, noted that the parashah indicates that the details matter and that often we find G-d in the details.  He also suggested that this parashah should lead us to consider the impact of wealth on our relationship with G-d and each other.

It seems to me that much of the spirit of this parashah stands as a paradoxical partner with the previous parashah, Yitro.  In Yitro, we learn that the altar G-d wants is of the earth and of unhewn stones.  In Terumah, we are told to build a gilded ark of all the finest materials.   While the mishkan and altar are not identical, these sets of directions seem not to go well together.  The previous parashah tells us not to make any images of G-d and this parashah tells us to craft cherubim.  While cherubim are not G-d it bothers our sensitivities around the issue of not making likenesses of the divine.

How do we reconcile these seemingly contradictory messages?  Are we to decide between the two parashot?  Is it like the directions we often give 5th graders to teach them to follow directions – the one with 15 items that I first saw in Sandra Zendlovitz’s, z’l 5th grade class:

1)   Read all the directions first before you write anything.

2)    Write your name and the date.

3)   Write a paragraph about the house you live in.

4)   Write a sentence about the ocean.

5)   Write a ten line poem about the sky.

15) Complete only item number one?

After all, we have seen in previous passages that we are not to blindly follow all dicta, but to follow the example of Abraham and Moses who argue with G-d.  Throughout the Torah we receive the message that we are responsible for understanding G-d’s will.  I wrote about the Torah’s message to us on this subject  in my post about Yitro (see Yitro 2014, subheading “Empowered Relative to Leadership”).  We are to be a kingdom of priests without intermediaries.  It is up to us to make sense of G-d’s instruction.

It seems unlikely that this parashah would be entirely a test of us and that we are intended to ignore it outright.  Rather, we must make sense of the paradox.  After all, there is indeed something beautiful about the idea that we bring our very best to carry that which symbolized both our connection to G-d and our peoplehood – the ark.  There is indeed something beautiful about the notion Rabbi Fuchs suggests that we gild the inside and outside of the ark and ourselves; as Rabbi Singer suggests that the blueprints G-d offers are complex and they are for us to make sense of; as Rabbi Saperstein suggests that G-d dwells among us after we have put in collective and substantial effort; as Rabbi Creditor suggests that we often find G-d in the details and that G-d is with us everywhere we go as a community.

How do we reconcile these instructions to have an altar of earth and no images of the Almighty with the instructions to build an elaborate gilded ark with cherubim?  I have not figured it out yet.  It reminds me of the teaching of the early Chasidic leader Rabbi Simcha Bunim that we should always have in one pocket a paper that says “I am but dust and ashes.” and in the other pocket a paper that says “The world was created for my sake.”  We are wise to be present with not just our individual but our collective humility and humanity, our fragility and our strength.  Still, this does not satisfy me, and I welcome help reconciling this paradox.