http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/dna-song-of-the-dog-in-the-symphony-of-creation/
The third portion of Exodus, Bo/Come, is read from the Torah scroll on Shabbat, January 16, 2016. See how my wife Miriam and I link this Torah portion to our life together through photographs and Torah Tweet texts at http://bibleblogyourlife.blogspot.co.il/2014/01/exodus-3-song-of-dog.html
The conceptual background for “DNA Song of the Dog in the
Symphony of Creation” is developed in my books PHOTOGRAPH GOD: CREATING A
SPIRITUAL BLOG OF YOUR LIFE http://photographgod.com
and THE FUTURE OF ART IN A POSTDIGITAL AGE: FROM HELLENISTIC TO
HEBRAIC CONSCIOUSNESS http://future-of-art.com.
EXODUS 3: SONG OF THE DOG
Bo/Come (Exodus 10:1-13:16)
“There shall be a great cry of anguish throughout all
Egypt.... But among the Israelites, no dog shall howl for man or beast.”
(Exodus 11:6, 7)
In Egyptian mythology, the Dog God Anubis gains its
powers from the howling of dogs at death to raise the soul to eternal
afterlife.
When the dogs did not howl, the plague of the death of
the first-born caused double anguish since eternal afterlife was denied.
The awesome quiet of the dogs at the freeing the
Israelites from slavery gives dogs an honored place in Judaism.
Every day, Miriam reads Perek Shira (Chapter of
Song) that gives voice to each creation to praise God together in a grand
symphony.
The climax of Perek Shira is the song of the dog, “Come!
Let us bow in humility and adoration, let us kneel before God our Maker.”
(Psalm 95:6).
The loyalty of a dog to his master provides a model for
human gratitude to God for everything in life.
Today, we saw the development of the highest level of
loyalty of a dog to its master at the Israel Guide Dog Center for the Blind
(see http://israelguidedog.org/
).
We witnessed dogs learning to control their instincts and
desires to become the reliable eyes of their blind human partners.
At the Center, we saw puppies bred to combine the docile
characteristics of the Labrador with chutzpah of the Golden Retriever.
The dogs learn to follow the commands of their human
partners, but to ignore them if they are in danger.
They learn to navigate obstacle courses at the Center and
then in the real world where their blind partners live and work.
Guide dogs turn the negative mitzvah to not place a
stumbling block before the blind to a positive mitzvah to avoid the block.
“Do not place a stumbling block before the blind.”
(Leviticus 19:14) “Accursed is one who causes a blind person to go astray on
the road.” (Deuteronomy 27:18)
GRAND SYMPHONY OF BIODIVERSITY
In addition to the song of the dog from Psalms, Perek
Shira presents biblical and rabbinic verses representing the songs of 64
other species of animals and plants. Every
species of living organism on our plant sings its distinctive praise of their
Creator. According to estimates made by
biologists, over eight million species of animals live on planet Earth. Each species sings its special song in
harmony with all the others to create a grand symphony of biodiversity.
Musicians write their musical compositions on a five-line
staff. God writes the distinctive song
of each species on rungs of DNA spiral ladders, the chromosomes in every cell
of the organism. The information for all forms of life from the amoeba to the
giant redwoods, from roses to elephants, from bacteria to whales, and from
onions to human beings, is written with an alphabet of only four letters like
the biblical Tetragrammaton YHYVH. They are A for adenine, T for
thymine, C for cytosine, and G for guanine. These letters spell four words:
A-T, T-A, C-G, G-C. Each rung of the DNA spiral ladder is written with one of these
words.
Human beings have 46 chromosomes. The sequence and number
of these words determines whether you have blue eyes or brown, whether you will
be short or tall, and whether you will be a genius or mentally retarded. During my first career as a science teacher,
I asked my students what would happen if they had 16 chromosomes instead of
46. When I told them that they’d be an
onion, they understood that all life forms are written with the same four
letters.
Here are some plants and animals with their verses from Perek
Shira in the order they appear in the book with their chromosome numbers:
The trees of the forest like the oak tree with 24
chromosomes, says: “Then all the trees of the forest will sing with joy,
before god – for He will have come to judge the earth.” (1 Chronicles
16:32)
The date palm with 26 chromosomes says: “A righteous
man will flourish like a date palm, like a cedar in the Lebanon he will grow.” (Psalms 92:13)
The sheaf of wheat with 42 chromosomes says: “A song
of ascents. From the depths I called
you, God” (Psalms 130:1)
The grasses with 55 chromosomes say: “May the glory of
God endure forever, let God rejoice in His works.” (Psalms 104:21)
The crane with 74 chromosomes says: “Give thanks to
Hashem with a harp, with a ten-stringed lyre make music to Him.” (Psalms
33:2)
The swallow with 70 chromosomes says: “So that my soul
might sing to You and not be stilled, my God, forever I will thank you.”
(Psalms 30:13)
The domestic goose with 80 chromosomes says: “Give
thanks to God, declare His Name make His acts known among the peoples. Sing to Him, speak of all His wonders.”
(Psalm 105:1-2)
The spider says: “Praise Him with clanging cymbals;
praise Him with resonant trumpets.” (Psalms 150:5) (There are tens of thousands of spider
species that differ in chromosome number.)
The cow with 60 chromosomes says: “Sing joyously to
the God of our strength, call out to the God of Judah.” (Psalms 81:2)
The donkey with 62 chromosomes says: “Yours, God, is
the greatness, the strength, the splendor, the triumph, and the glory, even
everything in heaven and earth.” (1 Chronicles 29:11).
The deer with 70 chromosomes says: “I will sing of
Your might, and rejoice towards morning in Your kindness.” (Psalms 59:17)
The elephant with 56 chromosomes says: “How great are
Your deeds, God, exceedingly profound Your thoughts.” (Psalms 92:6)
The bear with 74 chromosomes says: “The wilderness and
its cities will lift their voices; …those who dwell on bedrock will sing out.” (Isaiah
42:11)
The snake with 72 chromosomes says: “God supports all
the fallen ones and straightens all the bent.” (Psalms 145:14)
The ant with 40 chromosomes says: “Go to the ant, you
sluggard; see its ways and grow wise” (Proverbs 6:6)
The weasel with 44 chromosomes says: “Let all souls
praise God, Halleluyah!” (Psalms 150:6)
The dog with 78 chromosomes says: “Come! Let us bow in
humility and adoration, let us kneel before God our Maker.” (Psalm
95:6).
The Talmud teaches: “Had the Torah not been given, we
would have learned modesty from the cat, the prohibition of theft from the ant,
the prohibition of forbidden relationships from the dove, and the proper method
of conjugal relations from fowl.” (Tractate Eruvin 100b)
“He teaches us from the animals of the land, and from
the birds of the heavens He makes us wise.” (Job 35:11)
Each species sings its unique song in harmony with eight
million other members of the global orchestra to create a grand symphony of
biodiversity. The Symphony of
Creation is elegantly described in the last lines of Charles Darwin’s The
Origin of the Species:
“It is interesting to contemplate a tangled bank,
clothed with many plants of many kinds, with birds singing in the bushes, with
various insects flitting about, and with worms crawling through the damp earth,
and to reflect that these elaborately constructed forms, so different from each
other, and dependent upon each other in so complex a manner, have been produced
by laws acting around us.”
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