Day 5 of the Omer

Hod in Chesed - grace, the sense of our smallness, in compassion.​

When we see ourselves as small, we connect sympathetically with every one, even every thing. Sympathy can be a source for compassion, and can be essential for kindness in a helpful way.​

When we offer help, we often want to contribute in our own way. Assistance may often be most effective when we allow the person we hope to assist to design the manner in which we help.​

As a parent might often say to a child, "I need you to help me in the way that I need help, not in the way that you think you need to help."​

Assistance requires listening - compassion requires sympathy.​

Day 4 of the Omer

Netzach in Chesed - victory of the self in compassion and kindness.

Netzach is often associated with a powerful sense of self, even to the exclusion of others so perhaps a challenging fit into to world of compassion and loving kindness.

Kindness towards others begins with understanding that we have something worth giving. We need to believe in or own self-worth in order to offer kindness, even to our selves.

So on this day let us remember to care for our selves as a start to offering each other compassion.

Shabbat Shalom, Happy Counting, and Happy Passover!

Day 3 of the Omer

Tiferet in Chesed - harmonious balance in loving kindness.

Tiferet often connotes beauty, perhaps a supreme harmonized balance between important values - in this case between Chesed, compassion and kindness, and Gevurah, strength and rigor.

Perhaps the beauty we find is the balance between immediate needs and long term needs. In order to enact kindness that transforms the world, we may need to think beyond the good feeling of doing a compassionate deed in the moment. How can we exercise our compassion so as to create a ripple effect of kindness in our selves, our families, and our larger communities?

Balance our kindness for the long view.

Happy Passover and Happy Counting of the Omer!

Day 2 of the Omer

Gevurah in Chesed - power or rigor in compassion.

At first glance two difficult to combine concepts, still to apply compassion rigorously we would have to demand compassion of ourselves even when we feel no kindness.

Often our first response to difficulty excludes any compassion. To be rigorous in kindness would require us to admit a compassionate reflection, especially towards ourselves when we might be least disposed to do so.

Happy counting!

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Day 1 of the Omer

Tonight is Chesed in Chesed - Compassion and loving-kindness in itself.​

Each of the 49 days between tonight and Shavuot, the next big Jewish holiday represents an Omer, a sheaf of barley brought in for the spring harvest. Since we were dependent on that harvest for food in the summer, this became a time of reflection and renew - a spiritual assessment and directing.​

The Kabbalists, Jewish mystics, associated each of the seven easier to grasp sefirot, or Divine spheres of values, with each of the seven weeks, and each day within the week, Hence compassion, the 1st day, in compassion, the 1st week.​

For my thought on compassion, I am going to aim to be compassionate to myself when I have not met the mark in being compassionate. In other words, a little self-forgiveness may enable me to better use my compassion energy in the future.​

Happy Omer Counting everyone, and Happy Passover!​

A beautiful prayer from the heart from Rabbi Jack Bloom

Elohai N'tzor l'shoni mei-rai...

My God, Keep My Tongue From Evil, My Lips From Lies.
Help me ignore those who slander me!
Open my heart to Your Torah, so that I may pursue Your Mitzvot!
Frustrate the designs of those who plot evil against me.
Make Nothing Of Their Schemes!

A Prayer From The Heart, For The Heart.
From The Soul, For The Soul.
The Quintessential Personal Prayer.
Here, the slanderers, the plotters of evil are not found among those who share our planet.
They are "aliens",who subsequent to psychological and/or emotional pain, have taken up residence in us.
Similar to bacteria or viruses, though we host them, they are not us!  Our psychological immune system, impaired by psychic violence, though struggling valiantly, is unable to reject them.
In moments of vulnerability,the "aliens", though not us,- denigrate, demean and alienate us.
They tell us that we are not good enough, that we are frauds, that there is no room in the world for the likes of us, that we never do anything right, and on and on.
Though masquerading in our voice, and mimicking our style they are not us!  The evidence being that their attack leaves us diminished and alienated.  Created in the image of God, nothing that is authentically us, would leave us demeaned, diminished, and alienated!
So we pray for Torah, compassion, holiness, and Torah yet again;
teaching and reminding us that we are created b’Tzelem, in the Image, and that the aliens are most assuredly not us. 
And that peace. be the sign of our HEALING.
     

Jack
JackHBloom.com
jackhbloom@aol.com

Our names - Yom Kippur Sermon

Yom Kippur Morning 5773 – Wednesday, September 27, 2012
Temple Beth El, Charlotte, North Carolina 

G’mar Chatimah Tovah – may we all be inscribed for a good New Year.

Leah got a rough deal. Her father snuck her under the veil and married her off to Jacob, who was supposed to marry her sister. Leah married someone who didn’t love her, who was tricked into marrying her, and possibly resented her. Leah had only her children to comfort her.

Leah’s first four boys appeared quickly. She is the first of our ancestor women to name her children herself, and she explained each name as she gave it. Her first son, Reuben, from the Hebrew “See, a son!” – “See everyone! A son! Maybe now my husband will pay attention to me.” Her second son, Shimon, like “Sh’ma!” “Hear me! Why don’t you hear me Jacob? I have given you another son!” Leah’s third-born, Levi, in Hebrew, “My companion!” “Another son, will you now at last Jacob accompany me?” And after all of that, boy number four, Yehudah, Judah, from the Hebrew for “Gratitude”, “Thank you God for giving me a child!”

We receive our names from our parents, and then live our lives, giving them meaning.

I am Jonathan Benjamin. Jonathan in Hebrew translates as “God gave” or “God’s gift”. Like many of you, I am blessed to be son to a wonderful loving Jewish mother, so I truly know what it’s like to be God’s gift, at least to my mother. My name regularly reminds me that I need to work on what I offer as gifts to others too, including myself.

The name Benjamin comes with a story. The meaning of the word, “son of the right hand”, may come from the history of the Benjaminites binding their sons’ right hands behind their backs during childhood, training them to be lefties. Not unlike in baseball today, left-handed sword wielders had certain advantages in ancient times. My name Benjamin helps me remember that much of what I am comes from what I learn, even when it doesn’t come naturally for me. For example, I was told as a child that our family couldn’t learn foreign languages. So, of course, I chose a career that requires me to know three types of Hebrew AND Aramaic.

My names both describe me and offer me goals to shoot for. They are an intersection between the hopes and dreams that my parents had for me, and the development of my own ideas about myself.

The names we receive as a people likewise have meaning and teach us about ourselves.

The first name we received in the Torah is Hebrew – Abraham is described as “Avram the Hebrew”.

 “Ivri” is how we say it in Hebrew and it means “one who crosses”, as in to “cross a river, or a boundary,” or even to “cross a line of behavior”.

People saw Abraham as a traveler, an immigrant, a wanderer. So Hebrew fit him and his family. Abraham’s comfort with confronting the unknown expressed his relationship to God too – when he moved, when he took risks, he often was rewarded. God was on Abraham’s side when Abraham went looking for a new home.

Abraham embraced the name Hebrew for himself – he crossed lines as both an adventurer in his own right, and with God. Abraham challenged God, argued with God when it seemed like God was unfair.

When we as a people embrace the title Hebrew we make strides towards the unfamiliar, we lead by breaking down boundaries that hold others back.

Jacob also was a Hebrew. Jacob’s first journey away from home led him to his first spiritual encounter. When he departed, setting out to find a bride and make his fortune, Jacob dreamed a powerful vision of his relationship with God, and God promised to maintain the same promise with Jacob as he had with Abraham. Jacob set out on a risky journey and met God along the way.

Jacob earned another name for himself and for us as a people. When Jacob returned home, he needed to do more than just travel. He needed to make amends. On Rosh HaShanah we talked about Jacob’s wrestling as a form of personal transformation that allowed him to go and confront his brother Esau, whom he had wronged so severely. A Hebrew sets out and confronts the unknown, Jacob needed to do more than that, he needed to struggle and change himself at a deep level.

When he wrestled with an angel Jacob went beyond risk-taking and receiving blessings. Arguing with God was part of the Hebrew path, grappling with God, wrestling with how the universe might help us change, and then making the change – this is the path of Jacob’s new name, of Israel the God-wrestler.

As a people, we earn the name Israel when we follow Jacob, wrestle with difficult issues, and change our selves. When we initiate the challenging and thoughtful discussions that bring about progress, we are Israel.

One of my mentors, Rabbi Mitchell Chefitz tells a story of our Eastern European (in his book The Seventh Telling) past about an officer of the law. He was proud of his position, his sharply pressed uniform and shiny buttons. He marched instead of walked, more involved with his status than anything around him. One day the officer encountered a homeless man, dressed in rags.

The homeless man said to the officer, “Oy. What am I going to do with you?”

“Do with me?” said the officer, in astonishment, “I am the officer of the law, it is I who must do with you!”

Thinking for a moment, the homeless man said, “Ah ha – here’s what I am going to do,” and out of the folds of his rags he pulled a sword, and attacked the officer.

The officer was stunned. Still, he was a professional, and drew his sword and parried well, fighting off the homeless man. Suddenly, the homeless man fell on the officer’s sword.

The officer said in shock, “What have you done? Why did you attack me? You didn’t need to die today?”

With his last breath, the homeless man said to the officer, “I curse you with the curse of blessings. You may not live past another sunset without offering a new blessing.” The homeless man’s body then disappeared into thin air, leaving the officer with a pile of rags on his sword.

Shaken, the officer puffed himself up again, shook the dirty shmatas off his sword, and went about his day trying to forget the disturbing experience. As the sun set in the afternoon he began to feel his life fade away, and knew that the curse was real. Grasping in his mind for the nearest blessing, he said, “Praised are you God, creator of sunsets.” The officer felt his life’s energy return to him.

Starting in the morning the officer began to bless his everyday things. “Praised is the Creator of my teeth,” “Praised is the Creator of my breakfast,” “Praised is the Creator of my ability to walk”. Soon, the officer had to get more creative, and would bless people and odd and obscure things. Word got around that the officer uttered meaningful blessings, and he was often invited to the openings of projects and events, as well as weddings and other celebrations. The officer’s life grew full due to all that he noticed around him. He found himself transformed by the beauty of the world and all who shared their lives with him.

Since continuing to utter new blessings preserved his life, the officer lived very long. On his 120th birthday, he decided he had lived long enough – after all 120 was old enough for Moses. So, he awoke on that day and reviewed his full life, repeating many of the blessings that he had spoken. As sunset approached and his life began to slip away, the homeless man appeared to the officer again.

The officer was thrilled, and said: “I am so glad you are here. I have so many questions for you. Who are you for one and…”

The homeless man held up a hand gently, and explained, “I am the angel who was sent to gather your soul upon your death. When I saw you I immediately noticed a problem – you had no soul! I could not gather what wasn’t there. And so I found a way to help you grow a soul.”

The officer answered, “I don’t know how I can thank you enough. Praised is the Creator who brought you to me.” As the officer’s life returned to him for another day, he and his angel looked at each other and said, “Oy!”

This story helps teach us our third name as a people. In addition to Hebrews who cross boundaries and take risks, in addition to Israel, those who struggle with the world aiming to become better, we are also Yehudim, descendants of Judah, Jews, those who give thanks.

Leah’s name for us is what we call ourselves. Other people called us “Hebrews”, and the wrestler gave Jacob the name Israel. Jew is our own name.

Leah journeyed from despair to joy and gave us this name.

Adding a child to our lives can be one of the most amazing moments of connection with God. In response to her first three births Leah focused entirely on what she lacked – specifically, a loving relationship with her husband. As she named her first three sons, she talked of her misery: see me Jacob! Hear me Jacob! Accompany me Jacob! The names have nothing to do with her joy at having new babies.

And so arrived baby boy number four, and Leah changed her attitude. “This time I will give thanks…” She, like the officer in the story, learned to see the good of what was right in front of her – the miracle in her lap.

By giving her son a name Leah became the first Jew, a yehudit, one who gives thanks.

As a people, we earn this name when we enter each day with gratitude. When we relate to each other and the world with appreciation for the miracles all around us, when we see the good and share it, we live as yehudim, as Jews.

Expressing gratitude seems simple.

We all know it isn’t though.

We show appreciation by really saying, “Thank you”. When we acknowledge a gift, saying thanks right takes some work. Seldom, if ever, do gifts turn out to be exactly what we want. In order be truly thankful, we have to up our game. We need to shift out of expectations (not exactly what I wanted, not in the right color, or “socks again!”) and into gratefulness. Accepting gifts with real gratitude requires being in touch with our deeper values, not our superficial desires.

The officer’s lesson about seeing blessings in everything, Leah’s move from “God, give me what I want!” to “Thank you God!” – both show us a good path for this day.

We show our gratitude by getting rid of blame.

We must start with Leah’s acceptance of her own worth – when she offered thanks for Judah she stopped blaming everyone else – her father, Jacob, and God – and instead allowed her gratitude to shine forth. So our thankfulness must come before our apologies.

Our prayer book asks us to begin our day every morning with the words of Modeh Ani – “I offer thanks before You, Ruler of Life and existence, that you returned to me my soul with compassion, great is your faith.”

The order of our days begins with a prayer of thanks. Gratitude leads us to compassion.

When we treat existence as a gift, we appreciate God’s compassion and in turn, we offer the universe compassion. Sometimes we may wish things were different – we could be healthier, or more successful, or suffer less. When we start with gratitude though, we begin to transform our relationship to God as offering thanks with grace, accepting our imperfect existence.

When we relate to God in this way, we also can treat our own difficulties, our own feelings, with compassion and gratitude.

We grapple with our names – no one knows me as Benjamin, yet I have used it to help define and redefine myself. I have been called many names, some I have changed – Jon to Jonathan, and back again perhaps – some I have earned – like “rabbi”.

Some names hurt.

Even facing the hurt of what we’re called can help us grow.

When we experience hurt, we often want to avoid it. We want to reject our difficulties and move on. Yom Kippur gives us the opportunity to offer kindness to our selves. We can face our own wounds, our difficulties, and treat them gently. We can be thankful for the paths we have shared with our pains, the lessons we found with them and from them, and welcome our whole selves, even our hurt selves, with kindness.

Compassion for our selves helps us offer sympathy and compassion for others too.

So we can enter this day of repentance with healing in mind – healing for our selves, healing for everyone.

We get here today as Hebrews – crossing over into difficult places, testing our limits, being brave.  We are Israel, we embrace the idea of change. We wrestle with our own capacity to learn from the miracles around us. We are Jews, Yehudim, those who offer thanks and gratitude for all of reality, for our communities and families, and for our own individual selves. When we see our names as gifts from others, and opportunities for our growth, we participate in healing the world from our inner selves outwards.

Let us embark on this journey together. Let us find a year where we accept our names and live up to them, and craft new blessings for ourselves. May the day of Yom Kippur be one of meaningful and brave grappling, leading to appreciation and compassion. May we start with ourselves, and take that tikkun, that repair, and share it with each other.

מוֹדֶה אֲנִי לְפָנֶֽיךָ

Modeh Ani Lefanecha – I am thankful before you… – today, for all the good around me.

מֶֽלֶךְ חַי וְקַיָּם

Melech Chai V’kayam – Ruler of Life and Existence… – look at the miracle of creation.

שֶׁהֶחֱזַֽרְתָּ בִּי נִשְׁמָתִי בְּחֶמְלָה

Sh’heh-cheh-zarta bi nishmati b’chemlah – that you returned to me my soul with compassion – my senses, my thoughts, my feelings are gifts as well.

רַבָּה אֱמוּנָתֶֽךָ

Rabah emunatecha – great is your faith – I will return to you on this day, in gratitude, in compassion, with my confessions, making amends.

Life continues in doubts and loves

[Thoughts on remembrance for the Community Memorial Service at the Hebrew Cemetery in Charlotte, NC, Sunday, September 23, 2012]

A Poem, by Yehuda Amichai

The Place Where We are Absolutely Right

From the place where we are absolutely right
flowers will never grow in the spring.
The place where we are absolutely right
is trampled, hardened
like a courtyard.

However
doubts and loves
make the world rise like dough
like a molehill, like a plow.
And a whisper will be heard
in the place where a home was destroyed.


We still relate to those who are gone. We wish they were here to share time and space with us. We talk to them and wish they would talk back. We look back with regret over opportunities missed. Loss remains within us, a hollow space, demanding attention.

As our loss demands attention, so do we resist it – we want it to be simple and complete – to be absolute like the place in Amichai’s poem. A place where we are absolutely right sounds like a comfort. This place could be easier. It would certainly be quieter. Amichai reminds us what that place would look like – it would be truly lifeless. There are no possibilities there. In that place we allow our own small needs to crowd out everything else.

The people we have lost are not absolutely one way or another either, and to hear them we may have to admit that one person may have many sides that we remember.

My father (z”l) and I used to hotly debate the issues of the day. We knew each other’s positions very well, and often started arguing where we had left off before. After hours of discussion on long car trips between North Carolina and New York we usually managed to discover some common ground – growing closer through our doubts and our love. Over the years, as he fell ill to pancreatic cancer, my father lost interest in these conversations, preferring exchanges that took less effort. I lost those times even before he died. Now that he’s gone I must go past that barren place where nothing grows into my older memories of him in order to connect with a more living time between us.

Instead of working towards that place of absolutes, let us embrace our doubts and loves. Let us live and struggle in our world of grays and colors and shades of partial knowledge. In this world where things grow, things die as well. Our loss grows and changes and we learn and cope.

Over time we all accumulate a bigger cast of characters in our places of loss. As their numbers grow, as our loss increases, so too do those conversations. The ones where we offer one side and have to imagine the other side. These conversations can only happen in the places where we are not always right. Reminiscing with family and friends and imagining the thoughts and ideas of those who are gone allows us to keep them with us, allows doubt and love to live on.

As we enter this new year of 5773, let us bravely enter the areas of loss in our lives together. May we find in our own hollows, in those spaces filled with destroyed homes, the whispers of those who have left us behind, and the responses of we who remain.

In this time of communal memorial, this space filled with repentance and confession, this time of broken hearts and open gates, let us comfort each other. Our doubts and loves shared caringly with each other, our compassion and loss felt together, may help leaven the rising dough of our world. Let us listen to each other whisper, let us find comfort in honoring what has gone before, and building anew together.

G’mar Chatimah Tovah – may we be well inscribed together in the New Year.

Spirituality starts with reasonable theology

At the core of my spiritual journey is a theology that is open enough to allow exploration and admit mystery, and reasonable enough to allow my brain to include it.

I am not too sure about the existence of the divine much less the nature of the infinite.

I am confident that there is mystery in the universe and that existence is a miraculous gift. I like to think they're connected and that may be my leap of faith.

The most amazing miracle around is the evolution of life and its diversity. That's worthy of crafting practices of appreciation.

Thanks to Rabbi Arthur Green for his theologies, especially Radical Judaism:


Happy Purim - Spirituality in Mockery and Laughter!

Purim rocks as the best Jewish holiday! Why? Just look at our Purim traditions…

1)   Party – dress up and mock our normal figures and texts of authority.

2)   Listen – listen to the Book of Esther, definitely the funniest book of the Bible with the best interactive features – blotting out the name of the villain with loud noise!

3)   Give – send gifts of nourishment to your neighbors – no partying without giving so this is a guilt-free celebration when done correctly!

4)   Drink – for those of drinking age only, aim for a state of confusion about the hero and villain of the Book of Esther – please don’t reach that state and drive (or parent, or do anything else requiring responsibility)!

 

Celebrate Purim in all of these ways tonight, Wednesday, March 7, at Temple Beth El:

 

Purim Family Service & Megillah Reading

5:30pm - 6:15pm

appropriate for preschool through 7th grade

 

Shushan's Got Talent...Teen and Adult Purim Show

7pm - Shushan's Got Talent Purim Show

8pm - Hebrew High Party for Teens in Gorelick Hall

8pm - Purim Pastry Palooza & Coffee Bar with Assorted Liqueurs and wine for Adults at Temple Beth El

While congregants of all ages are welcome to attend the Teen and Adult Purim Show, the content is geared toward teens and adults and might be PG-13


Can we rationalists be judged by God?

Temple Beth El, Charlotte, NC
Yom Kippur Morning 5772 - Saturday, October 8, 2011

G’mar Chatimah Tovah! May all of us be inscribed for a good year to come.

Thank you for showing up!

The great Jewish sage Woody Allen noted that “Ninety percent of life is just showing up.” So thank you, and know that we have succeeded just by being here. You receive an easy “A minus”.

But what have we shown up for? Why have we come together today?

We come together in large part to confess our sins. We detail them at great length. We have sinned against ourselves and each other, against friends and family, and we have sinned against strangers. We have not done right by Jewish teachings and by the world.

Identifying all of these sins leaves us with a long list. Yet what do we really mean by sin?

One of the main words we use for sin is cheit, a term in archery from ancient Israel. To have committed a cheit means that we have missed the mark. We tried to do right and hit the bull’s eye, and we were not successful.

This alone offers us a teaching of forgiveness. How much easier our apologies when we admit to ourselves, and to each other, that we really were aiming in the right direction, and we were off a little. Next time we might get it right. When we forgive ourselves, and each other, we offer up the possibility of picking up the bow again, taking aim, and working to do better.

When we promise to try and aim more accurately, we begin to make amends.

Easier said than done perhaps. Going back over all those moments when we missed the mark seems like an enormous and painful task. What can we really do on this single day to correct our aim, to repent and then get it right in the future? What role does God play in judging our lives?

While I hope to answer these questions from a Reform perspective, first I share with you a story of a powerful experience I had with repentance, oddly enough from the midst of one of the most Orthodox communities in the world.

Many of you have already met Ginny, and more of you have heard about her from me. We lived in an interesting neighborhood in Jerusalem for a year and half between 1997 and 1998. We were students, had very little money, were looking for a place that was convenient to the center of Jerusalem and to the University, and knew very little about this particular place before we moved in. The neighborhood was wedged between Arab Jerusalem to the East and Meah Shearim, the ultra-orthodox enclave to the West. We lived amidst the super-religious and I was one of the only men who didn’t wear huge fur streimels, those big fur hats that look like UFO’s, and silk overcoats on Shabbat, and Ginny was one of the only women who didn’t wear ankle length dresses and shapeless shmatas to cover our hair.

Ginny and I were young and very secular by most Israeli standards. I was a non-orthodox rabbinical student with a ponytail, and Ginny was a scantily young woman - she even dared to wear short sleeved t-shirts and pants and never covered her hair! That’s right, she showed off her wrists and ankles! And we had a dog. Many ultra-orthodox frown on dogs as unclean. We clearly didn’t follow the right rules, and on top of that, we were an obvious bad influence on their children. I even rode a bicycle on Shabbat!

Our ultra-orthodox neighbors were hostile to us as soon as we moved in. The yelled at us when we went out on Shabbat. Their children threw stones and trash at our dog when we walked her. They viewed our presence as a total violation of their teachings.

Then, almost ten months after we moved in, things suddenly changed. Children stopped yelling at us, women hanging out their laundry stopped berating us, and the attacks on our dog ceased altogether. We soon learned of the reason. We heard that on Simchat Torah, in the synagogue nearest to us, while dancing around with the holiest object in our tradition, someone in this ultra-orthodox community had dropped a Torah.

Many of you know what a big deal that is. Our congregants of every age fear holding the Torah for precisely this reason. Tradition teaches that dropping the Torah is such an offense, that every adult present when one is dropped must fast for forty days. The rabbis of the Talmud explain that this means only days, not nights as well, so that means a forty day fast every day from sunrise to sundown. (Something better done during winter’s shorter days, obviously.)

For this ultra-religious community, a dropped Torah was a call to repentance of the greatest seriousness. They understood that dropping a Torah on Simchat Torah, the day that celebrates the Torah itself, meant that they must undertake a fundamental reform of their ways.

As it turned out, one of their communal commitments to change was in their interaction with us. These ultra-orthodox Jews recognized where they had missed the mark in their treatment of us, who were the strangers in their midst. They changed their ways.

Here is an Orthodox view of our God as judge. These traditionalists from Meah Sharim understood that dropping the Torah on one of God’s holiest days of the year was God’s harsh judgment upon them. They take literally the language of our shared prayers. They embrace as real, the metaphorical God of Yom Kippur who judges our every action.They traced the source of their trouble to this arbiter on high. The God of Sinai had punished them through one of their own dropping the Torah and they were sentenced to repent, atone, and make amends.

Fundamentalist Jews of this sort often embrace a very simple idea about God. God punishes us directly for breaking God’s rules. God forgives us directly when we repent, granting us atonement, and allowing us to do better in the year to come.

As Twenty-First Century Reform Jews we have a different view of God the judge. We are not satisfied with a simple notion of reward and punishment. When one asks “Why do bad things happen to good people?” we seek more profound answers than God’s punishment of our wrongs.

As Liberal Jews, we are not literalist or fundamentalist or orthodox. We take our Torah very seriously. We learn from it great and profound teachings. Still we admit that it may not be literally or historically accurate. Most of us connect to a more abstract idea of God - a deep mystery at the center of the universe that doesn’t point a finger down and make people drop a Torah in order to teach them a lesson. While dropping a Torah might be an opportunity to learn something, we wouldn’t attribute it to God’s direct interference in our lives.

In designing our ark, we worked so hard to make sure the Torahs wouldn’t fall, they almost get stuck inside. We wanted to make sure that we, and not God, protected the Torah.

In our Reform view of the world, a relationship in crisis awakens us to our failures in the same way a dropped Torah does. Yom Kippur is our annual checkup to prevent relationships from reaching a point of no return. Just as we don’t want to drop the Torah, we don’t want our relationships to break. Yom Kippur serves as a preventive measure allowing us to take note of what we may have missed through denial and oversight. Yom Kippur helps us protect against our behavior going unchecked in the way our ark protects our Torahs from physical accidents.

At the heart of Yom Kippur is our confessional:
For transgressions against God, the Day of Atonement Atones; but for transgressions of one human being against another, the Day of Atonement does not atone until they have made peace with another.

What are transgressions against God?

The Orthodox in Meah Shearim view their relationship with God as a quid pro quo – whether they forget to recite the blessing after going to the bathroom or steal from their neighbor, both violate God’s law rather than human relationships and earn Divine punishment.

As modern and thoughtful Jews we hold a different view. We can easily understand making amends with each other. When we ask for forgiveness we do so because we have wronged someone. What could we rationalists, we reasonable Reform Jews have ever done to hurt the creator of the universe? Without an awareness of the transgression, how can we repent, make amends, and receive forgiveness?

Albert Einstein said: “I believe in God who reveals himself in the orderly harmony of what exists, not in a God who concerns himself with the fates and actions of human beings.”

Einstein’s belief neatly sums up Reform thinking about God. We inherited ideas from Nineteenth Century Reform theologians that taught that creation itself asks us to be moral and ethical. The teachings of Judaism form a rational framework for good behavior and the building of a better society.

Even as a follower of such sound thinking, I dare to take a Jewish leap of faith.

When we honor the God of creation, we act in a way that preserves, perpetuates and creates more life. We sin against God the creator when we destroy life, or tear down structures that maintain life and contribute to betterment of all.

We sin against God the creator when we hurt each other, or allow hurt to come to one another by our inactions.

We sin against God the creator when we refuse to build a more just society in which people are taken care of because we see everyone as part of creation.

The preservation of living breathing humans, takes precedence over all commandments - we can break almost any other rule for the sake of saving each others’ lives, which are the outcome of creation.

As Reform Jews, we face judgement when we fail to be worthy partners with God in completing creation.  Our judgment comes upon us when our environmental failures cause cancers and ruin the world for living things. Our judgement comes upon us when we allow anyone to go without housing, healing, or food.

As Reform Jews, we find forgiveness when we solve our cheit, our aim that has gone astray - when we bring ourselves back in line with the direction of creation.

When we offer up our confessions, we do so as a community that yearns to come back together and do better, create better, in the year to come. We admit many more transgressions than we possibly could have committed alone, or even all together, in the hope that by so doing we create better aim for us all. We pull our bow back all together with eyes set in the same direction. Our forgiveness comes out of our sense of being in it together, as sinners who strive to do better.

We missed the mark in the year gone by. We yearn to aim better and make it right. Just as the Orthodox of Meah Shearim appealed to God’s mercy by fixing their ways and becoming civil to Ginny and me, so we appeal to the God in each other for mercy for not doing better and commit to each other to make improvements in the future.

The God from whom we seek repentance is the God of creation present in all of us and all the world. God’s judgment, our fate, is in our own hands.

God will not save us from hurricanes, a community that builds shelters and levees and hospitals and has resources for each other will.

God will not save us from cancer and terrible diseases, but facing life threatening illnesses with others makes them less horrific. Building a society that seeks out ways to treat and cure illness, to improve our health and well-being, saves lives, and gives us hope.

God will not save us from others who wish to do us harm. We protect ourselves when we take steps to build a world where fewer and fewer people are so desperate. When we create more options for more of us, when we educate all children, we foster a culture that resists resorting to violence.

God will not save us from our own neglect of our environment or our communities. Only when we come together and stand with moral courage will we align ourselves towards collective salvation.

Unlike the Jews of Meah Shearim, we do this righteous work for no reward - we do it because we believe that the universe arcs towards creation, because God prefers creation. The reward is in the deed itself. The deed brings God nearer to us and us nearer to God.

We must check in with each other, we must engage each other, and we must forgive ourselves for not doing better until now.

We must follow the words or Rabbi Woody Allen and show up, but more than that we must show up to confess and then show up for each other as we improve our aim towards a better future.

We must forgive God for not placing us in a better world, and demand from each other that we build that better world together.

So now I ask us to consider God, that space between people. When we seek forgiveness from God, let us turn, do our repentance, and find the strength to mend relationships. When we seek blessing, strength and righteousness, let us start with the bonds between people, and bring God into them.

When we have taken care of our end of the equation, of our side of the covenant, then we find that we have filled the world with God, and it is not God who will inscribe us but we who will inscribe ourselves for a Good New Year.