Chapter 24
Tim:
Referring to 24:2 “One basket contained good figs, like first –ripened figs,
and the other basket contained very bad figs, so bad they could not be eaten.”
Who sorted
these figs?
Ceil: Referring
to 24:8 “And like the bad figs… so will I treat King Zedekiah of Judah and his
officials and the remnant of Jerusalem that is left in this land… I will make
them a horror – an evil-to all the kingdoms of the earth.”
You would think that the remnant would be
considered the lucky ones – the ones who were able to survive and remain in the
land. Why aren’t they rewarded?
Ellen: God
needs anger management!
Rabbi: God
has been trying to direct and teach man all along – from Eden up to this point.
Ellen: God
hasn’t stepped in for a very long time – now he will starve them and create
hell on earth.
Ceil: Well,
the people have misbehaved.
Rabbi: There
is no pure good or pure evil/bad person who survives. Jeremiah is offering hope
to those who will make it back from exile. All the people at that time will be
purified.
Joel: This
is the eve of the Babylonian invasion. To surrender to exile is
counter-intuitive but that is what Jeremiah is directing them to do.
Jerry: The
remnant will stay with the corrupt puppet-king Zedekiah, so maybe that is why
they need to be purged.
Joel: The
Jews did well in Babylon after a while.
Ceil: There
wasn’t necessarily a climate of hate towards the Jews there. There were many
different cultures of conquered people living together.
Julie:
Sounds like NYC.
Ellen: Why
didn’t God destroy the other people – why his own people?
Joel: In
history bad things happen so humans make up reasons – God is historical
contingency. If you believe he is a personality he or she is functioning in
multiple dimensions. If he or she is not, then history sets up challenges and
Jews have to survive in a Darwinian sense. So it’s a test either way.
Ellen: That
works as an explanation if man made God but it doesn’t work if God made man.
Rabbi: I
don’t believe in a God who makes people do things.
Bill: It
seems that God wants people to earn things – learn and grow through adversity.
Rabbi: Ellen
wants to know why if God stepped in once why won’t he do it again.
Bill: As we
age our perspective changes.
Ellen: I
don’t think God is on a linear plane.
Rabbi: I
think it is man who is changing and discovering aspects of God. God doesn’t
change.
Corey: The
people were slaves in Egypt a long time. Maybe they needed and devised a reason
to finally leave.
Joel: This
is the evolution theory of God.
Chapter 25
Rabbi: At
this point Jeremiah has been prophesizing for twenty four years. This is his
last appeal to the people.
Bill: This
is in third person.
Rabbi: Yes,
Baruch the scribe’s voice may be here.
Bill: This
is like the end of the movie.
Rabbi: Yeah,
like Lord of the Rings with seven possible endings.
Joel: Frum
Jews believe that Jews are a nation. Real Jews yearn to go back. If we don’t,
we are in exile regardless of where we may live and thrive. I see myself as an
American and a Jew. This is a fundamental difference between Orthodoxy and
Reformed Judaism.
Rabbi:
Orthodox Jews pray three times a day for the time they can return to Israel.
Joel: These
are two poles pulling in opposite directions. It isn’t resolvable.
Rabbi: In
586BCE this is where the diaspora began.
Ellen: Why
would prophets stop existing? They seem to just end.
Joel: It’s
easier to refer to a book than a prophet who claims to speak for God.
Ellen: I’m
sure this was true back then too!
Rabbi: We
stopped writing the book, but we continue to write commentary on it.
Ellen: Why
can’t there be Prophets who add amendments to the Tanach, like we do with the
constitution?
Joel: We do
– it’s called the Talmud.
Rabbi: I am
part of a group of Reformed Rabbis who are asked questions and we try to write
answers or responsa. Of course the only authority we have is the belief that
others have placed in our answers.
Joel: But
this seems to be following the same Orthodox lines or reasoning. Judaism evolved
for practical reasons. Great Rabbis and by extension the community can vote on
the book and come up with their own commentaries to a particular problem.
Ellen: This
is hard material to read – he is a nasty God!
Bill: In the
parsha we read today God killed Aaron’s two sons. This upset me but he did and
I have to accept this. It is what it is and some things happen as they are
supposed to happen.
Paul: There
is something about fire and the cleansing of fire. There is a line of thinking
that fire was the cleansing element in the Holocaust.
Julie: This
line of thinking is a very slippery slope!
Jerry: Fire
is seen as an aspect of God, for example, the Burning Bush, the lights on
Sabbath etc.
Joel: In
this week’s Parsha Aaron’s sons, Nadab and Abihu, both Cohanim are killed for
offering “strange fire” at the alter in the sanctuary. Some Rabbis say they
were drunk, while others say “strange fire” was the wrong kind of offering, an
unwanted offering or an offering to another god.
Rabbi: You
laid this out very well, Joel. There are two branches. One is that we have
sinned and we must change our personal behavior and the other is we are
creative and try to figure out what God wants.
What does
God want? What is the value of contemplating all this in the face of injustice
and historical tragedy? Is God the source of all punishment and reward? Are we
forever looking over our shoulders wondering when judgment will come down,
despite our best efforts to live a good life? Whether you believe that these
historical events are motivated by divine providence or not, it’s clear that
bad things happen and often these things are out of our control. There is the
issue that the Jews in Jeremiah’s time were doing what they thought was right,
but God thought otherwise. There were also Jews who knew they were wrong, but
chose to continue on that path. The response in Jeremiah is that following the
laws is no guarantee of being saved or even rewarded in this life. We then must
ask, what about those Jews that tried their best in Judah, but were swept away
or killed by the Babylonians as a mark of collective guilt? What makes sense to
me, are the ethical and moral teachings which can be used even when confronting
these questions. Things are going to happen anyway, despite our efforts. What
is critical is our moral response to these events. These teachings can stand on
their own whether God is passing down moral judgments or not. This is what makes the difference in repairing
our own lives and the world.