Belief in Moshiach Belief in the coming of the Moshiach
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Belief in Moshiach
Belief in the coming of the Moshiach (Messiah) is a long standing and integral
part of Judaism. The Bible, especially in the prophetic texts, is filled with
references to the Messianic redemption. The Talmud and midrashim also contain
many discussions about the nature of Moshiach and the messianic era. Maimonides
codified belief in the Moshiach as one of the essential principles of Jewish
faith. At the beginning of his Mishne Torah, he writes that "one who does
not believe in him, or who does not await his coming, denies not only the
prophets, but also the Torah and Moses our Teacher."
The Jewish liturgy is filled with prayers for Redemption and the coming of the
Moshiach. One finds several in the text of the Amidah which, together with the
Sh'ma, ("Hear O Israel") is the most important Jewish prayer, and is
recited three times each day.
The Lubavitcher Rebbe has recently called for a renewed awareness of and
emphasis on the idea of the Moshiach's coming. Efforts to do so have elicited
reactions ranging from enthusiasm to suspicion to intense opposition.
To clarify the meaning of Moshiach, WELLSPRINGS asked a scholar of contemporary
Jewish thought and literature to engage a Lubavitcher rabbi in a discussion
addressing some of this discomfort.
SUSAN A. HANDELMAN - Professor of English at the University of Maryland,
and a contributing editor to WELLSPRINGS. She is the author of Fragments of
Redemption: Jewish Thought and Literary Theory in Benjamin, Scholem and Levinas.
MANIS FRIEDMAN - Rabbi and Dean of Bais Chana Institute for Jewish Studies in
St. Paul, MN. he is the author of "Doesn't Anyone Blush Anymore",
printed by HarperCollins. He lectures widely on the Torah approach to
contemporary social issues and serves as simultaneous translator for the
Lubavitcher Rebbe's addresses that are broadcast internationally.
HANDELMAN: The Lubavitch
movement has recently created quite a stir with its renewed emphasis on the
coming of Moshiach. What does it really mean to say that "Moshiach will
come"?
FRIEDMAN: The ultimate authority on that is Maimonides. Maimonides says that
there will be a Jewish leader who will be a descendant of King David who will
bring Jews back to Judaism, and who will fight G-d's battle. If he does so, we
can assume that he is Moshiach. If he then goes on to build the Temple and
gather all Jews back to Israel, then we will know for sure that he is Moshiach.
Now this means that Moshiach comes not by introducing himself as Moshiach.
Moshiach is a Jewish leader who does his work diligently and accomplishes these
things. So Moshiach comes through his accomplishments and not through his
pedigree.
HANDELMAN: In other words,
does the coming of Moshiach mean that we make this "assumption" about
a certain person, but the person doesn't himself declare it - and then one day
this person finally says, "It's me"? Or does the candidate actually
have to go and build the Temple in Jerusalem?
FRIEDMAN: Maimonides says that once he builds the Temple and gathers Jews back
to Israel, then we know for sure he is Moshiach. He doesn't have to say
anything. He will accept the role, but we will give it to him. He won't take it
to himself. And his coming, the moment of his coming, in the literal sense,
would mean the moment when the whole world recognizes him as Moshiach.
HANDELMAN: What specifically
does that mean?
FRIEDMAN: That both Jew and non-Jew recognize that he is the responsible for all
these wonderful improvements in the world.
HANDELMAN: What will those
wonderful improvements in the world be?
FRIEDMAN: An end to war, an end to hunger, an end to suffering, a change in
attitude.
We're also talking about Moshiach being a change in attitude: instead of people
tending towards the evil, we start to tend towards the good. Instead of evil
being the primary mover and shaker, good becomes the primary mover and shaker.
Now, how is that going to happen? Who's going to cause that to happen? Somebody
is generating a kind of new energy that's making people think differently and
feel differently and see things differently.
HANDELMAN: Yet isn't it
collective Israel, i.e, all the Jews in the world who are having to do their
part in that endeavor? Why maintain that it's just one person who is putting out
this energy. And how does the person do that?
FRIEDMAN: Everybody has a little bit of Moshiach in them, but still, there is
the one who is Moshiach. I think that everybody in Moses' generation was a
little bit like him.
HANDELMAN: How so?
FRIEDMAN: They all received the Torah, they all heard G-d speak face to face, so
they had certain qualities that are unique to Moses, and because they were his
generation they shared those qualities. In our generation, we all share a
quality that resembles Moshiach. But there must also be a Moshiach. This idea
that there is a Messianic era without Moshiach is like the 60's without Bob
Dylan.
HANDELMAN: If I am to agree
with you that this is the Messianic generation, what would this quality be?
FRIEDMAN: Number one is teshuvah [returning to G-d]. There has to be something
about the people of Moshiach's generation that helps produce the Messianic
benefits. Teshuvah is definitely a phenomenon unique to our generation.
HANDELMAN: Why is teshuvah an
essential quality of Moshiach?
FRIEDMAN: Let's compare it to a relationship. G-d makes certain overtures: G-d
chose us, G-d took us, G-d gave us, G-d taught us, G-d protected us. Moshiach
means the time when we respond to Him.
HANDELMAN: "Teshuvah,"
in Hebrew, also literally means "response," or "answer" as
well as "return."
FRIEDMAN: Right. Not teshuvah as regret for the past, but teshuvah meaning,
"You've done for us, and now we're responding to You." And that is the
conclusion or the consummation of a relationship.
HANDELMAN: Yet, hasn't it
been the case that in other historical eras the Jews have responded to G-d --
indeed returned to G-d with more devotion than they have in this generation?
FRIEDMAN: No. In the past it was more G-d's doing than our doing. In the past,
when we had a great teshuvah movement it was because G-d performed the miracle
and blew us away, and we were so inspired and so moved by it that we did
teshuvah. But it was really His doing. The same is true about coming out of
Egypt, and Chanukah. Whatever it was -- it was always His doing.
HANDELMAN: Wasn't the
Chassidic movement in its origins a teshuvah movement - wasn't that the Baal
Shem Tov's call?
FRIEDMAN: Yes. The Baal Shem Tov described it as preparation for the Moshiach.
It has been a 200-year project.
HANDELMAN: Why then do you
say that teshuvah is a phenomenon unique to our generation?
FRIEDMAN: Because of the fact that Yiddishkeit is on the rise, not on the
decline. Fifty years ago, people were predicting that Judaism was over, that it
was irrelevant, no longer served any purpose, and that in a few years it would
be gone. It's certainly not gone.
HANDELMAN: Yet that has been
the case throughout Jewish history, hasn't it? People have always been
predicting the demise of Judaism, and it hasn't ended -- so one might still
argue that there's nothing radically different about our era as opposed to
previous historical eras.
FRIEDMAN: But the teshuvah phenomenon is different. In the past, people
predicted that Yiddishkeit would die. It didn't because those who were religious
stayed that way. But we never had this mass return of people who have no reason
to return.
HANDELMAN: Well, you describe
it as a "mass" return but statistical studies of the Baal Teshuvah
movement have claimed that numerically it is very small. The number of actual
ba'alei teshuvah who return to observant Judaism compared to the number of Jews
who are leaving, intermarrying, or who don't even belong to a synagogue, is
minimal.
FRIEDMAN: I'm not talking about the ba'al teshuvah per se, that handful who go
off to yeshiva. I'm talking about the general return to more tradition rather
than less, more Jewishness rather than less, even among the Reform. So there is,
again, an attitudinal change.
HANDELMAN: Still, one could
reasonably predict that just as many Jews will marry out of the faith as will
make those attitudinal changes. Fifteen years ago the intermarriage rate was
much lower than it is today -- so one could also look at it the reverse.
FRIEDMAN: Yes, I suppose one could. But that's not news. The fact that there's a
dropout rate, the fact that there is assimilation, is understandable. It's
reasonable. It's not a miracle. If you don't teach and you don't inspire, time
wears away at you. It's been 3,000 years since we stood at Mt. Sinai -- what do
you expect? The miracle is that people pick themselves up and decide to be more
observant rather than less observant.
HANDELMAN: This return to
roots is a big trend in America among many ethnic groups, not only the Jews.
It's a conventional part of American culture today.
FRIEDMAN: That's part of the miracle.
HANDELMAN: Why is it a
miracle?
FRIEDMAN: The prophecy about Moshiach is that Elijah the Prophet will come and
"he will return the parents to through their children." When you have
a return to tradition, you're basically going upstream. Tradition comes down.
The parent gives it to the children, and the children give it to the
grandchildren. But for the grandchildren to pick it up when the parents didn't
have it, this is going against nature.
Today, the only way to be Jewish is by doing teshuvah, even for those who are
born in a religious family. You have to opt for Yiddishkeit, and it's not given
to you on a silver platter as it was in the past. So today we have a very
voluntary and democratic kind of Judaism that never existed. People predicted
that if you would allow people to choose, they would never choose Judaism. But
they are choosing it. And even amongst the most assimilated, there are
intermarried couples who bring their children to yeshivas and day schools
because they want their kids to hold onto that Judaism. So intermarriage is not
what it used to be, either.
Intermarriage used to mean, "I quit." Today, people intermarry largely
out of ignorance, not out of rejection.
What is also unique is the approach the Rebbe has taken in the last 40 years:
that every Jew is Jewish, and every Jew wants to do mitzvot, and no Jew can
sever his or her ties with G-d, and no Jew is ever lost. And indeed here you
have people who are intermarried, totally ignorant, totally assimilated, but
they want to be Jewish, and they don't hesitate to come to a rabbi and say,
"Teach me."
HANDELMAN: But, take for
example, German Jewry at the turn of the century. The situation there was very
similar to that of American Jewry today. The parents had emerged from the
shtetls of Eastern Europe, Germany had liberalized, and Jews could now enter
universities and become citizens. These Jews left Judaism and assimilated. And
later, there was a movement to return to Judaism by their grandchildren, for
example Buber, Scholem and
Rosenzweig. So I could well argue that it has happened before, and there is
nothing unusual in this trend of return.
FRIEDMAN: Even if I were to go along with you, the few individuals like Buber
and Rosenzweig did not really start a mass movement back to Judaism. They wrote
a book, people read it and that was the end of it. The assimilation continued.
HANDELMAN: Are you saying
that this is a generation of teshuvah and that the core message of Moshiach is
teshuvah?
FRIEDMAN: Yes. As Rav says in the Talmud, all we need is to do teshuvah and
Moshiach comes, for all the predestined dates for the redemption have already
passed (Sanhedrin 97b).
HANDELMAN: But why has the
Chabad movement recently begun putting such a great emphasis on the idea of
"Moshiach Now"? Why specifically now?
FRIEDMAN: The primary reason is that the Rebbe is saying that now is the time.
And how are we going to know when Moshiach comes if not by listening to the
experts? In addition to that, the Rebbe sees the miracles of the Gulf War and
Eastern Europe as miracles of special historic significance, not just miracles
of survival as we had for thousands of years.
HANDELMAN: One might wonder,
though, whether there is anything "messianic" about these miracles?
Saddam Hussein is still in power, the former Soviet Empire is in economic chaos,
the Syrian dictator Assad has gained renewed influence in Middle East politics,
etc.
FRIEDMAN: Of course, the problems are far from over. But the miracle is the
change in attitude for the good. What is happening today is that quite suddenly
there is a recognition of ideological evils and a change in moral attitude.
HANDELMAN: Here again, one might also think of these events as just part of
another cycle in history. That is, there are always periods of great reform and
progressive hope, and then a regression to oppression and war. Hearing about
this new emphasis on Moshiach, some people fear that you're setting yourself up
for disappointment, and that it's very dangerous to read into these
events some impending arrival of the Moshiach, because it hasn't happened for
the last several thousand years.
FRIEDMAN: That's exactly true, and that's why it has to happen now. This fear of
disappointment, I think, is a very invalid and insubstantial argument. There's
always a chance that we might fail in the things we hope for, the things we work
hard for. But that is not an argument against doing it.
HANDELMAN: Nevertheless, in
the past in Jewish history, when Messianic movements have arisen, such as Bar-Kochba
or Shabbetai Zvi, the resulting disappointment was disastrous for the Jewish
people. This disappointment is not a simple thing, it's not like being
disappointed in love --
FRIEDMAN: The stronger the virtue, the greater is the damage if it doesn't work.
But we should distinguish between today and the past failures of Bar-Kochba and
Shabbetai Zvi. Really the two are very different: Bar-Kochba didn't turn out to
be a disaster; he just didn't accomplish the goal.
Shabbetai Zvi turned out to be a disaster. But what they all have in common, all
the past Messianic fervor, is that they happened in a time of great trouble,
when people were really desperate, when they had reached the bottom of the
cycle, and the only way to go was up; and it had to be Moshiach - which is
understandable. When things are that dark, you have to hope for something, you
have to look forward to something.
On the other hand, it is still a virtue and a compliment to the Jewish people
that our faith is so strong that for 3,000 years we have been consistently
confident of his arrival. And what's unique about this time around is that we're
doing very well. There is no great trouble. Things are relatively good for Jews
today.
HANDELMAN: Many people agree
that the concept of Moshiach is important in Judaism, but point to passages in
the Talmud which say that we mustn't speculate about these things -- that we can
anticipate Moshiach, but we're not supposed to inquire into whom it is or talk
about signs of the times.
FRIEDMAN: On the one hand, the Talmud in Sanhedrin says that the Sages were very
unhappy with people who set dates and made predictions about the time of
Moshiach's arrival. But on the other hand, anyone who doesn't expect Moshiach
every day is a heretic. So how do we reconcile this?
HANDELMAN: How do we?
FRIEDMAN: If the average person were to start making predictions and say,
"I think according to the signs, to the stars, to the this, that, and the
other, that Moshiach is coming tomorrow," that is wrong. Moshiach is coming
today, always today, never tomorrow, never next week or next month, because
we're not supposed to rely on signs. We're supposed to believe and trust that
G-d said that He's going to send Moshiach, and G-d will send him today. That's
the only resolution to this kind of conflict.
So on the one hand, yes, it's true that we shouldn't play around with
predictions. But on the other hand, if somebody says, "I know Moshiach and
he's alive today," that's great --
HANDELMAN: You just said a
minute ago that it's wrong for every Tom, Dick, and Harry to start making these
predictions.
FRIEDMAN: We're not talking about predictions. The predictions are not kosher.
But if somebody says, "Moshiach is here; I know someone, and he is Moshiach,"
that's fine.
HANDELMAN: In the passage you
quoted earlier, Maimonides says you can "assume" someone is Moshiach,
but you don't know it for sure unless certain conditions are met.
FRIEDMAN: Right. Assume it, and hope it, like Rabbi Akiva did. He went and
carried Bar Kochba's armor for him.
HANDELMAN: But as with
Shabbetai Zvi, we have seen that when people do get very worked up about
Moshiach and they're wrong, the consequences are bad.
FRIEDMAN: But how can you reconcile this fear of a false Moshiach with your
belief in Moshiach? What does your belief in Moshiach consist of if you're
afraid that he might be a false Moshiach?
When the real Moshiach does come, what are we going to say? Who's going to
believe him? Are we going to say, "Got to be careful -- remember Shabbetai
Zvi?"
HANDELMAN: Still people find
finger-pointing very unsettling. They feel that it's very dangerous to point to
someone and claim that he is the Moshiach.
FRIEDMAN: If people can point a finger to someone and say, "This is
Moshiach," that simply shows how alive and vibrant their faith in Moshiach
is. Whether this person is or is not Moshiach is irrelevant.
HANDELMAN: Would you say that
it is irrelevant even if, for example, we decide on the wrong person? New
religions have been formed as a result of the belief that certain persons were
the Moshiach, and Judaism suffered considerably when these other religions
persecuted the Jews for refusing to accept these "Messiahs."
FRIEDMAN: The same is true of belief in G-d: The belief in G-d has been the
cause of a lot of suffering, too. If you believe in the wrong god, or you start
fighting over who G-d is, it also causes trouble.
But you can't use the abuse of something as an argument against it. And the same
thing holds true for attributing great powers to an individual. Just because
there was a Jim Jones and a Jim Swaggart, are you going to say that you
shouldn't believe in anybody? It's because we don't believe in the right people
that these charlatans find their way into those positions. If we're open to the
idea that somebody alive today is Moshiach, whether it's some Kabbalist in
Israel or a Rosh Yeshiva in Lakewood, New Jersey, that would indicate that our
belief in Moshiach is alive and healthy and well. Then when Moshiach comes,
there'll be no problem.
HANDELMAN: And what we would
imply by these claims is that this is a person who is a great leader and a
teacher -- not a miracle-worker, but somebody who could bring the potential for
goodness into the world if we paid more attention.
FRIEDMAN: Yes.
HANDELMAN: In the Talmud
(Sanhedrin 98b) the Sages have an interesting discussion about the name of
Moshiach. Each school claims that he is their teacher. The school of Rav Shila
said his name is Shiloh, and the school of Rabbi Yannai said his name is Yinnon,
and the school of Rabbi Haninah said his name is Haninah, etc. This passage
seems to support your interpretation.
FRIEDMAN: Yes, the commentaries say that each one thought that his Rebbe was
Moshiach.
HANDELMAN: Then why is it, do
you think, that such interpretations of Moshiach make many people so
uncomfortable? Why are people so afraid to identify a potential Moshiach?
FRIEDMAN: For a long time, since the Enlightenment movement, Jews have been a
little bit reticent on the subject of Moshiach because it was one area in which
the enlightened Jew ridiculed the observant Jew's totally blind faith.
Moshiach is really probably the only subject or the only issue in Jewish life
that is completely blind faith. Anything else can be explained by historical or
theological reasoning, but Moshiach's coming is totally beyond reason: G-d said
he's going to come, so he's coming. And there was a time when rational, logical
arguments reigned supreme. We were a little bit ashamed of the fact that we held
this totally irrational belief, and so we soft-pedaled it and we stopped talking
about Moshiach in public, because it would only open us up to ridicule. I think
that still lingers.
We're ashamed, because we don't know how to justify it, don't know how to
explain it, can't rationalize it. It is our faith. And we're not comfortable
with faith. We're comfortable with logic.
HANDELMAN: Maybe we should
talk a little about the nature of the Messianic era itself. I know that the
Talmud makes distinctions between the pre-Messianic era and the Messianic era
itself.
FRIEDMAN: There will be a time called the "Days of Moshiach" (Yemot
ha-Moshiach), which is different from "The World to Come" (Olam ha- ba).
In Yemot ha-Moshiach, nature does not change. You don't have any resurrection of
the dead, and you don't have disruption of nature. All you have is total
universal goodness and morality. And that would mean that nation does not
oppress nation, that there is no suppression of religion, and so on. And we're
beginning to see that today. Take the fact that you really can't find any place
on the globe where a Jewish community is not permitted to practice Judaism.
HANDELMAN: What about Iran,
for example?
FRIEDMAN: Jews are allowed to practice Judaism in Iran. If you practice Zionism,
then you're killed, but if you go to daven with your tefillin? No, nothing at
all.
In Saudi Arabia, it's forbidden, but there are no Jews there. And this overall
global freedom for Jewish practice has no precedent in the last 2,000 years. So
in that sense there's a geulah [redemption] for Yiddishkeit in the world.
To return to our point, in the "Days of Moshiach," morality becomes
the norm, or maybe the primary pursuit of mankind. "The World to
Come", however, is when nature itself starts to change, when earth becomes
heaven. And then it's eternal, and there's no death.
HANDELMAN: You are saying that there exists this Messianic potential, and you
see it in the signs today. But it could very well be that the potential might
not be realized in our generation, even though we might be very close, right ?
FRIEDMAN: When you say that you believe that Moshiach is coming, then you can
not entertain the possibility that he's not coming.
HANDELMAN: Why not?
FRIEDMAN: The belief in Moshiach is not the belief in a possibility. The belief
in the coming of Moshiach is the belief in the fact that he is coming.
HANDELMAN: Yes, but doesn't
the "fact that he's coming" mean that at any given time it is only a
possibility ? There's a belief that ultimately he will come, but not necessarily
today. The belief is in the potential for him to come every day.
FRIEDMAN: Now there's the difference between the way the Rebbe looks at emunah
[faith] and the Moshiach, and the conventional approach. The conventional
approach is that the belief in Moshiach means that you have to believe that
Moshiach
could come. That's not correct.
HANDELMAN: Why?
FRIEDMAN: That's not faith at all. To say that there's a possibility -- there
are all sorts of possibilities. That's not "complete faith" -- emunah
shleimah. Emunah shleimah means you cannot conceive of a world today without
Moshiach. Not that he could come, but that he must come. And Moshiach's coming
is dependent on our doing God's will. We did his will; I did my best today; what
else does He want?
HANDELMAN: Maybe you did your
best in fulfilling the mitzvot today, but not everybody did. Does the promise,
that Moshiach will come today, "if you do My will" mean that everyone
must do G-d's will?
FRIEDMAN: That's a genuine point of contention. Are we good enough? Have we done
enough? Are we ready for Moshiach? The Rebbe says we are.
HANDELMAN: Why does he think
so?
FRIEDMAN: Because the Rebbe looks at us as a historical collective, not just as
one generation. And the Jewish people, having gone through 2,OOO years of this
horrible exile, are more than ready, and more than deserving.
HANDELMAN: Why, because we have suffered?
FRIEDMAN: Yes, not only suffered, but we have suffered well. We have excelled in
suffering, without losing our faith.
HANDELMAN: So your point is
that there is a crucial difference between a certain view of the Moshiach as a
"possibility," and an emunah shleimah which is the conviction that he
is coming.
FRIEDMAN: Yes, emunah shleimah is the conviction that he is coming now.
HANDELMAN: That's what we're
tangling about. Even if I am obligated to expect that Moshiach could come now, I
don't know that for sure. So I must be open to the possibility that he may not
come now. I do not have the chutzpah to interpret every single sign. I think
this is the core of our discussion.
FRIEDMAN: Even if you don't interpret the signs, you are commanded to believe
that Moshiach is coming today. Not that he "might" come. We say that
every day in the prayers. Not that he could come, but as the text says, "I
believe with total faith in the coming of Moshiach": That's the first part
of the statement.
What does it mean to believe with perfect faith? That even though he hasn't come
in 2,000 years, yet every day I expect him to come. This is the definition of
emunah, of faith -- in anything, not just in Moshiach. Emunah means that this is
something that has to be. Now, there are those things that can possibly exist
and then there is absolute, necessary existence.
If you believe that Moshiach is coming then you cannot entertain the possibility
that he may not come
HANDELMAN: How is that specifically the definition of emunah?
FRIEDMAN: Emunah is supra-rational. It is an irrational conviction that
something just has to be. And it's not just Moshiach. We all have this quality
in some way. To take an example: many of us are convinced that people are
basically good; now that doesn't come from experience.
We might ask, what is the definition of an ideal? An ideal means a
conviction about how things must be, not how they are. And therefore you can't
come to an idealist and say: "What do you mean, you believe people are
good? Look at so-and-so who is a mass murderer." That will have no effect
on his or her idealism, because their idealism states that this is how it must
be, and if it isn't yet, then it will be, because it must.
HANDELMAN: Are you perhaps saying that we get that idealism from a higher source
- that these notions of Moshiach and goodness come to us from a kind of
revelation?
FRIEDMAN: Yes.
HANDELMAN: But how can we be sure that this particular irrationality is
trustworthy and not a hallucination?
FRIEDMAN: How do we trust any of our ideals? Why do we spend billions in search
of a cure for cancer? Because you're convinced: it just can't be that there is
no cure. Now, what convinces you of that?
HANDELMAN: I could argue that
my faith in modern medicine has been backed up by evidence. It's not irrational
to think that knowledge advances, because I have in fact seen cures for many
things that were not previously curable.
FRIEDMAN: Right. But when they started the research on cancer, we were just as
certain of it then. So it's not the evidence that's convincing us that there is
a cure. It's a belief that we just simply cannot accept a world in which there
are incurable diseases and evil.
HANDELMAN: This optimism --
the need to believe that there is a light at the end of the tunnel, can be very
adaptive. It can help us go on in times of great trouble. On the other hand,
optimism can be destructive. It can blind us to reality. It can also, as some
critics of Lubavitch have said, lead to "passivity" in relation to the
needs of the moment.
FRIEDMAN: Until now, Lubavitch has been accused of being too aggressive. We're
coming on too strong, we're pushing too much, we're going too far -- all of a
sudden we're passive.
But of course, if you start noticing a passivity resulting from the belief in
Moshiach, that's not a belief, it's a cop-out. If you believe in
Moshiach, you become more active, you don't become less active.
HANDELMAN: Some critics have argued that an intensified Messianism is dangerous
because it can lead people to take very extreme and unrealistic political
positions. What are the connections of Messianism, as you have described it, to
political action in Israel?
FRIEDMAN: I think you should take Moshiach the way it's meant to be: that you
merely intensify all the things that G-d wants of you and all the things that
the Torah wants from you. If Moshiach is Moshiach, then mitzvot become more
natural and goodness becomes more natural. You don't start projects that are
new, that are different. Whatever we're supposed to do in Israel, we were
supposed to do with or without Moshiach.
HANDELMAN: And what are we supposed to do in Israel?
FRIEDMAN: Make sure that the Jews in Israel are safe. That's priority number
one. So as the Rebbe says, fortify the borders. Make no concessions, because it
would be dangerous to do so. That's a law in Shulchan Aruch [Orach Chaim, Ch.
329]. It's not Messianic.
HANDELMAN: Suppose I'm not a
Lubavitcher and I still want to become more active, what should I do ?
FRIEDMAN: Talk up Yiddishkeit. Assume that your Jewish neighbor or business
associate wants to become more observant, and all you have to do is show him how
and give him the opportunity and expose him to a mitzvah -- and that will take
care of it.
HANDELMAN: And why will that
bring Moshiach?
FRIEDMAN: Because Moshiach could have come at any moment, right? If he decides
to come, he comes. But if he's waiting all these years, it must mean that he
doesn't want to overwhelm us.
The coming of Moshiach can't be one of these glassy-eyed, overwhelming
experiences like the Exodus from Egypt or the giving of the Torah at Sinai,
because those things just don't last. Because again, it's G-d doing it, not us.
It's the initiator, but not the response. So Moshiach can't come unilaterally,
because then it's not Moshiach - it's just another good event in our long
history of miracles and revelations. In order for Moshiach to come without
disrupting us, without blowing us away, we have to have some
awareness or some readiness, or some ability to handle the idea that the world
is becoming good, that evil and suffering are going to end. Like the bumper
sticker that says "Visualize world peace." If you can't make it
happen, visualize it; at least be able to conceive of it. So if we get more and
more people thinking, "Yes, it is time for the world to become good,"
maybe we could actually realize that which everyone has always insisted and
believed: that the world will some day be good.
But why some day? Why not today? If we can just get that thinking, then we're
ready for Moshiach. We don't have to do it. We just have to be open to it.
HANDELMAN: I'm interested in
what you just said -- that the arrival of Moshiach is not a glassy-eyed ecstatic
event. I think most people do have that idea in mind, perhaps because of the
influence of the non-Jewish notions of Moshiach.
FRIEDMAN: I agree. That's the idea that Moshiach comes in a flash -- one moment
he's not here, the next moment he's here, and everything is perfect. But that
can't happen because that means that G-dliness has not come down to earth.
HANDELMAN: Is that, then, the
ultimate meaning of Moshiach, that "G-dliness has come down to earth?"
FRIEDMAN: That G-dliness becomes obvious. It's no longer a miraculous spiritual
thing. It's obvious.
HANDELMAN: All in all, you're
interpreting the whole idea of Moshiach's coming as a kind of a gradual
recognition of G-d, and at the same time, you're saying that there will be a new
form of revelation. There is the gradualness which you just described, and then
there is something really new and different.
FRIEDMAN: It's going to be a radical change, but not disruptive. A grass-roots
kind of a thing, not revelation from heaven, but revelation from within, so to
speak. It'll dawn on us, it won't shock us.
HANDELMAN: And what precisely
will dawn?
FRIEDMAN: That G-d is real, and that goodness is real, and that evil is false,
and that darkness is only imaginary.
HANDELMAN: But evil is real,
isn't it? People do suffer, people are hungry, people are homeless, people are
ill.
FRIEDMAN: Yes. But the idea that gam zu l'tovah ("this, too, is for the
best" ) which today is something we have to bite our tongues on when we say
-- this will become obvious when Moshiach comes. We will see the goodness in
what previously appeared to be evil.
HANDELMAN: Someone recently
wrote that he's no longer waiting for the Moshiach. His point was, "Where
was the Moshiach when we really needed him, such as during the Holocaust? He's
too late."
FRIEDMAN: That's a good question. I'm waiting to ask Moshiach myself. When
Moshiach comes we will find out why, wherefore.
HANDELMAN: How will we find
that out? It's not Moshiach who is going to give all the answers because
Moshiach is just a human being, right ?
FRIEDMAN: He may have the answer, or the answer may just become apparent of
itself. When the darkness lifts, we begin to see clearly.
But it's a good question. Like the Talmud says teiku - that Elijah the
Prophet will answer all the unresolved questions and problems in the times
of Moshiach. So this is one of those questions we can't answer until Moshiach
comes.
HANDELMAN: As I understand
what you have said, the objective is to bring Moshiach, and to do that we need
to increase in the observance of Torah and mitzvot, and to get others to do the
same. But could we accomplish this more effectively without talking about
Moshiach -- since the topic creates so much
controversy?
FRIEDMAN: There are those who believe that you should get people to do mitzvot
without telling them about G-d, because G-d is a difficult subject for people.
No. You can't do that. If your enthusiasm is coming from the fact that you
believe Moshiach is imminent, then you should share that with others. Why hide
it? What are we apologizing for here?
HANDELMAN: So being ready
means helping other Jews, and talking about Moshiach --
FRIEDMAN: Being ready means that if he shows up today, you will not be shocked.
You won't be speechless. Ready means that we won't be overwhelmed. Moshiach does
not want to overwhelm us, because if he were going to overwhelm us, he could
have come 100 years ago.
I think that it is important to understand that much of the fear and discomfort
with the excitement about Moshiach comes from associations people make with
something apocalyptic and with the disruption of normal life - of packing up and
waiting to be flown to Jerusalem. It is important to disabuse ourselves of this
notion that Moshiach comes and blows everything to pieces. Because, in fact,
this isn't the way it is.
Somebody was visiting the Lubavitch World Headquarters in Brooklyn recently, and
was shocked to find that it is in the process of elaborate renovations. He
thought that the Lubavitchers' excitement about Moshiach implied that people
would pack their bags and stop all normal activity. What he found, however, was
quite to the contrary. We are not drifting away and losing our
grounding in reality. In fact, the day-to-day, normal activity gains
momentum because of this excitement and this desire to bring Moshiach.
(This article appeared in Wellsprings Magazine in 1992)
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