(Photo credit and much thanks to Howard Watkins for capturing the moment.)
I’ve lifted a bible before.
In fact, I do it a lot. It’s part of our tradition. It’s part of our ritual.
Traditionally, we lift the Torah scroll after we read it during our worship service.
For a variety of reasons, I have also lifted it during the reading for a visual effect. I find it more dramatic and palpable when it is held up for the congregation to see as we read the words.
One of the most powerful moments in my life followed the attack at the Eitz Chaim synagogue in Pittsburgh, PA when our community in Fresno came together to gather for peace and understanding.
I chose to read from our Holocaust Scroll, a scroll that survived the Holocaust, a scroll that has seen horrors.
I chose to read the verses we use in our liturgy from Deuteronomy…
“You shall love Adonai your God with all your heart…” The passage exhorts us to teach God’s loving words to our children and to live by these words.
Words like I read during my Bar Mitzvah… “Justice, justice, you shall pursue.”
Words from the prophet Amos, “Let justice roll down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
We held the Torah scroll aloft when we read from it that day and my brothers, Pastor DJ Criner and Reza Nekumanesh, a local Muslim leader, held the scroll high for the community to see.
I admit, I was creating an image.
We were flanked by women and men clergy from the most diverse religious gathering I have ever been a part of… a variety of ethnic and cultural backgrounds, LGBTQ+. It was a gathering of love.
Today I call upon that image to raise the ideal that Black Lives Matter.
When we lifted up the bible, the Torah, that day, we exhibited an image of the world I want to live in, the world we work to create. The work is not done, far from it.
When we lift up the bible, we lift it up open. We read from it. We take the inspiring words and share them.
I will continue to lift up Torah and may it continue to bring us closer to the world of justice it is meant to inspire.
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