Rabb Pini Dunner’s Hero System

In 1941 Rabbi Shmuel Yitzchok Hillman (1868-1953) wrote thirty-two pages on the tractate Shabbat. Eighty-three years later Pini Dunner (born September 25, 1970) carries those pages into the official residence of the President of Israel, except now they run to more than five hundred. He has spent years feeding the seed. Each line of the dead man gets a paragraph of the living one, a citation, an explanation, a footnote that holds the comment up to the light and turns it. President Isaac Herzog (b. 1960), great-grandson of the author, calls it an amazing achievement and a tribute to his great-grandfather’s legacy, and turns the pages, and the dead rabbi speaks again in a room in Jerusalem.

Hold that scene. A man spends the strength of his middle years making a dead man speak.

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) gave us the frame for reading a life like this one. In The Denial of Death he argued that man is the animal cursed with knowing he will die, that the knowledge is unbearable, and that every culture hands its members a hero system, a scheme by which a single mortal earns a place in something that does not rot. The scheme can be a nation, a church, a bloodline, a body of law, a stack of patents, a name carved in stone. Becker borrowed from Otto Rank (1884-1939) the idea that two fears press on us at once. One is the death fear, the dread of going out like a candle. The other is the life fear, the dread of standing alone as a separate creature, exposed, responsible for the whole weight of an unrepeatable self. A hero system answers both. It promises you will not vanish, and it folds your lonely self into something larger so you need not carry it by yourself.

Dunner’s hero system has a clean shape, and the shape is fidelity to a chain.

His grandfather, Rabbi Josef Hirsch Dunner (1913-2007), held the title of last Chief Rabbi of East Prussia before the war. The title names a world. East Prussian Jewry no longer exists. Men with rifles and ledgers erased it, and the title now points at smoke. His father, Aba Dunner (1937-2011), spent his working life as an activist for European Jewry, advocating for the survivors and their institutions. Pini Dunner stands third in that line, ordained at Beth Medrash Govoha, the strictest of pedigrees, and his life reads as one long answer to the question the smoke poses. The answer is the chain from Sinai. Each Jew receives the tradition from the hand of the one before and passes it to the hand of the one after, and the chain does not break, and a man who adds a link defeats the murderers in the only court that stays open. To preserve the text is to win. To transmit is to live forever.

Watch the answer take different forms.

In 1998 a group of philanthropists asks Dunner to build a synagogue in Maida Vale, and the Saatchi Synagogue becomes a magnet for single Jewish professionals with postgraduate degrees and good salaries and no one to marry. The conservative establishment dislikes the promotion. The methods strike them as worldly, the social events as too clever by half. Picture the older men reading the flyers and frowning. Picture the young woman in her late twenties, a lawyer or a registrar, who walks in because a friend swore it was not like the others. Under Becker’s reading the criticism misses the point and the young woman finds it. A synagogue full of single Jews who marry each other produces Jewish children, and Jewish children are links, and links are immortality made of flesh. The chain wants bodies as much as it wants books.

The agunah campaign follows the same logic. From 1999 Dunner makes noise about the chained women, the wives whose husbands refuse them a Get and so trap them outside remarriage. A woman in that state cannot make new links. The law that should free her becomes a cage, and a few men hold the key and enjoy holding it. Dunner sides with the women against the men who use the law to stop the chain. The fight looks like chivalry. Under the frame it reads as defense of transmission against those who would freeze it for spite.

In 2002 he goes on Top Gear and comes fifth in the first Fastest Faith race. A rabbi at the wheel on a British motoring show, comfortable in the worldly arena, neither hiding the beard nor apologizing for it. He courts the world rather than fleeing it. The hero system here does not retreat to the study. It drives the car, takes the award from AIPAC, debates Dennis Prager (b. 1948) at the Saban Theatre on whether men come into the world good, and republishes a dead rabbi with a sitting president. The man wants the chain to be seen.

Then there is the collection. Dunner gathers the books and periodicals and manuscripts of Jewish controversy, the heretics and the false messiahs and the rebels, and he writes Mavericks, Mystics and False Messiahs and Rebel Rabbi of London. When COVID arrives and death moves close, he turns a camera on his shelves and shows strangers his objects across a lockdown. A man who keeps the records of dead troublemakers in his own hands is building a private vault against oblivion. The objects outlived their owners. He holds them, and by holding them he holds off the candle going out.

So far so coherent. Now the part you have asked me to open up, because the same sacred words mean different things to different men, and Dunner’s words mean what they mean only inside his system.

Take continuity. For Dunner continuity is the chain, and to drop a link is to finish the murderers’ work. For a Hindu renunciant, a sannyasi who walks away from home and name and caste, continuity is the wheel, samsara, the very thing he labors to escape. The chain binds him to return and suffer again, and his whole discipline aims to step off it. He earns release by cutting the line, not by lengthening it. For a founder in a glass building south of Market Street, continuity is the incumbent, the legacy code, the slow company he means to disrupt. He wins his name through the unprecedented, the thing that breaks the chain rather than extends it. Three honorable men, one word, three opposed labors.

Take memory. For Dunner memory does holy work. The names of the dead, the annotation that resurrects a comment, the volume that makes Hillman speak in Herzog’s drawing room. To forget is to kill a man a second time, and after the smoke the second death looks like collaboration. For an evolutionary biologist who has made his peace with the universe, memory is the genome and nothing else, selection’s ledger, and the individual leaves no trace worth grieving. To mourn forgetting is a sentiment the cosmos does not share, and the mature hero stops asking it to. For the Stoic, Marcus Aurelius (121-180) at his camp on the Danube, remembrance is vanity, since those who remember you will themselves die soon, and the man who builds monuments against death has merely changed the shape of his fear. The Stoic conquers death by indifference. Dunner conquers it by inscription. Same reverence at the grave, opposite cure.

Take the book. For Dunner the book sits near a body. Worn ones get burial in a genizah. He grows thirty-two pages to five hundred out of love, and the page is a vessel that carries a soul across time. For a Māori carver the record does not live on a page at all. It lives in the carving, in the whakapapa spoken aloud in the meeting house, in the line recited from the living mouth, and the man who pins the word to paper might be seen as stopping the breath of a thing meant to keep breathing. For the founder, the book is documentation nobody reads, to be deprecated in the next release.

Take the rebel, since Dunner loves him. Inside Dunner’s system the maverick is a thrill and a warning, and Dunner himself promotes unorthodoxly, the rebel who stays in the house and keeps the blood warm. For a Carthusian in his cell, rebellion is pride, the first sin, the move that cast the angel down. The hero there empties the self into the Rule and the silence, and to stand out is to fall. For a soldier in a rifle squad, rebellion breaks the unit, and the unit is the only thing between him and the dark, so the man who breaks ranks commits the worst act he knows.

Every hero system charges a price, and Becker insisted on naming it, so honesty asks me to name Dunner’s. A life built on the chain can curdle into worship of the chain. It can grow frightened of the new, anxious about who counts as a true link, quick to treat the living tradition as a museum with a rope across the door and a guard at the case. The fear of life that the system soothes can come back as a fear of anything the system did not already contain.

Here the empathy you asked for becomes an honest reading rather than a kindness. Dunner pays the price lightly, and the proof sits in the texture of the life. A man frightened of the new does not collect the false messiahs and the heretics and put them on camera. A man worshipping the museum does not drive a car on Top Gear or fill a synagogue with single lawyers or take the women’s side against the men holding the Get. Dunner keeps the blood in the tradition. He loves its rebels and courts its world and fights for its chained daughters, and he does this while never once dropping the link he was handed. Against the particular century he was born into, the century that turned his grandfather’s title into a name for smoke, the chain is not vanity. It is fidelity, and fidelity to the murdered is honorable, and a man can build no cleaner answer to annihilation than the one Dunner has built, which is to spend his strength making the dead speak and the unmarried marry and the chained free.

Return to the lockdown. The plague is loud outside. A rabbi sits with a camera and his shelves and shows strangers the controversies of Jews three centuries gone. He turns the old pages toward the lens. He is telling the people on the other side of the screen the one thing his whole life has been arranged to say. These men did not vanish. I am holding them. Neither will you.

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The Eternal Chain: Rabbi Yitzchok Adlerstein and the Hero System He Tends

Three men sit behind a long table in a room off the main sanctuary. A young woman sits across from them. She has studied for two years. She keeps Shabbos, she has learned the brachot and the laws of family purity and the order of the festivals, and she has come this morning to be told whether she is now a daughter of Israel or still a stranger at the gate. One of the three men is Rabbi Yitzchok Adlerstein (b. 1950). The court he sits on decides who enters the Jewish people. Not who joins a congregation. Who enters the people. The distinction carries the whole weight of the morning.

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) gave the modern name for what that table protects. In The Denial of Death he argued that man is the animal who knows he will die and cannot bear the knowledge, and that almost everything man builds he builds against that knowledge. Culture, on this reading, is a hero system. It hands each man a script for cosmic significance and a route out of the grave. Some routes promise the literal kind, a soul that outlasts the body. Others promise the symbolic kind, the name remembered, the work that stands, the child who carries the line. The Jewish people own a hero system as old and as explicit as any in the Western record. The chain of transmission runs from Sinai to the table in that room, and the woman who crosses it becomes a link in something the death of any single Jew cannot end. The court guards the entrance to the deathless.

Becker took the architecture from Otto Rank (1884-1939), who described two terrors rather than one. The first is the fear of death, the dread of dissolving, of the body that rots and the self that ends. The second is the fear of life, the dread of standing alone as a separate man, of carrying one’s own freedom with no larger thing to answer to. A good hero system answers both. The yeshiva answers both at once. The man who gives his years to the Law defeats death by joining a chain older than any grave, and he defeats the terror of standing alone by becoming a link instead of a self, a bearer of something he did not invent and cannot lose. Adlerstein took that double cure young. He earned Phi Beta Kappa at Queens College and semicha from Yeshivas Chofetz Chaim under Rav Henoch Leibowitz (1918-2008), one of the last roshei yeshiva formed in the pre-war European mold. The two trainings do not sit together at rest. The secular degree teaches a man to ask what a text is and where it came from. The yeshiva teaches him to stand inside the text and submit to it. Adlerstein carries both, and the friction between them runs under everything he has written since.

His writing turns on a small set of sacred words. Mesorah. Humility. Truth. The words look stable. They are not. A sacred word is a slot, and each hero system fills the slot with its own deathless object, so that men who use the same word mean different rescues by it.

Take the wish to outlast the body. A geneticist runs a sequencing lab above the bluffs in La Jolla. She is forty-four and works fourteen-hour days. Ask her what survives a man and she answers without sentiment. The body is a vehicle the genes drive and discard. What survives is the line, the replicator, the information that copies itself down deep time long after the carrier rots. She has made her peace with the grave by widening the frame until her own death looks like one cell shedding off a thing that keeps going. Permanence, to her, is the gene.

A trumpet player works a club off Central Avenue four nights a week. He is sixty and his lip is going. Ask him the same question and he talks about a recording from 1961 that he still studies, and a phrase inside it that he lifted and passed to younger players who will lift it from him. He expects to die broke. He does not expect the phrase to die. Permanence, to him, is the lick that keeps getting played in other men’s hands.

A gunnery sergeant, retired, drives down from Twentynine Palms for the unit reunion every year. He does not pray much. He believes in the wall with the names on it and in the men who read the names aloud. He holds that a man lives as long as his people say his name in the right room. Permanence, to him, is the reunion.

Adlerstein takes the same wish and fills the slot with the chain. A Jew lives because Israel does not die, and Israel does not die because the Law passes hand to hand without a break, and his own portion of permanence is the Torah he transmits and the students who will teach what he taught. Four men. One wish. Four deathless objects, and no two of them the same. The word permanence carries each man’s private rescue and hides how little the rescues share.

Take humility, the word Adlerstein reaches for when an argument grows dangerous. The geneticist prizes humility too. Hers is the humility of method. She holds every claim open to overthrow, keeps the next experiment ready to kill the last one, and counts the willingness to be wrong as the highest discipline her work allows. Humility, for her, opens every door.

A Cistercian monk in the hills near the central coast prizes humility above the other virtues. His is the emptying kind. He works to thin the wanting self until little stands between him and God, whom he calls Him without strain. Humility, for the monk, is the subtraction of the self.

A founder in a glass office south of Market keeps humility on a laminated card by the door. Stay humble, stay hungry. His humility is a posture that keeps a man from missing the next thing that will eat his company. He treats ego as a bug to patch. Humility, for him, is a competitive edge.

Adlerstein fills the slot with bittul, the setting aside of private judgment before the mesorah. His humility runs the other way from the geneticist’s. Hers opens the load-bearing claim to overthrow. His closes it. When he meets a hard question, the conflict of Genesis with the age of the rocks, the gap between the spade in the ground and the story on the page, he does not throw the claim open. He calls for humility, and the call means the chain knows more than the link, and the link should bow. The rabbi and the geneticist both speak honestly. They send the same word in opposite directions.

Take truth. A scholar who reads the Torah as the academy reads any ancient book wants truth as correspondence, the text matched against the record of when men wrote and why, and he wants it whether or not the people survives the telling. A trial lawyer wants truth that survives cross-examination, built to a standard, provisional, the best a room can establish before a verdict. A novelist wants the truth of the human heart and will invent a whole town to reach it, holding that the made-up thing carries more truth than the minutes of any meeting. Adlerstein wants truth the chain can carry without snapping. He will grant that a problem is real. He grants it often, and the granting is the honest part. Then he subordinates the truth of the problem to the survival of the covenant, because a truth that ends the people is, in his hero system, the one truth he cannot afford to hold.

A secular reader watching all this thinks Adlerstein drew the hard assignment and the geneticist drew the clean one. The reader thinks the rabbi clings to an old shelter while the scientist stands out in the open air of fact. Becker spent a career taking that comfort apart. Nobody stands in the open air. The geneticist’s deep time is her cathedral. The founder’s disruption is his salvation drama, complete with a fall and a rebirth and a chosen remnant who saw it coming. The sergeant’s brotherhood is his afterlife. None of them subtracted the hero system. Each relocated it and then forgot the relocating, which is the part that lets a man feel he reasoned his way clear of what every other man only inherited. Adlerstein at least knows the name of what he serves. He has read the Maharal (c. 1512-1609) on why the Oral Torah resists the page. He has translated Be’er Hagolah and sat for years with the Netivot Shalom of the Slonimer Rebbe (Sholom Noach Berezovsky, 1911-2000). A man does not spend those years without learning that he stands inside a structure built against the dark. He does not pretend to stand outside one. The deep-time priest rarely matches that much honesty.

Most men tend one hero system and live among others who tend the same one. Adlerstein tends several at once and keeps them from looking at each other. Consider the room he works.

An evangelical donor in Orange County funds Jewish causes because his reading of scripture ties his own salvation to the standing of Israel. He needs the rabbi across the table to be the real thing, confident, unbroken, a Judaism with no cracks showing. The donor’s afterlife runs in part through the Jew’s fidelity. Doubt in the rabbi reads to him as a fault in the foundation of his own hope.

A rosh yeshiva in a Lakewood-adjacent world respects Adlerstein’s Chofetz Chaim pedigree and grants the man a hearing he denies a professor. His hero system holds that the chain stays pure by staying closed, that authority survives through insulation, no concession to outside categories. He listens to Adlerstein only as long as Adlerstein never tells him the chain has human links.

A mother in Hancock Park sends her daughter to YULA because the school threads a needle. She wants a child who can hold a place at a secular university and still bentch after the meal. Her hero system is continuity through her children. She needs the rabbi to make Orthodoxy survivable in a world of admissions offices and dinner parties, and she needs him to do it without thinning the thing he preserves down to nothing.

A centrist reader of Cross-Currents wants depth without rupture. He wants to feel that a serious man has looked at the hard questions and stayed. His hero system needs a living example that honesty and the chain can share one body.

Each of these people runs an immortality project that direct contact with the others might crack. The donor cannot watch the rosh yeshiva treat his evangelical alliance as avodah zarah dressed for company. The rosh yeshiva cannot watch the professor read the Torah as a layered human document. The Hancock Park mother cannot watch either extreme without fearing for her daughter’s footing. Adlerstein stands at the junction and takes the friction onto himself. Becker had a word for what these audiences do to such a man. Transference. We hand the terror to a figure who seems able to hold it, and we let him carry what we cannot. Several of these audiences have handed Adlerstein that load. His calm is the thing they lean on. His silences are the tax he pays to keep the leaning possible. When he declines to say the destabilizing sentence, he protects no salary. He keeps the dark off four sets of people at once.

The pattern showed in the Slifkin affair. When the ban fell on Natan Slifkin (b. 1975) for writing that the sages erred on points of natural science, Adlerstein defended the man and defended the right to ask the question. He did not endorse the conclusion that might have followed had he pushed all the way. A full endorsement might have cost him more than standing. It might have cracked a hero system in plain view, shown the chain as possibly the work of human hands and so possibly mortal. He defended the man and the procedure and left the load-bearing claim alone. Read without sympathy, that looks like hedging. Read through Becker, it looks like a man refusing to pull the roof off a shelter full of people who have nowhere else to sleep.

The question worth pressing is how much of this he sees. A man can serve a hero system blind, mistaking the shelter for the open sky, or he can serve it with his eyes open, knowing the walls are walls and tending them anyway because the people inside are real and the cold outside is real. The years with the Maharal point to the second man. You do not translate a sixteenth-century defense of the Oral Torah against its rationalist critics without grasping that the tradition has always known itself under pressure and has always built to hold. Adlerstein writes like a man who knows the name of the thing he protects. He introduces a real tension, lets it breathe, then closes it with a call to humility or a turn to a higher synthesis, and the closing carries no innocence. It is a valve. Enough air to keep inquiry alive in the room. Not enough to burn the house. A man who builds a valve knows there is a fire.

Run the frame cold and Adlerstein shrinks to a functionary of terror, a man who manages other men’s fear of death for status and a teaching post. That reading costs more truth than it buys. The denial of death is not a vice he happens to have. It is the human condition. The geneticist and the founder and the sergeant carry it no less than the rabbi. Becker thought the most a man can do is choose his hero system with open eyes and offer it as a gift rather than force it as a weapon. By that test Adlerstein does well. He persuades. He translates. He hands people a structure they can live inside and does not pretend the structure is the sky. For the young man ravaged by illness (this was me in the early 1990s), his phone calls provide hope, strength and good advice.

Place him, then, on three readings. He names the terror with as little evasion as his position allows, a learned Jew who knows the chain is at once a gift from Sinai and a labor of human hands, and who does not flinch from holding both. He offers his hero system as a gift. He wins assent by translation, and the honorable shelter is the one a man can choose to enter and choose to leave. And he carries an uncommon share of other men’s fear, because a junction bears the load of every road that meets there, and he chose to live at a junction.

Return to the room off the sanctuary. The woman waits for the verdict. Three men decide whether she crosses into the people that does not die. Adlerstein has spent his life at this table, the place where the deathless thing checks who comes in and the cold outside presses on the glass. He knows what the table is for. He knows the chain is older than he is and will outlast him if he does the work, and he knows that men built every link by hand, including the one he holds. He guards the entrance anyway. Call it moderation and you miss it. He tends a fire he knows is a fire, for people he knows will freeze without it.

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Rabbi Yitzchak Etshalom and the Two Terrors

The room sits behind the sanctuary, past the coat rack and the table with the cold coffee. Folding chairs. A whiteboard on wheels. Fluorescent tubes, one of them flickering. On a Tuesday night in Pico-Robertson, eleven people come to study Torah with Rabbi Yitzchak Etshalom, and he uncaps a marker and begins to draw a chart.

He writes four letters across the top. J. E. P. D. He marks the passages where God carries one name and the passages where God carries another. He notes the seam where the flood story tells itself twice, the count of the animals shifting from a pair to seven. He works the way a man works who has done this many times and still respects the material.

In the third row sits a retired cardiologist. He brings his own machzor, soft at the spine. He has davened these words for sixty years, in this building and the one before it. He watches the chart fill, and somewhere around the second doublet he feels the floor give a little under his chair.

The system exists to prevent this.

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) gave us the frame. A man knows he will die. He also knows, in some back room of himself, that he is an animal that eats and rots like the others. Against this he builds, or inherits, a hero system: a scheme of meaning that lets him feel he counts for something death cannot cancel. The culture hands him the scheme at birth. Be a good soldier. Be a great scientist. Raise sons. Keep the commandments. Each system promises the same prize under a different name. You will not be nothing.

Becker named two terrors, and they pull against each other. The first is annihilation, the body in the ground, the self switched off. The second is insignificance, the life that adds to nothing, the man who was here and left no mark. A hero system answers both at once. It tells you that your small life feeds a large and lasting thing.

The cardiologist in the third row has lived inside one such system. The words in his machzor connect him to his father, to a chain he pictures running back through smoke and steerage and shtetl to a mountain in a desert. The chain is his answer to both terrors. When he dies the words continue, and he continued them, and so a piece of him does not die.

Etshalom draws a chart that asks whether the chain begins where the cardiologist thinks it begins.

Watch the word both men would use for what happens in that room. Emet. Truth. The cardiologist wants the truth and fears it in the same breath. Etshalom serves it as worship. To shrink the evidence, to tell the room the doublets are not there, would insult the God who made both the text and the mind that notices the seams. In his world truth and Torah issue from one source, so a lie told to protect the Torah is a sin against its Author.

That is one face of the word. It wears others.

In a lab on an upper floor of a research building, a molecular biologist runs the same assay for the ninth time. He wants a result. He has wanted it for two years, and a grant renewal hangs on it. Truth, for him, is what shows up when he stops wanting it, the number the machine returns whether he likes the number or not. A second lab in another city must return the same number, or the truth is not yet truth. His honesty is a discipline against his own hope. “If it doesn’t replicate,” he tells his postdoc, “it isn’t real, and I don’t get to argue.” His hero system is the impersonal result, the finding that outlives the finder, his initials on a fact that stands after the grant and the building and the man are gone.

Across town a homicide detective sits with a man in an interview room and waits. Truth, for him, is the closed case, the account that fits the blood and the timeline and the phone records, the version that holds up when someone pulls at it in court. He has watched honest men remember things that never happened and guilty men pass a polygraph. So he trusts the physical world and distrusts the human voice. “Everybody lies in here,” he says. “My job is the part that doesn’t change when they change their story.” His immortality runs smaller and harder. He stands for the dead who cannot speak. When he closes a case a family stops waiting, and that is the mark he leaves.

In a zendo the roshi sits and the question drops away. Truth, for him, lives below the words, in the place where the asking stops. The student comes with the big ones, did it happen, is it real, what survives. The roshi does not answer. He returns the student to his breath. The chart on Etshalom’s whiteboard might strike him as one more set of concepts to release. His freedom comes from wanting to be nothing, from meeting the second terror by walking through it. Where the cardiologist needs the chain to be real, the roshi needs nothing to be real, and finds his peace there.

A forensic accountant opens a company’s books at two in the morning. Truth, for him, reconciles. The number on the left equals the number on the right, or someone moved money he was not supposed to move. He does not care about motive or meaning. He cares whether the figures close. “Show me where it ties out,” he says, and when it does not tie out he has found his truth, which is a discrepancy and nothing grander. He serves a quiet god, the ledger that balances, and he leaves his mark in the frauds he names and the trust other men place in audited paper.

The same five letters spell the same word for all of them, and the word points at a different god in each room. The biologist’s truth is impersonal and lives in repetition. The detective’s truth is adversarial and lives in what the body cannot retract. The roshi’s truth is silence and lives in the end of grasping. The auditor’s truth is arithmetic and lives in the close of the ledger. Each man calls his discipline honesty, and each honesty serves the immortality his system offers. Becker’s point holds. The hero system shapes the virtue to fit the prize.

Etshalom’s truth runs strange and exposed.

He wants the impersonal honesty of the biologist. He puts the evidence on the board at full strength, the archaeology of the conquest, the thin trail of the Exodus, the war bulletins of Egypt and Assyria that claim total victory over enemies who march again the next season. He does not shrink the data so the answer will fit.

He also wants the chain the cardiologist needs, the line that runs to a mountain and forward past his own grave.

A lesser teacher resolves the strain. He picks one. The harmonizer keeps the chain and shrinks the data. The academic keeps the data and drops the chain. Etshalom refuses the trade.

He reaches instead for the method Rabbi Mordechai Breuer (1921-2007) built at Har Etzion, the reading of the text through aspects. The doublets and the name changes and the contradictions are not the fingerprints of four human editors. They are the deliberate work of an Author who speaks in more than one voice because the truth He tells cannot fit in one. Joshua reports a swift and total conquest. Judges reports a slow and partial one. Etshalom holds both books open on the table and closes neither. Joshua states the promise. Judges records the failure. The tradition keeps both because a man’s life holds both.

The move denies the academy its favorite story about itself.

The historical-critical reading presents itself as the plain residue of the evidence, the picture you reach when you subtract faith and superstition and look at the documents as documents. Strip the piety and here is what remains. Etshalom does not grant the premise. The academic reading is not the world with the faith removed. It is another hero system with its own priesthood, its own initiation, its own immortality in the footnote and the peer-reviewed name. The scholar who reduces the text to J and E and P and D has not escaped the need to outlast his death. He has joined a different chain, the one that runs through the seminar room and the journal, and he calls his chain neutral ground because every hero system calls its own ground neutral.

Seeing this is Etshalom’s quiet radicalism. He treats the documentary hypothesis as a rival faith rather than as the floor under all faith. That lets him stand on the board, chart and all, without falling through it.

He knows the cost of what he does. The cardiologist will go home unsettled. Some students will find the tension a home and some will find it a wound. My previous essay in this series called the result a double truth, the gifted conformist who performs certainty in public while he carries contingency in private. Etshalom manufactures that condition on purpose. He decides that an adult deserves the evidence more than he deserves comfort, and he accepts that the gift will cost some of them their simple faith.

He cannot prove the chain is real. He does not pretend he can. He stakes his life on the chain and tells you, with the chart still on the board, that it is a stake and not a proof. He could lower the cost by lying, and he will not lower it.

Place him among his neighbors. Hayyim Angel hands the student a difficulty and a resolution in the same hour, and the student leaves with an answer and a closed book. Marc Zvi Brettler hands the student the full academic reading and no road back, clarity at the price of the chain. Zev Farber tried to hold both and said the implications out loud, and the system moved him from insider to boundary case. Etshalom gives more evidence than Angel and more tradition than Brettler and more caution than Farber, and so the system cannot file him. It cannot endorse a man who will not close the question, and it cannot exile a man who keeps the commandments and quotes the sources and shows up on the OU’s own platform under a label that reads Advanced.

What he offers is a way to stay. He builds a small room where a literate adult can know what the archaeologists know and still wrap the words around his arm in the morning. The room is not for everyone. It asks for patience and a tolerance for the open question that most men do not carry. Those who can live there become a strange remnant, the ones who hold the tension without needing it sealed.

What it costs is the comfort of the sealed answer, on both sides. The harmonizer sleeps better. The academic argues cleaner. Etshalom can’t sleep. He stands at the one point where the honesty of the laboratory and the longing of the cardiologist meet, draws his chart, names his stake, and waits to see which the community wants more, the truth it claims to serve or the comfort it has learned to call truth.

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The Long Walk to Shul

A boy walks a mile to shul and a mile back, beside his father, in Cleveland, in the years when his father is one of the city’s rabbis and his grandfather, the man he is named for, leads a congregation in Chicago. Years later a reporter asks the boy, now a rabbi in his fortieth year on his own pulpit, for his favorite childhood memory. He gives him the walk. Not a sermon. Not a triumph. Not a crowd. The walk. Two men on a sidewalk, one small and one tall, going to the same place his grandfather went and his grandfather’s teachers went, in Lithuania, out of the Slabodka yeshiva, before the place that made them was burned off the earth.

Begin with Rabbi Elazar Muskin there, because the walk holds the whole thing for America’s greatest congregational rabbi.

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) built his work on a single hard claim. Man is the animal that knows he will die, and the knowledge is too much to carry, so he builds a scheme of meaning that lets him feel he counts inside a story larger than his body and longer than his life. Becker called these schemes hero systems. A man wants to be a hero. He wants his days to add up to something the grave cannot cancel. Religion is the oldest of these schemes and, Becker thought, the most honest of them, because it says the terror aloud rather than dressing it as a stock portfolio, a flag, or a body kept lean at the gym.

Muskin’s hero system has a name his shul put on its logo. Where Community Happens.

The word does the lifting, so look at the word. He takes it from Hillel, in Pirkei Avot: do not separate yourself from the community. He repeats the line in interviews the way other men repeat their own. At the Shabbos table in Cleveland the community was the family’s bread and butter, he says, and Israel sat front and center in the talk. So when he uses the word he means a thing with edges and weight. He means ten men for a minyan on a Tuesday morning. He means the eruv that lets a mother carry her baby to shul on Shabbos. He means the mikveh, the chesed roster that brings food to a house of mourning, the names you know when you walk the street on a Saturday because you have prayed beside all of them. Community, for Muskin, is the body that carries the covenant from his grandfather to a child not yet born. It answers death by outliving any one member of it.

Now say the same word in other rooms, and watch it change.

A founder says community and sees a graph. Users, a Discord server, a curve that bends up and to the right. The terror under his project is irrelevance, the fear that he will pass through the world and leave no dent, and his community is the proof of the dent, churning and renaming itself every eighteen months, immortal as a logo and as thin.

A battalion officer says community and sees the men he would die for and who would die for him. Blood, not metaphor. The community is the unit, the dead are kept on the wall, and a man earns his place in it by what he is willing to lose. The terror it answers is the small death of meaning a man feels who has risked nothing.

A Trappist monk says community and means the opposite of all of them. His community exists to wear the self away, not to extend it. He wants no monument, no logo, no children. The brothers hold him to a silence that empties him toward God, and the immortality he reaches for is the one that begins where the self ends.

A preacher in a storefront church on a poor block says community and the room comes off its feet. The community is the Body, filled with the Spirit, singing back what he calls out, and death is already beaten, so the dead are not gone, only ahead.

An Armenian whose grandparents walked out of Anatolia says community and means memory under threat. The community is a wound kept open on purpose, a refusal to let the killers finish the work by being forgotten. To assimilate is to die a second time, this one self-inflicted.

Same word. Five terrors, five answers, five men who would not recognize what the others are protecting.

And there is the room I keep. The tribalist, the nationalist, the man of the old loyalties who says community and means the people. The nation does not die when he dies. It received him from the dead and will hand him to the unborn, and his small life draws its weight from that long line. The terror it answers is the terror of the rootless modern, the man from nowhere with no graves to tend.

Muskin’s answer rhymes with this last one. He too has a line, four generations of rabbis and the millions behind them. He too has a soil. He ran T’chiya Volunteers for eleven years, sending American college students into Israel’s development towns, and after October 7 he led five missions to Israel, one behind the other, and pointed back to the Soviet Jewry marches of the 1980s as the model for what a people owes itself in public. He has a blood, the peoplehood that the protester on his own block meant when he told a Jew to go back to Europe. When that man pointed his finger like a gun, Muskin named the act and then refused to inflate it. This was not a pogrom, he said. He would not lie upward even about an enemy. That is a man with the nationalist’s loyalties and not the nationalist’s appetites.

The nationalist makes the people the highest thing, the god at the top of the ladder. Muskin makes the people a servant of the thing above the people. The covenant outranks the tribe. The soil is holy because of a divine promise, not the promise holy because of the soil. Strip the God off the top and the structure does not stand, and he knows it, which is why the word on the logo is community and not blood. Religious Zionism is the hinge that lets both loyalties live in one man without either eating the other.

You can see the project at the moment he chose it. He marries in Israel in January 1985 and comes west on his honeymoon that July, having never seen the coast. He locks himself out of his wife’s uncle’s house, takes himself on a tour of the shuls, confuses Pico for Olympic, and walks in the wrong door. A man stops him on the street. Young man, what do you do for a living. A rabbi, he says. On the walk home the same man tells him a small shul across town is looking. Fewer than fifty families. Beth Jacob is the empire, the largest Orthodox shul west of the Mississippi, and this is the opposite of Beth Jacob. He takes it. He says later that he had always wanted to build a shul, that he never wanted to step into another man’s shoes and run a thing already made. He wanted to start something and watch it grow. Forty years on the membership runs near ten times what he found. Man for man, this becomes the most powerful line-up in the city.

Becker would call that the work. The man does not want to inherit a monument. He wants to build the vessel that carries life past his own death, and to feel his hand in every brick of it.

The cost. Asked about his day off, he says he does not have one, and the shul knows it. He pays for the community with his own body and his own hours, year after year, and the bill never stops coming. A community with an inside has an outside, and the warmth that one man feels walking the street and knowing every face is purchased by the line that decides whose face counts. On October 26, 2007, a Friday night, a man held him up at gunpoint, the terror under the whole project arriving for one moment in the flesh, the death his life is built to answer pressing a barrel into the rabbi on his way home from the work of answering it.

What lifts him toward the honorable is what he does with that boundary. He widens it. If a man is not welcome in his shul, he lets the other shuls know about the danger. He doesn’t shrink from taking hard decisions. He was the first to back the eruv and put it in the dues, because an eruv serves every observant Jew in the neighborhood and not only his own. He gathered the rival shuls, Beth Jacob and B’nai David among them, to learn the Tisha b’Av elegies together, and kept them coming for more than twenty years. Young Israel is one piece of it, he says. Not the whole. Mayor Hahn put him on the city’s Human Relations Commission, and his colleagues made him the first Los Angeles rabbi to lead the national rabbinic council. A smaller man builds a fortress. Muskin builds a shul and then spends himself keeping its doors propped open onto the street.

So place him by three coordinates and let the reader judge.

He locates the sacred not in the self and not in the nation alone but in the covenant community that carries both under God. That is the apex of his ladder, and he has never pretended otherwise.

He answers the oldest terror by transmission. He does not pretend death away. He hands on the road his father handed him, and the road outlasts the man who walks it. The grandfather is a photograph on the wall now. The boy who walked beside his father is the man five hundred families walk toward on a Saturday morning.

And he pays the price on his own account, the day off he does not take, the gun on the dark street, the boundary he keeps widening at his own expense. Asked in his fortieth year how he is, he says he is happy. The shul is booming. He is working full-time. He means it, and a man who has read Becker hears under it the only victory the frame allows a mortal. He built the thing that will keep going to shul after he can no longer make the walk.

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Rabbi Yosef Kanefsky’s Hero System

A woman stands at the lectern in B’nai David-Judea on a Shabbat morning and gives the drasha. A few men in the room watch each other more than they watch her. One has walked up Pico from a shul where this never happens, and he keeps his eyes on his shoes. Another nods at every second sentence to show he came for exactly this. On the bimah Rabbi Yosef Kanefsky stays calm.

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) reads a room like this as a workshop for managing death. Man is the animal who knows he dies, and the knowledge sits past bearing, so every culture hands its members a script for earning a significance that outlasts the body. Becker calls the script a hero system and the prize an immortality project. The warrior wins it by courage, the scholar by the book that survives him, the father by the sons. The system tells a man what counts as a life that counted. Strip the system away and you have a mammal with a calendar, watching the days subtract.

Kanefsky’s immortality project is the covenant that runs from Sinai through him to the children in the back rows, and the man who keeps a link in that chain has beaten death in the only way Becker thinks open to anyone, by joining something that does not die. He came to this shul in 1996 and spent twenty-five years building it, and before that he trained in Riverdale under Avi Weiss (b. 1944), who taught the activist’s habit of treating the moral demand as a summons you answer with your body. The covenant carries a stain. The morning blessing thanks God for not having made the worshipper a woman. The tradition Kanefsky loves has kept half its members off the bimah and out of the count. An educated modern conscience flags this as cruelty, and here the terror sharpens past plain death into something worse for a believer. If the ark is rotten, boarding it saves no one. Kanefsky’s heroism is repair. Hineni, here I am, names the man who steps forward to keep the thing worth riding.

This is honorable, and the honor costs him. The right wing of his world calls him a defector and reads his dignity language as liberal priors in a kippah. Some to his left think he stops short. He stands in the draft between two doors and walks through neither, and the standing takes more nerve than either exit. Becker kept patience for the man who knows he needs an illusion to live and chooses a generous one over a cruel one. Kanefsky knows the boat has a hole. He bails. He will not step off it and he will not pretend the water stays low.

His sacred word is conscience. He treats it as the highest reading of the law, the voice that tells him when a ruling has wandered from the God who issued it. Conscience, though, is not one thing. The word points a different direction inside every hero system that uses it, and the men in those systems hear Kanefsky’s conscience as something other than what he means by it.

To the haredi posek, conscience is the yetzer, the inclination, virtue’s oldest disguise. His hero system runs on submission. He earns his place by adding nothing and losing nothing, by handing the tradition to the next link in the shape he received it. The private moral feeling that flares when the law wounds someone is, to him, the voice that ruined Korach, the man who told Moses the whole congregation is holy and meant himself. “You feel the law is cruel,” he might say. “The feeling is the test. Submit it.” In his account Kanefsky has mistaken the temptation for the call.

To the combat officer, conscience is the hesitation you train out of a man so the men on his left and right come home. His hero system spends the self for the unit. The willingness to die on command, and to send others to die, buys the only significance the system has on offer, which is the survival of the people beside you. A platoon sergeant told his lieutenant once that you start consulting your own heart in a firefight and somebody bleeds out waiting on you. To him a man who follows a private conscience under contact has nothing brave in him. He has become a hazard with good intentions.

To the effective-altruism technologist, conscience is a spreadsheet. The warm feeling in the room when the woman finishes her drasha registers as scope insensitivity, a bug in a brain built for fifty people on a savanna. His hero system scores a life by the sum it moves, the most suffering reduced at the largest scale, and the sum does not care how the reducing feels. He reads Kanefsky’s drasha as a rounding error a good man has taken for a mountain. Save the children dying of malaria, he says, and let the bimah sort itself out.

To the man raised in an honor culture, a Pashtun elder or a Neapolitan grandfather or an Osaka section chief, conscience is the face he cannot lose before the eyes that hold him. Shame, not guilt. His hero system seats a man’s worth in the regard of his own people, and a man who answers a voice inside his skull over the standing of his house has come loose from the only thing that makes him real. To him Kanefsky weighing a private conscience against the judgment of his elders looks like a son who has forgotten where he comes from.

Kanefsky’s conscience is the inward, guilt-shaped sense that flares when the tradition wounds the weak, and that treats the easing of that wound as the highest service a man renders the law. It makes clean sense inside his system. It reads as vice in the posek’s, as a hazard in the officer’s, as noise in the technologist’s, as shame’s opposite in the elder’s. The same fracture runs through his other holy words. Dignity, for Kanefsky, is the woman’s standing before God and the room. For the posek dignity is the modesty that keeps her off the bimah. One word, two floor plans.

My hero system is tribal, national, traditional. Its sacred value is continuity, the survival of the seed across deep time, the boundary that keeps a people a people for a thousand years instead of three generations. Its hero is the watchman on the wall. Its enemy is the solvent, the humane man who files the boundary down one decent inch at a time until the thing the wall protected has thinned into the sea around it. From that wall Kanefsky reads as erosion with a kind face, retention bought by softening the edges that did the retaining.

The honest watchman owes something back. He cannot show that the wall holds the people better than the soft door does. He can say only that he loves the people more than he trusts any private conscience, and that his love runs on a hero system too, another way to feel he counts in a span longer than his life. The man on the wall and the man at the bimah flee the same terror by opposite roads. Each calls the other’s road the dangerous one. Neither stands on ground that lies beneath illusion. They have each chosen one and held it hard enough to act.

The question Becker leaves on the table is whether a man knows his hero system to be one among many. We will be strong and resolute, Kanefsky writes, because that is what you do when you are right. The line treats his conscience as the floor of the world rather than the floor of his system. He takes the parochial for the universal, which is what conscience feels like from the inside in every system that grows one. Becker does not scold him for it. The man who could see his immortality project as merely his, in full clarity, every morning, could not rise to defend it. The illusion has to bear weight. What Kanefsky does better than his critics grant is hold it loose at the edges. He concedes the female clergy member fits poorly in many shuls. He stays inside the world he criticizes. He bails the boat and refuses to burn it.

Place him on three lines. The terror he flees is less death than the corruption of the vehicle that has to outlast death, the fear that the thing built to carry him past the grave has rotted in the hold. What his heroism buys is survivability for the congregant halfway out the door, the one who stays if the cost of imperfect compliance drops far enough, and what it spends is the boundary-clarity the watchman prizes, definition traded for retention. And his grip on the illusion holds tight where it counts, conscience kept as bedrock and not as one floor among the rest, which serves at once as the engine of his courage and the root of the suspicion he draws. The warmth and the blind spot grow from one place.

Hineni means here I am. Every hero system says it. The only question one system ever puts to another fills out the rest of the sentence. Here I am, for whom, and at whose cost. Kanefsky answers for the man at the edge of the room who might otherwise slip out the back, and he pays for that answer in the coin the watchman would rather keep. He shows up. A man could choose worse ground to stand on, and stand on it with less honor.

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The Hero System of Author Aaron Renn (Life in the Negative World)

Laconia, Indiana holds about fifty people. It sits on a bend of the Ohio River, in country that had lost its reasons to exist about the time Aaron Renn (b. October 1969) was born there. A boy raised in such a place learns young that settlements are not permanent. The store closes. The young leave. The church that filled on Sunday seats nine. You can stand in the road and see the river in one direction and, in the other, the houses fewer and fewer people keep up.

This is the first thing to know about Aaron Renn. Before the balance sheets, before Accenture, before the newsletter and the book, he came from a place that emptied out, and he watched it empty with the eye of a boy who wanted to know why.

He spent his working life on that question. He co-wrote an early social network in 1991 because he wanted to know how coordination scales. He rose to partner at Accenture because he could walk into a firm, read its position, name the gap between the strategy it inherited and the world it now faced, and tell it where to stand. Then he turned to cities, the largest things men build to outlast themselves, and asked which ones last and why. He wrote about the Midwest, about places that lost the industries that fed them, about the geography of decline. The eye never changed. He looks at an institution and asks one question before all others. Can it survive?

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) gives us the reason that question runs so deep. Man is the animal that knows he will die. He carries two terrors. The first is the body, the rot, the certain end of the flesh. The second is worse and quieter: the suspicion that none of it counts, that he will pass and leave no mark in any scheme larger than his eighty years. Cultures answer the terror with hero systems. A hero system is a scheme of value that lets a man earn the sense that he will outlast his flesh, that he counts, that he stands inside something that does not die. The Denial of Death calls this the urge to cosmic heroism. We build cathedrals and corporations and bloodlines and books, and each does the same work. We want to last.

So consider what Renn does. He spends a career studying which built things last. Then he turns the instrument on the immortality project that promised to defeat death outright and has stood two thousand years, and he asks of it the question he asks of a railroad town or a software firm. Is it viable? Has the brand lost its market? Where can it still win?

He presents the answer as realism. He strips the sentiment, names the environment, and calls what remains the facts. Before 1994, a Positive World, where Christian identity paid. From 1994 to 2014, a Neutral World, where it cost nothing and gained nothing. After 2014, a Negative World, where the old confession carries a price in the credentialed precincts. He laid this out in First Things in 2022 and at length in Life in the Negative World. He packages hard structural observation into a vocabulary a frightened class can carry around.

Notice the move under the realism. A hero system always arrives dressed as the absence of one. It presents as the bare truth left when illusion burns off, the cold reading any honest man would reach. But survival is not a fact. Survival is a value, and a high one, and to make it the supreme test is to choose a god. Renn chose the god of viability long before he applied it to the church, in Laconia, watching the road.

Now the heart of the thing. The faith has a word for what Renn measures. The word is survival, or endurance, or to last. The same word means a different thing in every hero system that uses it, so that men say the word to one another and hear different gods.

Walk it.

A Carthusian in the Grande Chartreuse rises at midnight for the Office and keeps a silence older than France. Ask him what survives and he does not point to himself. The self thins out by design. What survives is the Rule, the form, the chant unbroken across nine hundred years. “We do not grow and we do not shrink,” the prior says. “We continue.” His survival erases the man so the form can go on.

A founder in a glass office south of Market in San Francisco means something else by the word. He has eighteen months of cash and a board that wants growth. Survival is runway. “We’re not dead,” he tells the engineers at the standup. “We just have to reach the next round.” His immortality is the exit, the company outliving his own burnout, the line on the cap table that says he built a thing that kept going after he left it.

A father in Crown Heights ties his sons’ shoes and walks them to cheder. Ask him and he points down a line. His grandfather came off the boat with the hat on his head. He wears the hat. His sons will wear the hat. What survives is the chain, the mesorah handed down unbroken from Sinai, and the institution serves the chain, not the chain the institution. “They tried in every century,” he says. “We are still here.” His survival is transmission, father to son, with the body of the people as the vessel.

A trauma surgeon at two in the morning means the most literal thing of all. Survival is the next sixty seconds, the bleed found and clamped, the pressure climbing back. He does not think about two thousand years. He thinks about the chest under his hands. To him every other use of the word is a figure of speech, and he has no time for figures of speech.

A rancher in the Texas panhandle, whose grandfather ran the first cattle on that ground in 1882, means the land and the name and the brand burned into the hide. Survival is the deed held, the fence kept up, the boy who will take it when he goes. He would no more reposition the ranch than cut off his hand. The ground is the point.

Set Renn’s sense of the word beside these. For him survival is repositioning. The firm has lost share in the elite market. The old mass strategy fails, so you build niche, raise parallel institutions, schools and legal shops and media and professional networks, and you teach the faithful professional a disciplined approach to disclosure, which names the practice of keeping the confession off the email signature where it might cost a promotion. The church survives the way a firm survives a hostile market, by falling back to ground it can hold and waiting out the weather. Same word. The monk’s survival kills the self. The founder’s survival cashes the self out. The Hasid’s survival runs the self down a line. Renn’s survival holds the firm’s position. Each man would nod at the word and mean his own god.

Another hero system stands at the edge of his map, and it hears the word differently again. Call it the tribal one, the national, the old loyalty to a people across time. In it survival means the people endure. The faith is the faith of a people, bound to blood and ground and the long company of the dead and the unborn. A man in this scheme does not hold a position in a market. He holds a place in a line of descent that runs back past memory and forward past his grandchildren, and he owes the dead his fidelity and the unborn their inheritance. From inside this hero system Renn’s frame can look thin, because it treats the believer as a professional managing reputational risk in a credentialed workplace, when the tribesman sees a son of a nation under a duty he did not choose. The tribesman does not reposition. He holds the ground or falls on it, because the ground and the dead in it are the thing he means to save. Renn would tell him the ground is lost and the smart move is to fall back and build. The tribesman would answer that a people who fall back to save themselves have already lost what made them a people. Both men love something real. They do not love the same god, and the word survival hides the difference.

Becker leaves the hard question for last. Does the hero know his heroism is a system, or does he take it for the truth? Renn knows more than most. He sees the class gradient under his own map. He knows the Negative World bites hardest in the coastal metropolis and the credentialed trade and barely touches a churchgoing family in the part of Indiana he came from. He knows he describes a class and calls it an age. That is a high degree of sight.

A tool built to ask whether a thing survives cannot ask whether survival is the right test. It can only score the surviving. A church that lasts by becoming a network of careful professionals who keep the faith off the signature line has survived in the way a firm survives a bad decade. Whether that is the survival the faith promised, the martyr’s kind, the kind that runs straight through death instead of around it, the instrument has no reading for. The martyr is the man who refuses to reposition. His hero system charges the terror head on and counts the loss of the body as the win. Renn’s runs around the terror with care, building shelters along the way, and the shelters are good and the care is real, and the instrument still cannot tell him whether a faith that survives by sheltering has saved the thing it set out to save.

Renn took the emptying town of his boyhood and gave his life to the question of why some things last and others go under, and he carried the question into the one institution that claims to have beaten the thing every town on the Ohio River loses to. He does not lie to the patient. He does not promise a revival he cannot see. He stands at the bedside and works the chart and keeps the patient breathing, and he tells the family the truth about the odds.

He stands between Rod Dreher (b. 1967), who would have the faithful withdraw into thick communities and tend the fire, and Sohrab Ahmari (b. 1985), who would seize the levers and fight for the commanding ground, and David French (b. 1969), who trusts the old rules to protect the believer so long as the believer keeps faith with them. He stands closer to the bedside than any of them, nearer the mid-level professional with the mortgage and the friction at work than the theologian or the warrior. And he stands, at the last, where he has stood since the road in Laconia, between the man who measures what survives and the man who must decide what he will not trade to survive. He gave his life to the first question. The second one waits for him, as it waits for everyone who loves a thing that might not last.

Masculinity

A young man at a big suburban evangelical church wants to know how to be a man. He asks the men around him, and the answers do not line up. The youth pastor in the untucked flannel tells him to serve, to be tender, to wash feet. The marriage seminar tells him to lead his home, to take the spiritual initiative, to be the head. The men’s retreat hands him an axe and a slab of brisket and tells him manhood smells of woodsmoke. The dating books tell him to wait, to pursue with intention, to honor her. He drives home holding four answers that do not fit together, and he suspects, without the words for it, that none of the men who gave them is sure either.

Aaron Renn built a following by naming that suspicion. He started The Masculinist in 2016 to tell Christian men the church had handed them a script that does not run. The church, he argued, takes its picture of the good man from the secular culture of about thirty years back, sands off the parts that have since gone out of fashion, and sells the result as timeless truth. A man who follows it loses. He is nice, and he is passed over. He serves, and he is not respected. Renn read the manosphere with the eye he once read a failing firm, kept the parts that described the field as it is, threw out the nihilism and the cruelty, and told men to see the world as it is and act in it with competence. Be able. Provide. Lead in fact and not in slogan. Stop believing a thing because it is pleasant to believe.

Ernest Becker shows why the question carries such heat. Manhood is the one human status that a man achieves rather than receives. A girl becomes a woman by the calendar and the body. A boy becomes a man by passing a test his people set for him, and in nearly every culture there is a test, an ordeal, a thing he must do before the men will count him one of their own. The reason runs to the root of Becker’s argument. Man carries two terrors, the death of the body and the dread that he does not count, and the male animal answers both at once by earning a place among the men, a name that will be spoken, deeds that will be remembered, sons who will carry him past his own death. Masculinity is not a trait. It is a hero system, maybe the oldest one, the local answer to a single question. What must a man do before he is counted?

Every culture answers, the answers do not agree, and so the word masculine, like the word survival, hides a crowd of gods.

In a kollel in Lakewood a young man sits over a folio of Talmud sixteen hours a day. His body softens. His eyes go bad. He has never thrown a punch and never built a fence and could not change a tire. In his world this makes him a man of the first rank, because the man his people honor above all is the one who masters the text, who holds a hundred arguments in his head and cuts to the law. “Show me his learning,” the rosh yeshiva says of a man courting his daughter, and he means show me his manhood. The masculine here is the mind bent to the holy text until it breaks open.

Carry the word to a fight gym in Albuquerque. A welterweight drills the same takedown four hundred times. His knuckles are scarred and one ear sits swollen and hard from the mat. He has read no folios. His masculine lives in the body, in the willingness to be hit and choked and to tap and come back tomorrow, in the calm a man finds only after he has been hurt enough times to stop fearing it. “You find out who you are on the mat,” the coach says. The scholar and the fighter both say man and point opposite ways, the one inward to the text, the other down into the flesh.

Carry it to a village in the Pashtun belt. An old man sits with the elders, and the word that governs his life is honor, nang. A man keeps his word. He feeds the stranger at his gate though it ruins him. He guards the women of his house. He answers an insult to his blood with blood. To fail any of these is to stop being a man in the eyes of every man he knows, and the shame runs worse than death, which is why men there will take death before it. His masculine is honor held in front of the whole watching village.

Carry it to a trading floor in lower Manhattan. A man runs a book and lives by the number on the screen. His masculine is the appetite for risk and the nerve to hold a losing position or cut it, the will to eat what he kills and feed the desk. “He carries the floor,” they say of the big producer, and the young men study how he stands and how he swears and how he spends. His proof prints out every afternoon in dollars.

Carry it to a working parish. A priest has taken no wife and sired no son and owns nothing, and the men of the parish call him Father and mean it. His masculine is authority spent as service, fatherhood without seed, the strength to govern souls by laying his own will down. He has renounced every proof the trader and the fighter live by, and his people count him among the greatest of men for the renouncing.

Five men. One word. Five gods. The mind, the body, honor, the number, the sacrifice.

Set the competitors in the Christian and conservative argument beside these, because they quarrel over which of these gods the word should name. Jordan Peterson (b. 1962) tells the young man his manhood is responsibility, the voluntary taking up of a burden, order carried into chaos, the dragon faced because someone must face it. John Piper (b. 1946) and the complementarians tell him his manhood is headship, a tender authority over wife and home modeled on Christ, and Renn’s whole complaint is that this picture names a sentiment and not a practice, that it raises soft men who lead in title. The red pill writers tell him his manhood is dominance and frame, that he must never supplicate, that the field rewards the man who needs the woman least. The vitalists on the new right, reading old books about beautiful and violent men, tell him his manhood is strength and beauty and the will to rule, and they sneer at the therapeutic age for breeding weak sons. Andrew Tate (b. 1986) sells the cartoon of it to teenage boys by the million.

Renn stands among these as the consultant stands among warring department heads. He does not pick the body or honor or dominance. He picks competence and realism. The masculine, for him, is the man who sees the field as it is, refuses the comforting account, and acts to win within it, providing and leading and building, declining to believe a thing because the pulpit finds it sweet. It is the manhood of a man who has read the org chart and will not be flattered.

An older answer sits just past the edge of his frame. In the tribal and national hero system the masculine is the defender, the man who stands between his people and what would destroy them, who fathers sons to hold the line after him, bound to the dead and the unborn by a duty no one asked him to accept. His proof is the wall. When the thing comes for his people, he stands at it. From inside this scheme Renn’s competent provider can look like a man working a position when he should man a post, and the red pill’s frame games can look like a boy preening while the gate stands open. The tribesman would tell them both that a man is known by what he will die in front of. Renn would tell the tribesman that the wall is already breached, and the smart move is to raise sons who can hold a job and a faith in the city the enemy now owns. Both speak of manhood. Neither hears the same god in the word.

Becker’s hard question. Does the man know his answer is one hero system among many, a choice of god and not a reading of the facts? Renn knows the church’s answer is a system, and he is fierce about it, and that is the source of his power. He saw that the servant leader script was a borrowed costume and said so when saying so cost him. The blind spot is the one the instrument always carries. Competence cannot ask whether competence is the test. It can only score the competent. And there are men his frame cannot see. The holy fool who gives away what he should keep and is more a man for it. The martyr who loses on purpose and wins a thing the org chart has no column for. The broke and passed over father, a failure by every measure Renn respects, who stood at the wall when it counted and whom his people will call a man at his grave. The consultant’s manhood has no reading for the man who throws the position away for something he will not name as strategy.

Renn told men a hard truth their shepherds dressed up and would not say, that the world does not reward the man who believes the pretty version, and he told it because he respected them too much to flatter them. That is a kind of love, the love a good coach has, who will not lie to a fighter about his weak left hand. He took the manosphere’s accurate cruelties and the church’s kind lies and tried to build for men a third thing that was true and decent at once. A man can do worse with a newsletter than that.

Place him. He stands between the pulpit, which tells the young man to be tender and to lead by serving, and the red pill, which tells him to dominate and to need her least, and he trusts neither, holding to a competence that takes the realism of the second and leaves its contempt. He stands nearer the working man with a family to feed than the theologian with a doctrine of headship or the influencer with a course to sell. And he stands, as he stood on the question of survival, between the man who reads the field and asks how to win it and the man who asks what he will not become to win. He gave his life to the first question. The young man at the suburban church, holding his four answers that do not fit, waits still on the second.

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The Hero System of Sociologist Edgar Morin (1921-2026)

Edgar Morin lost his mother when he was a boy. He spent the next century refusing to let anything stand alone.

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) taught that a man builds his life as a defense against two terrors. The first is death, the plain fact of the worms. The second is insignificance, the suspicion that a man passes through the world and leaves no mark, that his life signifies nothing the grave cannot erase. Every culture hands its members a hero system, a set of rules for earning the feeling that they count beyond their span. Religion offers heaven. The Party offers History. The Nation offers the soil and the dead buried in it. Each promises a man that some part of him outlasts the body. Becker called these the vital lies, and he meant the word lie without contempt, because a man cannot live in the bare knowledge of his own rot. Long before complexity, death held Morin. His L’Homme et la mort came straight out of the boyhood loss.

Morin spent his life taking the vital lies apart.

He subtracted God. Asked late in life about Him, Morin said he had no relations with the fellow. He subtracted the Party. He joined the Communists under the German occupation, when anti-fascism and Communism ran together, and the Party expelled him in 1951, and he wrote Autocritique, which treats his own faith with the care a man gives a wound he has examined many times. He did not call his Communism a mistake of reason. He called it a hunger, the hunger for certainty and belonging and meaning, and he knew the hunger had not died when the faith did. He subtracted the Nation in its closed form. Late in life he wrote of an Earth-Homeland and held that mankind now forms one community of fate. He subtracted even the safe name of a trade. He refused to be only a sociologist, only a philosopher, only a filmmaker. He left every house he might have lived in.

The subtraction story runs like this. Strip away God and Party and Nation and the comfortable name of a trade, and what remains is reality, bare and cold and true.

Becker saw the catch. A man cannot subtract his way to nothing. Take away one hero system and he builds another from the rubble, because the two terrors do not leave when the gods do. So the question for Morin is not whether he escaped the vital lie. The question is which lie he built from everything he refused to worship.

He built a god out of the open future.

Morin held that novelty sits inside the structure of complex systems, that the unexpected always arrives, that the future cannot be foreclosed. A man who cannot believe in heaven can believe in this, and the belief does the work heaven did. It promises that the story is not over. It promises that meaning stays possible, that the grave does not get the last word, that something new will come. The dead mother is not the end of the boy, because in a world where everything connects, where the part holds the whole and the whole shows in the part, nothing stands alone and nothing is wholly lost.

And he built a cathedral to it. La Méthode runs to six volumes across twenty-seven years, and its content is that no system holds the whole. He gave a life to the proposition that no single life or system grasps everything, and the giving was the bid. A man devotes himself to complexity, and the devotion is a claim on the whole he says no man can have. This is the honorable paradox at the center of him, and it is honorable because he paid for it.

He paid under two regimes. The Germans, he said, had three reasons to kill him, since he was a Jew, a Communist, and a Gaullist. He learned to distrust the closed system in a Europe where closed systems built camps. His openness is not the cheap openness of a man who never believed anything. He believed, hard, in the Party, and the belief cost him, and he wrote the cost down. When such a man refuses to close the question, he refuses from the far side of having closed it once and bled.

Becker’s deepest point reaches past any single man. The hero system shapes what a word can mean. A man says complexity or uncertainty or homeland, and the word carries the weight his hero system gives it, and the same word on another man’s tongue carries a different weight, sometimes the opposite weight. Morin made certain words sacred. The words mean what they mean inside his system. Carry them into another, and they change.

Take uncertainty.

For Morin, uncertainty is where freedom lives. The open future is uncertain, and so the future is free, and so a man is free, and so the camps were not the last word and the Party was not the last word and death is not the last word. He told schools to prepare the young for the unexpected, to expect it, to navigate it. Uncertainty, for him, is the room where novelty arrives. He honors it the way a religious man honors grace.

Carry the word to a field epidemiologist tracking a new pathogen, and uncertainty turns into the thing he must kill. Every hour of uncertainty is a count of the dead he cannot yet name. His heroism lies in narrowing the unknown, in turning a fog into a number, in making the future payable in doses and beds. “Give me the interval,” he says, and he means the size of his ignorance, and he means to shrink it.

Carry it to a Marine under fire, and uncertainty is hesitation, and hesitation is death. The drill exists to abolish it. A man trains until his hands move before his mind catches up, so that under fire he does not weigh the open future, he acts. His hero system promises that the trained man lives and the man who pauses to admire the richness of the unexpected dies in the road.

Carry it to a Cistercian monk at vigils, and the great uncertainties are settled already. God exists. The soul faces judgment. What remains uncertain is only whether this one man keeps faith to the end, and that he offers up. He does not prize the open future. He has read the last page. His heroism lies in fidelity inside a closed and finished cosmos, the thing Morin spent a life refusing.

Four men, one word, four worlds. Morin’s sacred uncertainty is the epidemiologist’s enemy, the Marine’s death, the monk’s settled matter. None of them is confused. Each man means what his hero system needs the word to mean.

The same holds for the whole. In the early 1970s Morin crossed to California and spent time at the Salk Institute, among the biologists, talking with Jonas Salk (1914-1995) and Jacques Monod (1910-1976). He went looking for the whole. He wanted to fold thermodynamics and cybernetics and biology into a single way of thinking, and he went to the lab to learn from it. To Morin the whole is the highest calling. Reductionism, the cutting of reality into compartments, is the disease, and synthesis is the cure.

Stand a working specialist next to him. To the man who spends thirty years on one ion channel, the whole is the refuge of the amateur. Synthesis is what a man reaches for when he cannot do the hard narrow labor that moves knowledge an inch. The specialist earns his immortality in the inch. He adds one true thing to the record, and his name sits on the paper, and the paper sits in the literature, and so he outlasts himself. The grand synthesizer, to him, writes for journalists and dies without a footnote.

Each man called the other a danger to knowledge. Morin found the specialists learning more and more about less and less. The specialists found Morin too philosophical for the lab and too scientific for the seminar. He lived between the houses and belonged to neither, and the homelessness was the price of the whole.

Then there is the word homeland.

He gave the world an Earth-Homeland. He held that the planet now forms one community of fate, that economies and climates and weapons bind all men together whether they love one another or not, and that human solidarity must grow to meet the scale of the bond or the species courts ruin. He was careful. He did not preach a soft cosmopolitanism. He warned that markets and machines had gone global while loyalty stayed local, and that the gap might kill us.

Carry the word homeland to the tribal and national and traditional man, and it means something Morin’s phrase cannot hold. To him a homeland is the small piece of earth that holds his dead and bears his name, and it is a homeland because it is not the rest of the earth. A patrie with no border is not a large patrie. It is no patrie. He hears Earth-Homeland and hears a square circle. He hears one community of fate and thinks that a fate shared with all men is a fate shared with no man, that a love spread across the species is the thin love left to a man who has stopped loving his own. Solidarity, to him, runs concrete or it runs to nothing. It is owed first to kin, then to neighbors, then to the nation, in widening rings that thin as they spread, and a solidarity that skips the rings and lands on mankind has skipped the only solidarity a man carries in his body.

This man notes, without heat, where Morin came from. Morin’s father sold women’s clothing in Paris, a Sephardic Jew out of Thessaloniki, from the Mediterranean world that joined France and Greece and Turkey and North Africa into one scattered people. Morin’s patrie was an idea before it was a place, because his people carried their homeland on their backs across the sea. The scattered make the universalists. A man with one village to defend builds a hero system around the village. A man whose village lives in memory and diaspora builds a hero system around mankind, because mankind is the only home wide enough to hold a people with no single soil. The trad man sees this and says, without cruelty, that Morin universalized his own condition and called it the future of the species.

And Morin has his answer. The closed homeland, in his century, built the camps. The bounded patrie, sworn to blood and soil, gave the Germans their three reasons to kill him. A man who learned in his body what the sacred nation does to the man outside its ring might be forgiven for distrusting the ring. His own method holds that certain opposites never resolve, that order and disorder, the one and the many, live in tension and advance through it. The trad man and the planetary man might be such a pair. Neither erases the other. The argument stays open, which is the one outcome Morin’s hero system counts a victory.

How much of this did Morin see?

A great deal, and the seeing was his gift. In 1969 a rumor ran through Orléans. Jewish shopkeepers, it said, drugged young women in the fitting rooms of their clothing stores and moved them through tunnels into the prostitution trade across the sea. Morin and his team went into the city while the story still burned. A lesser man stops at proving it false, and it was false, no girl had vanished, no tunnel existed. Morin asked the harder question. He asked why men believed it. He found that the rumor never touched the newspapers, that it ran mouth to mouth through the networks of the town, that it fed on the fears of a changing France, on consumer dread and shifting sexual mores and an old hatred in new clothes.

Sit with the scene. The rumor accused Jewish clothiers. Morin’s father was a Jewish clothier. The son went to study, with care and without rage, the precise fear that in another town, in another year, might have emptied his own father’s shop. And he extended to the frightened people of Orléans the same charity he gave his younger Communist self. He asked what hunger their belief fed. He did not call them stupid. He read their fear as a human thing.

That charity is the height of his self-awareness. He understood, better than most men who ever lived, that belief answers need, that men hold ideas because the ideas hold them. He turned the insight on the antisemites of Orléans and on the Stalinists of his youth and on the whole machinery of ideology.

He turned it less often on the god he made of the open future.

The man who could name the near-religious hunger that drew him to the Party did not often ask whether his late faith in complexity, in synthesis, in the unexpected, fed the same hunger by another door. The boy who lost his mother built a theory where nothing stands alone and nothing is lost, and the theory consoles exactly where the wound runs deepest, and a man does not always audit the belief that sits closest to his grief. Here, near the warm center, his clear sight goes a little soft.

And yet he left the door open even there. Asked about God, he said he had no relations with the fellow, and then he said at once that he did not deny the mystery in things, that men cannot shut the infinite complexity of the world inside their own ideas. A man who says that has admitted that his own system does not get the last word either. The confession runs small and true. He kept intimate diaries of his decline, his mourning, his failing body, and he did not pretty them. He once said the Resistance had taught him the difference between surviving and living, and he added that his own war had run more to slogans painted on walls than to grand deeds. The candor reaches almost all the way down. Almost.

Three coordinates fix him.

The first is the wound. A mother dies, a boy is left, and the man he becomes spends a century building a world where nothing stands alone, where the part holds the whole and the lost are held inside the living. The theory of complexity begins in grief.

The second is the renunciation. He gave up God and Party and Nation and the safe name of a trade, and from the rubble of all he refused to worship he built a god of the open future, a faith that the story never ends and the grave never wins. He could not subtract his way to nothing, because no man can, and he was honest enough to live inside the new faith without quite naming it as one.

The third is the cost, and the honor in the cost. He chose a homeland with no border and paid for the choice with homelessness, marginal in the lab and marginal in the seminar, scattered like the people he came from, owing his solidarity to a mankind too wide to love him back. He earned the choice the hard way, under regimes that wanted him dead for his blood and his certainties, and he held to it for a hundred and four years, and at the end he refused to call the question closed. That refusal was his last heroism. He fought all his life to keep the world from breaking into pieces, and he fought just as hard to keep it from ever being finished.

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The Cost of the True Sentence

The offer arrives on a Tuesday and dies on a Friday. Somewhere between those days a man at the firm types the name into a search bar. He reads for twenty minutes. He closes the laptop. He walks to the desk of the person who signed the deal. “Have you looked at his website?” The exact words do not survive. The question does. The offer goes away. This has happened before. It will happen again, and Luke Ford knows it the way a sailor knows weather.

He has writes online under his own name since 1997. Others write on websites on that carry his name and he has no control over what they say. He sold the sites decades ago (lukeford.com in 2001 and lukeisback.com in 2007), he took the money, and now he lives with the consequences. He livestreams. He writes long essays about men in media, in the academy, in the shul, in the parties that run the country. He sits in more than one twelve-step room. He grew up Australian. He keeps the Jewish calendar and prays at Orthodox shuls. Hold those facts in one hand. They explain the Friday.

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) gives the frame. In The Denial of Death he argues that a man lives under two terrors. The first is that he dies. The second is worse: that his life counts for nothing, that he passes and leaves no mark in any scheme that outlasts him. A culture answers the second terror with a hero system, a set of rules that tells a man how to earn a place in something that does not die. Follow the rules, do the brave thing the rules call brave, and you buy a share of permanence. The hero system does not feel like a coping device from the inside. From the inside it feels like the good.

Every hero system has a sacred word. The trouble starts when two systems use the same word and mean different things by it.

Take honesty.

For the courtier in a royal house, honesty is a failure of craft. The courtier who says the true thing about the king’s judgment at the wrong moment has not been brave. He has been clumsy, and clumsiness near power sends men from the room. His art is to carry truth sideways, wrapped, late, deniable. He sleeps well. He has served the house.

For the witness in the box, honesty is narrow and total at once. He swears to the truth and then answers only what the lawyer asks. He volunteers nothing. A good witness who blurts the whole story is a bad witness. The oath binds him to the question, not to the world.

For the intelligence officer, the truth belongs to the mission. He tells his wife a cover story for thirty years and counts it honor. He holds the real thing close, gives the false thing freely, and dies sure he kept faith.

For the surgeon with a bad scan in his hand, honesty is a dial, not a switch. He tells the daughter more than he tells the patient. He tells the patient enough to consent and not so much that hope dies before the body does. He calls this honesty. The ethics board agrees.

For the man under omertà, candor is the one sin with no penance. To name what you saw to the wrong listener is not honesty. It is death, yours and your family’s, and the code sits in him as firm as any commandment in any book.

Five men. One word. Each might fail the others’ test and pass his own.

Now place Luke between two hero systems that both raised him, that both hold honesty sacred, and that mean opposite things by it.

The first is the room. In recovery the founding line runs that a man is as sick as his secrets. The secret is the thing that kills. A drinker dies of what he hides, from himself first. So the work is confession without flinch: the searching inventory, the admission to another man of the exact nature of the wrong, the amends made to the face of the one he harmed. Here honesty is not manners and not strategy. Honesty is the way back. A man who tells the soft version relapses, and everyone in the room has buried someone who told the soft version. To this system the public website under the real name, the essay that names what others will not name, the refusal of the cover story, all of it reads as health. It reads as a man staying alive.

The second system is the tribe. Luke keeps Torah and sits in a shul, and the tradition he prays inside holds a law called lashon hara, evil speech, and its hardest edge is this: the speech is forbidden even when it is true. Truth is no defense. Rabbi Israel Meir Kagan (1838-1933), known by his book Chofetz Chaim (1873), built a whole literature on the claim that a man can destroy another with accurate words and answer for it as for a killing. The tribe sacralizes honesty too, but it means something nearer to loyalty, to the guarding of your own people’s name in front of strangers. You do not hand the outsider a true and ugly fact about your brother. You carry the family’s reputation the way the courtier carries the king’s. To this system the public website is the sin with the longest list of victims, because words travel and do not come back.

So one act, the true sentence published under the real name, earns two verdicts from the two homes Luke loves most. The room calls it survival. The tribe calls it the gravest ordinary sin. He cannot satisfy both, he knows it, and he writes the sentence anyway. That is the the man.

The tribal system is not foreign to him. He honors it. He defends the nation and the people and the old loyalties against the men who dissolve them, and he writes against those men. A nationalist hero system tells you the people come before the sentence, that a man shows himself by what he protects rather than by what he exposes, and that the exile who airs his own people’s faults for applause from strangers has chosen the strangers. believes this. That is why the withdrawn offer lands where it does. The world is not punishing a stranger’s idea of him. It confirms a charge he brings against himself.

He sees the trade. He has written that he drifts toward isolation, that he loses the thread of common manners, that he writes things against his own interest. A man blind to his hero system defends it as virtue. Luke names the price out loud. He knows the sentence costs the contract. He weighs the sentence against the deal and keeps the sentence. Becker might say he has chosen his immortality project over his comfort.

The project holds up in daylight. Luke wants to write the thing not yet written, to add to knowledge, to be read by the few men who decide what counts as known in their narrow field, and to earn a seat at that table by citing the right authorities and then saying something new. He applies a test to his own words. He imagines them on the front page of the paper, in full, in context, under his name. Most men cannot survive that test, because most men’s words depend on the listener never being the wrong listener. Luke writes for the wrong listener on purpose. The test that ruins the courtier is the test he wants to pass.

Three coordinates locate him.

The first is the immortality project. He means to be the man who said the true sentence and left the record under his own name, so that he does not pass without a mark. The website is the headstone he carves while living.

The second is the price. The price is the Friday. The offer that comes and goes, the rooms that go quiet when he enters, the doubt of the people he most wants to be counted among. He pays it in belonging.

The third is the seam he lives along and never closes. He holds two sacred laws that give opposite orders, the room’s law that the hidden thing kills and the tribe’s law that the spoken thing kills, and he leaves them unreconciled.

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The Heidi Beirich Hero System

Begin with the lights. A woman sits at a long table draped in black cloth. Microphones lean toward her. She holds a title that grants the right to name monsters: Director of Intelligence. The cameras like her because she brings the news the country wants and dreads, that the haters live among us, that someone counts them. She counts them. For two decades she keeps the list.

Five hundred miles north, in a different year, a near-deaf accountant sits in a rented room and copies ledgers. Randolph Dilloway works through twenty-five boxes of records carried over a state line and back. Donation slips. Sales receipts. The bookkeeping of a movement that dreams of a White nation scrubbed of everyone else. He copies for five months. He has drifted through half a dozen such groups already, a man whom each one used and discarded, a man who likes columns to add up. When the time comes, the watchers pay a second source to take the blame for the theft so the first source keeps his cover.

Two rooms, one engine.

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) built his life’s argument around a single fear. Man knows he will die. The animal that knows it cannot bear the knowing. So he builds a hero system, a shared project that lets him feel he counts, that some part of him outlasts the grave. In The Denial of Death Becker shows the project at its best, the cathedral and the symphony and the cure. In Escape from Evil, finished as he was dying, he shows the cost. The worst cruelties come from the heroics of purification, from men trying to be good by expelling the bad, from the urge to cleanse the tribe of the contaminant and stand clean before death as the one who held the line.

The watchman runs this engine in a stripped form. He raises no cathedral and no fortune. He watches. He names the enemy at the gate and keeps the record so the enemy cannot pass uncounted. His significance comes from the watch, and the watch needs an enemy to be a watch at all.

Sacred words travel badly. Vigilance sits at the center of Heidi Beirich’s work, and the word means a different thing in every house that keeps it. To the Benedictine at the night office, vigilance means rising in the cold dark to pray through the hour when the soul drifts toward sleep and sin. He guards an inward gate. Nothing crosses but his own weakness, and the watch he keeps is over himself. To the counterintelligence officer it means the mole, the double, the rot inside the service. James Angleton (1917-1987) watched so long for the Soviet penetration of the CIA that he came to see it everywhere, and the seeing hollowed the thing he meant to guard. He named his country a wilderness of mirrors and got lost in it. The hunter and the hunted twined together until no clean line ran between the watch and the wild. To the oncologist reading a follow-up scan, vigilance means the small return of the thing already cut out, caught early or caught late, the patient living or dying by the watcher’s eye. To the lookout in the fire tower above the pines it means the first gray thread of smoke after a hundred empty days. His value lives in the days nothing happens.

Each watcher guards a different thing and fears a different death. Beirich’s watch took a particular shape. Professionalized. Funded by mail. Archived under the name Hatewatch on a website. Performed under the lights. Her salary ran near a hundred ninety thousand dollars a year, and the organization that paid it had banked some eight hundred million by selling the country the count of its enemies. The list became a product. The watch met a payroll.

Take a second word. Purity. The National Alliance under William Pierce (1933-2002), who wrote the race-war fantasy The Turner Diaries, wanted a land cleansed of Jews and Blacks and every mongrel trace. The watchers wanted a land cleansed of the haters. Two purges, one grammar. Becker saw the symmetry and it frightened him. The man who hunts the unclean takes on the shape of the thing he hunts, because both run the same fear through the same gate, and the gate cares nothing for the content of the dream.

The Department of Justice now says the gate was a turnstile. The indictment claims the SPLC took donor money raised to fight hate groups and routed more than three million dollars of it, between 2014 and 2023, to people inside those groups, through accounts opened under invented names. The group denies all of it, calls the case a vindictive prosecution brought by an administration its enemies run, and has moved to dismiss. No one has been convicted. A superseding indictment filed June 2, 2026 adds the detail that drew the cameras back to the long black table. An employee the press takes to be Beirich, named in the document only as Employee-2, shared a house and two bank accounts with the informant the indictment calls F-9, the man inside the National Alliance. About a hundred forty thousand dollars of donor money passed through those joint accounts, near two-thirds of everything the couple banked, and F-9 drew one and a quarter million across twenty years. He took the money, the indictment says, and kept the movement running while the watcher wrote him into her articles as a defector who came running for help.

A woman spends twenty years close to men who frighten the country, close enough to turn one of them, and the closeness becomes a house, a shared account, a life. Becker might call this the tax on the watch. Look long enough at the enemy and the enemy becomes your intimate, your livelihood, your reason to rise in the dark. The hero needs the monster more than the monster needs him. Without the National Alliance there sits no Director of Intelligence, no panel, no list, no name in the morning paper. The watcher cannot afford the gate to stand empty, and a watcher in love with the man at the gate has fused her hero system to the very thing it claims to oppose. The fusion need not start as fraud. It might start as proximity, then habit, then a checking account two people open because they live under one roof.

Read the same facts the other way and the honor holds. Paying a man inside a Nazi cell for what he knows ranks among the oldest tools of every service that ever broke such a cell. The SPLC sued the United Klans of America into the ground and took their headquarters. When reporters asked the group’s longtime donors how they felt about their gifts reaching informants, more than a dozen said they had assumed as much and approved, that the work did what they paid it to do. To them the only fraud in the room belongs to the prosecutors. So two readings rest on one set of facts. In one, a watcher fell for what she watched and let donor money feed it. In the other, a watcher ran a source the way sources have always run, and a hostile state dressed the tradecraft as a crime. Becker settles neither. He only shows why the watch pulls a person toward the courage and the fusion at once, since both grow from the same root.

A third hero system keeps its own watch, and it reads this story as a verdict. Call it the tribal, the loyalty of a man to his own. Its sacred value names the people: the kin, the inherited home, the faith of the fathers, the tongue you were raised in, the plain right to prefer your own and pass it on. To this house the SPLC sits as an inquisition, a priesthood that earns its bread by finding heresy, that brands the love of one’s own as hate and sells the fear of it to frightened donors by the million. The lawyer Glen K. Allen stands as the exhibit. His name surfaced in the copied documents, the Baltimore city law office let him go, and a court threw out his suit in 2021. To the tribal watcher the indictment reads as the oldest story in the church, the seller of indulgences caught taking both purses, paid by the donors to fight the Klansman and paid again, through the joint account, to keep the Klansman in the field.

The tribal house honors the watch too. It wants the watch turned the other way, toward the watchers who guard the guardians. Its better self loves a thing worth loving, the home and the dead and the children not yet born, and that love shares no border with Pierce’s dream of a continent purged by blood. The watchers blur the two on purpose, the tribal man says, because the blur fills the coffers, and a movement that lives off naming hate needs hate to keep on living.

Becker leaves us at the joint account. Two names on one ledger, the watcher and the watched, their money mixed past sorting. Whatever the court rules about the statute, the account holds the older truth, that the man who keeps the gate and the man who storms it warm their hands at the same fire, the fear of being no one, of dying unremembered, of a life that left no mark on the dark. The Director of Intelligence built a self out of naming the enemy. Take the enemy away and you take the self. So the self holds the enemy close, closer than the donors knew, close enough to share a roof and a bank.

The lights go down. The list remains. Someone reads it and feels safer, and somewhere a frightened man rises in the dark and keeps watch over the thing that gives him his name.

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My Father’s Hero System

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) holds that a man lives under two terrors. The first is death, the animal fact that the body fails and the self ends. The second is quieter and harder to name. It is the terror of insignificance, the dread that a man might cross the whole span of his life and leave no mark, that he might be one creature among the billions and answer to no one and count for nothing. Against both terrors a man builds a hero system. He joins a scheme of meaning larger than his own body and earns a place inside it, and the place tells him he will outlast his death, in the memory of his people, in the survival of his work, in the verdict of his God. The hero system answers the terror. A man cannot live without one. He can trade one for another. He cannot stand in the open with none.

Desmond Ford receives his hero system at ten, from a stranger at the door.

The home has already failed. The father drifts toward unbelief. The mother goes up and down the east coast after men. The parents divorce when the boy is nine, and a child of nine in Depression Townsville learns early that the people who are supposed to hold the world in place will let it fall. Then an Adventist literature evangelist hands him a Bible, and the boy reads it cover to cover, and the second terror lifts. The book gives him a Father who does not leave. It gives him a people, a remnant, a place at the front of a cosmic story that ends soon and ends in his favor. He is baptized at sixteen over the family’s objection. At eighteen he quits a clerical desk at a Sydney paper and walks into Australasian Missionary College with nothing behind him and a vocation in front of him. The trade is complete. A boy with no home takes a church for a home and never looks for another.

Adventism is a hero system of unusual power, and the part that grips Ford is the part that grips the anxious. The movement comes out of a failed prediction, the Millerite expectation of Christ’s return in 1844, and it converts the failure into a doctrine. Christ did return, the teaching runs, not to earth but to the inner sanctuary of heaven, and there since 1844 He conducts an Investigative Judgment, a review of the books, a case-by-case audit of every professed believer to settle who will stand when the end comes. Set beside that audit a second teaching, Last Generation Theology, which holds that a final generation of the saved will reach a sinless life and so vindicate God before the universe. Put the two together and you have built an engine of dread. The believer wakes and asks the question the system trains him to ask. Has my case come up yet. Will my name hold when the page turns. Am I good enough, this year, this hour, to stand in the judgment with no advocate the books will overrule.

Ford spends his life trying to switch that engine off.

His whole work is a single argument made in a hundred forms. He wants to put justification by faith back at the center of the church, the old Reformation claim that a man stands acquitted before God by the finished work of Christ and not by the running tally of his own performance. He wants assurance. He wants the laity released from the perfectionist fear the Judgment breeds. Right with God right now, he tells them, the title he gives one of his books. The verdict came in at the cross. The audit is over. You may rest.

He builds the case with the tools he earns abroad. Two doctorates, the second at Manchester under F.F. Bruce (1910-1990), the leading evangelical New Testament scholar of the age. He reads Daniel 8:14 with the philology Manchester teaches him and concludes the Investigative Judgment cannot stand from the text. The Hebrew will not carry the load the church hangs on it. The atonement finished at Calvary. There is no second compartment of heaven where the books wait.

Here the Becker frame turns, and the turn is the heart of the man.

Ford reads his own life as a subtraction. He thinks he has stripped an error away and left the pure thing underneath, that he stands now on the text alone, having subtracted the church’s bad invention by honest scholarship. This is the story every modern reformer tells about himself. I removed the illusion and kept the truth. Becker says the story is false. A man does not subtract his hero system and stand free in the clear. He trades it for another, or he reforms it and stays. Watch what Ford keeps. He keeps the Sabbath. He keeps the vegetarian table. He keeps a respectful place for Ellen G. White (1827-1915). When the church revokes his credentials he does not cross to the evangelical Anglicans or the Baptists who already hold his gospel and would seat him at once. He founds Good News Unlimited and builds, in exile, a smaller Adventism with himself at the warm center and a network of loyal supporters who fund the meetings and fill the halls. The man who diagnosed the closed room reforms the room and locks himself back in. He could not subtract the church. No one subtracts the thing that gave a frightened boy a Father and a people. He could only relocate inside it.

Now take the sacred value at the core of his fight, assurance, the verdict already rendered, the right standing a man may rest in, and watch the word break apart the moment it leaves his hands. Becker’s point is that the value is real to each man and means a different thing to each, because each holds it inside a different hero system, and the system supplies the meaning.

To the bond trader at the screen, assurance is the number. The year-end statement is his book of life, the bonus letter his acquittal, net worth the proof that he is an object of value in a universe that keeps score in dollars. He fears the down year the way Ford’s people fear the open judgment. To the Theravada monk in the forest hut, assurance carries no verdict at all, because there is no self to acquit. The books close not by a favorable ruling but by the cooling of the craving that wrote them, and the rest Ford promises through a finished trial the monk finds through the end of the one who stood trial. To the Sicilian widow lighting her candles, assurance runs through the priest and the sacrament and the masses she pays to have said for her dead. Grace comes by the channel of the Church and the slow work of purgatory, and a verdict declared all at once at a cross long ago, with nothing for the living to add, would empty her hands of the only things she has to give. To the old Marxist who trained as a physicist under the Soviets, the verdict belongs to history, and assurance is the certainty of standing on the right side of matter and progress when the archive is opened, the dread the fear of the purge and the corrected record. To the West African elder, the verdict is the ancestors’, and a man rests easy only if his sons will pour the libation and speak his name, so that the worst end is not damnation but to die with no descendant to remember him.

And to the tribalist, the nationalist, the man who keeps the old faith of blood and soil and the long chain of the dead and the unborn, assurance has almost nothing to do with the single soul. His hero system locates the immortality elsewhere, in the survival of the people. He does not lie awake over the audit of his own case. He lies awake over whether the nation will hold its land and its name into the next century, whether the children will be born and raised in the faith of the fathers, whether the line continues. To this man Ford’s gospel looks strange and small, an intensely private transaction, one trembling Protestant interior settling its account with God alone, while the questions that decide whether a people lives or dies go unasked. The trad man would honor Ford’s courage and find his horizon narrow. He is curing the fear of the wrong death.

That fracture is the whole lesson. Assurance is honest in every one of these men. None of them is a fool. Each needs the word, and each fills it from his own scheme of meaning, and Ford’s scheme is the apocalyptic Protestant one that turns the universe into a courtroom and the believer into the defendant. His genius and his limit are the same fact. He fought the terror of the audit with the only weapon his hero system stocked, the verdict of grace, and he never stepped far enough outside the courtroom to ask whether the courtroom should have been built.

How much of this does he see.

Some of it, and not all, and the gap is human. He sees the cruelty of the perfectionist engine clearly enough to spend forty years dismantling it at the cost of his career, and a man does not pay that price for an abstraction. He knows the fear from the inside, the boy who needed the Father not to leave. The empathy he extends to the anxious believer is the empathy of a man treating his own old wound. What he sees less well is his captivity to the form. The 991-page manuscript he carries to Glacier View in 1980 tells the story without a word of confession. A tighter case might have cut deeper. The volume is the work of a man trained by a tradition that weighs citation rather than reasoning, who counts pages as proof of seriousness, who cannot trust the argument to walk on its own and so buries the committee in display. Witnesses speak of his recall of scripture and White as prodigious, an hour of chapter and verse without a note, and an audience takes that for authority. Memory is not synthesis. The power to retrieve a passage is not the power to weigh it. His best hours are the sermon and the conference, where the warmth and the memory carry the room. His weakest are the long manuscripts, where no editor stands between him and the page and the absence of synthesis shows.

He could not leave. That is the truest sentence in the file. He diagnosed the closed system and built a smaller one and sat at its center and died inside it on the Sunshine Coast in 2019, at ninety, the church drifting his way without naming him, the followers gray, the books on the shelf. A harder man might call this failure of nerve. Becker calls it the human condition with the lid off. The hero system is the thing that lets a man bear the two terrors at all, and you do not ask a man to set it down and stand in the open, least of all a man who first picked it up at ten because the people who should have held his world in place had let it fall.

Three coordinates locate him, and they hold together only if you hold them at once.

He is a brave man, the most consequential internal critic his church produced in a century, who saw a real cruelty in the system and gave four decades and a career to lifting it off other people, and who knew the fear he treated because it had once been his own.

He is a captive of the form he criticized, a translator who carried into a closed room the consensus a wider scholarship had reached a century before, and who reformed the room and locked himself back inside it because the room had been his first and only home.

And he is a man who fought one terror with great courage and never reached the second, who cured the fear of the audit and left the deeper fear untouched, because no hero system cures the dread it exists to manage, and his cured nothing it was not built to cure. He answered the verdict. He could not leave the court.

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