The Southern Israelite. (Augusta, Ga.) 1925-1986, August 26, 1966, Image 35
repudiated a covenant but , ier has not yet accepted ,» sees himself shipwrecked a n uninhabited island, far , , n centers of-life and move- , it. He sadly concludes that j i S a member of the world’s ] .best profession. He is tern and advanced, but the vi >round he brings to his , ternity stands in the way , • nis full integration into ( temporary life. He is liberal ,, i recognizes not only the irritability but the desir- :i .ijtv and value of change ■ [. v e n within the tradition w inch he represents. He recog- ,,,/es an irrefutable truth in pie words of Whitehead, “The ;u t of free society consists first in the maintenance of the symbolic code and secondly in tin* fearlessness of revision. . . Those societies which cannot combine reverence to their symbols with freedom of re vision must ultimately decay.” Yet he is restrained by the in hibiting apprehension that the stabilities needed to absorb the changes (Whitehead’s “sym bolic code”) are lacking in Jewish life, and change that is not made in a frame of refer ence of the continuing becomes dissolution rather than re vision. He responds to a de voutness to which he cannot give full expression at the services of which he is the officiant. Compelled by the convention of our times gov erning the clergy to make many public addresses, he worries constantly whether the fluency and felicity he has de veloped are not the enemies of his thought and reflection. As a rabbi he has not in herited a structured system of doctrine and is therefore given to a constant quest and re-ex amination. Yet it is expected by those who seek him out that he dispense certitudes and teach finalities. Himself of intellectual inclinations, he is looked down upon by the academic intellectual fratern ity as the upholder of the dis credited, outlived and irration al. Eager for dialogue, he en gages for the most part in monologues from pulpit and platform. He censures himself for sinking into the middle- class ethos from which he is striving to raise his people. He is a teacher of ends and goals at a time when techniques are in the saddle and means are supreme. While religion is respected, it is not invoked. Though he is honored as a “man of God,” he is not taken seriously. He has becorhe a symbol on a par with other symbols — the Ark, Torah, menorah, altar—and like them revered at a distance but not profaned by involve ment in daily life and crucial decisions: (He wryly muses that the traditional reference to the enkindled lights of Hanuka reflects, ironically, the contemporary attitude, “One is not permitted to make use of them, but only to behold them.”) The rabbi recognizes that what his generation needs, perhaps above all else, is a rationale, a reasoned exposi tion of Judaism that would not only serve as its intellectual justification but would also naturalize it in the larger uni verse of discourse and thought in which educated modern Jews move. But he is too fragmented, too diffused, to attempt such a synthesis and the age too greatly in flux to permit such a structure. He is perforce a dealer in fragments, fugitive texts, disparate in sights. The context to enclose them seems to have dissolved. Unity and wholeness are neith er in him nor in his teaching. The rabbi is not infrequently- troubled by his own inade quacies. He has not resisted what should have been re sisted. He has not devoted him self to basic matters with the inflexible s i n g 1 e-mindedness they deserve. He has permitted himself to walk for too long on surfaces and has lived too much with the peripheral and incidental. He has not suffici ently ignored the dais and the limelight. He has failed his tradition and his people. He sometimes feels this most keenly when he is being feted or complimented. In the rabbi are concentrat ed the frustrations, ambival- MANUFACTURERS OF BIRD MARK 25 SHINGLES Class A Firescreen Shingles Charleston, So. Car. Compliments Charleston Friend P 1 T T S B U R G H PLATE GLASS COMPANY AUTO GLASS INSTALLED Plate Glass Mirrors <04 Meeting Street Charleston, S. C. Phone RA. 3-M31 • EdumJi Think of.... 15 Complete Family Stores “Born and Bred in South Carolina!” In Charleston: 517 King Street, Reynolds Avenue, Pinehaven Center, St. Andrews Center Also: Aiken, Bamberg, Beaufort, Conway, Georgetown, Greenwood, Myrtle Beach, Orangeburg, Sumter, Walterboro, James Island TIDEWATER Concrete Block & Pipe Co. Telephone SH 4-5376 P. O. Box 162 Charleston, S. C. e Southern Israelite 35