Spiritual
Rehabilitation
The life and death imagery of Rosh Hashanah is meant to spur people to
improve their behavior.
By Rabbi Nina Beth Cardin
Reprinted with permission from The Tapestry of Jewish
Time: A Spiritual Guide to Holidays and Lifecycle Events (Behrman House).
One grand lesson of Rosh Hashanah
is not that we have to be perfect, but that we are, and can continue to be,
very good. It is sufficient if we strive to achieve our potential. It is only
when we fail to be the fullness of who we are that we are held accountable.
Rabbi Zusya said, "In the world to come, they will not
ask me, 'Why were you not Moses?' They will ask me, 'Why were you not
Zusya?'"
The language of our prayers imagines God as judge and king,
sitting in the divine court on the divine throne of justice, reviewing our
deeds. On a table before God lies a large book with many pages, as many pages
as there are people in the world. Each of us has a page dedicated just to us.
Written on that page, by our own hand, in our own writing, are all the things
we have done during the past year. God considers those things, weighs the good
against the bad, and then, as the prayers declare, decides "who shall live
and who shall die."
In order to make sense out of the
conundrum of life and death, many Jews of old came to believe that death is a
punishment for our sins. Others came to believe that death not only
punishes--for what value lies therein?--but also atones for our wrongdoings.
After the atonement, we greet the afterlife pure and cleansed, ready to enter
the garden of Eden, paradise.
This theology of punishment and atonement held sway for
centuries and is preserved in much of our liturgy. It is easy to understand
why, for that belief brings order and meaning to the world. People find it
preferable to believe that we are responsible for own suffering than to imagine
that suffering is random and meaningless. It is tempting to choose a world of
guilt and punishment over a world of capriciousness, in which there is no
apparent moral relationship between our actions and our suffering or our
rewards.
Nonetheless, while classic rabbinic theology promotes belief
in sin and punishment, it takes every opportunity to soften that belief. The
best punishment is the one that is averted. That is, the goal of the theology
of retribution is not to punish but to redirect. "I set before you life
and death," God says in the Torah, "therefore choose life"
(Deuteronomy 30:19). That is why, according to the rabbis, the rules of God's
court are different from those of a worldly court. In a worldly court, the task
is to discover the facts of the case and mete out justice. In God's court, the
task is to explore the goodness that dwells inside each person, and to help it
grow
Rabbi Nina Beth Cardin is the director of Jewish Life at
the Jewish Community Center of Greater Baltimore and is the chair of the
editorial committee of Sh'ma: A Journal of
Jewish Responsibility.
© Behrman House Inc., reprinted with permission. http://www.behrmanhouse.com/