表演:在Parshat Hukkat上的D'Var Torah

Perry Dane
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摘要

一些历史学家认为,早期拉比在神学上的伟大创新之一,是将哈拉卡理解为一种精神纪律的形式,而不是宇宙形而上学现实的反映。这种哈拉基唯名论的观点至少对犹太法律想象的主要流派产生了巨大的影响。这种方法的一个可能的结果是,在某种意义上,把犹太人的生活理解为一种“戏剧表演”但是,把遵守犹太教规理解为演戏并不会减少遵守犹太教规的犹太人的责任,只会加深这种责任。对于善于观察的犹太人来说,承认他们是在演戏并不能成为他们马虎的借口。因为拉比们还坚持认为,犹太人有责任遵循剧本,在犹太宗教生活的戏剧中扮演真实而令人信服的演员。他们需要成为演员,但是是非常严肃的演员。这篇简短的演讲进一步探讨了戏剧表演的隐喻。它区分了仪式脚本和道德脚本,并强调了驾驭它们复杂关系的重要性。它还扩大了对人类生活更大剧本的简短讨论的镜头。在这种情况下,我们必须理解演戏的隐喻,以适应人类自由意志的神圣礼物。从某种意义上说,上帝是一场现场演出的作者、导演、舞台管理或评论家,几乎没有排练,也没有重拍。它可以顺利进行。它也可能变得很糟糕。正如C.S.刘易斯所说,“当然,上帝知道如果人类错误地使用他们的自由会发生什么:显然,他认为值得冒险。”
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Playacting: A D'Var Torah on Parshat Hukkat
Some historians have argued that one of the great theological innovations of the early Rabbis was to understand much of halakha as a form of spiritual discipline rather than a reflection of cosmic metaphysical reality. This view of halakhic nominalism has powerfully influenced at least major strains of the Jewish legal imagination writ large. And one possible upshot of that sort of approach is to understand the observant Jewish life as, in some sense, a form of "playacting." But understanding halakhic observance as playacting does not reduce the responsibility of halakhically-committed Jews, it only deepens it. For observant Jews to admit that they are acting in a play is no excuse for them to be sloppy actors. For the Rabbis also insisted that Jews have a duty to follow the script, to be authentic and convincing actors in the drama of Jewish religious life. They need to be actors, but darn serious actors. This short talk further explores the metaphor of playacting. It distinguishes the ritual script and the moral script and emphasizes the importance of navigating their complex relationship. It also widens the lens to a brief discussion of the larger script of human life. In that context, the playacting metaphor must be read to accommodate the divine gift of human free will. In a certain sense, God is the author, or director, or stage manager, or critic, of a single-performance live show, with little in the way of rehearsal and no retakes. It can go well. And it can also go badly. As C.S. Lewis put it, "Of course God knew what would happen if [human beings] used their freedom the wrong way: apparently, He thought it worth the risk."
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