Thursday, October 17, 2013

All in the Family



As we make our way through the book of Genesis Abraham comes to the center of the stage. We are told about his great faith, his amazing trust in an unseen and unnamed God, and his zeal to spread the message of monotheism in a world not yet ready for the truth.
While most commentators, rabbis, and teachers focus on the spiritual attainments of Abraham, I think we do our ancestors a disservice if we do not look at his story from a very human viewpoint. Abraham was a rebel and a free-thinker! To his contemporaries Abraham was positing ideas that went against the status-quo. He was teaching revolutionary ideas that countered everything that any of his listeners had been taught. We never think of Abraham in those terms- we tend to think of a kindly older man, maybe a grandfather type, who is urging people to do the right thing. We hardly ever see the real struggle that he faced as a proponent of a revolutionary new way of looking at the world. Abraham was a real hero but a hero who was little appreciated in his own time. He displayed a daring bravery to speak the truth in an age in which people had become all-too-accustomed to believing in the lies and myths of the past.
As Jews we take pride in being the descendants of Abraham. We boldly assert that we, the people of Abraham, have taught the world that there is only one God. We take pride in tracing the source of our religion back to a man who was but a single voice for truth. I would ask you to consider making another bold assumption about your “yichus” to Abraham.
If Abraham were alive today he would be considered the most politically-incorrect person alive. He would state what he believed without the fear that he would offend someone else and without the need to “qualify” his values and opinions. No, he would not try to offend other people or to detract or demean their beliefs but he would have no hesitation in standing for what he thought was right. Most of all he would never feel the need to apologize for his beliefs. If only we could have a little of his spirit now!
Very few of us will live up to that connection to Abraham. Far too many of us are afraid to say what we really think because we are afraid that it might be unpopular. The world we live in today seems to be one that discourages belief in anything- anything and everything is “fine.” You mind your business and I will take care of mine. Do realize that if you said “I am proud to be a Jew” some would accuse you of being ethnocentric or bigoted or worse. God forbid we should encounter someone who offers a value judgment concerning right and wrong. Such a person instantly becomes a pariah, a snob, a “hater.”
Abraham did make it possible for our people to be moral teachers, to teach about one God, and to teach that even God is subject to an absolute sense of morality and justice. Abraham also still challenges us by example- we fall short of that example any time that we do not speak up for our beliefs, any time we hesitate to speak because we are worried about what is “popular.” Find your voice- find your “inner Abraham.”

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