I began this sermon by playing the song below:
The Sun Will Come Out Tomorrow from the play "Annie"
According to
the Talmud, whether the sun would come out tomorrow was a real concern of the
very first human being. "When Adam,
on the day of his creation, saw the setting of the sun he said, 'Alas, it is
because I have sinned that the world around me is becoming dark; the universe
will now become again void and without form - this then is the death to which I
have been sentenced from Heaven for eating of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and
Evil'. So Adam sat up all night fasting and weeping and Eve was weeping
opposite him. When however dawn broke,
he said, `I understand, “This is the usual course of the world.'" (Avodah Zarah 8a)
It is no
coincidence that Chanukah is celebrated at the darkest time of the year. It also is always celebrated around the time
we read Parasah Miketz in our synagogues. In Parasha Miketz we find Joseph in prison in Egypt for
12 long years. He was sold by his brothers into slavery when he was 17 years
old – he is now a young man of 30. He dwells in the darkness of a prison cell.
But Joseph never gives up hope. Placing his trust in G-d, he is suddenly freed
and is thrust from darkness to light.
Perhaps the
words left on another prison wall, of sorts, on a cellar wall in Cologne,
Germany by Jews in hiding during the Holocaust, best expresses the
thought. "I believe in the sun even
when it is not shining, I believe in love even when I am alone, I believe in
God even when He is hiding." When
everything is dark, we can rely on our faith in G-d that the sun will shine
again.
The person
who penned those words on the cellar wall would perhaps not be surprised to
read that a few days ago Berlin Mayor Michael Müller, German Justice
Minister Heiko Maas and Israeli Ambassador to Germany Jeremy Issacharoff stood
together to light the first candle of Europe's largest Hanukkah menorah at The Brandenburg
Gate in Berlin. The Brandenburg Gate, which had once been used as a symbol by
the Nazi party. The Brandenburg Gate, where West Germans had once gathered to
protest the Soviet building of the Berlin Wall, the symbol of the iron curtain
behind which millions were deprived of their freedom. The Brandenburg Gate, where
President Reagan addressed these words in 1987 to the General Secretary of the
Soviet Union, Mikhael Gorbachev, “If you seek peace, if you seek prosperity for
the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, if you seek liberalization: Come here to
this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, tear
down this wall!” Is
there a more fitting place for the Menorah, the symbol of freedom, to be lit
than at the Brandenburg Gate in Germany?
Each night
of Chanukah we light one more candle on our Menorahs. Each night, the light
grows and the darkness diminishes. Chanukah
is a holiday of hope – lighting the Menorah an expression of our faith that
even in the darkest of times, the sun will come out tomorrow.
No comments:
Post a Comment