by Sara Yoheved Rigler
In a God-directed world, you're never stuck.
I used to empathize with the horse in the gate. The only way for a car
to exit the walled Old City of Jerusalem, where I live, is through Zion
Gate. Like all authentic ancient gates, Zion Gate is a massive L-shaped
stone structure. My 21st century car has a hard time maneuvering
through the 16th century gate, especially when it is thronged with
tourists. My car, however, has it easy compared with the horses of yore
trying to invade the city.
A hole in the ceiling of the gate was used to pour boiling oil down on
the invading horsemen. If the horse slowed down to make the L-turn, the
horseman would be fried by the boiling oil and the horse would slip and
fall. If it galloped fast to avoid the oil, it would smash into the
stone wall. It was doomed if it did and doomed if it didn't.I often
feel like the horse in the gate. No-win situations abound in my life
and, I suspect, yours. The morning when you have an important meeting
at work with a visiting V.I.P., your child takes sick and needs you at
home. Just when you've blown your budget paying for holiday expenses,
your washing machine breaks down and needs an expensive repair. Rushing
to an interview for a new job, late because you couldn't find a parking
space, a woman in a wheelchair asks for your help. Your spouse splurges
on two tickets to a concert to celebrate your birthday and, just as
you're leaving, your mother-in-law calls complaining of chest pains
that are either indigestion or a heart attack.
When caught in such "horse-in-the-gate" situations, we feel like a
trapped animal. Often we lose it, and burst out in anger or tell
self-protective lies or blame the people closest to us. In our frazzled
state, our moral standards plunge like the "broken" 13-story elevator
in Disneyland's Tower of Terror. You would never leave a sick child at
home alone, but this time... You would never dip into the money you're
holding for the charity fund, but this time... You would never refuse
to help a woman in a wheelchair, but this time... You would never yell
at your spouse for helping his/her mother, but this time...
When we feel trapped without any recourse, our worst self manifests. We
actually become the snorting, rearing beast in the gate.
THE THIRD ALTERNATIVE
The most dramatic scene in the Torah is just such a "horse in the gate"
scenario. Three days after the Children of Israel made their Exodus
from slavery in Egypt, Pharaoh changed his mind and led his army after
them. When Pharaoh's chariot forces caught up with the Israelite men,
women, and children, they were camped beside the sea. With Pharaoh's
army behind them and the sea in front of them, the people had nowhere
to escape. Thinking their doom was sealed, they panicked.
Then, just at the critical moment, God intervened. He split the sea,
let the Children of Israel walk through on dry land, and restored the
water in time to drown the pursuing Egyptian army.
This Biblical prototype teaches us a profound lesson. At first glance,
the horse in the gate scenario seems to have only two players: the
invading soldier on his charging horse and the defending soldier poised
to pour down his pot of boiling oil. From a Jewish perspective,
however, there's always a third player: God.
Judaism believes in a God Who is intimately involved in His world.
Everything is determined by the Divine Will except the moral choices
that human beings make. In a Godless world, the horse and rider would
be doomed to fry or smash, but in a God-directed world, there are
always infinite possibilities. God could, for example, as the horse
enters the gate, give the soldier holding the pot of oil a coughing
fit, or he could feel a sudden urge to eliminate, or he could be felled
by an invader's arrow.
In a God-directed world, you could choose to stay home with your sick
child, and the V.I.P. you were supposed to meet that day could have
been detained in Tokyo for 24 hours. If you overcome your temptation to
dip into the charity fund, in a God-directed world you could be
surprised by a check in the mail from a friend paying back an old loan.
If helping the woman in the wheelchair makes you late for your job
interview, you could be sitting opposite the disapproving personnel
director when the interview is interrupted by a visit from his wife --
the woman in the wheelchair. In a God-directed world, there are
infinite possibilities.
THE INVINCIBLE CABLE
The antidote for the panic of the horse in the gate is to repeat four
simple words: "God runs the world." This does not mean relying on
miracles. It does not mean abdicating responsibility. It does mean
choosing to do the right thing and relying on God to take care of the
rest. The recognition "God runs the world" is the invincible steel
cable that keeps the elevator of our moral standard from plummeting.
Once you have chosen to do what is right and have prayed for Divine
assistance, God may make things work out as you wanted or He may not.
Yes, helping the woman in the wheelchair may make you late for the job
interview and cause you to lose the job. But perhaps a better job is
waiting for you... or perhaps this job would have posed ethical tests
that you are not strong enough to pass... or perhaps this high-paying
job would have taken too much time from your family...
Recognizing that God runs the world doesn't mean that we always get
what we want, but rather that we get what is best for us.
When we fail to let God run our lives, we get stuck like the horse in
the gate. Our possibilities are limited and our lives are constricted.
THE HOUSE OF MY DREAMS
Shortly after getting married in 1987, my husband and I moved to the
Old City of Jerusalem. We rented an apartment, with the intention of
buying an apartment at the end of our year's lease.
In those days, taking a mortgage in Israel meant financial suicide,
because both the interest and the principal of the mortgage were tied
to "the index," Israel's double-digit inflation rate. So, you could
take out a $100,000 mortgage and two years later find that you owed
$130,000 on the principal. We heard horror stories of people who were
swallowed up by such mortgages. We resolved to buy an apartment only
for the sum we had in the bank.
The problem was that all the apartments for sale in our price range
were small, cramped apartments. After months of searching, I gave up.
We decided to just rent for another year. Six weeks before our lease
expired, simply for protocol's sake, I called the owner, who had never
lived in the apartment, to make sure we could renew our lease. He
informed me that he would be moving into the apartment.
Panicked, I called the real estate agent to rent another apartment in
the Old City. There was nothing available.
Suddenly we were the horse in the gate. We couldn't stay in our rented
apartment, and we couldn't afford to buy an apartment that was big
enough for us.
Then it hit me: Why were we limiting God? God runs the world, and
perhaps He had a nice, large apartment that He wanted to give us. I
prayed hard, then called the real estate agent and told her: "We want
to buy the apartment that God wants to give us. Just show us our
apartment; it doesn't matter the price."
Our apartment, I told her, had to have a large living room where we
could hold classes and Shabbatons, had to have three bedrooms, and had
to be on the ground floor so that my mother and father, who suffered
from arthritis, could someday live with us. I secretly wished for one
of the Old City's ancient structures with domed or vaulted ceilings,
but that was not a requirement.
One morning soon after, the real estate agent showed us our apartment.
It had all our requirements-plus high vaulted ceilings. Its price was
exactly double what we had.
My husband and I each called our fathers and asked for loans. They
magnanimously gave us the money outright, as "an advance on your
inheritance," they told us.
That left us $20,000 short of the asking price. We told the real estate
agent to make an offer for the sum we had. "They won't take it," she
told us with authority. The owners, Mr. And Mrs. Kagan, had had the
apartment on the market for over a year, and were not willing to budge
on the price.
"God runs the world," I reminded her (and myself). "Please phone them
with our offer. Tell them it's our maximum offer. Take it or leave it."
Two days later, she got back to us, her voice filled with wonder. The
Kagans had told her that their married daughter, who lived on a moshav,
had just found a house she wanted to buy. They needed cash quickly to
help her buy it before she missed the opportunity. They were willing to
accept our offer.
Two weeks after we closed the deal, I went with Mrs. Kagan to transfer
the utility bills into our name. I asked her when her daughter would be
moving into her new house. Mrs. Kagan frowned and replied, "That house
fell through. She's not moving after all."
A world run by God is a world of infinite possibilities. We are never
stuck like the horse in the gate.
Original
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