Conversations with Tyler - Rabbi David Wolpe on Leadership, Religion, and Identity (Live at Sixth & I)
Episode Date: February 15, 2017Named one of the most influential Jewish thinkers of our time, Rabbi David Wolpe joins Tyler in a conversation on flawed leaders, Jewish identity in the modern world, the many portrayals of David, wha...t's missing in rabbinical training, playing chess on the Sabbath, Srugim, Hasidic philosophy, living in Israel and of course, the durability of creation. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow David on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox.
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Thank you all for coming.
This is my chance to ask you the questions I want to learn about.
So your latest book, it's called David, the Divided Heart,
and the Book of Samuel is probably the greatest political biography of all time,
one of the most significant books on politics.
So I'd like to start with some questions there.
And in how you view that book,
why is it that David, if indeed you believe this,
was a better king than Saul?
So first of all, thank you for inviting me to this dialogue.
I do believe that David was a better king than Saul.
The first, look, the first test of a king in the ancient world is what David did that is remarkable,
and that is he died in his bed.
That's rare among ancient and medieval kings, as you know, and so survival, you know,
and so survival in and of itself is a test of merit, even not speaking about in divine eyes, but just in human eyes.
Also, in some way, Saul seemed to have lost the confidence of the people.
And while no contemporary analogies are intended in anything that I say,
you cannot underestimate the value of charisma in a political leader.
and David had tremendous charisma.
So when the women of Israel went out into the streets and said,
Saul has killed thousands, but David has killed tens of thousands,
that was already a signal that Saul was going to fail and fall.
So I think that on those two just survival and charisma alone,
you would have to say that David was a more successful leader.
So if someone makes the argument that David was a better king
because he never committed idolatry,
Would you accept that description?
A better king, because he never committed?
Well, no, because it's not clear that Saul committed idolatry.
It's clear, pretty clear that David didn't.
I would say, and also,
Fawler is told to kill the king and to get rid of all the Amalekites,
and he doesn't do that, and that is mentioned again,
that was his failing.
And isn't that what appears to be a small thing, a big thing, or no?
Well, it's, yes, the sin there, I mean,
that's actually a very problematic,
sin, where he's told you didn't kill enough people, and you didn't slaughter the king when you were
supposed to. But the idea is that the way the Talmud puts it is that somebody who is kind
to the cruel will end up being cruel to the kind. And the idea that your enemies have to be
dispatched or at least effectively subdued was something that Saul didn't have the stomach
for. And I would say in the ancient world, maybe that would make you an unsuccessful king.
So if the commands of God are not necessarily visible to the rest of us, what for you is the
implied political epistemology of the book? How do we know when we have a good king, leader,
president, if that's an important feature, and we as outsiders don't know who has received what message
or command from God? How do we know in general? Or how do we know in a book of the Bible?
Because those could be two different. Sure. Okay. So I would say that it's true in the, one of the
problems with the Bible is that you can always say how did the person know that God was speaking to
them. Since I can't, as Queen Elizabeth said, cut windows into people's souls, I have no idea
if God spoke to David. That's something you have to either take on faith or not. What I do know
is that David was successful in unifying the kingdom, subduing rebellion, leaving a legacy of a lasting
legacy where people believed that he would lead to ultimately to the Messiah, and also installing
his son in the kingship and his son succeeded in building the temple, which became, for a long time,
the center point of Jewish religion. And he established Jerusalem as the capital, which,
if he had only done that, would have been an extraordinary achievement. So if you want to attribute
that to the fact that David listened to God and that the Psalms are, in fact,
expression of David's soul. I don't have a problem with that, but if you want to be
pragmatist about it and just look at results, so I would say that's how you judge the success
of a leader, then and now. If you think of it being an implicit question in the book of Genesis,
first, how is there political order at all? And also, why is it that brothers do not kill each other?
And those in Genesis, to my reading, are not at all resolved. And then you have the book of
Samuel and the David's story. By the end of that, what's the extra thing we've learned? What's the
resolution to those questions? To the questions of how is it the political order is possible
at a deep metaphysical level? And how is it that brothers don't kill each other? Is there any
resolution? Well, first of all, brothers not killing each other is always a provisional statement.
I say this with two of my brothers in the audience. And I think that it's fair to say that we have not
killed each other yet. But the beauty in some ways, let me first give you my sermonic answer.
The beauty of the book of Genesis is all through Genesis brothers are fighting, even though
they don't kill each other in the end. And then the very last set of brothers, the reason
that they fight is because generally in one way the younger is preferred over the older and there
are questions of birthright and so on. And then towards the very last scene, there are two brothers
Ephraim and Manasha. Manasha is the older. Ephraim is the younger. Jacob blesses, as the grandfather,
he blesses the younger with the better blessing. And Manasha doesn't protest. He's actually kind
of the silent hero of the book. So I would say that there is a degree of acceptance that is
taught an unequal distribution of goods, if I can transgress into your field for a moment.
And that's the way the world is.
And you have to accept that.
There will be different degrees of talent and gifts and so on and so forth.
And the acceptance of that, that is the acceptance of God's gifts at unequal levels,
is the way interpersonally brothers succeed in not killing each other.
And in terms of the establishment of a political order,
I think there the idea, at least in Samuel, what starts to happen is that there is an understanding.
stood division between the political order and the religious order. That is Samuel's the high priest
and the leader, and he gets very upset when they want to have a king because he says, why am I not
good enough? The reason is because you need a political order that is different. You need separation,
effectively, of synagogue and state to some degree. Let's say you have a leader who has had several
wives, has served the interests of a foreign power, is very good at blame shifting. Should that
leader be as self-confident as David seems to be in the book of Samuel?
Apparently.
I think, according to the standards of the time, having several wives was normative,
and they weren't sequential. They were simultaneous.
So, as my friend Joseph Tolushkin says, polygamy does exist in the Bible, it's just never successful.
So David does have many wives, and very strained and interesting and compliment.
complex relationships with women. David has the most complicated and most described relationships
with women of any character in the Hebrew Bible. Those qualities that can be negative in David
are to some extent positive. One of the things that draws David out of the charge of
simple narcissism is that he really listens. He pays attention. He pays attention to women,
over and over again, he listens to what they say and changes himself because of it,
and that's not a characteristic of men in the ancient world or the modern one,
that you can rely on.
So he is, I would say, next to his hubris, there's a self-effacement,
and next to his charisma there's also a receptivity.
And, yeah, in the complex of his personality,
you can understand why people might look at him sort of to draw a very different political figure,
the way that at some point, I think it was Seward said, about Lincoln,
which is he's the best among us.
Let me press you on two of the things you say in the book.
There are two things you said that surprised me, so let me try to become unsurprised.
I think it's on page 33, you said, of all the characters in the book of Samuel,
the one you could best imagine as also being a king is John and,
Jonathan because Jonathan had a capacity for self-sacrifice.
Right.
And that surprised me because, again, I'm very much a novice on this territory,
but I think of him as a little too nice a guy and not strong enough in the right way to actually be a king in that time.
I think you're probably right.
I could imagine him as a king, first of all, he was the son of the king, so he was the natural heir.
And as we know, that often happens, that the natural air may not be the fitting king, but...
And also, yeah, I thought that Jonathan was the kind of person that people would be drawn to.
But I would certainly, I mean, I think that that's probably a worthy caveat.
He probably would have gotten killed in the kingship in a way that David was too strong a personality
and too crafty an operator to allow himself to be killed.
Now, in page 18, there's a claim you make, and I don't want to misquote you here,
but I understand you to be saying something like
that Chronicles is like a boring retelling of the story of David.
That's almost a direct quote.
I said, Chronicles is Samuel made boring.
But again, coming to this as an outsider,
I read Chronicles.
I think of Chronicles as the very long-run perspective
saying that all of these events of the moment,
which are so dramatic, so emotional, so engrossing,
they seem to be what's so relevant,
just like we're all entranced by Twitter or the Daily News,
but ultimately what matters is the long run of history, does the kingdom survive, and it's actually
the contrast between the extreme impersonality of Chronicles and the deeply personal story of
the book of Samuel that are these multiple dual or competing layers or levels of wisdom,
and that that's better than either book taken alone. Am I off base there?
I think that's a beautiful explanation. I would say two things about it. One is,
one is that if you're writing the story of David
and you're writing the story of David as opposed to say
a political analysis of David's kingship
then you want the story as it's most dramatic
full of blood and fury and sex and betrayal and so on
and that's in Samuel
the second is that chronicles it's not just that
chronicles is when I said it was made boring
what I meant was not that it's a dry
textbook as opposed to a bodice ripper of a romance novel, but that it takes the very
humanness of David and tries to sanctify him in a way that I think is untrue to David's
character. So, you know, it's the first time, for example, that the character of the satan
appears as an inciter. He incites David to do something bad, so that way you don't have to blame David
that he did it. And in that sense,
I think that Chronicles is a sort of, it's a sanitizing of the real history of David,
even though it may be a more interesting political, I don't know, more interesting, a different
political lens. Now let me try asking you about some well-known Jewish thinkers and telling me what
you think are there significance, either for Judaism or maybe for you personally. And here's a man
who sadly passed away not long ago, but Jacob Noisner. So, Noisner was a very interesting
character in a lot of ways. I think the brief biography, and some of you may not know,
Jacob Neusner was the most productive and prolific scholar of the 20th century. Notice I did not say
Jewish scholar. I said scholar. He wrote, he's credited with almost a thousand books, maybe more.
Have you read them all? I've read every, I've read them at least once. I've read several of them,
But, I mean, some of them were produced by his students and some of them are translations and so on.
But even when you strip away all the accretions, he still was a phenomenally productive scholar
and in many ways changed the field of Talmud studies, even though traditional Talmudists didn't like to think that,
in part because they didn't like to think that, and in part because he was a notoriously difficult character.
And I will leave it at that.
But what Neuzner did was something very simple, which he learned from,
his beginning in Renaissance studies, which is when it says Rabbi so-and-so told Rabbi so-and-so this,
he started to question the attributions. How do we know that Rabbi so-and-so said that? And he
started to apply scientific study of texts in the 20th century to the Talmud in a way that had not
been done before and he had a very brilliant schematic mind. So anybody who studies Talmud today,
whether they say it or not, they're indebted to Noosner. And certainly my teachers were,
and they made sure that we were as well.
Primo Levy, the Italian writer.
So Primo Levy is a problematic figure in some sad way
because, you know, although it's not a universal consensus,
most people believe he committed suicide,
and Elie Wiesel said that he died at Auschwitz 70 years later.
The thing about Levy that is so remarkable
is that he's one of those rare, almost like,
Chekhov. He's a scientific mind that is a brilliant literary writer. So when you read him on Auschwitz,
you're reading very careful, detailed prose that he's heartbreaking. But there's no, he doesn't,
he doesn't appeal to your heart. Instead, he just tells you, in a crystalline way what happened.
And I'll give you one analogy that I've never actually written about or seen written.
about and I thought of it years ago and I hope that I'm remembering it right.
There's one place, I think in Survival in Auschwitz, where Primo Levy talks about a bricklayer
that the Nazis asked him to build a wall and he couldn't persuade himself to build it badly.
He just couldn't because that's what, I mean, that was his pride and it reminded me that
there's this great that I haven't read for years and I don't, I'm sure I could find it,
but there's a De Montpesson story about a guy who's a circus performer,
and what he does is he fires arrows into his wife's, into an apple on his wife's head,
and that's their circus act.
And he starts to hate his wife and he wants to kill her.
But he can't bring himself to do it wrong.
He can't do it.
And weirdly, when I read the Levy thing,
and I thought of the De Montpesson thing,
and I thought that in some ways that sense of,
I must be accurate all the time. That's what Levy is. It's like, I can't get this wrong. And when you
read that on Auschwitz, and you know that the person that you're reading won't exaggerate or
distort, it makes it that much more painful. Now, I'm sure you know Rabbi Jonathan Sachs. In his new
book, essay on ethics, he wrote the following. And I quote,
The entire burden of the Torah from the beginning of Exodus to the end of Deuteronomy is about
what it is to create a free society
as opposed to the slavery
the Israelites experienced in Egypt.
Agree or disagree?
Disagree. Why? Because if you take out
the entire burden of the Torah,
I might agree, but
I think there's a lot of other things
that you could just as easily say
the Torah is about.
So I think that
it's too sweeping a statement.
It's defensible to say
a large, you know,
swath of the Torah is about this, but not the entire
burden. Abraham Joshua Heschel. What's his importance? I think that I was, there were two thinkers
who were most important to me in different ways, although it's hard to say partly because
where I grew up, and I think one was Heschel, the other Buber. Heschel, the reason that Heschel is
so important is less for the content of his thought, although sometimes that's powerful, than
the frequently breathtaking prose in which he put it, and it was the first time that I read
somebody who could move me with the poetry of his language, even though, as I expressed to you earlier,
sometimes he's overflowery, sometimes he could have used a good editor, but there are some passages
where, like in his little book, the Sabbath, which everybody who's interested in Judaism
or in God or theology should read, where you think it's like just so extraordinarily
beautiful that it's an illustration of what it talks about.
That is, it is something that touches your soul as it talks about the necessity for your soul
to be touched.
So again, I'm an outsider in this dialogue, but say I were thinking of converting to Judaism
and I were asking you about Hasidic philosophy.
Yes.
Now, in terms of social connections, I probably would fit better into your congregation than into a Hasidic congregation.
But if I ask you, on theological grounds alone, is there a reason why I should be hesitant about Hasidic philosophy?
From the point of view of theology, what do you think is the greatest weakness there or your biggest difference with it, given how much you like Heschel?
Well, first of all, I would say Heschel had a Haschidic background, but he became a modern scholar.
So there are things in Hasidic philosophy that he would not subscribe to.
And among other things, the, I mean, if you, it's just among us, right?
So, look, there is going back to Yehuda Halavi and going through the Tanya
and woven through Hasidism is the question of whether Jews have different souls
from non-Jews in some essential way.
That I don't think you'd be particularly comfortable with.
nor am I. It's what a great American rabbi who passed away not so long ago,
Harold Chorweiss used to call metaphysical racism.
But if it's correct, right, I'll accede to it. I'm a reasonable man.
If it's correct, I would expect you that you would as a reasonable man, but I certainly don't believe it.
So the second thing I would say that might give you pause about Hasidism is.
this theurgy, which is, and this is a deep Kabbalistic belief, this is where, if I can go
on a mini rant about Tikun Olam, and I say this deliberately at 6th and I, Tikun Olam has nothing
to do with saving the whales. It doesn't. Ticun Olam is actually not a synonym for social
action, even though everybody uses it that way.
Ticun Olam, please, by all means, let the
record reflect that there was scattered applause. So Tikun alam is a Kabbalistic term that is a term
from Jewish mysticism in which you do mitzvote in the world to fix breaks in creation and in God.
Okay? And that means that you're doing Tikun alam when you wrapped philin in the morning just as much as
when you give siddaka, when you give charity, when you keep kosher just as much as
when you, you know, I don't know, when you're kind to animals. Every mitzvah is Tikun Olam. Now,
the idea that there are breaks in God that human beings can affect is a beautiful idea, but if you're
a rationalist, it's a hard idea to absorb. But if I defend Hasidic philosophy and I say, there's
something wondrous about the world, a kind of imminence which may be other traditions have neglected,
And it was a resurgence in Judaism.
It was part of the Enlightenment.
It happened at a time where a Judaic philosophy and life
was having a lot of problems.
It was highly modern.
If I think about a lot of 19th century
or even early 20th century Jewish writings,
that's arguably the most dynamic tradition,
again at that turning point.
And in terms of capturing the beauty of existence
in a way that reflects how we moderns
would call a subjective perspective on that,
Isn't that the most profound branch of Judaism or no?
Okay, well, you asked me to critique it.
Sure.
You didn't ask me what was good about it.
Now you're asking what was good about it.
So what I would say, I don't want to call it the most profound branch of Judaism.
I don't think that you could say, for example, that the Vilna Gaon, who represented the Mietnagdim, those who opposed Khashidism, certainly was not less profound than the Bal Shem Tov.
What I would say is that Khashidism, which is a tradition that I deeply love and in some ways my, my, in some ways, my,
greatest religious hero was a very offbeat, strange Hasidic rabbi called the Kotska
Rebi.
Chasidism, what it did was, at least from the Balcham tov, is it sought, yes, to restore the sense
of God's imminence in the world, the sense of joy in connecting to God and to other people.
it expanded the expressions of religious ecstasy in dance and song and also very powerfully and
importantly in religious stories, chasidic stories, especially the stories of Rabbi Nachman
of Bratislav are the most famous example but not the only example by far.
Hasidic stories are an immeasurable contribution to the world treasury of spirit.
So all those things absolutely are true.
If we end up elevating imminence over transcendence,
do we in some ways neglect Torah study
and the special role of Israel too much?
So this is a constant back and forth and argument.
Heschel was criticized for when he wrote about the Sabbath,
for calling it a cathedral in time,
for not being terrestrial enough in some ways.
And so he wrote a book about Israel called Echo of Eternity.
Yeah, I mean, there are those who see God,
is unutterably far and those who see God is unbearably near and the Talmud and Jewish tradition
and not only Jewish tradition, Christianity bridges that gap, obviously, with the personhood of God.
Judaism does not. Judaism believes that both exist simultaneously. The rabbi say that God is as
close as your mouth to your ear. In other words, God hears what you say as easily as you do,
and yet there is no representation of God in this sanctuary. God. God,
is not invisible because that suggests that God has a body but you can't see it.
It's like if you put a hat on God, you would see the hat go down the street.
But God is intangible like love, like justice.
That is, God doesn't have a physical being.
And that makes God transcendent and in some ways incredibly distant.
And I think that that's important because what I always say to, especially to high schoolers,
when I talk about God, I begin the conversation about God with this.
We're going to discuss what God is or what God isn't and so on.
I said, in the Jewish tradition, think about, let's say they're 15, or as adults,
when you were two years old, could you imagine what an adult is?
Not only could you not imagine it, but you couldn't even imagine what it is that you couldn't imagine.
You don't know what your gaps are when you're two or three.
Now, God in the Jewish tradition, the distance we don't.
between God and human beings is infinitely greater than the distance between a two-year-old
and a 20-year-old. So as soon as we say God's imminence or God transcendence, realize
that we're caught in this net of metaphors about something we can't comprehend.
Is it permissible to play chess on the Sabbath or if I offer a pawn sacrifice, am I a gambler?
Yes and no. And one day I hope to find out.
How would you alter or improve rabbinical training?
I've given this a lot of thought.
Let me just mention one area.
When I speak to rabbinical students, I tell them all the time
that the single most valuable commodity you have as a rabbi,
you can answer that yourself, and then I'll tell you what I think,
your voice.
Most people are going to come in contact with you
when you speak to them.
not all of them, but most.
There'll be more people who come to your services
than the number of people at whose bedside you will sit as they die.
And yet, most rabbis, most people, don't know how to speak.
And that training, which is given, we have homilettish classes,
but the ability to communicate what words to use, what examples to use,
how to train your voice so that people can understand you,
How often have you been in front of speakers who you have to tell them 10 times,
put the microphone closer, please.
I can't hear you, right?
That ability is woefully underrepresented, I think, in the rabbinic community,
and it's very much to our detriment.
I've thought about social media quite a bit and written on them,
and I have two questions relating social media to Judaism.
If you think about the tradition of the Torah,
the Torah is so much itself commentary on the Torah.
Yes. And there's Mishina and Talmud and everything, commentary upon commentary upon commentary.
But there's something about social media that seems to act to strip away context.
And people who write for mainstream media will tell you this.
Well, I wrote an article that ended up on Facebook in a very different setting than how I intended it to be read.
And you can say all you want, all the hyperlinks are there, but people don't click through.
And what do you think is the intellectual future of a belief?
system based on commentary, on commentary, on commentary, now inject it into a world with this
technology that so strips away context and just gives you some bald statement of something.
I think that Judaism has the same problem that any thick civilization has in a world in which,
as you say, context is stripped away. And not only is context stripped away, but attention
to any one thing is scantor.
and less than it used to be.
So for example, a lot of Jewish commentary
is based on your recognizing the reference that I make.
Who recognizes references references anymore?
Because people don't spend years studying books.
And so what I would, the optimistic take on that
is that the availability with ease of the vast libraries
of Jewish learning at your fingertips
will create a more,
conversant community. And in some ways I think that has happened. The negative is that
Jewish culture will get thinner and thinner and Judaism as you said depends on a
very deep and thick culture. If I look at the history of the arts and other areas,
I see a tendency for a kind of centralization of the past. So I think today actually
many more people read Shakespeare than they did 30 years ago. But older plays and
fiction are in general less read. More people read Jane O'Reckon.
Austin, but the second tier authors from that time are less read. Maybe from the 1960s it will be the
Beatles, but you know, the birds will fall away, whatever. Do you see that happening with Jewish
philosophy and with the Hebrew Bible? There's a kind of centralization of what people know and a falling
away of what superficially appear to be less important? I think what you're describing is something
that is a normal historical process. I mean, the commentary that we have is a small fraction of the
commentaries that were written. There were always people diving into obscurity, right? And people
who wrote and their books, like Hume said, his book was still born from the press. There were
always such people. And so, and you never know what's going to survive. So I have no idea who
from the 20th century, for example, will survive. There's a sense in which, I think,
you know, history, when they say history is the final judge, but the final judge, but the final
The final judgment is never written because authors are being revived, they're being rediscovered,
and the same thing is true with certain commentaries and books and ideas.
So as long as they are available and accessible, and in this, the Internet is an invaluable
addition to the continuity of learning, somebody will be able in 500 years to rediscover a book
that we may think is gone forever and suddenly it will live again.
I worry sometimes that electronic media won't have the durability of good old paper.
They're a book centuries old. You can still read.
I have two questions from readers.
This is a blog reader of mine.
Quote, why do so many American Jews leave Judaism when say Canadian Jews don't?
So I think I'm not sure about the statistics of that, and I've spoken up in Canada a few times,
and it's not as though they're not plagued with many of the same problems,
although maybe they're a little bit in this sense behind the assimilation rate of American Jews.
But I think that the reason that American Jews leave Judaism is some of it is very clear.
You know, first of all, it's what Irwin Crystal used to say.
He used to say the complaint that the Jews made about the non-Jews used to be that they wanted to kill us,
and now it's that they want to marry us.
When you say to a child,
I want you to go to the best schools, live in the best neighborhoods, work in the best firms, but don't fall in love.
That's too nuanced a message.
So the degree to which neighborhoods were coherent and unvarying and constant was the degree to which there was a great deal of in marriage and communal raising of children and continuity of heritage,
and that's still true in some Jewish communities, and more true in Canada because there's less mobility.
But in an age of mobility where people don't have extended families and where intermarriage rates are what you would expect from a tiny minority in a big majority,
where there's a lot of cultural sharing, it's not surprising that a countercultural tradition, which demands, as you said, knowledge, and is reliant to a great extent on another language which Americans won't do, unless,
I guess it's Chinese these days. So, I mean, the inability of Americans, for example, American Jews
to learn Hebrew is a sort of intellectual scandal in one way because Judaism really does have a sacred
language in another way, I suppose it's expected because that's what Americans are like. And so
I'm not, it's not a shock, even though it's a great sadness. And I don't think that it is, the
Jewish tendency is to say, well, Judaism has not been presented this way, or we haven't given
it that twist, or the leaders haven't done this, but I think that that's a function of standing
against a tide, and I don't know what would reverse that tide, but it's a difficult thing.
Second reader question, do I have to believe in God?
Do you?
Tyler?
The reader.
Well, you have to give me, what's the end of that sentence?
Do I have to believe in God in order to?
Do I have to believe in God?
Well, no, obviously not.
Since I've had a whole, as you know, a whole series of debates with atheists,
obviously there are people who don't.
And I didn't myself for a long time.
If you're asking, do I have to believe in God to be a Jew?
I think that's what was implied.
The answer clearly is no.
You don't have to believe in God to be a Jew.
That's not definitional.
It's not definitional.
All of these conversations, simple now.
But, okay.
Simple now, all right, then I won't.
go on from there. All of these conversations, there's a segment in the middle called
overrated or underrated. Yes, I know. And I mentioned something to you. Feel free to pass.
The goal is not that you have to offend anyone. But the first on the list,
overrated or underrated, Los Angeles as a city. In one way overrated and in another underrated.
Please explain. Oh, okay. It's overrated in its
think of it as a dream factory, as an ideal place in the world, as a, you know, as a cloud,
as a cloud city.
But it's underrated in two ways.
First of all, in its tremendous natural beauty, which if you haven't been there, really,
it's tremendously beautiful.
There are mountains in the middle of the city coming from Philadelphia.
I didn't know what they were doing there.
And it is much more.
interesting, deep, ramified, filled with all sorts of intellectual, cultural activity,
then people on the East would think and to dismiss a city of, I mean, look, one out of every
10 people in America lives in California, to dismiss them all as fruits, nuts, and flakes
is silly.
The Israeli television show, Surguim.
Underrated.
Tell us why.
More people should why.
Why is it special?
Because it tells you.
you about the life of a very important segment of Israeli population, which are,
Strugin means knitted, knitted, Kipot, that is modern Orthodox, which is a very important
sort of straddling population in modern Israel, and most American Jews don't know about it,
and it will teach you.
One thing I like so much about the show is how it maintains erotic tension.
It's a great problem from the 20th century onwards.
If you have a romantic dilemma, it's not the 19th century.
Well, why don't they just get divorced?
or why don't they just sleep together or why don't they just whatever.
And through game, you have a setting where that tension is maintained.
That's why in a beautiful essay, although slightly problematic, many years ago,
Trilling said that Lolita was the modern novel of love.
The reason is he said, all love requires, all real love stories require an obstacle.
And usually it was, you know, adultery or something like that.
He says, but when all barriers have been leveled,
And the only obstacle left is an adult may not touch a child.
It was part of Nabokov's genius to make that into a love story,
which is to some extent what Lolita is,
even though at the same time, of course, you feel revolted
by the reality of what it's about.
But that's a very extreme way of going back to what you said,
which is that religious stories can still do that,
because there are rules.
In a ruleless society, love stories have no erotic tension,
no barrier, nothing to voice.
rolled over.
The Iran nuclear deal, overrated or underrated?
Way overrated. And I wish it hadn't, I mean, I think that it, I think that it will prove
a mistake, I think a bad mistake, having said that. I also want to say what I said, when
I spoke against it, I want to say one other thing though, which is when the Iran nuclear
deal came out, all of a sudden people who had never been, who have been, who have been, who
knew nothing about nuclear physics, and I include myself, except that they watched The Simpsons.
We're pronouncing on whether it was a good idea or not. I can't speak in those words, but I think
that any deal, first of all, knowing something about Iranian culture, because so much of my
congregation is Iranian, and any deal where the American side didn't leave the table even once is to
me by definition a bad deal. By definition. So I hope to God that I'm wrong, but I think
overrated. Speaking of Islam, what is it that's especially beautiful in Islam? Well, first of all,
I think that in a lot of ways Islam shares more with Judaism than Christianity does. First of all,
it's a, it's a religion of the transcendence of God. It's a religion of the transcendence of God. It's a religion
of law and commentary.
And I have a theory for why that is, and Christianity isn't,
why Judaism and Islam are, if you want to hear the theory.
Sure, let's hear the theory.
Okay, here's my theory.
My theory is that it's because Christianity grew up in the Roman Empire,
so the laws were taken care of.
But Moses and Muhammad had to create a people in the desert.
So you needed civil law as well as criminal law.
And the other thing I think that is beautiful about Islam,
although today, in some ways very scary about Islam, is the enormous power that it has for large
populations who one day know very little about it and yet the next day feel tremendous devotion to it.
Something that can, some belief system that can do that is, you know, that's worth paying attention
to on its own terms, not just from the outside.
If you think of the portrayal of David, the David story, in the correct.
and you compare it to that in the Hebrew Bible.
Do you think that reflects something that later becomes troubling or do you just think it's a, you know, a rewrite?
This is part of a much larger question.
There are a lot of differences between the Quran and the Hebrew Bible.
David is one thing.
The Quran is, and this, in this, you should excuse me, for the home team, I like Judaism much better.
The Quran is very unwilling to allow any sinfulness in its heroes.
He's much more heroic, David.
And as is Moses.
Much more.
As is Moses, as is everyone in, I mean, the story.
The story, right, exactly.
So, so I like the idea of flawed heroes.
I like the notion that there isn't this whitewashing,
and I feel that the Quran does that, but obviously, I'm not a Muslim.
When you look at Michelangelo's David statue in Florence,
yes.
Do you feel that's quote-unquote, you're David,
or is that a Christian David being portrayed?
Huh.
And if so, what's the difference?
I feel that the, here's what I would say.
No, he's portraying the Hebrew David,
but the idea of having such a magnificent David statue
is a Christian idea.
So if I could say it that way.
Very good answer.
On Islam, if we look at Islamic countries in the world today,
we've all noticed in different ways,
this is a generalization,
but it seems to me a true generalization.
Their ability to be stable democracies
seems problematic, at least right now.
And I'm not just talking about the Middle East.
If you look at places like Bangladesh, Malaysia,
other parts, they're somewhat democratic,
but they don't seem to mature into quote-unquote normal democracies
the way, say, South Korea and Taiwan have.
And, of course, much of the Middle East,
they're not close to being democracies.
And why, at the deepest level you could explain
And as a matter of intellect, theology, metaphysics,
has the doctrine of the religion ended up correlated with this result?
If I were wise, I would say that I'm not,
I'm neither an expert in Islam nor in politics,
and therefore I would beg off this question, but I'm not going to.
Because I think that there is incumbent.
It is an intellectual necessity of the time,
since I think there is no question that jihadist Islam is right now
as great a threat. I don't want to say the greatest. Not the extreme. I'm talking about the...
But I'm just saying, so there is a necessity I'm saying, to put some intellectual pressure on the question of why it isn't creating
societies of healthier political climates. I would say if I had to pick one thing that is at the heart of Islam that is
that is anti-democratic, it is the concept that's very deep, that is in the very name of the religion of submission.
because a population that he's trained essentially to submit
is a population that will create authoritarian's.
And so I think that the recalcitrance,
I mean, when you think about Israel,
the founders of Israel, none of them came from democracies.
They came from Russia.
I mean, they came from Eastern Europe.
They came from the Levant.
They didn't know from democracy.
And yet, why did they create a democracy?
Because they all argued with each other.
Seriously, they all did.
That's like my friend Joseph Epstein has a great line. He said, Jews don't listen. They wait.
And I think that, and that idea, the disputatious culture of the Talmud and so on, it's good for democracy.
And I think the culture of submission can be corrosive to it.
Some questions about Israel, if I may.
Sure.
Let's say you're talking to someone who is Jewish and who is pro-Israel in a broad sense and would consider
themselves a Zionist, but they don't have a deep theological belief in the content of the Torah
or the Hebrew Bible. They may not even believe in God. And they're posing the question,
well, should I live in Israel, or should I live, say, in the United States, Canada, other places?
And they're feeling some despair. Israel's a wonderful country. I've been several times myself.
They might perceive higher danger. I'm not even sure that's correct. There's a somewhat lower
standard of living. And if they ask you without invoking theology, which won't persuade them,
what's the best case for choosing Israel rather than leaving or not going at all? What would you say?
I think probably the best non-theological case for choosing Israel is that you would be part of
an astonishing experiment that is the revival of a people in its land after thousands of years
in an attempt to create something that is important and lasting
and a legacy that involves tradition but is not enslaved to it.
And if you want to see where your people, since this is a Jew who's asking,
where your people is determining its own destiny in a world
that too often determined its destiny for it,
the only place where that is happening in a full range of areas is in Israel.
Say it's an American Jew and he or she says to you, well, maybe that's begging the question.
Is Israel my people or America my people?
And I would say that's too binary a question.
As an American Jew, I don't feel like I have to say this one is and that one isn't.
What is binary, for the most part, I guess, is where you live.
You have to live either here or there.
So it depends what adventure you choose to be a part of.
But that's the adventure of Israel.
Now, a question on the settlements, which are a hot issue now.
Thanks a lot.
I know this is very controversial.
Now, I'm myself a natural-born contrarian, so if I hear a lot of people criticizing something,
my natural instinct is to try to defend it.
So I'm going to try to lay out.
I'm an economist.
I've studied game theory.
What might be a case from an Israeli nationalist perspective for the settlements,
and I don't want you to agree or disagree,
I just want you to tell me if I have understood the case correctly or not.
Okay.
Okay, so if I'm an Israeli nationalist, I would think a few things.
I would think there's a danger of a future technology coming along,
maybe rocket technology that would have the potential, say, to shut down Tel Aviv airport.
If Iran or some other hostile country got nuclear weapons,
there could be a possible nuclear umbrella used to protect terrorist forays into Israel,
and that there's some future game coming where one needs a kind of chip,
or pushback or bargaining power or leverage.
And furthermore, on top of that,
one always wants to keep an option over the notion
that, yes, there would be a greater Israel,
but a lot of the current Palestinians would become
what are now called Israeli Arabs
at a higher standard of living
and possibly higher level of political liberties.
And maybe that wouldn't be all of what are now the territories,
but that maintaining an option on that relative to
what else might possibly happen, which could be terrible.
Who knows?
That is itself valuable, and that to have a kind of action on each of those two margins actually
requires that settlements continue.
Now again, I'm not asking you to agree or disagree, but have I understood the case?
Naftali Bennett would be proud of you, yes.
You have understood the case.
Okay.
Now, just from an Israeli nationalist perspective, would you agree with that case?
I would agree with parts of that case.
But which part's not?
What I would say is that the problem with the case is it doesn't take into account two parts
of the calculus that are important pieces of this.
One is that it is an element of security to allow your neighbors to feel a certain way about their neighbors.
And therefore, if you
build in total disregard of the people in the neighborhood, that's not going to encourage
goodwill. That's the first part of the case that I would urge. And by the way, this works
in extending circles around the world that Israel is not an island and the opinion of the
world also matters in this. And the second part of the case is that the idea that ultimately
the population around you will be reconciled to this in one way or another.
Those are the end game doesn't work for me.
I don't think that eventually the Palestinians will be absorbed into Israel
and will feel okay about it if their standard of living is high enough.
And of course, if they're enfranchised, then it's very hard to imagine a Jewish state.
But there are other parts of the case that I absolutely subscribe to.
And let's say you took a cosmopolitan perspective. So imagine you're not Jewish, never been to Israel,
you're some guy in Western Australia. Right. And Israelis, Palestinians, they're just names on a map to you,
and you're sort of wading everyone's interests and desires equally. How then does the case look to you
for the settlements? I mean, I think if it's fairly presented, it would, well, first of all,
the other part of the case, I want to say there are settlements and there are settlements. And the word
settlements is way too broad, way too broad, because there are settlements that everybody knows,
I mean, with a nod and a wink, they're always going to be Israel, they were always going
to be Israel, in any negotiation they're going to be Israel, and they are still called settlements,
but they're not settlements. And then there are outposts in the middle of, you know, Yennavel,
to the middle of another world where there are six guys in a goat, and that's also called
a settlement. The, I think that the case would appear like most, like most, like most
such cases like Kashmir, like Nagorno-Karabakh, as mixed. Both sides have very powerful arguments,
and the only people, I suspect, along with you, the only people whose arguments I almost,
I bridle at automatically are people who don't see that there's another side here. Because if,
what I would say, look, I used to, this is the analogy I used to give, it's now a little bit out of date,
but I used to say, what would happen, I mean, think of Hamas in Gaza, what would happen,
if Khomeini had taken over Texas.
How do you think the United States would react?
Do you think they would say, well, look, we should negotiate?
I mean, this is a serious existential issue.
On the other hand, you're not dealing with an alien body that has come and taken over your land.
And so I think that they would feel like this was a mixed and complicated issue, and neither
side can be painted with too black a brush.
I am agnostic on the question if you're wondering.
What is the under-observed, under-noted trend in contemporary Israel of importance?
Hmm.
I would say probably what strikes me when I visit Israel is that there is an increasing dissatisfaction and disaffection with all political life and activity
that is dangerous for the country
because the left wing is virtually declawed.
The religious right is not really a political entity.
They negate the political legitimacy of the country
even as they support right-wing policies.
And so you're raising a generation that I think doesn't feel...
And where does that disengagement come from?
an endless struggle over the same issues that never seems to change and never seems to go away and seems to get worse.
How much do you think income inequality is a driving issue in Israel today?
Yeah, but I don't think I see, you said an unnoticed.
Sure.
There have been demonstrations in the streets about income inequality.
That's somewhat unnoticed in this country.
Right, okay, maybe unnoticed in this country.
Yeah, no, income inequality is a huge issue in Israel, especially because in Israel, unlike in the United States,
Americans should forgive me for this. There's a sense of national solidarity in a different way,
as there is in small countries. Like, small countries feel like someone in my country who's like me
shouldn't be poor. I don't think Americans feel that. Somebody in New York doesn't quite feel that
way about Appalachia. Like, well, we're both Americans, you shouldn't be poor, the same way that
someone in Jerusalem might feel that about someone in Natanya. You know, so.
Now let's say you're talking to someone who's going to Israel, they've been before, quite possibly they're Jewish,
they're familiar with the major sites, and you're giving them advice about something else they might do or see that they haven't thought of.
What is it that you would recommend?
Other than the obvious.
I don't know whether this is the obvious or not, but I mean less visited and among my favorite sites is the graveyard in Svatt,
which contains the graves of most of the most famous Kabbalists of the time, including Luria,
including the man who wrote Lechad Odish, Shlomo Alcabets.
And they're all there, and you can stand on the hills of Svat and see the sun set,
and it's a magical experience.
Now that you mention the Kabbalists, why is there so much sex in the Zohar and so much talk of devils?
And is that really part of the Jewish tradition, or is that going?
beyond and its non-religious speculation, say.
Well, the sex part, in all seriousness, is I think the only metaphors for, not the most powerful
metaphors for human intimacy are sexual metaphors.
And so when you're talking about intimacy with God, it's very hard to avoid like
Zivug, which means coupling or, you know, or...
But at least some other parts of Judaism, it's quite.
kept at a distance, intrigued at least.
That's true, but it goes back to the Hasidic question you asked before, which is this sense
of intimacy with God is very hard to feel without any sort of, to express rather, without
recourse to some kind of sexual metaphor.
So.
And the role for devils in the Zohar?
Is that simply a mistake?
I think it's a lot of, I think it's a lot of the fact that it was written in medieval times
when devils were, you know, proliferated.
And if you, is it part of Judaism?
Well, it's part of Jewish folk culture in the same way that if you read the stories of Isaac Bachev Singer,
you'll get a lot of angels and devils and so on.
But is it part of the biblical tradition? No.
It's a little bit more part of the Talmudic tradition, but it grew and grew as people believed,
you know, in a world lit only by fire that there was,
there were magical creatures all around them.
Speaking of that era, the book The Cusari, which you've written about,
You mentioned the author before Halevi from the 12th century.
Why is that an important book for Judaism?
It's an important book for Judaism because the way it's structured is all these different religions come to the king of the Khazars who historically converted to Judaism, at least that's the best history we have.
And it makes a case for Judaism against other religions.
And Judaism generally did not engage in polemics against other religions, and this really was the foundation stone of it.
And it happened because of the Golden Age of Spain, where there was a lot of interaction with other religions.
And Jewish philosophy was sort of born out of, unlike the Christian tradition, philosophy wasn't native to Judaism.
It was born out of an encounter with other cultures and a need to explain ourselves.
And it was written by one of the great poets of medieval times, who also was a...
was a distinguished philosopher.
And it's written in the form of a dialogue, as you know, a conversation.
And Leo Strauss wrote on this, he was himself Jewish, though I think probably not a believer.
And he suggested that as with the works of Plato and Hume, the fact that it was done as a conversation and dialogue meant,
not that it was deliberate untruths, but many things were deliberately unsaid.
And there was a hovering ambiguity to the final content about the relative status of religion, philosophy,
and whether prophecy is something truly spiritual or can be naturalized to some degree.
Do you agree with that reading?
Yeah, well, he was very, I mean, as we know, he was very fond of things unsaid.
Leo Strauss, that was his bread and butter.
And, yeah, there's a debate in, there's a debate in Jewish philosophy between Maimonides and Yehuda-Halevi
about whether prophecy is something that is divinely gifted or something that you can achieve.
And while Halevi is on the gifted side, he's,
Alevi, I want to say, represents the non-rationalist strain of Jewish philosophy, as Maimonides
represents the rationalist strain. And so for the, and that's why that book nurtures the
Hasidic tradition from afar, and that idea that it comes from a poet makes a lot of sense.
My last question before we turn over to audience questions, and some people have said,
they're not going to leave until you tell us the correct answer to this one.
Uh-oh.
Book two of Maimonides, is creation eternal?
Yes or no?
We'll see.
Or not.
Right.
We're not.
I would, look, I think that Jewish faith rises or falls, Jewish faith, whether the Jewish people does is as yet an unasked question.
but Jewish faith rises or false, not on whether creation is eternal, but whether God is.
And so I don't think that that's a question for Jewish dogma, whether creation is eternal or not.
As long as God is, we're good.
Rabbi David Wilpie, thank you so much.
Yes, Diana.
So I actually have a question about my monodies and your kind of view of the evolution of Jewish thought.
The evolution of Jewish thought, like the history of Jewish thought as it relates to my monodies.
I mean, two things.
One, do you think there was something lost,
something important that was lost in Maimonides'
caudification of the law
that we kind of don't have access to anymore today
because of that development?
And then how much of kind of the work of Maimonides
changed the course of Jewish thought
in a way that maybe wouldn't have happened anyway
with kind of the advent of modernity?
So, that's my question.
I would say in answer to the first one, how much, what did we lose with Maimonides' aggregation
of Jewish law with the Mission of Torah?
So what Maimonides wanted to do was take all of this messy giant Talmudic and other tradition
and make it simple.
And one of the things that he did that he later said he regretted but didn't have the chance
to fix was he didn't add footnotes.
So we don't know, I mean, scholars have spent generations trying to reconcernation.
instruct the sources of my monies. That's a lot that was lost. Because among other things,
he might have been basing it on readings and manuscripts that we don't have. And also,
any time you have a fixed law, you rigidify the practices of communities. Because then
people say, well, it's not in the book, so you can't do it. So yes, a lot was lost. But I mean,
I think probably more was gained. In terms of whether he changed the course of
of philosophical, of Jewish history, I think you almost can't say no because Maimonides is probably the single
most important figure in Judaism. Certainly post-Talmud, he is the single most important figure.
And he did bring in, but, and what he changed, which some people like and some don't, is he made
people who are Jewish rationalists comfortable and people who are not Jewish rationalists,
rationalists forced to argue that it was okay not to be rationalistic.
That to think of God as omniscient, omnipotent, and benevolent like you do in a philosophy class,
is not the only way to think about God.
And that's why the Hasidim needed to reinvigorate the Jewish tradition in a sense.
So, you know, on balance, glad we had him.
Next question.
Okay, so this is a general question.
When I went on birthright, we talked a lot about the idea that everything happens for a reason in the Jewish religion.
And so I wanted to know your beliefs and your mindset on when you experience things in life that are really bad.
And like, for instance, a lot of nice people and good people passing away or just anything bad that happens in life,
I guess your belief on that and if you still believe everything happens for a reason.
Okay.
I'm going to try to make this
really as quick as possible
but give me some allowance
for the fact that I'm making it very quick.
First of all, I don't believe at all
that everything happens for a reason.
Not at all. I think there's
a lot of randomness in the world.
I think the attempt to say everything happens
for a reason can lead you to some moral
obscenities. Like,
oh, this kid in the Sudan who was born
with amoevik dysentery and lived for three years
and suffered and died, it happened for a reason.
Yeah, the reason is
because the world is unfair. That's the reason. Now, why the world is unfair, I have a theory about,
but before I get that, let me just say, the question of life is not why did this happen to you,
but what will you do with it given that it happened to you? That's the question, that does God
give you the power to make something out of what has happened to you, even though that doesn't,
It's like when I got cancer a couple times, I've had two brain surgeries and I've had chemotherapy.
And every time someone would say to me, why do you think God did this?
And they were well meant.
And my answer was, I don't think that God said, Wopi could use some chemo.
I think rather that the question of my life would be, given that this happened, what do you do with it?
How do you react to it?
How do you feel about it?
And I would just say very quickly that my working theory is,
and it's not original with me,
is that when people say, why do bad things happen to good people?
Imagine for a minute the good things happen to good people
and bad things happen to bad people.
Everybody would be good all the time.
Because who would be bad if you know
every time you steal you're going to get a disease?
Everyone would be good all the time.
The only way it is possible to be good in this world
is if you can be good without knowing the consequences.
It has to be random, or there's no goodness.
So you know you can be the best person in the world,
and you can still die young.
But at least if you know that, then your goodness was real goodness.
You were doing it because you believe good is important,
or you love other people,
or being good makes you feel good at something intrinsic
and not because you're being good
because you know God's going to reward you.
So that's what I would say in a nutshell.
Next question.
Wow.
What an answer.
A different subject.
Your thoughts on the rise in anti-Semitism
in large parts of Western Europe
on college campuses
and the intense feelings
so many people in the world have about Israel,
many observers think that
the anti-Israel expressions
is just a cloak for anti-Semitism.
So what I would say,
the quick answer to the
very end of it is not all anti-Israel sentiment is anti-Semitism,
but anti-Israel sentiment is now the respectable guise for anti-Semitism.
Very few people, only the most fringy fringers will come up and say,
we'll stand up and say I'm an anti-Semite.
But you can say I'm anti-Israel and be an anti-Semite,
and that's a respectable, and I think there are lots of tests that you can apply
to the way people criticize Israel and the way they criticize other places,
that will let you know what's behind it.
I have a lot of thoughts about why anti-Semitism, you know,
my father who was a wonderful rabbi,
he talked about anti-Semitism often.
And I remember thinking when I became a rabbi,
I'm so glad that's done, you know?
So glad my rabidant, it won't have to be about that.
And boy, was I wrong.
It's like the return of the repressed.
I think post-Holocast, it had to go underground in a deep way
for a while, but now it has erupted again, and there is some viral strain in, well, first it was
in European DNA, and now I'm afraid it's very much in world, not in world DNA. I mean, there was
already in Islam again, there were seeds of it, but it wasn't the kind of fraternal fight that there
was in Christian, or paternal fight, that there wasn't Christianity and Judaism, but now
it's taken over lock, stock, and barrow, and the virulence on the virulence on the, you know,
both sides in Islam and in Europe is truly frightening. It is truly frightening. So I say, you know,
the Buddhists and Hindus. That's where we got these days. I don't know, it's a very,
look, the one thing that I would say that is important to keep in mind is it's not
1942. Throughout Christian Europe, there are many, many, many millions, the overwhelming number of
people are of goodwill. The leaders of Europe are overtly and for the most part, you know,
covertly also opponents of anti-Semitism in some very significant ways. But it's scary. It is scary.
Next question. Thank you. I was going
to ask whether it's natural for Jews, maybe especially American Jews, to be conservatives or
liberals, but let's get more up to date and pointed. Is there something Jewish about being
alarmed or not about what's perceived to be the Trump agenda?
So here's what I would say about that. And I think actually my answer to both would be the
saying, which is it is impossible to say, let's, let's, I know a lot of, I know a lot of
lot of liberal Jews who will say that Judaism and democratic politics are virtually identical.
And if they don't say it, they feel it. To which I always say, look, if the most learned
and most observant Jews, that is the Orthodox community, tends to be Republican, then it's a
little short-sighted to say, obviously, Jewish values and democratic values are identical.
You can't say that. On the other hand, you also can't say that the values of the prophets of Amos and Jeremiah for the poor and the widowed. And, you know, Herman Cohen said very beautifully in the idea of the stranger Judaism was born. Think about that today. Right? That's what Herman Cohen said. So I think you can make a very powerful Jewish case on both sides. I don't want to address individuals at the moment. I think that that's
not the purpose of the forum, although if Tyler asked me, I will, I will. But I think that you can,
you can in good conscience be a Jew on the right or on the left. And the only thing that I,
that I would say you ought to be uneasy in your conscience about is if you believe that the
other side has no good Jewish values on its side, because you're wrong. If I could just try
a follow-up question, given how many literally billions of people,
have been elevated from poverty by what is mostly, in my account, capitalism, not only capitalism.
Milton Friedman saw this, but still the weight of Jewish intellectual opinion in the United States
has mostly been on the left. I think that's a well-established regularity. What's the intellectual or sociological reason for that underlying?
Well, I'll say why that is, and then one thing about capitalism that I think is profoundly Jewish that most people don't realize.
Seriously. I think the reason is because they came from Eastern Europe and that tradition, like the FDR tradition in America, is very, I mean, the only way that you could see out of the morass of the civilizations they were in was the only thing that gave them hope other than Zionism was a kind of Bundist, Marxist, socialist.
You know, there wasn't really a living capitalist alternative. And it looked to the very first glance,
it looked like the humanistic face of economics as opposed to, I mean, what is capitalism?
Competition. Well, that doesn't look like a humanistic face. But the one thing that I will tell you,
and I think I first heard this many years ago, mentioned by George Gilder, I want to give him credit
for this insight. He said, a real capitalist has to have empathy. Because if you're building
a business or a product and you don't know what other people want, you'll fail.
The only way you can succeed is if you actually understand what it is that other people want and or need.
And both that combined with what you said, which is that it is the great engine of wealth that lifts people out of poverty,
I think that a Jewish thinker today, and certainly many in Israel would argue this too,
that you would have to be a capitalist of some stripe.
I think it's very hard to make the case that
certainly communism or even socialism
is the Jewish, although I could find you a few Jewish socialists
who would argue with me.
We'll take the three last questions. Yes, please.
Yes, Rabbi, thank you so much for sharing your evening with us.
When this synagogue here was also the second home for Otis Israel,
when Otis Israel left here in 1959, I believe,
conservative Judaism was the top stream of Judaism in the United States.
In the decade or 15 years later, conservative Judaism lost over 600,000 members.
Could you tell us a little bit in your own words, so to speak, why you think that happened
and what steps are being taken to recover that sort of attraction that conservative Judaism
once had for American Jewelry? Thank you.
So, sure. But let me also add one.
more thing that I was thinking about about the capitalism thing, which is that capitalism also has
the almost inevitable byproduct of creating tremendous inequalities. And a Jewish value has to, a Jewish
ethic has to address that as well. It can't be a capitalism that ignores the fact that it creates
an underclass that suffers. So it has to be a capitalist socialism. Anyway, so not that I split
differences as a pulpit rabbi, but you're right too. So that's, I don't know if you know that,
that's an old joke about the rabbi who has two people in front of him, and then they each make
their case, he goes, you're right, and then the second one makes the case, you're right, and
then his wife says, dear, they can't both be right, it goes, you're right too. So conservative
Judaism, the dilemma that conservative Judaism had was that it tried to hold on to a serious Jewish
observance without, with modern scholarship that didn't consistently say, God told you you have to do this.
And modern Jewish observance is a very hard thing to hold on to. And so people who had grown up
with the traditional observance lived that out. But as the motivational piece of it weakened,
so did that lifestyle that would maintain them as conservative Jews.
And unless and until, not only conservative Judaism, by the way,
but liberal religion in general, unless and until,
but the problem is worse than Judaism because it makes greater demands
than other religions.
I mean, Christianity doesn't make such lifestyle demands
on Christians as Judaism does on Jews.
Unless and until there is a compelling, non-fundamental,
rational for why I should eat a certain way and why I shouldn't go out on Saturday.
In other words, the ritual behaviors that maintain the cohesion of the tradition until
that is created and many philosophers have tried to and many rabbis have tried,
until that's created. Conservative Judaism is going to face a huge uphill battle.
That's the short answer.
Even if creation is eternal, this session is not.
The two last questions and answers will sum to seven minutes.
Yes, please.
Yes, please.
Thank you.
The United States Supreme Court is currently comprised only of Catholics and Jews.
Do you think that these groups naturally produce better jurors?
If so, why?
And if not, why is that the composition of the court?
I defer here to an answer that I heard given by my sociologist brother at a session we did
together in South Africa last summer, which is probably a sentence you've never heard
uttered before, right?
I defer to my sociologist brother in a session we did together in South Africa.
Because Catholicism has a natural law tradition.
Judaism has a strong legal tradition.
And Protestantism is antinomian.
It's anti-law.
That's the essence of Protestantism, right?
So when you're looking for, so who around here is trained in law?
The Catholics and the Jews.
Now, that doesn't mean that there won't be individual Protestants,
but if you're looking for a deep tradition, well, we got one.
Yes.
Do you think it's realistic to talk about an American Jewish community,
or have we become too fractured to be considered a single community?
And if it is realistic or possible,
then what is the biggest challenge facing the community?
Okay. Are we a community?
I have good news and bad news.
The good news is Jews have never been united.
Never.
Only people who think, oh my God, why don't we have the cohesion we used to are people
who don't know Jewish history.
I mean, we used to be excommunicating each other all the time, the Khashidaman, the
Mignagdim, there was always, always, always fights among Jews.
And there are all sorts of jokes and things, but it's true, it's true.
And by the, I don't think this is unique to Jews, but it certainly is true among Jews.
The, you can't speak about it in America.
Jewish community that will mobilize around certain moments of crisis.
And if, God forbid, there were a terrible moment of crisis,
I think most of the American Jewish community would mobilize around it.
If there was a huge wave of anti-Semitism in America, for example.
But having said that, in some ways, there are, look, in Jewish theology,
there are two ways of serving God.
God. There's Yara and Ahabah. There's fear and love. And fear in many ways is more immediately
effective. Right? I mean, when you're driving over the speed limit, is it love for your fellow
drivers or the presence of a police car that will get you to slow down faster? Right? Fear is in some
ways more immediate and effective than love, but love is more enduring because fear passes, right? But
love, real love, even if creation is not infinite, real love endures, right? Love in the words of
Shirashir, the Song of Songs, is strong as death. So if the American Jewish community,
even if not holy, because I'm not a believer in universal love, because then love is diluted,
it has no meaning, right? Because people that you love, you'll sacrifice for, and you can't sacrifice
for everyone. But if the American Jewish community feels this familial sense and this sense of love
this sense of closeness, then we won't disappear. And to some extent, I'll close with the Hasidic
story, to some extent, I feel like our story, not entirely, but a little bit, it's like the story
that Rabbi Chaim Halbushdam used to tell of the man who was lost in the forest. And he wandered
and wandered and wandered, and he was completely lost, he had no idea where to go, and he sat down
in despair, and as he sat down, another man comes along. And he said,
says, oh, I'm so glad to see you because I'm completely lost.
And the second man says, I have bad news for you. I'm lost too.
He says, but one thing I do know is the way we have gone is not the way.
Now let's hold hands and find the way together.
Thank you.
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