Yom Kippur Posting... from page 383 of the Mahzor:
"This is how we become aware of the effort to purify the self: to become aware of our inner enslavement to the ego, to detect the taints in our virtues, the tinge of idolatry in our worship of G-d...
After all our attempts to purify the self, we discover that envy, vanity, pride continue to prowl in the dark... Should we, then despair of our being unable to retain perfect purity? We should, if perfection were our goal. However, we are not obliged to be perfect once and for all, but only to rise again and again beyond the level of the self. Perfection is divine, and to make it a goal of man is to call on man to be divine. All we can do is try to wring our hearts clean in contrition. Contrition begins with a feeling of shame at our being incapable of disintanglement from the self. To be contrite at our failures is holier than to be complacent in prefection."
It's Yom Kippur, and I'm busy practicing self-denial and reflection. What does it mean to me?
I'll preface: I'm not a great Jew. I'm probably not even a good Jew. I don't obey all the commandments, and I'm nowhere near diligient enough in pursuing mitzvot. I don't spend enough time in prayer or self-reflection. I have neglected my studies of the Torah and Midrashim. I'm not nearly kind enough or charitable enough. I'm prideful and lazy.
And I'm not proud of that. I'm not complacent. I'll never achieve the divine, which, like the 10' rim, is out of my reach. But I do strive. And I do not excuse. To see my accomplishments as small, and my failings as great, so that I might work to overcome them. To see offenses done against me as minor, and my offenses done against others as great, so I might endeavor to be more just in my dealings.
If I have been wronged, I must work to forgive because not all are divine. If I have wronged others, I must be humbled. I can and should be a better man than I am.
Yom Kippur is a day of reckoning with G-d, and a day of atonement. My guilt is not merely about feeling contrite for screwing up. (although I do) My own guilt is the motivator, the reminder that I am not perfect. That I should not be complacent. That I have much to learn, and much work to do. Because I can be a better man. And I should be.
It's not about punishments and rewards. Although we deal with both every day. It's about justifying my own existence. Am I making an honest effort to make the most of myself? Am I succeeding in my efforts when I do try? How do I correct for past failures? How do I ensure that I do better in my future?
To those whom I have offended, I am sorry, and offer humble apology, though I know I'll offend again. To myself, whom I have assuredly offended, I seek forgiveness for my failings, though I know I'll offend again. Man cannot achieve the divine.
But that's no excuse to stop trying hard to get a little bit closer.
"This is how we become aware of the effort to purify the self: to become aware of our inner enslavement to the ego, to detect the taints in our virtues, the tinge of idolatry in our worship of G-d...
After all our attempts to purify the self, we discover that envy, vanity, pride continue to prowl in the dark... Should we, then despair of our being unable to retain perfect purity? We should, if perfection were our goal. However, we are not obliged to be perfect once and for all, but only to rise again and again beyond the level of the self. Perfection is divine, and to make it a goal of man is to call on man to be divine. All we can do is try to wring our hearts clean in contrition. Contrition begins with a feeling of shame at our being incapable of disintanglement from the self. To be contrite at our failures is holier than to be complacent in prefection."
It's Yom Kippur, and I'm busy practicing self-denial and reflection. What does it mean to me?
I'll preface: I'm not a great Jew. I'm probably not even a good Jew. I don't obey all the commandments, and I'm nowhere near diligient enough in pursuing mitzvot. I don't spend enough time in prayer or self-reflection. I have neglected my studies of the Torah and Midrashim. I'm not nearly kind enough or charitable enough. I'm prideful and lazy.
And I'm not proud of that. I'm not complacent. I'll never achieve the divine, which, like the 10' rim, is out of my reach. But I do strive. And I do not excuse. To see my accomplishments as small, and my failings as great, so that I might work to overcome them. To see offenses done against me as minor, and my offenses done against others as great, so I might endeavor to be more just in my dealings.
If I have been wronged, I must work to forgive because not all are divine. If I have wronged others, I must be humbled. I can and should be a better man than I am.
Yom Kippur is a day of reckoning with G-d, and a day of atonement. My guilt is not merely about feeling contrite for screwing up. (although I do) My own guilt is the motivator, the reminder that I am not perfect. That I should not be complacent. That I have much to learn, and much work to do. Because I can be a better man. And I should be.
It's not about punishments and rewards. Although we deal with both every day. It's about justifying my own existence. Am I making an honest effort to make the most of myself? Am I succeeding in my efforts when I do try? How do I correct for past failures? How do I ensure that I do better in my future?
To those whom I have offended, I am sorry, and offer humble apology, though I know I'll offend again. To myself, whom I have assuredly offended, I seek forgiveness for my failings, though I know I'll offend again. Man cannot achieve the divine.
But that's no excuse to stop trying hard to get a little bit closer.
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-Rhi
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