Devotion 30 — Sh’ma as a Way of Life |
The Journey Continues
“Hear, O Israel: The Lord is our God, the Lord is one.”— Deuteronomy 6:4
“These words that I command you today shall be upon your heart.”— Deuteronomy 6:6
The Sh’ma begins with listening.
But it does not end there.
From the beginning of this journey, the command to hear has carried deeper meaning than simple sound or attention. In the Hebrew tradition, sh’ma means listening that leads to response. It is hearing that changes the way a person lives.
The Sh’ma therefore is not only a prayer.
Over the course of these reflections, listening has appeared in many forms:
listening to conscience
listening to suffering
listening across difference
listening within community
listening for healing
listening for the future
Each form of listening reveals something important about covenant life.
People become what they continually learn to hear.
This is why the Torah places the Sh’ma at the center of Jewish life. The command reaches beyond worship into daily existence. It is spoken:
in the morning and evening
at home and in public
in moments of joy and moments of struggle
The Sh’ma forms identity through repetition.
It teaches that spiritual life is not sustained through occasional inspiration alone. It is formed through practices of attention carried consistently over........