Sim Shalom, and the value of peace
Mar. 1st, 2003 09:30 pmThe translation of the "Sim Shalom" prayer in
Gates of Prayer begins: "Grant us peace,
Your most precious gift...". It's a poetic
translation, I gather; I don't see anything in
the Hebrew that supports "precious". And the more
I think about it, the more I realize that I don't
like this interpretation.
Peace isn't -- or rather, wouldn't be, if we had it -- God's most precious gift to us. Self-awareness, sentience, soul, free will, and life itself (with health) are ahead of peace. These are the most precious gifts we've received, and the most precious gifts we could receive.
God could give us universal peace easily enough if He were so inclined. All it would cost would be those things that make humans different from the animals. But God didn't create puppets; He created people. And so the best we can pray for in the peace department is that all people will see the value in choosing peace, and thus all work toward it. But that's different from being granted peace outright.
(no subject)
Date: 2003-03-02 01:46 pm (UTC)This is a good point. But (you knew there had to be a "but"), isn't this still kind of like the difference between praying for an A in the class and praying for the insight, knowledge, etc that will let you earn an A in the class? So ok, if that sort of inner peace is the goal, but we're actually praying for the characteristics that will lead us to that goal and not for God to wave a magic wand and make it happen, then I can agree with you. (And I don't think we really disagree here.)
And very good point about mankind judging the comparative values of gifts.