Houston Chronicle Sunday

Life is fluid — learn how to stress less

- By Scott Hausman-Weiss

Editor’s note: Look for a sermon or lesson from Houston’s diverse faiths every week in Belief. To submit a sermon, email robert. morast@chron.com.

If you’ve read even a few of my blog posts, you probably won’t be surprised to hear that I am a little obsessed with the ancient Israelites’ penchant for kvetching.

With the story of the Exodus from Mitzrayim (Eygpt) and their 40-year wandering through the midbar (wilderness) so prominent in four of the five Books of Moses, their moaning, groaning and constant trope of “woe-asus” ever streaming from their lips, is either a serious character flaw or meant to be something to which we really need to pay attention.

In one of our Torah studies the Israelites are once again bemoaning their plight — hungry, thirsty, tired, distressed and even longing for the “good ol’ days” back in Egypt. As the saying goes, “The Pharaoh you know is better than the one you don’t!” While this isn’t at all true, it appears that for the Israelites, and let’s face it, for us too, it’s a very difficult default to resist.

As a punishment for their “high crimes and kvetching,” God once sent snakes on them, with their only recourse being that they must look toward Moses’s staff — with a snake sculpture at its top — in order to then be healed.

Why must they look to the staff instead of, as has happened in the past, crying out to God in order to be healed?

I would argue that this is a part of God’s “learning curve.”

Human beings need symbols, representa­tions and physical reminders of the potential for healing, renewal and hope. If God’s redemptive power remains ethereal, unable to be even temporaril­y concretize­d, God remains far too transcende­nt for us to connect.

I know that the Second Commandmen­t appears to be an injunction against this concept. However, what does the Second Commandmen­t truly say? “Al taaseh lecha fesel,” or “Do not make yourself a graven image.” The fluidity of life that swings from concrete to symbolic, from elusive to present, from life to death, from slavery to freedom — this is the reality, or, these are the reality.

Life is always changing and we will notice if we pay better attention to that fact. We just have to remember that everything we look at or

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