~ Rabbi Shefa Gold's Torah Journeys ~
V'Etchanan
(And I implored)
DEUTERONOMY 3:23 - 7:11
V'Etchanan tells the story of Moses' plea to enter the Promised Land. It goes
on to recount the Ten Commandments, and also gives us the Sh’ma, our central
prayer that affirms the Unity of God.
THE DRAMA OF V'ETCHANAN recounts Moses' plea for grace. As our story
unfolds, Moses implores God to allow him to enter the Promised Land.
God's response is interpreted by Moses as an angry and terrible "NO!"...
as a withholding of grace.
God says, "Rav lakh!" You have so much! Stop fixating on your idea
of what you want! And then God instructs Moses to climb to the top
of the mountain and get a clear view in all directions so that he might
see and know that he has already arrived. The promise has already been
fulfilled.
As we search for Grace in our own lives, we often come to that search
with a preconceived notion of what our success must look like. We look
towards the Promised Land - the right partner, perfect health, enough
money, the right places to live and work. Our time and culture condition
our goals; they drive us onward in our journeys, blinding us to the
destination beneath our feet. As Grace pours into our lives from within
or without, we will not recognize or receive its flow if we are fixated on
a certain picture, on a particular outcome, a specific idea of success. Our
expectations will blind us to the Promised Land that is before us and
within us.
THE BLESSING of V'Etchanan is the opportunity to hear God's words
again, "Rav lakh," You have so much! I am answering your request in
this very moment, but you must open your eyes to receive it. You must
lift your eyes beyond your own limited expectations. You must climb the
mountain to take in the wide expanse. You don't need to cross the Jordan.
You are already Home.
We take this journey in order to be strengthened, purified, transformed,
refined. We journey so that our eyes may be opened.
V'Etchanan blesses us with a map for that path of awakening in the
form of the Ten Commandments and the Sh'ma.
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS, written on the tablets, represent the Covenant.
This covenant is the Truth of our connection to the ultimate reality
hidden beneath the apparent surface of things. V'Etchanan blesses us
with a path of attunement to the essential truth of our existence. Ignoring
or contradicting the guidelines carved on the tablets of covenant, will
serve to keep us from knowing and experiencing that connection to God
and to the whole of Life. If the line of connection to our Source is broken,
then awakening becomes impossible and our relationship to Reality
becomes distorted.
But what kind of blessing is this? Haven't we already received the
blessing of this gift earlier in our journey in the Book of Exodus? How
can it be given again? Here is the secret of Deuteronomy; its earliest title
being Mishneh Torah, the "repetition of the Torah."
What looks like repetition is actually the journey spiraling to a deeper
level. When the Ten Commandments are given a second time, they are
not accompanied by fire and thunder as they were at first. Instead they
are given in the quiet of our practice, and they open us to an even deeper
mystery, which is the Sh'ma. "Listen God-wrestler, YHVH is your God,
YHVH is One." The words of the Sh'ma pierce through the veils of illusion.
These words have the power to awaken us from our trance of separation
that obscures the truth that there is Only God.
I FIRST EXPERIENCED the power of the Sh'ma in a Native American Sweat
Lodge. This happened one moonlit night more than twenty years ago in
a lush New York forest. The ceremony was being led by a very learned
and devout man, Jewish by birth, who had been adopted into the Lakota
tribe. He chanted in their holy language and followed their rules and
traditions with respect and reverence.
Sweat Lodges are designed to facilitate our deepest prayer. Volcanic
rocks are heated all day in a fire and then ceremoniously placed in to a
hole at the center of the lodge. The door is closed and the circle sits in
complete darkness except for the glow of the red-hot rocks. As sacred
herbs touch the rocks, the lodge fills with smoke. As water is poured onto
the rocks, the lodge fills with fragrant steam. As our artifice is burned
away, the lodge fills up with prayer.
This particular lodge was hotter than any I had ever experienced before.
The heat, smoke, and chanting seemed to strip away everything - ideas, memories, hopes, will, my very identity felt as if it was burning
away. I felt like I was going to die. Suddenly we all cried out the Sh'ma.
(In truth, I didn't even know these people were Jewish.) As the sound
of this ancient prayer poured through us, ten spiritual seekers - all born
Jewish - none of us connected to a Jewish path, were all startled awake.
Completely cleansed of fear, we were all suddenly open to a Love that
was at once given and received.
I still call on the memory of that Sh'ma in the Sweat Lodge to inspire
me in my prayers. It inspired in us the power to transcend our fear of
Death - a fear that is rooted in our identification with Duality - the
mistaken conception that anything is separate from God.
WHEN GOD TELLS MOSES to climb the mountain and lift his eyes, we
are being invited to receive a glimpse of Unity. From the summit of this
mountain, everything that we thought separate, all of the opposites that
have warred within us, are suddenly united. It is all Echad - "One." Then
the fullness of Love can flow. Then, "You shall love God with all your
heart and all your soul and all your might." When we experience the
knowledge of the Unity beyond Duality, it takes root inside us, and we
become lovers of the highest order.
THE SPIRITUAL CHALLENGE
V'ETCHANAN OFFERS US the challenge of transforming the power of Desire
from a potential prison into a vehicle for Enlightenment. Each of
us must climb the mountain of our own desires and lift our eyes to see
beyond what we have come to expect or imagine.
Sometimes our spiritual challenge comes to us in the form of a koan.
In the tradition of Zen Buddhism, a koan is a question that can't be answered
by linear thinking. Instead we must embrace the question itself,
by taking it into our meditation and into our lives. The apparent contradictions
that emerge on the path of our Torah Journey require that we
open ourselves to living with and being with the Mystery until the answer
breaks forth from a place beyond rational thought, a place of knowing
and experience.
V'Etchanan teaches us that our very lives depend upon developing the
practice of D'vekut, cleaving to God through the fullness of loving desire.1 Twenty verses later, God defines Herself as "a consuming fire." 2
The Talmud asks: "How do we cleave to a God who is
a consuming fire?" 3
This koan leads us to the edge of a great abyss. Every step of our journey
has been fueled by a profound longing for D'vekut, the experience
of Oneness. Yet the self who desires must be annihilated in the process. "How do we cleave to a God who is a consuming fire?"
GUIDANCE FOR PRACTICE
OUR HOLIDAY OF FULFILLMENT
Our Holiday cycle celebrates the steps along the way of the Journey from
Egypt to the Promised Land. Passover commemorates the Exodus from Egypt;
Shavuot remembers the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai; Sukkot celebrates
our journey through the wilderness. So it was perplexing to me that there is no
holiday that celebrates the longed-for arrival in the Promised Land. After all,
that was the point of the journey, wasn’t it? A celebration would seem to be in
order. When do we celebrate the completion of our journey?
I put this question to Rabbi Lawrence Kushner, and he suggested that Shabbat
was our holiday of arrival in the Promised Land.
Shabbat is the time of experiencing the truth of "coming home." We expand
our consciousness wide enough to embrace the paradox that our lives are a difficult and harrowing journey filled with struggle, tragic loss and suffering...
AND YET, we have already arrived, and each moment offers us its absolute
perfection. All week long we may long for Messiah - an era of Freedom - when
we come to Shabbat we know that we are already redeemed.
AFTER LIGHTING THE SHABBAT CANDLES this week of V'Etchanan, take
some time to gaze into the flames.
RECEIVE THE DIVINE WORDS, "Rav lakh" - You have SO much! Stop
fixating on your idea of what you want.
THEN SEND YOUR STORIES, your tragedy, your questions, your unquenchable
desire into the flame. Let the power of God-Who-Is-a-Consuming-Fire burn away regrets and pride for the past; let it burn away worries and
hopes for the future.
LET GOD-WHO-IS-A-CONSUMING-FIRE reveal this present expanded
moment of Shabbat. Let these Shabbat flames illuminate the expanse of
the Promised Land within you.
REST IN THE KNOWLEDGE and pleasure of coming Home at last.
(I used to perceive Judaism as enormously depressing, always remembering
the destruction of the Temple, mourning a terrible history of oppression, and
yearning for an impossible future. Yet now I see that Shabbat, the holiday of
arrival and fulfillment, is our most nurturing, most accessible, most important
holiday. And it happens every week! )
1 Deuteronomy 4:4
2 Deuteronomy 4:24
3 Talmud Bavli, Ketubot 111b
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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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