Tuesday, June 9, 2009

A Rabbi and a Buddhist


Question:
A monk took a small Buddha statue out of his pocket, and threw a statue onto the ground, smashing it to pieces.

The monk asked the startled Rabbi, "Now tell me, would you do that with one of your Torah scrolls? If not, who is it that makes idols?"
________________
Answer:
This story encapsulates the profound difference between eastern spirituality and Judaism. The two traditions have some things in common, but on many of the deepest issues they sharply diverge.


One fundamental question, elicits from the two diametrically opposed answers: Which is holier, physicality or spirituality?

The Buddhist would answer, that the spiritual is far higher than the physical. The Jew would give a typical Jewish answer: not necessarily.

The monk was right, we would never throw a Torah scroll on the ground. It is our holiest object, and we treat it with reverence and tenderness. The Torah is not G-d, but it is sacred.
___________
A Torah scroll embodies what the Jewish mission is all about - to take this world, and infuse it with G-dliness.

In the making of a Torah scroll, it requires of all four levels of existence - mineral, plant, animal and human- to create a holy object.

Pieces of parchment , made of animal hide, are sewn together with animal sinews. A feather quill, is dipped in ink made from plant derivatives; and a living human handwrites the Torah, letter by letter.

The scroll is then bound on wooden poles, covered with an elegant cloth coat, and decorated with silver adornments, representing the mineral realm.

The four levels of existence, have thus transcended their physical nature, and become a vehicle to express G-d's wisdom, and a vessel to hold His presence.
_______________
This seedemingly lowly world, hides the infinte G-d within it. The Torah scroll testifies, that the physical is not an impediment to holiness; on the contrary, it can be a home for holiness.
_____________
Eastern thought does not agree. Holiness lies in higher consciousness, elevated states of being, heightened awareness; but cannot elevate an animal's hide.


The Buddhist can smash his statue, because he thinks it absurd, that an object can be anything, more than a symbol of something higher. For him, there can't be intrinsic holiness to the statue, because holiness, is limited to spirituality.

For the Jew, this is the essence of idolatry. By relegating holiness to the higher worlds, you have limited G-d's jurisdiction. G-d can be just as comfortable in the physical world, as He is in the spiritual worlds, if we onlywelcome Him here.
______________
Of course, we can't worship a physical object, for as long as you are seeing something physical, you are not seeing G-d.

Any object can become holy, if G-d so desires.
The Torah scroll is not G-d, but it reveals G-d, it is a manifestation of G-d's wisdom.


A human being cannot be G-d, but we can become G-dly by aligning with G-d's will. To do so, we can write a Torah, study it, and bring holiness into every level of our life.
____________
This is where the paths of Buddhism and Judaism diverge.


In Buddhism, a physical object can't have innate holiness, for holiness is other-worldly; in Judaism, a physical object can be the holiest of holies, because there are no limitations to the divine.
____________
This difference in worldviews translates, into two very disparate ways of life:

Buddhism is about silence; Judaism is about words.
The Buddhist ideal is celibacy; Judaism's is family.

Buddhist spiritual centre is the temple; the Jewish spiritual centre is the home.

Buddhism glorifies the life of a monk; Judaism glorifies the life of a mother.

In Buddhism holiness is discovered in solitude; in Judaism holiness is found, in helping people, and elevating the world.

Buddhism says, the physical world is an illusion; Judaism says, this world is hidden a G-dly reality, but its potential for holiness has to be revealed by man.

In short, Buddhism is a calling to retreat from physicality, and reach for the spiritual. Judaism is a calling, to relate to the physical in a G-dly way, and marry the two, to make this world holy.
__________
Limiting G-d to the heavens, is idolatry. But revealing His presence in the world -, by living the Torah - that is the holiest thing we can do.


When our physical life is imbued with the divine imprint, then we have done the impossible: we have expanded infinity, to even include the finite world.

That's not just spiritual, it’s higher than spiritual - it's G-dly.

No comments:

Post a Comment