Jonathan Sacks z”l – The Courage to Grow & Finding Purpose
Finding Purpose
On Yom Kippur, we plead with God for forgiveness and reassess our life. Here is a powerful clip from Rabbi Sacks zt”l talking about how to find your purpose in life, which he describes as: “Where what you want to do meets what needs to be done, that is where God wants you to be.”
The Courage to Grow
I vividly remember the surprise and delight I had when I first read Jane Austen’s
Emma. It was the first time I have read a novel in which you see a character changing over
time. Emma is an intelligent young woman who believes she understands other people
better than they do. So she sets about arranging their lives – she is an English shadchan –
with disastrous consequences, because not only does she not understand others; she does
not even understand herself. By the end of the novel, though, she is a different person:
older, wiser and humbler. Of course, since this is a Jane Austen story, it ends happily ever
after.
In the more than 40 years that have passed since I read the book, one question has
fascinated me. Where did Western civilisation get the idea that people can change? It is not
an obvious idea. Many great cultures have simply not thought in these terms. The Greeks,
for instance, believed that we are what we are, and we cannot change what we are. They
believed that character is destiny, and the character itself is something we are born with,
although it may take great courage to realise our potential. Heroes are born, not made.
Plato believed that some human beings were gold, others silver, and others bronze. Aristotle
believed that some are born to rule, and others to be ruled. Before the birth of Oedipus, his
fate and that of his father, Laius, have already been foretold by the Delphic Oracle, and
nothing they can do will avert it.
This is precisely the opposite of the key sentence we say on Rosh Hashanah and Yom
Kippur, that “Teshuvah, tefillah and tzedakah avert the evil decree.” That is what happened
to the inhabitants of Nineveh in the story we read at Minchah on Yom Kippur. There was a
decree: “In forty days Nineveh will be destroyed.” But the people of Nineveh repent, and the
decree is cancelled. There is no fate that is final, no diagnosis without a second opinion –
half of Jewish jokes are based on this idea.
The more I studied and researched, the more I realised that Judaism was the first
system in the world to develop a clear sense of human free will. As Isaac Bashevis Singer
wittily put it, “We have to be free; we have no choice.”
This is the idea at the heart of teshuvah. It is not just confession, not just saying Al
chet shechatanu. It is not just remorse: Ashamnu. It is the determination to change, the
decision that I am going to learn from my mistakes, that I am going to act differently in
future, that I determined to become a different kind of person.
To paraphrase Rabbi Soloveitchik, to be a Jew is to be creative, and our greatest
creation is our self. As a result, more than 3000 years before Jane Austen, we see in Torah
and in Tanach, a process in which people change.
To take an obvious example: Moshe Rabbeinu. We see him at the start of his mission
as a man who cannot speak easily or fluently. “I am not a man of words.” “I am slow of
speech and tongue.” “I have uncircumcised lips.” But by the end he is the most eloquent and
visionary of all the prophets. Moses changed.
One of the most fascinating contrasts is between two people who were often thought
to resemble one another, indeed were sometimes identified as the same person in two
incarnations: Pinchas and Elijah. Both were zealots. But Pinchas changed. God gave him a
covenant of peace and he became a man of peace. We see him in later life (in Joshua 22)
leading a peace negotiation between the rest of the Israelites and the tribes of Reuben and
Gad who had settled on the far side of the Jordan, a mission successfully accomplished.
Elijah was no less a zealot than Pinchas. Yet there is a remarkable scene some time
after his great confrontation with the prophets of Baal at Mount Carmel. He is at Mount
Horeb. God asks him, “What are you doing here, Elijah?” Elijah replies, “I have been very
zealous for the Lord God Almighty.” God then sends a whirlwind, shaking mountain and
shattering rocks, but God was not in the wind. Then God sends an earthquake, but God was
not in the earthquake. Then God sends fire, but God was not in the fire. Then God speaks in
a kol demamah dakah, a still small voice. He asks Elijah the same question again, “What
are you doing here, Elijah?” and Elijah replies in exactly the same words as he had done
before: “I have been very zealous for the Lord God Almighty.” At that point God tells Elijah
to appoint Elisha as his successor (1 Kings 19).
Elijah has not changed. He has not understood that God now wants him to exercise a
different kind of leadership, defending Israel not criticising it (Rashi). He is asking Elijah to
make a similar transformation to the one Pinchas made when he became a man of peace,
but Elijah, unlike Pinchas, did not change. Even his words do not change, despite the
momentous vision. He had become too holy for this world, so God took him to heaven in a
chariot of fire.
It was Judaism, through the concept of teshuvah, that brought into the world the idea
that we can change. We are not predestined to continue to be what we are. Even today, this
remains a radical idea. Many biologists and neuroscientists believe that our character and
actions are wholly determined by our genes, our DNA. Choice, character change, and free
will, are – they say – illusions.
They are wrong. One of the great discoveries of recent years has been the scientific
demonstration of the plasticity of the brain. The most dramatic example of this is the case of
Jill Bolte Taylor. In 1996, aged 37, she suffered a massive stroke that completely destroyed
the functioning of the left hemisphere of her brain. She couldn’t walk, talk, read, write, or
even recall the details of her life. But she was very unusual in one respect. She was a
Harvard neuroscientist. As a result, she was able to realise precisely what had happened to
her.
For eight years she worked every day, together with her mother, to exercise her brain.
By the end, she had recovered all her faculties, using her right hemisphere to develop the
skills normally exercised by the left brain. You can read her story in her book, My Stroke of
Insight, or see her deliver a TED lecture on the subject. Taylor is only the most dramatic
example of what is becoming clearer each year: that by an effort of will, we can change not
just our behaviour, not just our emotions, nor even just our character, but the very structure
and architecture of our brain. Rarely was there a more dramatic scientific vindication of the
great Jewish insight, that we can change.
That is the challenge of teshuvah.
There are two kinds of problem in life: technical and adaptive. When you face the
first, you go to an expert for the solution. You are feeling ill, you go to the doctor, he
diagnoses the illness, and prescribes a pill. That is a technical problem. The second kind is
where we ourselves are the problem. We go to the doctor, he listens carefully, does various
tests, and then says: “I can prescribe a pill, but in the long-term, it is not going to help. You
are overweight, underexercised and overstressed. If you don’t change your lifestyle, all the
pills in the world will not help.” That is an adaptive problem.
Adaptive problems call for teshuvah, and teshuvah itself is premised on the
proposition that we can change. All too often we tell ourselves we can’t. We are too old, too
set in our ways. It’s too much trouble. When we do that, we deprive ourselves of God’s
greatest gift to us: the ability to change. This was one of Judaism’s greatest gifts to Western
civilisation.
It is also God’s call to us on Yom Kippur. This is the time when we ask ourselves
where have we gone wrong? Where have we failed? When we tell ourselves the answer, that
is when we need the courage to change. If we believe we can’t, we won’t. If we believe we
can, we may.
The great question Yom Kippur poses to us is: Will we grow in our Judaism, our
emotional maturity, our knowledge, our sensitivity, or will we stay what we were? Never
believe we can’t be different, greater, more confident, more generous, more understanding
and forgiving than we were. May this year be the start of a new life for each of us. Let us
have the courage to grow.