Today, Christmas Eve, 2021, I sit at my computer crafting my blog for the CEObuilder January 2022 newsletter. Intermittent snow flurries are frosting my window...it looks and feels just as it should for the Christmas season. That said, my thoughts are about a much more temperate climate, that of Palestine–and He whose birth we celebrate at this time.
My ponderings in this regard were interrupted last evening by an email from a friend and client from the Holy Land. His name is Alon Goshen-Gottstein; he is a Jewish Rabbi and the director of the Elijah Interfaith Institute in Jerusalem. His organization is dedicated to sharing wisdom, fostering peace, and building bonds of friendship among the many and diverse religions of the world.
I want to share the message Alon sent to me, and others of Christian faiths:
To my Christian friends, on this Christmas eve (Christmas Eve arrives earlier in Jerusalem than in the United States),
In thinking of the greetings I would be sending all of you, my thoughts turned to Isaiah 9,5 and the reference to the prince of peace. This is one instance in which much is lost in translation.
The Hebrew speaks of שר שלום, which can be translated as prince of peace, but the word שר also reflects a struggle (compare Hosea 12,5, based, of course, on Genesis. 32,29). Thus, the Prince of peace is really the one who struggles for peace.
I believe this holds an important lesson in the quest for peace, as well as for our common messianic expectation. It is not as if peace is simply a divine portfolio, handed over to some particular personality. Peace is a process that is brought about, through struggle. That struggle is the divine struggle to manifest peace on earth. It is also our struggle, each and every one of us, to realize peace through all the struggles that make up life. And our individual struggles are part of the larger messianic quest and struggle for peace. With God, with our aspirations for the Messiah, we look to peace as the end goal and accept that the path passes through struggles, that are imbued with the goal, with the end peace, that allows us to struggle towards that goal.