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21/01/2017

A spiritual comment and prayer to begin the day with Ed Kessler, from the Woolf Institute in Cambridge.

2 minutes

Last on

Sat 21 Jan 2017 05:43

Arguing

Good morning!One day a Jewish mother and her 8-year-old daughter were walking along a beach. Suddenly, a gigantic wave hit the shore, sweeping the little girl out to sea. Β β€œOh, God,” lamented the mother, turning her face toward heaven and shaking her fist. β€œThis is my only child. She is the love and joy of my life. I have cherished every day that she has been with me. Give her back to me and I will go to the synagogue every day for the rest of my life!”  Suddenly, another gigantic wave hit the beach but this time deposited the girl back on the sand. The mother looked up to heaven and said, β€œAnd what happened to her hat?” The tradition of arguing with God has a long history, going back to biblical times. Β Abraham, whom the Bible called a β€˜friend of God’, famously argued with the Almighty when the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah were about to be destroyed.Β Β Even when you read a Jewish commentary on the Bible you witness a kind of rabbinic argument going on. In the surrounding small print there are arguments about the arguments about the arguments. If I were to describe the literature of Judaism, indeed of all faiths, the best I’d come up with, is that it’s an β€˜anthology of arguments’; or a millennial chat roomΒ And the question is not just: why do we argue? I suppose everyone argues. The question is: why is argument central to the religious experience? How can argument be holy?Β The answer is that when we give a respectful hearing to another side and learn how to disagree, we not only do justice to more than one point of view, but make our arguments holy.Β Β And then we can truly say we argue for the sake of heaven.Β Amen

Broadcast

  • Sat 21 Jan 2017 05:43

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