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Have You Heard The
One About Rosh Hashana?
By Rabbi Daniel Lapin
The solemnity of the High Holy Days is shared by other emotions as the following article demonstates.
Is laughter indeed the motif of this most solemn day, a day that attracts
more Jews to synagogue than any other? Regular worshippers are accustomed
to finding the meaning of the day in the Torah portion designated for public
reading on that holiday. On Rosh Hashana, Chapters 21 and 22 of Genesis are
read; they chronicle the birth and early life of Abraham and Sarah's son,
Isaac, history's first born Jew. Even from conception, laughter surrounds
his life. In fact, out of the 13 Scriptural references to "laughter," nine
occur in the context of Isaac's life. His name means "he shall laugh" and
it is the name that G-d instructed Abraham and Sarah to give him after they
had laughed about his birth. It must have seemed a comic thought that a
90-year-old woman and her 100-year-old husband would become first-time
parents.
Laughter is one of the distinctions that humans enjoy over animals. What
makes us laugh? People laugh at things that violate a sense of how things
ought to be. A pompous mayor who slips on a banana peel is funny. A tramp
who falters and sprawls on the sidewalk just seems sad.
Likewise, the sexual innuendo that provokes howls of laughter among school
boys and titters among stockbrokers, elicits yawns of indifference from
hardened prison inmates. The joke assaults notions of human refinement,
thereby causing laughter. To the depraved it is not a joke, it is reality.
The only reason that we laugh at cartoons of talking animals is because of
our underlying conviction that only humans were given the gift of speech. A
joke can only be funny in the context of a fixed framework which it
contradicts.
One of the hallmarks of secular liberalism is that there is absolutely no
fixed framework at all. In the absence of any system of inviolable,
religiously based absolutes, there are no unthinkable acts to perform; there
are few rules to violate. In a world in which everything floats, humor has
nothing solid to thrust against.
This helps to explain the laughter and joyfulness that permeate the family
life of religious Americans who typically favor discipline and structure.
Conversely, it also sheds light on the grim seriousness with which the
secular liberal seems to go about the business of life. (One cannot help
but recall the famous joke that reflected so faithfully, feminism's
humorlessness: How many feminists does it take to screw in a light bulb?
Answer: That's not funny).
Since jokes are only funny if they contradict a preconception, and all
preconceptions are becoming banned, certain genres of jokes are vanishing
from our national repertoire. For example, humor based on stay-at-home dads
no longer resonates when working moms are so common. America's evolving
social standards are not introducing new humor genres to take the place of
those excised. On the contrary, the political correctness doctrine banishes
humor and laughter entirely, precisely because humor presupposes an existing
standard. If nothing is abosolutely good and nothing is unthinkably bad,
nothing can be funny. Clearly one of the goals of secular liberalism is to
eliminate all existing standards. The unintended consequence will be the
dreary and somber atmosphere that was characteristic of life behind the old
Iron Curtain. Secularism and its sequel, socialism, work together to banish
laughter from the world.
Talmudic Tradition has it that Abraham, through his renowned kindness,
attracted thousands of devotees to Judaism. Yet, a full three generations
later, by which time the world's Jewish population ought to have reached
large numbers, the Bible (Genesis 46) indicates a total Jewish population
of merely 70 souls.
The Talmud explains these surprisingly diminished demographics as the
inevitable consequence of viewing compassion as the only governing
principle. Kindness attracts a following-justice and structure keep it.
Abraham had focused on the Almighty's capacity for unrestrained love and
compassion. Isaac, the icon of Rosh Hashana, introduced an awareness of
G-d's firm hand into Jewish culture. Many of the disciples drawn by
Abraham's gentle nature were later repelled by Isaac's unpopular emphasis on
law, leaving a core following of only 70.
Yet it is precisely the structure of law that defines boundaries and allows
humans to live among one another. One of the tractates of the Talmud,
Ethics of the Fathers III:2, exhorts "Pray for the welfare of legal
authority-without it, men would destroy each other." The origin of legal
authority and its best validation is the model of Divine authority. For
this reason, civil authorities like kings would often head the Church too.
They were aware that their acceptance of G-d's authority made it more
logical for citizens to accept their's.
In other words, my children are more likely to obey my rules and later,
society's too, if they grow up watching me accept G-d's rules. Children of
parents whose vehicles sport bumper stickers that read "Question Authority"
will grow up doing just that. They will also become rather hard to live
with.
Humans are by nature reluctant to submit themselves to a higher authority.
Showing how treasured human moments like laughter depend on that submission,
helps persuade us that civilization depends upon allowing G-d to judge us.
That is the paramount message of the High Holy Days and accounts for its
laughter motif. It also accounts for why traditionally Orthodox synagogues
eschew solemnity and somberness and instead, fill the High Holy Days with
laughter and joyful
http://www.jewishworldreview.com --
THE HIGH HOLY DAYS begin with two days of Rosh Hashana, the Jewish New Year
and end 10 days later with Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. Talmudic
tradition teaches that Rosh Hashana ushers in the month whose astrological
sign is Libra-the scales of justice- in order to highlight its theme of
allowing G-d to judge us. Sometimes He finds us virtuous and worthy of
reward; at other times He finds us lacking and sentences us to cosmic
punishment. Rosh Hashana's solemn role of affirming that G-d judges us,
makes its central theme of laughter difficult to understand.

The shofar
Talmudic tradition demands that the shofar (ram's horn) be blown 100 times
on Rosh Hashana in a complex sequence of notes composed to sound just like
hysterical laughter. With the meaning of Isaac's name as well as the
laughing sounds of the day all integrated by the day's reading of the Torah
portion, Rosh Hashana is not only the day of judgment, it is also the day of
laughter.
JWR contributor and radio talk show host, Rabbi Daniel Lapin, is the president of the national
organization,
Toward Tradition, projecting a comprehensive socio-political
vision of moral and economic unity based on the Word of He who is the source
of all Unity. Lapin's book America's Real War is a 1999 best seller. Send your comments by clicking here.
