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YOU ARE HERE: Archive >> Past Issues >> Winter 2007

God is in the Details

At least once a year we are supposed to engage in heshbon hanefesh, accounting of the soul. This includes taking a personal inventory of your own behavior and the lessons you may unwittingly be teaching your children. In Judaism, God is in the details, and one of the most important details is everyday courtesy.

The Rabbis teach that respectfulness and courtesy are redeeming virtues even when the Jewish people do not fulfill the other precepts of the Torah. They call these practices derekh eretz, and say: “A Torah scholar who does not have derekh eretz is worse than a dead animal.”

In our competitive, over-scheduled world, we often get in the habit of looking for shortcuts and finding creative justifications for breaking rules and putting our own needs ahead of those of the community. It is easy to forget our children are watching.

You need look no further than the carpool drop-off lane at your child’s school to know exactly what I’m talking about. Rudeness is so rampant that administrators nationwide are found to write parents letters begging them to be polite and follow the rules. I know, because I have a collection of these letters. They range from moving sermons to stand-up comedy routines, but all have a shared goal: to convince parents – those same parents who so badly want children to follow rules at home – to follow carpool rules that are designed for safety, efficiency and fairness.

All of us do things we don’t want our children to emulate, more often than we realize and often in undramatic, everyday ways. It’s always a good time to find ways to practice derekh eretz, beginning with the details of daily living.

Our Sages have plenty of suggestions for how to do this. The rules are as sensitive, countercultural and ethically sharp today as they were years ago. Here are some of my personal favorites. Many of these come from “Guide to Derekh Eretz,” an introduction to the subject by Rabbi Shaul Wagschal.

To these venerable laws I would like to add three suggestions of my own that will give parents frequent opportunities to teach by example:

Your child deserves as much consideration. Get off the cell phone before they get in the car. If the phone rings during the first few minutes of your greeting, don’t answer it.

Think of the phone as the snake in the garden. It’s an alluring temptation to always connect, but the caller knows how to leave a message. If you don’t answer the phone immediately, your child gets a message too – that greeting someone in person takes precedence over any other activity.

The Babylonian Talmud explores the problem of two boats simultaneously approaching a bottleneck in a river. If it is impossible for both to pass together, they should compromise in the following way: one boat goes first, and the captain of this boat compensates the second boat for the time that it lost waiting.

What is your compensation for waiting your turn in the carpool lane? It is the knowledge that you are teaching your child patience and courtesy.

The Rabbis say that one should not break a promise to a child, because doing so will teach the child to lie. If you tweak the rules for your children, you are breaking the agreement you made with them when they were young. Back then, you taught them to tell the truth. When they see your hypocrisy they will lose respect for you, imitate your behavior or both.

Jewish law provides rules that are meant to be followed even when your daughter absolutely must get to the orthodontist on time, even when you’re tempted to say, “Just this once.”

The commandment to honor one’s parents helps elevate the laws of derekh eretz to prominence. We can ask, “Do I deserve the reverence of my child? Am I the kind of parent my child can learn from and be proud of?”

Whatever motivates you – your entry ticket to the gates of heaven, how your children will treat your grandchildren or your child’s next letter of recommendation – it is the time to think about not only crimes but misdemeanors and, if we are right by the Rabbis, even dust.

Wendy Mogel is a clinical psychologist. She is the author of “The Blessing of a Skinned Knee: Using Jewish Teaching to Raise Self-reliant Children.” She is currently writing a book for parents of teenagers, “The Blessing of a B Minus.” This article was provided by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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