Jewish Midrash is conversation with the Bible; dialoging, questioning, arguing, for "When the Torah was given at Sinai it came with thirteen methods of interpretation, and forty-nine arguments proving each item is correct and forty-nine arguements proving that it is not" (p. 41).
To write or speak a midrash one:
1. chooses a text
2. finds a question to ask
3. creates an imaginative answer
4. argues, expands, changes; in other words, edits
The Burning Word explores midrash as one way to playfully interpret, understand and use scripture in our daily lives. In Kunst's discovery of the power of the midrash, she writes of intimacy, reverence, curiosity, community, suffering, attention, imagination, creation, repetition, revelation, and truth.
I encourage church educators and ministers to read the chapter on curiosity: Moses and the burning bush and the importance of questions as a way of encountering God.
Children (all of us) ask questions because they are curious. Moses was caring for his sheep when he saw the burning bush and asked, "Why isn't the bush consumed?" Curiosity stopped him and he turned aside to look, to stand on holy ground and in so doing, God began a relationship with Moses.
I found much in Judith Kunst's The Burning Word to turn me aside to look and stand on holy ground, and in so doing, encounter Elohim, 'Our God of Creative Power." |