There was once a king who ruled his kingdom with wisdom and compassion. As he approached the end of his days, everyone in the kingdom wondered who would be the next ruler. Would it be one of his children? An adviser? A general?

To keep the contenders from fighting over the throne, the king put his instructions in a letter, which was to be opened only on the day of his death. It named the person who would succeed him on the throne.

When that day arrived, the kingdom mourned its wise and caring leader. And then all eyes turned to the king’s letter to see who would rule in his place. With great ceremony, the prime minister opened the letter and read the instruction. Who had the king chosen? Not one of his children, nor an adviser, nor a general. The king had chosen the jester. The jester would be crowned king!

The jester? Everyone in the kingdom thought this must be a joke. How could a fool be king? But such were the king’s instructions. And so, the jester was brought before the royal court. Royal retainers removed his jester costume and cloaked him in the robes of the king. They removed his jester hat and crowned him king. And they sat him on the royal throne.

At first the situation was awkward—for the new king as well as his kingdom. But over time, it turned out to have been a brilliant choice. The jester was every bit as wise, as compassionate, and as insightful as the old king had been. He listened to everyone with care—advisers, generals, even the commoners of the realm. He treated everyone who came before him with respect and with kindness. He used his powers to bring peace and prosperity to his kingdom. To the amazement of all in the royal court, the jester came to be a superb ruler. And everyone in the royal court, indeed, everyone in the kingdom—came to love him.

There was a mystery surrounding the jester-king, however. Every so often he would retreat to a distant room in the palace, a room to which only he had the key. For a few hours he would lock himself in that room. And then he would return to the throne and resume his duties. Most members of the royal court assumed he went to the room to think, to meditate, or perhaps to pray. They accepted the mystery as part of their beloved king’s life.

Once an ambassador came from a far-off land. The ambassador spent many hours with the king. He grew to appreciate the king’s wisdom and his kindness. It was rare, he thought, for a king to listen as carefully as this king listened. It was unusual for a king to seek advice from everyone who appeared before him. It was remarkable for a king to care as deeply and to work as hard for the good of his subjects as this king did.

When the ambassador noticed that the king occasionally disappeared into his distant room, he wondered, “What does the king do in that locked room? Why does he go there? What is it in that room that helps him rule with such wisdom and kindness?” The ambassador just couldn’t let go of the mystery. So one day when the king retreated to his room, the ambassador secretly followed behind. When the king closed the door, the ambassador crouched down and peered through the keyhole. There he took in the king’s great secret.

In the privacy of the room, the king took off his crown and his royal robes and put on the costume of a jester. Around and around the room he danced the jester’s dance, making funny faces and singing the silly songs of a jester. Then he stood before a great mirror and recited to himself: “Never forget who you are. You may look and sound and act like the king, but you are only the jester. You are only the jester pretending to be the king. Never forget who you are.”

Now the ambassador understood it all. He understood the source of the king’s deep wisdom. He understood that the king’s kindness and greatness emanated from his humility. And now he knew the secret of the king’s humility. This knowledge made the ambassador love the king even more deeply. He vowed his everlasting loyalty to the king. And he vowed to keep the king’s secret.

Over the years the king and the ambassador grew close. One day when they were alone, the ambassador confessed what he had done and what he had seen. “I promise you on my life that I will never reveal your secret,” he declared. “But there is one thing I have never been able to figure out: Of all the people in the royal court whom the old king could have chosen to succeed him, why did he choose you? Why did he choose the jester?”

The king smiled at his friend and replied, “And who do you think he was before he became king?”

Commentary

On the surface, the story’s message is that enlightened leadership flows from humility.

On a deeper, spiritual level, we each have an inner chamber into which we can retreat. It’s a place where our soul flourishes. You might even call it the place where our soul is energized by the Divine. In this inner chamber we shed our worldly garments—the role we must play, our lack of empathy, our disappointment, our cynicism, our despair, our shame. All these weights are removed. We don robes of levity to achieve a levitation of the spirit. We dance and we sing.

I want to invite you to make these holy days a time for entering your inner chamber. Throughout these services, I invite you to make a concentrated effort to shed the spiritual muck that we have accumulated over the year and has hardened, layer by layer, encasing our soul. Peel back the roles we play, the hardening of the heart, the disappointment, the cynicism, the despair, the shame. And sit, immerse during these holy days in that place of naked purity.

Then, when we reconvene three weeks from tonight for Simchat Torah, and we take up the Torah to the melodies of a klezmer band, your inner light will shine, and the song and dance of your soul will radiate from your spirit.

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