Zot Chanukah. As we contemplate the lights on our Hanukkiot on this final day of the festival, let us resolve to carry that light into a needy world in the ensuing days, weeks, months, and year.
Sunday, December 21, 2014
Thursday, November 27, 2014
Thanksgiving 2014
This Thanksgiving, I am of course
thankful for all of the beautiful, wonderful, exceptional, blessed things in my
life. There is the family—wife, children, grandchildren, parents, siblings,
aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces, nephews, in-laws. There are the friends and
acquaintances, old and new. There is the roof over our heads, large enough to
house not only the two of us but family and friends, as well. The amazing
variety of foods and drinks in this world, and the infinite variety of ways to
prepare them. The transportation vehicles that take us from here to there and
back again. The giant flying machines that whisk us from city to city, state to
state, and country to country, over mountains and oceans, all while we eat,
sleep, and watch the latest movies or sporting events. The form of government
that, at least for the moment, still allows us to make many of our own choices
and lead lives relatively free of tyranny.
As I pondered the very idea of
thanks and what it means to give thanks, I saw how the idea of thanks so exemplifies
the reality of our interconnectedness, as beings. Giving thanks always requires
another, one separate from ourselves, another being, whether human or divine.
We have explored in times past how various languages imply various shades and
subtleties of thanksgiving (http://yeshliblog.blogspot.com/2009/11/thanksgiving-2009.html). The gratias/gracias/grazie stream of thanksgiving
reflects thanks for grace, the grace of God or the gracious, full of grace,
full of kindness acts of our fellow human beings. The merci folks of Gallia
reflect gratitude (there’s that grace again) for mercy received. The obrigado form
indicates that an act worthy of thanksgiving creates an obligation, but one
that must be freely realized and returned. Nihonjin speakers also acknowledge
an indebtedness whenever they offer arigato. That and the xie xie ni of the “Middle
Kingdom” contain a tinge of apology along with the thanks, perhaps reflecting
an Asian attitude of humility in language directed toward another. The xie
character seems to indicate that the physical act of speaking thanks is itself
an act justly required. The spasebo speakers of the frozen north declare “God
saves” whenever they give thanks. The Hellenists remember good gifts when
eucharistically giving thanks. The descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
reflect their thanks with hands, lifted up and out, in blessing. Todah Rabah. A
whole lot of thanks and blessing.
All of these things are obvious
between people. Grace, kindness, mercy given, obligation and indebtedness from
charitable acts. Giving, receiving, speaking and doing good things. But what of
the thanks we give for being, for the creation, for the blood coursing through
our veins, for the life-giving breath we breathe, for thought, for speech, for
awaking every morning. To whom do we give thanks for these acts of grace,
kindness, goodness? To and for whom do we apply our hands in worshipful
thanksgiving? To the ultimate You.
On this Thanksgiving, I give grace-and-mercy-received-obligation-indebtedness-creating,-slightly-apologetic-acknowledging-the-good-gifts-of-salvation-received-hands-uplifted-and-offered-in-service THANKS to you and you and
ultimate You.
Modeh ani lifanekha...
Saturday, October 11, 2014
Friday, July 04, 2014
Happy Independence Day 2014
When in the course of human events, July 4th rolls around, it is time to say...
Happy Independence Day!
To paraphrase some famous Americans, 34 score years ago our
forefathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty
and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal, and that they
have been endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, and that
among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.
Now we are engaged
in a great politico-socio-economic war, testing whether that nation or any
nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. May G-d grant us the
insight, wisdom, and moral courage to extricate ourselves from the self-destructive
morass in which we find ourselves—that we might once more be a shining city on
a hill.
May G-d bless us as we bless ourselves by re-discovering and re-committing
to the founding principles of this nation that have guided us through 238 years.
Labels:
Independence Day
Sunday, June 29, 2014
Bonnie's Virtual Gallery of Quotations--Room Two
Bonnie continues to post excellent quotations on Facebook. This is room two. Room one already contains 100 of her favorites.
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