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The Jerusalem Post

Hanukkah, Hamas: Wars against ungodly ideas to restore belief in God - opinion

 
 RELEGATED TO a display: At the British Museum, sculptures from the Parthenon, the temple on Athens’ Acropolis that stood as a Greek monument to democracy. (photo credit: HANNAH MCKAY/ REUTERS)
RELEGATED TO a display: At the British Museum, sculptures from the Parthenon, the temple on Athens’ Acropolis that stood as a Greek monument to democracy.
(photo credit: HANNAH MCKAY/ REUTERS)

It is our historical responsibility to defeat these ungodly ideas and restore belief in a one, all-powerful, and merciful God who crafted us in His image and desires our well-being. 

Jewish history isn’t random.

Selected to represent God and inspire moral and religious spirit, our battles aren’t local, nor are they purely geopolitical. We stand against toxic cultures that threaten both moral spirit and religious consciousness. In defeating the dangerous ideas posed by these wicked cultures, we protect the world from its own darkness. So it was, and so it always will be.

Obviously, our current war with Hamas isn’t purely military and isn’t merely a local skirmish. We face sub-human barbarians who committed horrific atrocities in the name of God. Our eventual defeat of their culture of death, rape, and torture will protect this world from moral and intellectual collapse. The ferocious international opposition that our just war has aroused affirms that, in our battle, there is more at stake than merely the future of Gaza.

Thousands of years ago, our Hanukkah battles were also ideological. Greece was the first civilization to both organize and dramatically improve our world. The word cosmos is a Greek term that translates into “order,” reflecting their newfound ability to organize and rationalize a previously vast and disorderly universe. Greek advances in science and mathematics lent predictability to a world that, for the ancients, had seemed chaotic and intimidating.

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Greece also developed a rudimentary form of democracy which offered a degree of fair and equitable government. Furthermore, major advances in art and culture enriched the aesthetic quality of human experience. Greece was brimming with confidence as it sought to relandscape a new enlightened pan-Greek society, centered in Athens, which would unify man in pursuit of a more civilized and elegant lifestyle. Greece offered great hope for humanity’s future.

 Images of Hanukkah are splashed on the walls of Jerusalem’s Old City. (credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM)
Images of Hanukkah are splashed on the walls of Jerusalem’s Old City. (credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM)

Yet, despite these possibilities, Greek Hellenism was based upon flawed religious concepts which threatened the evolution of religion. Our defeat of Hellenism dismissed these erroneous notions, preserving moral spirit.

Hellenism and Hamas

On the surface, there is no common ground between our ideological war with Hellenism and our cultural war with Islamic fundamentalism. These struggles are separated by thousands of years and are being waged against very different cultures. However, each of these battles is centered upon the same city of Jerusalem, and evidently, as different as they seem, they share a common feature. Nothing in Jewish history is random; everything repeats itself.

Divine image?

In its rejection of ancient paganism, Greece renounced molten idols and no longer imagined gods to be grotesque, heavenly monsters. Yet, for all its religious progress, Greece was utterly incapable of discovering a one God responsible for all creation. Instead, heaven was occupied by a noisy pantheon of gods and goddesses, each with specific domains and responsibilities. The Greek gods who inhabited Mount Olympus weren’t very much different from us but were merely larger and stronger versions of Man.


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Within this cavalcade of gods, the details of Man’s creation remained murky. Greek mythology provides differing accounts as to how Man originated. In one famous myth, Prometheus fashions Man and delivers him creativity, only to anger a different god, Zeus. The creation of Man is tangled in the rivalries between warring gods. Even among classical Greek philosophers such as Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, who studied virtue, knowledge, and the nature of the human soul, the description of Man’s creation is either absent or vague.

Though Greece broke with crude paganism and introduced philosophical inquiry, it could not imagine a one God who both created Man and endowed him with divine image. Instead of believing in a God who created Man in His image, Greece continued to craft gods in the image of Man.

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Being that Man wasn’t fashioned with any surpassing divine image, he didn’t possess any distinctive or lofty features to distinguish him from the rest of the cosmos. Man didn’t possess autonomous free will because there was no all-powerful God to grant it to him. Without free will, Man was left entirely to the whims of fate. In a famous mythological tale, Oedipus is prophetically informed that he will murder his father and marry his mother, yet his efforts to reverse this tragic fate are futile. Fate, not free will, determines human experience.

Our defeat of Hellenism reinforced the belief in an all-powerful God who crafted Man as the masterpiece of His creation. Moreover, God gifted us with divine image that included traits such as speech, creativity, consciousness, and free will. Reverence for God demands respect for every human being gifted with divine image. Belief in God demands respect for Man.

Though Greece took dramatic leaps, without belief in divine image its ability to spur human progress was severely limited. Without belief in divine image, Greek influence on human development was capped. By the 3rd century, the Roman Empire, the cultural descendants of Greece, had begun its rapid decline, and the prospects for further human development were handed off to other cultures. By denying tzelem Elokim, or divine image, Greece could not glorify Man and was limited in its ability to advance the human condition.

What went wrong?

In 2002, Middle Eastern historian Bernard Lewis authored a book titled What Went Wrong?, which probed the historical factors contributing to the decline of the Islamic world in comparison to the West. Factors such as resistance to technology, a decrease in scientific inquiry and intellectual openness, an absence of political pluralism, and the presence of stifling social structures all led to the stagnation of Islamic culture, while the West was racing ahead.

In addition to these socio-political influences, there is a religious root for the relative lack of progress in the Islamic world. We believe that God is compassionate and desires welfare for the creatures He crafted in His image. When human beings suffer, or even when human experience is limited, we sense a religious calling to discover, innovate, and transform our world. For a Jew, progress, science, and discovery are driven by a religious impulse: God is compassionate, fair, and just and wants human prosperity. We are His agents in delivering that prosperity.

To Islamic fundamentalists, God is angry and vengeful. There is great joy in heaven when innocents suffer or lose their lives. If God is angry and capricious, there is little religious motivation to alleviate human suffering or to ameliorate the human condition. In the West, religious-based humanism drove the evolution of modern society. While the West believed in a kind and just God, and labored to relandscape the world in His image, the East was bereft of any religious motivation for change and progress. A dysfunctional world of suffering and misery was in perfect concert with an impulsive and irate God.

Hellenism could not imagine a divine image, while Islamic fundamentalism scoffs at it. You cannot believe in Man’s divine image while also wantonly murdering, raping, mutilating, and burning human beings. If you believe in an angry and enraged God, these abhorrent acts can be committed in His name.

Just as the Hellenists before them, Islamic fundamentalists threaten the cardinal belief in the divine image of human beings. Just as then, it is our historical responsibility to defeat these ungodly ideas and restore belief in a one, all-powerful, and merciful God who crafted us in His image and desires our well-being.

The Hanukkah battle continues. We are modern-day Hasmoneans waging a battle on behalf of tzelem Elokim. The battle between good and evil wages on. There is only one ending to this battle. It just takes unwavering conviction and patience.   ■

The writer is a rabbi at Yeshivat Har Etzion/Gush, a hesder yeshiva. He has smicha and a BA in computer science from Yeshiva University, as well as a master’s degree in English literature from the City University of New York.

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