Rabbi Meir Soloveichik, Sermon, 1/19/2010
Rabbi Soloveichik, who was raised in Chicago, began his sermon by recounting the perpetual frustrations of Cubs fans, whose team, in several recent years, has missed playing in the World Series by the narrowest of margins. Each time the Cubs miss an opportunity to win a pennant, the rabbi noted, many Chicagoans experience periods of depression and feelings of worthlessness. Such feelings are not uncommon, he added, because most people encounter periods of great frustration in both their work and personal lives—periods in which their efforts seem to produce no results and their sense of personal worth is called into question.
Rabbi Soloveichik then drew attention to a detail in the sections of the Torah from the Book of Exodus that are read this month in synagogues. In ancient Egypt, the onerous labor of the making of bricks was forced on the Hebrew slaves. In a number of biblical passages, including those that tell of the building of the Tower of Babel, brick has a negative association. According to a classical Jewish commentary, when a worker fell from the scaffolding during the building of that tower, the overseers ignored the death because one worker is like another, just as one brick is like another.
By contrast, the Torah compares the Jewish people to natural stones: The stone that the builders despised has become the cornerstone of the foundation, says the psalmist. The patriarch Jacob, who is called the Stone of Israel, built an altar of stones at Beth-El. The altars of ancient Israel were built only of uncut natural stone. This, Rabbi Soloveichik continued, has symbolic significance: Whereas every brick is alike, every natural stone is different. In this sense the Jewish people are like natural stones because every individual is created for a purpose, and each, in his or her own way, is unique and indispensable.
No matter what our frustrations, the rabbi concluded, we must keep in mind that all of us—each unique, each indispensable, and each with his or her own contribution to make—must persevere in our efforts to realize those contributions.
Lord Acton
February 26, 1877
Thus they became the only people of antiquity that grew great by democratic institutions. But the possession of unlimited power, which corrodes the conscience, hardens the heart, and confounds the understanding of monarchs exercised its demoralizing influence on the illustrious Democracy of Athens. It is bad to be oppressed by a minority; but it is worse to be oppressed by a majority. For there is a reserve of latent power in the masses which, if it is called into play, the minority can seldom resist. But from the absolute will of an entire people there is no appeal, no redemption, no refuge but treason. The humblest and most numerous class of the Athenians united the legislative, the judicial, and in part, the executive power. The philosophy that was then in the ascendant taught them that there is no law superior to that of the state, and that, in the state, the law-giver is above the law.