by Rabbi Steve Altarescu
When we stood at Mt. Sinai the mountain was described as
ablaze with fire and that the people heard the sound of God from out of the
fire but did not see any form or shape -
We learn that since we experienced God without a form or
shape it would be wrong for us to make a likeness, a resemblance of anything in
nature. We does Moses repeat this prohibition four times?!
For the Torah there is power to an image, whether it be a
sculpture, a painting or any other art form that stands in contrast to feeling
the power of God.
For me, there is a difference in the experience of being in
the natural world versus seeing representations of what is in nature. Watching
a hummingbird on our deck is very different then the hummingbird engraved on my
coffee mug!!! The hummingbird fluttering around has the power to open
ourselves up to an experience of great wonder and awe at the vast beauty,
intricacy and inter-connectiveness of the natural world. Abraham
Joshua Heschel wrote:
Our goal should be to live life in radical amazement....get up in the morning and look at the world in a way that takes nothing for granted. Everything is phenomenal; everything is incredible; never treat life casually. To be spiritual is to be amazed.
There is an awesome beauty to creation, alive and always
changing - when we walk outside and quiet the chatter of our minds and listen
to the birds, the cicadas, see a sunset, we can be blessed with moments of
radical amazement
The Torah wants us to see this world as holy, sacred, and
mysterious. To look at the world and see the Divine Presence not in any
particular form or shape but within the life energy of all forms and shapes. The
Talmud wrestles with the reality that we humans will make and enjoy art. I
remember visiting synagogues built in Northern Israel 2000 years ago and seeing
beautiful mosaic tile floors with all the signs of the zodiac--
The rabbis of the Talmud wrestle with the permissibility of
artistic representations. One of the ways the Talmud resolves
this question is to only prohibit making an image of anything that represents
God or any of the items that were parts of the rituals of the of the tabernacle
in the desert or the Temple in Jerusalem. The reason given is that
the Tabernacle and the Temple
were the places for sanctioned artistic creation that God commanded.
Maimonides said that the purpose of the prohibition
against copying the ritual art that God sanctioned is to promote
reverence for the sacredness of the Temple which
would be lost if reproductions, copies of copies of Temple items are created.
Maimonides took the concept of reverence and awe for the
objects of the Temple and related it to how one
behaves in the Temple including a particular
sacred choreography performed by all the masses of people who attended a Temple service. This
choreography had to circles of people who walked in circles that intersected
each other. One of the groups was those who were fortunate in life and the
script they follow was to ask those in the other circle, the unfortunate ones
about their troubles and offer them words of comfort and strength. Like
the cherubim in the Tabernacle the space were they faced each other was where
the Shekinah, the Divine Presence would be revealed.
Maimonides wants us to understand that awe and wonder of the
natural world will hopefully lead us to reverence in its mostly sacred form. This
is when we are facing another human being and in a moment of care and
compassion invoke the Divine Presence.
I suggest we begin the process of teshuva where we
look inside of ourselves by spending time in the quiet and open spaces of the
natural world. If we start the process of teshuva with awe and
wonder we might see and grow the divine spark within and see this light in all
we encounter.
Rabbi Steve Altarescu currently serves as co-rabbi with his
wife, Rabbi Laurie Levy, at the Reform Temple of Putnam Valley. He was ordained in May 2014 at the Academy of Jewish Religion and holds a Bachelors
degree in Religious Studies and Literature and a Masters degree in
Counseling. Rabbi Altarescu has
completed his Chaplain Pastoral Education and served as a chaplain resident at Beth Israel Hospital in NY , NY and at Westchester
Medical Center
in Valhalla , NY .
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