Faith
Faith Triumphs Over Sorrow In Difficult Times
Faith Facts
- Tisha B’Av marks the tragic destruction of Jerusalem, yet only in faith can ultimate hope and redemption be found.
- True repentance and intentional righteousness are needed over hollow religious practice to avoid repeating the failures of the past.
- Throughout history, even in exile and suffering, God’s promises of hope and restoration endure, culminating in the hope of redemption.
The Fast of Av, or Tisha B’Av, reminds the faithful of the profound loss when Jerusalem was destroyed not once, but twice. For believers, it stands as a somber occasion—yet within it, glimmers the promise that faith and hope persist, even in mourning.
Rabbi Shear Yashuv Cohen, deeply committed to Jerusalem, reflected on the city’s unique nature:
“I profoundly love this city. I love her because she is a city of contradictions and conflicts. I love her for her twists and turns, her hopes and despairs… For, in the midst of the squabbling, the in-fighting and the dissent, one thing unites all Jerusalemites; their unique love of Jerusalem, a love like no others: ‘Seek the peace of Jerusalem; may they prosper that love thee’ (Psalms 122:6).”
Even within turmoil, the enduring love for Jerusalem unites people, ultimately bringing peace not through ease but through resilience—lessons echoed throughout Scripture and in the Christian walk.
Scripture reveals that the First Temple’s fall was due to the grave sins of idolatry, immorality, and bloodshed, while the Second Temple’s destruction stemmed from “sinat chinam”—baseless hatred. Despite apparently keeping outward commandments, inward division can undo even the most pious community, a timeless warning to value true unity, humility, and God-honoring intention over complacency and routine.
The prophet Micah provides guidance: “to do justice, love kind deeds and walk unobtrusively with God” (Micah 6:8). Righteousness, compassion, and humble faith are always needed. Without right intention and genuine love, even good deeds fall short. Historical failures can be traced to hearts grown cold by habits and pride.
During the Second Temple period, God’s prophetic voice grew silent, and the Shekhina—the Divine Presence—departed. Sacrifices continued, but unity and divine blessing faded, finally giving way to exile and suffering under pagan rule. Even so, the darkness was never total.
In the bleakest moment, rabbinic tradition reminds us, hope was born: “From the moment the Temple was destroyed, the Messiah was born.” This profound truth assures that even as oppression deepens, God’s deliverance is being prepared. Prophets like Amos spoke hope in dark times: “She has fallen. No more. Rise, virgin of Israel.” That hope, often overlooked, is vital to the faith-driven life.
Turning to Lamentations (Eicha), the prophet Jeremiah’s record of tragedy for Jerusalem also finds a turning point amid pain:
“My soul remembers well and makes me despondent. Yet this is how I respond to my heart. Therefore I still hope. I have hope in Him [God].”
In Hebrew, “hope” carries the sense of waiting in expectation—sometimes through struggle and sometimes in patient quietness. Both forms matter for a life of faith, as Jeremiah wrote: “The Lord is good to those who hope/wait patiently… Let one sit in solitude and silence… there may yet be hope [tikvah].”
This passage echoes Isaiah’s call to humility and readiness to “turn the other cheek,” and resonates deeply with believers enduring hardship and waiting for God.
Crucially, the faithful are not called to rote acts or external habits, but to take responsibility, to “search and examine our ways and then return right up to the Lord.” Real repentance—teshuvah—reaches God’s throne and brings transformation. As the Talmud teaches, “Great is teshuvah [return/repentance], for it reaches right up to the Throne of Glory.” Genuine worship combines hands and hearts, justice and mercy, in all things striving to walk humbly as Micah urged.
God’s voice is often found not in the spectacle, but in the “still small voice” of quiet conviction, as Elijah discovered. Endurance, faith, and continual return to the Lord build the foundation for lasting hope and national renewal.
One week after Jerusalem’s reunification in 1967, hundreds of Jews marched in unity to the Western Wall, fulfilling ancient hope and prophecy. Rabbi Shear Yashuv Cohen walked with the revered Reb Aryeh Levin, who whispered:
“My whole life I have not been able to understand what is meant by those words of Scripture: ‘When the Lord accompanied the captivity of Zion on their return— we were like dreamers’… But now I understand. It is characteristic of a dream that in a single instant a person can see events that have actually taken place over a long period… Through a dream moment you comprehend a whole era, a whole history, a whole story. In that very instant you experience the entire existence of generations past… This is exactly what is happening to us now… How fortunate we are to merit this moment, the moment of the rebirth of Israel the moment when Am Yisrael are once more in control of the City of Jerusalem. How fortunate we are to be worthy of reaching these times: the times of the beginning of the redemption. And if we all do Teshuva right now and repent, there is no doubt that redemption will soon be complete.”
This account powerfully testifies to God’s faithfulness amidst affliction. For Christians and Jews alike, such moments confirm that even in exile or persecution, the Lord’s promises endure and can bring joy from mourning.
As we remember destruction, let us live out hope—striving for righteousness, walking humbly, and trusting that redemption is always near for those who remain faithful. May God grant that our times of sorrow become seasons of joy, and that faith always triumphs over despair.