Nine months of pain, followed by nine months of possibility and the entire time I was completely, utterly terrified.

Similar documents
Dream Come True. each day, which is the only thing keeping me awake. I wonder who and what I ll make of

Listen to these words of blessing from our loving God! To encourage my hearers to listen to the words of blessing from our loving God.

Sermons from The Church of the Covenant

DISCUSSION GUIDE PINELAKE CHURCH THE DYSFUNCTIONAL FAMILY FORGIVENESS AND RESTORATION JUNE 16, 2013

If you replace the word locust with snow, I think we can find a parallel here: What the snow didn t cover, the sleet covered. What the sleet didn t

Song of Moses. January 17, 2016 Exodus 15:1-18

God s Relentless Pursuit of Us 1 Peter 1:18-21 and Exodus 39:32-43, 40:34-38 October 8, 2017 M. Michelle Fincher Calvary Presbyterian Church

Crying for the World Rabbi Claudia Kreiman First day of Rosh Hashanah, Let me begin by sharing with you a personal story:

LESSON 13. PLUG IN TIME minutes as the kids begin to arrive

How Awesome is This Place! Genesis 28:10-19 Crossroads Christian Church Romans 8:12-25 July 20, 2014 Pentecost 6A People who don t read much of their

LIFE LESSONS FROM THE LADIES: Part Two

Facing One s Fear. Rev. Mark A. Medina June 25, 2017

JESUS THE SON OF MAN

(Hymn: Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God Almighty!) >>FAY: You may be seated. And will you join me in prayer, please? O Lord, you are the creator and

2) That s the second point for this sermon. Mary sang with Bible knowledge.

Intersecting Faiths: The Story of Hagar

LESSON 13. PLUG IN TIME minutes as the kids begin to arrive

Right in God s Sight

SEPTEMBER WEEK FOUR: ISAAC AND ISHMAEL. Monday Genesis 21:1 21

Sat 23 July 2016 / 17 Tammuz 5776 Dr Maurice M. Mizrahi Congregation Adat Reyim Torah discussion on Balak. Balaam s Ass: Why?

P.M. DIGGING DEEPER Page 1 DIGGING DEEPER. What Does A Donkey And A Fortune Teller Have To Do With A Christian?

Father Abraham. Lesson Guide by Third Millennium Ministries

How to Face the Coming Crisis

DESTINY TRAINING LEVEL 2 MODULE 4 CLASS 03 INNER HEALING FOR THE FAMILY

KHC - January 7-8, 2017 Exodus 33:11-23 "My Presence will go with you." Pastor Jason Flentye

MOSES CONFIDENCE RENEWED Exodus 4:27-5:9,21-6:13, 28-7:17; 14:1-18, 20-31

BCP: Hear the comfortable words : Come to me, he says, all you who labour and are burdened, and I will give you rest.

Like every engaged couple that meets a priest to arrange for a wedding, you have your own expectations. Generally, the man and woman expect a

THE NEXT STEP. Israel is the light. Jesus is the light. Catalog No John 8: th Message Scott Grant January 5, 2014

Rabbi Leider s Sermon - Rosh Hashanah Day September 11, 2018

Genesis 22:1-14 No: 3 Week: 319 Monday 19/09/11. Prayers. Bible Study. Opening prayer. Prayer Suggestions. Meditation. Bible passage Genesis 22:1-14

Enduring Unspeakable Loss Rosh Hashanah Day 1, 5762 (2001) Rabbi Carl M. Perkins Temple Aliyah, Needham

LIVING THE DREAM. Ernest F. Krug, III Third Presbyterian Church July 23, 2017 Genesis 28: 10-19a

BIBLE RADIO PRODUCTIONS

The children s children s children

The Burning Bush Lesson Aim: To know God calls us to be His messengers.

The Burning Bush Lesson Aim: To know God calls us and equips us to be His messengers.

LESSON 13. Isaac & Ishmael. The promise of a son is fulfilled

Fear and Love Kol Nidre 5778 Rabbi Lori Koffman

Wrestling with God. Mountain Life Church Life Pack Isaac & Israel series August 28, 2011

Rosh Hashanah The Ten Commandments for Building Resilience

THE STORM OF LIFE. John 6:16-21 Key Verse: 6:20. But he said to them, It is I; don t be afraid.

What If You Could Not Sing the Songs of the Church?; Psa 137; 04234; Page 1 of 9

How Do I Live With series

Genesis 25:1-27:45 Esau and Jacob September 2, Proverbs 27:7. He who is full loathes honey, but to the hungry even what is bitter tastes sweet.

Jesse Tree Daily Devotions

Rabbi Noah Arnow Kol Rinah Rosh Hashanah Day 1, 5778/2017

Place of peace established. Lesson 93 June 27, 2012

Hidden in Plain Sight Yom Kippur Sermon Rabbi Jeffrey Saxe September 26, 2012/10 Tishrei, 5773

Homily for 25 th Sunday of OT, Year C (Part II: Preparation for Holy Mass) A saint of the past century suggested that after receiving Holy

The Immortal Story Deuteronomy 34:1-12

"..and Joseph's hand will close your. eyes"

Three Facets of LOVE. A sermon by Norman Moll

BROADWAY CHRISTIAN CHURCH COLUMBIA, MISSOURI THE WORSHIP OF GOD FEBRUARY 17, 2019

Christmas: The Sequel

First Presbyterian Church of Kissimmee, Florida Dr. Frank Allen, Pastor 3/16/08. Matthew 26:36-46 (NRSV)

THE RECIPE FOR A MIRACLE Luke 23:44 24:53

Psalm 35:15-22 Matthew 26:36-46

Table of Contents. Introduction. Love - The Essence of God. Love - God s Eternal Nature. The Temporal Manifestation of

CONNECTED IN SPIRIT Corona del Mar Community Church, Congregational Rev. Mary Scifres May 20, 2018

INSPIRED WORD June 28, 2017

ACIM Edmonton - Sarah's Reflections. LESSON 132 I loose the world from all I thought it was.

Moses and Aaron Divine Commission Exodus 1-4

Seven Covenants: The Abrahamic Covenant

HELP! I Can t Face. Tomorrow

Sermon: The Word Became Flesh

Leader Prep & Bible Study

Before the Flood The Flood Scattering of the People The Patriarchs The Exodus

Bible Stories for Adults Jacob Flees and Returns Genesis 28-36

God Parts the Red Sea Lesson Aim: To show God has made a way for us to be saved. (Salvation Message)

Our Banner. What are some things we rely on for protection? QUESTION 1 BIBLE STUDIES FOR LIFE 29

Grace Bible Church Pastor Teacher Robert R. McLaughlin Dispensation of Promise. Jacob

We hope that you and your community are blessed and enriched by these resources.

THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD PSALM 139:1-6. Our God knows. He knows everything. But what moved David to this psalm

DEUTERONOMY PART 2 CH 27-34

Succession. Structure:

Sermon for the Ninth Sunday after Trinity. Texts: Genesis 18:20-32; Colossians 2:6-15 and Luke 11:1-13

CAN YOU REALLY BE ANXIOUS FOR NOTHING??? Philippians 4:6-7(KJV Schofield)

St. Andrew s Episcopal Church The Rev. Barbara Hutchinson Proper 10 Year A July 16, 2017

1 Yom Kippur Sermon 5768 Kol Nidre, September 21, 2007 Rabbi Laura Geller

The pursuit of holiness

The Stewardship of Earthen Vessels

MICAH: Hope in the Face of Hardship Guilt & Punishment and God s Mercy & Grace Micah chapters 6 & 7 Layne Lebo November 20, 2016

God Parts the Red Sea Lesson Aim: To know God made a way for us to know His presence. (Salvation Message)

God Parts the Red Sea Lesson Aim: To show God has made a way for us to be saved. (Salvation Message)

Moses Lesson 27 Handout

for my father are approaching ; then I will kill my brother Jacob. Their mother hears of this and knows Esau s not messing around.

Abram and Lot Lesson Aim: To learn how to be a peacekeeper.

A Conversation with Lauren Tarshis, Westport Author of I Survived Series for Young Readers

27 So Moses stretched his hand out

Genesis 15:1-6; Luke 13:

Hope Lutheran Church July 16 & 17, Tears of Joy in Christ Alone!

SCRIPTURES and SERMON: Proper 7, Year B, June 24, 2012

Share the most difficult thing about the recent holidays and how you handled it.

I don t know the places to which your heart leaps when I say the words Holy Faith. Trust.

Jacob and Esau. Bible Passage: Genesis Story Point: Rebekah and Jacob tricked Isaac into blessing Jacob. Key Passage:

Copyright 2013 Christian Liberty Press. Christian Liberty Press Arlington Heights, Illinois

A Good Shepherd Sacred Story Sold Birthright

The Promise Reaffirmed

Faith that Doesn t Limit Almighty God

Transcription:

Our Awesome Fear Rabbi Suzie Jacobson, Yom Kippur 5779 Last year, I stood witness to the great parabola of life and death. For the better part of a year, I sat bedside, watching my beloved father slowly succumb to long term illness. Then, after standing up from his shiva, I began a new vigil, as my then ten-weekpregnant wife JoJo began to swell with the life that would eventually become our son Nathan Yitzhak. Nine months of pain, followed by nine months of possibility and the entire time I was completely, utterly terrified. During the long months of my father s final illness, doctors with sad eyes and tight smiles offered us wait and see solutions, made no promises, and encouraged us to keep him comfortable. A spectator, a witness to pain and tedium - I woke often in a cold sweat, my dreams plagued by terrified images of his demise as I struggled to imagine a world without him. And then, as it always goes, life dwindled, pain increased and I watched fearfully as my father let go of this world. My grief was immediately distracted. Finally JoJo was pregnant! But the finality of death and the sweet promise of new life did not resolve my fear. Instead, we were thrust into a new phase of anxiety - Would this fetus be healthy? Would it survive? Is the heart beating now? How about now? Are you still growing? Every new stage of development threw me into new worries, and we walked into each appointment and ultrasound holding our breath, half expecting bad news. As queer parents who spent years in fertility treatments - we took nothing for granted. Until delivery was around the corner, and it was undeniable that our very large child would indeed need to make his transition from potential life, to star of our universe --- we were terrified. As the non-gestational parent, I stood as constant, fearful observer to this potentiality. To live is to be afraid -- fear is universal. Endowed with imagination, we have the ability to anticipate what will happen to our health, to our security, and to our loved ones. We live in a constant state of what if - leaving us anxious and afraid. Our imagination is propelled first by our observations - how we each uniquely see the world, and then by the stories we tell ourselves. As I watched my father on his deathbed, as I watched my wife grow a human being - I stood witness to the minuscule

changes of day to day, but I crafted horrific what if scenarios, terrifying stories that deeply impacted my experience of reality - stories that for the most part, did not come true. Fear lives and grows in the stories we tell ourselves In a TED talk 1, novelist Karen Thompson discusses how human beings are often swayed by the most salacious, and least likely of fears because they make the most outrageous stories. She tells the story of the men of the whale ship Essex, who were struck by a sperm whale 3,000 miles off the coast of Chile. They are faced with a terrible decision - head to the closest Island, Tahiti, where cannibalism is rumored, or go to the coast of South America - a known but much farther destination. Terrified of the horrible campfire stories, they avoided Tahiti, choosing the longer trip to South America. They chose to listen to the more vibrant fear of cannibalism, rather than the more mundane fear of starvation. In the end, the length of their trip and lack of supplies killed half the crew. And the men who survived, lived because they resorted to cannibalism. If they had listened to their more realistic and common fears, and headed to closer land, more of the crew may have survived. We fear serial killers and plane crashes, rather than the subtler and slower disasters we face: the silent buildup of plaque in our arteries, the gradual changes in our climate. Thompson teaches that just as the most nuanced stories in literature are often the richest, so too might our subtlest fears be the truest. To live is to be afraid - But how we engage our fears, makes all the difference. This message runs throughout the narratives of our Torah. Sarah feared Hagar, Moses feared failure, and everyone feared God. The story of our people, the story of each person is really the story of confronting fear time and again each day over a lifetime. In Jewish devotional texts, the most common word for fear is yirah, which has the same letters as the word, to see yir eh, and to be seen, yera eh. Often in Torah the character who yireh sees someone or something foreign and from afar becomes afraid - yirah. 1 https://www.ted.com/talks/karen_thompson_walker_what_fear_can_teach_us/transcript? language=en

Here s a story -- When the Moabite King Balak 2 sees the numerous Israelites succeed in their travel through the wilderness, he fears them before he meets them, sending his prophet Balaam to curse them. God s power is strong as Balaam opens his mouth to curse, blessing pours forth. The Torah teaches that the curse of xenophobia must be thwarted with the blessing of love. King Balak s story is one of unreasonable fear. But there are other stories, smaller stories, interpersonal stories that are less black and white - Here s a story -- Our forefather Jacob and his brother Esau were separated for decades after trickster Jacob stole his brother s birthright. 3 After many years, Jacob returns home to the land of Israel, choosing to dwell very near to Esau. As Jacob and his city of wives, children, animals and servants approach - He sees Esau from afar and is afraid. Surely this brother he wronged will now have his revenge. He sees Esau and allows his fears to craft a story of violence and danger. Sending his wives, and children ahead, Jacob stays back waiting for death. Instead, Esau runs to meet him, embraces him, flings himself upon Jacob s neck, kisses him and weeps. 4 When Esau looks up and sees Jacob s large family and many possessions he does not see the terrifying army of an enemy, he sees the wealth and blessing of family. This is the story that reminds us that our vision is not 20/20, that the fears we craft may not be grounded in reality, and the other person s heart and will are a mystery until we come face to face. In fact, Jacob has already learned the complexity of confronting the unknown. After first escaping Esau s anger, Jacob dreams of a ladder filled with angels. God stands over Jacob, promising covenant, love, protection. In this moment of confronting the Divine Other, standing face to face with extraordinary power and majesty, Jacob feels yirah, but he does not interpret his yirah as fear. Rather, now, yirah takes on its second meaning - awe. 2 3 4 See Numbers 22-24 Genesis 27 Genesis 33

Jacob exclaims - Mah Norah hamakom hazeh! 5 How full of awe is this place, and I did not know it. How awesome is our God! Yirah, awe, is our reaction when we come face to face with the unknown, with what is not within our control - God, the stranger, the mysteries of life and death, illness, suffering and change. Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel defines yirah as radical amazement, he teaches that: The meaning of awe is to realize that life takes place under wide horizons... Awe enables us to perceive in the world intimations of the divine, to sense in small things the beginning of infinite significance, to sense the ultimate in the common and the simple; to feel in the rush of the passing, the stillness of the eternal. 6 We experience yirah when we lack control, but it is in our control how we define our yirah. Are we terrified and fearful, filled with anxiety, making decisions out of a sense of dread? Or are we awestruck, humbled by the expansiveness of the universe and the mysteries of human experience? Or perhaps our yirah is not either or. In Mishnah Pirkei Avot, Rabbi Eliezer ben Azariah teaches Im ein chochma, ein yirah; Im ein yirah, ein chochma 7 If there is no wisdom, there is no yirah, no fear and awe. If there is no fear and awe, there is no wisdom. Wisdom, experiencing life and the world with depth and reason, does not exist without yirah/ awe - the humility that comes with the recognition of our own limitation; and it also cannot exist without yirah/ fear - the caution and anxiety that comes with the recognition that we are ultimately not in control. 5 6 7 Genesis 28 Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, God In Search of Man, p. 75 Pirkei Avot 3:17

During these highest of holy days, our liturgy helps us to openly explore our fears and to stand in awe of life and the Divine. In the Unetaneh Tokef prayer, we ask: How many shall pass away and how many shall be born? Who shall live and who shall die? Who in good time, and who by an untimely death? Who by water and who by fire? Who by sword and who by wild beast? Who shall be at peace and who pursued? Who shall be debased, and who exalted? When we recite the Unetaneh Tokef, we are meant to accept rather than push aside the fears natural to human life and mortality. But we are also called to stand in awe of the blessings of life, and our great fortune to wake up each and every day. Our yirah must include an acceptance of our fears, and also a recognition of the majesty of life. Fear without awe is terror, and terror leaves us paralyzed, enticing us to make decisions based on the most lurid and unrealistic nightmares. But awe without fear is equally hollow, detached from our emotions and unrealistic - For when we love, when we truly care about our loved ones and the lives we live, it is natural to fear loss, to fear suffering. The terrified stories of loss and suffering I told myself during my father s illness and Nathan s gestation at times brought me unnecessary pain. But, pregnancy is truly a dangerous time - despite the best medical care, miscarriage, stillbirth and high risk complications are common. We were amongst the lucky ones - tragedy was not my family s story, but every pregnancy, and every illness brings us face to face with the fear and threat of great loss. And it is only natural to fear living the rest of our lives without the parents, grandparents, children we adore. But that yirah of fear is only half the story -- During my dad s illness, while I dreaded the impending loss, I stood in awe of every experience of his life. Every shared meal was a party, every ridiculous joke brought us to happy tears, the stories we shared, the quiet moments of presence and holy witnessing were some of the most important moments of our relationship. I sat there day after day, holding his hand, with tears of gratitude for the gift of knowing him, for the gift of his love.

And as my son grew from a great yearning to the crawling, babbling, great big bundle of joy we call Nathan Yitzy - I spent, and continue to spend every day in awe of the mysterious blessing of life, in gratitude for the holy witnessing of this miracle, for the heart expanding experience of this great love. And of course I am still fearful of the what-ifs, of his vulnerability in this fragile world - Such is the prerogative of parenthood. This is my story - There are others - Esau was Jacob s teacher, the Israelites helped Balak and Balaam grow, and the beautiful black sands of Tahiti forever taunted the sad remaining sailors of the Essex and inspired Herman Melville s Moby Dick. What do you fear in this new year? Do you fear what is happening in our government? Do you worry about democracy and the moral values of our country and city? Do you fear instability? Do you worry about your finances or your home? Do you fear loss? Do worry about your health or the health of your loved ones? Do you fear loneliness? Do you worry about your relationships, your children, your friendships, your lack of connection to community? This year, may yirah be our teacher. When we fear political instability may we stand in awe of collective power, and find new ways to fight for what we believe in. When we fear loneliness, may we stand in awe of human relationship, and dedicate more of ourselves to building community and finding the connections we desire. When we fear suffering and loss, may we stand in awe of the precious mystery of life, and commit more time and energy to the people we love and our passionate pursuits in the world. This year, may our fears lead us to wisdom, and our wisdom lead us to awe. And may we each write our stories with compassion, bravery, and great love. Amen.