The 77% Weekly

The 40/52-weeks-a-year, quick-reading, thought-lingering, spiritual-religious newsletter.

Religion-Outside-The-Box (rotb.org) is a donation supported not-for-profit empowering adults to find and be with (the) God (of their understanding).  
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From the desk of Rabbi Brian

What do I - Rabbi Brian - think that (the) God (of my understanding) wants from me? An honest, present relationship with me.

This article has been lifted from my book - How To Find Out What (The) God (Of Your Understanding) Wants from You. The book helps adults find their own answers to the question of what it is that God (howsoever they understand this word) wants from them.

This is one of the answers (of many) that I give.

Rabbi Brian's Book
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Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel - considered by many to be one of the most significant Jewish theologians of the 20th century - wrote that society's problems were not caused by humanity seeking and searching for God. He wrote that the ills stemmed from God searching for humanity and humanity making excuses, running away.

Nineteenth century Polish scholar Menachem Mendel of Kotzk once asked a group of students, as the introduction to a longer discussion, "Where is God?" The students' answered his softball question with words they knew by heart: God is everywhere. (Although, in the way I initially heard the story, they put it in a bit more Biblical language, "The whole earth is filled with God's glory." [Numbers 14:21]) The great teacher exclaimed, "No! God is only where humanity makes room for God."

Carl Jung had the Latin phrase Vocatus Atque Non Vocatus Deus Aderit (Invited or not invited, God is present) inscribed above his doorway.

I often run away from, fail to make space for, and ignore God.

God is in the present all around me right this moment. And, as with a faint star in the heavens, as soon as I stare at it, it disappears; God, likewise, is really hard to keep an eye on.

God, as I understand it, wants a relationship with me. A real one. A present day one. Not one based on the fact that I'm circumcised or that I was ordained as a rabbi. Not one based in history, but one based right here and now in the here and now. God wants to be a part of my life, even if that means a few more sessions of us going to couple's counseling.

The God of my understanding doesn't want me to have blind devotion. God wants to wrestle with me and for us to proverbially enjoy a glass of schnapps together.

God wants me to be in a relationship - a real, adult-type relationship. The type in which I can tell God honestly, as I do with my wife and closest friends, when I feel disappointed or annoyed in the way I feel I'm being treated.

God, I am certain now, was glad that I taught classes on atheism because I was working on our relationship - not ignoring it, but working through the difficult parts. God wanted then and still wants from me some inkling of where our relationship stands.

Like it or not, God is here, all around me, and God wants to be more a part of my life.

This week's spiritual-religious advice: Think about whether you believe (the) God (of your understanding) wants an honest relationship with you and what that might look like.



With love,

Rabbi Brian

Rabbi Brian

The 77% Weekly
The 77% Weekly: The Religion-Outside-The-Box Newsletter helps people find and be with (the) God (of their understanding) 40 out of 52 weeks a year.

Why 77%?
Two reasons:
1) 40/52 = 0.76923. The newsletter is sent every Monday except the last of each month.
2) In school 77% was a passing grade and ROTB is delighted to remind you that life isn't graded.



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