~ Rabbi Shefa Gold's Torah Journeys ~
Nitzavim
(Standing)
DEUTERONOMY 29:9 - 30:82
The Israelites stand before God and receive the covenant. They are encouraged to step up to the blessings and challenges of Torah.
NITZAVIM TELLS US that we stand before God in our wholeness. This
completeness infuses us with the fullness of vitality, presence and beauty
that is necessary in order to receive and give the blessings of covenantal
love.
THE PROPHET EZEKIEL gives us a glimpse of the passionate partnership
suggested in the meaning of covenant. We stand before God in our most
fragile and raw vulnerability. From there we are lifted up into sovereignty:
"I let you grow like the plants of the field; and you continued
to grow up until you attained to womanhood,
until your breasts
became firm and your hair sprouted.
You were still naked and
bare when I passed by you and
saw that your time for love had
arrived. So I spread My
robe over you and covered your nakedness,
and I entered
into a covenant with you by oath - declares the Lord
God; thus you became Mine. I bathed you in water, and
washed
the blood off you, and anointed you with oil. I
clothed you with
embroidered garments... dressed you
in silks. I decked you out
in finery... I put a ring in your
nose and earrings in your ears,
and a splendid crown on
your head. Your food was choice flour,
honey and oil.
You grew more and more beautiful, and became
fit for
royalty."1
When we stand in our wholeness (including all our disparate parts - from the elder and honored aspect of self, to the most lowly woodcutter/
water-carrier aspect2) we are privileged to pass into a covenant with
God. To stand and receive this honor is to be given a splendid crown, be
robed in finest silk, enjoy a royal repast and grow into our beauty. Covenantal
love washes us clean and anoints us with the oil of our sovereignty.
The path of covenantal love requires the maturing of our humanity as we
become "fit for royalty," as we grow into our essential Divinity. Through
covenantal love we are lifted up, ennobled.
THE PROPHET HOSEA describes that day of covenant, the day when we
stand before God in our wholeness. The covenant that we establish with
God blesses the whole world, opens our hearts to all creatures, and ends
violence.
"In that day, I will make a covenant for them with the
beasts
of the field, the birds of the air, and the creeping
things of the
ground; I will also banish bow, sword,
and war from the land.
Thus I will let them lie down in
safety."3
This "safety" that Hosea describes comes in remembering that we are
intimately related to all beings. We are part of them and they are part of
us. We can lay down our weapons, put away our armor and clothe ourselves
in the silks and embroidered garments of covenantal love.
THE SPIRITUAL CHALLENGE
AS WE STAND BEFORE GOD we are challenged to reclaim all the shards
of self that have been broken off in trauma, all the lost pieces of self that
we project on the "other," all the parts of self that lie hidden behind walls
of shame or pride. As we stand up in our integrity, the blessings of covenantal
love begin to shine through our lives.
These blessings of covenantal love come as we stand before God and
rise to the challenge that has been put before us. We grow into spiritual
adults by standing up to face this challenge and not shying away
from it. "I've put Life and Death in front of you, Blessing and Curse."4
The challenge that God gives us is to choose Life and Blessing, to turn
away from Death (the force of destruction) and Curse (the negativity
that limits us). Yet what sounds so very simple becomes so very confusing
in the moment-to-moment choices that we face. The Mind becomes an
expert in rationalizing whatever choice might bolster the ego's ambitions
or defenses. What looks like a blessing in one moment may turn out to
be a curse in the next. What seems like a choice for Life entangles us in
the forces of Death. The simple challenge of "choosing Life" becomes
infinitely more subtle.
This spiritual challenge of Nitzavim can only be taken up when we
learn how to "stand before God." In standing fully before God, we can
finally embrace our whole selves completely. We can take responsibility
for our choices. In standing before God we become true partners in the
work of Creation.
I WAS ONCE ASKED to lead High Holy Day services at a large Mindfulness
retreat that was to be taught by Thich Nhat Hanh, a Vietnamese
Buddhist teacher whose reputation for gentleness and wisdom drew hundreds
of followers. The retreat was scheduled during the Jewish Holidays,
and the organizers thought there might be some Jews at the retreat who
would benefit from the presence of a rabbi. In preparing for the retreat, I
wrote to Thich Nhat Hanh to explain what we'd be doing at his gathering
and I sent him a few books about Judaism so that he’d have a better
understanding of the importance that these days held for his Jewish
students.
At the opening session, he welcomed the Jews who would be celebrating
their holy days at the retreat. In a tone that was both incisive and
tender he said, "It is my understanding that the purpose of all Jewish
practice is to live every moment in the awareness of God's Presence…...
and that is Mindfulness."
He understood that to stand in God's presence means to stand outside
the whirlwinds of change, anchored in the stillness of center, shining out
the fullness of our own presence, attentive to the truth of this moment.
From that still center, from that open-hearted awareness, the choice between
Life and Death, Blessing and Curse at last becomes clear. Until
we can stand before God in a state of calm, alert clarity, all the layers of
distraction, turbulence and conditioning will rob from us the freedom of
choice. And so as we rise to the challenge of choosing Life, we must learn
to stand before God, or as Thich Nhat Hanh explained, "to live every
moment in the awareness of God's Presence."
I LIKE TO IMAGINE that Thich Nhat Hanh's exposure to Jewish teaching
deepened his understanding of the core practice of Mindfulness meditation,
just as my own experience with Buddhist meditation has given me
insights into how I might "live every moment in the awareness of God's
Presence." One way that I might live up to this ideal is to bless the Source
of every gift I receive - each awakening, each meal, each opportunity
for celebrating this unique moment as a culmination of my life's journey.
(The Tradition advises us to say 100 blessings a day in order to affirm
our awareness of the Divine Presence, in an attempt to remain conscious
amid the constant stream of distractions and acknowledge the unseen
miracles that are the foundation of existence.)
The challenge of Nitzavim goes a step further. The continual awareness
of God's Presence, which we affirm through the act of blessing,
leads us to truly stand before God and pass into a covenantal love affair.
Covenantal love requires that we stand up, accept our soul's mission and
take action to manifest our purpose and calling. Nitzavim reminds us
that we reject that mission at our peril, and not only at our own peril.
Nitzavim tells us that when we "walk in the stubbornness of our heart,
(that is, resist our true destiny and work) the wet will be swept away with
the dry."5 (The innocent will suffer because of our negligence.) Nitzavim raises the stakes. Covenantal love calls forth the wisest and best from us
and then warns us that there are consequences when we ignore that call.
GUIDANCE FOR PRACTICE
There are three signs of the covenant that serve as reminders of our obligations
and tools for awareness as we enter into partnership with God.
THE FIRST SIGN OF THE COVENANT IS THE RAINBOW, which God establishes
as a remembrance of the love and commitment between the Source - and all of Life, forever. The Rainbow is a reminder that renewal follows
devastation; and that beauty is born from opposites (sun and rain) converging
in paradox. We are reminded by the Rainbow that our covenant
with God is large enough to include all the colors or aspects of faith, even
the ones that seem to contradict each other.
THE SECOND SIGN OF THE COVENANT IS SHABBAT. We are given this sacred
time of renewal each week so that we might rest and enjoy the fruits
of Creation. We are bathed and anointed, dressed in silks, decked out in
finery. The splendid crown of Shabbat is placed upon our heads. We become
fit for royalty. On Shabbat we are led to the place where covenantal
love may be consummated.
THE THIRD SIGN OF THE COVENANT IS CIRCUMCISION. Most literally, circumcision
is the ritual cutting away of the foreskin which covers the glans
of the penis. It is a ritual that dates back to prehistoric times and till this
day is practiced by many peoples. For Jews it became not only a religious
practice but a national one, representing a sign of tribal inclusion.
AT A TIME IN OUR HISTORY when women are standing up to claim their
rightful and honored place in the tribe, how is it possible to put forth a
sign of inclusion that is by definition, exclusively male?
Fortunately, there is another kind of circumcision described in Leviticus,
Deuteronomy, and in the writings of the prophets which is called the"circumcision of the heart." Earlier in Deuteronomy, we are commanded
to circumcise our hearts,6 and here in Nitzavim we are told that God "…will circumcise your heart and your descendants' hearts so you can love
God with all your heart and with all your soul, so that you will live."7
Here it sounds as if it is God performing the circumcision. How do
we reconcile this apparent contradiction? Who is to perform this most
important ritual for which our lives and love depend, God or us?
Because circumcision is the sign or reminder of covenantal love, which
denotes mutuality, I believe it requires a sacred partnership in order to
accomplish it. We must lay our hearts bare, become aware of just when
and why our heart closes, confess to our own hard-heartedness, and offer
up our stubborn heart to the Power-that-transforms.
CIRCUMCISION OF THE HEART
THE PRACTICE FOR THIS WEEK OF NITZAVIM is to take special care to
notice when your heart closes. Really notice. Does your heart close when
you feel judged? When you are in the presence of suffering? When you
are stuck in traffic? When you disagree? When you get too busy? When
you’re in pain? When you read the newspaper?
IN THE MOMENT when you notice that your heart is closing, take a slow
gentle breath into the heart and ask God for help.
1 Ezekiel 16:8-13
2 Deuteronomy 29:9-10
3 Hosea 2:2
4 Deuteronomy 30:19
5 Deuteronomy 29:18
6 Deuteronomy 10:16
7 Deuteronomy 30:6
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Rabbi Shefa can be reached by email at: Shefa@RabbiShefaGold.com
Rachmiel O'Regan can be reached by email at: CDEEP@RabbiShefaGold.com
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