Living in Torah Time
April 20, 2009
Holidays | Torah
(9 comments)
By Marge Eiseman
I've always wondered why the Torah reading about the Exodus didn't occur at the time of year when we celebrate Passover. And shouldn't we be reading about receiving the Ten Commandments at Shavu'ot? Doesn't that make more sense? Why are we in the midst of all the rules for the Levites and how to properly offer sacrifices, when it's time for us to act "as if" we were there at the plagues and the preparation for crossing the sea?
I've probably referred to this before, but my friends and I talk about living in "Torah Time" - when the themes of the weekly Torah portion either reflect or shape our modern experiences. So today, at 88 year old great uncle Archie's funeral, I had this idea that maybe it's what we put into these connections, this synchronicity that gives it some oomph!
I listened to the rabbi speak about how this very accomplished man was like matzah in his humility and service to nourish community. All who knew him in life, had memories of his very opinionated style of speaking, arguing cases and being the family storyteller, and as one of the speakers said, one quality he had little of was doubt. And yet, when the rabbi likened him to the humble flat bread that symbolizes the holiday during which Uncle Archie died, people nodded like that really captured his essence.
I guess in Torah Time, not everything has to line up perfectly, but it all sort of makes sense.
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Marge, our Rabbis teach that there is no earlier or later in Torah -- and by the same principle, I first wrote that our Rabbis taught, then realized that the teaching is as alive today as when it was first pronounced.
I marvel at the ability of our contemporary rabbis, particularly pronounced at this state of the cycle, to find contemporary messages in the arcane minutiae of Leviticus -- and particularly Professor Adler's skill at presenting such serious ideas with a light hand and a humorour touch.
To paraphrase your lovely metaphor, in Torah Time, we bring our sensibility to the line-up, so we synchronize ourselves with the text rather than asking it to synchronize with us.