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Rabbi Lord Sacks

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Rabbi Lord Sacks,

Rabbi Lord Sacks

Opinion

Why the world needs Rosh Hashanah

The former Chief Rabbi says the solution to the global moral crisis lies in the message of the High Holy Days

September 6, 2018 14:24
GettyImages-513276504 (1)
Religious leader and philosopher Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks, gestures during a press conference in central London on March 2, 2016. Rabbi Sacks was named the winner of the 2016 Templeton Prize. The Templeton Prize honours a living person who has made "an exceptional contribution to affirming life's spiritual dimension, whether through insight, discovery, or practical works", according to the Templeton Foundation, which presents the award. / AFP / BEN STANSALL (Photo credit should read BEN STANSALL/AFP/Getty Images)
4 min read

On Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur and the days between, we enact one of Judaism’s most powerful yet unfashionable beliefs: that our lives individually and collectively have a moral dimension.

We may live most of the year as if what matters is success or fame or power or wealth. But on these holy days, we come together in the synagogue to stand before God and acknowledge two altogether deeper truths: that we are the good we do in the world, and we are accountable for the bad we did or the good we failed to do.

This year, courtesy of the BBC, I had a rare chance to discuss these beliefs with some of the finest minds in the world. In the course of making a series of programmes on moral challenges of the 21st century, I met leading philosophers, thinkers, innovators and philanthropists, as well as sixth-form students from across the country. What they had to say was powerful, important and necessary.

The thesis I wanted to test was that, for the past 50 years the West has been engaged in a fateful experiment: that we can do without a shared moral code. Words that once guided us — like “right”, “wrong”, “ought”, “should”, “duty”, “obligation”, “loyalty”, “virtue”, “honour” — now have an antiquated air about them, as if they come from an age long dead.