A teacher was lecturing his
pupils on the story of Joseph who was sold by his brothers to passing slave
merchants.
At once, a sympathetic
student began to weep listening as the tragedy unfolded.
The next year while teaching
that same passage, the same student began to laugh uproariously.
“Are you insane?” The teacher rebuked. “Last year you were crying and now you are
splitting your side with laughter?”
“Why shouldn’t I laugh? After what happened last year Joseph should
have learned his lesson!”
The stories in Torah do not
change from year to year, but we do. It
is not surprising to understand them in an entirely different light with the
passing years.
One year Moses may be our
hero and the next, a man handicapped by all kinds of idiosyncrasies and deep
flaws. The same can be said for Rebecca
or Abraham or Isaiah.
There is one underlying concept,
which undergirds the opinion we hold about the actors in the Torah: what makes a hero? That entirely subjective question is
determined by who we are. The heroes we
venerate are a reflection of our values.
For example, do you think Abraham, was fearless, unwavering in his faith
to G-d? Was he the paradigm of a
religious human? Or was Abraham too
pliant, too easily moved to do evil?
After all, he was willing to murder his own son.
The answer to that question,
like so many others, start with a simple question: Who is your hero? Gandhi?
Akiva? Roosevelt? Mao? The next-door neighbor? A relative?
Why choose them? What is it that makes them a hero to you?
We choose our heroes based on
some ideal of human life. When we know
who is our hero, we understand who we wish to become.
That ideal changes as we
grow.
“When I was young I admired
clever people. Now that I am old, I
admire kind people,” wrote Abraham Joshua Heschel. As we grow our priorities and wishes change. Some become more conservative, others move to
become liberal, while others change their world-view in myriad directions.
The question burns: whom do
we idolize?
A Midrash: When Moses ascended to heaven to receive
Torah the angels complained, “What is
flesh and blood doing here, among us?” they wailed.
HaKadosh Baruch Hu responded,
“He is here to receive the Torah.”
“Nine
hundred seventy- four generations have passed since the inception of the
world. Since that time Your word has
been safe with us. And now you want to
give it to such beings??”
HaKadosh Baruch Hu responded,
“They can do teshuvah.”
Hearing the clamor raging in
heaven, Moses grew afraid. What if the
angels grew spiteful and destroyed him?
HaKadosh Baruch Hu soothed
Moses’ anxiety saying, “Hold My throne and you will be safe.”
Even angels hold opinions. Allowing
others to do likewise and respecting differences is what this midrash comes to teach. Times change and people change along with
them. G-d trusted Moses and the people
to change. One upon a time we were
radically different than we are today.
Thank G-d someone was wise enough to know we would grow out of it.
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