[To study Torah] all you need is an hour. A partner. A commitment. An openness to struggle. A willingness to learn.
Without further ado...
La’asok B’Divrei Torah: Soaking Oneself In Torah
by ravlinda
Dan Nichols' sings la’asok b’divrei torah is as sweet as honey on our tongues. The ending of the traditional blessing for Torah study is translated in our prayer-book Mishkan T’fillah
as: “to engage in words of Torah”. We also might translate it as
busying ourselves, or working with Torah. But most of all, I love Arthur
Waskow’s wordplay: “to soak” (la’asok) in words of Torah. Torah for me
is like taking a warm bath. It adds a comforting glow, provides a focus
or refocus, so that I can approach the world with new vitality.
A
confession: Torah for me has become an addictive regular habit. Every
Wednesday at 1pm half-a-dozen women congregants gather in my office to
become my study partners for an hour. This year we are slowly reading
Abraham Joshua Heschel’s The Sabbath. The
structure I have struck with these ladies is the same one that I have
with my other Torah enablers, my one-on-one rabbinic study partners, the
ones with whom I tackle Zohar or Hasidic Commentary or Talmud.
Such
study is very different to “teaching” in the congregation, where I
might be viewed as the “guide” or “expert” in the subject matter we
tackle. That learning takes preparation and is goal oriented. Study is
different. I have fixed guidelines for study which have allowed me
through the years to make this endeavor part of my daily routine.
My study rules are as follows:
- Study should be done in true partnership.
- Partners should agree on a topic to study that has an equal amount of unfamiliarity to all.
- Study is time limited to a regular hour or hour-and-a-half on a specific day of the week.
- Study should be viewed as a non-negotiable appointment, and the only reason not to study is in the case of a true emergency or vacation/conference time.
- No partner should pre-prepare to enter this sacred time. All learning is done there and then.
In
study, we are all journey-folk , learning from one another, wrestling
with the text and gleaning from its pages. Study in such a way means
letting go and making struggle part of the process. The immediacy allows
for first-time revelations and insights. The unprepared but open study
table allows the text to speak to us and through us. The text becomes
the direction and guide and a mirror.
I
share this, because so often I hear from folk that they wished they had
the time for Jewish learning. They lament they cannot because life
feels more urgent. Or they feel time poor. They are discouraged by the
enormity of the task or their lack of expertise.
But all you need is an hour. A partner. A commitment. An openness to struggle. A willingness to learn.
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