(This is my sermon for the SECOND day of Rosh Hashanah. If you'd like to read the sermon for Day 1 first, you can find it here. Thanks!)
What is the Opposite of Guilt?
(SH'EINO YODEI'A LISHOL)
Shanah Tovah.
Yesterday I introduced my theme
for this year's High Holiday sermons, namely 'Guilt Free Judaism.' I also
presented the metaphor through which I plan on presenting my four main holiday
sermons: The Four Children of the Passover Seder. And I got a few quizzical
looks from people yesterday, presumably because they didn't come to Rosh
Hashanah services expecting to hear about Passover, and I appreciate how some
of you are recreating those puzzled looks for me here today. Thank you for
that.
As you may have suspected after
yesterday's D'var Torah, my speech, the Passover connection is going to
continue into today and further into Yom Kippur as well. But don't worry, I'll
make it up to you by talking about Apples and Honey and blowing the Shofar in
the spring, during Passover.
I always loved the image that the
rabbis painted for us at the Passover Seder of these Four Children asking
questions during the meal. It’s presented, inconspicuously, as these four
curious kids, just trying to understand what the heck is going on with this
whole Seder thing. Yet, each one of them winds up posing to US, a few
challenging questions about what WE’RE doing here! It turns out, it isn’t about
these four children at all; it’s about you and me, and not going through the
motions by rote, year after year. It's an important reminder, both that
children play an essential role in our holiday observances, and that we should
look at our various traditions, rituals, and laws through the fresh and
inquisitive eyes of children. It's easy for us to get complacent, and to start
observing our Jewish customs without really thinking much about what we're
doing. Along come these four mischievous kids and really force us to answer,
not only their questions, but really our own as well.
My favorite of the four children
has always been the last one, known in Hebrew as Sh’eino Yodei’a Lishol.
Literally, it means 'the one who does not know how to ask.' I find it such a
humbling, and human, statement; being so thoroughly lost that we don’t even
know how to ask a question. We don't like to acknowledge that we feel this way
sometimes, but the reality is that there are always occasions in our lives when
we are SO confused, so utterly befuddled and confounded that we do not EVEN
know how to ask the first question that it going to start us on the road to
begin to understand what we don't know, and eventually move towards some
semblance of comprehension. Right? Now, it's not always like that. Sometimes we
just don't get it. We're perplexed, but we ask a couple of questions and we
start to get a hang of things. But there ARE occasions, even as adults, when
we're not sure what the first question should even be to help get out of the
utter fog of mystification that we find ourselves in; THAT is Sh’eino Yodei’a
Lishol.
Just to give you an example, many
of you know that math just ain't my thing. I love rabbinic math, like when they
tell you there are 10 commandments, but when you start counting you either get
to 9 or 12. Or they tell you there are four essential truths you need to know,
and then list 5. Oddly enough, I GET rabbinic math. But algebra, geometry, and
calculus; terrifying! So I just made sure to pick a profession where it's not
essential that I bring a calculator or an abacus, and most of the time I'm
fine. But it does occasionally intrude into my little rabbinic world. Like when
we review the synagogue budget information at Executive Committee and Board of
Directors' meetings. In fact, next month I've asked Matt to offer a tutorial to
'all' the new board members who are confused about these B&A, P&L,
whosiwhatsit's. And maybe one or two other board members will come to make me
feel better, but we all know for whom this tutorial has really been set up... I
look at the information before me, and I’m not even sure what my first question
is to start making sense of it all!
But it can be freeing to admit
this. Society tells us NEVER to do that, to never use terms like 'I don't
know.' Fake it, till you make it, we say! Never ADMIT that you're confused!! But
that can be SUCH a burden. Yesterday we talked about the weight that we carry
around with us, the heavy load that guilt can constitute when we allow it to
drag us down. Sh’eino Yodei’a Lishol, admitting that we're hopelessly lost,
invites connection. It allows us to be vulnerable, to maybe even laugh at
ourselves a bit, and then accept help from another to begin that long journey
towards comprehension. The research professor, Brené Brown, whom I’ve spoken
about from this pulpit before, writes about this in her book, “The Gifts of
Imperfection”: “To overcome perfectionism, we need to be able to acknowledge
our vulnerabilities to the universal experiences of shame, judgment, and blame.”
Vulnerability is SUCH a crucial emotion, and one that we generally think of as
a four-letter-word, or a sign of weakness and failure. And we feel guilty when
we are vulnerable, when we’re less than perfect. Brené Brown admits that even
she has to use ‘fake it till you make it’ from time to time, but she likes to
think of it as ‘practicing imperfection.’ I think we all need a little practice
to get BETTER at being IMperfect…
So how does Sh’eino Yodei’a
Lishol relate to today, to the High Holidays? Sometimes we feel stuck at the
opposite end of where we want to be. We are lost, and we are in fact so lost,
we don't know where to begin to turn around. In Hebrew, we might call that
t'shuvah, turning around and beginning to take that first step towards repentance.
We feel so FAR away from repentance sometimes, that even that first step, just
turning around, and exposing ourselves by saying ‘I’m sorry,’ without
qualifying it or laughing it off, feels impossible. We don’t even know how to
take that first step.
Guilt can permeate our lives, and
we feel so saturated with it, it's hard to know where to start, in our attempts
to move away from it. Perhaps we need to begin by freeing ourselves, by just
acknowledging how much guilt infuses everything? Brené Brown refers to the hard
things we DON’T want to talk about. It’s more fun to talk about joy and
gladness, maybe the weather or the Phillies (on second thought, no one really
wants to talk about the Phillies…). We focus on what’s easy and uncomplicated…
but all the while, we aren’t getting to the heart of the matter. And we’re
NEVER going to improve, or get out from under that weight, if we don’t talk
about the hard things that get in the way. Let's begin by accepting that we're
at the other end of the spectrum, and let's talk about what the opposite of
that might be.
So what is the opposite of guilt?
There's no right answer here, and there's no wrong answer. But it's an
interesting little question, no? A good first question for that Passover child,
who's been seeking just a question to get him or herself started. What IS the
opposite of guilt, of feeling burdened by so much self-imposed guilt?
Because it is self-imposed
really, isn't it? It's not as if what we're wrestling with here is the felony
form of guilt, like, ‘I'm racked with guilt because I killed
someone/stole/cheated.’ It's imagined
guilt; self-inflicted and wholly unkind. That's an important word to me,
unkind. We can be so harsh on ourselves, so punishing. This illusory guilt is
particularly unkind, because we won't forgive ourselves, and then we feel bad
about feeling bad, and the vicious cycle continues. And it can be crippling. So
maybe the opposite of guilt has to do with kindness? Kindness towards others,
and particularly kindness towards ourself. And don’t be fooled here, folks!
Just because we can name it, doesn’t mean it’s easy. This too takes practice,
like vulnerability or imperfection. But we’re not going to get ANYWHERE until
we admit that a lack of kindness is problematic, and in need of remedy. Perhaps
kindness is the opposite of guilt?
The Baal Shem Tov, a very famous
rabbi from the 1700s, was considered the founder of Chassidic Judaism, and an
expert on the Kabbalah. And he taught about something called the 'Yeitzer
Ha-Rah,' the evil inclination that is in all of us. Picture a little devil
sitting on your shoulder, and of course you've also got the 'Yeitzer Ha-Tov' on
the other shoulder, a little angel. And the Baal Shem Tov said that the Yeitzer
Ha-Rah was always trying to get you in trouble. Like talking you into eating
just one more little piece of cake, or convincing you to stay up just a little
bit later to watch one more episode of the TV show, “Homeland.” (It’s a really
good show, ok?!?) The Yeitzer Ha-Rah IS a part of you, it's just not the most
kind or forgiving part. The Baal Shem Tov said that, 'More than the Yeitzer
Ha-Rah desires that you should sin, it desires that you should feel GUILTY that
you sinned.'
The guilt is in some ways WORSE
than the sin itself. It's more damaging, because it lasts longer, and allows
you to keep punishing yourself, again and again, for something that is in the
past, can't be changed, and is so completely human. So maybe the opposite of
guilt, according to the Baal Shem Tov, is letting go? Again, related to
t’shuvah, to repentance, because we end that vicious cycle. We don’t allow the
guilt to fester, to remain in the darkness of our souls, continuing to plague
us with ‘what if’s’ or ‘I should have’s.’ Again, we think it’s easier to just not
talk about it, to just ‘drop it,’ and move past the sin that was committed. But
our Yeitzer Ha-Rah won’t let us drop it, and so we have to recognize the guilt
in ourselves FIRST, and then we can begin to let go.
But the opposite of guilt can
also be freedom. Freeing ourselves, and freeing another. When someone has been
hurt, they sometimes think that refusing to be consoled, or forgive, is
empowering. ‘I am in control,’ they might say. ‘I have a right to be hurt, I
have a right to refuse forgiveness, and I have a right to demand that the other
continue to feel guilty!’ But we’re not just hurting someone else; we’re
actually hurting ourselves as well. Again, it is a wound that festers, that
languishes. It isn’t made better, and it is once again the Yeitzer Ha-Rah
that’s in there, giving us the language of empowerment, entitlement, and
righteous indignation. But it hurts. It’s unresolved. And it damages everyone.
So the opposite can be, again,
FREEDOM! Release. Like it says on the Liberty Bell, here in Philadelphia, from
our Torah, from Leviticus, 25:10: “You shall proclaim liberty throughout the
land for all its inhabitants.” It’s a funny word, in the Torah, for ‘liberty.’
It’s not the normal word for ‘freedom,’ either ‘chofesh’ or ‘cheirut,’ like
when we say the Israelites were taken from slavery to freedom, ‘Mei-Avdut l’Cheirut.’
(Yeah, I know, I’m back to the
Passover story again. I don’t know what’s going on, I can’t help myself!) In
Leviticus, it uses a peculiar word, ‘D’ror.’ It’s a hapax legomenon (I love
that term!), meaning a word that appears only once in the entire Torah. It can
mean ‘liberty,’ or ‘freedom,’ or even ‘release.’ WE need to release ourselves
and each other: Summon from the depths of our being the strength to BE free of
guilt, and to give that freedom as a gift to one another.
It’s not easy! This word appears
once in the Torah, certainly a reminder of how hard it is to recreate! But
without it, without liberty and release, we are left without the words to
speak; unable to ask even a simple question to figure out how to begin feeling
less guilty.
But there isn’t just one opposite
of guilt. I told you, there isn’t a right answer and a wrong answer, there are
only nuances and choices. Sometimes we need kindness to reduce guilt, sometimes
we need to practice letting go, and sometimes we need to just open our arms
wide and allow freedom to wash over us! Personally, I like another choice:
‘self-compassion.’ In a way, it is a combination of all the other traits we
spoke of; kindness, letting go, and freedom. Dr. Kristin Neff is a researcher
and professor at the University of Texas at Austin, and she has a whole website
devoted to this, www.self-compassion.org.
There, she summarizes self-compassion as three things, self-kindness, common
humanity (meaning, the importance of recognizing that it's part of being human,
for EVERYONE, to experience suffering, and to feel inadequate), and mindfulness
(dealing with our challenges and limitations, but not obsessing over them).
Neff writes about how self-compassion is a lot like compassion for other
people, except it's often hard to truly accept that we're like everyone else,
with the same fears, the same frustrations... the same guilt. It is indeed part
of THE human condition. Neff deduces, "The more you open your heart to
this reality instead of constantly fighting against it, the more you will be
able to feel compassion for yourself and all your fellow humans in the
experience of life."
A friend recently shared with me
the term 'analysis-paralysis.' Sometimes when you spend too much time on
something, read too much, and now know too much on a subject, it crosses over a
threshold from being useful, informative, and empowering, and instead becomes
debilitating. I don't want that to happen here. I think analysis-paralysis is
what happened to that poor fourth child at the Seder table, listening to
endless debates and conversations about Passover, and all that Hebrew being
chanted. Lost and overwhelmed by too much information, there isn't even a
question left to help get back on track. I hope that isn't the case here.
We know our first question: What
is the opposite of guilt? Guilt is up there with shame, fear, perfection, and
insecurity - they're all barriers to keep us from ourselves and others, to stop
us from feeling connected and in harmony. So what do YOU think is the opposite
of guilt? Is it kindness, letting go, freedom, or perhaps self-compassion? Just
start with one question, one small change to start moving away from guilt and
distance. A simple turn like that can help us achieve real and lasting
t'shuvah.
The Baal Shem Tov, our
Kabbalistic friend, also taught that t'shuvah, repentence, is process - not
accomplishment; journey, not destination. In order to move away from Sh’eino
Yodei’a Lishol, from being unable to EVEN ask that first question, we don't
need to know the final destination, the total accomplishment. We need only to
be WILLING, today, right now, right here in this room, on this holiday, to begin
the journey, begin the process. Then Guilt Free Judaism won't seem impossible;
it'll be SO close by, just opposite us, in fact. We've just got to turn and
look.
Happy Passover - ach, darn it,
I'm still stuck! Shanah Tovah - Happy New Year!
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