Excerpted from a sermon I gave a couple of years ago:
Once a student of the Ba’al Shem Tov decided he was going to
play a trick on his teacher. He caught a butterfly in his hands, cupped them
very carefully together so the butterfly was hidden, and brought it to his
teacher. He asked the BESHT, is the butterfly in my hands alive or dead? If his
teacher said alive, he would kill it. if he said dead, he would release the
butterfly into the air. So how did the ba’al shem tov respond to schrodinger’s
butterfly? He looked at his student and said, “whether it’s alive or dead is
entirely in your hands.”
We live in a society with an ever-shorter attention span
that seeks to minimize the actual import and impact of our actions. The High
Holiday liturgy, especially unetaneh tokeph, takes us and our choices
seriously. They remind us that what we do has cosmic significance. And in a
world where everyone is trying to sell you something, to coddle you and fawn
over you, to be disturbed and challenged is a luxury. Again, to quote [Larry] Hoffman:
prayer is not supposed to satisfy us.
It is intended to get us in touch with centuries past, minds that are not our
own, and attitudes that we may find difficult, but that should not on that
account be trashed as if they must obviously be less cogent than what we,
nowadays, take for granted.
Unetaneh
tokeph challenges us. As we read of God opening the book of our lives, we open
that book as well, and recount all the events of the past year we’ve signed off
on. As we read the various ways people die, we’re reminded of our mortality, a
fact we flee constantly, afraid to acknowledge
the truth that all of us are afforded limited time. And as we read of
how prayer, repentance and charity soften the harshness of the decree, we are
reminded that, to quote Rabbi Soloveitchik, “one’s mission in this world is to
turn fate into destiny.” None of these things take away our mortality; we are
finite, a dream soon forgotten, but this prayer and those like it show us that
frailty and humility are not sources of weakness or failure, but of wisdom and
strength. And that while we may experience loss, and pain, and bitterness, we
can take comfort in a strong community of worship, find love though acts of forgiveness
and repentance, and remove bitterness from our lives and the lives of others
through the charity of our hands. Or, to quote someone far wiser than me: we are moral creatures, we are vulnerable
creatures. Vulnerability wins. This is the realest thing anyone anyone will
tell us in ritual.
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