A Listening Heart . . .
Meeting in the Valley, we welcomed 2 new members to the
group, checked in, then read the meditation on Shofar for the fourth day of
Elul, written by Michael Chusid in his book “Hearing Shofar” (http://www.hearingshofar.com/book.htm). To paraphrase and crystallize: in contrast
to the cacophony that was the Tower of Babel, or perhaps the cacophony that is
all the Tweets, Email blasts, and cable news soundbites of today’s culture, the
shofar blast is a universal language of Spirit, like art, like music, like
prayer.
“As you hear shofar today, quiet the flood of words in your
mind and simply hear sound.”
Kings I, 3:1 “Solomon made a marriage alliance . . . he
took Pharoah’s daughter in marriage”
Wait a minute! After
all the assassinations, palace intrigue, and power politics we read about last
time, this represents a sudden, jarring shift in tone. As if to say, that was before, now let’s get
on with it. The violence of the
preceding chapter describing Solomon’s consolidation of his rule is left in the
dust, as our soap opera suddenly shifts gears and Solomon begins to expand his
kingdom through marriage alliance. This
was in contrast to his father David, who built his kingdom through war and
conquest. Solomon’s propensity to make
such political alliances through marriage is famous in our people’s legends,
that in this way he built community through marriage rather than violence. It is said that Solomon had 700 wives, and that
this was, in fact, his ultimate undoing.
But that’s for a later chapter.
And what ever happened to Bat Sheva and Avishag? Two beautiful heroines left behind in
yesterday’s news.
Kings I, 3:3. “Solomon offered up a thousand
elevation-offerings on that Altar.”
The text spends the next couple sentences describing
offerings by the people in the “high places” – these were personal sacrificial
offerings that anyone could make on a personal altar (the high places). While verse 3 states that Solomon did this as
well, as did David before him, now verse 4 says he went to Gibeon, the location
at that time of the Tabernacle, and offered the thousand offerings on “the
Altar” – this is the copper altar built by Bezalel and Moses in the
wilderness. This represents a shift from
the personal to the communal, from Solomon’s own personal interests to those of
his community, foreshadowing the coming period of the Temple when communal
offerings were the norm.
Kings I, 3:5: “YHVH appeared to Shlomo in a dream of the
night”
Previously God had appeared to our ancestors directly, but
to Solomon He comes in a dream. Our
sages teach that a dream is 1/60th of prophecy. Interpretation of a dream is tricky: while it
may very well be, particularly in indigenous cultures and villages, that the
dreamer receives the dream for the sake of his/her community, one must also be
careful to sort out that part of the dream that may relate to the dreamer on a
personal, psychological level. Dreams
are stonger than awakening realizations, have a stronger emotional impact, yet
an inherent ambiguity. Though any dream
can be interpreted in multiple ways, the Talmud tells us we should never
interpret a dream in a negative way. So,
Shlomo, like his ancestors Jacob and Joseph before him, is a dreamer, and the
fact that he is having this dream, this particular dream, says much of his nature
and spirit, whether it is a dream of a personal or collective nature.
Kings I, 3:9: “a listening heart, to judge Your people,
to distinguish between good and evil”
In the dream, HaShem asks him what he wants, to which Shlomo
responds
“an understanding heart” (literally, “a listening heart”, Lev shomeah). It is said that a prayer within a dream is the truest of prayers. Lev – a pure heart; shomeah – listening, from the same root as Sh’mah. Sh’mah, listen, such a core concept in Judaism. To listen, for the still, soft voice of the Holy One speaking to you, directly to you. An empathetic approach to life, with heart wide open. Shlomo asks to bypass all the noise that the brain/mind can place on the message – give it straight to my heart. He is asking for an empathetic heart from which to rule. He asks to be able to judge the nation with this gift, to understand between goodness and evil. The Hebrew grammar here is slightly different than in Genesis, where Adam and Eve are told by the Nahash that if they eat the fruit they will “know good and bad”, whereas here Solomon asks to “understand (the difference) between good to evil (the whole gamut).
“an understanding heart” (literally, “a listening heart”, Lev shomeah). It is said that a prayer within a dream is the truest of prayers. Lev – a pure heart; shomeah – listening, from the same root as Sh’mah. Sh’mah, listen, such a core concept in Judaism. To listen, for the still, soft voice of the Holy One speaking to you, directly to you. An empathetic approach to life, with heart wide open. Shlomo asks to bypass all the noise that the brain/mind can place on the message – give it straight to my heart. He is asking for an empathetic heart from which to rule. He asks to be able to judge the nation with this gift, to understand between goodness and evil. The Hebrew grammar here is slightly different than in Genesis, where Adam and Eve are told by the Nahash that if they eat the fruit they will “know good and bad”, whereas here Solomon asks to “understand (the difference) between good to evil (the whole gamut).
In granting him his wish, HaShem gives him a “pure heart of
wisdom and understanding”, alluding to a balancing of the Sefirot of Chochmah
(wisdom, intuitive right brain) and Binah (understanding, rational left brain)
with a direct pipeline to the Heart.
This is the place of true empathy, from which Solomon will rule. This is the model of what a king should be,
and stands in stark contrast to the place of power and self-interest from which
most kings, both before and after this point., rule. It is
clear now that we are entering into a study, not only of Solomon, but of
kingship.
Kings I, 3:16: “Then 2 women, innkeepers/prostitutes, came
to the king . . . ”
This is the famous story of the 2 women, each claiming the same
baby as theirs, and Solomon’s decision that decides the question. We are struck by the description of the women
as “prostitutes” in one translation, “innkeepers” in another. Does the text mean to imply they are of
little consequence? The Hebrew word
“zonah” usually is translated as prostitute, but may mean much more than our
modern, secular understanding of this word.
We recall 2 such “zonots” who played critical roles in the history of
the Jewish people: Tamar, who slept with her father-in-law Judah and thereby gave
birth to the line of David and Solomon, and all the kings of Judah; and Rahav, who hid the Hebrew spies in
Jericho before that classic battle, and who strung the crimson thread from her
inn’s window so that her family was saved and became part of the Hebrew
people.
A hint to the more raised and respected status of the zonah,
compared to the modern day prostitute, is apparent in that the root of the word
is the same as that meaning to provide for, or to feed, as we see in the Bircat
HaMazon, the blessing we say over the food we’ve eaten. And of course in ancient cultures the ritual
prostitutes were often regarded as bridges to the divine.
Kings I, 3:28: “All Israel heard the judgment . . . and saw
that the wisdom of Elohim was within him, to do justice”
Shlomo’s “decision” to cut the baby in 2 and give each woman
half is successful in ascertaining which woman is the true mother. Or is it?
At the very least it identifies which woman has the child’s best
interest at heart, and she is awarded the child by the king. And the people “heard and saw” how the new
king handled this major test of his ability to judge disputes. There is a teaching that Ruth was in the
court of Solomon at the time of this event, and that later this played a role
in her giving up her baby for Naomi to raise.
This “courtroom theater” by Solomon may also have been a political
metaphor, with the message that you don’t divide up the 2 kingdoms (Israel and
Judah) if you want to keep them alive.
And all Israel “heard and saw”. This takes us back to the revelation at
Sinai, where the people likewise heard the lightning and saw the thunder of
HaShem on the mountain. This then is the
role of the king in Israel: to be a physical manifestation of the ongoing
revelation of Spirit for the people. So
in this way, and no doubt not the only way, the direct connection of the people
to the Holy One is meant to be maintained through its leaders, as it was at
Sinai.
Next Meeting:
Saturday, September 7 – Shabbat Shuvah, between Rosh HaShanah and Yom
Kippur. We will hike in Encino to “The
Trees”, hold Council, learn.
Save the Date
(tentative): Sunday, September 22, Sukkot at Devorah’s. Gathering, ritual, build sukkah, potluck
lunch
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