Parshas Vayakhel
Endless Value to All We Do
By Rabbi Label Lam
And Moshe assembled the entire assembly of the Children of Israel and
said
to them; “These are the things that HASHEM commanded to do them: “On six
days, work may be done, but the seventh day shall be holy for you, a day
of complete cessation for HASHEM…You shall not kindle fire in any of your
dwellings on the day of Shabbos..:” (Shemos 35: 1-3)
Moshe is commanded to tell all the Children of Israel what “to do” and
then it seems there is a slight deviation. By instructing about the
Shabbos again he tells them what “not to do” first. Shabbos finds itself
sandwiched between the instructions and accounts of the creation of the
Tabernacle. This week it serves as the introduction to the construction of
the Tabernacle where as prior to this it had been the crowning conclusion
of that same project. Why?
There are two aspects of Shabbos. 1) In one way Shabbos is the pleasant
prize after a good week of work. 2) In another way it is the all important
pause in preparation for the coming week. The Shabbos serves as the calm
both before and after the storm.
A couple with a thriving business in Manhattan had an amazing adventure.
It was late Saturday night when we got the call. Shabbos had been long
over. What a trip they had had! They boarded a boat Friday afternoon that
traveled out into the bay of New York and there it anchored for more than
twenty four hours. From there they could see the city sparkling like a
jewel in the distance and so they just relaxed and enjoyed being safely
away from the place that occupied the days of their lives. It was
called, “A trip to nowhere!”
I remarked, “You’ve described something similar to Shabbos! Shabbos,
though is not a “trip to nowhere”. It is a trip to somewhere! (Later this
couple came to us for Shabbos numerous times and is now counted happily
amongst the “Keepers of Shabbos”)
Shabbos is not an escape from a week of harried activity. Certainly, we
cease from doing many things but where do we retreat to? Back home! We
walk down the same streets and past the same trees we fly hurriedly by
during the week. Suddenly we are moving slow enough to notice things and
people we may never had seen had the maddening drumbeat not been made to
stop.
However, when one uses any artificial or contrived method of escape not
only do the problems not go away but they loom even larger. We find
ourselves not more equipped but less so to deal with the rugged realities
of our lives. We are made lower, not higher, in the end. Shabbos returns
us to the center of our lives. It allows the swelling from the pressure of
the week to subside in order to see things with a truer sense of
proportion.
There is a building in Manhattan, owned by a Shomer Shabbos Jew. The
architecture of the building tells a story. Imagine a tall block and out
of the inside is carved a rectangular center piece or alternately a tall
rectangular piece of empty space around which is built a building. The
entire structure is a made of glass from the lobby and beyond. Climbing
plants decoratively drape the banisters of the atrium. The first time I
saw it, I thought to myself, “What a waste of space! How much good rental
property is lost in this albeit beautiful but inefficient design?” Later,
I was informed that the offices that face the atrium are as costly as ones
that face the street. Nothing is wasted. Every office has an exposure to
light and is thereby made more valuable.
Similarly, Shabbos may seem to be a waste of so many man-hours but in the
end it yields time. The quiet refrain of Shabbos allows one to recapture
energy and focus. The week that follows a Shabbos is likely a more
productive and meaningful one. Creating that sacred center piece in our
life lets sufficient light into our inner world to lend endless value to
all we do.
Text Copyright © 2005 by Rabbi Label Lam and Torah.org.