Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz reflects on...
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Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz reflects on this passage: "... The implication is clear -- one who struggles with God will, in the end, be blessed by God....
"In fact, [God] rather likes people who fight him. Fighting [religion] means that you are active, not passive within it. If I don't care, then I have no questions; if I have no questions, then I have no problems. If I do care, then I will be questioning; I'll definitely have more problems with it because the questions lead to problems; not answers.
"In a certain way the difference between a saint and someone who is surely not a saint is not that the saint has no problems, but that he has more, and more elaborate problems. It is an incessant struggle. And it is definitely not a restful religion....
"You can see it in all the biblical heroes; none of them are restful, none of them without blame; there are no rosy pictures in the Bible. They are all in struggle and this is what makes them great.
"Trying to know God is like trying to catch the horizon; the more you try, the more you understand the distance, yet the more you yearn for it."
"In fact, [God] rather likes people who fight him. Fighting [religion] means that you are active, not passive within it. If I don't care, then I have no questions; if I have no questions, then I have no problems. If I do care, then I will be questioning; I'll definitely have more problems with it because the questions lead to problems; not answers.
"In a certain way the difference between a saint and someone who is surely not a saint is not that the saint has no problems, but that he has more, and more elaborate problems. It is an incessant struggle. And it is definitely not a restful religion....
"You can see it in all the biblical heroes; none of them are restful, none of them without blame; there are no rosy pictures in the Bible. They are all in struggle and this is what makes them great.
"Trying to know God is like trying to catch the horizon; the more you try, the more you understand the distance, yet the more you yearn for it."
