Gratitude (A Sermon for the High Holy Days, 2015) By Haskel Lookstein

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God Owes Me Nothing Gratitude (A Sermon for the High Holy Days, 2015) By Haskel Lookstein These words did not originate with me. unfinished autobiography. They form the title of my father s It was to be an ode of gratitude for the blessings in his life: his family, this congregation, Ramaz the school and its namesake (the Ramaz) and other aspects of his life. I am not contemplating writing a similar work, but the confluence of returning home to our shul, completing the total renovation of the synagogue house/ramaz Lower School building and the recent election of Rabbi Steinmetz by KJ and the arrival of Rabbi Grossman as Head of School at Ramaz, all inspire me to think about the central theme of my father s unfinished book gratitude, or thanksgiving. In Hebrew: Todah or Hoda ah. It s a big subject, but our time is limited and since I want to earn your gratitude I will discuss only three aspects of gratitude and close with one moral principle. First: There is no todah without dayeinu. One does not feel grateful until one feels satisfied. The paradigmatic example of this is the Biblical Matriarch, Leah, the unappreciated and unloved wife. God blessed her with four sons. She named the first: Reuvain, saying: כי ראה ה' בעניי כי עתה יאהבני אישי For God has seen my affliction; maybe now my husband will love me. The second: Shim on, saying: כי שמע ה' כי שנואה אנכי For God has heard that I am despised. The third: Levi, because ילוה לי אישי כי ילדתי לו שלשה בנים.הפעם Maybe this time my husband will accompany me because I bore him three sons. The fourth: Judah, saying הפעם אודה את ה' This time I will thank God. babies. and she stopped having מלדת ותעמד After the first three births, Leah only wanted or needed more and, therefore, she never thanked God. By the fourth, she was satisfied. She had had enough. And so, she made a b racha: Ha-tov v ha-meitiv. She thanked God. And stopped giving birth. First: Dayeinu; then Todah! 1

This is the theme and perhaps the fundamental message of Shabbat. There is no Shabbat without Dayeinu. Otherwise we would just keep on working and doing and striving and competing. Rabbi Lookstein: I just love Shabbos, a highly industrious and accomplished convert said to me once. I disconnect from my cell phone, computer, beeper and everything and I am exclusively with my husband and children. I just love Shabbos. She gets it! Unknowingly, she expressed the first verse of the psalm for מזמור שיר ליום השבת טוב להודות לה'... Shabbat: A Psalm for the Sabbath day; It is good to thank God That feeling of gratitude comes from a feeling of בחלקו,שמח we are happy with what we have. On the Sabbath we feel like we have no needs. We do not ask God in our prayers for any of our needs because we feel satisfied. Our sages call the Sabbath a taste of the world to come מעין עולם הבא a world in which we have no needs. So, our first aspect of gratitude is that it is a result of our learning to be have. happy with what we שמח בחלקו If we can say Dayeinu we will say todah Ah! But saying it and feeling it is hard. Dayeinu runs somewhat counter to human nature. Contentment is not natural to us. We always want more, no matter how much we have so how can we ever be grateful? We tend to compare ourselves to others who have more than we have: possessions, family, health, happiness. Often such comparisons are inaccurate. Most people have bundles of problems and difficulties greater than ours. How does the saying go: if I entered a room where everyone had deposited his or her pecklach I would probably be happy taking my own peckle and leaving. Or as Dennis Prager once put it: I walk around amazed at my good fortune. Given how much unjust suffering and unhappiness there are in this world, I am deeply grateful for how much misery I have been spared. (Happiness Is a Serious Problem P.11-12) Here is a Prager example from the real world. About twenty years ago, the following scene took place in our shul. An elderly man fainted during Musaf. Hatzolah came and went through their routine, ultimately placing him on a stretcher, as Chazzan Davis nervously completed the Musaf Shemoneh Esreh in record time. As the women were filing out of the balcony, one of them asked Mrs. Esther Eisenstat; How are you? Mrs. Eisenstat, then in her eighties,who had been widowed when her two sons were young boys and who had, arguably, a very difficult life and, in her older years, was stooped and bowed from osteoporosis, but who had the 2

greatest disposition and sense of humor (which her son, Sandy, thinks he inherited), looked at the man being wheeled out and responded to her questioner: How am I? Compared to him, I m great! What an attitude! How much are we prepared to pay a surgeon to replace our arthritic hip or knee or repair a detached retina? How much then should we thank God for all our body parts that work just fine? Says the author of ישרים.מסילת A person is alive? He/she must thank God? A person is healthy? Certainly thank God. Sick? He should also be grateful because, miraculously, he is dealing with it. Rich? Certainly thank God. Poor? Also thank God because, despite his poverty, he is somehow surviving. We need to focus on what we have that is good, and not on what we lack and what is bad. And then, thinking positively, and comparing ourselves with others who have far less, be grateful. The Halakha helps to ingrain within us the feeling of Dayeinu and gratitude. That is what Benchin is all about ואכלת ושבעת וברכת When you eat, and you are satisfied (i.e. Dayeinu), say thank you to God. The festivals are all about gratitude to God for how far we have come. Think of Sukkot (as the Rambam explains in the Guide to the Perplexed, Book III). In the aftermath of the harvest, remember how we once sat in booths in the desert. We must not allow ourselves to think that our success is all ours. We came from very humble beginnings, and we must thank God for how far we have come. Gratitude, says Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, also lies behind a fascinating feature of the Amidah. When the leader of prayer repeats the Amidah aloud, we are silent other than for the responses of Kedushah, and saying Amen after each blessing, with one exception. When the leader says the words Modim anachnu lakh, We give thanks to You, the congregation says a parallel passage known as Modim de-rabbanan. For every other blessing of the Amidah, it is sufficient to assent to the words of the leader by saying Amen. The one exception is Modim, We give thanks. Rabbi Elijah Spira (1660-1712) in his work Eliyahu Rabbah, explains that when it comes to saying thank you, we cannot delegate this to someone else to do in our behalf. Thanks has to come directly from us. Jewish prayer is a daily seminar in gratitude for all that we have. We tend not to be grateful for what we have. We take what we have for granted and assume it will always be there. But it s not always there. 3

Recently, I visited someone in the hospital who endured a siege of medical problems and, thank God, recovered. Part of the recovery period required a catheter. When I visited him after its removal he said: Rabbi Lookstein: I don t think I will ever again fail to say Asher yatzar (the bracha we recite after the elimination of bodily waste). Question: Where was he when everything was going normally? Answer: He was human; he was normal; like all of us. We take our health and bodily functions for granted. Says the Halakhah: Do not take any of this for granted. Recite the morning blessings every day with kavanna. Asher Yatzar Gratitude that everything works. E-lohai Neshama Gratitude that I wake up and my mind works. Torah. Torah Blessings Gratitude that I am a Jew and live by the,ברכות התורה sight The blessing of,פוקח עורים Last spring, I was operated on for a partially torn retina. About a week later, I took a flight to Florida with Audrey. As the plane ascended, I noticed the affected eye was getting blurry. By the time we reached the flying altitude, I could not see out of that eye. I was terrified! I didn t say a word to Audrey because I didn t want to terrify her. In my mind, I envisioned blindness in one eye. The two and a-half hour flight seemed endless, but as the plane descended I found that my sight was slowly improving in that eye. Obviously, it had something to do with the pressurized cabin. Once on the ground, I surreptitiously called my eye doctor, Dr. Robert Friedman, and told him what I was experiencing. He calmed me down and suggested that I call him in an hour and tell him how things were. By the time an hour had passed my vision had returned to normal. But I had a new sensitivity to the blessing of sight which we recite every morning. Take nothing for granted. Thank God for everything simply by making blessings. Let us summarize our thoughts so far. 1. There is no gratitude without Dayeinu we must be happy with what God has given us. 2. We cannot feel that satisfaction if we keep focusing on what we do not have or on others who we think have more than we. 3. The Halakhah helps us to internalize the feeling of Dayeinu through Benchin, festivals, modim and daily blessings. Finally, a moral principle that flows from all of this: There can be no gratitude without humility. And expressing gratitude engenders humility. 4

If we think we have everything coming to us we will never be grateful. Why should we be grateful? We are entitled! It s my right! I paid for it! I worked for it! I inherited it! I don t have to be grateful for it neither to God nor to people. Judaism mandates a specific b racha when a person survives serious illness, or a ברוך...הגומל לחייבים טובות שגמלני כל טוב childbirth. life-threatening danger, or Blessed are you, God, King of the Universe, who bestows good on the unworthy and who bestowed good upon me. Question: Why the word unworthy? Answer: Because we should always consider ourselves unworthy and undeserving of all the kindness and blessings that we receive. We should never think of ourselves as entitled to good fortune. For if I am entitled to blessings; if I have expectations of being given something, why should I be grateful? It was coming to me! I deserved it! David Brooks (New York Times July 28, 2015) wrote instructively: Gratitude happens when some kindness exceeds expectations, when it is undeserved הגומל לחיבים טובות God gives blessings to the undeserving or unworthy. (At this point, I donned a METS hat and said:) Those of us who are METS fans understand this intuitively. We know we are entitled to nothing. We have no expectations. If the METS are having an incredible run, we are humbly grateful, because we never felt we were entitled to any of this! Rav Yitzchak Hutner, in his famous work, Pachad Yitzchak, made a fascinating observation. The word מודה has two meanings: I thank, and I confess. Rav Hutner explains that when we thank God, we simultaneously confess and admit our limitations, our vulnerability, our unworthiness, our needs which we cannot fulfill ourselves. Out of that הודאה - confession comes הודאה - gratitude to God or to people because we realize we are entitled to nothing and therefore we are grateful for everything. So, my father s unfinished autobiography also had an unfinished title. God Owes Me Nothing, he wrote, and, Therefore, I Am Grateful for Everything! May this be a year for all of us, of humility and non-entitlement, and may God and our society bestow upon us abundant and unexpected blessings, for which we must be profoundly grateful. 5