Thursday 13 October 2016

Yom Kippur Sermon 5777

Drasha for pre-Neilah/post Yizkor YK 2016.
The gates of judgement are closing… Neilah – the locking of the gate is nearly upon us. For many, the message of Yom Kippur can sometimes seem to be one of fear-inducement for the sake of piety. We call this day, a day of judgement. We induce the fear of one being called to a mighty court. Just in case we weren’t scared enough by the summons, over and over the text of the mahzor finds every possible way to talk about Death. Were the editors of the mahzor trying to scare us into being good, when they included the terrifying U’netana Tokef piut from the middle ages which ask who will die by fire and who by water? I believe not. Of course those who shaped and designed the Yom Kippur experience over the millennia have wanted us, the pray-ers to think about fear – but not because they wish to scare us to piety, but because they wish to alert us to the perils of giving in to such fear.
This morning, Libby chanted so beautifully from the Torah:
הַעִדֹתִי בָכֶם הַיּוֹם, אֶת-הַשָּׁמַיִם וְאֶת-הָאָרֶץ--הַחַיִּים וְהַמָּוֶת נָתַתִּי לְפָנֶיךָ, הַבְּרָכָה וְהַקְּלָלָה; וּבָחַרְתָּ, בַּחַיִּים--לְמַעַן תִּחְיֶה, אַתָּה וְזַרְעֶךָ
I have brought to witness upon you today the heavens and the earth, and I have places before you Life and Death, Blessing and Curse. Choose life! So you and your children may live.
Yes – this is judgement day – yes, we are asked to face our fears. But we are being judged on the decisions we make today – whether or not we are going to give into our fears.
Each of the central texts that we read throughout the High Holidays has a fearful climax. On the first day of Rosh Hashannah, we read the story of Hagar and Ishmael being sent into the wilderness – can we imagine that kind of fear? The fear of the unknown – of leaving behind all you have, of being forced to set out on a journey where the end is out of sight, where death may easily take you. In our day, some of the descendants of Ishmael are making those journeys of fear as we speak – fleeing home, towards the unknown.
On second Day Rosh Hashannah, we read the story of Yitzhak. It starts off as a nice family camping trip, with everyone checking they have brought bug spray and enough water. It ends with Yitzhak on the barbecue, about to become the entrée for a campfire meal. Can we begin to comprehend that fear?
On Yom Kippur, we read the story of Yonah, thrown overboard to wallow in the depths of the sea – once again, it is hard for me not to think of those drowning in the seas of the Mediterranean, who leave their homes because getting into a rickety wooden boat to travel across the sea is LESS scary than what’s happening at home. But Jonah, of course does not drown, rather he is swallowed by a great fish.
And none of these stories end with death – not by the scorching fire of the sun, nor by the water, nor by the sword, but with redemption. They don’t point us to the fear of death but rather they ask of us – how do we overcome the fear that resides within us? How do we choose life? How do we choose NOT to fear?  
In our own day and age, it seems like we are all too ready to give in to fear. Many of you will have read of the current wave of attacks by people dressed as clowns. This is a real crime wave started from a hoax playing on people’s fears. The people behind these so called pranks are weaponising fear. And they are not the only ones. It almost seems we live in the age of terror. Wherever we look we seem to be trapped between those using violence to stoke fear and those stoking fear with violent results.
The politics of fear of today stand in complete contradiction to the message of Yom Kippur and to all that the Jewish tradition has had to say about how politics should be used. Jewish political thought, in its modern guise of Zionism taught us that we must come home in order to take charge of own affairs – to become a normal functioning people with a state. There was no place for historical bogeymen, no eternal Amalek’s, no enmity based on superstitions and religion. The Zionist ethos was a hopeful one – in which Israel would be able to determine its own future, create peace with its neighbours based on rational negotiation of tachles, real-world, economic and political issues.
This was the Zionism of the greatest proponent of hope our country has known in its recent history. I talk of course of President Shimon Peres. He knew that fear paralyzes. It does not allow us to go forward, through the gates of opportunity. Only hope can allow us to do that.
Yom Kippur is a Shimon Peres kinda day. It is a day, in which one of the central messages, delivered in our Haftarah from Shaharit, chanted seamlessly by Emily, is (to paraphrase Yeshiyahu):
Religion Shmeligion, Fasting, Shmasting. Get on with making a better society.
This is a day in which we name our fears – not to scare us – but make us aware of their pernicious effect on us. We need to talk about dying by fire, by water, by sword, not because we wish to be afraid of them, but the exact opposite, so we can put our fears out into the world, so they do not torment us from within. So we can overcome them. We use the imagery of death not to scare ourselves, but to remind ourselves that IN LIFE - we have the option of conquering our fears – taking our destiny into our own hands. In many eulogies, President Peres was quoted as saying:
“Optimists and Pessimists die the same way. They just live differently. I prefer to live as an Optimist.”
Yom Kippur is the opposite of the politics of fear. Rather than asking us to act out of fear, it is asking us to look into ourselves, recognize our fears and rise above them. Rise above the basest elements of our humanity, to reach those parts of us that our closest to divinity.
In discussing the process of reflection on Yom Kippur, the Midrash in Pesikta Rabbati relates that R. Levi said:
“God appears to Israel like a mirror in which many faces can be reflected; a thousand people look at it, it looks at each of them.”
And this may seem to be a very lonely experience, even a vain one – just each of us and a mirror - but there should be no such thing as a lonely Jew. Like nearly all Jewish rituals, Yom Kippur can only be done together, as a community. For this reason, our Kol Nidrei service reminded us, right at the beginning of this day:
אנו מתירין להתפלל עם העבריינים
We permit ourselves to pray with the sinners
If we all say it together – I may think he’s the sinner – but he thinks I am: We are all in this together.
As we look into the mirror of Yom Kippur, we see our fears deep inside of us, and only we see what is inside of us, but we stand surrounded by our community – transient though it may be for many of us. Their fears we do not see – but their faces, their humanity – that we see. When we try digging ourselves out of our individual holes, we are urged to look to our community – to continue to be hopeful, optimistic, to continue to believe in the goodness and potential of humanity in order to help us on our way out. If we give in to fear, allow ourselves to be ruled by negativity, we will never escape death to truly live.
If one prefers a different metaphor from the mirror, the Mishnah in Masechet Yoma (8:9) uses the metaphor of the Mikveh. Yom Kippur is the mikveh, through which we pass to purify ourselves to enter the new year. From the waters of the mikveh, we emerge re-born, full of hope to face a new year of life.
When this country chose a national anthem to signify what it meant for this nation to be reborn, brought back to life, it chose HaTikvah. At the end of our services we will sing that song of hope – not as a piece of nationalistic pride, but as a reminder that only Hope allows great things to be achieved, or as our teacher, our Nasi, our Shimon said:
“For me, dreaming is simply being pragmatic.”
May we all merit a year of hope. A year of dreams. A year where we will conquer fear. A year of choosing life.  

Shana tova.