Va’etchanan 5763 Hear, O Israel; The Lord our God, the Lord is
One
…Deuteronomy 6:4
There are probably the most familiar Hebrew words in the entire
language.
In the whole Bible, in the whole Siddur, what words are more
familiar than these?
Words we are commanded to say in the morning when we get up, words we
are commanded to say when we lie down at night, words that are often
the last words on a dying Jew’s lips.
Jews who don’t know any other Hebrew, will know the Shema.
Jews who don’t know the meaning of any other Hebrew words, will
know what these six words mean.
In fact today I’m not even going to talk about the entire verse: it’s
too big a subject for just one talk.
Instead we are going to discuss just two words:
Ad-nai Echad.
Let’s start with a question: when you say those words, Ad-nai Echad,
what do you mean? What do
they mean to you?
The Hebrew which is so familiar seems pretty simple and
straightforward.
But we find that if we look in a few different sources, we get
significantly different translations.
Everyone agrees on “Shema Yisrael.”
Translating the rest of the sentence, there is no such
agreement:
Hear, O Israel; The Lord our God is one Lord
--Soncino and King James Version
Hear, O
Israel
! The Lord is our God,
the Lord alone --Jewish
Publication Society
Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is One.
–Hertz and Siddur Sim Shalom
Hear, O Israel: Hashem is our God, Hashem is the One and Only
--Artscroll Tanakh and Siddur
Hear, O Israel: Adonai is our God, Ad-nai alone.
–the New Siddur Sim Shalom
The classical commentators understand this verse in a few different
ways:
Rashi explains the verse: “God is our God now, not the God of other
nations; but in the future he will be One God, as it says “for then I
shall change the nations to speak a clear language so that they may
all call out in the name of God, and it says on that day God will be
One and His name One.”
For Rashi, the unity of God in the verse is His universal recognition
by all of Mankind – For Rashi, like for many others, Ad-nai Echad is
talking about the uniqueness of God.
Rashbam: God is our God, we don’t have any other God with Him.
God is one, only to Him we will serve…again, Ad-nai Echad means
God is unique, and our relationship with him is special.
Rambam takes it in a different direction—not just God’s uniqueness,
but God’s unity: “We believe that this Primal Cause [God] is One. [His
is] not like the oneness of a pair, nor like the oneness of a species,
nor like man, whose complex oneness may be divided into many units,
nor like the oneness of a simple body, which is one in number but may
be divided and separated without end. Rather, He is One with a Oneness
that knows no parallel in any manner. This is the Second Principle, as
affirmed by the verse (Deut. 6:4): "Hear O Israel, God is our Lord,
God is One."
As we can see, some Jews focus on God’s uniqueness; others focus on
God’s unity in understanding this verse.
We see a similar understanding of God in other religions.
In Islam, God is also seen in both lights:
Uniqueness in Islam:
Abul A'La Mawdudi,
Towards Understanding Islam
The most fundamental and the most important teaching of Prophet
Muhammad (blessings of Allah and peace be upon him) is faith in the
unity of God. This is expressed in the primary Kalimah of Islam as
"There is no deity but Allah" (La ilaha illallah). This beautiful
phrase is the bedrock of Islam, its foundation and its essence. It is
the expression of this belief which differentiates a true Muslim from
a kafir (unbeliever), mushrik (one who associates others with God in
His Divinity) or dahriyah (an atheist).
Unity in Islam:
There is a principle called Tawhid
(Unity). Everything originates
from ‘one’ and eventually will return to ‘one’, as stated in the
Quran: “We originated the first creation, so We shall bring it back
(to its former state) again.” (21:104)
What I want to focus on today is God’s unity, which is a central
concept to mystics of all types, not just Jewish mystics.
I first got interested in the idea of the Oneness of the Universe
through studying Buddhism and physics.
Some representative concepts/quotes:
“Since everything in this world is brought about by causes and
conditions, there can be no fundamental distinctions among things.
The apparent distinctions exist because of people’s absurd and
discriminating thoughts.” …The Teaching of Buddha, Bukkyo Dendo Kyokai
“Sakyamuni Buddha
and mystics down through the ages have taught that not only are all
beings interconnected, we are the same being -- there is only One of
us. We are many, but we are also One.”
… David Wigginton, web site.
The goal of Buddhist meditation practice is to sit and quiet the mind;
Enlightenment is ultimately about seeing through the veil of
appearances of the world around us to the essential essence of the
Unity of the universe.
I found this concept attractive, and all the more so when I found that
Western Physics, our rational, scientific approach to the world is
saying similar things:
From “The Dancing Wu-Li Masters: An Overview of the New Physics,” by
Gary Zukav: “A vital aspect of the enlightened state is the experience
of an all-pervading unity.
‘This’ and ‘that’ no longer are separate entities.
They are different forms of the same thing.
Everything is a manifestation.
It is not possible to answer the question, ‘Manifestation of
what?’ because the ‘what’ is that which is beyond words, beyond
concept, beyond form, beyond even space and time.”
Zukav (and others, such as Fritjof Capra, who wrote “The Tao of
Physics”) take scientific proof for this notion that everything is a
manifestation from a theory in physics called “
Bell
’s Theorem.” Again to
quote Zukav, “
Bell
’s theorem is a mathematical construct which , as such, is
indecipherable to the nonmathematician.
Its implications, however, could affect profoundly our basic
world view. Some
physicists are convinced that it is the most important single work,
perhaps, in the history of physics.
One of the implications of
Bell
’s theorem is that, at a deep and fundamental level, the ‘separate
parts’ of the universe are connected in an intimate and immediate way.
In short,
Bell
’s theorem and the enlightened experience of unity are very
compatible.”
Bell
’s Theorem speaks of “Non-locality.”
A particle is split, and measuring it at location “A” seems to
effect what you will see why you measure it at location “B.”
Instantaneously, no “communication time lag,” i.e., much faster
than the speed of light.
It suggests that at some kind of fundamental level matter transcends
space—it’s all connected somehow.
There are other principles in physics which also speak to the unity of
the universe. E=Mc2 says
that energy and matter are the same thing—so in a way, “stuff” is just
another form of “energy.”
Another interesting principle is the Heisenberg Uncertainty
Principle. What this
principle says is that at a sub-atomic level we can’t know both the
exact location and the exact velocity of a particle—measuring
unavoidably influences the results.
One of my favorite bumper stickers is “Heisenberg may have
slept here.”
On a more macro level, we are becoming increasingly aware of the
interconnectedness of all of us who live on this planet.
Polar bears, who live thousands of miles from the nearest
“civilization” are endangered because of factories putting toxic
chemicals into the air which find their way to the North Pole.
It has been scientifically proven that acidification of lakes
in
Sweden
is from pollution originating in other countries.
Learning that Judaism shared a similar understanding of the Unity of
the universe was for me an important opening in my return to Judaism
after years of being secular and dabbling with other forms of
spirituality.
Kabbalah (Jewish mysticism) teaches that this verse, these two words,
Ad-nai Echad, is the most basic and fundamental principle in Judaism.
A great Kabbahlist, the Ramchal (Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzato)
wrote a book called 138 Openings of Wisdom, as a kind of primer on
Kabbalah. In the first
“opening” Ramchal states:
“The oneness of Eyn Sof - He who has "No End", blessed be He - lies in
the fact that only His Will exists, and no other will exists except
through Him. Therefore He alone is in control and not any other will.
The entire structure is built on this foundation.
“God's supreme unity is the foundation of faith and the root of
wisdom…
“We must believe and have faith that the Supreme Emanator - blessed be
He and blessed be His Name - is One alone, unified in all respects.
This means that He alone exists, and only He exists necessarily: there
is simply none other. And He alone controls everything. That He alone
is in control is an obvious inference from the first proposition -
that He alone exists. Since He alone exists, He alone is in control.
This means that every other being that exists now is contingent upon
Him.”
There is a passage in Isaiah that seems to be saying the same thing.
Here is the conventional translation of Isaiah 45:5-6:
I am the Lord, and there is no one else, there is no God
beside me; I girded you, though you have not known me; That they may
know from the rising of the sun, and from the west, that there is none
beside me. I am the Lord, and there is no one else.
However, I would suggest the verse could also be translated as
follows:
I am the Lord and there is nothing else.
Besides me there is no God.
I girded you, and you did not know me.
In order that they will know from the rising of the sun and
it’s setting that there is nothing but Me.
I am the Lord, there is nothing else.
There is also a “mystical strain” in Christianity.
There is a verse in Ephesians which also speaks to this
pervading Oneness of God: Ephesians 4:3-6, 13 "Endeavouring to keep
the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. There is one body, and
one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your calling; One
Lord, one faith, one baptism, One God and Father of all, who
is above all, and through all, and in you all.
The mystics say that there is no way we can truly know the ultimate
Unity of the Ein Sof. As
a Ba’hai prayer says: “Thy unity is inscrutable, O my God.”
It is simply beyond human comprehension.
We are aware of God through the Sefirot, which are ways that
God manifests God’s self in the world.
We strive to attain an understanding and appreciation of God’s
unity, yet we know that ultimately we can never succeed—for as God
told Moses, “Man cannot see My face and live.”
There are many paths to connect with God’s Unity: Buddhism, Islam,
even Christianity and Scientific study.
Judaism and Kabbalah is another way to connect with God’s
unity—it’s the way Jews do it, studying Torah and doing Mitzvot.
I will leave it for your lunch table conversation to discuss the
implications of God’s impenetrable unity on how we should conduct
ourselves in the world, how we should take care of the world, and how
we should treat other people, whether Jews or Gentiles.
Shabbat Shalom