Believing In
Miracles
The many stories
related to Hanukkah actually recount two different miracles--one supernatural,
the other "natural".
By Noam Zion
Reprinted with permission from A
Different Light: The Big Book of Hanukkah published by the Shalom
Hartman Institute and Devora Publishing.
The Rabbis speak of two different kinds of miracles that the
menorah proclaims. We must decide whether to believe in and propagate either.
The Miracle of the Oil
The miracle recalled in the Talmud speaks of a cruse of oil
that burned for eight days instead of one. That is a supernatural miracle
violating the laws of nature. Taken literally, it promotes a belief in
supernatural intervention. It may even denigrate human effort. Perhaps that
kind of belief explains why Lubavitch Hasidim refused to wear gas masks during
the Iraqi missile attacks on Israel in 1991 when chemical warheads were feared.
However, David Hartman argues that the miracle of oil is
only a symbol that arouses human faith. When human beings are willing to
believe that more is possible than meets the eye, then they will invest in
historical projects like the Maccabean Revolt and the Declaration of the
Independence of Israel in 1948 even against all odds. Our presupposition that a
cruse of oil cannot burn for eight days, that it is a natural impossibility, is
only a symbol of the mistaken belief in the historical impossibility of change.
The Miracles of the Few Against the Many
Even if we cannot embrace the miracle of the cruse of oil,
the Rabbis offered a different kind of miracle to celebrate. The Rabbinic
prayer for Hanukkah, Al Hanisim, ignores the miracle of the oil and
speaks of a general phenomenon possible in every generation whereby God helps
human beings to bring about miraculous rescues from historical oppressors. This
belief in God's miracles does not undermine human effort but causes it to
redouble. The miracle is "natural" within the realm of historical
possibility, yet inconceivable and
unattainable by oppressed peoples who don't believe in its possibility.
In the Exodus from
Egypt, God initiates the miracles for a passive, despairing people of slaves.
However, on Hanukkah, first the martyrs like Hannah and then the zealots and
the warriors initiate the redemptive process. In a world where God seems
eclipsed, where there are no supernatural signs and no prophets, where the
leading priests accepted Hellenism as a boon, the Maccabees bear witness to
another dimension. They evaluate the world differently and they believe in a
Divine power whose hidden will becomes manifest. The Rabbis celebrated the
political and military manifestation of God's miracle in the Maccabees'
victory.
Personally, I prefer
the miracle of the few against the many. I need to reject the miraculous long-burning
cruse of oil lest I be understood as an anti-rationalist or passive Jew. But
perhaps beyond my polemic against the childish legend, I need to mature and to
reinterpret both kinds of miracles as opening me up to other dimensions, to
possibilities in myself and in
my world that I have too quickly foreclosed. Believing in miracles is
another way of learning to keep my options open and letting myself be surprised.
Noam Zion is the Director of Shalom Hartman Institute's
Resource Center for Jewish Continuity. He specializes in teaching Jewish
holidays, bible and art, and has edited several educational books for the
Shalom Hartman Institute.