Nadiv Lev: Offerings of the Heart

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Rabbi Shawn Israel Zevit | Parshat Terumah

Rabbi Shawn Zevit (Courtesy)

Immediately upon breaking free from oppression and our birth as a people, not only clans, we have been committed to looking at financial resources as tools for building a sacred community, reflecting living values in the very structures and foundations of communal life.

The fundamental approach to economic resources from biblical times onward has been to sustainably manage available resources and to demonstrate gratitude and cultivating an abundance mindset by offering back a portion of what we have been graced with to those in need and the greater community.

Our tradition asks us to put our financial practices through a Jewish values and practices audit to see how our actions line up with living a holy life.

We can benefit greatly in our communication and choices about financial matters when we share not only balance sheets, but concerns over income and expenses, deeply held values and life experience. Avoiding these discussions — viewing them as “not related to the bottom line” or relegating sacred talk or values clarification to moments deemed “spiritual” — contributes to a financial and spiritual split where we may consider our financial decision-making as unrelated to us being the best person or community of faith we can be.

In congregations and Jewish organizations, we are also pulled in a variety of directions that, on the surface, can seem in opposition to the very foundations of our endeavor. We are neither for-profit “businesses” in the marketplace, nor classic nonprofits. I like to think of our faith-based communities as “for-prophet enterprises,” sharing the ultimate goals of manifesting the sacred values, laws and cultural traditions we have come to hold dear.

To obtain something is to create an exchange that leaves all parties feeling whole and holy in their comings and goings with each other. Money used as a spiritual tool in this way has the potential to leave everyone resting in a place of peace, of shalom.

To address realizing our personal and communal goals, we need to create a trusting environment for such a discussion. Conversations about money in a communal setting can be challenging because issues of class and money are tied to issues of self-worth, personal values and individual choices.

We may have discomfort or even shame at having too much, too little or not enough, especially when there has been little in the way of education and dialogue about money and religious life.

Through study, effective listening and open discussion of our attitudes and expectations, however, we can turn a potentially challenging subject into a profound opportunity for building relationships and community.

There has never been any organized religion that did not need resources of some kind, expecting its members to contribute offerings, dues, or taxes to support its institutions. Along with the personal dimension as described above, we need to develop workable congregational systems where funds are collected, educated and communicated about and managed in a fair and just manner that both reflects our values and inspires further giving.

Envision how you and your congregation, organization or community’s actions could be active participants in this process from a perspective of community-building, caring and justice in the world. Financial resources, and how they are organized and viewed, are an integral part of realizing this dream. Terumah (l’harim).

May we strive to bring Your Presence into the flow of our resources.

Rabbi Shawn Israel Zevit serves as rabbi at Mishkan Shalom in Philadelphia and is co-founder/director of the Davennen Leader’s Training Institute.

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