Rabbi Lipman's Monthly Message                                         

                                     Rabbi Lipman's Message

                                             September, 2003




            We Reform Jews have radically changed our perception of the High Holy Days.  We have left hints of the original holidays in our liturgy, but our personal focus is so different from the traditional view that this season is completely transformed for us.
    Traditionally, Rosh HaShanah is the Day of Judgment.  Our personal angels (we each have two….) have spent the entire month of Elul gathering evidence against us, noting every time we broke one of the 613 commandments during the past year.  (One tradition maintains that every time we break a commandment, we create a "bad angel," and these angels themselves go up to the Divine Court to testify against us by their very presence.)  Rosh HaShanah is our Day in Divine Court.  Our lives, our souls are judged; our very lives are in the balance; if our breaking the commandments outweigh our fulfillment of commandments, we are doomed.  Traditionally, Rosh HaShanah was a day of awe, fear, and dread.
    Yom Kippur was the Day of Sentencing.  That which had been judged on Rosh HaShanah was finalized on Yom Kippur.  The last service on Yom Kippur is called "Ne'ilah," the Locking, referring to the Gates of Heaven being locked shut with our sentence determined.
    Our ancestors understood that our only possible hope during these Days of Awe was to throw ourselves on the mercy of the Divine Court, to beg for forgiveness.  That was the entire goal of Selichot (this year on Saturday, September 20 at 7 pm), Rosh HaShanah, the Ten Days of Repentance (between Rosh HaShanah and Yom Kippur) and Yom Kippur.   Our rabbis emphasized that for sins between humans, forgiveness from God can only occur after we have been forgiven by the ones we have wronged.  Moreover, our liturgy repeats again and again, "Repentance, Prayer, and Tzeddakah can overturn the stern decree." That "stern decree" is God's sentence against each of us personally.  Little wonder that for traditional Jews this season calls for introspection,  asking forgiveness, thinking about our own mortality, thinking about God and our covenant with the Divine, and thinking about how we've lived our lives during the past year.  Prayers during this season are heavy-duty for traditional Jews; their lives and souls are at stake.
    This sense of immediacy tends to be foreign for most of us.  We have transformed the High Holy Days into a time to get together to re-affirm our Jewish identity.  We come to listen to the choir, to hear familiar High Holy Day music, to hear the shofar, to see friends whom we might not have seen since the last High Holy Days.  The High Holy Days frequently become our annual Jewish check-up: everything's in place, the building looks good, we've paid our "spiritual dues," all is in order for our Jewish year.  Mitzvah, sin, repentance, judgment, God, and a sense of mortal immediacy have been removed from this season by most of us.
    Rabbi Julian Cook provides us with the following image:  A young man comes to a hermit and says, "I want to study with you."  The hermit asks "Why?"  The young man answers, "I want to find God."  The hermit immediately grabs the young man and holds his head underwater.  The young man struggles but to no avail.  After a minute, the hermit pulls the struggling, frantic young man out of the water.  He asks the young man, "What did you want most of all when you were underwater?"  "Air!" answered the young man.  The hermit smiled.  "When you want God as much as you wanted air, come back."
    We don't equate God, the High Holy Days, or our Judaism with life, with air.  It's a loss.  I believe that it's possible to imbue Reform Judaism with a traditional sense of immediacy, of importance.  Our best chance to begin to do so is at the High Holy Days, when these themes are enunciated in the liturgy.  Let's use this sacred time to think about our lives, to think about God, to think about what mortality and immortality mean.  May 5764 be a sweet and good year for all of us.

Robyn, Kivie, Shira, Aviva, Shira, and ZZ join me in wishing all of you a fond Shanah Tovah.

Rabbi Lipman's August, 2003 Message
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