The Blessing of Bewilderment: A Message of Hope for Post-Pandemic Life
By Rabbi Abraham Skorka
Excerpted from Returning to Life After the Storm: Hope and Wisdom from Jewish Sources, Behrman House, 2021
As you read this, the pandemic began about two years ago. Vaccines have since been created and have been found mostly effective, but too many people have also refused to take them, and too many people in the world have not had easy access to them. Conclusive solutions to the overall problem facing us are not yet full in sight.
Perhaps science today finds itself in a similar position as it was at the beginning of the twentieth century, when the so-called Spanish flu was raging. Many people, scientists included, thought that most of the secrets of nature had already been—or were about to be—discovered. They felt that only a few residual details remained to be resolved. For them, the 1918 influenza pandemic was an uncomfortable eye-opener.
This brings to mind Max Planck’s groundbreaking work in quantum mechanics. This was important because it was the beginning of a new paradigm in physics. It called into question the mathematical models of Newtonian physics. Perplexity and amazement returned to science.
Bewilderment and wonder make us aware of the limits of our knowledge but also encourage us to continue to search for fuller understandings.
We didn’t need the pandemic to teach us this. The overwhelming evidence of climate change, because of human factors, has yet to convince us that we aren’t here to dominate the planet. Nor do we control it. Now the pandemic has reinforced this teaching for us. Will we listen? Will we hear it? This is "teaching” or Torah, too.
These thoughts resonate with my Jewish faith. Although God is revealed to humanity in the Bible, God remains a mystery because human minds are unable to fathom God’s magnificence. This causes them to continue inquiring and seeking the presence of a higher power. Abraham surely was perplexed by the great challenges God placed before him, and in his struggle to cope with them, he found new dimensions of faith. Moses was confounded by being asked to speak on behalf of God because he was ineloquent and slow of speech. Job was bewildered by his undeserved suffering but eventually became contented. The Bible seems to teach us that faith is born when an awareness of human limitations induces us to search for transcendent meaning.
According to the Bible, nature itself holds in its essence a message from the divine to human beings: “Lift up your eyes and see: Who has created these? (Isaiah 40:26). “The heavens proclaim the glory of God, and the firmament announces the work of His hands” (Psalms 19:2. The pandemic is only the latest enigma to challenge and remind us that our search for meaning is always ongoing.
__________________
A thoughtful guide to explore coping, healing, and beginning again in a world changed by the pandemic.
“COVID-19 put us all in crisis, and you don’t get out of a crisis alone: either we all get out together or we don’t get out.” --Pope Francis
“Rabbi Skorka wrings from our texts lessons about the pandemic, the Jewish future, and the fractured souls that we bear through this accelerated modern world.” --Rabbi David Wolpe
Returning to Life After the Storm: Hope and Wisdom from Jewish Sources
By Rabbi Abraham Skorka
With a Foreword by Rabbi David Wolpe and a special message from Pope Francis
NOW AVAILABLE!
Ask about quantity discounts from Behrman House
Keep up with the latest information by subscribing to our newsletter and connect with us on social media!