Intention is important when it comes to behavior, but it isn't quite as important as you might think. In this week's Torah reading, we learn some uncomfortable lessons about our responsibilities in society, specifically regarding committing sins unintentionally and being an 'innocent' bystander.
In each of these instances, we still incur some guilt and bear some responsibility for what happens. I would like to talk to you about this for a bit, and I invite you (if you're in the area) to also join us on Friday night, where we'll continue this conversation as part of National Gun Violence Prevention Shabbat. However, I'm also mindful of keeping you, all of you, IN this conversation, so I want to make it clear that I'm not pointing a finger, or labeling any one (or any group) as the 'bad guy.' This is about communal responsibility, and acknowledging - as the Torah implores us to - that each person shares in the fate of everyone else, and we all must take that obligation seriously.
In chapter four of Leviticus, the Torah lays out the laws regarding 'intentional' sins vs. 'unintentional' ones. The text refers to 'nefesh achat ki techeta bishgaga' - literally, '[if] one soul commits a sin unknowingly,' and goes on to list the sacrifices that person must
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And I say this because I think we tend to label one another. 'Are you on my side of this issue (or aisle)? And are you therefore worth listening to or not?' And we also allow ourselves to be distracted by political debates, and forget that this is a human issue.
It may ALSO be an issue with many political dimensions, lots of facts and figures, and terrifying statistics; but at its core - its soul - violent acts (not control, legislation, or amendments) are being committed every day, and we're not stopping them. Last month, in the Huffington Post, Rabbi Aaron Alexander wrote a terrific piece entitled, 'Gun Violence in Our Country: A Crisis for Every Single American.' He writes about Moses smashes the Ten Commandments (which we'll talk about on Friday night), and he writes about sitting with clergy members who have to perform tons of funerals for gun violence victims every MONTH. And he also offers a quote from Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.: "We are
caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of
destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly."
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It is time to say, as Rabbi Alexander does and members of our community have done: 'Enough!' - 'Dayeinu!' No longer will our souls tolerate the status quo. Change must come.
Photos in this blog post:
1. Image courtesy of Faiths United Against Gun Violence
2. CC image courtesy of infomatique on Flickr
3. CC image courtesy of kirstyhall on Flickr
4. CC image courtesy of Gideon Tsang on Flickr
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