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- A .W -.. .2 . ":wr :w / .‘-A./J\.h\ . ..,fl,_‘ WHAT IT MmANS To 'PRACTISE' JUDAISM It is a sfe guess that we have come here from a variety of motives, conscious or unconscious. of us; Perhaps because we feel that 1t 15 expected Perhaps because we want to honour the wishes of our deceased parents or grandparents.[:Perhaps because we have a vague rear that to be absent on the Day of Judgment is to invite an unfavourable verdictlj Perhaps because to stay away on this day would be to sever our last link with our historic past and with the living fellowship of Israel. Perhaps because We have long sensed an emptiness in our lives Which a day of prayer may help to remedy. But whatever are the motives which have brought us here - Whether they be good, bad or indifferent - there is one and only one purpose which should unite us now that we 3;: gexw: to rededicate ourselves to Juiaism. If that is not our aim and desire, if we neither intend nor anticipate that we shall take Judaism any more seriously in the future than we haVe in the past, than our gathering is purposeless and meaningless[énd, worse, hypocritica1.{Then we would have done better to stay at home. That being so, there is a fundamental question which should occupy our minds today: What does it mean to be a Jew, to take Judaism seriously, to lead a Jewish life? Clearly it is ndt merely a matter of Eiggg, for one can be born of Jew1sh parents and yet never give Judaism a momentgs Equally clearly, it is not only a matter of Egiigf, for one can subscribe to all the doctrines of Judaism, as one may subscribe to thought. various philosophical and mathematical theories, Without ever acting upon them. One can simply store them up in onels mind. To be a Jew in any real sense, in any effective sense, in any worth-while sense, ' -2- 4’ we must g2 something about the birthright which we claim, we must g2 something about the beliefs we hold. fig must practise Judaism. But What does it 3252 to practise Judaism? There is a common notion that ifi means to be in the habit of performing certain ritual acts: to have a Mezuzah on the front door, to light the candles on Friday night, to go to Synagogue on Sabbaths and Festivals, to have a Seder at Passover and at a Menorah at Chanukkah and to fast on Yom Kippur, to say grace after meals and perhaps to keep a kosher home. When a person claims that he is a practising Jew he usually means that he does these things. When a person confesses that he is not a practising JeW, or that he is not very religious (usually with that peculiar mixture of apology and pride with Which people explain that they are not much good at arithmetic) they generally mean that they do not do these things. But I submit to you that to use the expression "a practising Jew“ in this sense is to Eérvert, or at any rate tildebase, its meaning. For When we say that belief must expresa itself in action, we do not mean, or we should not mean, ritual action. We mean ethical action. We mean quite another kind of action. Ana please understand that when not just talking Liberal Judaism, I I am talking Judaism. say this I am For it is precisely on this point that Judaism differed sharply from all the other religions of antiquity. They were just systems of ritual. In them the all-important thing was to offer the right sacrifices and to utter the right incantations in order to placate and propitiate their capricious gods. But Judaism, having discovered that there is only one God, went on to discover that he is a moral God and that it is only through moral conduct that man can please him and serve him. FManus first and foremost 9—— -5... duty is to emulate the moral attributes or God. In the Words of our Torah portion, “he executes justice for the fatherless and the widow, and loves the stranger...therefore you shall love the stranger.":] This revolutionary change from ritual religion to ethical religion was not, of course, easVJto effect. It took many centuries, and all the eloquence of the Prophets, to Wean the people away from the old emphasis on sacrifice and ritual as the means of winning God's favour. Amos: nI hate, I despise your feasts, and I Listen to take no delight in your solemn assemblies;..But let justice roll down like water, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream. "Listen to Isaiah: "What to me is the multitude of your sacrifices? says the Lord. I have had enough of burnt offerings and the fat of fed beasts...Even though you make many prayers, I Will not Wash yourselves; make yourselves clean; remove the evil of your doings from before my eyes; cease to do listen: your hands are full of blood. evil, learn to do good; seek justice, correct oppression; defend the fatherless, plead for the widow." Listen to Hosea: "I desire love and not sacrifice, and the knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings.“ Listen to Micah: "With what shall I come before the Lord?..;W111 the Lord be pleased With thousands of rams, with tens of thousands of rivers of 011?...He has showad you, 0 man, What is good; find what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love k1ndness, and to walk humbly With your God?" But, you may say, all that 13 Biblical. different View? Did not the Rabbis take a Is not Rabbinic Judaism altogether preoccupied with -4— ritual? Yes and no. The Rabbis were concerned to devise a way of life part but which was nevertheless intended in which ritual plays a large to inculcate precisely those ethical qua11t1$s which thg Prophets advocated. It was a habbi who said that thecommandment, Von shall love your neighbour as yourself, contains the whole essence of the Law. It was another Rabbi who said that the ritual cemmandments were given only was to purify God's creatures, that is, to produce a moral effect, It was to the Rabbis who ordained that the Haftarah for the Day of Atonement be the passage from the third part of the book of Isaiah which makes it abundantly clear that the only fast, the only self-affliction, acceptable homeless t6 God is to free the oppressed, to feed the hungry, th house the and to clothe the naked. It is in the Misnnah that we find an elder addressing his community on a fast-day in these words: “Brethren, 1t 15 not written of the men of Nineveh that 'God saw their sackcloth and their fasting', but 'And God saw their works that they burned from their evil wayl. Remember also What Joel said: 'Rend your hearts and not your The whole Prayerbook is a creation of the Rabbis, the and it is ethical through and through. Take for example the Viddui, of Sins. The traditional version specifies over fifty different garments!“ (Taanit 2:1). Confession db with kinds of transgression, yet not a single one has anything to ritual. They all refer to ethical offences. Faced with this kind of evidence, Which can be indefinitely multiplied, how is it possible to maintain that Judaism is pre-eminently concerned with ritual, and that to be a practising Jew means primarily to carry out certain Observances? 'Yet that was thb prevailing attitude when Liberal Judaism was launched as a protest against it, and it is, -5- alas, Still common. The reason is not far to seek. It is a fundamental For 1t is so much easier to practise ritual than to only at practise righteousneSS. Observances have to be performed stated times; r1ghteousness.at all times. be intangible. Observances are clearly defined; moral duties tend to satisfaction Observances, as Dr.Mattuck once wrote, “can give emot1onal Thought 22 the Prophets, in return for a comparatively small effort“ (The righteousness does not give any emotional satisfaction at all; human weakness. p.119); ourselves and with the on the contrary, it makes us dissatisfied, with us to make great world; it demands strenuous exertion; and 1t requ1res complacency, our sacrifices; to sacrifice our ease, our comfort, our — our accustomed habits of peace of mind, and - most difficult of all behaviour. as of This undoubtedly explains the tendency of so many JeWs, ethics, adherents of other religions, to stress ritual at the expense of Dre-Prophetic which is at bottom a tendency to revert to pre—JeW1sn, usually conscious of types of religion. But, of course, people are not rate they the true causes which motivate their attitudes. At any reasons to rationalise thmmJ:that is to say, they invent respectable important justify themgj So the theory is advanced that ethics may be very Judaism. Christians, but that 1& doesn't have all that much to do with is the ritual Muslims, Humanists and others also believe in ethics. It be stressed. of Judaism which is distinctive and which, therefore, mfist superficially This theory is all the more dangerous because it is to you plausible, and the best way to explode it is, I think, to read a memorable passage from a sermon given in London ten years ago by Rabbi Issenman: "It is ofiten said that if you eliminate ritual, then what is left in Judaism? ’Xes, what is left in Judaism? The answer g1ven in 2253 the religion of the prophets, only the belief in one God, only the belief in one humanity, only beating swords into ploughshares, only treating all men as brothers, only doing Justly and loving mercy, only loving thy neighbour as thyself, only making my house of prayer for all people, only recognizing that we have one Father and that one God has created us all. In this word QEEE we see the tragedy of Jewish spiritual life; that these basic values are relegated to a minor role, highlights the low tide of religious thinking;...that the one who stresses ritualistic externals bulwarks Judaism; that one who emphasizes sooial justice and world peace contributes little to it. That is the pitiful plight of Judaism, from Which our movement sought to extricate the Jewish masses of the World. We are not opposed to ritual...but we are opposed to making these externals primary, to making last things first and first things last" (1951 World Union Conrerance Report, p.55). The ethical teachings and ideals of Judaism are not identical with those of Christianity, or Humanism, or any other rbology. There are some highly significant differences, though of course there is also much common ground. But the fact that there is much common ground does not make it any less important. On the contrary, we should rejoice that so much of Judaism has been accepted elsewhere,[énd especially in ghe knowledge that it is the important things which have gained such acceptance] It would be tragic if we felt obliged to write off as "no longer of primary 1mportance" every item of Jewish teaching as soon as it became the possession of a wider section of humanity. For then, exactly as Judaism -7. fulfilled its mission of exerting a world-wide influence, it would shrink into a set of relatively unimportant ceremonies and customs, like an egg which, having released the chicken, 13 of no further use. fact, become an empty shell. it would, in No, neighbourly love 13 no less a Jewish ideal because Christianity teaches it also; justice is no less aewish ideal because Humanists believe in it too; peace is no_less a Jewish ideal because everybody yearns for it. To be a Jew and to practise Judaism, these expressions must always have pro-eminently an ethical connotation: to display certain qualities - certain very high qualitiesa- in personal conduct, in human relations, and in citizenship. Even if Judaism and, say, Christianity were identical in their ethical demands, which they are not, a good Jew would still be one who led that kind of life under the guidance and inspiration of Judaism, even as a good Christan would be one who led that kind of life under the guidance and inspiration of Christianity. Where, then, do Observances come in? as totally 1n31gn1ficant. Surely they cannot be dismissed They are contained in the phrase Which just used: "under the guidance and inspiration of Judaism“. I have It used to be said by exponents of L;beral Judaism that Observances are a means to an end. . It is still said, and it is perfectly true. But is is not an adequate way of stating the case.‘ For it is not immediately obvious how, for example, lighting candles on Friday night helps us to lead better lives in the ethical sense. The matter must be approached in another way. As we have seen, ifi is not easy to lead the good life as Judaism conceives it. On the contrary, it is very hard. It cannot be achieved merely by wishing it, or by following the easyagoing standards and conventions of ./‘s \ .13 -8- our half-Christian, half-Pagan environment, With only a dim recollection of Biblical prophecies and comwandments and only a touch fli$h JeWish dis- crimination. It requires guidance and 1nsp1rat10n:1§ery much guidance and very much inspirationrj To have any chance of achieving it we must draw heavily and constantly upon the accumulated power of centuries of Jewish wisdom, striving and aperience. Observances - by which I do not mean only ceremonies, but also regular study of Jewish literature and regular prayer and worship in the Synagogue and in the home - Observances are our point of contact with this vast storehouse of Jewish tradition, they are the dannel through which the influence of Judaism can Rigg, uvu*&wmn like a never-failing stream, into our consciousness and our sub-consciousness, bringing refreshment and strength. An individual ceremony, looked at in isolation, may not seem to have any ethical significann. wide sense in Which I But to lead a life without Observances, 1n the have used thatfienm, is to cut ourselves off from the influence of Judaism altogether. A person who says as some people do: "I am a good Jew, I am a passionate believer 15 Judaism, but I never go to Synagogue, I never pray a Jewish prayer, I never perform a JeW1sh ceremony and I never read a Jewish book" is like a person who says: "I am madly keen on music, but I never visit a concert hall, I never listen to the symphonies of the great masters, I never read about the history of musiq, I never study musical technique, I just give performances." genius the performances may be gmfil either in music or in religion. If he is a But most of us are not geniuses, Perhaps not for all of us, but certainly for ninety-nine per cent of us, to pray, to worship, to study and to observe ceremonial is indispensable if we are to achieve any success at {gs a n 3 . -9- 1n the attempt to lead a Jewisn life. To practise Judaism, theh, does not mean to observe things. But to observe things Eglgg 23 to practise Judaism. It is the way to harness the historic forces of Judaism for our every day use, as a nuclear reactor harnesses the physical forces of the atom. But just as the purpose of a nuclear reactor is to generate electricity, so the purpose of devotional exerclses is that we may lead lives of truth and justice, of purity and brotherly love. Dr.Mattuck summed it all up in one pregnant sentence which I invite you to ponder agd.n and again: “The good Jew is he in whosa life being a Jew is a perpetual influence for good" (Liberal Jewish Monthlz, September 1961, p.152.) And so end where I began. If our Worship today is to have any meaning and any value whatsoever, then we must resolve here and now I tnat 1n the New year we shall practise Judaism more faithfully than we have in the 01d, remembering that to be a practising Jew means to draw from Judaism not just from common sense or from the Eggs: of society, but from Judaism - the guidance, the inspiration and the strength to lead a noble life. —