Biblical Study Tours with Bart and Pat

Biblical Study Tours with Bart and Pat Bart and Pat Den Boer have led biblical study tours tours for more than 15 years.

A Passover ReflectionPassover’s Radical Message Is More Vital Than EverApril 21, 2024, by Rabbi Shai Held. author of “Ju...
04/22/2024

A Passover Reflection

Passover’s Radical Message Is More Vital Than Ever
April 21, 2024, by Rabbi Shai Held. author of “Judaism Is About Love,” from which this essay is adapted.

What do we do with our pain? What, if anything, can we learn from it?

The Bible offers a startling and potentially transformative response: Let your memory teach you empathy and your suffering teach you love.

This week, Jews around the world will mark the beginning of Passover. We’ll gather for Seders, in which we’ll re-enact the foundational story of the Jewish people, the Exodus from Egypt. For Judaism, a religion preoccupied with remembering the past, no memory is more fundamental than the experience of having been slaves to a tyrant and having been redeemed from his murderous clutches by God.

Such a memory, for some, may seem impossible to summon now, in a time of so much trauma and devastation. But it is critical to remember the Exodus precisely at moments of horror and pain because it is the ultimate reminder that the present moment need not be the final stage of history. The status quo, no matter how intransigent, can and must be overturned. Further, we are meant not just to remember our suffering but also to grow in empathy as a result.

The Bible’s emphasis on empathy is particularly poignant in this agonized moment, when Israelis and Palestinians, two utterly traumatized peoples, are so overcome with grief and indignation that they can barely see each other at all. And yet if there is to one day be a different sort of future in the blood-soaked Holy Land, both peoples will need to do precisely that: to hear each other’s stories and histories, to listen to and bear witness to each other’s suffering. The revolution in empathy I am describing is urgently necessary to remember precisely now, when it seems so utterly out of reach.

The recollection of slavery and redemption has important theological and spiritual ramifications. We are meant to live with a sense of gratitude and indebtedness to the God who set us free. We are asked to recall — year after year — that we moved from serving a cruel human master who sought only to humiliate and tear us down to worshiping a loving divine master who blesses us and seeks our well-being. We are called to empathize with those who are exposed and endangered in the present, having ourselves been defenseless in the past.

“You shall not oppress a stranger,” the Book of Exodus teaches, “for you know the feelings of the stranger, having yourselves been strangers in the land of Egypt.” You know what mistreatment feels like, Exodus says, and therefore you should never inflict it upon anyone else.

Leviticus takes this further. “The stranger who resides with you shall be to you as one of your citizens,” it tells us. “You shall love him as yourself, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt.” Leviticus envisions something radical: a society that actively loves and seeks the welfare of its most vulnerable members.
There are longstanding debates in the Jewish tradition about precisely what loving our neighbor entails, but one thing is clear: The love we owe to our neighbor we owe to the stranger among us, too.

There is nothing obvious about this teaching, particularly in a moment when fear and anger threaten to suppress any hint of compassion.

Suffering can teach us love, but all too often we let it teach us apathy and indifference — or, worse, unbridled rage and hostility. Our afflictions harden us, turn our focus stubbornly inward, make our most aggressive impulses seem both necessary and justified. We come to feel entitled: I was oppressed, and no one championed my cause; I don’t owe anything to anyone. But the Bible encourages us to take the opposite tack: I was oppressed, and no one came to my aid; therefore I will never abandon someone vulnerable or in pain.

Many people who have suffered terribly, whether personally or politically, hear both voices in our heads and have both impulses in our hearts. One voice tells us that the pain we have endured (or are enduring) frees us from responsibility to and for others — justifies our fixating on ourselves — while another voice insists that our suffering must teach us to care more and more deeply for others. Through the mandate to love the stranger, the Bible commands us to nurture the latter impulse rather than the former, to let our suffering teach us love.

At a moment like this, the mandate to love the stranger can seem to be speaking to broad and intractable geopolitical conflicts, and in fact, it is, but it also addresses us personally, at the most intimate levels. I know both these voices only too well. Having lost my father as a child and been left alone with a mother who lacked the emotional tools to parent any child, let alone a grieving one, I struggle at times with feeling entitled to ignore other people’s pain and care for just my own. And yet — having experienced aloneness, abandonment and abuse — I also feel an intensified sense of empathy for and responsibility toward those who are alone, abandoned or abused. It is this impulse that the Bible seeks to nurture in me and in each of us.

This week, when we retell the Exodus story, we must remember its implications: Since we know vulnerability, the plight of the vulnerable — whether among our own kin or among those who do not look or pray or speak like us — makes an especially forceful claim on us.

The commandment to do this work is both individual and communal; it is, on the one hand and at various points in the Bible, very much specific to Jews. But on the other hand, it is fundamental to the heritage of human civilization, and thus it addresses every person and every people who hear it. Perhaps, having suffered, you are tempted to learn indifference or even hate. Refuse that temptation. Let your memory teach you empathy and your suffering teach you love.

To tell the story of our past is always also to internalize an ethical injunction for our present and our future: to love the stranger, for we know what it feels like to be a stranger — we know the vulnerability, the anxiety and the loneliness — having ourselves been strangers in the land of Egypt.

NY Times, April 22

With God On Our SideChristian Zionism, America, and the Middle EastCheck out the film at this link:
04/20/2024

With God On Our Side
Christian Zionism, America, and the Middle East

Check out the film at this link:

With God On Our Side takes a look at the theology of Christian Zionism, which teaches that because the Jews are God's chosen people, they have a divine right...

Dozens Rally For Peace in HollandThanks to all who are standing for peace at Centennial Park this Holy Thursday afternoo...
03/28/2024

Dozens Rally For Peace in Holland
Thanks to all who are standing for peace at Centennial Park this Holy Thursday afternoon!

03/24/2024

If Americans Knew is dedicated to providing Americans with everything they need to know about Israel and Palestine.

The Stones Cry Out Delegationto Palestine and Washington DCled by Dr. Michael SpathWebinarRegister Here: https://us02web...
03/14/2024

The Stones Cry Out Delegation
to Palestine and Washington DC
led by Dr. Michael Spath

Webinar
Register Here:
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZUofuiopjwvG9G229PHxO_Cn845mD1vIYYh?utm_source=ICAHD&utm_campaign=db080d8384-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2021_07_07_02_09_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_06adf561a8-db080d8384-294083917&mc_cid=db080d8384&mc_eid=e7bc936ee5 #/registration

Wednesday, March 20, 2:00pm ET



The Stones Cry Out Delegation was made up of 23 church leaders and activists from 12 Christian denominations from all across the United States. We had a series of meetings with 17 Jewish, Christian, and Muslim peacemakers, human rights activists, and practitioners of non-violence in Bethlehem, Jerusalem, Ramallah, and Hebron, then returned to Washington DC for a series of meeting with congresspersons, demonstrations, and an interfaith prayer service.

Delegation leader, ICMEP's Dr. Michael Spath, will moderate a conversation about what we learned in our meetings in Palestine and DC with the following Delegation members:

Susan Brooksbank is a retired businesswoman, an elder in her Presbyterian Church, and has traveled to Palestine numerous times. Susan has worked with Palestinian organizations such as Friends of Wadi Foquin and Bright Stars of Bethlehem.

Joanne Quinn is an oncology nurse and a member of Kairos Puget Sound. She has made multiple trips to Palestine since 2015. "Why Palestine? Because it is a just cause. A noble ideal. A moral quest for equality and human rights." (Edward Said)

Rev. Ashlee Wiest-Laird is Pastor at First Baptist Church, Jamaica Plain, MA. She has been the Southern Baptist Chaplain at Harvard University and spent a year working with Sabeel Palestinian Liberation Theology Center and the Middle East Council of Churches in Jerusalem.

Rev. Jack Erskine has served 40+ years as a priest in the Episcopal Church, 8 years as a Chaplain in Independent Schools, and12 years as a Hospital Chaplain. In addition to this Delegation, Jack visited Gaza on a delegation in 2019.

Note: Two of our Kairos West Michigan Board members, Shelly Millen and Grace Newhouse attended the Washington D.C. portion of the Delegation. Watch for their report coming soon!

Why An Israel-Hamas Ceasefire? We abhor all violence. Wherever it originates and on whomever it is visited. Over the pas...
02/07/2024

Why An Israel-Hamas Ceasefire?

We abhor all violence. Wherever it originates and on whomever it is visited.

Over the past 75 years, cycles of violence perpetrated by both sides have resulted neither in Israelis living in peace and security within their own borders, or Palestinians attaining their legitimate human rights, including self-determination, an independent state and the right of return for refugees. When a state commits violence against innocent humanity we call it, “the occupation, or apartheid, or the right to self-defense.” When an oppressed people commit the same, we refer to it as “terrorism.” Where have the past 75 years of such practices brought us?

About 50% of the 2.2 million Gazans are 18 years old or younger. The violent bombing, the killing of more than 27,000 of them and counting (60% of which have been women and children) is only radicalizing another generation. This violence will lead only to more violence. The Pentagon estimates that after 120 days of war Hamas has lost only about 25% of its militants. But Hamas is more than a militant terrorist group; it is a movement, an ideology. Even if Hamas lost every one of its fighters, the brutality of Israel’s military operation is serving to fertilize its continued growth.

Let’s stop the violence. We call for equal human rights for everyone in Israel and Palestine. We are for Israel, because we believe the cessation of violence and the recognition of the equal human rights between the Israeli and Palestinian people are the only paths to Israel living in peace and security within its borders. We are for Palestine, because we believe the recognition of the equal human rights of the Israeli people is the only way Palestinians will achieve their legitimate aspirations and independence.

Neither Hamas nor the current Israeli government led by Benjamin Netanyahu espouse equal human rights for everyone in Israel-Palestine. It is time for us as Americans to hold both Hamas and Israel accountable to this essential, fundamental American value, fought and died for by generations of Americans.

Our Reformed, Christian tradition calls us to look forward to the day when Christ restores all things broken by sin and evil. In the meantime, however, we work tirelessly and proactively toward the ultimate goal of shalom, wholeness, and peace. As followers of Jesus, we call for a ceasefire and the resumption of aid to UNWRA, the lifeline for refugees in Gaza and the Middle East. We cannot imagine that the Prince of Peace would advocate for the continuation of this brutal assault!

Darell Dalman
Bart Den Boer
John Hubers
John Kleinheksel
Shelly Millen
Grace Newhouse
Marlin Vis
Kairos West Michigan Board of Directors

Two Traumatized PeoplesAre you interested in a presentation to your school, church, or civic group on how we arrived at ...
02/04/2024

Two Traumatized Peoples

Are you interested in a presentation to your school, church, or civic group on how we arrived at our current brutal circumstances in Israel-Palestine?

Complete this form. Let's talk!
https://forms.gle/rYNUXNFH7w5ma3Wz7

See Video Here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qr7_1N6_nnU

Bart Den Boer, Kairos West Michigan

Photo: Banksy mural in Beit Sahour, West Bank

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