False Gods
Jblogs come, and Jblogs go. Some are amusing, others are thought provoking, and a few others are inspiring. A whole lot of Jblogs seem to affiliate with Orthodoxy, the "Torah true" hashkafah (point of view, philosophy), according to their authors. Sometimes they tend to be the loudest, and certainly attract like minds. Then there are the questioners and the seekers, who restlessly swarm the Jblogosphere.
Why do I read? Not to be validated, not to get warm fuzzies, but to help me know where I stand, to know what I stand for. To define my place, unlike others sure of their place. There are more like me, I find - the commentors- than the bloggers.
The people who attract me are questioners- everything is on the table- I admire and love the stark and hard won honesty. Indeed, the writers I find most compelling are those where the author and commentors have lost the "faith". I see a whole lot of engagement in the minutiae of Orthodox Judaism, for example- like Science v Torah.
In that sphere I see the likes of Dovbear whom I consider the Mozart of Jbloggers- who is loyal to Orthodox Judaism, and can argue rationally about things like the belief in G-d- that we are commanded and therefore he believes. I think of Dovbear to some extent as once removed from faith (in G-d)- he has no faith that is experiential, but there is a tradition of Tradition and that is what he cleaves to and has faith in- all that has gone before; he knows his hashkafah is honourable and fits. Dovbear has defined his place vis-à-vis Judaism- he plays on the themes and constraints and freedoms of Orthodox Judaism as his own, and, thus, is always a delight.
Then there is the incisive and honest and hungry intellect that is the Godol Hador. I relate most of all to his clear-eyed questioning of everything, where nothing is sacrosanct. He does it with love. I think he is beyond brave as well. He takes the mesorah (tradition) and turns it inside out, looking for clues. Godol Hador is like this fabulous surgeon who knows where to cut and expose the vulnerabilities needing healing. I fancy him a surgeon with a deep abiding faith in the outcome, and that is why he is The Man, as far as I am concerned.
I also hang on the words of Jewish atheists, Conservative apikorses, rebels and disillusioned ba'alei tshuva and unOrthodox Jews, all who often strike me as the ones who love Judaism and what it means to be Jewish the most intensely- the ones most invested, the ones most disappointed, the ones most burnt, who are the ones willing to express and describe their disappointments in great detail, who dedicated their hearts and souls to Judaism until it let them down, intellectually- or the people who espoused it let them down. These are the ones who possess a forceful and sensitive integrity; in a sense, having gone to the wall, they are liberated, while all the while there is a part of them that grieves for home....
Fact is, all of these bloggers (and others) love Judaism and Jews, beyond compare. And that is why I read them. And I read them for resonance- I'm like a humpback whale, making the song, listening to the echo and the reply. I listen for orientation. And what has come through, over and over again, is this question: we love Judaism, but who loves G-d?
That is the issue with Orthodox Judaism and other streams as well, for us, the rank and file. Way beyond what the gedolim (Torah greats) or "liberal" leaders think or dictate, are those pesky 13 articles of faith established in tradition as a touchstone- by the Rambam (Maimonides), one of the reasons, I could not, in all good conscience, affiliate with Orthodoxy, because I do not accept some of them as written. Similarly, I see post upon post of arguments about science v Torah- people digging through the arguments, wondering, and digging further into uncomfortable and inconvenient dark places.
It makes you think.
How many people would even bother to follow halacha (Jewish law), if the fundamentals are debunked- the universe was not created in 6 days, the Torah is more than a document to be taken literally, how much is due to myth and how much is history- did Moshe write the entire Torah as dictated by G-d? The fundamentals, too, are mesorah. It makes me wonder sometimes: is the mesorah so strong that it has become something to worship in and of itself, something to cling to blindly when you get confused or challenged?
And what about reward and punishment- are we so clear on how to interpret G-d's moves ? Is there that much certainty?
The debates and arguments in the Jblogosphere have shown me that much of faith seems to be based on keeping the myth alive- up till now, it has not really been about G-d, or faith in G-d. It has been about details and about a people. About Chazal and the prominence of Chazal's authority for some. It has been about authority and the tradition of bowing down to that authority, been about those who look past the authority to their own experiences, about those going eyeball to eyeball with "tradition" and finding it rationally, lacking- and so, they reject Judaism. But what they don't address, directly, is the crisis of faith. It is not about all-or-nothing. The main issue is faith.
It really is about G-d, which embarrasses most Jews. It really is about nothing else. It, in truth, is not about having a crisis of Jewish identity, because the mesorah ensures your ethnic identity, even if you don't believe in the soul or in G-d- many Orthoprax individuals make that clear. And so do Jews who are ethnocentric and bigoted.
It is fundamentally a crisis of faith. It is akin to saying, Judaism has let me down, because it misled me about the divinity of the Torah, and I admit that I thought that Judaism is all about Torah.
No, it isn't. I think that Judaism, like all religions, is about G-d.
And Torah is the vehicle, the "blueprint", for Jews, to find their way to, and to connect with G-d. It's that simple. Even if it was not brought down by Moshe, all by himself. It does not invalidate the thought of fellow Jews that came after him. Torah is pure genius but nothing that I am willing to worship, anymore than I am willing to place the Rabbis of the past on a pedestal, though I think that often they were divinely inspired, if that's what you want to call wisdom.
Thanks to thought provoking Jblogs, I realise that I have been privileged to connect with G-d through Judaism. Judaism is my heart and my soul. It is me. Even though I don't think that G-d created the world in 6 days, or that Moshe wrote down all of G-d's thoughts, etc. Even though I don't take the Torah literally. But I have faith, in G-d. So, not Jewish, I am finding.
19 Comments:
I think many, even those who don't often express it on their blogs, think about these things. To me, Judaism is certainly about G-d. I think it's quite a shame that not more people focus on Him and what He wants from us, rather than what other people want from us.
You're right, it IS all about God, or it should be. It is a shame that so many get mired in the minutiae which then deforms the true issue and that is connection TO the Holy. I believe the mitzvot are the true language through which we communicate with God and he with us. The Torah tells us how this is done. And then we find a way which is meaningful to us, which we can understand. To bog down the whole process with useless discussion about a spot of blood on a piece of muslin cloth...I think that is wholly unnecessary and even alienating in the grand scheme of our relationship with God. BUT...perhaps that is the way that individuals who find meaning in that sort of thing connect with the Holy...and who am I to say what is or isn't the best way? It's a shame so many others don't grasp THAT fact.
Judaism is about God, who we view in so many different ways. God can be large, an overwhelming, cosmic figure who seems to invalidate or negate one's existence, and at the same time is the sheperd and father figure, the one who is our Beloved. God has so very many facets in the Torah- He cares for His people and yet He punishes them, He is an angry God and yet a loving God.
Judaism is about, at least to me, questions. Questioning, looking through the lense of our viewpoint and attempting to find answers, or even simply to ask the questions. Judaism is a joy, but it is also hard, hard and unyielding, confusing and grand, a whirl of seeming contradictions...and the beauty that lies within.
Your every entry is a journey. Thanks for your transparency.
"I think that Judaism, like all religions, is about G-d." But also about having God-infused lives, no? As Jews, "incarnating" God in community, both Jewish and non-?
What if Judaism is not about God? What if it is about perfecting humans and society by using God as a template?
-smoo
shoshana- Can't agree with you more. But when people think these things but don't express them? Is it that important to them? Just wondering.
Z- well, of course I agree with you! And I think about some people who study "Torah" all day, and that, indeed, can also be a connection with G-d. Wouldn't it be great if we could list the connections, the possibilities?
chana- thanks for your POV. I think of Judaism as being about connection with G-d. I concur with the question thing, but I had no idea that Judaism was about questions. Hmmm.
carl- You might want to rethink your vocabulary. Jews do not imagine "reincarnating" G-d. Jews were chosen to be a "light unto the nations", according to our Torah, a very different kettle of fish.
smoo- Judaism is indeed about connecting with G-d- and it is not about perfecting, but about learning to be "humanly holy".
Barefoot -
I think people are often afraid to openly express their questioning, because many times that attitude is condemned and not encouraged. Questioning in the Orthodox community, especially in educational settings, is often returned with reprimand, which is not right, but curbs that questioning many times.
Thank you, Barefoot Jewess...
To further clarify what I meant when I say Judaism is about questions, I offer the following quote-
"The error of modern representatives of religion is that they promise their congregants the solution to allt he problems of life- an expectation that religion does not fulfill. Religion, on the contrary, deepens the problems but never intends to solve them. The grandeur of religion lies in its mysterium tremendum, its magnitude, and its ultimate incomprehensability. To cite one example, we may adduce the problem of theodicy, the justification of evil in the world, which has tantalized the inquiring mind from time immemorial till this last tragic decade. The acuteness of this problem has grown for the religious person in essence and dimensions. When a minister, rabbi, or priest attempts to solve the ancient question of Job's suffering through a sermon or lecture, he does not promote religious ends but, ont he contrary, does them a disservice. The beauty of religion, with its grandiose vistas, reveals itself to man not in solutions but in probems, not in harmony but in the constant conflict of diversified forces and trends. Unhampered by the theological doctrine and dogma, the Greeks, in such an understanding, could freely divinate religious faith as "divine madness." "
~Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik, from 'Sacred and Profane'
What I take this quote to mean, coupled with the rest of Rabbi Soloveitchik's works, is that religion does not provide answers or easy answers, but simply increases the problems and the questions. We thirst to know and are not always answered, but this, too, is something beautiful and wonderful, the soul that is (another quote) "torn between two powerful poles of fear and hpe, dread and love."
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Bravo for your eloquent and insightful blog. A question for you, however, from someone who is a chozer b'sheelah. You say you believe in god, but that is a somewhat ambiguous statement. Leaving aside what it might mean to belive, What does "god" mean? Without answering that question the concept of belief is somewhat meaningless. Moreover, references to belief in an ill-defined entity eventually serve on to polarize and hurt people and populations. By relying on an undefinable as a source of morality, we also undermine any hope of ever actually seeing the world improve. Perhaps there is a better way?
You're a questioner and a searcher, the best kind of people
I obviously didn't make myself clear. I used the term "incarnating" (not "reincarnating") God. What I meant was "embodying [our relationship with] God" as we live in community. Perhaps this says it better: "Something substantial of our relationship with God needs to infuse our lives in community." I simply don't see how we can truly be "a light to the nations" without this. Sorry for the misunderstanding.
What I love about your blog and other Jblogs is the diversity of opinions. I admire skepticism--indeed, it's a major value of mine--and the different viewpoints help me understand why others think the way they do. It's sad that so many people are so narrow-minded that they can't conceive of another viewpoint without screaming, 'Heresy!'. Your blog is a breath of fresh air. Thank you.
Shavua tov! This is - I'm a bit embarrassed to say - my first time reading your blog, though I've seen it on many blogrolls (this is a good thing!). Now that I'm looking not just for Jewish bloggers (which has led me primarily to Orthodox bloggers), but for other Jewish bloggers who may not affiliate with Orthodoxy, but continue the struggle to understand - and explain - just what it means to be Jewish, I'm finding more and more.
I can appreciate your questions and your efforts because some of it mirrors my own struggles. I have argued before (even had my characters argue before) that without G-d as our center, where is the real meaning in even being Jewish? (It's an argument I enjoy having my characters hash out!)
Anyway, just wanted to say hi, and I am enjoying your blog and look forward to visiting again!
Wonderful comments, everyone! I apologise for not responding, but my computer has been dying a slow death. As of yesterday, I am working out the bugs on its replacement (which is ancient), so posting will be highly unlikely for a while!
Plus, I am looking for work.
Just as an FYI, you were included in the most recent HH which can be located at
here
I lost your email address, Barefoot. Just wanted to let you know I'm blogging again, and that you might be interested in this post.
I'm tired. It's late. But I just have to say that I entered the JBlogging world very recently, and the one thing that has struck me most was the searching of it all. Everyone is searching. For answers, for questions, for G-d, for love, for validation, for money. I believe in G-d. Not because I searched for Him and found Him, but because He has, so to speak, found me. I believe in the Torah, in every word of the five books of Moshe, our teacher. Because I was found by G-d, I was placed in a two way relationship. I converse to Him when I pray, and He replies when I learn His Word. So what am I, new blogger, searching for? Besides answers, questions, love, validation or money? More than all else? I am searching for the strength to embrace all that I believe in so strongly. To live the life I believe in so much. Please, ask G-d to help me in this. I know He will.
-B.J., thank you for inspiring this plea.
Does anyone else miss hearing from Barefoot?
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