Rabbi Eytan Kenter, Kehillat Beth Israel |
By Rabbi Eytan Kenter
Kehillat Beth Israel
With a five-year-old and an 18-month-old, the time that I wake up in the
morning is largely not of my own choosing. Yet, even when I can wake up on my
own, we are still in the most depressing time of the year, when we wake up in
darkness and return home from work in that same darkness. Shabbat starts
earlier and earlier as it grows cold, snowy, and dark.
This annual reality can serve as an apt metaphor for the challenges that
we all too often encounter within our world. Whether it be the problems of
climate change or increased tribalization and polarization, there are immense
problems that we are encountering and the fear of their growing impact
permeates within us. These huge global problems can’t help but worry us and the
darkness of hopelessness and fear for the future can, all too often, consume
us.
But then, as the end of December approaches, something remarkable
happens: the light begins to return and days start getting longer. It is not a
coincidence that Chanukah, the festival of lights, falls at this time of year.
Not only is the lighting of this candelabra our attempt to remember the miracle
of the oil from the story of Chanukah, but it also serves as a reminder, that
light can and will return in the face of great darkness. While the situation
looked bleak for the Maccabees, they were still able to be victorious. So too,
can light overcome darkness in our lives as well.
Martin Luther King Jr. taught, “Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only
light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.” No
matter how dark it may seem, light can overcome it. No matter how bad our
problems may seem, our light and our love can face it, if we are willing to do
what it takes to fight back. The Maccabees didn’t simply hope for a better
future, they made it happen. They stood up against seemingly insurmountable
odds, and with God’s help, were able to win the day.
There are days when I fear the challenges we will face in the years to
come will be too difficult to overcome. There are times when I worry that it is
already too late to change course, that the darkness has already overwhelmed
us. But then I remember the story of Chanukah, then I remember that lighting of
the candles in the face of the creeping darkness. If we can find the love deep
in our hearts. If we can reclaim the dedication and commitment of the
Maccabees. If we can remember that light can always conquer the darkness, we
know that the better future we need is still possible. Through our hard work
and dedication (literally the meaning of Chanukah), we will be able to repair
our world. It is never too late and it is never too dark. As long as every day
we add a little more light, one candle at a time, we can once again take pride
in returning the world to where it ought to be. One light, one act, and one
person at a time.
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