MIER 40 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU! Man Seeks God from page 47 world!' chronicling his personal jour- ney was natural. "I'm an exhibition- ist" If he experiences something, he writes about it. The nurse's question shocked him out of his spiritual lethargy. "I've been too busy running away from a faith I considered at best irrelevant, and at worst something of an embar- rassment, like the uncle at family gatherings who balances wineglasses on his forehead!' he confesses in his spiritual travel guide. "That was me: mildly curious about God, but not curious enough to actually do anything about it. A spiritual voyeur, at best. A hypocrite, at worst:' Weiner also had a very personal question to answer: "How do I want to raise my daughter?" So he started "shopping for God:' First, he read: "Tolstoy and Huxley and Merton and Heschel and Gandhi. I read a lot of William James:' Then the "determined traveler" hit the road. "I'm not interested in travel for travel's sake," Weiner says. "I'm inter- ested in travel for a reason. I need to get out of my element." Like to some place like the Bronx church where he ended up in a con- fession booth. "Forgive me, Father!' he said to the priest behind a partition, "but I'm not Catholic!' "'Yes, that's OK: he says!' accord- ing to Weiner's account, "but his voice betrays unease:' "I'm not even Christian. I'm Jewish!" "That's OK, my son, but ..." "Yes, Father:' "I have to do the mass now I'm already late. Can you come back in half an hour?" Weiner promises to come back. He doesn't. "The moment has passer he writes. "I feel like a failure at con- fessing, which is something else I will need to confess, eventually:' In each spiritual venue, he learned about other people's faith and chal- lenged his own lack thereof. From the Raelians, he learned about joy ("Religion and fun can mix"); from the Wicca, about the multiplicity of theological paths ("They have a diversified portfolio in a way that, say Jews, don't; if Hashem tanks, has a bad year, Jews have no recourse; we're screwed. Not so with Wiccans; there is always another god"). Along the way he refined his search. He's been unable to track down the nurse whose question spurred his quest, but he came to realize he was trying to answer "the wrong question:' The right question: "Are you headed in a direction?" "God is not a set of missing car keys or an exit on the New Jersey Turnpike he writes. "He is not a des- tination:" If Weiner did not find God, he found a way to look for God. In the end, Weiner investigated Judaism. He saved the most famil- iar — which for him had remained foreign — for last. "I was born Jewish. That's cer- tainly my religious heritage, but not necessarily my God, which is anoth- er matter altogether!' he writes. His parents had enrolled him in Hebrew school because of a "Jewish tradi- tion — guilt," but he found it "much less relevant to my life than, say, breakfast:' "You could say I'm a self-hating Jew, but that's not quite accurate he writes. "In order to hate something, you need to know it, at least to some extent, and I didn't know enough about Judaism to hate it:' Weiner says his time in Safed, Israel's mystical city up north, spending Shabbat with the city's mellow residents — "children of a less uptight God!' he calls them — and studying the tenets of Kabbalah showed him a face of his religion he had never learned in Hebrew school. His spiritual flirting days over, he's settled down with his own brand of Judaism. He's more comfortable with it and says he sees it "as something of value:' And now he is even bringing some rituals into his home. "Instead of looking for my God, I must invent Him!' Weiner writes. "Not exactly invent. Construct:' Think IKEA Judaism. "Some assembly required:' Which is how Judaism is practiced in the Weiner household. "I now look forward to the Jewish holidays at my brother's house he writes. "When my daughter, now almost 7, speaks of God, I no longer wince. I observe the start of the Sabbath, though not as often as I should. I meditate, though not very well or for very long. I say grace before meals, though sometimes I forget:' Not long after leaving the Ethiopian cafe, he would share a Shabbat meal with his family. Candle lighting. Kiddush. HaMotzi. "The whole thing takes 90 seconds!' he says. "We do the speeded-up version:' But, Weiner says, he finds meaning in the level of Judaism to which his search brought him "Sometimes!' he says, "what you're looking for is right under your nose:' ❑ r 1 Purchase of ' I I II $10.00 II 1 IN II 1 or more I I I I gat I I 1 I Not valid with any other offer. Not valid on breakfast specials.: 1 1 i I With coupon. 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