Where Will We Find G-d?

Remember us for life King who delights in life
And write us in the book of life For your sake, God of life.
People have said odd things about Jews, that we seek power or success or wealth or fame. 

Truth is that in the hour of truth, on rosh Hashanah and yom kippur, Jews only ever asked god for one thing. Life. Choose life, said Moses. Sanctify life, says the Torah. Celebrate life, says Kohelet. When we make a berakhah Judaism teaches us gratitude for life. 

When we keep Shabbat we learn to appreciate the blessings of life. When we give tzedakah or do an act of chessed or give hospitality to those who'd otherwise be alone we enhance other people's life. And if there is one thing I've noticed about Jews, it's their appetite for life, their passion for life. 

Judaism is a sustained discipline in the art of life. And that's where we find God: in the joy, the wonder, the miracle and mystery of life. God: in the year to come please bless our life so that we can make a blessing of our life. Write us in the book of life. 

The Unetaneh Tokef Prayer

Unetaneh tokef is a prayer of intense drama. The world is a courtroom. The books of life and death are open. God is the judge. The shofar sounds. The angels tremble. The court is in session. And we are on trial, awaiting the verdict. Who will live and who will die. What will be our fate in the year to come?

Yet this we believe: that no fate is final. Uteshuva utefillah utzedakah maavirin et roah hagzerah. Repentance prayer and charity have the power to avert the evil decree.

Two great cultures between them shaped the civilization of the west: ancient Greece and ancient Israel. Athens and Jerusalem. Two different approaches to life.

The Greeks believed in moira, ananke, blind, inexorable fate. What will be will be whatever we choose. And the more we try to avoid it the more we make it happen. Out of this belief came great drama, the Greek gift to the world. Its name is tragedy.

Judaism said no. It isn't true. Fate is not final. The decree has not been sealed. God has given us the one gift that redeems life from tragedy, the gift of freedom. We can choose. We can change. We can act differently next time. We can make sure the future is not an endless replay of the past. And as for the past, if we acknowledge it, God forgives. Out of that faith came the one word with the power to redeem life from tragedy. The word tikvah. Hope.

Jews lost many things in the course of history, their land, their home, their city Jerusalem, their holy of holies, the temple; sometimes they lost their lives. But never did they lose their hope. Jews kept hope alive, and hope kept the Jewish people alive. And if you were to ask me what difference faith makes, I would say: faith is the ability to know the worst and yet remain committed to the best, to know how cruel life can be and yet never ever to despair. Faith is the courage to hope.

"Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, is a kind of clarion call, a summons to the Ten Days of Penitence which culminate in the Day of Atonement... Yom Kippur is the supreme moment of Jewish time, a day of fasting and prayer, introspection and self-judgement. At no other time are we so sharply conscious of standing before God, of being known."

 For the remaining videos, click here: “Preparing for the New Year”