{"id":349,"date":"2010-11-28T13:25:00","date_gmt":"2010-11-28T13:25:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/monkeymind\/2010\/11\/thoughts-while-holding-a-candle-in-the-dark-a-sermon-on-hanukkah-anticipated\/"},"modified":"2011-11-01T15:03:27","modified_gmt":"2011-11-01T19:03:27","slug":"thoughts-while-holding-a-candle-in-the-dark-a-sermon-on-hanukkah-anticipated","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/monkeymind\/2010\/11\/thoughts-while-holding-a-candle-in-the-dark-a-sermon-on-hanukkah-anticipated.html","title":{"rendered":"THOUGHTS WHILE HOLDING A CANDLE IN THE DARK A Sermon on Hanukkah Anticipated"},"content":{"rendered":"<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC \"-\/\/W3C\/\/DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional\/\/EN\" \"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/TR\/REC-html40\/loose.dtd\">\n<html><head><meta http-equiv=\"content-type\" content=\"text\/html; charset=utf-8\"><meta http-equiv=\"content-type\" content=\"text\/html; charset=utf-8\"><\/head><body><div class=\"separator\" style=\"clear: both;text-align: center\"><a href=\"https:\/\/1.bp.blogspot.com\/_niPwTW3rBbU\/TPKeZuzzfiI\/AAAAAAAADlY\/YGmDCOEsT8k\/s1600\/warinheaven2.jpg\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" border=\"0\" height=\"236\" src=\"https:\/\/1.bp.blogspot.com\/_niPwTW3rBbU\/TPKeZuzzfiI\/AAAAAAAADlY\/YGmDCOEsT8k\/s320\/warinheaven2.jpg\" width=\"320\"><\/a><\/div>\n<p><i><span style=\"font-size: large\"><b>THOUGHTS WHILE HOLDING A CANDLE IN THE DARK<\/b><\/span><\/i><\/p>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><i><span style=\"font-size: large\"><b>A Sermon on Hanukkah Anticipated<\/b><\/span><\/i><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">James Ishmael Ford<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">28 November 2010<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">First Unitarian Church<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">Providence, Rhode Island<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><b><i>Text<\/i><\/b><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><i>A candle is a small thing.<\/i><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><i>But one candle can light another.<\/i><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><i>And see how it\u2019s own light increases,<\/i><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><i>as a candle gives its flame to the other.<\/i><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><i>You are such a light.<\/i><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">Moshe Davis &amp; Victor Ratner<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">Once upon a time a friend who is psychic told me that I\u2019d been a rabbi in a fairly recent past life. I liked that. A lot. Although the sad truth is I\u2019m goy to the bone. I still blush as I recall a school tour of a synagogue when I was nine or ten, when I asked the rabbi, as I didn\u2019t see one anywhere else if the arrangement of the ceiling lights was their cross? <\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">This doesn\u2019t mean Judaism wasn\u2019t part of my forming consciousness. My maternal grandmother\u2019s fundamentalist theology, which meant our family\u2019s theology included the belief that Jews are God\u2019s chosen people, an ideology that had two consequences for us. The first was how important it was to convert the Jewish community, get \u2018em back on the right side. Grandmother was often in correspondence with various Messianic Jewish organizations, writing checks out of her meager savings. <\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">And, second, and more important was how nice she thought it would be if we were somehow Jewish, ourselves. Grandmother put a lot of hope in her own maternal grandmother who had, she thought, a Jewish sounding name. Genetic testing that Jan and I gave each other a couple of years ago as Christmas gifts, suggests this hope is rather unlikely. Nonetheless, as I said, I liked it when my friend pronounced I had once been a rabbi in some past life. Didn\u2019t even matter that I don\u2019t put much store in psychic pronouncements of any sort.<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">My spiritual pilgrimage began in my adolescence sparked by my serious doubts about the existence of the deity described in church. Over the years that have passed I\u2019ve traveled a very long ways from fundamentalist Christianity and its concerns. Still, as I\u2019ve walked my way, and life\u2019s journey twisted and turned and I ended up here today as a Unitarian Universalist minister, with a liberal <a href='https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/library\/buddhism' target='_blank'>Buddhist<\/a> theology, I still found it a treat that in general it is our UU custom is to pay attention to some Jewish holidays, honoring as we do this, our deep ancestral root. In fact some have suggested if there are Jews for Jesus, we UUs could be Christian\u2019s for Moses. Well, but for the fact that only about twenty percent of us are particularly comfortable being identified as Christian. <\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">However, nonetheless, there is that root. And there is little doubt whatever our current spiritual stance, so wide, perhaps even dangerously wide, although something in which I delight, and which allows someone like me a place in this community; nonetheless has a taproot. And while I would argue the rich soil that nourishes our tradition is ancient paganism particularly as expressed in the Greek philosophical tradition, still, I have no doubt the root itself is Judaism.<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">And so, I think, it more than helpful that we take time from time to time to look at the traditions of Judaism, particularly the holidays, and to consider what they may say to us as contemporary religious liberals. It is a conversation with our ancestors. And you never know what can come out of such shamanic endeavors. Can be dangerous for all connected to the enterprise. But with care and respect I believe there are lessons to be gleaned. And well worth the dangers.<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">Perhaps you\u2019ve heard how someone goes to the rabbi and asks \u201cWhen is Hanukkah this year?\u201d And she replies, \u201cJust like every year, silly. It starts on 25h of Kislev.\u201d For the rest of the goys out there, that\u2019s a Jewish joke, friends. The Jewish calendar is a modified lunar calendar. If it weren\u2019t modified, it\u2019d be like the Muslim lunar calendar where there\u2019s an annual drift of eleven or twelve days, and so major festivals gradually wind around the whole year. In the Jewish calendar, there\u2019s a bit of a float, but with little tweaks here and there which allows things to stay more or less in the same general area against the seasons. And, of course, the dates are constant within that calendar. Hence, as much as I hate to explain a joke, that question, and the rabbi\u2019s response. In our Gregorian calendar, of course, what some call the universal secular calendar, this year Hanukkah runs for the first eight days of December. <\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">So, why Hanukkah today, what\u2019s the point? The title, you may have noticed, for next week\u2019s sermon is \u201cLight one Candle,\u201d (a sermon title I seem to like. I noticed after announcing it that I preached with that title two years ago. Perhaps somewhere deep down I was hoping I\u2019d get it right the next time \u2018round.). That candle isn\u2019t Peter, Paul and Mary\u2019s lovely song of Jewish liberation, but rather Amnesty International\u2019s light of justice for all. Although I suggest there are echoes in that small light for us to consider, today. I\u2019ll return to that.<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">As most of us know Hanukkah is an extremely minor holiday in the Jewish calendar, one that has certainly only grown here in North America because of its rough proximity to Christmas. It\u2019s become a way for the Jewish community to celebrate the season dominated by a much larger Christian cultural context. <\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">But, that\u2019s not the end of the matter. After that small irony of dealing with the season and its utility in standing out against Christmas, the ironies begin to pile upon each other. Especially for us, here. After all the story is, among other things, about a war between assimilationists and traditionalists, that is between religious liberals and conservatives, actually its not putting too fine a point on this to say fundamentalists. Not what one would think of as a ready theme for Unitarian Universalists and our magpie religious tradition, assimilating many themes and traditions into our ever-evolving, dynamic faith. <\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">So, here\u2019s the gateway into my point for today. The ironies within this holiday are almost endless. For instance, many, most scholars suggest Hanukkah is in fact itself rooted in ancient pagan festivals celebrating light at the darkest time of the year. In that sense its roots are as pagan as are the roots of the Christmas holiday. And then to compound the ironies its history of a fundamentalist victory over liberalism was first recorded by the Greek-speaking, think assimilationist, liberal Jewish community, and then preserved as part of their Holy Scripture by the early Christian community, think not friends.\n<p>The early rabbis were wary of the Maccabees and their holiday for several reasons, two principally. First the Maccabeean call to arms was a pyrrhic victory. Much ill would follow this revolt and its brief success. But also the Maccabeean blending of priestly and kingly power during the brief Hasmonean dynasty whose founding is the celebration of Hanukkah, had more than a shade of resemblance to the Taliban\u2019s rule in Afghanistan. All of this should be deeply troubling if one thinks about it. And the rabbis did.<\/p><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">The rabbinic commentators choose to focus their attention, as limited as it actually was, remember \u201cminor holiday.\u201d I\u2019ve quoted the Reconstructionst rabbi Arthur Waskow before. I really like his thinking. Of this holiday he observes, \u201cTo the rabbis, it was crucial both to call for courage and hope, and to do so in a sphere other than military resistance, which they\u2026 viewed (through the tragic lens of historic hindsight) as hopeless and dangerous and self-destructive.\u201d A point, perhaps, for all of us to recall.\n<p>Waskow continues, \u201c\u2026(T)he story the rabbis told about the Light was the story of the rabbis themselves \u2013 absorbing that the Maccabees\u2019 military victory had saved the nation, but that getting stuck there would be self-destructive. They needed to bring the Higher Consciousness of courage for Enlightenment into the people\u2019s arsenal of spiritual \u2018weaponry.\u2019\u201d<\/p><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">Higher consciousness. What should higher consciousness mean for us? Personally, I\u2019m more inclined to the simpler word wisdom. And, I\u2019m taken by that seeking of wisdom, which very much is in the story as the rabbis tell it. But to find it takes not being bound too tightly by the text or the history. Rather we need to allow the telling to be shaped by our deeper calling: toward our true freedom, to a way of genuine wisdom. And we should try to do this because reshaped it is our heart story. It is about how we can find the light, how we can find our depth, our possibility: the way of the wise heart.<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">And the wise heart must juggle contradictory information.<\/div>\n<p><span style='font-family: \"Times New Roman\";font-size: 12pt'>The scholar and author Rachel Adelman cites columnist David Brooks, in his December 10<sup>th<\/sup>, 2009 op-ed in the New York Times. Brooks describes Hanukkah as \u201c\u2019the most adult of holidays. It commemorates an event in which the good guys did horrible things, the bad guys did good things and in which everybody is flummoxed by insoluble conflicts that remain with us today.\u2019\u00a0 For Brooks, the story of Hanukkah is a \u2018self-congratulatory morality tale,\u2019 commemorating a Civil War, a war in which he may have fought on the side of the Hellenizers.\u2019\u201d I\u2019ve always liked Brooks, as they say, the liberal\u2019s favorite conservative.<\/span><br><span style='font-family: \"Times New Roman\";font-size: 12pt'>And, there are deeper currents yet. Adelman also cites the great Jewish scholar Theodore Herzl Gaster, who \u201csuggests that the Hanukkah story is essentially about the inalienable right to be different.\u00a0 The festival teaches the value of \u2018the few against the many, of the weak against the strong, of passion against indifference, of the single unpopular voice against the thunder of public opinion.\u00a0 The struggle was not only against oppression from without but equally against corruption and complacency within.\u00a0 It was a struggle fought in the wilderness and in the hills; and its symbol is appropriately a small light kindled when the shadows fall.\u201d<\/span><br><span style='font-family: \"Times New Roman\";font-size: 12pt'>Both, and. If we want to be spiritual adults, if we want wisdom, we\u2019re going to have to take our history and our myth all mixed up. Which is fine, as long as we\u2019re respectful, careful, and engaging in all this to a purpose.<\/span><\/p>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">The purpose for us is that we find the light, that one miraculous light that lasts well past any possible reasonable effort. It is the path of passion, and heart. And this is our task, as it has been the task of every soul over the many generations. To take what is given, to look deeply into the matter at hand, and to allow ourselves to be transformed and in that transforming to become spiritual adults. To become people who can take on the work that needs to be done. <\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">There is little doubt today that our liberal religious tradition is the minority position. We are the weak in this struggle for hearts and minds. Right now ours is the unpopular voice that is nearly lost in the thunder of public opinion. And the call for us is a struggle, and it is a struggle not only against every oppression from beyond those walls, but to fiercely resist corruption of this spirit, losing to our own complacency. That is the small light we are called to notice today, the light burning in our hearts, the light that shows the way.<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">I suggest this story and our working with it calls us, you and me, to resist the dying of the light, to shine forth beyond all reasonable expectations, to become, each and every one of us by our example, by our willingness to not turn away, by our challenging all authority, particularly that voice in the back of our heads that says turn away.<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">Each of us needs to be that small candle in the great wind. And in doing so become the miracle.<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">And how do we do this? Question authority, of course. Particularly our own. Looking deeply, not just to do something, but to find ourselves, and our place in the family of things. We do this and the flame we are will leap from our hearts to another. And there becomes a chance for this poor, hurt world.<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">The spiritual writer Clark Strand shifts the image of that flame just a little bit, perhaps in a way that can help. He notices how we can also use as our image how the world itself is on fire, consumed in a conflagration of grasping and hatred and endless certainties. And to which we can bring a different flame, that spiritual possibility, that small light.<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">Clark sings to us.<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">To this burning house<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">Of a world, I add one log<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">And a little light.<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">May this turning of the heart, of our becoming the flame of possibility become the Hanukkah flame. May it burn, and burn, transforming our own hearts, and showing this beautiful suffering world a way.<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">That\u2019s our challenge. That\u2019s our possibility.<\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"MsoNormal\">Amen.\n<a href=\"http:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=3yZ1zxtbOJE?fs=1\">http:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=3yZ1zxtbOJE?fs=1<\/a>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"blogger-post-footer\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1\" height=\"1\" src=\"https:\/\/blogger.googleusercontent.com\/tracker\/33904114-4947558904054821036?l=monkeymindonline.blogspot.com\" alt=\"\"><\/div>\n<\/body><\/html>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>THOUGHTS WHILE HOLDING A CANDLE IN THE DARK A Sermon on Hanukkah Anticipated James Ishmael Ford 28 November 2010 First Unitarian Church Providence, Rhode Island Text A candle is a small thing. But one candle can light another. And see how it\u2019s own light increases, as a candle gives its flame to the other. You [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":120,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-349","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v21.1 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>THOUGHTS WHILE HOLDING A CANDLE IN THE DARK A Sermon on Hanukkah Anticipated<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"THOUGHTS WHILE HOLDING A CANDLE IN THE DARKA Sermon on Hanukkah AnticipatedJames Ishmael Ford28 November 2010First Unitarian ChurchProvidence, Rhode\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" 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He has been authorized as a teacher within two traditional Zen lineages. James has washed dishes, assisted a crab fisherman on the Florida keys, worked in bookstores up and down the California coast, and served as a Unitarian Universalist parish minister. He currently lives with his spouse Jan and her mother in Los Angeles. 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