Do we see and hear when people are hurting?
Do we pay attention or look away?
Do we even care?
Do we do anything about it?
As queen Marie-Antoinette said when told that her people were starving and had no bread, what did she say?
Let them eat cake!
Pray that we are better than that. ;-)
(Credit Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
Showing posts with label Hardened Heart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hardened Heart. Show all posts
August 13, 2020
Let Them Eat Cake
Labels:
Bread,
Brotherhood,
Cake,
Caring,
Charity,
Compassion,
Eating,
Food,
French,
Hardened Heart,
Hungry,
Hurting,
Kindness,
Needy,
Pain,
Photo,
Poverty,
Starvation,
Suffering,
Washington D.C.
June 12, 2017
The Knowable and Unknowable
So as we all do, I often come across challenging and perplexing issues or problems in life.
And my nature is to try to understand them, solve them, fix them--is it survival or the challenge or both?
But then we come across some things that are just beyond our [mere mortal] understanding or ability to simply fix them.
I remember as a youngster learning in Yeshiva about when it says in the Bible that G-d hardened Pharaoh's heart so that he continued to refuse to let the Jews go from their enslavement in Egypt.
And the classic mind-bending question is how could G-d harden his heart if Pharaoh retained free will which we all have to choose good or evil.
Did G-d harden his heart or did he have free will--which is it? And if G-d hardened his heart, then how could Pharaoh and the Egyptians be punished for something they didn't fully control?
One explanation is that by facing the punishing plagues, Pharoah was losing his free will to decide what to do with the Israelites, so by hardening his heart, G-d was actually restoring his free will to choose once again...interesting.
Of course in life, there is also the philosophical dimensions of so many seeming contradictions such as the cliche about what happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object.
Which wins out if one is unstoppable and the other is unmovable?
No, I don't think these are just riddles, but the testing of the abilities of our human minds to understand further and further into the mysteries of G-d, creation, and the universe.
So what do we do in life when confronted by things that are seemingly or really beyond our human capacities?
- We ponder these weighty matters and sometimes we get frustrated and rip our little-left hair out or laugh at ourselves as to why we can't just get it.
- We look to understand the deeper spiritual meanings of these challenges in the context of our earthly lives.
- We try to solve and fix what we can within the confines of our spaghetti brain matter and flesh and bone bodies.
- At the end of the day, we acknowledge our human limitations, and look to the Heavens for answers or at least for Divine guidance and protection along the way.
While we cannot understand everything or always reach our destination that we set for ourselves that should never prevent us from trying our hardest and going as far as we can on our journeys--and letting the next person, and the next person pick up the torch and carry it forward.
In the Jewish prayers, we say that the matters of the earth are for our exploration and striving, but the ultimate secrets of the Heaven are for G-d alone. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
And my nature is to try to understand them, solve them, fix them--is it survival or the challenge or both?
But then we come across some things that are just beyond our [mere mortal] understanding or ability to simply fix them.
I remember as a youngster learning in Yeshiva about when it says in the Bible that G-d hardened Pharaoh's heart so that he continued to refuse to let the Jews go from their enslavement in Egypt.
And the classic mind-bending question is how could G-d harden his heart if Pharaoh retained free will which we all have to choose good or evil.
Did G-d harden his heart or did he have free will--which is it? And if G-d hardened his heart, then how could Pharaoh and the Egyptians be punished for something they didn't fully control?
One explanation is that by facing the punishing plagues, Pharoah was losing his free will to decide what to do with the Israelites, so by hardening his heart, G-d was actually restoring his free will to choose once again...interesting.
Of course in life, there is also the philosophical dimensions of so many seeming contradictions such as the cliche about what happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object.
Which wins out if one is unstoppable and the other is unmovable?
No, I don't think these are just riddles, but the testing of the abilities of our human minds to understand further and further into the mysteries of G-d, creation, and the universe.
So what do we do in life when confronted by things that are seemingly or really beyond our human capacities?
- We ponder these weighty matters and sometimes we get frustrated and rip our little-left hair out or laugh at ourselves as to why we can't just get it.
- We look to understand the deeper spiritual meanings of these challenges in the context of our earthly lives.
- We try to solve and fix what we can within the confines of our spaghetti brain matter and flesh and bone bodies.
- At the end of the day, we acknowledge our human limitations, and look to the Heavens for answers or at least for Divine guidance and protection along the way.
While we cannot understand everything or always reach our destination that we set for ourselves that should never prevent us from trying our hardest and going as far as we can on our journeys--and letting the next person, and the next person pick up the torch and carry it forward.
In the Jewish prayers, we say that the matters of the earth are for our exploration and striving, but the ultimate secrets of the Heaven are for G-d alone. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
The Knowable and Unknowable
Labels:
Challenges,
Comprehension,
Faith,
Free Will,
G-d,
Hardened Heart,
knowledge,
Limitations,
Mortality,
Mysteries,
Photo,
Problem-solving,
Secrets,
Spirituality,
Test,
Torah,
Try Your Best,
Understanding,
Universe
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