Tuesday, December 22, 2020

    Last week marked the end of Hanukkah.  Although it is a minor holiday on the Jewish liturgical calendar, because Hanukkah usually occurs around Christmas, it has tended to generate a significant amount of attention in the Western world.  For some, it is considered the Jewish "equivalent" of Christmas.


     While this conclusion is far from the historical and theological truth, it does communicate an important point.  Although Hanukkah commemorates the rededication of the Temple after it had been profaned by the Seleucid emperor Antiochus Epiphanes (he sacrificed a pig on the inner altar) in the second century B.C.E. and not the birth of Jesus, it is nonetheless a time to rejoice, to rejoice in the fact of light.    To rejoice in the light and faithfulness of God, to delight in God's continuing bestowal of life and illumination to human beings.  In this, Hanukkah, like Hinduism's Diwali and Christianity's Incarnation, speaks to all of us, all of us who, whether we know it or not, each day walk in the grace of an infinitely remarkable light, a light without which we would not be.
     Enjoy the light of God.

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