Friday, October 30, 2009
My Kol Nidre sermon--email me for footnotes
Today we are starting from scratch. We are suspended in a state of not living and not dying, pathless with fates uncertain.
We are old, we are sick, we are late—but we are here.
But what exactly are we here for?
We are here to forgive and be forgiven.
We are here to be with our loved ones, and our community.
We are also here to restore awe and wonder, to clarify our life’s purpose, and to connect with God or the godly in our lives.
How can we clarify the direction in which we are to walk our life’s path?
Teshuva – “the process of returning to the truest expression of ourselves.”
Tefillah -- “reaching towards God -truth -ultimate reality”
tzedakah -- “distributing our possessions with righteousness.”
Teshuva tefillah and tzedakah restore our relationships with self, God and other, and in so doing, soften the harshness of the inevitable decree -- who will live and who will die.
it is written in Tractate Taanit of the Mishna (2nd century) that was never a more joyous time in Israel than [Tu b’Av] and Yom Kippur.
If this is the day when we are asked to rehearse our own death, how can it be joyful?
What greater joy than ridding oneself of habits of thought, speech or behavior that no longer serve us?
What greater joy than releasing old grudges that prevent us from loving?
What greater joy than discovering that our inherent nature –that which we are at our core-- is joyous and brilliant, compassionate and creative, adventurous and enthusiastic and that we can be all this in our lives and express all this in our relationships?
But what if our negative habits have become so entrenched that they shape the very core of our identity? How can we open ourselves to entirely new ways of being in the world?
Mchadesh bkol yom btuvo maaseh bereshit (Morning Liturgy)
Every day the world (including each one of us) is created anew with goodness, allowing for the opportunity to start from scratch every day.
Yet on Yom Kippur our beings are the most malleable the most “morphable” the most conducive to shaping and being shaped like a Potter shapes clay.
“The rabbis [who developed Yom Kippur] wanted to bring us to the point of existential crisis. They wanted to bring us to the point of asking the crucial question, “what is my life about?” [before it is too late.]
Today is the day of our purification. What does this really mean?
A Cherokee medicine woman grandmother Selena once told me:
Let go of what no longer grows corn for you.
In order to fully take advantage of the power of this day we must let go a little bit.
Allow yourself to be vulnerable and approach every moment with “beginner’s mind” a concept we borrow from Zen Buddhism. “Beginner’s mind” refers to having an attitude of openness, eagerness, and lack of preconceptions when approaching a subject in this case Yom Kippur.
What are some moments in your life when you were truly able to let go, and operate with “beginner’s mind?” I want to share with you a time in my own life when I was able to do that. As I do so, think about your own experience.
In the spring of 1995 I drove down to Leslie County, Kentucky to volunteer with the Frontier Nursing Service, a rural medical center staffed mostly by midwives. It had been a difficult year and I was feeling lost and unsure. I had been working in New York City as an administrative assistant – without any connection to community, I was totally alone.
I remember driving and singing on the top of my lungs:
“How long ‘til my soul gets it right? Can any human being ever reach that kind of light?” -- Indigo Girls.
When the Dogwoods burst out with fresh green leaves, I felt the joy of being alive as if for the first time. Just regular old spring!? Where have I been all my life!? God was in the birthing of the leaves, the birthing of the babies and the birthing of myself.
When we experience a Force of Healing and Transformation (Rabbi Michael Lerner) we begin to understand that the universe is hard-wired towards love. This is what some of us call God.
Whether of not we choose to call it God, there is a Force for Healing and Transformation that flows through this universe.
Rabbi Michael Lerner presents the idea of “a new bottom line.” “Beyond efficiency and productivity, how can we shape a society in which there is time not only to Do and to Make but also to Be and to Love?”
Perhaps you have had an experience of being brought out of a personal Mitzrayim or in which you have stood at Sinai and discovered an eternal truth about life. Perhaps you have had an experience in which of a part of yourself dies to allow space for something else to take root.
The natural response to each of these is to utter words of thanks and praise whether or not you know the Hebrew.
Yet once these moments pass, we must harvest the “aha!” just like seeds. (Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi)
Spiritual practice helps us to transcend the day to day buzz of our lives, become more aware of the moments of liberation and remind us of our experiences of revelation. This helps us integrate the lessons that each of these moments provides.
“How long ‘til our souls get it right? Can any human being every reach that kind of light?”
The work is never done yet we are blessed with this one life time, this one chance to sing what Rav Abraham Isaac Kook called “the song of the self, the song of our people, the song of humanity and the song of the world.”
Now and in the next 24 hours is your opportunity to do the work. We are sustained by each other, doing this work together in this place as a community.
May the Source of Healing and Transformation guide us to the place where our work must begin today, this Yom Kippur 5770—the day of our At-One-Ment.
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Cheshvan Message
During the months of Elul and Tishrei we experienced holiday after holiday and engaged in a process of return to our true selves and rediscovering our true purpose. This was followed by the celebratory joy of Sukkot and Simchat Torah.
Now we have entered the Jewish month of Cheshvan (in Hebrew: חֶשְׁוַן), or as it is also known, Mar-Cheshvan, a season of ordinary routine days. It is the only month which contains no holidays or special mitzvot. Following such a great spiritual ascent, there is a danger of a fall. We must find a way of sustaining the elevated level of the past two months during the days of Cheshvan which are relatively mundane.
If we look closely, there is a hint of how to maintain our heightened spiritual state hidden in the title we give to Cheshvan, the word "mar." There are two different interpretations as to why we give Cheshvan this title. One is that the month is bitter ("mar" in Hebrew) because it contains no holidays. The other is that since Cheshvan contains no holidays, we are giving it an honorific title by adding the word "mar" which also means "mister."
These two different interpretations give us two different approaches toward the season. The first approach is pessimistic implying that a fall from the heights we reached during Elul and Tishrei is inevitable.
The second approach is more proactive and optimistic. Since there are no holidays in Cheshvan, it is up to us to make this month into a time of spiritual transformation on our own, independent of set holidays, through actively seeking out new opportunities for learning and growth.
To this end, there will be a variety of new programs, learning opportunities and classes at Har Shalom. Some of these include; Mitzvah Day, Musicians' Havurah, a new Israel group, and the Eco-Chanukah planning committee. There will be two new adult education classes starting up in addition to our weekly Torah study group. They are An Introduction to Judaism and The Mystics Journey: Kabbalah in Theory and Practice. Details about all of these are included later in the Kadimah and will also be posted on-line.
May we merit to call Cheshvan an honored friend rather than a time of bitterness.
Rabbi Ben and Rabbi Shoshana
--
Rabbi Shoshana Leis
Rabbi Ben Newman
Congregation Har Shalom
The Center for Jewish Living
725 W. Drake Rd.
Fort Collins, CO 80526
rabbi@congregationharshalom.
(970) 223-5191
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Text Study for Parshat Bereishit-10/17/09 Congregation Har Shalom
"In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth..." בראשית ברא אלהים את השמים ואת הארץ
"In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth..." The main thing here is that the Creator, blessed be He, created everything and is everything, and His influence never parts from the world, for in every moment He sends down shefa (divine energy) to His creations and to all the worlds, and to all the Heichalot (Palaces/Astral Realms), and to all the angels, and to all the divine beings. Therefore, we say [in our prayer service] "[blessed are you who] forms light and creates darkness," and not "formed light and created darkness". It is only "forms" in the present tense [that we say]. For in every moment He forms because in every moment He sends out life-force to all life, and everything is from him, may He be blessed, and He is perfect, and He is made up of everything.
Therefore, when a person comes to the realization of nothingness [i.e.-"no-self" or as the Buddhists say "anatman"], and he knows that he is nothing , and that only the Creator, Blessed be He, gives him energy, then He/She calls God by the nickname "the One that is forming," which is in the present tense--for even now He is forming.
Consequently, when a person looks at his/her self, and doesn't look at nothingness, then he/she is at the level of being/existence [literally- 'there is'-as opposed to "there is not"- nothingness]. Then, one calls the Creator, blessed be He, only by the nickname "the One that formed," which means that God already created him/her. This is why we say in our daily prayers, "...the One who formed humanity with wisdom..." For Wisdom [in the pantheon of the sefirot] is on the level of being/existence...Therefore it says in the writings of Isaac Luria that the word 'melekh' or 'king' when referring to God is associated with the aspect of nothingness, for we say that God is King, for He is at the present moment giving us life-force, and this is the meaning of the aspect of nothingness, for we are nothing except for the fact that God puts in us [energy and] power [to exist.]
Nothingness operates entirely above nature, and being operates in nature. However, we are able to connect being with nothingness by means of the mitzvot and the Torah which are called the angels that are running and returning [from Ezekiel]. This is why the Zohar wrote that 'the mitzvot and the Torah are hidden and revealed,' for 'hidden' hints at nothingness and 'revealed' hints at being, and this is what connects nothingness with being and being with nothingness. Therefore it is spelled MiTzVaH (M-Tz-V-H). For the letters mem tzadi in the atbash cypher become Yod and Hei [the first two letters in the name of God], which correspond with the aspect of nothingness, and the letters vav and hei of the word Mitzvah correspond with the aspect of being. Consequently, the letters yod and hei are hidden.......
Thursday, October 1, 2009
7 spiritual questions for sukkot by Rabbi Brad Hirschfield
Here are seven questions, one for each day of the holiday, which will help in that process.
1. What do you do that truly brings you joy and how can you make more space for that in your life?
2. When do you feel most spiritually connected and how can you strengthen that connection?
3. What big questions do you need to ask about the faith you follow?
4. What new ideas do you most want to learn in the coming year?
5. Who would you like to bring into your life and how will you invite them in?
6. What's the most important part of your own spiritual journey? Why?
7. What people, ideas, or practices that seem at odds with each other could be brought together so that EACH would learn something new?
http://blog.beliefnet.com/windowsanddoors/2008/10/sukkot-celebrates-seven-steps.html
Above is the link to the full article on beliefnet
Sukkot Message
Given that we have only known you all of six weeks, it is extraordinary what we accomplished together. We feel that the Yamim Noraim brought us to a strong foundation of trust, creative energy and potential growth, and we are eager to take the next steps of building on our strengths as a community and charting the course for our future together.
And now, as the leaves change, the air grows cold, and the wind picks up we experience the familiar whiff of impermanence that is felt back east in October and the Jewish month of Tishrei.
The Har Shalom Sukkah was decorated today-- our first communal action after the spiritual heights of Yom Kippur. Sukkot (temporary dwellings) remind us of the passing state that is each of our lives, the tentative condition of the earth's well-being and the fragility of our faith itself.
In our backyard we are blessed with a unique Sukkah decorated by the Har Shalom 7th grade. Also in our backyard, we will also have more kale and mint than we will know what to do with (and without having done any work!) so we will have plenty to share-- another theme of the Jewish harvest holiday of Sukkot aka "Chag Ha-Asif" (the Festival of Ingathering).
If the paradox of Yom Kippur is that we each travel through life with both broken tablets and whole tablets in our personal Mishkan, the paradox of Sukkot is that while we may be as fragile as a passing breath, we are strong enough to give away that which sustains us -- our home, our food, and our love.
For this reason, the rabbis called Sukkot "zman simchateinu" - the time of our rejoicing.
"Enjoy my bounty while you still have it and share it with one other"--the earth cries. Because the real bounty is the realization that we are each connected to each other in a complex web of interdependence, and that we are all fellow travelers on the earth's wonderful and mysterious surface. Sukkot is a time of outward pruning and inward growing. It is a time for quiet reflection on the fragility of life -including our livelihoods- but it is also a time for celebration of its fruits.
On Sukkot we read the book of Ecclesiastes (Kohelet) where it says, "hevel havalim ha kol havel" emptiness of emptiness. All is emptiness. Everything on the earth dies and is reborn. Everything is impermanent. Kohelet has a realism (some may call pessimism) and pragmatic mentality that is unique in the Jewish tradition.
--
Rabbi Shoshana Leis
Rabbi Ben Newman
Congregation Har Shalom
The Center for Jewish Living
725 W. Drake Rd.
Fort Collins, CO 80526