What is faith, any faith really about? Is it about philosophical debates? Is it nothing more than theological wrangling? Or could it be something much closer to home for most of us? Could it be about the big questions in our everyday lives, and the spiritual tools we need to address them?
My recent post, Proof of God's Existence, drew an interesting response from regular reader and interesting commenter, Laura Mushkat, which got me thinking about this. Frustrated by what she perceived as a disconnect between my post's title and the piece itself, which deals with a family tearing itself apart over a grandfather's will, and her desire share her own theological musings about the ability to prove God's existence, she writes:
ALRIGHTY THEN! Very clever headline for a mundane subject. Was all set to come here to write about why we should or should not require proof the good Lord exists. Instead we have a will and a family fight! OMG! (SARCASIM)
Well Laura, there is nothing mundane about a family that allows their father and grandfather's legacy to destroy their family. Unless by mundane, you mean commonplace. In which case, I would sadly have to agree. These kinds of family fights occur everyday, and all too often, one or both sides invoke God or tradition to "prove" that they are correct. And it's not that I am opposed to people believing that they are correct, or to believing that their interpretation of God's will is correct. But how come we don't see people invoking God that way to hold the family together, despite their disagreements about "what God wants"? Isn't that kind of commitment to each other also a religious issue?

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Author, radio and TV talk show host, and President of CLAL-The National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership, Brad Hirschfield is the author of 


