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Blog EntryShabbat (the Sabbath) - thinking aloudSep 13, '07 7:08 AM
for everyone

If I was back home in Israel I would have had to have done all my shopping by early afternoon yesterday. The shops there will be closed now till Sunday - they're always closed on Shabbat (Saturday - the Jewish Sabbath) and this year Rosh Hashana (Jewish new year) falls on Thursday and Friday, which means three days off from work (nice) but also three days of the shops being closed (not so convenient). (oh, and no public transport, which is also not hugely convenient if you haven't got a car.)

Here in England there's only one day in the year (Christmas Day) when all the shops close and public transport stops.

So which is the better way?

I don't feel I have answers, just questions. I grew up as a secular Israeli and was thus one of a large part of the population who resented these laws being imposed on us in the name of a religion which we didn't understand and had no love for. Now I do believe in God and know that it was he who gave us the commandment to rest one day a week, and I believe that this commandment comes from his love for us - he knows our weaknesses, he knows we need a rest once in a while and he also knows that we are very good at forgetting that.

And this is what I see here in England, where we have the freedom to shop on any day of the week - I see people forgetting about the need to rest and relax, filling every moment with some sort of activity. Would it be better for us if one non-shopping day in the week was imposed on us (as it used to)? Would it force people to stop for a day and rest?

The trouble is I'm not so sure about that. Those of us who feel they have to keep busy will find ways of doing that, even if they fill their time with church activities. Why do some of us have this need to keep busy all the time? Is it to prove our worth? Is it to show that we're not bone idle? Is it in order to avoid stillness, because we're scared of hearing ourselves think for a change? Is it because we're afraid of hearing God speak to us (because he might have some uncomfortable things to say)?

I've got into the habit over the years of going away on retreat once in a while. I need it even now that I'm out of the rat race, even though I'm at home and you'd think I could easily spend time praying and listening to God whenever I want to - the problem is that when you're at home there are always a million other things you could be doing, and it's not always easy to focus on God when you can see the pile of ironing that's waiting for you. At home there's the computer, the phone, the washing up - lots of things I could fill my time with. Going away to a place that is set apart for the purpose, I can become still more easily and I don't have so many ways of shutting God out.

So in a way I need once in a while to curb my own freedom so that I would be able to spend more time doing what is actually really good for me! Isn't it weird, this human tendency (or is it just me?) to avoid doing what we know is really good for us?

Like I said, I have no answers, only questions. So now it's over to you - tell me what you think.


jweissman wrote on Sep 14, '07
Doing stuff stops us thinking too much. This is my theory. If you stop you begin to analyse and realise things. Perhaps we're scared of spending too much time in spiritual reflection, so we keep active. Or maybe we've had a bad time of things, and now have bad memories, so we try to forget about it and do new things, hoping to create good memories. Part of it perhaps is the influence of adverts & music & society, which is always telling us to do stuff and be interesting. Maybe we think we'll look pathetic if we tell our friends "I stayed home and rested" too much, when they inquire about our weekends. Maybe living an active life is just fun for lots of people. Or perhaps it's an "I'll sleep when I'm dead" mentality. Alternatively, you can see an active life as an attempt to show God how grateful you are for life and his creation, and how you're determined to enjoy it as much as possible, and redeem the time. In short, I don't know. Nice post though :)
houseofbread wrote on Sep 20, '07
Hi Haven't worked out the answer to this one yet but here are a couple of my thoughts. I can be really busy or sometimes busy doing nothing. Sometimes I can have free time but still not rested inside,or even bored. This week we have spend a couple of days in a hotel to rest, mainly swimming, sauna and relaxing but still not "rested". Other times I can be busy but feel rested inside.There's something about Hebrew 4 of entering G_d's rest that needs to have it's outworkings in my life. What I find is when my relation is right with him I am at rest no matter how busy I am, yet if I'm going my own way or worring instead of trusting G-d I'm tired no matter how little I do. Somehow I am at rest when I am relating to G-d, sometimes that is time aside,other times it's an awareness of Him whatever I'm doing. Sometimes I just need to be disciplined and set time aside for G-d, if Jesus needed to set time aside to listen to his father then I certainly need too.
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