Jessica Price Profile picture
Sep 28, 2020 19 tweets 3 min read Read on X
And this prayer (also from our Yom Kippur prayerbook) is so incredibly Jewish and I love it:

Hey, Clockmaker--
I was looking for You.
Builder of the machine,
You lost interest, I guess, and walked away--
but I was looking for signs of You.
I saw accidents,
mutations...
...disasters unpredicted and unexplained;
pretty sloppy work, if You ask me.
Hey Clockmaker--
praised by Your name
and the names of Your mechanics.
"praised be... the names of Your mechanics"

is such a sly, angry, defiant, and accepting reference to the idea of tikkun olam, that we--humans--are repairers of the world.
It's echoed a few pages later in a poem that takes our traditional hymn of praise, "who is like you among the celestials (eilim)?" and changes one letter in the Hebrew to get, "who is like you among the silent (ilmim)?" :
"Who is like You
among the silent?
Mute and inscrutable
You witness our pain...

Ever-silent, hiding out in history,
You have Your reasons--or so they say.
You left us on our own, so let us give You leave:
withdraw into Yourself,
withhold Your saving power...
"And we will live on memories of joy;
and stubborn and stiff-necked, we'll cling to hope;
and gather strength to fight the Pharaohs when we must.
And hold fast to freedom, and celebrate in song--
and vow that we will never be
among the silent."
And I'm glad that our practice also makes this space--among all the Yom Kippur confession of all the ways *we've* failed--for us to be furious about the ways it feels like we've been failed by forces greater than us.
And that it reaffirms our commitment to act in God's stead when God fails humanity.
An interesting (and difficult) poem by Abba Kovner--a Jewish resistance fighter who formed a group called Nakam (Hebrew for vengeance) that proposed killing 6 million Germans, but later settled down to become a poet, speaks of God (or maybe himself) as an anxious accountant...
..."not very strong, neither at spiritual accounting nor any other kind."

He labors to come up with a final analysis, a sum total:

"but in the last analysis,
what does it matter!"

He goes on:
"Life--if he could,
what he would like to tell you is this:
life is what is left of it
is hard to give up
hard
even now."
The prayerbook goes on with the Untaneh Tokef, the ancient prayer that acknowledges that we don't know who that stands here with us today will not be here next year, that some of us will die.

It's a hard prayer that lingers almost morbidly over all the ways we might die.
And then, seeming to respond to Kovner's insistence that what God (or Kovner) would want to tell us is that

"life is what is left of it"

and we should want to live

the prayerbook goes on (anonymously, and so, collectively, rather than in the voice of an individual rabbi):
"The words are old and the language was theirs,
but the call is real and the message is ours:
Take hold of your life
while you still have the chance;
for your story will end
and it might be this year
in a way you don't know.
Take hold of your life
make things right while you can
"...and don't miss the call of the Day of Dread."
A bit later, we come on the words of Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg:

"All that we Jews can know about ourselves is that every tragedy we have always made new beginnings...

Jews exist to be bold. We cannot hide from the task of making the world more just and decent."
Which reminds me of a line from Laurie Zoloth's beautiful essay on cloning, "Born Again: Faith and Yearning in the Cloning Controversy," which I dearly hope the next edition of the Yom Kippur prayerbook will excerpt:
"It is the way that Jews answer death, with the passionate search for justice."
"Resolute, doubtful bearers of stories of grace and loss... the slow work of repair [falls] to us, bewildered, freed slaves holding the Law in our hands, meaning, not in the narrow place, but on the vast plain of the possible, set free with much to do."

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More from @Delafina777

Oct 6, 2023
Yeah, the thing about diversity is it doesn’t mean any particular way of being is superior full stop. Different ways may do better in *some circumstances.*

Being different from the norm can feel superior because your way of being is *underutilized.*
The thing you learn if your brain doesn’t work like the standard, when you dig into how the world isn’t designed for you, and then apply what you’ve learned about yourself to observing other people?

There are no normies.
Everyone is a mosaic, and I don’t think there’s any one of us for whom every last piece fits the standard.

And if the ways in which you’re different are ones that are denigrated, it’s very tempting to view your difference as making you complex and deep where others are shallow.
Read 10 tweets
Oct 4, 2023
So, don’t take it from me: take it from someone with a PhD: the way we conceptualize “religion” means that the only religion that exists is Christianity (and *maybe* Islam). (Thanks, @maklelan !) (1/x)
This is why I generally use the term “tradition” or “culture” or “practice” when talking about Jewish stuff.

As I keep saying, the religious/secular distinction is a Christian framework, and it is—sometimes explicitly, sometimes unacknowledged—a tool of colonialism.
The idea that you can just pull out the “religion” module of a culture and replace it with a different one (if you’re doing Christian evangelism) or none at all (if you’re doing antitheist evangelism) is… not how cultures work.
Read 10 tweets
Oct 3, 2023
THIS.

IIRC correctly, there's a correlation between higher IQ and higher rates of depression and other unhappiness--as one of my therapists said, "it's harder for smart people to figure out to be happy."

But what if happiness is a form of intelligence?
Like, we have a habit, in our fiction, of characterizing happiness as foolishness or oblivious. Simple people are happy because they don't know better.

But identifying what *actually makes us happy* is an emotional intelligence challenge most of us fail.
And almost everything in life that we pursue is a proxy for happiness: we think love will make us happy, we think fame or recognition will make us happy, we think money will make us happy.

We sacrifice a lot of things that might make us happy to pursue happiness proxies.
Read 9 tweets
Sep 24, 2023
I’m hardly the first person to say this, but Luke’s gloss on the lost sheep parable that there’s more rejoicing over the repentant sinner than the 99 who didn’t stray has probably done more harm to the world than anything in the NT other than the Great Commission. So toxic.
Like imagine being a child abused by your youth pastor and hearing in essence that having abused you is PART of why he’s more spiritually valuable than you are.
After all, one needs to sin in order to repent. Combine that with the Christian idea that suffering is ennobling and not only is your abuser using your pain as a necessary component in his spiritual elevation, but he’s doing you a favor by giving you a chance to suffer nobly.
Read 10 tweets
Aug 8, 2023
So—and this is not about Jamie Foxx, I’m not touching that one other than to point out that you should prioritize listening to Black Jews over anyone else on it—let’s talk about why the figure/story of Judas is antisemitic by itself, and why that’s so invisible to most Christians
The reason some Jewish scholars have suggested that the story of Judas is a later, ahistorical, and intentionally antisemitic addition is that it *doesn’t actually make sense* in the story.
It certainly is dramatic and emotionally evocative—conspiracy! betrayal! tragic end for a guilty villain!—but if you actually *read the story,* it’s superfluous.
Read 17 tweets
Aug 7, 2023
The Kokobot thing is SO dark and like, I don't wanna be an AI doomer (there are some things that (human-supervised) AI can do better than humans without AI! we're just not doing much of that for some reason) but this is literally the only thread talking about this I found. (1/x)
And hey, it's from someone who follows me! That makes me feel sort of warm and fuzzy about the sort of people who follow me!

But also, wow, tweets in this thread have maybe one like each, which tells me very few people read it. So READ IT, and I'm going to elaborate on it.
So. Kokobot.

A mental health nonprofit decided to run a mental health experiment on users between the ages of 18 and 25 without their knowledge or consent, having a bot contact them if they were using "crisis-related language."

Beyond that, things start to get muddy
Read 37 tweets

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