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The Big Questions
By HaRav Ariel Bar Tzadok. Copyright (C) 2008 by Ariel Bar Tzadok. All rights reserved.
Many ask the big questions; who or what is
G-d and what does G-d want from us? In
order to answer the second question, the
first must also be answered. What G-d wants
from us is integrally bound up with our
awareness of who and what G-d is? One with a
mistaken view of G-d will by definition only
have a mistaken view of what G-d wants. So,
before we ask what G-d wants let us seek to
answer who is G-d in the first place.
Asking about G-d is no small task. There are
so many centuries of embellished myths and
legends to overcome. Most people today, in
one way or another, hold to the rather
juvenile belief that G-d is some kind of
super/greater human being; an old man with a
long white beard sitting on a cloud or a
throne with throngs of ministering angels,
all with cute little wings, serving before
Him. These novel portrayals can be found in
the most ancient of literature.
Yet, modern people fail to understand that
the writers of these accounts were writing
using poetic metaphors. They never intended
their accounts to be understood literally.
Ancient Semitic writers were by no means
rationalists by modern standards. The
rationalism of ancient Semitic writers was by
our modern definition both poetic and
mystical. To put it in terms familiar with
Torah Judaism, their pshat is not our pshat.
How the ancients thought and wrote and what
they considered to be simple and
straightforward are radically different from
how we are today. Their spirituality was far
from juvenile; but our understandings or
better to say, misunderstandings of what they
wrote is what is truly juvenile.
When a modern rationalist comes to the
metaphorical accounts recorded in Torah,
written as it is from an ancient Semitic
point of view, they often misinterpret the
style of the writing and mistakenly interpret
metaphors as literal. This misinterpretation
is by no means rational. Therefore one
making such a mistake cannot honesty be
called a rationalist and certainly not a
scholar. There is another term used to
describe those who are unable to recognize
the true rationale in ancient Semitic
literature all the while claiming that theirs
is the true understanding. Such individuals
are called fundamentalists.
There are all different types of
fundamentalists. There are secular
fundamentalists who look at the ancient
Semitic metaphorical accounts recorded in
Torah and dismiss them out of hand as
outdated nonsense. Then there are the
religious fundamentalists who embrace the
ancient accounts as literal truths, seemingly
oblivious to their original intent. One side
rejects the literal account and the other
side embraces it; both sides however are
grievously in error in that they view the
metaphorical as literal and respond to it
according to their own individual agendas.
I am sure if the original writers of Torah
and later prophetic literature were alive
today they would reject the fundamentalists
of both sides and explain their Semitic
poetic metaphorical writings in ways that the
honestly rational of minds would today
appreciate and embrace.
In order to properly understand G-d and what
G-d wants from us, we have to approach the
original Torah and prophetic material from
the point of view of those who wrote the
literature and not from the point of view of
modern day fundamentalists, who in very
unscholarly ways, misinterpret it.
Fundamentalists, both secular and religious,
essentially perpetuate a serious crime
against religion, spirituality and G-d
Himself. By interpreting metaphor as literal
and poetry as prose, they have totally
confused the true identity and reality of G-d
and have served to distance countless numbers
from the truths of spiritual reality. In
order to properly understand both G-d and
Torah one must be rational in the way the
term was originally understood by the ancient
authors and not how the meaning of the term
has been skewered today.
Rationalism is an interesting and often
misunderstood term. It has been embraced by
fundamentalists today who claim that they are
the true rationalists. Yet, the true
rationalist's views the fundamentalist as
being nothing other than a primitive boor.
True rationalists are seekers of truth,
regardless of where such truth may lead them;
they cannot afford to be dogmatic. While
they understand the concept of faith, they
also understand its parameters. True
rationalists seek to understand the universe;
they are seekers of natural law and objective
truths. They have zero patience for
fundamental proclamations that refuse to
mature with expanding realities.
Centuries ago there arose the great Rabbi
Maimonides. Aside from being a world class
physician and leading Torah scholar, he was
also a scientist and seeker of natural truth.
In his day the highest level of scientific
accomplishment was expressed through
Aristotelian philosophy. Therefore,
Maimonides used Aristotle to explain Torah
and reality most specifically in his book,
Moreh Nebukhim, the Guide for the Perplexed.
Maimonides took advantage of the best
information available in his day. If he were
alive today, he would have definitely looked
at modern scientific discovery and like every
other scientist today, he would leave
Aristotle behind in the distant past.
Maimonides today would certainly have been a
student of modern Quantum physics, String and
"M" theories, with all their talk of parallel
dimensions and alternate realities. He would
also have found modern scientific discoveries
to fit very comfortably with anciently
revealed Torah wisdom, very much unlike
Aristotle.
Here is where we distinguish between the true
rationalist and the fundamentalist. Like
Maimonides the true rationalist will expand
his definition of what is and is not rational
based upon the expanding horizons of reality.
Whereas the fundamentalist will only look at
the past and never look at the reality of the
present. By doing so, they miss the reality
of what is and cling to the fantasy and
fiction of what was once believed.
This difference between true rationalist and
fundamentalist is critical to our
understanding of the nature of G-d. The
fundamentalist still clings to his immature
and juvenile ideas and attitudes. The
fundamentalist hides his face from reality
and discovery. He refuses to accept truth
because truth requires change and change is
something the fundamentalist is not willing
to do.
The true rationalist on the other hand seeks
to know truth, to grow and mature through
education, as discovery leads to greater and
deeper understandings of ultimate truth. The
one time Aristotelian has graduated to
Einstein and from Einstein to the Quantum and
from the Quantum to the Stings and the M.
From here, who knows where the next step in
the great process of discovery will take us.
One thing is of course certain, the more and
more we learn about science and nature, the
closer and closer we come to the actual truth
of the reality of the Creator.
Who is G-d? The answer depends upon who you
ask; the true rationalist or the
fundamentalist. What does G-d want of us?
This too depends upon who you ask; the true
rationalist or the fundamentalist. One will
answer you with childlike stubbornness and
rigidity. One will answer you with maturity
that comes about through discovery and the
embrace of deeper understandings of truth.
One thing is certain, true science will never
ever contradict true Torah. Ultimately the
two are one. There is only one objective
reality underlying all our subjective
perceptions of reality. The spiritual child
obviously needs to grow up before it can
appreciate the deeper truths of the adult.
The fundamentalist too needs to expand his
narrow horizons before he can see for himself
the true broader horizons that the true
rationalist sees ever so clearly.
G-d is not a little old man with a white
beard warning us to be nice and not naughty.
There are no such actual realities as the
portrayals our Sages described using physical
metaphors. Our Sages used the common
vernacular to describe to us abstract
spiritual realities. This is the only way to
relate these abstract concepts to the
infantile fundamentalist mind. Yet, once we
mature we must go beyond child's play.
The deeper understandings of spiritual truths
have always been safeguarded by our Sages.
They were called secrets, the Sodot of the
Torah. These deeper levels of understanding
were kept secret not so much for their own
protection but rather to protect the
infantile mind from confusion before their
ability to mature and integrate greater
discovery.
Spiritual maturity is therefore necessary for
one to become a true rationalist, similar to
Maimonides. Mind you, even the
fundamentalists in his day condemned
Maimonides because they could not fathom the
depths of his rationalism. Can we imagine
what Maimonides would say today in light of
modern science and how much opposition today
this would generate?
So, who is G-d? What has science and
discovery revealed to us about the true
nature of reality? The secular atheist will
loudly proclaim that science teaches
absolutely nothing about a Creator. Yet, we
recognize that even the secular atheist is in
his own way a fundamentalist who refuses to
accept uncomfortable truths. Modern science
clearly reveals the wondrous "Hand"
underlying our universe and how profound
reality truly is. Modern science has
discovered the "Big Bang" origin of our
universe. They now know for sure that
Aristotle was wrong and that our universe had
a beginning. Logic necessarily dictates that
if there is a beginning, then there must too
be a beginner that initiated the process.
Call it Intelligent Design. Therefore, call
G-d the Intelligent Designer. He is not a
little old man; he is not human at all.
Indeed, He is not even a "He." In spite of
Torah and religious vernacular it is more
accurate to refer to G-d as an "It," a
reality that transcends everything human.
G-d therefore is the Intelligence of the
universe, the Universal Mind and the
Consciousness of Creation.
Centuries ago, many of our Sages used Hebrew
terms that describe these very concepts. G-d
was called the Sekhel HaPoal, the Active
Intelligence. Indeed even the Torah itself
expresses this concept. G-d's Name in
Hebrew, spelled Yod Kay Vav Kay is derived
from the Hebrew root for the verb "to be."
The verb "Hovey" means "being." When adding
the prefix Hebrew letter Yod, we take the
base form of the root verb and transform it
grammatically from the passive to the active
tense. Thus "Yod-Hovey" would translate as
Active Being, or Being in Action. This is no
little old man or any other kind of
super-human. This is a reality so
transcendent and different that we cannot
possibly imagine it or in any way ascribe to
it any type of form. This is the underlying
reasoning to the Second (of the Ten)
Commandments, not to portray G-d with any
image or form.
We have such a profound truth and such a
profound Torah that expresses that truth. We
do serious injustice to both the Creator and
His Torah by viewing them with fundamental
immaturity.
What then does the Intelligent Designer wants
of us? I would say that "It" wants from us
is to be intelligent as It Itself is. To be
intelligent as is the Intelligent Designer
requires of us that we embrace reality. Yet,
in order to embrace reality, we must first
know what it is. If we do not explore then
we will never discover. Therefore, only when
one outgrows the fundamentalist mentality can
one begin to walk the proper path.
G-d wants us to be what we are, intelligent
creatures created in "His" Image. As the
Intelligent Designer has revealed "Its"
profundity through the nature of the universe
He/It designed, so too must we, created in
His/Its image equally express our own
profundity and thus become what we truly are:
human beings created in the image of the
Creator. Only in this, our enlightened form,
can we ever come to study and understand
Torah properly. Only a mature adult can ever
fulfill Torah Law properly.
Today's religious fundamentalists are nothing
more than spiritual adolescents. In spite of
however religious they are on the outside,
they are usually rather spiritually empty on
the inside. Many of our Sages throughout the
centuries have recognized this each in their
own communities and have warned against it.
Fundamentalism is a dangerous condition. It
can only be overcome by those who spiritually
grow up, mature and embrace the greater and
fuller depths that our Torah has to offer.
Only a true rationalist can be rational and
not succumb to fundamentalist
narrow-mindedness. Only such a one can
properly know G-d and thus serve Him.
In the end, the big questions remain
ultimately unanswered. We can gather
glimpses of truth from time to time as we
pursue paths of study and discovery. Yet,
will we ever evolve to the point when we will
know everything? This is another good
question, one to add to the original two. We
say that the Creator is all knowing and that
we are created in His/Its "Image." Maybe
this means that we too can eventually rise to
the level of knowing all.
Prophecy states during the Messianic era all
humanity will achieve a level of higher
knowledge. Other prophecies state that even
prior to the Messianic era the process of
expanding knowledge would begin. We are now
in this period. Knowledge is definitely
expanding. Our understanding of the greater
universe is expanding as well. We must not
allow our understand of Torah to fall behind
the times. We must never allow our Torah
knowledge to remain juvenile and fundamental.
We must delve deeper and deeper in Torah to
discover whatever lies hidden under its
surface. Only as we learn, grow and mature
will we ever come closer to being able to
answer the big questions. Maybe G-d is
waiting for us to do just this and only then
will He send Mashiah to seal it all.
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Shalom, Ariel Bar Tzadok