GUIDING INVESTIGATIONS
- What is our response when bad things happen to good people?
- What do the sources say about the role of God in acts of destruction and then the recovery?
- How do the sources tell us to respond to God in moments of natural tragedy? to each other in moments of natural tragedy?
CORE SOURCES
לֹ֥א תַעֲמֹ֖ד עַל־דַּ֣ם רֵעֶ֑ךָ אֲנִ֖י ה'׃
Do not profit by the blood of your fellow: I am the LORD.
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Source Unknown
A young man once came to Menachem Mendel of Kotzk. ‘Rebbe, I can no longer believe in God. I can’t believe in God because the world is so filled with pain, suffering, ugliness and evil. How could there be a God in such a world?!’ ‘Why do you care?’ asked the Rebbe. ‘What do you mean, why do I care? How could I not care? Innocent people suffer; the world is ruled by cruel people. Why does God allow it?’
Again, the Rebbe inquired, ‘But why do you care?’
The young man screamed out: ‘Someone has to care! Someone has to see the pain of the world and cry out! If not, all the suffering is meaningless. I care because I want a better world, not only for my children but for all children!’
The Rebbe responded, ‘If you care that much, then God exists. You see, God exists in your caring.’”
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Rabbi Harold Kushner, When Bad Things Happen to Good People
The flood that devastates a town is not an ‘act of God,’ even if the insurance companies find it useful to call it that. But the efforts people make to save lives, risking their own lives for a person who might be a total stranger to them, and the determination to rebuild their community after the flood waters have receded, do qualify as acts of God.
Rabbi Elissa Sachs-Kohen, quoted in the Baltimore Sun
“…I do believe that through learning our Jewish tradition, we learn of responsibility for one another. Those who have skills that are useful should be employing those skills in a helpful way.”
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על הגשמים ועל בשורות טובות אומר ברוך הטוב והמטיב... מברך על הרעה מעין על הטובה ועל הטובה מעין על הרעה
For rain and other good tidings, one recites the special blessing: Blessed…Who is good and Who does good. Even for bad tidings, one recites a special blessing: Blessed…the true Judge... The mishna articulates a general principle: One recites a blessing for the bad that befalls him just as he does for the good. In other words, one recites the appropriate blessing for the trouble that he is experiencing at present despite the fact that it may conceal some positive element in the future. Similarly, one must recite a blessing for the good that befalls him just as for the bad.
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ADDITIONAL RESOURCES: MODERN EXPRESSION
"After the Storm: A Moment of Gratitude," By Alden Solovy
God of heaven and earth,
Source of All,
The storm passed,
The tempest moved on.
Thank you for the kinship of neighbors and friends
As we work together to clean up after the squall.
Thank you for providing safety
To my family and friends throughout the gale.
Thank you for the emergency and rescue workers
Who kept watch and risked their lives for our community.
Bless all who were injured with healing and recovery.
Provide food and clothing, warmth and comfort, to all in need.
Blessed are You, our Rock and our Shelter.