Talmud Bavli
Talmud Bavli

Chasidut for Shabbat 236:10

אמר רבי יוסי מימי לא קריתי לאשתי אשתי ולשורי שורי אלא לאשתי ביתי ולשורי שדי

and not of those who order [them] to rise [depart] from the <i>Beth Hamidrash</i>.<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' To adjourn for meals. ');"><sup>26</sup></span> R. Jose also said: May my lot be of those who collect charity, but not of those who distribute charity.<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' It is very difficult to perform the latter with absolute impartiality, as personal predilections are apt to intervene. ');"><sup>27</sup></span> R. Jose also said: May my lot be of those who are suspected whilst innocent.<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Lit., 'and it is not in him'. ');"><sup>28</sup></span>

Kedushat Levi

Exodus 31,12.Hashem said to Moses, to say: but ‎you are to observe My Sabbath days for the Sabbath is a sign ‎between Me and you, etc;” our sages in the Talmud ‎‎Beytzah 16 learned from this verse that when one gives a ‎gift to one’s fellow man one needs to inform him of this fact; they ‎quote the fact that G’d gave the Jewish people the gift of the ‎Sabbath, but made a point of informing them beforehand. In the ‎parlance of our sages, G’d told the people that He had kept a ‎valuable gift hidden in His treasure chamber, a gift called Sabbath. ‎What did G’d mean by referring to the Sabbath as a valuable gift? ‎He referred to the light and the holiness that emanates from the ‎celestial regions and supplies people with something we loosely ‎refer to as ‎רוח הקודש‎, holy spirit, also known as ‎ערבות‎, a name for ‎pleasurable sensations as experienced in the celestial regions.‎
Actually, we are meant to be looking forward to the special ‎gifts experienced on the Sabbath throughout the six working ‎days, and therefore we should concern ourselves with the ‎preparations for the Sabbath not only on the Sabbath but every ‎day. The degree in which we experience the gift of holy spirit just ‎described on the Sabbath reflects the efforts we have made during ‎the week to welcome the Sabbath when it comes.
When we read in Exodus 16,5 –concerning the first Sabbath ‎the Israelites experienced in the desert when the manna did not ‎fall but they received an extra portion of the preceding day- ‎והכינו ‏את אשר יביאו‎, ”they are to prepare what they are going to bring ‎home on that day,” this is an instruction to prepare oneself for ‎the Sabbath on the weekday. Our sages have coined a famous ‎phrase when they said ‎מי שאינו טרח בערב שבת מהיכן יאכל בשבת?‏‎, “if ‎someone did not make the necessary effort on the Sabbath eve, ‎how he is going to have something to eat on the Sabbath?”‎
In spite of the fact that we human beings made an effort to ‎provide for our needs, the Sabbath is still considered a valuable ‎gift. The reason is that all man’s efforts notwithstanding, he is ‎not entitled to an automatic gift of holiness nor is he entitled to ‎be the recipient of outpourings of G’d’s largesse. If G’d’s gift of ‎the Sabbath is entirely gratuitous, why do we need to put in so ‎much effort into preparing for the Sabbath? The reason is that ‎G’d’s gift of the Sabbath is in danger of being wasted unless the ‎recipient has provided a receptacle that ensures that it can be put ‎to good use. [If someone receives a bouquet of flowers but ‎does not have a vase to put these flowers in to fill it with water to ‎preserve them, the gift is wasted. Ed.]
Observance of the Sabbath consists of two separate aspects, ‎called by the Torah: ‎זכור ושמור‎ “to remember,” and “to keep,” in ‎the two versions of the Ten Commandments. (Exodus 20 and ‎Deuteronomy 5 respectively) In kabbalistic parlance the ‎זכור‎ ‎aspect refers to the masculine side of the table of emanations, ‎whereas the ‎שמור‎ aspect belongs to the feminine side. [The ‎‎“masculine” aspect refers to the spiritual aspect, whereas the ‎‎“feminine” aspect refers to the materialistic aspect. Ed.] ‎Some people observe the Sabbath primarily on account of the ‎physical pleasures it affords, i.e. a rest from back-breaking labour ‎in the field during the weekdays, consuming more and tastier ‎food, spending “quality” time with one’s family, etc. Others view ‎the Sabbath as a day that affords them an opportunity to provide ‎their Creator with pleasure and satisfaction for having created ‎him.‎
The most revealing comment about the value of honouring ‎the Sabbath by sanctifying it through reciting Kiddush and ‎not violating any of its negative commandments, is found in the ‎Talmud (Shabbat 118) where the sages say that anyone ‎doing this will have all his previous sins forgiven even if he had ‎been the type of idolater that was current in the generation of ‎Enosh (Adam’s grandson). The reason why observance of the ‎Sabbath is such a powerful means of man rehabilitating himself in ‎the eyes of the Lord through observing its laws, is that each ‎transgression he commits, is an act of distancing himself from his ‎holy origins, his roots, leaving a stain on his soul. Observing the ‎laws of the Sabbath is an act of returning to one’s roots thereby ‎removing stains on his soul. The additional spiritual light that G’d ‎bestows on us on the Sabbath also acts as therapy for a soul that ‎has been injured. This then is the ‎מתנה טובה‎, “the valuable gift” ‎G’d bestows upon us every Sabbath. If someone observes the ‎Sabbath exclusively in order to take advantage of the “window” ‎for immediate forgiveness for his sins this is “good,” but it is a far ‎cry from observing the Sabbath optimally. Hence his observance ‎is called “observing the feminine aspect of the Sabbath.”
Clearly, when someone observes the Sabbath for such ‎considerations it is a good thing, but even if he observes the ‎Sabbath for the sake of receiving spiritual rewards this is not yet ‎the “optimal” manner in which to observe the Sabbath, it is still ‎part of the aspect of the Sabbath we have called the “feminine” ‎aspect. We have mentioned a number of times that serving G’d, ‎i.e. including through Sabbath observance, that the highest level ‎of such service must always revolve around his “giving” ‎something to His Creator not around his “receiving” something ‎from Him. This “giving” must not be confused with presenting ‎sacrifices on the altar. It need not be a tangible gift; in fact it ‎cannot be a tangible gift seeing that G’d has no use for tangible ‎gifts, seeing everything in the universe is His by definition? ‎Sabbath observance, just as any other form of service, including ‎prayer, must be designed to please the Lord and give Him ‎satisfaction in order to qualify as keeping the “masculine, ‎זכור‎ ‎aspect of the Sabbath.” When David said in psalms 68,35 ‎תנו עוז ‏לאלוקים‎, “give might to G’d!,” he emphasized the need for man to ‎give something to G’d that will confirm and reinforce His power ‎as being actual not only potential through His creatures ‎responding to Him and seeking His nearness. This may be done ‎through performance of commandments physically.‎ ‎
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy

Kedushat Levi

When we keep this in mind we may be better able to ‎understand a strange statement in Shabbat 118 according ‎to which if the entire Jewish people were to observe just two ‎consecutive Sabbath days properly the messiah would arrive ‎immediately. The Talmud quotes Isaiah 56,4-7 in support of this; ‎we read thereכה אמר ה' לסריסים אשר ישמרו את שבתותי.....והביאותים ‏אל הר קדשי ושמחתים בבית תפלתי‎, “thus says the Lord, as for the ‎eunuchs who keep My Sabbaths,………I will bring them to My ‎sacred Mountain and let them rejoice in My House of Prayer, etc.” ‎Why did the Talmud choose to interpret Isaiah’s words as ‎applying to the observance of two Sabbaths? Why would not the ‎collective observance by all the Israelites of a single Sabbath ‎suffice to bring on the redemption?‎
We have a rule that there is a spiritual awakening that occurs ‎in the “lower” regions of the universe, just as there is a parallel ‎spiritual awakening originating in the celestial regions. Translated ‎loosely, the difference between these two “awakenings” is their ‎origin. Spiritual awakenings can be the result of good deeds ‎performed by man here on earth, or they can be the result of ‎inspiration from above.
‎‎[I have heard that the difference between a psalm ‎commencing with the words ‎לדוד מזמור‎, and one commencing ‎with ‎מזמור לדוד‎, is that in the former the holy spirit had already ‎entered David before he commenced composing, whereas in the ‎latter type he commenced composing, as a result of which he was ‎granted holy spirit. Ed.]
Whereas it is easy to understand the merit accruing to us if ‎we by our own efforts decided to observe the Sabbath in deed and ‎thought, the question is why we deserve credit when our Sabbath ‎observance was inspired by G’d and not by our own efforts? We ‎must remember that when G’d favours us with the inspiration to ‎observe the Sabbath, (or some other commandment) He does so ‎because of something good we must have done or our forefathers ‎must have done. We have pointed out repeatedly that G’d “takes ‎pride” in His creatures having performed the commandments. He ‎does so when they did so without having to be prompted. This is ‎proof that they did so enthusiastically. As a result of such ‎enthusiasm by the person or persons or congregations when they ‎perform G’d’s commandments, G’d is encouraged to provide ‎stimulus for further mitzvah performance. [This is ‎what the sages in Avot 4,2 call ‎שכר מצוה מצוה‎, “the reward ‎for performance of a commandment is the encouragement ‎provided with the help of heaven to perform additional ‎commandments.” Ed.] G’d’s largesse need not necessarily ‎manifest itself in material benefits but it can take the form of ‎human beings becoming endowed with greater intellectual ‎capacity as a result of which they will desire to observe more ‎commandments and with greater enthusiasm.‎
When the Talmud spoke about the observance of two ‎Sabbaths being a requisite for the redemption following ‎immediately on the heels of these two Sabbaths, the Talmud ‎referred to the second such Sabbath being the result of G’d ‎having inspired the people so that they can intensify the Sabbath ‎observance and do so with greater enthusiasm than when they ‎observed the first of these Sabbaths. When we attain the level of ‎awareness so that we please the Creator by the way in which we ‎observe His commandments, we truly deserve to be redeemed.‎
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy

Kedushat Levi

Exodus 31,16. “the Children of Israel are to observe the ‎Sabbath, etc.;” this verse helps us understand a statement ‎by the Talmud in Shabbat< 118 according to which “if the ‎Jewish people were only to observe two Sabbaths the Messiah ‎would already have come.” When an Israelite observes the ‎Sabbath properly, the spiritual uplift derived from that ‎experience will leave its mark during the six weekdays following, ‎so that in effect he has observed two Sabbaths, i.e. on the day ‎that G’d had sanctified at the end of His creative activity, and the ‎one to which His creatures, have given sanctity during the days ‎following. Not only that; if one has served G’d during the six ‎working days, “observing” the negative commandments of the ‎Sabbath on the following Sabbath becomes very much easier. As a ‎result, he will almost automatically observe every Sabbath in the ‎future also and be looking forward to it.‎
When we keep these considerations in mind we will also have ‎less difficulty in answering a question posed in the Jerusalem ‎Talmud Taanit 1,1 that even the observance by the Jewish ‎people of a single Sabbath is sufficient to usher in the messianic ‎age. [The question raised by the reader of this statement is ‎if the Jerusalem Talmud disagrees with the Babylonian Talmud in ‎‎Shabbat 118 that we quoted previously. Ed.] What ‎the Jerusalem Talmud means is simply that once the first ‎Sabbath has been observed optimally, observing the next Sabbath ‎is so easy that it represents no additional achievement in terms of ‎overcoming Satan’s attempts to deflect us from our purpose. At ‎any rate, essentially it is the collective observance by the Jewish ‎people of a single Sabbath which will result in the messiah ‎coming shortly thereafter. This is the meaning of the words: ‎ושמרו בני ישראל את השבת לעשות את השבת‎, “the Children of Israel ‎are to observe the Sabbath to ‘“make it into a Sabbath.’”‎
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy

Kedushat Levi

Available for Premium members only

Kedushat Levi

Available for Premium members only
Previous VerseFull ChapterNext Verse