Please Visit My New Blog

Dear Friends,

I have migrated my blog to the HEA website. To read my latest sermons and find all my past posts, please visit

http://headenver.org/rabbigruenwald/

21 September 2010

Bucket List Source Sheet

Following my Rosh Hashanah sermon, many people asked me to show them where to find the Talmudic quote upon which the sermon was based.  For your convenience, I have provided the text here as a PDF document.  The source sheet also includes some other references to questions you're asked in heaven. 
To download the source sheet, please click here.

Dr. Ron Wolfson wrote a thought-provoking and inspirational book that I highly recommend called The Seven Questions You're Asked in Heaven (Jewish Lights, 2009) based on these sources.

10 September 2010

Kicking the Bucket List

Rosh Hashanah 5771

The Rabbi, the Cantor, and the President of the synagogue were flying home from a conference when their plane crashed on a tiny pacific island.  The three men crawled out of the wreckage only to be captured by a tribe of vicious cannibals.  The chief of the tribe said to the men, “Gentlemen: by tribal tradition, you are lunch… but seeing that you are men of great distinction, we will grant you one last request.”  The rabbi said, “In that case I would like to preach my greatest high holiday sermon – a two-hour discourse that ties together the entire Bible and finally solves the question of good and evil… but I never got to give that sermon because the cantor needed more time for Kol Nidre.”  The cantor stepped forward and said, “In that case, I wish to give my most sublime rendition of Kol Nidre ever.  Each 30 minute repetition is a tribute to one of the three greatest Hazzens of the early 20th Century.  But I never had a chance to sing that Kol Nidre because the Rabbi here needed more time for his sermon.” “In that case,” said the President, “eat me first!”

The “dying wish” joke is, of course, part of a genre we love.  The final request of a dying person is supposed to reveal something essential about their character.  The question is: if you knew you were going to die soon, what would you want to do?  In recent years, a number of popular books, websites, and films have tried to answer that question.  It’s called “making a bucket list” – as in: “what would you like to do before you kick the bucket?”  It has become very popular to make bucket lists… especially for other people.  A number of books have been published in recent years beginning with Dave Freeman’s 1999 book titled 100 Things to Do Before you Die.  The book is about events and sites around the world that are worth experiencing.  Now there are hundreds of these books: 1001 Films to See Before You Die, 50 Foods to Try Before You Die.  The funniest one I came across is called No Regrets.  This one is too impatient to wait for death.  Marketed to young women the subtitle is: 101 Fabulous Things to Do Before You're Too Old, Married, or Pregnant

There are also a number of websites that provide suggestions and give you advice about writing your own bucket list.  If you go to 43things.com, you can see what the most popular bucket list items are.  The typical stuff usually involves travel, extreme experiences like skydiving, or accomplishments like writing a novel. 

A couple of years ago, Rob Reiner made a movie called “The Bucket List” in which Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson share a hospital room when each man is informed that he has less than a year to live.  Nicholson, who plays an obnoxious billionaire, and Freeman, a wise and intellectual auto-mechanic, make their bucket list and set off on an extravagant adventure around the world.  As you might expect from a big Hollywood film, the two men have their trite epiphanies in the last few minutes and discover that what really matters isn’t all the adventure but family and friendship.  The Bucket List is entertaining enough, but not all that profound. 

I have to wonder what the proliferation of these bucket list themed movies and books and websites is about.  What does it say about our culture and our society?  What does it say about an enormous generation of baby-boomers entering retirement?  What does it say about Gen Xers confronting a world with no clear answers or laid out paths?  The philosopher Ernest Becker observed that we are the only creatures who are consciously aware of our mortality.  And, it is this knowledge that drives us.  In his book, The Denial of Death, Becker argues that we compensate for this dreadful knowledge by constructing what he calls “affirmation systems.”  We see death as the ultimate failure, so we pursue success.  We see death as ultimate emptiness, so we fill our lives with stuff.  We see death as the end of feeling, so we crave pleasure.  We see death as impotence, so we seek power.  The bucket list craze is just another attempt at the denial of death.  Checking things off the list – even if they are noble pursuits – is still about us trying to conquer the inevitable. 

Judaism doesn’t see death as “kicking the bucket.”  And Judaism doesn’t see life as the short journey during which we have to get as much done as possible.  Judaism teaches us that our lives are a precious gift – a gift we did not earn, but one that comes with enormous responsibility and opportunity.  In the account of Creation we read that God fashioned humanity out of the dust of the earth and blew into us “nishmat hayyim” – the breath of life (Gen. 2:7).  The Torah means to teach us that our bodies are made up of the same finite stuff as the rest of the universe and will return to the earth from whence they came.  But, at the same time, we possess a tiny mysterious bit of what God is.  We call it many things: the soul, the spark of the divine, the image of God – it is that part of us that makes us who we are and that which lives on. 

So death isn’t oblivion to be feared; but Judaism isn’t a morbid religion either.  It is a religion that affirms life while reminding us that we don’t have an infinite number of tomorrows. 

Once a year Judaism asks us to confront our mortality – but not with a bucket list mindset. Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur are a drama.  A rehearsal.  The prayers we recite tell the Jewish story of what happens to us when we die.  Our ancestors imagined that when we leave this world we go before a Heavenly Court that reviews our lives.   This drama is represented in the most important and emblematic prayer of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, the U’netane Tokef.  The prayer describes God as the ultimate Judge: “B’rosh Hashanah Yikateivu, u’ve’yom tzom kippur yechatemu”… “On Rosh Hashanah [the judgment] is written; and on Yom Kippur it is sealed: … who will live and who will die… who by fire and who by water…” –  you know the rest. 

In this heavenly court we find ourselves today, they don’t ask you if you ever went sky diving or climbed all the 14ers in Colorado .  God doesn’t want to know if you made a million bucks or if you belong to the Mile High Club.  The prosecutor in this court isn’t going to ask you how many items you checked off your bucket list.  No.  In this court, you’re asked to give an account of your life and how you lived it. 

According to the Talmud, there is a final exam in heaven.  The 4th Century sage known as Rava says there are 6 questions you’ll be asked when you reach the heavenly court (see BT Shabbat 31)[1].  So what are they?  What’s on the entrance exam to heaven?  Before I tell you what Rava says, I’d like you to think about it for a moment.  What questions do you suppose you will be asked on that day? 

So, according to Rava, the first question is:  “were you honest in your business?”  WHAT!?!  Of all the questions that could be on the exam, that’s the first one!?  What about tzedakah? Did you give to charity? Where you generous?  Were you kind to people?  What about mitzvot?  Did you keep Shabbat?  Were you scrupulous about Kashrut?  How can the first thing on the list be so mundane?  But, it actually makes a lot of sense.  Tzedakah (giving charity) is certainly a righteous act, but you can be very generous and still be a crooked SOB.  I’m sure Bernie Madoff was very generous with other people’s money.  And religious piety is certainly important too.  God expects us to follow the commandments, but it’s possible to rest on the Seventh day and lie, cheat, and steal on the other six.  You can be scrupulous about what you put in your mouth, and lie with every word that comes out of your mouth.  So it makes a lot of sense that this is the first question.  How you conduct your affairs says a lot about you. 

The words in Hebrew are “nassata v’nattata be’emunah” – literally, did you give and take faithfully.  It is talking about business, but much more than commerce.  The question is: in your dealings in the world, in your interactions with other people, were you fundamentally honest and did you act with integrity?  How we deal with other human beings is an essential requirement to be considered a decent person. 

Interestingly, the question does not ask if you were successful in business – that’s a bucket list mentality.  The 1st question is, were you honest in business?

The second question:  did you set aside time for Torah study? How should we apply this question to our lives today?  I want us to interpret it simultaneously in two ways.  The first way is to take Torah in its broadest sense.  To our sages the word Torah has always meant much more than the 5 Books of Moses.  Torah means knowledge – so the question here is: did you set aside time for acquiring knowledge?  We all know how easy it is to neglect our minds once we’re out of school. 

But I also want us to take the question more literally – that it really means Torah.  It means Judaism.  I can tell you with 100% confidence that there isn’t a single person in this enormous room (including the people up here on the bima) who doesn’t need to learn more.   I’m going to say something very challenging, but I believe it deeply:  there is no way to have a meaningful experience of Judaism without learning.  You may enjoy our services and you may love coming to hear the Cantor’s powerful voice; you might enjoy the company of other Jews; but the religion of our ancestors will not touch your soul or improve who you are if you don’t learn. 

And, again, the point isn’t to read the entire Talmud or memorize the Torah… that’s a bucket list mindset.  The question is: did you make time for Torah?

The third question you’re asked in heaven is: “did you engage in the mitzvah of being fruitful and multiplying.”  After my wife Melanie and I had our first child we argued often about how many more children we were going to have.  Melanie wanted to have a total of three children and I wanted only two.  It seems that God decided that for us when we conceived twins.  So it looks like we’re covered when it comes to being fruitful and multiplying!  Wrong!  That’s not necessarily true. 

At first glance you might think this question is about having children… but it doesn’t ask, “did you have children?”  So what could it mean? Our tradition teaches that a person can fulfill the mitzvah of being fruitful and multiplying in many ways – certainly by having children or adopting, but also by being a teacher, a mentor, or by being creative and putting something new into the world.  The question isn’t about children; it’s about leaving a legacy.  It’s about making a positive difference in the world.  Not for the sake of fame or honor, but for the sake of advancing the human enterprise.

There is a legend in the Talmud about a man named Honi who was famous for performing all sorts of miraculous deeds.  In one story, Honi sees an elderly man planting a carob tree (BT Taanit 23a).  So Honi asked the man, “how long will it take for that tree to produce fruit?”  The man answered, “seventy years.”  Honi laughed, “do you expect to live 70 years to see the fruit of this tree?” To which the old man replied, “I may not see the fruit, but just as my grandparents planted carob trees for me, I now plant a carob tree for my grandchildren.”  Honi snickered as he sat down to eat some lunch and fell into a deep sleep.  He slept for 70 years and when he awoke he saw a man picking fruit from a carob tree.  Honi asked him, “are you the man who planted this tree?”  The man replied, “no, my grandfather planted this tree.” 

Now, if you’ve ever heard this story at a Jewish fundraising event, this is usually where the storyteller will ask you to make a gift in order to leave a legacy to the next generation. And that is correct – that is what the tale is about.  But it isn’t actually the end of the legend.  The continuation of the story is that Honi goes back into town and tries to convince everyone that he is the famous Honi who had made miracles happen a couple of generations ago.  But, no one believes him; so, Honi despairs and asks God to take his life.  He would rather be dead than anonymous.[2]  Honi is actually a failure because he didn’t understand the true moral of the story: that leaving a legacy is important, but leaving a legacy in order to be famous is notthat’s the bucket list mentality.
               
The question you’re asked in heaven – “did you leave a legacy? – is not about grandiose accomplishments.  It’s about planting simple carob trees from which others will someday eat. 

The fourth question you’re asked in heaven is: tzipita li’shuah.  “Did you hold out hope for redemption?”  This too is an unexpected question.  We usually think of Judaism as a religion that places a priority on our behavior over our attitudes.  We might expect this question to be about repairing the world – doing tikkun olam… not simply hoping for redemption.  So why is hope so important? 

The Torah teaches us that in the beginning, the world was “tohu va’vohu” – unformed and void, chaos and disorder… and God created the reality we know by making order out of the chaos.  Yet we all have a sense that just under the surface of this world is tohu va’vohu.  We see it every day – when we watch the news, when we see the injustices and violence in our world, when we confront the struggles in our own lives.   It isn’t hard to despair in the face of all that chaos.  But the story of creation also teaches us that after each day of creation, God looked at what had been created and said, “ki tov” – that it was good. 

One of my mentors, Rabbi Ed Feinstein says that “good” is the most important word in the chapter.  “This is the great revolution that began our faith,” he says, “The whole world sees chaos, terror, random death as inevitable.  And this one little people, a people who suffered more than any other people, this people has the cosmic chutzpah to say ‘It doesn’t have to be that way! Come, be God’s partner.  There is goodness in creating the world.’”[3]  It is true that our world exists in the precarious balance between order and chaos, between good and evil.  It’s tempting to become cynical – to believe that nothing can change, that there is no hope for a better world.  It’s tempting to focus on ourselves and what we can grab in our short time on this earth.  It’s also tempting to think that the only thing that really matters is making big changes to the world – that anything short of a revolution is pointless… again, those are bucket list ways of thinking.  But Judaism teaches us that we have the power to bend the moral arc of the universe (even if only slightly) in favor of goodness and justice.  In order to be partners with God in the pursuit of a more perfect world, we have to hold on to hope despite the odds. 

The last two questions are related.  The fifth question is “pilpalta b’chochma – did you delve into wisdom?” and the sixth question is “havanta davar mitoch davar - did you understand one thing from another?”  On the surface these questions are about study and learning; but I think these questions are getting at something much deeper. First we have to understand what wisdom is.  My teacher, Rabbi Elliot Dorff, always taught us that wisdom is the knowledge we gain through experience.  It is what we learn when we pay attention.  Wisdom is a way of living in the world. 

And the 6th question is related.  “did you understand something from something?”  In your life experience, in the choices that you made, did you derive some additional understanding from what was presented to you?  Did you accept the conventional wisdom or did you advance that wisdom is some meaningful way? 

Taken together, these last two questions are about the choices we make in life.  Interestingly, the question isn’t did you always make the correct choice?  Again – that’s a bucket list mindset.  They aren’t asking: were you right?  We all make mistakes, we all make bad choices.  These are questions about your process.  Did you make thoughtful and deliberate choices based on wisdom and understanding?

In the Talmud, Rava ends his list of 6 questions with an interesting conclusion.  He says, “even [if a person doesn’t have answers to these questions] if he/she had reverence for God, the judgment will be favorable.”  I think Rava telling us something I’ve to which I’ve been alluding all along.  Having the right answers to the questions isn’t what matters most.  After all, each of us will have different answers to these questions. These questions aren’t about what you’ve accomplished or what you’ve checked off a cosmic bucket list.  These questions are also not about being perfect or even righteous – that bar is too high for most of us; and it is a bucket list mindset.  These questions are about being a decent person, a good person.  They are about striving to be better; being better next year than you were last year.    

In these days between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur we should all be asking ourselves theses questions:  Was I honest last year, and I can do better next year?   Did I make time to learn, and how can I learn more?   Am I proud of the legacy I cultivated last year, and what will I do in the year to come?  Did I live with hope this year? And, do I still hold out hope for a better life, hope that one day we will achieve a world worthy of the good God created?   And, finally, were the decisions I made based on wisdom, and will the choices I make next year advance that wisdom to the next level?

So let’s kick the bucket list mentality out of our lives; and instead, keep these questions in mind so we can live more thoughtfully, more deliberately and improve a little every day.  If we do, I believe the final judgment will be favorable

L’Shanah Tovah.

Following my Rosh Hashanah sermon, many people asked me to show them where to find the Talmudic quote upon which the sermon was based.  For your convenience, I have provided the text here as a PDF document.  The source sheet also includes some other references to questions you're asked in heaven. 
To download the source sheet, please click here.

For more on the questions you're asked in heaven and a somewhat different take on the Talmud section I discussed, please read Ron Wolfson's wonderful book, The Seven Questions You're Asked in Heaven (Jewish Lights, 2009)



[1] My teacher Ron Wolfson wrote a wonderful book called The Seven Questions You’re Asked in Heaven” (Jewish Lights, 2009) based on this section of Talmud.  He counts this list as five and adds two additional questions from other sources.  Some of my examples come from the book. Though I interpret the questions somewhat differently from him, I owe Ron a debt of gratitude for the influence of his book.
[2] See Taanit 23a.  Most readers interpret Honi’s despair at the end of the story as a plea for “scholastic fellowship.”  Coincidently, it is Rava who interjects a comment at the end of the story citing an aphorism: “O Hevruta, O Mituta,” (“either fellowship or death.”).  But, in context and considering what we know about Honi’s personality from other stories, the source of Honi’s misery is clear: he is despondent because no one will accord him the honor he feels is due to him.  “Hevruta” in this context does not mean he is looking for a study-partner.  “Hevruta” here means the recognition of his peers. 
[3] Quoted by Ron Wolfson in The Seven Questions You’re Asked in Heaven (Jewish Lights, 2009), p. 60. 

21 August 2010

It's the Grown-up Thing to Do.


Parashat Ki Tetze 5770
             
Having young children in your home at times feels like being the anthropologist living among warring tribes of ruthless Ya̧nomamö warriors.  Take my two year-old twins (please).  I like to observe Hannah and Micah when they don’t think I’m watching.  It’s interesting to see how they figure out problems together (like how to help each other climb up a book shelf) or how they are learning to share and take turns.  But, they are two years old and it usually doesn’t take long before the harmonious little society they’ve created in the living room breaks down.  One of them decides sharing is overrated, the other grabs the toy, the other screams, then the other replies with hitting or pinching, then it escalates to bighting or pulling hair.  Meanwhile I sit in the corner wearing my pith helmet recording it all in a field journal.  Of course, I’m kidding… as a parent I break up the fight and I discipline them.  It drives me crazy when the kids fight.  But I try to remember that they are, after all, two year-olds.  They don’t yet have the impulse control to respond appropriately when they feel wronged.  They haven’t learned that there are more important things at stake than who has the ball.    

It’s also interesting to observe how our 5 year-old, Koby, behaves differently.  His little brother and sister gang up on him – they break his stuff, they hit and pinch, they pull his hair; but, matter what they do to him, he very rarely will retaliate in kind.  It’s interesting to observe what a difference a few years makes: he’s begun to understand that even when someone does you harm, it isn’t always justifiable to do the same back.  He’s learned that there are higher principles to take into account: he understands that they are still learning how to behave; he knows that escalating isn’t going to solve the problem; he trusts that he can rely on grown-ups to help him; and he’s learning that hurting his siblings is wrong no matter what.  Approaching age six, he’s become more mature and I’m proud of him for that.  It isn’t easy to do the right thing when your instincts dictate otherwise.  

 This week’s Torah portion is largely about the rules that ask us to transcend our instincts and inclinations – even when giving in to them might be justifiable.  At first glance, Parashat Ki Tetze reads like a laundry list of laws that don’t have much to do with one another.  But one theme that ties together most of the mitzvot in Ki Tetze is the irreducible dignity and worth of every human being.  These are laws that demand that we uphold principles, even when it feels like a sacrifice.  Here are some of them:

                The Torah says that if you, as a soldier, are fighting in a war and you take a woman captive; and if you find her attractive and want to marry her, you have to wait for a month.  In the meantime, she’s supposed to make herself as unattractive as possible.  If after a month you still like her – only then can you marry her. If not, you have to set her free?  Why?  Why is it that in a world in which it was typical for men to rape women in war, Israelite soldiers had to go to such lengths to marry a captive woman?  Would our enemies have afforded our women the same rights?  After all, he’s not forcing her.  But God says no, you have to give her time to mourn her parents and you have to transcend the passion you felt on the battlefield in order to preserve her dignity.  If you’re going to marry her, you have to actually fall in love with her.  

The Torah says when you see someone’s lost animal, you have to return it.  Why?  Why is it your problem if your neighbor can’t keep his ox tied up?  What if your neighbor is a jerk?  But God says no, you can’t ignore it, lo tuchal l’hit-alem.  It doesn’t matter if you like your neighbor; you have to go out of your way to help him.  

The Torah says when you build a house with a flat roof, you need to build a wall around it to prevent people from falling off.  Why?  It’s your house.  If someone’s walking around on your roof and they don’t look where they’re going, why is that your fault?  You didn’t push them off!  But God says no – you have to protect other people, even against their own clumsiness.  

The Torah says if your father is married to a woman who isn’t your mother and your father dies, you can’t marry his widow.  Why not?  Your single; she’s single.  You like her; she likes you. What’s wrong with that? –she’s not even related to you! But God says no – you have to transcend your instincts and respect your father’s dignity even in death.  

The Torah says if you lend someone money you can’t take the clothes off his back or the tools he uses to make a living as collateral.  Why not?  If he wants to pawn his shirt, why’s that your problem!  But God says no, you have to look out for his dignity, even if poverty has stripped him of it. 

The Torah says if someone owes you money and doesn’t pay up, you can’t enter her house to seize property.  Why not?  You’re the repo man; and you’re taking what is rightfully yours.  But God says no - it may be yours, but you have to afford her the dignity of handing it over herself.  

The Torah says if you hire a day laborer you can’t wait till the next day to pay him.  Why not?  You’re not denying him his wage, you’re just saying, “I’ll pay you in the morning”?  But God says, no – a person who lives hand-to-mouth deserves to eat dinner after an honest day’s work and shouldn’t have to go hungry till morning.  

And there are several other examples like these throughout the Torah.  Taken together, they teach us that God holds human dignity as a primary value and an unconditional right.

                But the question remains: why do we have to be so moral? There’s nothing I just listed that is in itself wrong.  Doing the things prohibited by this list doesn’t make you an overtly bad person.  Why should we be expected to be better than what human inclinations dictate?  Why should we be better than the other nations amongst whom we live who don’t follow these rules?  But God says no, you do have to be better. 
Over and over the Torah says that it isn’t enough to refrain from doing harm.  Again and again, the Torah teaches us that human dignity is not up for debate.  You don’t get to choose which people are deserving of dignity and which are not.  You have to act fairly and respectful of others even when your inclination is to do otherwise, even when it costs you something, even when it doesn’t feel fair, even when it is uncomfortable for you.  But that takes maturity to understand.

The Torah does not use the language of “rights,” but in modern legal parlance we would say that human dignity and freedom are rights.  As Jews we should be proud of our religion for holding us to high standards.  And I think this is also true for us as Americans.  Like Judaism, we have a Constitution that holds us to high standards.  Like Judaism, the law of this land is one based on principles that uphold human dignity for all people.  That’s really hard to do!  Like the soldier who has to go to a lot of trouble to marry a woman who, by anyone else’s standards has no rights, sometimes upholding our principles is costly.  Like the guy who owes you money and fails to repay; or the schlemiel on the roof, some people take advantages of the system – they act irresponsibly or offensively; nonetheless, we afford them rights and dignities, even if we think they don’t deserve them.     

                Judaism acknowledges that it’s hard to be that moral.  If these standards were easy, God wouldn’t have to command them.  Likewise, the US Constitution recognizes that providing freedom equally and standing on principles is hard to do.  If these freedoms were easy to ensure, we wouldn’t have to declare them as rights.  

                Being Jewish and also being American means we don’t measure ourselves by other people’s lower moral standards.  We’re not governed by the lowest common denominator.  We don’t act like children who say “I’m going to treat you the way you would treat me if the tables were turned.”  We stand on principle even when we don’t like it or find it convenient.  Upholding our ideals not only makes us better people; it is a sign of maturity.  Like parents who have to teach their children not to lash out every time someone offends them; the law is there to help us be more mature, even when we don’t like it.