Have you ever heard of the phrase, “To call a fig a fig and a trough a trough”? Probably not. This is the original Greek phrase that over time turned into the popular idiom, “Call a spade a spade.” This term is a figurative expression that refers to calling out something “as it is” without beating around the bush, but rather, speaking truthfully, frankly, and directly about a topic. In short, it means to tell it like it is! (And no, a spade has nothing to do with a deck of cards, but rather the gardening tool.) 

If you think about it, most people on our planet spend their time “beating around the bush” and ignoring the truthful reality of our world. Western culture has put an emphasis on instant gratification and a lifestyle that values lust, money, and fame. There is an inherent flaw in the Western culture system, in that, it fails to call a spade a spade. It neglects to recognize the world for what it truly was created to be. It disregards the purpose of the human beings very existence. Instead, Western culture, more than anything, actually makes the people on this world more ignorant; ignorant from reality, ignorant about the world’s purpose, ignorant of their personalistic life mission, and ignorant from the truth. 

But, no worries, they even have a popular phrase to back them up: Ignorance is bliss. It’s apparently good to not know things. It’s apparently good to be unknowing of life’s most important questions. It’s apparently good to be straight up foolish. Right? Wrong!  

Ignorance is not bliss. It can’t be. As Thomas Jefferson once said, “If ignorance is bliss, why aren’t more people happy.” If the Western culture and ideology was indeed accurate, a lot more people should be living on a high and experiencing happiness. But they aren’t. Because ignorance is not bliss. It’s just plain old foolish. 

In Judaism, we believe that knowledge is bliss. The more we “call a spade a spade” and see the world for the truthful reality that it is, the happier we will be. The more we don’t ignore, but focus on life’s most important questions and take time to navigate our life mission, the more we will experience a life of meaning and joy.  

In a world that was filled with tremendous לכלוך, dirtiness and lowliness, Avraham Avinu found the courage to heed the calling of לך לך. The Sfas Emes says (based on a Zohar) that the calling of לך לך was for everyone, but it was only Avraham Avinu who actually listened. Everyone else was busy with their לכלוך, busy with their personal egotistical and self-gratifying agendas and pursuits. They beat around the bush, didn’t call a spade a spade, and ignored the reality of what was taking place. 

Avraham Avinu, in contrast, overcame the לכלוך and tapped into לך לך. He chose not to ignore, but to explore. He chose to live by connecting to reality. He chose to live by thinking about his purpose and his personalistic mission. He chose to live by the truth.  

He chose a life of knowledge, a life of true bliss. My friends, we can do the same. 

Have a holy Shabbos!