|
Topics in this digest:
Torah and Baseball
by Rabbi Dr. Barry Leff
Congregation B'nai Israel
Toledo, OH
Here's something a little lighter for your summer reading pleasure...
BL
July is the month of Independence Day—the holiday of hot
dogs, hamburgers, beer and bar-b-ques, not to mention fireworks. And all of
those things remind me of baseball. Even though the World Series is months
away, somehow the month of July seems to be the heart of the baseball
season. Baseball is the classic summer sport, and July is the heart of the
summer.
There are actually a lot of similarities between Judaism and baseball. Rabbi
Avraham Yakov taught 100 years ago that we can learn from everything—we can
learn lessons from the train, from the telegraph, from the telephone. What
lessons can we learn from baseball?
To start with there are two sides. We have a yetzer hatov, our good
inclination, and a yetzer hara, a bad inclination. Children play in Little
League, but once you get to be past bar/bat mitzvah age, you’re in the game
that counts.
It is symbolic that baseball season usually starts around Passover time—Jews
celebrate starting out on the journey to the Promised Land, while baseball
fans start the journey to the Promised Land of the World Series.
Of course, when we think of Passover we think of food, and certainly Judaism
and baseball both have special foods—even if we can’t eat the non-kosher
ballpark hot dogs, there are still peanuts and Cracker Jacks.
Baseball and Judaism are both full of rituals—baseball has the singing of
the national anthem, the throwing out of the first pitch. In both baseball
and Judaism the rituals are performed with a covered head. And there’s even
one baseball ritual that I imported to our High Holiday
services: the 7th inning stretch.
Speaking of holidays, baseball, of course, also has its own holidays: the
World Series and the All Star Game to name two.
Baseball and Judaism both have a lot of rules. You got the rabbi-umpires
making sure the rules are followed (at least at the “ball park”—synagogue!).
Some of the rules in both baseball and Judaism are plain and simple, and
others are complicated, confusing, and need an expert’s explanation.
Sometimes we think we know the rule, but when we dig into it we find it’s
complicated. Take the designated hitter rule: someone else bats for the
pitcher. Simple, right? Here’s a little excerpt from Major League Baseball’s
web site: “Pinch hitters for a Designated Hitter may be used. Any substitute
hitter for a Designated Hitter himself becomes a Designated Hitter. A
replaced Designated Hitter shall not re-enter the game in any capacity. The
Designated Hitter may be used defensively, continuing to bat in the same
position in the batting order, but the pitcher must then bat in the place of
the substituted defensive player, unless more than one substitution is made,
and the manager then must designate their spots in the batting order.”
Confused?
You may need a “rabbi of baseball” to
explain that one to you. The Jewish equivalent of the “designated
hitter”—the “Shabbos goy”—has rules equally complex. If the non-Jew makes
himself a cup of coffee, and happens to make extra you can drink a cup. But
if he asks you if you would like a cup of coffee before he makes any you
have to tell him no. Ask me if you’d like to know why.
In both baseball and Judaism at the start of a New Year you have a chance to
be a winner. The team that finished the year in the basement starts out with
the same 0-0 record as the team that won the World Series.
Similarly, if you had a bad year last year, if you do honest teshuva,
repentance during Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur, you get to start the New Year
with a clean slate: a 0-0 record, your old sins no longer held against you.
And last but not least, in both Judaism and baseball, while an individual is
important, we win or lose as a community. One star player cannot drag a team
into the World Series any more than one star rabbi or one star cantor or one
star congregant or one star synagogue president can drag a congregation into
a winning position. We affirm this every day when we recite the Shema, where
the blessings and curses that come with obeying or disobeying the mitzvot
are stated in the plural form—they come to us as a community, not
necessarily to us as individuals.
So as you go out and enjoy a Mud Hens game this summer, see if you can come
up with some more ways baseball is like Judaism.
Besides, as Rabbi Ken White points out, baseball is God’s favorite sport.
How do we know baseball is God’s favorite sport? Because the Torah begins
“in the big inning.”
To view the archives, go to www.neshamah.net
To join this email list, go to www.neshamah.net enter your email address and
click "join now."
______________________________________________________________________
If you no longer wish to receive these emails, please reply to this message
with "Unsubscribe" in the subject line or simply click on the following
link:
http://unsub.vresp.com/u.html?9c55200b01/7f2a79ca74/565f099
_____________________________________________________________________
This message was sent by Reb Barry''s Torah Commentary using
VerticalResponse's iBuilder (TM)
Reb Barry''s Torah Commentary
Congregation Bnai Israel
2727 Kenwood Blvd
Toledo, Ohio 43606
Read the VerticalResponse marketing policy:
http://www.verticalresponse.com/content/pm_policy.html
Top of page |
|