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Turn Friday into Erev Shabbos #235 - Creating Rest
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[music]
Good. Shabas everybody. Today's my
shables.
>> [chant]
[music]
>> Friday of Shabas. Today Shabas and we
are turning our Friday into Shabas and
we're doing so thanks for the generosity
of our dear friends Meni and
Fredo in memory of Rabbi Rabbi Lord
Jonathan Saxen
David. I want to build on something we
said last week. Last week we spoke about
Shabasa
created something new when he created
Shabas. I I thought Shabas is the end of
creation. Shabas is the end of creation.
It's the end of creation in terms of the
39 categories of creative labor. But he
created something new that didn't exist.
And what was the thing that didn't
exist?
Babas.
When we stop, when we cease, when we're
happy with what we have, that's when we
have. That's when we have peace of mind.
When we're running and chasing and
doing, then we're never ever satisfied.
We're never happy. We have no peace of
mind. So, let's just continue that same.
rested from all the work he did.
That God created
to do. What does that mean? That word
everybody asks.
We're all familiar with it. We say it.
It's part of our kdish. It's part of our
doning. But what does it mean?
This is a combination. Turn Friday into
aros shabas and a little kittish sitter
snippet. What do you mean lassos? So the
in theorus quotes the shalom who says
the following. It can explain it in two
ways.
Shabas six days of the week a Jew needs
to be occupied and preoccupied with
preparing for shabas. Today is
Sunday.
All the days are oriented around how
close are we? How many days has it been
since Shabas? How many days is it in the
count towards Shabas? But there is no
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday for a
Jewish shabas shabas. All of our
weekdays are working so that when shabas
comes, the payday theoras
of when shabas comes I can lean in I can
experience I can elevate I can find the
holiness. So the six days are preparing
literally it means shopping and cooking
and setting a table and inviting guests.
It also means spiritually becoming who
we could and should be to have the most
and says the shalom says the amus
directly proportional to the preparation
we put in is the holiness and what we'll
get out of Shabas. If you try to wing
it, if you run into Shabas last minute
of the 18 minutes, if you're not really
ready, then not only physically will you
have nothing to eat, not only will your
table not be set, not only will you not
be dressed for Shabas, but spiritually
you won't be able to feel and experience
and be elevated and be transformed by
Shabas.
tells us that whoever prepares toils,
[snorts] puts themselves out on Shabas,
we'll have what to eat on Shabas. So
that don't doesn't only mean physically,
it means spiritually. Do we do chuva and
repair? Do we figure out where we went
wrong? Do we pride in what we did right?
How do we understand and inter and
interpret our week so that we can go
into shabas trying to prepare to do
better in the week that will be?
Shabas after
because you know what's coming another
Shabas.
We get it wrong. We get it backwards. We
think that Shabas is so we can rest for
the week. Oh, I'm so tired. I've barely
slept. What a week it's been. Shabas.
I'm going to eat and sleep and rest and
laugh and play so that I have the energy
for the next week. No. The whole point
and purpose of the week is to be able to
have Shabas. Shabas is the
Shabas is the tlas. Shabas is the
essence. Shabas is the goal. Shabas is
the all week long we work so that we can
have Shabas. All week long we prepare.
We get ready. What am I going to say?
What story? What provocative question?
What game will we play? What joke or
story will I share? How will we laugh
and bond? How will we rest? How can I
lean in and get the most out of Shabas?
But it doesn't happen on its own. It
happens only when we put in the prep and
the time. And therefore,
another Shabas. We have one Shabas and
then we get back to work for a week to
get ready for the next Shabas. So the
Shabas is not to get ready for the week.
The week is to get ready for Shabas. And
this is very important to our mentality.
We turn Friday into of Shabas when on
Friday we don't say, "Oh, thank God.
Shabas is coming. I'm going to pass out.
I set the timer on the lights to go out
right away so the meal can't go on
because I just want to pass out because
what a week it's been." That is not the
purpose of Shabas. It's the opposite.
It's that Shab all week long I work so
that I can have Shabas. Shabas is the
payday. Shabas is the purpose. Shabas is
the goal. Shabas is the destination.
Even though we're refraining, we're
resting from doing the So what's If
Shabas is all about being at rest and
not doing work, then what did God do?
What is the creation? What is theos?
Because this is the place. What did he
create? Resting. Being at rest is work.
Being at rest is creation of something
new. Is the creation of something new.
That's
the great reward for the effort that we
put into the resting itself. On this
Friday, as we're turning our Friday into
Shabas, it's not Friday. It's shabases.
And Shabases means not, oh, thank God
TGIF. Thank God it's Friday. I could
pass out. I could rest. I could relax. I
could I look forward to Shabas.
It's that Shabas is the Mccor braha. So
spend Friday getting ready. Spend Shabas
building up. Put on great music. Put a
skip in your step. Put extra flavor in
the food. Set the table and set yourself
up for a great shabas. A story tora. Be
ready because only
doesn't just mean physically will you
have what to eat. Y means will you eat
from the holiness and the beauty will
you be transformed. Maybe a holy,
healthy, a happy, a wonderful Shabas
first. [music]
>> [music and singing]