Daily Life Lessons from Rabbi Heschel
Year 2 Day 189
“His compassion is greater than His justice. He will accept us in all our frailty and weakness. “for He knows our drive (yetzer), He remembers that we are dust.”(Psalms 103:14)(God In Search of Man pr.378)
In Judaism, as in all spiritual disciplines I believe, God’s compassion is always greater than God’s justice. The prophets are always calling to us to return as God will “accept our backsliding”. Yet, it seems like these two truths are among the hardest for most human beings to accept and live into.
We are living in a time where some people’s ‘justice’ is greater than their compassion. Their definition of ‘justice’ is anything that keeps them in power, anything they can use to keep people enslaved, anything that servers their interests, anything that is mendacious and deceptive, and, of course, their ‘justice’ can and must be bought! We are witnessing the Supreme Court Justices defend their questionable behaviors regarding their personal finances and cases brought before the court. We are witnessing Clarence Thomas proclaim that filing a false financial report about his wife’s earnings and sales of property, acceptance of gifts is ‘perfectly fine’. We are witnessing the current Republican Party become a terrorist organization, terrorizing anyone they disagree with by lying, legislating, holding fake hearings on fake ‘testimony’ and reputing the Declaration of Independence’s statement that “all men(people) have certain unalienable rights”. McCarthy, Cruz, Greene, Hawley, et al may have had some information on the planning of Jan.6th, which they now call a “peaceful demonstration”. These ‘leaders’ and so many others of the Republican Party have been willing lackeys for their rich, powerful benefactors like Harlan Crow, the Koch’s, Rupert Murdock and Fox News, Leonard Leo, etc. None of these ‘good christians’ have any compassion for anyone who does not hew their ‘party line’ as evidenced by their treatment of Liz Cheney, Adam Kinzinger, the people of the Lincoln Project, etc.
Imitacio Dei is a universal principle in Jewish and many other spiritual disciplines. Yet, imitating God, acting Godly by making compassion greater than justice, by rendering justice with righteousness, by tempering our selfish need for power and our unrelenting desire to be deceived, to deceive another(s) and engage in self-deception with truth, love, kindness seems to be ‘for suckers’ according to how some people understand faith, religion and God! ‘Religious’ people who see God as the Lion, who see God as Angry, who see God as vengeful, are living outside of what our Holy Books teach, living outside of the words of the Psalmist, living outside of Rabbi Heschel’s wisdom above.
We, the people, must rise up against the harshness and cruelty that is so prevalent today. We have seen the results of scapegoating, the results of “standing idly by the blood of our neighbors”, we have witnessed the chaos, death, ugliness that allowing these authoritarians, these terrorists have wreaked on Ukraine, on Germany, on Europe, on the Pacific Rim. We have the documentation of the Concentration Camps of Hitler, we have the lessons and power of Goebbels’ way of accusing another(s) of that which you are guilty of. We have seen the decimation of Tutsis in Rwanda, we have seen the “ethnic cleansing” of Milosevic, and, we, the people, have not risen up strong enough, fast enough in most of these cases to live “compassion greater than justice”, we have not responded from our higher selves, we have not followed God’s example, God’s call, nor the examples and calls of Rabbi Heschel, Rev. King, Bobby Kennedy, the Berrigan Brothers, Rev. Barber, Rabbi Brous, etc with the force and energy to stop these terrorists. We have the opportunity today to do this, we have to demand a NATIONAL DAY OF REPENTANCE for the Republican Party, the Democratic Party and everyone else for either our complicity, our inaction, and/or our perpetrating of terror and hatred, our absence of compassion and justice.
In recovery, we know that compassion is one of the greatest actions we can engage in. Compassion is more than a feeling, it is an action. We do this by letting go of resentments and praying for the welfare and good fortune of those people whom we resent. We do this by, as my first sponsor taught me, keeping our minds open enough to have them changed. In recovery, we are constantly asking ourselves “do we want to be right or be happy”, compassion is what helps us stay happy, joyous and free. When Dr. Susannah Heschel visited Beit T’Shuvah the first time, she spoke about seeing people who are stuck as pathetic: isn’t it sad that they are so stuck, unhappy that they have to act this way. Imitating God’s compassion has allowed me to let go of resentments and anger. God Bless and stay safe, Rabbi Mark