Deu
29:10-29 KJV Ye stand this day all of you before the LORD
your God; your captains of your tribes, your elders, and your
officers, with all the men of Israel, (11) Your little ones, your
wives, and thy stranger that is in thy camp, from the hewer of thy
wood unto the drawer of thy water: (12) That thou shouldest enter
into covenant with the LORD thy God, and into his oath, which the
LORD thy God maketh with thee this day: […] (29) The secret things
belong unto the LORD our God: but those things which are revealed
belong unto us and to our children for ever, that we may do all the
words of this law.
Just
Call Him Bob
townhall.com
[/] by Paul Greenberg [/] http://j.mp/0IsraelStands
or
http://townhall.com/columnists/paulgreenberg/2015/09/14/just-call-him-bob-n2052154
BOSTON
-- We're here to attend the bar mitzvah of my eldest grandson, Aviav,
who's named in honor of his other grandfather, the one he never met.
By now he's gotten used to spelling out his first name, which is
Hebrew for father of my father, but the pronunciation may escape
folks. Like the violin teacher he had who tried and tried but just
couldn't get her tongue around his name. ("What's that again? Av
... uh, Av ... Avi ...") That's when Aviav, always trying to be
helpful, told her: "Call me Bob."
Now
he stands before the congregation to chant the ancient prayers, read
from the Torah scroll, and finally deliver his own commentary on
Nitzavim, this week's designated portion of Scripture -- not that I'm
sufficiently learned to appreciate it.
The
spirit of bar mitzvahs past, present and future is strong in this
modest little synagogue; you can sense it. Surely this place is holy
and I, I knew it not.
Looking
around, I see ghosts everywhere. They started appearing when we
recited the magical words of the Kaddish, the Jewish prayer for the
dead (Yisgadal v'yiskadash sh'mei rabbah . . .), and were soon
shimmering next to us. That's when the realization hit: We were all
praying together, the quick and the dead.
Maybe
the apparitions had something to do with my hanging a bunch of old
pictures in my study back in Little Rock before we left home. Because
there were Zeyde Chaim and Bubba Chava (Grandpa Charlie and Grandma
Eve, the grand matriarch and mother courage of my side of the
family), along with my father as a young immigrant fresh from the old
country -- and already an aspiring American businessman complete with
fountain pen in his vest pocket. My namesake Pesach the Gritsmaker in
his black kaftan peers out from an ornate frame, and other forebears
look down from their perches here and there on the walls. Not content
to stay where I'd left them in Little Rock, they all seem to have
followed me here.
The
bar mitzvah boy's mother, my daughter, got that old-time religion
while a student at Brandeis years ago and became Shomer Shabbos, one
who strictly observes the sabbath, so I can no longer phone her on
Saturdays. But now we were all together for the bar mitzvah.
I
can remember her Texas born-and-bred grandfather taking me aside at
her wedding as all rites were observed in more than full to warn me
she was "joining a cult." Which is how we tend to think of
any religious practices stricter than our own. But today came the
happy ending: the sight and sound of Aviav delivering his own
commentary on Nitzavim.
Young
Aviav reviewed the commentaries he'd studied so carefully, including
that of Rashi, the foremost medieval scholar of Holy Writ, who asked
why this portion of the Torah used the verb nitzavim instead of the
more ordinary omdim for "You are standing...." And
answered: Because nitzavim has the connotation of standing firmly,
not just standing. And standing together with others, united, not
just for one generation but through all time. Or as Scripture tells
the story:
On
the last day of Moses' life, as he was preparing to hand the reins to
his successor Joshua, he gathered all the people of Israel together
and told them:
"You
stand this day, all of you, before the Lord your God. Your tribal
heads, your elders and your officials, all the men of Israel, your
children, your wives, even the stranger within your camp, from the
chopper of wood to the drawer of water, to enter into the covenant of
the Lord your God which the Lord your God is concluding with you this
day...."
That
is, all the souls who have gone before, who are here today, and will
come in the future. What a difference a single word can make.
The
spirit of Rashi's interpretation of the biblical verse is not
entirely different from Edmund Burke's definition of what makes a
continuing nation -- a social contract between past, present and
future. Society, he wrote in his "Reflections on the Revolution
in France" back in 1790, "is a partnership ... not only
between those who are living, but between those who are dead, and
those who are to be born."
That
contract, compact, covenant or whatever we choose to call it, is
violated when one generation runs up debt and leaves others to pay
for it. It is violated when one generation fails to conserve its
natural inheritance -- fields, forests, mountains, lakes and rivers
-- for those who come afterward. It is violated when historic
structures are neglected or ancient rights ignored. It is violated
when one heedless generation decides it no longer needs to defend its
freedom and moves to appease the latest aggressor to come along. And
risks the safety and security of all. It is violated when ... well,
name your own favorite example and warning. God knows there are
enough to choose from among today's headlines.
Here
endeth today's lesson. Thank you, Aviav ben David. You made us proud.
And hopeful.
Full
Disclosure.
Town
Hall is a favorite site. Features Ann Coulter, Mike Adams, Thomas
Sowell, Walter E. Williams, and other favorite and important
commentators.
Paul
Greenberg, longtime Arkansas editor, inventor of phrases “Slick
Willie” and “Clinton clause” about their then governor, is
another top favorite.
I
believe that ending Jewish boys to Hebrew school is a great
tradition. (Sending Christian boys to Greek school would be a better
tradition.)
Deu
29.29 has long been a favorite verse.
I
have long thought that the word “to stand” has a flavor of
eternity. The Greek words for both crucifixion and resurrection are
derived from a verb meaning “to stand”.
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