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<channel><title><![CDATA[Joshua "Yoshi" Fenton - Divrei Torah ]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.ravyoshi.com/divrei-torah]]></link><description><![CDATA[Divrei Torah ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 29 Jun 2022 10:45:01 -0700</pubDate><generator>Weebly</generator><item><title><![CDATA[Forgiveness and Letting Go]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.ravyoshi.com/divrei-torah/forgiveness-and-letting-go]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.ravyoshi.com/divrei-torah/forgiveness-and-letting-go#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 02 Sep 2014 03:02:45 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.ravyoshi.com/divrei-torah/forgiveness-and-letting-go</guid><description><![CDATA[Forgiveness and Letting Go    For a second year our friends at G-dcast invite us to download their delightfully fun Yom Kippur e-Scapegoat,   an app to anonymously submit, showcase and view "sins" to be  "absolved"  by the digital Yom Kippur goat.&nbsp; A favorite of mine from  last year was  "I said it was gluten free."&nbsp;The   app is great because it's fun.&nbsp; It's fun to read other people's   submissions and it's fun to participate as a penitent.&nbsp; But does it   work?&nbsp; Did the  [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;"><span style="text-decoration:none; font-style:normal; font-weight:400; color:rgb(85, 85, 85); "><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style="" color="#323232"><span style=""><strong style="">Forgiveness and Letting Go</strong></span><br /><br /></span>  <span style="">  <span style="">For a second year our friends at G-dcast invite us to</span> <a style="" title="" href="http://www.g-dcast.com/goat/?utm_source=Ignite+-+September+2014&amp;utm_campaign=Rosh+Hashanah+Ignite+2014&amp;utm_medium=archive" target="_blank">download their delightfully fun Yom Kippur e-Scapegoat</a><span style="">,   an app to anonymously submit, showcase and view "sins" to be  "absolved"  by the digital Yom Kippur goat.&nbsp; A favorite of mine from  last year was  "I said it was gluten free."&nbsp;</span><br /><span style=""><br />The   app is great because it's fun.&nbsp; It's fun to read other people's   submissions and it's fun to participate as a penitent.&nbsp; But does it   work?&nbsp; Did the gluten free saboteur feel absolved of their sin following   last year's confession?&nbsp;</span><br /><span style=""><br />G-dcast's   approach towards repentance didn't come from thin air - the roots of   the scapegoat, (the origin of the expression) are found in the Torah and   in the original Yom Kippur ritual where the High Priest would   symbolically heap the collective sins of the community against God- sins   that hurt no person, but broke religious law - onto two sacrificial   goats. A symbolic act of communal repentance, absolution, and   forgiveness all wrapped up in one.&nbsp;<br /><br />&nbsp;</span><span style="">Through   introspection and repentance, the people of Israel would be born anew,   cleansed of all their wrongdoings; but only those against God, ben  adam  l'makon.&nbsp; For the sins we commit against each other, ben adam  l'adam,  those require an apology and forgiveness.&nbsp;<br /><br />&nbsp;</span><span style="">Asking   for forgiveness is scary, especially if you're not sure you're going  to  be forgiven. But being forgiving, that's something else.&nbsp; To be able  to  forgive can be as transformative an experience for the forgiver as  it  is the forgiven.&nbsp; In a </span><a style="" title="" href="http://blog.uwgb.edu/alltherage/the-value-of-forgiveness/?utm_source=Ignite+-+September+2014&amp;utm_campaign=Rosh+Hashanah+Ignite+2014&amp;utm_medium=archive" target="_blank">2012 Study at Iowa State University</a><span style="">, researchers found&nbsp;</span><span style="">"[forgiveness]   to be very effective at helping people not only cope with anger and   work through those negative feelings, but also to move the person to a   'better' place of acceptance and even human flourishing."&nbsp;</span><br /><br />   So how can we cultivate a culture of forgiveness in our homes, workplaces, and communities?<br /><br /><strong style="">Listen to a shofar.</strong><span style="">&nbsp;   It is said that the sound of the shofar evokes forgiveness. The story   goes, the shofar reminds God of the Ram sacrificed in place of Isaac,   Abraham's son.&nbsp; It reminds God that Abraham was willing to sacrifice his   son if God wanted, and because of that willingness, God is then   inspired to be merciful and forgive.</span><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>   <strong style=""><br />Look inward.&nbsp;</strong><span style="">   The introspective weeks leading up to the High Holidays is an   opportunity to make a cheshbon nefesh, an accounting of your soul.   "Search your life, inspect your deeds and repent" says the High Holiday   liturgy. This year, while you reflect on the people you've wronged,  also  spend some time thinking about the people who've wronged you. Who   suffers because they treated you poorly?&nbsp; Which relationships are mired   down because you can't let something go?&nbsp; Take an accounting of your   soul and then give yourself a gift, forgive.&nbsp;</span><br /><strong style=""><br />Let go.</strong><span style="">   The Mayo Clinic advises us to "move away from your role as victim and   release the control and power the offending person and situation have   had in your life.... As you let go of grudges, you'll no longer define   your life by how you've been hurt. You might even find compassion and   understanding."&nbsp;</span><br /><strong style=""><br />Say the <em style="">Shema</em> at night before bed.&nbsp;</strong><span style="">   In the traditional liturgy of the Jewish bedtime prayer, you'll find   the following paragraph:&nbsp; "I hereby forgive all who have hurt or wronged   me, deliberately or by accident, through speech, deed, word, thought,   or notion, whether in this incarnation or in another. May no one be   punished on my account..."&nbsp; It suggests forgiveness as a constructive   kavanah, intention to take with you at bedtime.</span><br /><span style=""><strong style=""><br />Read a book.</strong></span><span style=""><span style="">   This year, the book selection for our One Bay One Book program is The   Betrayers by David Bezmozgis, a story with themes including  forgiveness,  the ways in which we do forgive, the ways in which we  don't forgive,  and how those choices impact our lives.&nbsp; So do read the  book and join  one of the hundreds of conversations that will spring up  all around the  bay area this year.</span> <a style="" title="" href="http://www.jewishlearningworks.org/library/one-bay-one-book?utm_source=Ignite+-+September+2014&amp;utm_campaign=Rosh+Hashanah+Ignite+2014&amp;utm_medium=archive" target="_blank">Join in the conversation</a>.&nbsp;</span><br /><span style=""><br /><span style="">Maimonides explored repentance and all of its angles In chapter 2:9 of his Mishnah Torah he writes,&nbsp;</span></span><em style="">"If   the person does not want to forgive him, then he must bring a row of   three of his friends and entreat the person to forgive him. If they   still won't forgive he must ask him two or even three times. If they   still won't forgive him he should leave him alone and go away. This   person who did not forgive is now the sinner."</em><span style="">&nbsp;</span> <span style="">&nbsp;</span><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>  Devoting  an entire chapter to forgiveness, Maimonides acknowledges  that asking  for forgiveness is not easy.&nbsp; He describes in great detail  the important  steps of apology and repentance.&nbsp; But in the end,  Maimonides challenges  the one who was wronged to forgive.<br /><span style=""><br />Can   you move on?&nbsp; Can you forgive?&nbsp; Perhaps we can bring the intention of   forgiveness with us into the holiday season.&nbsp; Perhaps we can bring the   intention of letting go.</span><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> <span style=""><br />By Rabbi Joshua Fenton</span><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> <span style="">Associate Director, Jewish LearningWorks</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></div>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>