Tuesday, March 26, 2013

The Four Cups of Wine



We will drink the first of four cups of wine
And give up control
To the wine, to the story, to God.
We are in Mitzrayim, the narrow place, 
And God says to us:
I Shall Take You Out,
I Shall Rescue You,
I Shall Redeem You,
I Shall Take You to Me.

Sanctify the day with the First Cup.
I Shall Take You Out, sez God,
From the burdens of Egypt.
That's nice.  But what about 
The burdens of now?
War, sex slavery, exploitation, inequality,
Not much changes.
We better get out from under,
Resist the oppressor
And make our own places free.
So drink from the Cup of Sanctification.
The fruit of our hopes and prayers.


Tell the Story of a People's Creation with the Second Cup.
I Shall Rescue You, sez God,
From someone else's definition 
Of you are, of what you can be.
Inspired by God, we free ourselves.
Moses or Abraham Lincoln or Betty Friedan
Freedom is not something we can be given
Freedom is something we must create.
So drink from the Cup of Deliverance
The fruit of our arduous journey.

Thank the chain of work that created the Seder meal with the Third Cup.
I Shall Redeem You, sez God
With an outstretched arm
Scattering the seeds
To the earth to the vineyard to the farmworker  to the winemaker to the bottle to the grocer,
All for this glass of wine.
Redemption is hard work,
Forgivenss requires self awareness,
Teshuvah ain't for babies.
So drink from the Cup of Redemption
The fruit of our many labors.


Praise God's Awesome Glory with the Fourth Cup.
I Shall Take You to Me, sez God
For a people
And be your God
In eternal covenant.
Gosh, can I get a job description first?
Commitment to obligation
Requires freedom to choose
And freedom to disobey.
So drink from the Cup of Restoration
The fruit of our Holy Connection


God says to us:
I Shall Take You Out.
I Shall Rescue You.
I Shall Redeem You.
I Shall Take You to Me.
Drink.

Amen

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Blessing After Eating the Seder Meal



All who sit around this table:
Friends and Strangers,
Those who remember and those who are remembered
On this Pesakh,
Who have shared such a fine meal
And such a fine story,
We take this moment to acknowledge
How blessed we are
And in our turn, we bless:

Blessed be the eaters and the eaten,
Blessed be the feeders and the fed.
Blessed be the cooks and the meal,
Blessed be the drinkers and the winemakers..
Blessed be the vegetables and the farmers,
Blessed be the matzah and the baker.
Blessed be them all.

Blessed be the questioners and the questioned,
Blessed be the musicians and the songs.
Blessed the comics and the jokes,
Blessed be the artists and the illustrations.
Blessed be the maggid and the stories,
Blessed be the rabbis and the learning.
Blessed be them all.

Blessed be the doers and the done upon,
Blessed be the freers and the freed.
Blessed be the leaders and the led,
Blessed be the tellers and the told,
Blessed be the prayers and the prayed for,
Blessed be the servers and the served.
Blessed be them alll.

Blessing us,  One-ness
With the biggest and the smallest of blessings
And
Blessing the One-ness
With the biggest and smallest of our gratitudes,
All who sit around this table,
All who ate this wonderful meal,
Friends and Strangers,
Those who remember and those who are remembered,
On this Pesakh
We give thanks.

Amen 

Thursday, March 14, 2013

If I Let It: A Kavanah for Kabbalat Shabbat


It grows dark.
I light two candles and drink a sip of wine
And the world changes for one day,
If I let it.

There will be music
And friendship
And food,
If I allow it.

There will be Torah
And wisdom
And God-ness,
If I permit it.

There will be quiet
And napping
And deep rest,
If I open up to it

There will be study
And expansion
And new ideas,
If I consent to it.

There will prayer
And blessings
And meditation,
If I give in to it.

There will be hope
And renewal
And clarity,
If I walk toward it.

If I let it
If I allow it
If I permit it
If I open up to it
If I consent to it.
If I give in to it.
If I walk toward it
The world changes for one day.

Shabbat happens,
If I let it.