I am regularly inspired by a little book called "Steal Like An Artist" by Austin Kleon. His simple wisdom and advice often helps me get back on track when I've fallen off. I highly recommend it.
Steal Like An Artist by Austin Kleon published by Workman Publishing Company, New York. You can visit Austin at www.AustinKleon.com. Thanks, Austin.
Saturday, January 30, 2016
Friday, January 29, 2016
Torah Thoughts on Yitro
This week’s Torah portion, Yitro,
(Ex. 18:1 – 20:23) depicts the climactic meeting between God and the Israelite
people at Mount Sinai, and highlights the Ten Utterances, usually referred to
as the Ten Commandments, spoken by the voice of God from the mountain to those
assembled below.
Many years ago, on a Hillel
retreat, a student of mine gave a d’var Torah on this portion. He pointed out that all but one of the Ten
Commandments had to do with our obligations: to God, to society, to parents, to
our spouses, to community. Only one of
the ten is not a responsibility but a benefit, and that is to remember
Shabbat. Shabbat is a day to rest and renew,
to look after our spirit and delight in friends, family, food, and song. However you choose to observe it, make it a
celebration. It’s for you.
Friday, January 22, 2016
Torah Thoughts on Beshallach
This week’s Torah portion, Beshallach, (Ex. 13:17 – 17:16) tells
of the greatest miracle in the Torah, the splitting of the sea of Reeds so that
the Israelites might cross, but the Egyptians pursuing them are drowned. Once the great crossing is over, though, the
reality of life in the wilderness begins.
The Israelites suddenly realize they have no food, no water, and nowhere
to live. God provides food, the manna
which will feed them through their forty years in the wilderness, and water,
which God gives them by Moses striking the rock. But other nations now know that the Israelites
are in the wilderness, and Amalek attacks the fledgling nation at
Rephidim.
God also provides help for the Israelites in fighting their
enemies, but we also learn a lesson in how to work with one another. As Joshua leads the newly-formed army in
battle, Moses stands above them on a hill, holding the rod with which he split
the sea in his hands. As long as Moses’
hands are raised, the Israelites prevail, but when Moses grows tired and lowers
his arms, Amalek begins to win. Aaron and
Hur sit Moses down on a stone and hold up his arms for him until the sun set,
so that Israel can win the battle. Even
as great a leader as Moses, and even with all of God’s support, also needs help
from his fellow human beings.
Thursday, January 14, 2016
Torah Thoughts on Bo and on Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day
The first time I wrote this was three years ago, but once again, Parshah Bo and Martin Luther King Day fall at the same time, so I am re-running it. LB
It
is a happy coincidence of the Hebrew and secular calendars that this week’s
Torah portion, Bo, (Ex. 10:1-13:16), falls in the same week as the
commemoration of Martin Luther King’s birthday.
The Torah portion addresses the last three plagues of Egypt, and the
exodus itself. Within the first few
verses of the portion, Moses and Aaron, speaking on behalf of God, utter the
famous words, “let my people go”. These
words continued to resound throughout history.
Most notably, they were used by the civil rights movement of the 1960s,
and mentioned by Dr. King in his 1964 acceptance speech of the Nobel Peace
Prize:
Oppressed people cannot remain oppressed forever.
The yearning for freedom eventually manifests itself. The Bible tells the
thrilling story of how Moses stood in Pharaoh's court centuries ago and cried,
"Let my people go." This is a kind of opening chapter in a continuing
story. The present struggle in the United States is a later chapter in the same
unfolding story. Something within has reminded the Negro of his birthright of
freedom, and something without has reminded him that it can be gained.
Consciously or unconsciously, he has been caught up by the Zeitgeist,
and with his black brothers of Africa and his brown and yellow brothers in
Asia, South America, and the Caribbean, the United States Negro is moving with
a sense of great urgency toward the promised land of racial justice.
Nor
is that struggle at an end, no matter how far we have come. The Haggadah for the American Family,
written by Rabbi Martin Berkowitz in that same time frame of the 1960s, looks
prophetically towards the future in this reading:
The struggle for freedom is a continuous struggle,
for never does man reach total liberty and opportunity.
In every age, some new freedom is won and
established, adding to the advancement of human happiness and security.
Yet, each age uncovers a formerly unrecognized
servitude, requiring new liberation to set man’s soul free.
In every age, the concept of freedom grows broader,
widening the horizons for finer and nobler living.1
As
we face this coming week, may each of us feel the need to continue the struggle
for freedom, wherever in our world it may be needed.
1And a tip of the
kippah to Alice Meerson for bringing the Haggadah reading to my attention.
Friday, January 8, 2016
Torah Thoughts on Vaera
This week’s Torah portion, Vaera
(Ex. 6:2 – 9:35) tells of the first six plagues of Egypt, which come about
after Moses asks Pharaoh to let the Israelites go out into the wilderness to
worship their God for three days. Moses
warns Pharaoh that the God of the Israelites is powerful and that there will be
dire consequences for Pharaoh and the Egyptians if Pharaoh disobeys God’s
will. But God also tells Moses “I will
harden Pharaoh’s heart that I may multiply My signs and marvels in the land of
Egypt (Ex. 7:3)”. How are we to interpret
this? If God is causing Pharaoh’s heart to harden, how can Pharaoh himself be
held responsible for his actions?
Biblical scholar Moshe Greenberg
writes, “Pharaoh conducted himself in conformity with his own motives and his
own Godless view of his status. God made
it so, but Pharaoh had only to be himself to do God’s will”. In Greenberg’s view, God simply used Pharaoh’s
own natural stubbornness, rather than forcing him to do anything that was
foreign to his nature.
Psychologist Erich Fromm notes
that for the first five plagues, it is written “Pharaoh’s heart was hardened”,
meaning that Pharaoh hardened his own heart, and only for the second five, “God
hardened Pharaoh’s heart”. He comments, “Pharaoh’s
heart hardens because he keeps on doing evil.
It hardens to a point where no more change or repentance is
possible. The longer he refuses to
choose the right, the harder his heart becomes until there is no longer any
freedom of choice left him”.
Judaism teaches that we are born
with free will. But the case of Pharaoh
illustrates that free will may not be limitless.
Friday, January 1, 2016
Torah Thoughts on Shemot
This week’s Torah portion, Shemot (Ex. 1:1 – 6:1) picks up
the story of the children of Israel long after the death of Joseph and of his
brothers. Under a new regime, they are
enslaved by the Egyptians and put to hard labor. This chapter introduces us to
Moses, a new leader for the people. He
is born into a Levite family but raised as the adopted daughter of the
Pharaoh. He kills an Egyptian overlord
and flees to Midian where he marries the daughter of Jethro the priest. Moses joins Jethro’s family and one day,
herding Jethro’s sheep in the wilderness, out of a burning thornbush, Moses
sees and speaks with God.
God tells Moses that he has been chosen to free the people
Israel from enslavement in Egypt. God gives
him specific instructions and assures him.
But Moses resists. He is filled
with doubts about his ability. Four
times, he gives God reasons why someone else should be chosen. But of course, God knows best. Moses will stand up to Pharaoh. He will guide the people Israel from Egypt to
the wilderness, to their encounter with God at Sinai, and to the verge of the
land which God had promised to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. The one who called himself “slow of speech”
achieves an unmatched eloquence, and dictates the entire book of
Deuteronomy. The one who feared he was
too insignificant for Pharaoh to heed wins arguments with the God of the
universe.
When Moses herded Jethro’s sheep, he could not have imagined
that he would become the image of liberation for people all over the world for millennia,
but that is exactly what happened. And,
though we are not as great as Moses, we each underestimate what we can accomplish. On the day of this secular New Year, let us
commend ourselves for how far we have come, and look down the road to the next
goal.
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