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Opportunities
Recently,
I took part in a day-long symposium at the New York headquarters of the
Reform movement on the topic of Shabbat observance. We spent the day
looking at a variety of Shabbat activities including worship, learning
activities, congregational programs and individual/family practices.
While Friday evening service attendance is pretty good throughout the
Reform movement, that is often the sum total of Reform Shabbat
observance. This is reflective of both people’s engagement with their
Judaism and engagement with 21st century American culture.
A part of the discussion centered around the issues of obligation and
commended-ness. Both are concepts from which many Reform Jews recoil.
And not just Reform Jews — contemporary American society tends to shun
the idea of obligation. Shabbat observance is, of course, commanded in
the Torah. Failing to disengage from weekday activities is punishable by
death.
We do not, of course, kill or ostracize people who continue their
workweek activities on Shabbat. And ceasing those activities is
sometimes difficult to do in our 24/7, instant communication,
choice-filled, workaholic world. Yet for that very reason, our need for
Shabbat has perhaps never been greater. With non-stop work and
activities, the importance of setting aside separate time — sacred time
— is only more urgent. Holiness means separation, setting something
aside for a special purpose. God rested on the seventh day and called
the seventh day “holy.”
If we resist the idea of being commanded or obligated to rest on the
seventh day, then how else can we view that time? In the Reform
movement, we teach the principle of informed choice: understand all of
the mitzvot/ commandments and incorporate into your life those which
increase your sense of holiness. Someone at our symposium characterized
the mitzvot as opportunities to encounter God. I like that. How many of
the mitzvot surrounding Shabbat serve not only to counterbalance our
chaotic, spinning-outof-control lives, but offer a possibility to look
beyond the mundane and have an experience with the Divine? To what
extent do we need to stop for a moment and appreciate the world around
us in order to give meaning to the work on which we expend so much
energy?
We all spend so much time doing. When I talk to families and listen to
their schedules, I’m exhausted. Work, school, sports, professional
appointments, volunteer activities, cultural and social events — a
non-stop list of “doing.” Shabbat, on the other hand, is a time of
“being.” Shabbat is not about prohibitions or requirements. Shabbat is a
time when accomplishing gives way to accomplishment, seeking melts into
having, the need to have becomes satisfaction.
What is the goal of all that “doing” anyway? Do we really need to have
more? Are we obliged to accomplish more? In the grand scheme of things,
how will all that doing make us better people or the world a better
place?
Shabbat is about looking around and appreciating our blessings. Shabbat
is knowing that — at least for the moment — all we have is all we really
need. We don’t labor on Shabbat; we enjoy the fruits of our labor.
During the 16 years I worked as a professional musician in Seattle, I
directed several musical organizations, conducted scores of concerts,
planned countless services, worked hard on lots of programs. After my
farewell concert, many of the people I’d worked so closely with over
those 16 years came to a reception at which they talked about the work
we had done together. As I listened, I suddenly realized that, in all
that time of trying to accomplish so many things, I’d never once stopped
to ask myself if what I was doing was effective. After each concert or
service or program, I was immediately planning and executing the next
one, always trying to do better, accomplish more.
Something of the work is lost if we don’t stop long enough to give it
meaning. Whether Shabbat means a 25-hour period from Friday to Saturday
sundown, or it is a special time set aside, not to accomplish but to
appreciate, we need the break in order to allow the work to become
significant — to become holy.
L’shalom,
Andrew Bernard
Cantor
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