In his book The Seven
Questions You’re asked in Heaven, Dr. Ron Wolfson draws on the rabbinic
writings of Abba ben Joseph bar Hama (280-352 CE), known as Rava, to describe
the questions you will be asked in heaven. As a baby boomer approaching my
63rd birthday, I find I am spending more time thinking about ultimate
issues. How best should I use the last
quarter of my life?
These questions, according to Wolfson, were designed to “reveal
how you lived your life on earth.” Wolfson notes that the third question asks “Did
you set a time for Torah?” The fifth question in the book deals with wisdom and
knowledge. It asks, “How did you learn? How did you study?”
Wolfson writes, “Our teacher Rava imagines that the Fifth Question You’ll be Asked in Heaven
is in a two parts:
Pilpalta b’chochmah? - Did you seek
wisdom?
Havanta d’var mitach davar? - Did
you understand one thing from another?”
Wolfson
argues that Rava’s two questions “seem to be a kind of instruction guide for
his students as they swim in a sea of Talmud, a lifelong pursuit.” Wolfson goes
on to argue that knowledge comes from three sources (The Seven Questions You’re Asked in Heaven, Dr. Ron Wolfson, Jewish
Lights, pp 80-81):
- Da’at refers to factual knowledge - the what, where, when and how
- Binah refers to analytic ability
- Chochmah refers to the kind of knowledge that comes from experience, i.e., wisdom
The
pursuit of analytic ability, knowledge and wisdom are important qualities for
all people but they are very important to the strategic leader. One of the
goals of USCJ’s Sulam for Strategic Planners program is to help leaders
access all of their leadership learning skills.
Data
Gathering
Da’at
We
have the planners create a FACT book of all of the relevant internal and
external facts relating to the synagogue.
We help planners conduct a congregational survey of their member’s wants
and needs.
Binah
We
have planners create a SWOT analysis that
looks at the congregation’s Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats. This
exercise helps sharpen the ability of the planners to analyze data and to see
the relationship between different elements. When the congregational survey
data is complete, we give planner a Survey Debrief Worksheet so that they can
learn to listen for the big insights. What assumptions did they have? How have
they changed? What are the implications? These exercises are designed to help
planners “learn to study”.
Chochmah
We
offer planners exercises that support analysis. The Strategic Planning
Committee depends of the accumulated experience of the planners to make sense
of all the information and to determine what is most important. This
accumulated wisdom grows over the 12-15 months of planning. That is why it is
so important the steering committee members make the commitment to finish the
work together. As consultants we
sometimes refer to this as “the wisdom of the room”. A plan cannot just a book
of facts or a laundry list of actions-
it must prioritize. It must identify what is most important and what is needed
most now. It must lift up what is of greatest value.
Wolfson
addresses this question about wisdom by quoting a famous rabbinic quote:
Before
his death, Rabbi Zusya said, “In the coming world, they will not ask me, ‘Why
were you not Moses?’ They will ask me, ‘Why you were not Zusya’?” (Tales of the
Hasidim, Volume 1 page 251).
Outside
consultants and resources can help support leaders, but in the end congregational
leaders must determine the path that is best for them. The seventh question
that Wolfson discusses is as follows:
- Did you live your life trying to be someone else?
- Were you true to yourself?
We assign
all planners the book Holy Conversations by Dr. Gil Rendle and Alice
Mann. The authors speak from years of experience walking with congregational
leaders. They learned that the goal of planning is not to fix congregations but
to help them be the best that they can be:
Planning does not fix a congregation. Planning
does not make it something that it is not. As leaders invite the congregation
into a planning process, it is important that the participants understand that
the structured conversation at the heart of planning is not meant to make the congregation look like some other successful
congregation. Rather the structured conversation is meant to help the
congregation be the people that they most
effectively can be, given their history, their resources, and their call.
In Sulam for Strategic
Planners we argue that planners need to manage the tension between three
poles: Their enduring mission, vision and values, the unique challenge of their
congregation’s environment and context and their capacities. We define these
capacities as what a congregation is good at, what it is known for and what it
is capable of. A strategy is a plan to help them fulfill their vision within
the constraints of the context and capacity.
There is no mathematical formula for this work. It takes
wisdom to learn from each pole. It takes courage to live in the tension between
these poles and to navigate your own path. With a commitment to learning and
practice, leaders can hope to answer some of these ultimate questions for
themselves, their leadership community and their congregation. When planers
look back on their time on the planning committee we hope they will feel that
they acquired some wisdom.
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