What
kind of scene does this picture describe?
This
is a picture of Rabbi Dovid Goldstein, director of Chabad-Lubavitch of West Houston,
Texas, and Jedidiah Murphy, a death-row inmate in a West Livingston, Texas
prison. (Guess which one is which. J)
The
story was covered in the Jewish press, and there is longer story about this
subject on Chabad's website. Rabbi Goldstein enabled Murphy, convicted
for killing a 79-year-old woman, to lay tefillin for the first time. It
was not easy to arrange as state law prevents death row inmates from having
direct contact with their visitors. Goldstein provided the tefillin and a
kippah for Murphy and instructed him through the glass. Rabbi and
prisoner celebrated the “Bar Mitzvah” with chips and soft drinks from the
nearby vending machine.
(This
was not Goldstein’s first time putting tefillin on a death-row inmate. In
2013, he helped Douglas Feldman put on tefillin one week before being executed
by lethal injection. That time, he was allowed direct contact with the
prisoner since the tefillin were considered part of his last rites.)
What
can we take away from a story like this?
There
are Jewish criminals…Chabad is dedicated to every single Jew…It’s never too
late to perform a mitzvah…
I
find myself thinking about how we approach second chances. Murphy never
had a Bar Mitzvah or a chance to act in a Jewish way. It took a death-row
encounter with a truly dedicated rabbi to create this mitzvah moment.
Often, we seek out second chances in moments of extremis. We repent in
time for Yom Kippur or we try to spend more time with someone after not
spending time with them earlier. As the saying goes, “Better late than
never…”
Why
can’t there be more opportunities to seize the moment? How about more
positively-induced second chances? We could each benefit from proactively
wanting to do all these good things because they are too good to miss out on,
and we want to experience them again.
Do
you remember the Life Saver commercial in which a
father and his daughter are sitting watching a beautiful sunset. As the last of the light disappears beneath
the horizon, the dad says, “Going...going...going...gone!” And then the
girl says, “Do it again, Daddy!”
There are so many things we should try to experience
again because they are just so special and awesome that, heck, why not?
We don’t need to wait until the last minute – or when it is too late – to try
and spend more time with our family or enjoy the beautiful weather or read that
book or try that new experience.
We may not be able to make the sun set again, and we,
most certainly, don’t want to need to be in an extreme situation to push us to perform a
mitzvah. For now, as we start a New Year, let’s think about all the positive
experiences - for religious and personal growth or spending time with family or
just doing wonderful things – we can grab.
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