Sunday, September 24, 2017

Rosh Hashanah Sermon: Open Doors, Open Hands, Open Hearts



It was the Tiki Torches.  Those Tiki Torches signified that everything had changed.  The news coming out of Charlottesville was horrific.  The violence, the bigotry, the brazenness of the protesters was deeply troubling.  I couldn’t believe that this was America in 2017.  In the past, the protesters would have worn hoods; they would have gathered in the darkness of night.  Here they were, marching proudly in the midday sun, yelling, “Blood and Soil,” “Jews will not replace us.”  The Tiki torches looked almost medieval; a nod to the past, to the Third Reich and to “Pitchforks and Torches” – vehicles used to scare us and put us in our place.

Charlottesville shook me to the core.[i]  There always was and will always be bigotry.  Anti-Semitism, racism, hatred of all kind, has been a part of our country’s dark history since our very founding.  Yet, this moment just feels different.  This year just feels different. 

So let us be unequivocal.  We firmly deplore these and any acts of anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, racism, or bigotry.  We stand firmly with our interfaith allies.  We will always speak out against hatred of any kind.  We deplore all who were ambiguous in their condemnation of these acts.  There is right and there is wrong.  We stand together and when there is no moral voice, we will be that moral voice.

Yet, I keep coming back to the Tiki Torches.  Last night, I began these High Holy Days with a story of how each of us must be a light.  We need you to light up a corner of our synagogue and a corner of our world.  The Tiki Torches were used to bring light.  They were there to scare us, frighten us, shock us.  We will not be scared.  We will not be frightened.  Instead, I urge us to reclaim the torch, to reclaim the light.[ii]  We will transform fear into hope.  We will transform hatred into love.

The bigots and the White Supremacists entire wish is to extinguish Judaism; to eradicate our proud religion.  And our response will be: to create a proud and vibrant Jewish future.  Today, I’d like to share with you my vision for the future of Bolton Street Synagogue.  How will we transform our synagogue.  How will we journey forward together.  How will we build upon our past and create a proud and vibrant community.

Open Doors
Long ago, there was a question about why Saul, than an ordinary man, merited the great honor of being named King of Israel.  In a wonderful midrash,[iii] a parable, the rabbis share that Saul was chosen as King of Israel because of the merit of his grandfather, a man known as Ner (meaning lamp).  What did Saul’s grandfather, Ner, do?  Ner lit lamps for the public.  There were always dark alleyways between people’s homes and the Beit Midrash, the House of Study.  In the darkness of night, without a torch guiding the way, many didn’t come to the synagogue to study, pray, or gather together.  It was too frightening and there were too many barriers to venture out into the darkness of the night.  Ner lit lamps to banish darkness.  The torches allowed all to be together.

This leads us to the first aspect of community, which I’d like to call: Open Doors.  Bolton Street has always been a community that is known for its openness.  It doesn’t matter our age, our sexuality, our skin color, our background, how we define family, or even our religion.  All are welcome to enter these doors. 

Yet, we know that we can always do better.  Open Doors means everyone feels welcome.  What about the new guest that fails to be welcomed?  What about the person who sits alone waiting for an invitation?  What about the visible and invisible barriers that prevents those from joining us, engaging fully in Jewish life?  Open Doors means we do our best to knock down all obstacles that drive us apart and create new pathways to bring us together.

Open Hands
A man[iv] was travelling from place to place when he saw a castle aglow in flames.  The man said, “Is it possible that this castle lacks a person to look after it?  Who will put out the fire?”  The owner of the building looked out and said, “I am the owner of the castle.”  Similarly, Abraham, looked out at the world and said, “Is it possible that this castle, our world, has no one to look after it?”  And God said, “I am the Master of the Universe, and he replied to Abraham, “Lech Lecha… Go forth…”

In this Midrash, a man sees a castle ablaze and searches for the owner, in order to extinguish the fire.  And Abraham, the first Jew, looks out at the world on fire and asks, “Who is responsible for all of this?”  And God answers: “From your question, I know that you are the one!  Lech Lecha, go forth, for it is now your responsibility to care for my world.”

That is the essence of what it means to be a Jew, of what it means to be a part of the Jewish community.  It’s what I’d like to call Open Hands.  Our responsibility is to reach out to those in need.  Whether we call this Tikkun Olam (Healing of the World), Tzedakah (Charity), Social Action, or Gemilut Chasadim (Acts of Loving Kindness), our first responsibility is to care for and heal the world.

The man looked out and saw a palace on fire.  He didn’t wait until his house was burning down in order to act.  No, he first reaches out to help those in distress.  That is our foremost responsibility as a synagogue community.  We are guided by the Jewish past.  We are reminded that we were slaves in Egypt; that we encountered hostility and bigotry; that we were the downtrodden, the stranger, and the less than human.  Yet, we don’t turn our backs to the world.  We reach across faith lines to assist all who are in need.  Our past guides us; as the prophets remind us, we must open our hands to all who struggle, all who are challenged, here and everywhere.

Open Hearts
Almost seventy years ago, the German and Austrian Jewish Community was devastated during Kristallnacht, the night of broken glass.  On that fateful evening, thousands of synagogues, Jewish businesses, and homes were destroyed!  Arsonists burned down buildings, while windows were broken.  Shards of glass were everywhere.  The Jewish community laid in ruin just as the Holocaust was about to begin.

One young man, Walter Schwarz, lived through this horrible ordeal.  In the aftermath of Kristallnacht, Walter swore that if he survived, he would one day learn to rebuild the shards of glass into something beautiful.  What was broken, would one day become whole.

Walter survived and Baltimore became his new home.  He became a founding member of our congregation and fulfilled his long promised vow.  Well into his 70’s, Walter learned how to make stained glass windows at the JCC; he had never worked with stained glass before.  He took pieces of broken glass and created the breathtaking stained glass window that was located in Bolton Hill and now sits prominently in our lobby.  The window serves as a reminder of where we came from and a symbol of our past.  A Jewish star remembers the 6 million while the 10 commandments proudly recognizes the essence of who we are as a Jewish community.  As sunlight shines forth, a spectrum of colors shines down upon our lobby.




The stained glass window and Walter’s story symbolizes the third aspect of community: Open Hearts.  Walter took something which was broken and helped build something new and vibrant.  As we begin the next chapter of Bolton Street Synagogue, what do we wish to build, together?  How will we maintain our progressive Jewish values, yet not lose our vibrant Jewish past?  How will we keep tradition alive, but also change with the times?  How will we define “Jewish community” when many of our members and loved ones aren’t Jewish?  Open Hearts mean that we open ourselves to the diversity that is our community, yet continue to delve down the path of modernity and tradition.

Another aspect of Open Hearts means strengthening our relationship with each other.  Jewish community has always been built upon a brit, a covenant.  A brit means that we have responsibility for each other.  That we look out for each other, embrace each other, care for each other.  Part of creating a brit, a covenant with one another, means opening our hearts to each other’s strengths, but also each other’s weaknesses.  Open Hearts means being forgiving and empathetic.  We must recognize that all of us make mistakes, none of us is perfect.  Let us open our hearts to our entire persona and to our entire community.

As a rabbi, I’ve been blessed to serve many communities, from the tiny chavurah to the largest synagogue.  I love being a rabbi.  I love leading services, teaching Torah, guiding young and old, leading my community.  Yet, I’ve always searched for something more; yearned for a community that truly felt like home.  This past winter, when Brian, Caleb, and I visited Bolton Street for the first time, we knew we were home.  We felt warmth and love permeating everywhere.  We loved the dedication to tradition and the willingness to think differently.  We saw the stewards of the past and the builders of the future.  Brian and I wished to find a community that we’d join even if I wasn’t the rabbi; a place where Caleb would grow up and feel loved and supported.  We found it, here, at Bolton Street.

As your rabbi, I promise to be by your side, to guide you, and nourish your souls.  I promise to teach, but also to learn; to lead, but also to listen.  I promise that I’ll push us forward, but always remember our past.  I will be there for you, but I need you to be there for me too.  I need you to support me and guide me on this new endeavor, together.

On the start of this New Year, I ask you again to roll up your sleeves.  I ask you: come to services, attend a class, volunteer around the synagogue, give back to the community.  I ask you: share your passion, give of yourself, meet me, and join with old faces and meet new faces too.  In this New Year, we will respond to hatred and violence by building upon our proud past and creating a vibrant Jewish future.  May we open our doors, open our hands, and open our hearts.  Together, we will transform our world, transform our synagogue, and most importantly transform our lives.  Ken Yehi Ratzon, May it be so.  Amen v’Amen.



[i] Much appreciation to the Central Conference of American Rabbis (CCAR) for its webinar “Post Charlottesville from the Pulpit.”  Thank you to Rabbi Amy Schwartzman, Rabbi Mari Chernow, and Rabbi David Stern for their thoughts and reflections as I prepared for this sermon.
[ii] Gratitude to Rabbi Adam Allenberg for his commentary and thoughts about Charlottesville in the HUC-JIR Podcast “Bully Pulpit” collegecommons.huc.edu/bully_pulpit/charlottesville_huc/
[iii] Leviticus Rabbah 9:2
[iv] Genesis Rabbah 39:1.  Many thanks to Rabbi Dvora Weisberg for her thoughts in the HUC-JIR Podcast “Bully Pulpit.”

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