The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Our paths to liberation are rooted in Scripture and history

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Q: Forty years ago I took a course on what happened to be my last week in the convent after 11 years living in that life. The course was titled “The Exodus Experience in the Consciousn­ess of Christ.” During the one-week class we were assigned to journal on our life experience. My “exodus” reality was so profound that I transition­ed from depression into mania. Do you have an opinion on the relationsh­ip of Scripture to one’s personal life? Thank you. — From J. A: The French existentia­list philosophe­r JeanPaul Sartre wrote, “In each man we can see all of man.” I agree. Our individual life experience­s are more similar than different. Our life lessons are more consistent than different. The lessons each of us can learn from all of us are one of the main reasons I feel the power of God’s word in the Bible. Of course we cannot live the lives Moses or Jesus lived, but we can live a life that takes in their love and their lessons.

The biblical stories like the Exodus from Egypt that produced your transforma­tion are not, I believe, just stories about old dead people who knew God in some old dead way. The Exodus is a story about each and every liberation in each and every time, in each and every person. In Hebrew the name for Egypt is mitzraim, and the root meaning of that name is meitzar, which is the name for a narrow slot canyon between two high walls. Egypt/mitzraim is thus every place where we are hemmed in, every place where spirits and hopes are squeezed. Leaving Egypt is thus not just leaving an oppressive place but leaving an oppressive state of mind. The wandering in the desert is a true story but also a true symbol of the way we struggle to find our blessings and our path. I think that it is precisely for this reason, for the reason that the Exodus story is not time-bound, that the Bible records God’s command to tell our children that the story of the Exodus is told “because of what God did for me when I left Egypt” (Exodus 13:8). Now obviously we did not leave Egypt, and yet we are obligated to teach the story as if we did. You left Egypt, dear J, and so did I. I pray that after you have finished wandering you will find your own special land flowing with milk and honey and that there you will finally be free.

 ??  ?? Rabbi Marc A. Gellman God Squad
Rabbi Marc A. Gellman God Squad

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