Menachem Bluming Muses: Define Judaism
The Jewish people can best be described as a spiritual family. We are connected by our souls, and every Jew is a part of this invisible web by virtue of our Jewishness. You can either be born into the family or join by choice. But once you are in, you are family, no matter what.
If
Jews are a family, the Torah is the family rules. It recounts the family
history, defines the family identity, and lays out the expectations of how
members of the family should behave and the good they can contribute to the
world.
Some
of the Torah is universal, but much of it is about our particular family and
its relationships - with our brothers and sisters, our ancestors, our homeland
and the Head of the family - G-d.
If
you break the rules, you are still a member, because family is family. But
those who keep the rules keep the family together. Those who reject the rules
usually find their children or grandchildren will drift away from the family
entirely, not even knowing what they are leaving behind. But they can always
come back. You can never really leave the Jewish family.
So if
the Jewish people are a family, and the Torah is the family rules, what is
Judaism
Judaism
is a story. The story of a family.
Every
family has its story - its joys and its conflicts, its high moments
and its not so high moments. Parents are sometimes proud of their
kids or disappointed with them; children follow their parents' ways or rebel
against them. But throughout the family dramas, they remain a family.
Judaism
is our family story. But not a story to just read, a story to live. We are the
characters of the story. The story is bigger than you or me or any one person.
But it is about you and me and every individual Jew. Each one of us, through
our relationship with G-d and the Jewish people, continues the story that is
Judaism.
Mendel
(Menachem) Bluming and RA”M