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Toward
a Meaningful Life with Simon Jacobson
Radio Show Transcript - September 17, 2000
Rabbi Simon Jacobson: Welcome to another
episode of Toward a Meaningful Life. Tonight, in the
spirit of an article that I just wrote called, A Voters
Guide to Rosh Hashanah, and since were in the weeks
that precede Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year and the High
Holiday season, I felt it was opportune to talk about this topic.
So what exactly does A Voters Guide
to Rosh Hashanah mean? Why would a voter need a guide
to Rosh Hashanah? Well, first of all, in an interesting way,
the greatest freedom of all perhaps, as they say in democracy,
is the freedom of free elections; the freedom to be able to
vote and appoint our leaders.
Well, Rosh Hashanah is also, in a sense, the same
concept but on a more cosmic level because Rosh Hashanah is
the day when human beings have the opportunity to elect and
appoint G-d as our leader. I have always found that to be a
very powerful message that Judaism teaches usthat our
relationship with G-d is a two-way street. Its not just
that G-d imposes Himself upon us. We actually have the opportunity
and the gift or the responsibility to bring G-d into our lives.
That actually is what the concept of Rosh Hashanah
is all about, which is the idea of crowning the sovereign king,
but in simple English it means introducing and inviting G-d
into our lives. So in an interesting way, Rosh Hashanah, which
comes right before the elections here in the United States in
November, is the concept of an election, a voters guide.
Of course, one cant help but mention the
fact that Senator Liebermans nomination as Vice Presidential
candidate to the Democratic party is also a big factor here
because suddenly, in the glare and spotlight of the news, everyone
is hearing about observant and Orthodox Jews. Theres no
doubt that as the media follows Lieberman to the synagogues
that he will pray in on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, it definitely
is a great opportunity to satisfy the curiosity and educate
all of us in what the deeper message of Rosh Hashanah is, and
what the blowing of the shofar is all about, and so on.
So some of the questions Ill pose to you
tonight are: How can we use Rosh Hashanah to turn over a new
leaf? What do we do when we feel stuck in our lives, when patterns
seem to play themselves out in our lives again and again?
People tell me that theyve been to Rosh
Hashanah services year after year after year and its always
the same old story, the same prayers. It always has some nostalgic
effect, but every resolution for the New Year lasts about a
day, a minute, or maybe an hour, so how can we make a Rosh Hashanah
or New Year more meaningful?
Now my personal interest is in discussing it in
a more general sense: what is the universal message, the national
message, of Rosh Hashanah? Is there something there that all
of us as a nation, the people of the United States, can learn
from?
Out the outset I should begin with what a beginner
or outsider might perceive as one of the strangest customs of
Rosh Hashanah, which is that the shofar is blown. Now
the shofar is a rams horn that is carved out into
an instrument. Essentially, when you blow into it at one end,
it emits a sound, a blast, that sounds not quite like a trumpet,
but like a simple wailing type of cry.
The mitzvah of Rosh Hashanah, the commandment
or tradition of the day, is to blow the shofar. There
are many reasons given for this, but the real question of course
is, what is the significance and the deeper meaning of the shofar
blowing, and most importantly, what does it mean to us?
Unfortunately, we live in a time when religion
has been rendered irrelevant to many people, meaning that we
perhaps do it out of guilt or obligation or out of ritual or
habit, or for our children. But the ritual has become divorced
from the spiritual, which means that personal relevance isnt
always experienced through the traditions. I speak particularly
from a Jewish perspective, because many Jews often find their
spiritual inspiration in other pastures, perhaps more than they
do in their Judaism.
So for me its always a personal challenge.
Can we take a tradition, in this case Rosh Hashanah, and can
we in some way glean from the holiday a message that has personal
relevance?
I think the blowing of the shofar is a
perfect challenge to us because heres this seemingly odd
type of custom, the mitzvah of Rosh Hashanah, where someone
gets up and actually blows into this rams horn. What exactly
is the significance of the shofar blowing? What message
does it have for us?
Now if I were to say to you out there, Did
you ever hear the sound of your own soul? What does your soul
sound like? What does your soul look like for that matter?
How would you like the opportunity to be able to hear the sound
of your own soul?
I think most of us would be intrigued by that
concept. The sound of our soul. Usually the soul is not identified
with a particular physical sound. A soul is a soul, a spiritual
entity.
But you do hear the terms soul music,
music that touches the soul, or that a certain poem touched
my soul. Or love is an experience of the soul.
So we do know about how the soul exercises and
expresses itself in different ways in our lives. But
actually, the sound of the shofar shows us the closest
approximation of what our soul sounds like.
So lets do a little Bible study here. In
Genesis, you find that Adam and Eve are created on a Friday,
which is, of course, Rosh Hashanah, the creation of the human
race, man and woman, created equally.
In the short and succinct description of Adam
and Eve is the story of all our lives. And what is the story?
G-d took earth from the ground and blew into it, infused into
it a soul of life (vayipach bapov nishmas chayim).
In other words, the earth of the ground is the
body and the soul of life makes it come alive. Our body, as
we know, is approximately 80% water along with other elements.
But what makes it alive, what distinguishes it from a corpse,
G-d forbid, is a spirit.
Im not getting into a discussion what kind
of spirit, the fact of the matter is, it behooves us all, whether
youre an atheist or a non-believer, to understand the
difference between a corpse and a live body.
From the Biblical perspective its a very
simple difference. The difference is: the spirit, the soul of
life (nishmas chayim or neshamah in Hebrew). The
word for neshamah is spirit. Neshamah also means,
interestingly, the word breath. In Hebrew, when you pronounce
the word neshamah in a different way it means breath,
because it says vayipach bapov, G-d breathed the
soul of man into the earth. So breath, as we know today
with meditation and breathing exercises, is an expression of
spirit.
What we do on Rosh Hashanah to recreate that moment
is to use that breath that is within us, the breath of G-d,
to blow into a rams horn and a sound comes out of it.
That sound is the sound of your breath, the sound of your soul.
The obvious question is, why a rams horn?
Why cant we just get up and start crying or screaming
with our own voices? That also has its own sound. And the interesting
answer given in Jewish mysticism is that a ram is the most docile,
the tamest, the most domesticated of creatures. It barely has
any defenses of its own.
In an interesting way, by blowing into a rams
horn, we dont allow man-made activities, man-made speech,
man-made expressions to get in the way. In other words, the
ram becomes a channel for us as the purest form of soul
expression, and that in essence is the significance of the blowing
of the shofar.
Now this may be a little complicated for some
because I am sharing with you a mystical dimension of the shofar
blowing, the concept of soul, but suffice it to say that it
is the concept of hearing your own soul, your own inner voice.
When a person actually accesses that part of themselves,
thats the secret to all lifes success. Everything
in life originates from how you see yourself and what you really
think is your inner voice. And that is the cry of the shofar.
So as a universal message of Rosh Hashanah, we
have a message to all human beings on earth that what makes
you tick, what makes you who you really are, is your soul. Rosh
Hashanah, which is the creation and recreation and the commemoration
of the beginning of existence, is an opportunity to get back
to that point in our lives. That is what Rosh Hashanah is all
about.
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Jacobson: Can we truly hope for real change
in our lives? After much that weve gone through in our
personal lives, the patterns, can we truly experience something
new? New rejuvenation? Or do we just give in to the resignation
that many of us have that the more things change the more they
stay the same?
We have Bob on the line.
Caller: I wanted to discuss with the Rabbi
the subject of souls. Ive been having a lot of theories
posted at me from people who discuss religion and Im somewhat
confused about the word soul. I know that people
of all religious faiths talk about it, but what confuses me,
Rabbi, is the fact that when we die, little is known about what
happens to the soul. Does it go beyond our bodies, does it leave
our bodies, or like a lot of people believe, does it go to heaven?
What is your concept of a soul when a person leaves the earth?
Jacobson: Thank you for your call Bob.
Its a great question. So since were speaking about
Rosh Hashanah and the description of the soul, the Bible puts
it this way, G-d breathed the soul of life into a human
being. There are different definitions of what a soul
is. You hear people say that the soul is like a form of electricity,
like electricity energizes an appliance, a soul energizes the
body. Others describe the soul in the very spiritual sense of
it. The best description Ive ever heard, personally, of
what a soul is is with the analogy of a musician or a composer.
A composer of music has a vision within his or her spirit and
in some way wants to capture or express that vision, that sense,
that feeling, that emotion. So they express it through the different
sounds of music.
The musical notes that they write are just the
body, the vehicle or the channels of the expression. The soul
of the music is the vision and feeling, the emotion and the
spirit, the message, that the composer has.
So in a sense we can say that if the human race
and the entire existence, our universe, is like many musical
notes and G-d is the grand Composer, our souls are essentially
like the musical notes, the vision of the Creator within us,
what He wants of us, and what our purpose is. And thats
really our soul. Our soul is the energy that is a manifestation
of the vision of the composer, and when we play out our particular
musical note, we fulfill our souls purpose.
I think thats the best definition of soul.
So when people ask the question about where the soul goes after
death, or for that matter where the soul comes from before birth,
the question is based on a flawed premise. Let me ask you a
question in reverse.
If somewhat pulls out an electrical plug, where
does the electricity go when it leaves the appliance? The answer
of course is, it doesnt go anywhere. It just goes back
to its original state. On the contrary, the appliance is where
it travels to and it becomes contained in that container
for a period of time. But thats not its natural place.
So when you have electricity energizing an appliancean
air conditioner, a refrigerator, a light bulball thats
really happening is that the electricity is being contained,
but the electricity is completely omnipresent, because electricity
does not really occupy space as we understand time and space.
The same is with the soul and even more so. The
soul doesnt go anywhere. On the contrary, the soul goes
somewhere from birth to death, it enters that container. But
the soul is an energy, an energy of the musical composer, the
Grand Composer, that enters into existence and energizes it.
Unfortunately, when you live on the level of the
musical note, the level of the body, we dont always get
in touch with and we dont always experience that soul
dimension.
So lets go to the next call. Jill, youre
on the air.
Caller: Hi Rabbi. I was wondering if you
could tell me the story behind and anything else you can tell
me about a persons soul mate, your beshert or besherta?
Jacobson: Okay, thanks for the call. The
fact of the matter is, that Rosh Hashanah is the first
beshert, Adam and Eve, so your question is not that out
of context. And since were talking about souls, of course
the next question is about soul-mate. I think
that getting in touch with your own soul is the secret to getting
in touch with your soul-mate. Many people look for a soul-mate
and they havent even mated (bonded) with their own soul
dont even have a mate of their own soul. In other words,
if youre not in touch with your own soul, how do you expect
to find a soul-mate?
So the key here is to be able to identify what
is your own spirit, your own soul, and what is G-ds vision
of your life? This is the question that each of us should ask,
and I say this across the board to Jew and non-Jew. The question
of Rosh Hashanah is international and non-denominational, one
for all people. And that is, who are you and what is your calling?
That really is the question of Rosh Hashanah. When Adam ate
from the Tree of Knowledge and afterwards was ashamed, the Bible
says, G-d came into the Garden and Adam hid from G-d.
And G-d said to him, Aieka? Where are you?
The question was asked actually by a Russian minister to
Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi (whose birthday we celebrate today,
the 18th of Hebrew month of Elul, as well as the
birthday of the Baal Shem Tov). When Rabbi Shneur Zalman was
arrested, the minister, who was an educated man, came to him
and asked, Why did G-d say, Where are you?
Doesnt G-d know where Adam is?
Its a longer story, but just to make a long
story short, Rabbi Shneur Zalman responded that G-d asks this
question to every human being. Where are you? What have
you done with your life? Youve been given so many and
so many years. What have you accomplished?
Sometimes you can be sitting near someone and
theyre right there, but still, you ask them where they
are because theyre spaced out. Its like theyre
not there spiritually, psychologically, or emotionally.
So where are you doesnt always
mean physically. Where are you means I dont recognize
you. Youve disappeared. G-d said to Adam, What is
your calling? Why are you here on this earth?
And thats the question that each of us has
to ask ourselves when we come to Rosh Hashanah. When you ask
that question, thats the way to begin to find your soul-mate.
Lets go to Shifra.
Caller: Hello Rabbi. Well, Hashem is in
the field now that its the month of Elul. My question
is about the shofar you had mentioned and it has a connection
with two parts: that there is wailing (this is a time for introspection,
a time to look inside and to take a graphic look at what we
were and how we spent the year) and theres the court of
din and the court of mercy rachmanus.
In terms of what shall be our pronouncement with
the blowing of the horn and the different kind of ram horn and
the shofar is that the Prosecutor thats ready to
prosecute us gets very confused, and when he does that, Hashem
goes into the court of mercy, and the bottom line is and with
His love and His mercifulness, He gives us another look and
shows His love for us.
In other words, we go down in and do this work
and we know that somehow at the end of Rosh Hashanah, we come
out renewed as if its the beginning of a new creation.
My question is, where does the Akeidah
come into this in terms of the rams horn and the sacrifice?
Jacobson: Okay, the Akeidah that
Shifra is referring to is the binding of Isaac, when Abraham
was told by G-d to bring Isaac as an offering. One of the reasons
that we use a rams horn is that instead of Isaac, Abraham
saw that there was a ram caught in the bushes, and he offered
the ram instead. And the ram is a memory, a zicoron,
of the binding of Isaac, which is considered to be one of the
greatest acts of faith in history.
I would say briefly that when a person is committed
to their soul, essentially they are ready to overcome any obstacle.
Its true that its a complicated and controversial
question of how Abraham even considered to bring his son as
an offering, but the point is that G-d never intended him to
offer Isaac on the Akeidah. The intention was really
to see if Abraham was truly committed all the way to G-d, to
the point where he would even give up his love, so to speak,
for his own son.
So the fact is, the commitment to ones soul
can make the entire difference in your life. The truth is, if
you know what your calling is, then your life is not driven
by the rhythms of social circles or other pressures outside
of you. I often find people, who may be otherwise very intelligent,
whose lives are really controlled by other people or, if not
so much by other people, by a certain social trend.
And thats a result of not having a grounding
or an anchor of knowing your own calling. When you find someone
who has really found their own personal voice, who knows what
theyre here for, theres nothing that can stop that,
because they know that theyre here for that purpose and
everything in life becomes focused.
You see sometimes a businessperson whos
really invested in making his or her business successful. Everywhere
they go, every person they meet at a party, at a social scene,
in the religion scene, theyre always looking to network
and find how that person can help them in their business, which
is a very interesting type of analogy. There its business.
But if you have your personal, spiritual higher
calling, then everything you do becomes focused because you
ask, How does that help me fulfill what I have to do in
this world? which is really the Rosh Hashanah meditation
and experience.
Lets go to Chaim on the air.
Caller: Hello, how are you, Rabbi? Id
just like to comment on the question of the day, that some people
make their resolutions every year on Rosh Hashanah and right
after Rosh Hashanah they forget about it and go right on with
their pattern of life. So at some point, some people are resigned
to the fact that this is it, this is what I am and I cant
change. So Id just like to comment that every time you
put up a fight and even if you dont win it, you have become
uplifted. So one day you will be so uplifted from fighting every
time that you will win, so you should not resign.
Jacobson: Thats a very good way of
looking at it and I thank you for that insight. Lets take
a break and well be back in a moment.
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Jacobson: Welcome back. We have David on
the air.
Caller: Hi Rabbi Jacobson. I sent you an
email the other day. My only fear sometimes is that when Hashem
called out to Adam and when he calls out to me and says, Where
are you? that He should only stop calling. Ive been
trapped at home a lot lately and going through a lot of anger
about a painful condition I have. Its kind of hard to
get my focus on where my soul is and where I want to go when
Im in pain. I read your chapter in Toward a Meaningful
Life several times and I read something in this weeks
Haftorah which I read today after going through a terrible day
yesterday, which says that in order to elicit true kindness
from Hashem we have to conduct ourselves in a special way and
thats through acts of loving kindness amongst each other.
My mother is in a nursing home and I want to call
her up and say, How do you feel being abandoned like we
were abandoned when we were children? or to my brother
who stole my youth, and when youre angry, how do you get
in touch with your soul? Especially now if you cant walk
to shul, what do you do for Rosh Hashanah and things
like that?
Jacobson: Well, David, first of all, my
heart goes out to you a person doesnt always have
an answer to questions like that as you know. Sometimes its
questions like this that defy any type of answer. A fellow came
to the Rebbe once and the Rebbe said, I dont have
answers for you but I can cry with you.
I guess the fact is that no matter what situation
youre in, the hope that Rosh Hashanah infuses each of
us with is the fact that life is recreated every year anew.
No matter how seemingly hopeless the situation can be, even
the worst of the worst, it means that there is a rebirth, and
theres a renewal that takes place. We dont always
feel it and we cant always access it, but the only thing
I can say to you is that you have to do your part and make your
effort, as hard as you can, and G-d fulfills the rest. You dont
have to be too hard on yourself.
About the anger, the fact that you called in and
youre talking to meI guess you could be talking
to other friends as wellis a way of alleviating the anger
through communicating with others. One of the things we
do before the High Holidays is that we ask forgiveness of people
around us, but its not just to ask forgiveness, its
a way of airing out and expressing yourself as I spoke about
last Sunday on the show: just being able to express yourself
in some way relieves the tension by breaking the silence.
Im sure you know, David, that anger is something
that works against you, even if its justified. Ultimately
it weakens your spirit and demoralizes you.
Caller: And it makes the pain worse, the
mind-body tension.
Jacobson: What I would say is that its
important to get out of the line of fire by connecting with
supportive friends, and to get away from people who incite or
in some way elicit the worst inside of you. Hang around and
be around people who are really beautiful and who lift your
spirit and help you connect.
Will it be easy? Not necessarily. Its always
a battle, especially when youre in pain.
Now Im not familiar with the kind of pain
that youre in, and I dont know if you should even
say it on the air, but the point is, whatever it is, you have
to do every intervention possible to deal with it if its
physical pain.
If its psychological and emotional, theres
no better solution and no better antidote than in some way connecting
to ones soul. I dont find ultimately that theres
any other solution to real pain, real psychological loss, or
personal loss, than to turn to G-d. Someone once asked one of
the o
Holocaust survivors, How could you continue
to believe in G-d after the Holocaust? So he answered,
My question is, how can you continue to believe in man
after the Holocaust? I have no refuge except G-d.
Caller: When I read stories like that,
I say, what they went through, I can go through. And I have
to deal with it.
Jacobson: Well, the key is not to allow
yourself to get demoralized. You have to get out of your own
space. It says that what one can accomplish on Rosh Hashanah
through tears, one accomplishes on Simchas Torah through joy,
and maybe you should start dancing now to bring a little joy
into your life.
Theres a big misconception. People think
that the Days of Awe, the High Holiday season, is
a day of fright and terror and fear. In truth, its not
that way at all. Its actually days of spirit, a holiday,
a day of simcha, meaning joy, but the joy of Rosh Hashanah
is packaged within a certain seriousness. When you stand before
a king, you dont just dance and make somersaults. However,
you have a deep joy inside that you have the opportunity to
stand before G-d.
The joy comes out in an apparent way on Sukkot
and the second half of the Holiday season. So the truth is,
the season thats coming up is really a two-sided one.
Its not all about the seriousness of judgment, its
also about the spirit and the celebration of the spirit.
Look, David, youre here, youre alive.
You have many beautiful qualities about you. The fact that you
have the courage to call is Im sure empowering to others
as well. And I wish you a real kesiva vchasima tova,
a real blessed year. Do your little part and G-d will do
His great part.
Caller: And hopefully Ill see you
in class.
Jacobson: Thank you David for the call.
On the other side of the coin, as I mentioned
earlier, Id like to address Mr. Liebermans bringing
Judaism to a very prominent position. I have traveled to some
places where I rarely get anyones attention and now they
start asking me, What is this thing called the Sabbath?
Why do you have a beard? Why do you wear a yarmulke? And what
is Rosh Hashanah?
Of course there are also skeptics who are wondering
whether putting a Jew in such a prominent position is even good
for the Jews, because it opens up the opportunity for a scapegoat,
and we find precedents in Jewish history that whenever a Jew
rose to prominent power, it created all kinds of other problems.
So some are not so excited about it and well
dedicate the next part of the show to the issue of religion
and politics, and whether its good to mix the two.
There was a fascinating article recently in the
New York Times written by Michael Novack, called The Founders
and the Torah. He writes that hes a Roman Catholic
who is not voting for the Gore-Lieberman ticket, yet hes
extremely excited and happy about what Lieberman is doing to
raise the religious consciousness of this country.
I found it amazing that he basically makes a case
that the foundation of this nation, as he puts it, has
Jewish roots. Instead of using Christian terms like savior
and redemption on our currency and on the
dollar bill, the founding fathers used words like the
Creator, judgment, judge and providence which, as he writes,
are unmistakably Jewish words.
He cites John Adams who said that the Jews have
done more to civilize the world than any other nation. Its
quite an interesting article, especially coming from someone
who isnt Jewish.
So heres the question Id like to ask
the listeners: Is it good that a man like Mr. Lieberman can
potentially be the Vice President and someday the President
of the United States, or does it bring religion too much into
the secular world, because it may intrude on the separation
of church and state? Will having a religious person in one of
the top positions in this country make America a better country,
or is it dangerous because he can ultimately make it a fundamentalist
one and so on.
Now regarding this issue of religion and politics,
my take on it is that there is definitely a danger in the area
of the separation of church and state and we dont want
to break that boundary because we dont want any particular
denomination or religion to dictate how we live as human beings.
Freedom of religion is a critical freedom, as important as the
freedom of expression and the freedom of speech.
However, its fascinating that the same founding
fathers who instituted such a rigid separation of church and
state also would allow the currency to make the statement, In
G-d We Trust, and other allusions to statements which,
while not necessarily religious, clearly have a distinct biblical
sound: All men are created equal.
They could have written, All men are
equal, or all men are born equal. So you find that
these same founders who stated that theres a necessity
for the separation of church and state still allowed certain
religious statements to become part of the overall universal
message of this country.
My understanding of it is quite a simple one actually,
that the founding fathers never meant to eliminate G-d from
the dialogue, from our lives.
What they did want is a non-denominational G-d,
so to speak. In other words, all men are created equal
is critical because if theyre not created by G-d then
perhaps they arent equal. The monarchs and the despots
of the past said some people are more equal than others.
The fact that all the men are created equal (meaning
all people of course) gives the right paradoxically and ironically
to the atheists to deny G-d. So theres a certain equality
that comes as the result of the belief in G-d, and without it
they felt that the Bill of Rights and the basic rights of the
people are not guaranteed.
But they are Divinely guaranteed to each of us.
Lets go to Teddy on the air.
Caller: Hello Rabbi. I was listening to
you in my car and I was so inspired by you. Im so happy
with the way you walked the last person through whos in
so much pain. It was an inspiration for anyone, and as far as
religion and politics, Im sort of in the middle of it,
because I know we need G-d in our lives to keep some sort of
balance
Im an African-American and I know very little
about Judaism, but Im always drawn to it because of the
inspiration and life and the lessons and teachings. I was wondering
how your community, yourself, can reach out to folks so that
we wouldnt feel alienated if we wanted to pursue that.
Because as a people in this country, with our history, its
so confused and so lost, and Im sure there are people
like myself who feel the same way and are yearning for that.
But then on the other hand you look around and say to yourself,
well maybe I wouldnt be accepted.
Jacobson: Teddy, where are you calling
from?
Caller: Im in Brooklyn actually going
to visit family. Im in my car and I just pulled over;
I just got off from work.
Jacobson: Well, when were finished
with this call, why dont you leave your name and number
with Philip, and then I can call you after the show and answer
your question in more detail. But I will say this on the air.
First of all, thank you for your question and for your kind
words. They are very encouraging and empowering.
I believe, as I was just saying about G-d and
politics, that there is a non-denominational G-d who created
as all, and no one has a monopoly over that G-d, not Jews, not
Buddhists and not Christians and not Moslems. Nobody. Because
its a G-d who created us all.
Adam and Eve are the father and mother of all
human beings, black and white, men and women, whatever color,
whatever race, whatever educational background. The key to embracing
ourselves as a nation and world of brothers and sisters is recognizing,
as Ive been discussing tonight, the soul in each of us.
Each of us has a calling. If someone questions the validity
of another human being, no matter what background they have,
even the validity of an atheist who doesnt believe in
G-d, theyre questioning the validity of G-d. Because G-d
is the one who put that person there.
As I mentioned earlier with the musical notes,
every one of us is a musical note. When Mozart presented his
first great composition to the Archduke of Austria, the Duke,
who was a connoisseur of music, said, Mozart,
beautiful, beautiful, but far too many notes. Can you
imagine, this great expert on music told Mozart
that there were too many notes in the song?
So Mozart wisely replied to him, Yes, your
majesty. But not one more than necessary. Meaning, every
note is indispensable.
So, too, each of us, Teddy, myself, yourself,
are needed, and we have to share that message with each other.
I dont know if theres a more empowering and more
relevant and more valid Rosh Hashanah message than that one.
We have Keith on the air.
Caller: I have two questions about Joseph
Lieberman. Joseph Lieberman is an Orthodox Jew. Didnt
he read in Shemos (in the book of Exodus) that there
was a new Pharaoh who did not recognize Joseph?
And didnt the Rabbis claim from that point on that Jews
shouldnt really become leaders over non-Jews? Thats
question number one.
And question number two. Th fact that the election
is going to be during the week of parshas Lech Lecha,
does that have any bearing?
Jacobson: Good questions. Do you have answers
too?
Caller: I dont have any answers.
Thats why Im calling you!
Jacobson: Well, briefly put, whether its
in the Jewish tradition for a man to rise to such power in a
non-Jewish world is definitely a question, and you find historical
precedents that have caused problems, but on the other
hand, you do find that Maimonides and other observant
Jews, starting from Mordechai (who was well after Joseph), were
clearly in a position of power and actually helped save the
Jewish people as a result of that.
So its an argument that is not simple, because
you could make the argument that Divine Providence has led a
person to that position. Is it all right that he is in the Senate,
because where do you draw the line? Should a Jew not be in any
position? Should he not be a mayor, a governor, a senator? Or
he should only avoid President and Vice-President?
Its a general question of what level of
power he should or shouldnt access. So its complicated
because there is a case to be made either way. And I dont
know if Im in a position to render a legal decision on
this, and I dont know if theres any rabbi in the
world who can really say if it was prohibited for him to accept
that nomination.
I think of it more in practical terms. The fact
is, he made his choiceIm not in control of his life.
If he had asked me personally, if I were a friend of his, wed
weigh the different factors involved.
But the fact is, once hes in that position
and theres a certain level of acceptance, I as a Jew would
not undermine that; on the contrary, I celebrate it. I celebrate
the opportunity to educate people about what Judaism is about.
And politically and economically speaking he may
end up being a terrible Vice-President or President at some
point. And they may blame him as a Jew for being such. But on
the other hand, he may be a great leader whos a great
role model. How can anyone argue if he ends up being the type
of role model that will actually change the face of this nation
and how we view our leaders as role models after all the disillusionment
that has taken place in the last 30 years in politics?
That may be a great blessing. And if he were a
devout Catholic who was extremely moral, would that be better?
I think the fact that hes Jewish and a moral, ethical
person is a really great tribute, and I really see that side
of it as a great blessing.
Again, this is not an endorsement or non-endorsement
of him, because that has to be judged on the merit of his own
political leadership.
Regarding the election taking place during the
section of Lech Lecha, Im sure theres significance.
Lech Lecha is the chapter where Abraham begins to come
out and spread monotheism and belief and faith in G-d in the
universe, so one can say that Joseph Lieberman is in a way a
form of an Abraham. In a way, you can say that if he makes a
kiddush Hashem, which means that he sanctifies G-ds
name by demonstrating that he can be an observant Jew and not
compromise his position, and at the same time be a good leader,
thats a great kiddish Hashem and in a way, yes,
he would be like an Abraham whos spreading the name of
G-d all over the world.
Lets go to a break.
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Jacobson: Lets go to Ellen.
Caller: Hello Rabbi. Something irritates
me greatly. Joe Lieberman is a person, a man, and he happens
to be Jewish. Until he became nominated, he was Joe Lieberman
a person who happens to be Jewish. Now he is Joseph Lieberman
the Jew. And I hate that. Hes still a person. Hes
not identified by his religion, hes a person, hes
not the Jew, and I wish they would stop making such reference
to it.
Every person is a person regardless of his or
her religion. Its not Ellen the Jew or you the Jew, its
a person who happens to be Jewish or Muslim or whatever. So
its not really a question; Im just venting my annoyance.
Jacobson: Im glad that we can serve
as a ventilation service to you and I understand what youre
saying. I think its part of the curse of our times where
people stereotype one another. And we like to label. Labeling
simplifies matters but it just ends up being a stereotype. Is
that what youre referring to?
Caller: I guess so.
Jacobson: Like a stereotype that names
people with adjectives or words that, even if theyre not
derogatory, definitely pigeonhole.
I appreciate your call Ellen, and by the way,
that is the Rosh Hashanah message because its about cutting
through the labels, the stereotypes, the divisiveness and the
divisions that divide us, and getting to the essence of who
we are as people.
So thank for the call.
I want to say in the spirit of the issue, which
is a very important one, that were all human beings looking
for change in our liveschange for the better. No matter
how good things are, theres an expression in Yiddish,
Oib gut is gut, is besser nisht besser? If
good is good, is better not better?
So theres always a restlessness that every
human being has to grow and achieve and accomplish more in their
lives. This time of the year is actually the perfect opportunity
for that, but the key, as I was saying earlier, is to get in
touch with your calling. Who are you? Aieckawhere
are you? Where are you in your life? What have you accomplished?
Have you come in touch with who your inner voice is, what youre
supposed to be achieving in this world?
The unfortunate fact is, as David said in his
call, is that the pain in our liveswhether its physical
or emotional painthe fears, the material tentacles that
hold us trapped are really our greatest enemy because they dont
allow us to access our inner soul.
That is one of the reasons we go into the synagogue
to blow the shofar and to hear the shofar, because
we yearn to cut through the barriers and pierce through the
layers to be able to hear that inner voice.
Theres no greater blessing than to be able
to hear your own soul or another persons soul because
that ultimately is the barometer that helps us navigate
the realties of this world. Living in this world, we can easily
be deceived and distracted by different side turns and detours
that sidetrack us in our lives. Rosh Hashanah is a time to realign
yourself and look at what youre made of, who you are.
To do so needs a certain measure of integrity, a certain measure
of sincere introspection, but more importantly, it needs the
recognition that you have something inside of you thats
uniquely yours that makes you unique and indispensable. I think
thats the critical message of Rosh Hashanah.
I want to say, this show has been sponsored by
listeners like yourselves, and this show in particular has been
sponsored by James and Georgeanne Garfinkel, James and
Anne Altucher, Ivan Stux, Ted Doll, Sharon Gans, and Fred Mindel.
Those are the people Id like to thank for this weeks
show and many of the other shows that they and their friends
and others sponsor.
Its your opportunity, your gift that you
can give to others. This show can only be made possible through
your grants. You can call us any time to help us out in that
way at 1-800-3MEANING (1-800-363-2646).
On a personal note, every year has its own particular
personality. I find this a very exciting time to be spiritual,
to be a religious person, because theres a credibility
and a pride that has emerged in our society. So with all the
cynicism and all the resignation, these are exciting times because
people are asking questions, people are sincerely searching
for deeper meaning and deeper purpose and as such, it becomes
a great opportunity and a great gift for each of us to share.
I want to say this to all of the listeners, that
we all have a responsibility. The responsibility is to open
our voices, to open our souls and to create a grassroots soul
revolution. We live in the time of the Internet, a time
of a communications explosion, that defies anything that anyone
could have fathomed 10-20-30 years ago. Its an unbelievable
opportunity for us to share a message of hope, of love, and
remembering the message of Rosh Hashanah, the cry of the shofar,
the call of your soul.
Each of us has a soul. Each of you has a very
special, powerful, indispensable contribution to make and as
a result, we need each other to complement one another: all
races, all backgrounds, no matter who you are, no matter what
education you have. So make sure to use this opportunity. In
these days, this Rosh Hashanah, wherever you are, access your
soul.
This is Simon Jacobson with Toward a Meaningful
Life. See you again next Sunday at 6pm.
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