Monday, August 4, 2014

The Saddest Day on the Jewish Calendar

Tisha B'Av (the ninth of Av) is the saddest day on the Jewish calendar. It was supposedly a pre-ordained day of tragedy for the Jewish people. Countless calamities are remembered: the destruction of both Temples, the expulsions from England and Spain, the start of World War I, the Warsaw ghetto uprising, to name a few.

Reading the histories of many peoples, I find many celebrations of victories, but few that recall defeats and calamities. In ancient times, kings would create grand monuments of their victories in battle and their accomplishments, but not their defeats or losses. 

Judaism has a practical approach to these matters. It recognizes both the wins and the losses. This reflects our own humanity and the ebb and flow of our lives. We suffer and celebrate, win and lose.

Both provide valuable lessons for the choices we make. It is not the victories, but the defeats and failures which have the most influence and enable us to be resilient. It is wonderful to be able to celebrate a victory with joy, but only a grown up adult man or woman can find and utilize the losses for personal and spiritual growth by reframing what went wrong, adjusting to the situation and walk away with a life changing approach and action.

The TOV calendar advocates a day or days that confront our defeats, losses and failures. Psychologically and emotionally this helps us to be healthier by facing the darkness and the fears we encounter. It brings us together with others who are not afraid to confront the darkness and do the activities that will create light.

Those who can face loss and learn, are the ones who progress as people and bring the world closer to redemption by committing to do acts of TOV, acts that meet the Creator’s Standard:

Acts that protect human life, preserve human life, make human life more functional, and/or increase the quality of human life.

We do acts of TOV whether we win or we lose.

Tisha B'Av begin today at sundown and last until tomorrow at sundown.

Choose Life By Doing TOV!
Rabbi Jeffrey Leynor


1 comment:

  1. As far as history goes, I would agree with the assertion that a society normally glorifies its victories or pays tribute to their strengths. But that it is more through a shared-remembrance that we acknowledge our defeat and loss, the tragic if you will.

    I would say that most religions and people in general have this belief, that the wins and the losses are a natural part of living - the ebb and flow. Personally, the most tragic event in my life has made me grow more than I ever imagined possible. It taught me emotionally, psychologically, and even spiritually more than could any victory or accomplishment.

    I have great respect for those of faith, at times I wish I could have some and believe in a higher power. I truly appreciate the sentiment of bringing the world closer to redemption by committing to do acts of good TOV. Everyone should live by that philosophy.

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.