The Mothers Point The Way
Being a student is inspiring and humbling. I read a lot of brilliant work from scholars
who have dedicated themselves to one corner of the Big Questions. I get daily
glimpses of some fascinating idea to explore—it’s as exciting to me as gambling
or skydiving must be to others. I sometimes imagine myself as one of these
scholars, and then reality brings me down with a thud when I think of how much
I would have to learn to really grasp the complexities of a single area of my
multi-disciplinary field, how much Greek philosophy or Latin philology or
cultural anthropology I would need to study, not to mention the German and
French I would need to learn to read the big works in those fields. Probably my
other life as an academic needs to remain as the road less traveled. But once
in a while the heavens open up, and the angels of learning throw down a shaft
of pure bliss (nerd division).
I had one of those recently in Hebrew class. I am already
predisposed to loving Hebrew—I love everything about it, the sound of the
words, the elegant calligraphic beauty of the letters, the deep pools of
meaning that can be contained in a single word. Our class had been introduced
early in the semester to group of Hebrew letters called matres lectionis, “mothers of reading,” which our tutor calls the
mother letters. Sometimes these words are used as consonants or vowels, but
other times they have a special function, to be little pointers that alert the
reader to notice the way certain vowels work. Occasionally our tutor would say,
pay attention to the mothers and I would think, word to the wise.
So, we were sitting one day recently in our small tutorial
group going over our vocabulary words for the week. One of my classmates was
puzzling over a word, saying, why doesn’t this one have any vowels, and then we
realized that the word was the Tetragrammaton, the four letters, YHWH, that
represent the holy name of God. The ancient Jews that preserved the text of the
Hebrew Bible believed that name is too sacred to be spoken by the profane
mouths of mortals, so they came up with this holy monogram. When it appears in
the text, the lack of vowels reminds the reader not to vocalize those letters,
but to substitute another word, Adonai, which means “Lord.” If you see the word
LORD in small caps in your Bible, that’s the Tetragrammaton. There are others
words that mean God used sometimes, but this word represents, not just the
concept of God, but God’s name, the answer God gives to Moses when Moses asks
who God is, what name he should use when going to the Egyptians to seek the
freedom of the enslaved Hebrews. That answer, as a word, is a verb, a verb of
being, which you could translate as “I am who I am,” or “I will be who I will
be.” This points towards some ideas about the nature of God, the dynamic
character of God who exists beyond—well, everything—beyond the limits of
language, our small imaginations, the way we try to control things by naming
and dissecting them, beyond our desire to have neat categories and solid
answers, toward a realm of God’s continual renewing, becoming, inviting.
That day in Hebrew class as we sat around the table,
reflecting on the holy name, one of my classmates pointed to the four letters
again and said, “Have you ever noticed that all four of the letters are mother
letters?” We all looked at each other, quiet for a moment, soaking in the
perfection of that metaphor. These letters, YHWH exist to do what mother
letters do, to be like arrows, pointing towards a reality so big, words don’t
really cover it, so glorious we can really only stutter with awe. And so this
word, this name, made up of mother letters is the ultimate big flashing neon
sign of a pointer, saying, look around. You are breathing the air that is God
every second of your life. Pay attention! You don’t want to miss this!
The mother letters are kind of like Mother Wisdom, gently
pointing us toward the Big Questions, and reminding us to be aware that words
have great power, not only the sacred name of our creator, but all words. The
great Jewish thinker Abraham Joshua Heschel said, “Words create worlds,” and he
may have been referring to the way, in the creation story, that God says the
word “light,” and light comes into existence in the world. And he also meant
that the way we name our reality shapes that reality. In large ways and small,
the respect and compassion with which we speak becomes the compassion we can
imagine and therefore give, which the world so desperately needs. The mothers
guide us away from falseness and self-seeking toward the becoming of more
justice, more kindness, more room for God’s big ideas to take root and make the
deserts bloom.
Photo credit:
Nubra River, Kashmir, India
Copyright by Yodod 2006