Friday, December 25, 2009

"The rabbinic sayings comparing Shabbat to the world to come are more than mere figures of speech"


"The Jewish Sabbath is unique.


Indeed, a comparison with the Christian and Muslim imitations of it—not to mention the modern secular 'weekend'—only underlines this uniqueness.

Shabbat is not simply a day when one refrains from work, nor is it merely the day when it is customary to attend public prayer.

It is a day when one enters a completely different sphere.

The rabbinic sayings comparing Shabbat to the world to come are more than mere figures of speech.

Basically, Shabbat means put­ting aside creative activity in order to concern oneself com­pletely with personal reflection and matters of the spirit, free of struggle and tension.

The key element in Shabbat observance is a kind of passivity: refraining from 'work.'

Yet, over a period of three thousand years, the Jewish people have developed a tradition that transforms what might otherwise be a day of mere inactivity into one of joy and inner peace, 'a day of rest and holiness,' in the words of the liturgy."
--Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz


From Teshuvah by Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz