Torah.org Home Subscribe Services Support Us
 

Writing Under the Influence

by Rabbi Berel Wein

I always attempt to write my weekly comments on the forthcoming parsha of the week as well as this type of “On Judaism” article on Saturday night or early Sunday morning. It is then that I am still under the influence of Shabat and I find that to be calming and stimulating at one and the same time. The influence of Shabat is never limited to its twenty-five hours visit with us. If it is truly appreciated and valued then its aura stretches over the entire week until the next Shabat arrives. This is especially important in our very crowded world, full of noise, great and small decisions and enormous frustrations. The ability to think about issues and events, about life itself and our individual roles in family, society and the world generally, let alone to be able to think clearly about these issues, is severely hampered by our daily distractions and mundane but necessary chores.

Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzatto in his immortal work, Mesillat Yesharim, begins his book by asking the basic question of life – What is the basic obligation and purpose of living? Why are we here and what are we supposed to do with our existence on earth? Though logically speaking, this question should haunt us every waking moment of our lives, the truth is that we are usually so busy making up our grocery list that we never really have the ability to concentrate on answering this basic question of life. It is only on Shabat when we are at least physically freed from life’s pernicious demands that such a question can be contemplated and addressed. That is why it is so important that we all should attempt to make the Shabat influence stretch over as much of the workday week as possible.

Over all of my years of writing, I have found that I am most able to write satisfactorily (at least in my opinion) the closer I am, time wise, to Shabat. With the distractions and problems of the week not yet upon me, though I know they are not long in coming, I can approach my writing obligations refreshed and much calmer than I would if I wrote on Wednesday or Thursday. Shabat is a shower for my brain, a cleansing of my inner being, an opportunity for spiritual growth (physical as well, as the Shabat meals in our home can attest to) and at least some minimal contemplation on important personal issues.

Writing regularly is a cruel taskmaster. Without the aid of my Shabat experience and its influence it would undoubtedly be an even more formidable task. I realize that Shabat does not improve my prose or perfect my grammar, but it does help me think about what to write and what my true opinions are on matters that concern me and perhaps others as well. I think that this is another possible interpretation for what the rabbis called the neshama yeteira – the additional soul – that inhabits our being on Shabat. The additional soul is really our true internal self yearning to be expressed in our thoughts and behavior which oftentimes is stifled within us by the demands of the routine and schedule of everyday living.

We are not all necessarily writers, though a great writer once wrote that there is a great book residing within each of us awaiting exposure and redemption. But we can each attempt to carry the benevolent and holy influence of the Shabat with us during the days of the work week. There were Jews who named their children Shabat or Shabtai in order to remind them of the Shabat all of the days of their lives. One of the greatest compliments that could be paid to a Jew in previous generations was to be called by others a “Shabat Jew.” It not only meant that the person was a Shabat observer, something which the overwhelming majority of Jews then were, but that the person carried the Shabat within him or her always, even in the midst of the pressures of the workday week.

Being a “Shabat Jew” had less to do with personal scholarship and public leadership roles and much more to do with inner serenity, satisfaction with one’s lot in life, a spirit of optimism and faith that transcended all of the pettiness, anger and frustrations of everyday living. Driving an automobile “under the influence” is dangerous and criminal. Living one’s life under the influence of the holy Shabat truly gives one a taste of eternity and immortality.

Shabat shalom.

Berel Wein

Reprinted with permission from RabbiWein.com
 
Submit Your Comments
Note: Comments are for display on this page, they are not sent to the author.
First Name: Last Name:
Email: Display Comment? Yes
Yes, anonymously
No
Comment:

Please check 8, 10, and 2 to submit your comment.
1.
 2.
 3.
 4.
 5.
 
6.
 7.
 8.
 9.
 10.
 


Please Support TORAH.ORG
Print Version       Email this article to a friend

 

ARTICLES ON BEHAR AND THE OMER:

View Complete List

Why Shemittah?
Shlomo Katz - 5768

Divide By Fifty - Behar/Bechukosai
Rabbi Raymond Beyda - 5764

Growth Period
Rabbi Yaakov Menken - 5755

Win Free Laptops this Lag Ba

Sensitivity Training
Rabbi Aron Tendler - 5762

Where Have the Years Gone?
Rabbi Berel Wein - 5761

The Tests of Chukim and Mishpatim
Rabbi Yissocher Frand - 5757

ArtScroll

Seven Perfect Weeks
Rabbi Yosey Goldstein - 5756

Charity and Empathy
Rabbi Chaim Flom - 5767

Paying it Forward
Rabbi Mordechai Kamenetzky - 5765

The Everything Torah Book

Manual for a Sanctified Life
Rabbi Aron Tendler - 5761

Blind Faith
Rabbi Mordechai Kamenetzky - 5761

For Yourself
Rabbi Pinchas Avruch - 5764

Email Sponsorship

Effort Counts
Rabbi Yaakov Menken - 5762

What We All Really Want!
Rabbi Label Lam - 5762

Of Interest to Us All
Rabbi Pinchas Winston - 5759

Sefiras HaOmer and Rabbi Akiva
Rabbi Yehudah Prero - 5766


Learning Events and Programs

Project Genesis

Torah.org Home


Torah Portion

Jewish Law

Ethics

Texts

Learn the Basics

Seasons

Features

TORAHAUDIO

Ask The Rabbi

Knowledge Base

Discussion Forum




Help

About Us

Contact Us


Enable popup menus


Download to my HandHeld


Torah.org Home
Torah.org HomeCapalon.com Copyright Information