Showing posts with label Tower of Babel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tower of Babel. Show all posts

Thursday, October 22, 2020

Noach: The words we hear, the words we use

 Parashat Noach (Genesis 6:9-11:32)

They say that every rabbi really only has three sermons. Mine are: we are created B’Tzelem Elohim/in God’s image; as humans we are fallible; and words have power. This week’s parsha, Noach, illustrates all of these. We see how the fallibility of humanity causes the flood and the building of the Tower of Babel. The idea that we are created in God’s image was on the minds of the people who decided to build the tower in the first place, although they were not trying to emulate God so much as trying to BE God – never a good idea. 

Every time I read a parsha a different lesson is revealed to me. This year the Tower of Babel story with its focus on the power of words and language seems more relevant than ever. Who hasn’t been in a situation where everyone is speaking the same language but somehow no one seems to understand what anyone else is saying. 

A classic example is the Abbott and Costello skit “Who’s on first?” Abbott begins by naming the players on the bases. Costello hears something entirely different and responds accordingly. Abbott in turn does not understand Costello’s responses and proceeds to answer in a way that just compounds the misunderstanding – and so it continues. Even two people, friends, speaking the same language, do not understand what the other is saying --  and the result is a conversation at cross purposes. In this case it is very funny but we all know that is not always the case.  

In Parshat Noach (Genesis 11:1-7) we are told that people from chol ha’aretz/all the earth speak the same language and together decide to make a name for themselves by building a tower up to the sky. Commentators say that this chol ha’aretz means that it was literally all of humankind who were involved in this endeavor. If that was the case, who were they trying to impress by making a name for themselves? The commentaries’ answer is that they wanted to challenge God. As we all know from countless episodes in Torah, God doesn’t particularly like to be challenged and when God is challenged it must be done in just the right way (think Abraham and Sodom). The people building this tower were afraid that if they did not build it, they would be “scattered all over the world.” (11:4) The consequence of this challenge turned out to be exactly what they had named as a reason for their actions, but much worse. They were not only scattered but also lost the gift of ease of communications.

I once attended a workshop that demonstrated how easy it is to misunderstand the meaning of a spoken word. One activity involved the presenter saying a sentence, highlighting a particular word and then asking each person to write down what they heard when this word was spoken. The word was “Israel.” The responses contained the entire spectrum (positive and negative) of the biblical, political, religious and spiritual meanings. It was fascinating. It reminded us that we cannot take for granted that what we say will be received and perceived in the ways we intend. 

The verse in which God states the intention to confound humanity’s speech concludes “…asher lo yishma’u/so that they shall not understand one another’s speech.” (11:7) The root of the word used for understand is shin-mem-ayin, shema. Rashi writes that this root word is used here as “hearing” with one’s heart, as distinct from hearing with one’s ears. Isn’t that what the communication is all about? What we say and what we hear is determined not only by our ears and our intellect. It is also determined by our hearts, by our experiences, by our world view. 

As we move through not only this health crisis but also this challenging political season, my blessing for all of us is to hear with open ears, mind and heart. May we recognize that there is meaning under the surface of words and strive to shema/understand what is being heard and what we say in return. 


Note: a version of this Dvar Torah can be found in the 10/22/20 issue of the Washington Jewish Week. 











Friday, November 1, 2019

Parshat Noach: Two aspects of God


            A quick note before Shabbat. This week’s Torah portion is ParshatNoach. It contains two stories with very different views of God.
            In the first, we are presented with a God who becomes so angry or fed up with human kind that S/He makes the decision to destroy the entire world – all except for Noah, his family, and some animals so that there will be a remnant to start over with. In the end, God realizes that perhaps a cataclysmic flood event was a bit extreme, even with a generation as degenerate at the generation of the flood supposedly was. So God becomes contrite gives us the rainbow as symbol that God will never again destroy the world by a flood.
            Adonai, the God of mercy, justice and forgiveness, is also a God of anger. If God can get angry, then so can we. We are created in God’s image and try to emulate God’s attributes – in this case anger and the recognition that anger needs to be reigned it. In other words, we should control our anger, it should never control us. There is godliness in anger. It can provide the impetus for change and action, but it must be controlled.
            The second story, which is at the end of the Torah portion, is that of the Tower of Babel. Here God sees a world, about 700 years after the flood (according to the Sages), where everyone speaks the same language, and everyone gets along. They get along so well that they decide to cooperatively build a tower that will reach God. Why? There are different explanations including in order to make their name or just because they think they can.
            God sees the people are setting themselves an impossible task and decides to intervene. Why? One possibility is God saw that the people would be so occupied with building the tower that nothing else would get done – no crops planted, no stores selling things, no houses built, no babies being made. Another is that God didn’t want the people to have the consequences of setting themselves an impossible and unachievable task.
            In this story we have a parental or benevolent God who chooses to intervene in order to protect the people. The result: Babble! God “gifts” humans with the gift of different languages. Suddenly it’s much more difficult to understand each other. People instinctively gather together with those that speak the same language that they do. Then they have to start figuring out how to communicate with those who are different. A lesson that we are still learning to this day.      
            A God of anger and a God who is parental and benevolent. Two characteristics of God that are innately human, have both positive and negative aspects, and teach us that we do not have to be perfect to access the godliness within.   
            It might be a bit more difficult to access the godliness within this weekend as we turn the clocks back tomorrow night and mess up our sleep! But I have faith that we will prevail and get to wherever we need to be Sunday morning on time if a bit discombobulated.
             Have a blessed and lovely Shabbat.
            Shabbat Shalom,
            Rabbah Arlene