Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Omer Meditations - Week Three

During the third week of Counting the Omer, we examine the emotional attribute of Tiferet or compassion. Tiferet blends and harmonizes the free outpouring love of Chesed with the discipline of Gevurah. Tiferet possesses this power by introducing a third dimension ― the dimension of truth, which is neither love nor discipline and therefore can integrate the two.
Truth is accessed through selflessness: rising above your ego and your predispositions, enabling you to realize truth. Truth gives you a clear and objective picture of yours and others' needs. This quality gives Tiferet its name, which means beauty: it blends the differing colors of love and discipline, and this harmony makes it beautiful.
Examine the love aspect of compassion. Ask yourself: Is my compassion tender and loving or does it come across as pity? Is my sympathy condescending and patronizing? Even if my intention is otherwise, do others perceive it as such? Does my compassion overflow with love and warmth; is it expressed with enthusiasm, or is it static and lifeless?
Exercise for the day: When helping someone extend yourself in the fullest way; offer a smile or a loving gesture.
For compassion to be effective and healthy it needs to be disciplined and focused. It requires discretion both to whom you express compassion, and in the measure of the compassion itself. It is recognizing when compassion should be expressed and when it should be withheld or limited. Discipline in compassion is knowing that being truly compassionate sometimes requires withholding compassion. Because compassion is not an expression of the bestower's needs but a response to the recipient's needs.
Exercise for the day: Express your compassion in a focused and constructive manner by addressing someone's specific needs.
True compassion is limitless. It is not an extension of your needs and defined by your limited perspective. Compassion for another is achieved by having a selfless attitude, rising above yourself and placing yourself in the other person's situation and experience. Am I prepared and able to do that? If not, why? Do I express and actualize the compassion and empathy in my heart? What blocks me from expressing it? Is my compassion compassionate or self-serving? Is it compassion that comes out of guilt rather than genuine empathy? How does that affect and distort my compassion? Test yourself by seeing if you express compassion even when you don't feel guilty.
Exercise for the day: Express your compassion in a new way that goes beyond your previous limitations: express it towards someone to whom you have been callous.
Is my compassion enduring and consistent? Is it reliable or whimsical? Does it prevail among other forces in my life? Do I have the capacity to be compassionate even when I'm busy with other activities or only when it's comfortable for me? Am I ready to stand up and fight for another?
Exercise for the day: In the middle of your busy day take a moment and call someone who needs a compassionate word. Defend someone who is in need of sympathy even if it's not a popular position.
If compassion is not to be condescending, it must include humility. Hod is recognizing that my ability to be compassionate and giving does not make me better than the recipient; it is the acknowledgment and appreciation that by creating one who needs compassion God gave me the gift of being able to bestow compassion. Thus there is no place for haughtiness in compassion.
Do I feel superior because I am compassionate? Do I look down at those that need my compassion? Am I humble and thankful to God for giving me the ability to have compassion for others?
Exercise for the day: Express compassion in an anonymous fashion, not taking any personal credit.
For compassion to be fully realized, it needs bonding. It requires creating a channel between giver and receiver; a mutuality that extends beyond the moment of need. A bond that continues to live on. That is the most gratifying result of true compassion. Do you bond with the one you have compassion for, or do you remain apart? Does your interaction achieve anything beyond a single act of sympathy?
Exercise for the day: Ensure that something eternal is built as a result of your compassion.
Examine the dignity of your compassion. For compassion to be complete (and enhance the other six aspects of compassion) it must recognize and appreciate individual sovereignty. It should boost self-esteem and cultivate human dignity. Both your own dignity and the dignity of the one benefiting from your compassion.
Is my compassion expressed in a dignified manner? Does it elicit dignity in others? Do I recognize the fact that when I experience compassion as dignified it will reflect reciprocally in the one who receives compassion?
Exercise for the day: Rather than just giving charity, help the needy help themselves in a fashion that strengthens their dignity.

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Omer Daily Meditations

Dear Haverim,

I will be in California visiting my parents and Elissa's mother, along with my family. During the time I am away, I was hoping you might begin this Omer Count Meditation, so that together, we can work on self-improvement during these 49 days between the Second Seder of Passover and Shavuot. I found this set of meditations on the Chabad website and they have served me very well over these past few years. I hope these meditations will make each day meaningful. I will only give you those days which we will be covering while I am away, and I will resume my postings upon my return.

By the way, if you have already forgotten to count, TONIGHT IS THE 2nd DAY of the OMER!

Warmly,

Rabbi Michael

With the mitzvah of counting the 49 days, known as Sefirat Ha'Omer, the Torah invites us on a journey into the human psyche, into the soul. There are seven basic emotions that make up the spectrum of human experience. At the root of all forms of enslavement, is a distortion of these emotions. Each of the seven weeks between Passover and Shavuot is dedicated to examining and refining one of them.
The seven emotional attributes are:
  1. Chesed ― Loving-kindness
  2. Gevurah ― Justice and discipline
  3. Tiferet ― Harmony, compassion
  4. Netzach ― Endurance
  5. Hod ― Humility
  6. Yesod ― Bonding
  7. Malchut ― Sovereignty, leadership
The seven weeks, which represent these emotional attributes, further divide into seven days making up the 49 days of the counting. Since a fully functional emotion is multidimensional, it includes within itself a blend of all seven attributes. Thus, the counting of the first week, which begins on the second night of Pesach, as well as consisting of the actual counting ("Today is day one of the Omer...") would consist of the following structure with suggested meditations:
Upon conclusion of the 49 days we arrive at the 50th day ― Mattan Torah. After we have achieved all we can accomplish through our own initiative, traversing and refining every emotional corner of our psyche, we then receive a gift ('mattan' in Hebrew) from above. We receive that which we could not achieve with our own limited faculties. We receive the gift of true freedom ― the ability to transcend our human limitations and touch the divine.

Love is the single most powerful and necessary component in life. It is both giving and receiving. Love allows us to reach above and beyond ourselves, to experience another person and to allow that person to experience us. It is the tool by which we learn to experience the highest reality ― God. Examine the love aspect of your love.
Ask yourself: What is my capacity to love another person? Do I have problems with giving? Am I stingy or selfish? Is it difficult for me to let someone else into my life? Am I afraid of my vulnerability, of opening up and getting hurt?
Exercise for the day: Find a new way to express your love to a dear one.
Healthy love must always include an element of discipline and discernment; a degree of distance and respect for another's boundaries; an assessment of another's capacity to contain your love. Love must be tempered and directed properly. Ask a parent who, in the name of love, has spoiled a child; or someone who suffocates a spouse with love and doesn't allow them any personal space.
Exercise for the day: Help someone on their terms not on yours. Apply yourself to their specific needs even if it takes effort.
Harmony in love is one that blends both the chesed and gevurah aspects of love. Harmonized love includes empathy and compassion. Love is often given with the expectation of receiving love in return. Compassionate love is given freely; expects nothing in return ― even when the other doesn't deserve love. Tiferet is giving also to those who have hurt you.
Exercise for the day: Offer a helping hand to a stranger.
Is my love enduring? Does it withstand challenges and setbacks? Do I give and withhold love according to my moods or is it constant regardless of the ups and downs of life?
Exercise for the day: Reassure a loved one of the constancy of your love
You can often get locked in love and be unable to forgive your beloved or to bend or compromise your position. Hod introduces the aspect of humility in love; the ability to rise above yourself and forgive or give in to the one you love just for the sake of love even if you're convinced that you're right. Arrogant love is not love.
Exercise for the day: Swallow your pride and reconcile with a loved one with whom you have quarreled.
For love to be eternal it requires bonding. A sense of togetherness which actualizes the love in a joint effort. An intimate connection, kinship and attachment, benefiting both parties. This bonding bears fruit; the fruit born out of a healthy union.
Exercise for the day: Start building something constructive together with a loved one
Mature love comes with ― and brings ― personal dignity. An intimate feeling of nobility and regality. Knowing your special place and contribution in this world. Any love that is debilitating and breaks the human spirit is no love at all. For love to be complete it must have the dimension of personal sovereignty.
Exercise for the day: Highlight an aspect of your love that has bolstered your spirit and enriched your life...and celebrate.

After the miraculous Exodus from Egypt, the Jewish people spent 49 days preparing for the most awesome experience in human history ― the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai. Just as the Jewish peoples' redemption from Egypt teaches us how to achieve inner freedom in our lives; so too, this 49-day period, called 'Sefirat Ha-Omer' the Counting of the Omer, is a time of intense character refinement and elevation.
During this time, the aspect of the human psyche that most requires refinement is the area of the emotions. The spectrum of human experience consists of seven emotional attributes, or sefirot. This week we continue Sefirat Ha'Omer, utilizing the seven dimensions of the seven emotional attributes. The first week after Pesach was dedicated to examining the aspect of chesed, loving-kindness. The second week corresponds to the emotional attribute of gevurah, discipline or justice.
If love (Chesed) is the bedrock of human expression, discipline (Gevurah) is the channel through which we express love. It gives our life and love direction and focus. Gevurah ― discipline and measure ― concentrates and directs our efforts, our love in the proper directions.
The underlying intention and motive in discipline is love. Why do we measure our behavior, why do we establish standards and expect people to live up to them ― only because of love. Chesed of gevurah is the love in discipline; it is the recognition that your personal discipline and the discipline you expect of others is only an expression of love. It is the understanding that we have no right to judge others; we have a right only to love them and that includes wanting them to be their best.
Ask yourself: when I judge and criticize another is it in any way tinged with any of my own contempt and irritation? Is there any hidden satisfaction in his failure? Or is it only out of love for the other?
Exercise for the day: Before you criticize someone today, think twice: Is it out of concern and love?
Examine the discipline factor of discipline: Is my discipline reasonably restrained or is it excessive? Do I have enough discipline in my life and in my interactions? Am I organized? Is my time used efficiently? Why do I have problems with discipline and what can I do to enhance it? Do I take time each day for personal accounting of my schedule and accomplishments?
Exercise for the day: Make a detailed plan for spending your day and at the end of the day see if you've lived up to it.
Underlying and driving discipline must not only be love, but also compassion. Compassion is unconditional love. It is love just for the sake of love, not considering the others position. Tiferet is a result of total selflessness in the eyes of God. You love for no reason; you love because you are a reflection of God. Does my discipline have this element of compassion?
Exercise for the day: Be compassionate to someone you have reproached.
Effective discipline must be enduring and tenacious. Is my discipline consistent or only when forced? Do I follow through with discipline? Am I perceived as a weak disciplinarian?
Exercise for the day: Extend the plan you made on day two for a longer period of time listing short-term and long-term goals. Review and update it each day, and see how consistent you are and if you follow through.
The results of discipline and might without humility are obvious. The greatest catastrophes have occurred as a result of people sitting in arrogant judgment of others. Am I arrogant in the name of justice (what I consider just)? Do I ever think that I sit on a higher pedestal and bestow judgment on my subjects below? What about my children? Students?
Exercise for the day: Before judging anyone, insure that you are doing so selflessly with no personal bias
For discipline to be effective it must be coupled with commitment and bonding. Both in disciplining yourself and others there has to be a sense that the discipline is important for developing a stronger bond. Not that I discipline you, but that we are doing it together for our mutual benefit.
Exercise for the day: Demonstrate to your child or student how discipline is an expression of intensifying your bond and commitment to each other.
Discipline, like love, must enhance personal dignity. Discipline that breaks a person will backfire. Healthy discipline should bolster self-esteem and help elicit the best in a person; cultivating his sovereignty. Does my discipline cripple the human spirit; does it weaken or strengthen me and others?
Exercise for the day: When disciplining your child or student, foster his self-respect

Monday, April 14, 2014

PASSOVER!

Dear Haverim:
        As we light our Yom Tov candles this evening, and celebrate our Festival of Freedom, in light of the shootings at the Greater Kansas City Jewish Community Center and Shalom Retirement Home, we know that we must never take our freedom for granted.  May the memory of those who died be for a blessing, and may God speedily heal the wounded. We must also be constantly vigilant against hate-mongers and be prepared to speak out when such people make their presence known.  Constant vigilance is the best defense against such threats, for in every generation there arose those who sought to annihilate us ­–Passover Haggadah.
*Tomorrow, Tuesday, April 15th, 9 a.m., 1st Day Passover Service.
*Wednesday, April 16th, 9 a.m., 2nd Day Passover Service.
*Thursday, April 17th, 7:30 a.m., 1st Day Chol Ha Mo’ed- First Day of the Omer (begin count the previous night).
*Friday, April 18th, 7:30 a.m., 2nd Day Chol Ha Mo’ed.
Second Day of the Omer
6:30 p.m. Shabbat services.  Special darshan: Marv Cytron, presenting his Pesach commentary, titled: “The Pesach Goose, New Americans Preparing for Passover.”
*Saturday, April 19th, 9:30 a.m., Shabbat services, 3rd Day Chol Ha Mo’ed.  Special darshanit: Rabbi Shari Preston, who grew up at Congregation Beth Shalom, presenting her reflections on PesachShir Ha Shirim will be added to the service as a group reading, along with key passages chanted in a unique melody.
Third Day of the Omer
*Sunday, April 20th, 9 a.m., 4th Day Chol Ha Mo’ed.
Fourth Day of the Omer
*Monday, April 21st, 9 a.m., 7th Day Yom Tov Passover.  Special darshanit: Cantor Elisa, speaking on Passover Customs Around the World.
Fifth Day of the Omer
*Tuesday, April 22nd, 9 a.m., 8th Day Yom Tov Passover.  Yizkor.
Sixth Day of the Omer

Looking Ahead…
*Friday, April 25th, 6:30 p.m. & Saturday, April 26th, 9:30 a.m.  Special Shabbat Darshanit: Rabbi Ellen Bernhardt, former Head of School, Albert Einstein Academy.
My family and I will be out-of-town, April 17-27, visiting our parents/grandparents in Southern California.  Please enjoy the slate of speakers I have brought to educate you in my absence.  Please approach Cantor Elisa for your pastoral needs. I will very happy to help you upon my return to CBS on Tuesday, April 29.
Have a happy, health Passover!
        Chag Sameach!
                Rabbi Michael

Friday, April 4, 2014

From Dr. King's Assassination to War & Occupation


Dear Haverim:

*TONIGHT, Friday April 4th, 5:30 p.m. Veggie Dairy Chametz-Removing Shabbat Potluck Dinner.  With less than two weeks to prep your home for Passover, this is an opportunity to open the freezer, take your favorite inappropriate-for-Passover meal, and share it with your friends, along with the blessings of children, candles, wine, and challah.  On a serious note, tonight also is our opportunity to mark the 46th anniversary of the yahrzteit of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who was assassinated on this date, at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee. I will mark this tragic moment by sharing Dr. King’s observations of Jews and African-Americans, along with Dr. King’s thoughts on Israel. We will also celebrate all April birthdays tonight.

*TOMORROW, Saturday, April 5th, 9:30 a.m. Shabbat Services.  Sheliach Adir ben Tovim will be our guest.  He will be chanting both Torah and Haftarah, using melodies unique to his family’s 2500-year Yemenite heritage. He will speak both during services and Israeli-themed lunch on the topic: My Jewish Journey: From Yemen to Israel, From Religious to Secular.  For those of us looking for an Israeli that is more thoughtful, deep, nuanced, beyond the headlines, Adir’s presentation is just the remedy. He comes to us courtesy of generous funding from our own Jewish Federation of Delaware. We will also be hosting a CBS Hebrew School Shabbaton, so NO Hebrew School on Sunday, therefore please redouble your efforts to attend Sunday’s 9 a.m. morning minyan.

*Sunday, April 6th, 7 p.m., FDR & the Jews. Join me for this wonderful program, rescheduled from our original snow-out date, for a thought-provoking reassessment of Roosevelt’s relationship with the Jews, with a noted scholar in the field.

Looking ahead…

Wednesday, April 9th, 9:15 – 11:30 a.m., JCC Board Room, DVLI Series: I-Engage Israel: WAR AND OCCUPATION.  This is the last-in-a-5 part-series of text and video lectures that I am presenting through the Shalom Hartman Institute, a pluralistic yeshiva in Jerusalem.  Each class is a stand-alone unit, $7 checks made payable to the Siegel JCC.  The program resumes after High Holy Days.

Stimulate your mind and heart. Join us at Congregation Beth Shalom this Shabbat, start your week with us, and continue the conversation midweek at the Siegel JCC.

Shabbat shalom!

Rabbi Michael