WRITING OUR OWN AVINU MALKEINU

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SERMON Rosh HaShanah Eve 5779 (2018) Rabbi David Edleson, Temple Sinai, Vermont WRITING OUR OWN AVINU MALKEINU Avinu, Malkeinu our father, our king, we have sinned against you. Avinu Malkeinu Our father, our king, You alone are our King. But we re American. This adorable blond boy of about six said to his mother loud enough for everyone in the synagogue to hear, We don t believe in Kings. Avinu Malkeinu Our father, our king, act for your sake and save us Shhhhhh. his mother said. Avinu Malkeinu, Our father, our king, hear our voice. But Mom. Shhhh You told me Avinu Malkeinu is one of the high points of Rosh HaShanah, and I was up on the bimah, in front of the open ark, totally in my rabbi zone, doing my best to pray with kavannah, intention, but as this went on, I started to laugh, that kind of laugh where the congregation could see my back shaking. I wasn t laughing only because I was the kid when I was his age, but that I was still that kid at some level. I ve always struggled with the Avinu Malkeinu and other prayers on the High Holy Days. We are supposed to see this as a very powerful spiritual experience, but so much of the service seemed to me, especially when I was younger, focused on groveling and begging, and we re not worthy that I remember in my first years leading services wanting to suddenly break into Monty Python and the Meaning of Life s chapel scene: Oh Lord, Ooo you are so big, so absolutely huge, gosh we re all really impressed down here, I can tell you. Forgive us O Lord please don't grill us or toast your flock, Don't put us on a barbecue, Or simmer us in stock While I recognize the grandeur, the poetry and I have studied the centuries of prayer that make up our High Holy Day liturgy, there was always something about

the High Holy Days that didn t quite jive with my theology of the divine in all of us. To be honest, while I love the music, and the shofar and the songs,- religiously, I struggle with the high holy day service and I ll bet that many of you have felt the same. But we come to synagogue anyway, at least every few years. Like Jewish salmon to spawn the New Year. It is no wonder that as Americans we struggle with this theme of God s rule and power, our vulnerability, our dependence on things we can t control, on our unworthiness. As Americans we are taught that we are self-reliant, that the hierarchy of monarchy that the imagery of the holidays are based on is nothing but oppression in the name of God, and so coming to synagogue to beg God not to kill us in the coming year is a form of religious cognitive dissonance. Avinu Malkeinu, Our father our King, have mercy on us. The notion of fear of God, terror, almost feels as if we are held hostage. In Hebrew, the words awe and fear have the same root. In our time of religious fanaticism and terrorism, the liturgy to me can sometimes feel like part of the problem rather than the solution. As a rabbi, it is not my hope to resolve that conflict. I m Reform on purpose, and that tension is exactly where Reform Judaism lives, between faith and skepticism, between critical scholarship and love of Torah, between an embrace of tribe and a fear of tribalism. I believe that the truth of modern life, and modern Judaism, lies in a profound awareness of this tension, of this paradox, and a commitment to live deliberately, purposefully, and joyful in the sacred space of complexity, in which truth can t be reduced to an either/or choice. Avinu Malkeinu. Our father our king. And some how changing it to Imeinu Malkateinu, Our mother our queen, though it helps some, it doesn t really fix the problem. So here we are. So as that boy made so clear, some of the reasons we rub against some of the imagery of this liturgy are obvious and reasonable, I suspect there are some much deeper layers of why, in this culture at this time, this liturgy challenges us spiritually.

We live in a time in America, where the value of self-esteem and self-care is widely celebrated, taught, worked into advertisements, and sold as billions of dollars worth of profit. We are told to give up the guilt, to set boundaries, to affirm ourselves regularly, and to see those who challenge us as haters and negativity in our lives. We all live in Oprah s world now. Or as RuPaul says at the end of every episode of Drag Race, If you can t love yourself, how the hell you gonna love somebody else? Indeed, learning to love ourselves and to realize we are lovable is one of the great spiritual tasks each of us has, and it is a life s work. We are all created in the image of the Divine, and our tradition teaches that we are good by nature, and given the minds and hearts to know good from evil, and the free will to do our best to act to increase the good. That is at the heart of Judaism. We are also told to love the neighbor and the stranger as ourselves, which when you think about it clearly means that first we have to love ourselves. It is quite beautiful that in the commandment to love others is the commandment to love ourselves. But here again is another paradox: Loving ourselves means being honest with ourselves. It means taking a hard look in the mirror and confronting our failures and still loving ourselves. Just as when we truly love someone else, we do so knowing their flaws, their failures, their self-delusions, and somehow the intimacy only makes us love them more deeply. The problem is, I m not sure we can do that when we live in a culture that continuously reinforces how great we are. I m not sure a culture of gold stars for everyone and relentless affirmation helps us learn to love ourselves. I fear it does the opposite, we fear we are loved for the person they see, not who we really are. And this is only made worse by the current push for constant self-presentation and narrative. Whether you are on Facebook, or Instagram, or Snapchat, we are forever taking pictures of ourselves to create a narrative with our friends of how well we are doing, how smart we are, how connected we are, how witty we are, how erudite we are, that we read the right books, and go to the right movies, and like the right music, we want to tell ourselves by telling others that we are great people and that our lives are a success.

In some ways, though we are free people, with free will, in a nation that despite it current impulse, still offers us tremendous freedoms and privileges in some ways we are held hostage. We are held hostage by our desire to see our lives and ourselves as good; we are held hostage by the narrative we want for our lives; we are held hostage by our egos. Avinu Malkeinu, we have believed our own story. The recent reign of narcissism in the nation, one that in many ways is just the predictable extension of what was already a culture rather fixated on celebrity and online monologues. We also live in a time where there is a great deal of passionate certainty in the world. There seems to be a lot of certainty about who is right and who is wrong in the world, and a tendency to divide the world up into two teams: us and them. That sort of certainty, and I am full of it, is also a form of hubris. But teaching college ethics to people from a wide range of backgrounds has shown me just how much ethics lies in the grey area, the difficult balancing of competing goods, and competing wrongs. Indeed, our tradition is one that deeply explores the grey area. The Talmud, the great work of Jewish legal thinking written in Babylon and the Galillee in the 4 th and 5 th centuries CE, is one that will go back and forth for pages about a small point of ethics or law, considering it from every conceivable angle, arguing across generations, and often coming to very complex answers that recognize the tensions between competing needs and goods. One of the reasons I am so proud to be Jewish is that our tradition thinks about the world in complex ways, and recognizes the some things are just beyond our ability to comprehend or control. Avinu Malkeinu, have compassion on us and on our families. The Hasidic Master Simchah Bunam taught: Each person should carry in his or her pockets two notes. One should read, the world was created for me. The other should read, I am but dust and ashes.

Judaism teaches us two seemingly contradictory lessons: we are beloved of God and created in the image of the Divine, AND we are stubborn, flawed, ingrates that should feel bad about how much we betray our potential. The High Holy Day liturgy, the Avinu Malkeinu, pushes us to explore both. We are both holy, and we are insignificant. We are both the masters of our world, and powerless in the face of so much. Rosh Hashanah is both the birthday of the world, the celebration of the goodness of creation, including humans, and our abilities to be miraculous good and it is the beginning of the days of awe, a time of remembering that we are small and insignificant in the great scheme of things. To quote the Jewish singer, Dan Nichols, We re perfect the way we are, and a little broken, too. Avinu Malkeinu, renew us for a year of Goodness. So on Rosh Hashanah, we both celebrate the light that is in each of us. The spark of the divine that glows in each person. That is why we should love ourselves, and love others. Because we are all human. And we also acknowledge that we are small and while we sometimes think we control the world, we can t even seem to control our own actions and egos. And we acknowledge that there are things we want, that we need and while asking for them, we know, doesn t mean we will get them, unless we learn to give voice and words to what it is we hope for in our most honest and vulnerable moments, we can t make clear choices to help us realize them. And Judaism stresses both our individual and collective responsibility and hopes. Avinu Malkeinu, halt the reign of those who cause pain and terror. AVinu Malkeinu, help me be more kind with my words. So now, on this our First Rosh HaShanah together, I want to ask you to take a moment, maybe close your eyes and take a deep breath, and ask yourself, in this sacred space and at this sacred time, what it is you want to say in your own personal Avinu Malkeinu. What do you want to ask for your growth, your family, your own growth, our community, our nation, the world? What do you want help

to accomplish in the New Year? Where do you need growth and renewal? And try to worry so much about getting an A, and instead try to let yourself be vulnerable enough to ask a Higher Power. If you aren t religious, think of it as asking the Universe, or putting out your intentions. I m going to ask some of you to share yours out loud in a moment, so I am hoping some of you will come up with Avinu Malkeinu prayers that aren t so personal you can t share them safely. Avinu Malkeinu,. Avinu Malkeinu, enter our names in the Book of Life for a Blessing. (Sing: Avinu Malkeinu Avinu Malkeinu.)