Parshat Vayechi
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14 Tevet 5766 / January 13-14, 2006
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Covenant and Conversation
Dvar Torah by
Britain's Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks |
Vayechi
Different cultures tell different stories. The great novelists of the
nineteenth century wrote fiction that is essentially ethical. Jane
Austen and George Eliot explored the connection between character and
happiness. There is a palpable continuity between their work and the
book of Ruth. Dickens, more in the tradition of the prophets, wrote
about society and its institutions, and the way in which they can fail
to honour human dignity and justice.
By contrast, today's fascination with stories like Star Wars or Lord of
the Rings is conspicuously dualistic. The cosmos is a battlefield
between the forces of good and evil. This is far closer to the
apocalyptic literature of the Qumran sect and the Dead Sea scrolls than
anything in Tenakh, the Hebrew Bible. In these ancient and modern
conflict narratives the struggle is "out there" rather than "in here":
in the cosmos rather than within the human soul. This is closer to myth
than monotheism.
There is, however, a form of story that is very rare indeed, of which
Tenakh is the supreme example. It is the story without an ending which
looks forward to an open future rather than reaching closure. It defies
narrative convention. Normally we expect a story to create a tension
that is resolved on the final page. That is what gives art a sense of
completion. We do not expect a sculpture to be incomplete, a poem to
break off halfway, a novel to end in the middle. Schubert's Unfinished
Symphony is the exception that proves the rule.
Yet that is what the Bible repeatedly does. Consider the Chumash, the
five Mosaic books. The Jewish story begins with a repeated promise to
Abraham that he will inherit the land of Canaan. Yet by the time we
reach the end of Deuteronomy, the Israelites have still not crossed the
Jordan. The Chumash ends with the poignant scene of Moses on Mount Nebo
(in present-day Jordan) seeing the land - to which he has journeyed for
forty years but is destined not to enter - from afar.
Nevi'im, the second part of Tenakh, ends with Malachi foreseeing the
distant future, understood by tradition to mean the messianic age:
"See, I will send you the prophet Elijah
before the coming of the great and awesome day of the Lord. He will
turn the hearts of the fathers to their children, and the hearts of
the children to their fathers . . ."
Nevi'im, which includes the great historical as
well as prophetic books, thus concludes neither in the present or the
past, but by looking forward to a time not yet reached. Ketuvim, the
third and final section, ends with king Cyrus of Persia granting
permission to the Jewish exiles in Babylon to return to their land and
rebuild the Temple.
None of these is an ending in the conventional
sense. Each leaves us with a sense of a promise not yet fulfilled, a
task not yet completed, a future seen from afar but not yet reached. And
the paradigm case - the model on which all others are based - is the
ending of Bereishit in this week's sedra.
Remember that the story of the people of the covenant begins with G-d's
call to Abraham to leave his land, birthplace and father's house and
travel "to a land which I will show you". Yet no sooner does he arrive
than he is forced by famine to go to Egypt. That is the fate repeated by
Jacob and his children. Genesis ends not with life in Israel but with a
death in Egypt:
Then Joseph said to his brothers, "I am about
to die. But G-d will surely come to your aid and take you up out of
this land to the land he promised on oath to Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob." Then Joseph made the sons of Israel swear an oath and said,
"G-d will surely come to your aid, and then you must carry my bones
up from this place." So Joseph died at the age of a hundred and ten.
And after they embalmed him, he was placed in a coffin in Egypt.
Again, a hope not yet realised, a journey not yet
ended, a destination just beyond the horizon.
Is there some connection between this narrative form and the theme with
which the Joseph story ends, namely forgiveness, about which I wrote in
last week's study?
It is to Hannah Arendt in her The Human Condition that we owe a profound
insight into the connection between forgiveness and time. Human action,
she argues, is potentially tragic. We can never foresee the consequences
of our acts, but once done, they cannot be undone. We know
that he who acts never quite knows what he is doing, that he
always becomes "guilty" of consequences he never intended or even
foresaw, that no matter how disastrous the consequences of his deed, he
can never undo it . . . All this is reason enough to turn away with
despair from the realm of human affairs and to hold in contempt the
human capacity for freedom.
What transforms the human situation from tragedy
to hope, she argues, is the possibility of forgiveness:
Without being forgiven, released from the
consequences of what we have done, our capacity to act would, as it
were, be confined to one single deed from which we could never
recover . . . Forgiving, in other words, is the only reaction which
does not merely re-act but acts anew and unexpectedly, unconditioned
by the act which provoked it and therefore freeing from its
consequences both the one who forgives and the one who is forgiven.
Atonement and forgiveness are the supreme
expressions of human freedom - the freedom to act differently in the
future than one did in the past, and the freedom not to be trapped in a
cycle of vengeance and retaliation. Only those who can forgive can be
free. Only a civilization based on forgiveness can construct a future
that is not an endless repetition of the past. That, surely, is why
Judaism is the only civilization whose golden age is in the future.
It was this revolutionary concept of time - based on human freedom -
that Judaism contributed to the world. Many ancient cultures believed in
cyclical time, in which all things return to their beginning. The Greeks
developed a sense of tragic time, in which the ship of dreams is
destined to founder on the hard rocks of reality. Europe of the
Enlightenment introduced the idea of linear time, with its close cousin,
progress. Judaism believes in covenantal time, well described by Harold
Fisch: "The covenant is a condition of our existence in time . . . We
cooperate with its purposes never quite knowing where it will take us,
for 'the readiness is all'." In a lovely phrase, he speaks of the Jewish
imagination as shaped by "the unappeased memory of a future still to be
fulfilled".
Tragedy gives rise to pessimism. Cyclical time leads to acceptance.
Linear time begets optimism. Covenantal time gives birth to hope. These
are not just different emotions. They are radically different ways of
relating to life and the universe. They are expressed in the different
kinds of story people tell. Jewish time always faces an open future. The
last chapter is not yet written. The messiah has not yet come. Until
then, the story continues - and we, together with G-d, are its
co-authors.
This Week's
Shabbat Shalom
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