Choose We Rabbi Dusty Klass Temple Beth El, Charlotte NC Yom Kippur 5779

Similar documents
Yom Kippur Morning 5778 The Blessings of Belonging Rabbi Karen S. Citrin

Storm Survivors! Jonah 1:1-16 July 2, 2017

Dad, please don t do anything rash. I m going to take the first flight to Chicago. Promise me that you won t do anything until I get there.

Chumash Themes. Class #11. by Rabbi Zave Rudman. Jews go through on dry land, while the Egyptians drown. Exodus 14:1 15: JewishPathways.

Judaism is a religion based on principles and ethics found in religious texts of the Jewish people.

YK-KOL NIDREI-5774 (2013): Tzedakah: Justice, Righteousness, & Communal Responsibility Rabbi Lisa S. Malik Temple Beth Ahm-Aberdeen, NJ

Temple Beth El Religious School Parent Handbook

sing Bar chu and Mi Chamocha to the same tune to which we sing Lshana tovah tikateivu.

God s Face in the Clouds Parsha Nitsavim Deuteronomy 29:10-30:20

For great is your love, reaching to the heavens; your faithfulness reaches to the skies. Jesus Is God, Part II. March 24, 2019

Being our Best Selves: A Vision for SAJ for 5777 and Beyond Rabbi Lauren Grabelle Herrmann, Rosh HaShanah Shana Tova!

Al Tifrosh Min HaTzibor - Not turning our back on TBS

Plan B. Church of the Palms. Sunday, September 10, 2006 The Rev. Graham Hart, General Presbyter Peace River Presbytery

ARE YOU AWAKE? December 1, 2013 Matthew 24: Adam D. Gorman, The Brick Presbyterian Church in the City of New York

Celebrating the High Holy Days at Temple Beth Shalom Rosh Hashanah September 20-22, 2017 Yom Kippur September 29-30, 2017

GRACE CHAPEL Student Ministry Volunteer Packet

Developing Excellence in Care

There s Always Enough Providence United Methodist Church Message by DD Adams July 26, 2015

Judaism is a Marriage to G d. Yom Kippur is our anniversary of our marriage with G d (Midrash)

ONE MONTH TO LIVE SERMON. Yom Kippur had been married for ten years but had not had any children.

Calabash. Gus Edwards SWIMMING AND DIVING

Temple Beth Torah Sha aray Tzedek. Hebrew School. Parents manual

I wrote at the top of the page it s been quite a week.

What will be the impact of your time on this planet?

A Church of the Broken Beloved Sunday, January 13, 2019 Isaiah 43: 1-3 Luke 3: 15-17, 21-22

B nei Mitzvah. transmitting. The. Program. between generations, Timeline. ...The child stands. inheriting from the one and. to the other...

Rabbi Richard Agler September 30, 2017 Keys Jewish Community Center 10 Tishrei, 5778

A Life of Joyful Thanks and Praise. Meditation on Luke 17: Oct. 9, Merritt Island Presbyterian Church

Letting Go- Releasing to the Eyn Sof Rabbi Micah Becker-Klein Rosh Hashanah Day / 2015

Practicing Resurrection SWWAUC Annual Meeting. Matthew

Fifth to Fiftieth: The Lessons of the Jubilee

I N TO. ef r e m sm i th. G e t r e a d y t o j u m p.

Moses, Water, and Reflections Shabbat Vaera /5/19 Rabbi Alex Freedman

Using PJ Library Books to Explore the Jewish Concept of Love June 2, 2015

#Sermon Series: The New Normal Failing Faithfully Matthew 14:22-33

Type 9 - Waking Up to God's Peace

Lesson Book: The Sabbath How to Keep it Holy

Religious School Curriculum

How to Neighbor Part 3: Taking the Great Commandment Seriously 1

Lesson Book: The Sabbath How to Keep it Holy

John 20: Here we are-and we can tell this Sunday s a little different from last week.

Not Knowing What To Ask For Yizkor 5770 (2009) R. Yonatan Cohen, Congregation Beth Israel

Prodigal Son Luke, the gospel-writer, introduces the parable of the Prodigal Son, along with several

The Value of Life Magen David Adom Saving Lives in Israel for High School Lesson Planner

A Good Stain Randal Stephens

The 13 Mitzvot Temple Sinai

TEMPLE BETH AM TUTORS (as of )

Atem N tzavim: We are all standing together. A challenge to build new relationships in the New Year.

Too Many T.E.D.s, Crooked Politicians, and Shrimp: The Barriers to Empowerment. Gail McWilliams

Cloud GPPC Psalm 8, Romans 8:18-25, Hebrews 12:1-2. This Sunday, as the saying goes, we re nurturing two birds with

It is only by Beelzebub, the Prince of Demons, That This Fellow Drives Out Demons

Sermon delivered on Yom Kippur 5777, October 11th, 2016, at Temple Israel of Boston

OUR NEED FOR PEACE SESSION 5. The Point. The Passage. The Bible Meets Life. The Setting

The Mission Statement January 27, 2019 [Scripture Focus: Luke 4: 14-21]

Yamim Noraim (Days of Awe) 5779

SEJ Committee on Episcopacy Questions for Episcopal Nominee-2016 Leonard Fairley-North Carolina

Reach in. Reach up. Reach out. SHABBAT WITH LEO BAECK TEMPLE

> PRAY for Pastor Brandon, the upcoming class time, your teaching, your class members, and their receptivity to the lesson.

Discovery Bible Study Discovering God

BACKGROUND. Hillel. What does it mean to be whole?

The Japanese skill copied by the world

1. The Israelites were unfaithful to God by marrying non-believers (11-12)

Resilience of the Heart: From Transition to Transformation. Talk given to the UK Transition Conference, London May 2009

High Holiday Speech 5774

Do I Have To Believe In God To Be A Good Jew? Once upon a time, there was a great rabbinic sage who

Our Lenten Creed February 22, 2015 Mark 12:28-31

We already learned from Mickey's dvar Torah that this parsha is all. about are a metaphor. God is trying to scare the people so that they

Christ Presbyterian Church Edina, Minnesota February 25 & 26, 2012 John Crosby Spiritual Disciplines: Solitude Luke 5:15-17

The Child and Youth Protection Policy requires a minimum of two adults for every interaction with young people.

Yom Kippur 2017 Rabbi Chai Levy Three Principles of Faith for Turbulent Times

Thank you, but no thank you, the minister replied God will save me. Thank you, but no thank you, the minister replied.god will save me.

3 rd -6 th. The Israelites Forget God s Promises Exodus 32:1-14. Lesson #3-5. Sunday, October 9, 2016

In Between Dreams by Jesse McDaniel

secrets to serenity from the cultures of the world MELBOURNE LONDON OAKLAND

"A CENSUS THAT MAKES SENSE" There is a disturbing idea apparently suggested by a verse

Student Prayer Guide For Alef Tefillot

YOU CAN T TREIF A TORAH, OR A SOUL

3330 Grove Avenue Richmond, Virginia

Florida diocese moving from prayer to action in wake of Hurricane Michael

Judaism. By: Maddie, Ben, and Kate

Echad: We are One Rosh Hashanah Morning 2015 / 5776 One of our most beloved and well-known prayers is this one, a quote from the book of Deuteronomy,

Prodigal Son Luke, the gospel-writer, introduces the parable of the Prodigal Son, along with several

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

PARASHAT EMOR 5774 THE MODERN ROLE OF THE KOHANIM

Spirit Fruit: Peace. The Alien and the Borowskis POWER DEVOTIONAL 6

they lived under kings, kings with a lot of power: a king was the most powerful image they could think of.

Kushner, Harold S. Living a Life that Matters. Anchor Books. New York Page 40.

Providence, Rhode Island

Missions Position Paper

Hurricane Season Mark 4:35-41

After months and months of waiting, Monday night marks the end of a very important

A Life of Meaning and Purpose Rabbi David B. Thomas Yom Kippur Morning 5776 September 23, 2015 Congregation Beth El of the Sudbury River Valley

Along my journey to the edge of civilization however I was reminded of the uncivilized means by which the airline industry makes a profit.

The Difference Between a Church and a Messianic Synagogue

Surrogate Motherhood in Judaism

Rabbi Sidney M. Helbraun Temple Beth-El Northbrook, Illinois September 18, Kol Nidre 5779 The Struggle

First Presbyterian Church of Kissimmee, Florida Dr. Frank Allen, Pastor 3/30/08

BIBLE RADIO PRODUCTIONS INC.

Sermons from The Church of the Covenant

Listening For the Still, Small Voice

Transcription:

Choose We Rabbi Dusty Klass Temple Beth El, Charlotte NC Yom Kippur 5779 With gratitude to Rabbi Leah Citrin for walking through this writing process with me every year, and to Rabbis Miriam Farber Wajnberg, Asher Knight, and Jay LeVine, Cantor Mary Thomas, and Jeff Trost for letting me think out loud with them. Something was wrong with Gus. The 700-lb polar bear at the Central Park Zoo had begun to spend most of his waking hours swimming an endless series of short laps, the equivalent of pacing back and forth in his cage. He had all the fish he could want, and his cage was set up to simulate his natural habitat, but clearly, all was not well. The zookeepers brought in an expert, animal behaviorist Tim Desmond, who concluded that Gus was - stressed out. Columbia University professor Sheena Iyengar explains that zoo animals experience perpetual anxiety, because they don t actually know that they are safe. They can smell their predators in the next cage over, they are unable to migrate as the seasons change, and even though they receive food regularly, day in and day out, there is no real guarantee that it will continue to miraculously appear. They are living in perpetual fight-or-flight mode, with nowhere to fly and nothing to fight. Desmond s conclusion to Gus s anxiety? He needs more challenges. Gus wants to feel as if he still has the ability to choose where he spends his time and how - he needs to reassume control of his own destiny. 1 This is true of people, as well. The Whitehall Studies explored the health of employees of varying ages, pay grades and job environments over time. The researchers determined that, the less control people had over their work, the higher their blood pressure during work hours...what affected people most in these studies wasn t the actual level of control people had in their jobs, but the amount of control they perceived themselves as having. 2 Agency is not just about having choices, it is about feeling empowered to make choices. This past week as Hurricane Florence crept closer and closer, changing trajectory over and over, 1 The Art of Choosing, by Sheena Iyengar, p. 13. 2 The Art of Choosing, by Sheena Iyengar, p. 15. 1

slowing down and slowing down and slowing down, I began to feel a bit like Gus the polar bear; pacing back and forth between Yom Kippur preparations and weather reports - Category 4...3...2. Not going to hit Charlotte, barely going to hit Charlotte, 5-9 inches of rain in Charlotte, going from contingency planning meetings to responding to texts from concerned family and friends - Yes, I have water. No I don t need you to come get me. Yes, I did find gas. Impending hurricanes have a great way of reminding us just how little control we actually have. To a certain extent, we are all polar bears pacing back and forth in the metaphorical cages we have built for ourselves. But unlike Gus, we do not live in actual cages. As Professor Iyengar notes, we have the ability to create choice by altering our interpretations of the world - a small change in our actions, such as speaking or thinking in a way that highlights our agency, can have a big effect on our mental and physical state. However, once we recognize our agency, we must take another set of challenges into account. When we choose, are we choosing for ourselves? Or are we choosing with others in mind? In Nitzavim, the torah portion Caleb, Brooke, Rebecca, Ben and Ms. Montoni just chanted beautifully, we read: "I have put before you life and death, blessing and curse. Uvacharta bachayim - Choose life - if you and your offspring would live..." 3 Rabbi Eliezer Davidovits asks the obvious question: What kind of choice is that? Wouldn t most everyone prefer life to death, blessing over curse? Here is Rabbi Davidovitz s insight: There are two ways to "choose life." The first way is the "me" way. If we want, we can choose to think of ourselves first. We can worry about our needs and our desires and our wishes, and only later consider the needs, desires, and wishes of others. But there is another way to "choose life," another way to live our lives. This is the "we" way. Before we act, before we decide, before we speak, we can choose to think about how our actions, decisions, and words will affect others. We can think about how our behavior will affect future generations, including our own children and grandchildren. 4 In her book The Art of Choosing, Professor Iyengar notes that most societies in the world fall into one of two categories: individualist or collectivist. American society falls into the individualist category: we are taught, in this country, to be motivated by [our] own preferences, needs, rights, and the contracts [we] have established with 3 Deuteronomy 30:19 4 Nitzavim: Life and Death Davar Achar, by Rabbi Josh D. Zweiback https://reformjudaism.org/nitzavimmitzvah-choosing 2

others. 5 If I want to move up in the world, if I want to find true success, I must make the choice that is best for me, over and above what might be best for the people around me. America promotes the me mentality. On the other hand, most religious traditions, especially Judaism, promote a we mentality. In contrast to individualist societies, collectivist societies see themselves primarily in terms of the groups to which they belong, and are willing to give priority to the goals of those collectives over their own personal goals. 6 Jewish text teaches us: kol yisrael aravim zeh lazeh - all of Israel is responsible for each other. 7 We have very little control over the things that affect us. The moment in which you meet your beshert, the speed at which cancer spreads through a body, the way in which the person next to you on Providence Road is driving his car, the danger level of an impending storm. When we focus solely on our lack of control, we run the risk of building ourselves cages of despair and anxiety. But when we instead focus on that which we can control: our response, our attitude, our next step... when we exercise our agency, we are empowered to live actively rather than passively, to choose life, rather than to have life choose us. But we must take that charge one step further, because we are all aravim zeh lazeh we are all responsible for each other. And so we must do more than choose life - We must choose we, and not just me. There is much to be said about the importance of donning one s own oxygen mask first, and there is a fine line between caring for our needs and caring for the needs of others. Two years ago I spoke about what it means to forgive ourselves, to take care of ourselves. I believe deeply that we cannot care for others unless we are healthy ourselves. But I worry sometimes that the power of the collective is being drowned out by the desires of the individual. I worry that sometimes, we are letting me outweigh we. We are failing to see the ways in which the individual choices we make, over and above the needs of the collective, can be dangerous not only for others, but in fact for ourselves as well. Perhaps you ve heard the midrash of the man in a boat who begins to drill a hole under his seat. His fellow passengers protest: Sir, what exactly do you think you re doing? 5 The Art of Choosing, p. 31. 6 The Art of Choosing, p. 32. 7 Talmud Bavli, Sanhedrin 27b 3

What concern is it to you? He responds. I am making a hole under my seat, not yours. They reply, That may be so, but when the water enters and the boat sinks, we re all going down together! 8 It is one thing to put on your own oxygen mask first. It is quite another to act on your own interests in a way that does damage to the collective. We must work to choose with we in mind, And act in ways that acknowledge our collective responsibility. Who do you see as being in your boat? Who s destiny is bound up with yours? 9 Let s start small: Our families - both biological and chosen - are on board. The choices we make - about which job we take, and where we live, and how we choose to spend our days - those choices affect our partners, our children, our parents, and our friends. But we interact with additional people every day - and so our neighbors are on board, too. When we choose to build fences or take down trees or add a second story on the house, those changes affect more than just our property. Our Temple Beth El community is on board. When people serve on committees, or greet people as they walk into the sanctuary on Friday nights, or write a note to a fellow congregant whose loved one has just died, or make sacred gifts, our contributions affect the way our fellow congregants here at TBE feel supported and welcomed. And the concentric circles keep growing: Our kid s school communities, the people we work with, the other voters in our precincts - we are all on board together. Our actions ripple outward, and the choices we make, every single day, affect those around us, regardless of whether we want them to, or not. We see this best in moments of tragedy and disaster: in the choice to close Charlotte-Mecklenburg schools in order to house some of the over one million folks who were evacuated from their homes along the Carolina coast. We see this in the willingness of Covenant Presbyterian and Myers Park Presbyterian AND Forest Hills Church to be on call to host us for Yom Kippur this year. These churches had all the reasons to choose me over we - to be willing to host 1200 human beings, at the last minute is an astronomical undertaking, a massive logistical commitment. And it s not like they don t have their 8 Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai, Leviticus Rabbah 4:6 9 Inspired by activist Lilla Watson s statement: If you have come here to help me, you are wasting your time. But if you have come because your liberation is bound up with mine, then let us work together. 4

own full calendars. But they all said yes - if it comes to it, please use our space. You are welcome and it would be our honor. And I am confident we would do the same. We know how well we come together in crisis - I have seen it over and over again. I wonder, however, what it would look like for us to take each other into account when the waters are calm, when there is no hurricane looming, when we are not in imminent danger. When we choose we, all people feel responsible for all children. From sharing carpool responsibilities, to showing up for friend s dance recitals, to checking all of the ingredients on the snack packet, even if your kid doesn t have any allergies, choosing we means all children are ours, not theirs. When we choose we, people know that their presence and absence matters. Whether it s checking in on the regular who didn t show up for her usual coffee this morning, or texting the guy who usually comes to the J to swim every day at 2pm, or calling the couple that almost always sits in the second to last row, aisle side, every Friday evening, choosing we means every person feels seen. When we choose we, we are all accountable. Not only do we make healthy eating choices and actually show up for 6am yoga, we also ensure that every shiva minyan is full whether we knew the person or their family - or not. Choosing we invites everyone to be everyone else s accountability partner. When we choose we, humanity protects the planet. In a we world, Gus and his fellow polar bears wouldn t have to worry about melting ice caps and rising sea levels. Choosing we means caring for the whole world, not just our piece of it. Before we are told to choose life or death, blessing or curse, we are told to assemble: Atem nitzavim hayom, kulchem - you stand here this day, all of you - men, women, children. Members of the tribe and those who have sojourned with you. Tribal leaders and those who chop wood. We are not instructed to choose life until we are all there to hear God s words. Because choosing life is about choosing not just me, but we. It is only together that we can truly choose life. As we move into this new year, Anachnu nitzavim hayom - we stand today. May we do so together, and may we choose we - uvacharta bachayyim, may we choose life. 5