Jackie Tabick: The balancing act of compassion

9,717 views ・ 2015-07-17

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One of my favorite cartoon characters is Snoopy.
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I love the way he sits and lies on his kennel and contemplates the great things of life.
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So when I thought about compassion,
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my mind immediately went to one of the cartoon strips,
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where he's lying there and he says,
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"I really understand, and I really appreciate
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how one should love one's neighbor as one love's oneself.
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The only trouble is the people next door; I can't stand them."
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This, in a way, is one of the challenges
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of how to interpret a really good idea.
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We all, I think, believe in compassion.
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If you look at all the world religions, all the main world religions,
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you'll find within them some teaching concerning compassion.
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So in Judaism, we have, from our Torah,
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that you should love your neighbor as you love yourself.
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And within Jewish teachings, the rabbinic teachings, we have Hillel,
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who taught that you shouldn't do to others what you don't like being done to yourself.
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And all the main religions have similar teachings.
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And again, within Judaism,
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we have a teaching about God,
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who is called the compassionate one, Ha-rachaman.
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After all, how could the world exist without God being compassionate?
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And we, as taught within the Torah that we are made in the image of God,
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so we too have to be compassionate.
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But what does it mean? How does it impact on our everyday life?
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Sometimes, of course, being compassionate
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can produce feelings within us that are very difficult to control.
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I know there are many times when I've gone and conducted a funeral,
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or when I have been sitting with the bereaved, or with people who are dying,
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and I am overwhelmed by the sadness, by the difficulty,
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the challenge that is there for the family, for the person.
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And I'm touched, so that tears come to my eyes.
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And yet, if I just allowed myself to be overwhelmed by these feelings,
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I wouldn't be doing my job --
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because I have to actually be there for them
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and make sure that rituals happen, that practicalities are seen to.
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And yet, on the other hand, if I didn't feel this compassion,
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then I feel that it would be time for me to hang up my robe
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and give up being a rabbi.
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And these same feelings are there for all of us as we face the world.
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Who cannot be touched by compassion
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when we see the terrible horrors of the results of war,
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or famine, or earthquakes, or tsunamis?
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I know some people who say
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"Well, you know there's just so much out there -- I can't do anything,
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I'm not going to even begin to try."
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And there are some charity workers who call this compassion fatigue.
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There are others who feel they can't confront compassion anymore,
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and so they turn off the television and don't watch.
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In Judaism, though, we tend to always say, there has to be a middle way.
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You have to, of course, be aware of the needs of others,
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but you have to be aware in such a way that you can carry on with your life
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and be of help to people.
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So part of compassion has to be an understanding of what makes people tick.
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And, of course, you can't do that unless you understand yourself a bit more.
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And there's a lovely rabbinic interpretation of the beginnings of creation,
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which says that when God created the world,
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God thought that it would be best to create the world
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only with the divine attribute of justice.
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Because, after all, God is just.
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Therefore, there should be justice throughout the world.
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And then God looked to the future and realized,
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if the world was created just with justice, the world couldn't exist.
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So, God thought, "Nope, I'm going to create the world just with compassion."
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And then God looked to the future and realized that,
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in fact, if the world were just filled with compassion,
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there would be anarchy and chaos.
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There had to be limits to all things.
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The rabbis describe this as being like a king
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who has a beautiful, fragile glass bowl.
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If you put too much cold water in, it will shatter.
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If you put boiling water in, it will shatter.
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What do you have to do? Put in a mixture of the two.
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And so God put both of these possibilities into the world.
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There is something more though that has to be there.
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And that is the translation of the feelings
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that we may have about compassion
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into the wider world, into action.
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So, like Snoopy, we can't just lie there
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and think great thoughts about our neighbors.
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We actually have to do something about it.
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And so there is also, within Judaism, this notion of love and kindness
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that becomes very important: "chesed."
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All these three things, then, have to be melded together.
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The idea of justice, which gives boundaries to our lives
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and gives us a feeling of what's right about life, what's right about living,
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what should we be doing, social justice.
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There has to be a willingness to do good deeds,
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but not, of course, at the expense of our own sanity.
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You know, there's no way that you can do anything for anyone
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if you overdo things.
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And balancing them all in the middle is this notion of compassion,
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which has to be there, if you like, at our very roots.
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This idea of compassion comes to us
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because we're made in the image of God,
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who is ultimately the compassionate one.
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What does this compassion entail?
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It entails understanding the pain of the other.
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But even more than that,
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it means understanding one's connection to the whole of creation:
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understanding that one is part of that creation,
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that there is a unity that underlies all that we see,
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all that we hear, all that we feel.
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I call that unity God.
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And that unity is something that connects all of creation.
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And, of course, in the modern world, with the environmental movement,
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we're becoming even more aware of the connectivity of things,
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that something I do here actually does matter in Africa,
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that if I use too much of my carbon allowance,
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it seems to be that we are causing
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a great lack of rain in central and eastern Africa.
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So there is a connectivity,
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and I have to understand that -- as part of the creation,
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as part of me being made in the image of God.
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And I have to understand that my needs
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sometimes have to be sublimated to other needs.
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This "18 minutes" business, I find quite fascinating.
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Because in Judaism, the number 18, in Hebrew letters,
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stands for life -- the word "life."
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So, in a sense, the 18 minutes is challenging me to say,
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"In life, this is what's important in terms of compassion."
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But, something else as well:
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actually, 18 minutes is important.
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Because at Passover, when we have to eat unleavened bread,
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the rabbis say, what is the difference between dough that is made into bread,
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and dough that is made into unleavened bread, or "matzah"?
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And they say "It's 18 minutes."
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Because that's how long they say it takes for this dough to become leaven.
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What does it mean, "dough becomes leaven"?
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It means it gets filled with hot air.
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What's matzah? What's unleavened bread? You don't get it.
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Symbolically, what the rabbis say is that at Passover,
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what we have to do is try to get rid of our hot air -- our pride,
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our feeling that we are the most important people in the whole entire world,
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and that everything should revolve round us.
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So we try and get rid of those,
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and so doing, try to get rid of the habits, the emotions, the ideas
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that enslave us, that make our eyes closed, give us tunnel vision
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so we don't see the needs of others --
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and free ourselves and free ourselves from that.
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And that too is a basis for having compassion,
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for understanding our place in the world.
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Now there is, in Judaism, a gorgeous story
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of a rich man who sat in synagogue one day.
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And, as many people do, he was dozing off during the sermon.
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And as he was dozing off, they were reading from the book of Leviticus in the Torah.
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And they were saying that in the ancient times in the temple in Jerusalem,
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the priests used to have bread,
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which they used to place into a special table in the temple in Jerusalem.
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The man was asleep, but he heard the words bread, temple, God, and he woke up.
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He said, "God wants bread. That's it. God wants bread. I know what God wants."
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And he rushed home. And after the Sabbath, he made 12 loaves of bread,
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took them to the synagogue, went into the synagogue,
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opened the ark and said, "God, I don't know why you want this bread, but here you are."
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And he put it in the ark with the scrolls of the Torah.
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Then he went home.
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The cleaner came into the synagogue.
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"Oh God, I'm in such trouble. I've got children to feed.
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My wife's ill. I've got no money. What can I do?"
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He goes into the synagogue. "God, will you please help me?
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Ah, what a wonderful smell."
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He goes to the ark. He opens the ark.
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"There's bread! God, you've answered my plea. You've answered my question."
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Takes the bread and goes home.
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Meanwhile, the rich man thinks to himself,
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"I'm an idiot. God wants bread?
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God, the one who rules the entire universe, wants my bread?"
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He rushes to the synagogue. "I'll get it out of the ark before anybody finds it."
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He goes in there, and it's not there.
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And he says, "God, you really did want it. You wanted my bread.
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Next week, with raisins."
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This went on for years.
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Every week, the man would bring bread with raisins,
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with all sorts of good things, put it into the ark.
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Every week, the cleaner would come. "God you've answered my plea again."
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Take the bread. Take it home.
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Went on until a new rabbi came. Rabbis always spoil things.
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The rabbi came in and saw what was going on.
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And he called the two of them to his office.
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And he said, you know, "This is what's happening."
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And the rich man -- oh, dear -- crestfallen.
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"You mean God didn't want my bread?"
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And the poor man said, "And you mean God didn't answer my pleas?"
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And the rabbi said, "You've misunderstood me.
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You've misunderstood totally," he said.
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"Of course, what you are doing," he said to the rich man,
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"is answering God's plea that we should be compassionate.
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And God," he said to the poor man, "is answering your plea
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that people should be compassionate and give."
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He looked at the rich man. He held the rich man's hands and said,
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"Don't you understand?" He said, "These are the hands of God."
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So that is the way I feel:
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that I can only try to approach this notion of being compassionate,
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of understanding that there is a connectivity, that there is a unity in this world;
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that I want to try and serve that unity,
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and that I can try and do that by understanding, I hope,
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trying to understand something of the pain of others;
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but understanding that there are limits, that people have to bear responsibility
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for some of the problems that come upon them;
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and that I have to understand that there are limits to my energy,
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to the giving I can give.
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I have to reevaluate them,
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try and separate out the material things
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and my emotions that may be enslaving me,
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so that I can see the world clearly.
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And then I have to try to see in what ways
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I can make these the hands of God.
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And so try to bring compassion to life in this world.
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