“We cried out to Adonai, the God of our ancestors, and Adonai heard
our plea and saw our affliction, our misery and our oppression.”
(Deuteronomy 26:7)
“So why isn’t our crying out working
now?” my step-mother, Melissa, asked at our Passover Seder after she read this
verse. My brother Josh jokingly suggested putting blood on the doorposts of our
houses like the Israelites did.
On reflection, I realized that
Melissa’s question contained a few logical premises. Her question assumed that:
1)
God sent the
original plagues, we cried out to God and God stopped the plagues – as stated
in the Bible.
2)
Therefore,
crying out to God should work for this plague too.
It’s simple Geometry – the
transitive property – so why isn’t it working?
Beneath her question, Melissa raised
deeper questions:
1)
Did God send the
plague of Coronavirus? and
2)
Can God stop
it?
Did God send this plague? I spent some
time entertaining the idea that God may have sent the Coronavirus plague. After
my Amazon Alexa told me the world’s air pollution had dropped due to people
staying home, I went on a bike ride and wondered. I thought about how we’ve
been in this state in recent years where the youth – headed by Greta Thunberg –
understood the need to change our behavior to avert climate change, while older
people in power have resisted. Perhaps, God would be tempted to send a plague
that kills the older but not the young, causing people to stay home thereby
reducing air and water pollution. This plague has caused humanity to realize we
can live more humbly to avert death – which is what we need to do to avert the
destruction of the planet through climate change. Perhaps, I mused, God did
send this plague.
But then after I returned from my bike ride, I learned that a
relative was in the hospital with Covid-19. He’s been on a ventilator for the
past week. A few days later, another family member in another part of the
country was taken to the hospital with Covid-19 as well. In both cases, their
spouses and children were not allowed to visit them in the hospital.
God surely wants none of this.
The God that I believe in is a God of snuggles, hugs and kisses – a
God who knows that zooming is a second-rate substitute for sitting beside a
loved one and holding their hand. I imagine that like me, God is grateful for
the blessings of Zoom, Skype and Facetime – which are infinitely better than no
contact at all. Still, it’s not the same.
God surely didn’t send this plague...
And while I’m all for crying out, I’m not holding my breath that
crying out will save us. As our sages said in the Talmud, “Where there is a
possibility of danger, we should not depend upon a miracle.” Don’t get me wrong
– I’d love a miracle, but I’m not expecting one.
The only way out is for our medical researchers to find a vaccine. In
the meantime our medical professionals need to keep caring for the sick, our
social service agencies to offer support the needy, our grocery workers and
deliverers to keep us fed, the clergy to provide comfort and the rest of us to
hunker down and Zoom our friends and family through this catastrophe. God will
provide us strength and inspiration in these endeavors.
To be honest, I don’t know if God even sent the first 10 plagues in
Egypt, but I do know that the Israelites recognized that the time of the plagues
was their shot to get out and create a different kind of society which
glorified life rather than death. So too, this moment is our chance to
transform how we live.
As Rabbi Sharon Brous said, after the plagues, the Israelites
“rebuilt a society that was the counter-Egypt, that was the anti-thesis of what
they had experienced in their suffering in Egypt, and we will rebuild a society
that is counter to the injustices and oppressions and indignities of this world
that we have lived in.”
Or as Rabbi Steven Leder wrote, “Do not come out of hell
empty-handed.”
Indeed, let’s create a society based on the antithesis of
isolation. Let’s create a society based on love, justice, and togetherness.
So Josh, I don’t think blood on the doorposts is the answer this
time. Melissa, I don’t think crying out is the solution either. I don’t think
God sent this plague, but I know we can learn from it.
From the first 10 plagues, our people learned to “be kind to the
stranger for you were strangers in the land of Egypt.” From this plague, let’s
learn that we have the power to radically change our lives quickly to avert our
destruction. Let’s care for the earth and each other with renewed ferocity.
That way, we won’t come out of this hell empty-handed.
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