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Episode details

Radio 4,02 Jun 2023,2 mins

Available for over a year

A spiritual comment and prayer to begin the day with Rabbi Jonathan Romain Good morning For some reason there’s a song that kept going through my head this week that we used to sing at youth camps, the one that went (I won’t try and sing it this early in the morning), “oh you never get to heaven..in my old car, ‘cos my old car....won’t get that far” Maybe I thought of it as it’s one of the questions I get asked most – how do you get to heaven? And there are various Jewish legends, though I stress, they are only legends, like the one about a rabbi standing in the market place, and an angel appearing to him to say that two people there had already earned their place in heaven. The rabbi asks who, and the angel points out two men, so the rabbi rushes over to find out what is so special about them and asks what they do: are they saints or scholars? “No”, they reply, “we are merry-makers: when we see a person who is sad, we cheer them up and when we see two people quarrelling, we make peace between them”. Just a story, but with a strong message about how to act in this life, and make it more like heaven for others, like another legend about when you get to heaven and request to be let in, you will not be asked how many prayers did you say each day, but you will be asked, were you honest in your business dealings because it is just as much how we behave at work, Monday to Friday between 9 am and 5.30 pm, that indicates whether we are religious or not. But my favourite is that you when you knock on the gates, you won’t be asked, were you another Albert Einstein or Nelson Mandela, but instead they will say, were you yourself, did you do what no one else but you could have done in the situations you were in, were you the best possible version of you that you could be? We’ll never be any good at being other people, but we can be a first class us. So I ask God’s help to be, if not merry-makers, then to use our talent for good as much as we can, whatever it may be, and to fulfil our own unique potential. Amen

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