As I’ve written before, there is nothing harder for a writer to face than a blank white page. Its void seems to be more powerful than all the wisdom and words we have inside of us. None of our previous literary accomplishments seem to offer the loving assurance, “Don’t worry we too all started with a blank page.” But emptiness, my friends, craves to be filled. And so, the Evil One takes advantage and fills us with insecurity and injects us with his toxic words, “You can’t do it, so don’t even try.” Personally, I’ve learned to recognize this enemy and stymie him; instead, I listen to the reassuring sound of my fingers clacking against the keys. Clack, clack, clack but the results are in His hands.
In this week’s Bible reading, Shelach,
we learn how the Israelites, prior to their own entry, wanted to send spies
ahead to scout out the Promised Land. They too were afraid of the “blank page”
and the unknown that lay ahead. Ten of the 12 spies came back and said
the land and its inhabitants were unconquerable; they viewed their enemies as
giants and superior warriors and by contrast themselves as grasshoppers
believing their foe too viewed them as such. They also reported that the land
consumes its inhabitants. However, two of the spies, in contradistinction said
of the land, “We shall surely ascend and conquer it, for we surely can do it.”
Interestingly, all the spies observed the same reality on the ground; the singular difference
between the naysayers and the optimists was self-confidence founded in faith.
Time has changed nothing; the lesson remains the same: If you think of yourself
as a grasshopper, you will be regarded as one. “I think therefore I am.” If you
think the challenges ahead will consume you, they will. The optimists and
faithful, Caleb and Joshua, had faith in G-d and believed in the land’s
“exceptionalism.” They were the only ones to reach their destination.
An entire generation succumbed to the
doom-and-gloom tales of the ten spies and cried to go back to Egypt. As punishment,
none of them were allowed to enter G-d’s precious land. And thus, an entire
generation wandered for 40 years, corresponding to the 40 days the spies
surveyed a land flowing with milk and honey and brought back curdled sour
reconnaissance. The fear to forge forward had them desperate to retreat--all
the way back to slavery. Before them lay a blank, but promising,
G-d-blessed "page." However, they feared to write a new story for
themselves. How many of us in our own lives are terrified of becoming and
so instead we choose stagnation and stay put? We think what we are used to is
keeping us alive while all the time it is burying us.
But life is not just about keeping a
person breathing, it is also about creating and recreating ourselves to be
better people and better Jews. If you are the same person you were yesterday,
you are dying. It has been asked why from all the Torah’s great men from
Abraham to Moses, why the Jewish nation has come to be called “Israel,” the
name given to our Patriarch Jacob after wrestling with an angel who ultimately
blesses him. The answer is rather simple. The life of a living, breathing
Jew is a constant struggle--and it should be. It is that struggle that makes
us Israel; it is the struggle that makes us shine. It is that struggle
that makes everything we never dreamed we could be or were destined to be,
possible.
Both in our spiritual and practical
lives we must always keep moving and striving for growth, fearlessly. Like the
modern-day Israel that was transformed from a desert and malarial swamp into a
blooming, booming and blossoming land by valiant pioneers and their
descendants, we too must courageously cultivate the Garden of Eden within us.
Don't tolerate the weeds, lest they strangle you. Don’t be a comfort-zone-Jew.
The number one reason people bungee jump is because they want to step out of
their comfort zones and feel alive. Ironic that people are ready to jump to
near death, but not to life. Judaism and Torah offer you a jump up and an
eternal life, not a cheap thrill. Like Joshua and Caleb, Have faith Hashem will
catch you. Stop getting caught up in the secularism and materialism of this
world and forsaking your Jewish identity for it. How sad it would be if your
designer shoes will outlive your soul.
Friends, the beautiful thing about the
blank page and your life is that they can be whatever you want them to be and
read how you want them to read. Every day you have the opportunity to rewrite
the story of your life. Just because you were not brought up religious or
you were brought up very religious, don’t believe the GPS, you have not reached
your destination. And if you live in faith instead of fear you just might find
you have invented the struggle altogether. YOU are Israel! You may struggle
with G-d and man—and yourself, but you can prevail--SO PREVAIL! Shabbat
Shalom!
In memory of my best friend
and editor Phil/Pinchas who would have been celebrating a birthday today. G-d
bless his soul. May this Torah article help his soul have an aliyah and may all
my typos remind him how much he is still needed and missed.
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