Heschel's 1951 essay distills the rabbinic conception of Shabbat into a hundred pages of philosophical-poetic prose that remains, seventy years later, the best short introduction to what the seventh day actually is. The argument that civilization conquers space and Shabbat sanctifies time is not decorative metaphor; it is the structural claim of the book, and it holds up.
tag: #judaism
3 posts
8 years ago
Reflection on Heschel's The Sabbath
8 years ago
The Two Torahs
The popular reading of Judaism imagines a single Torah, written, sufficient on its own — and the rabbinic literature as commentary added on top. The classical sources tell a different story, and the structural argument for it is harder to dismiss than most readers realize.
9 years ago
What Tefillah Actually Is
The popular understanding of Jewish prayer is a wish list submitted to the Divine. Classical sources treat tefillah as something else entirely — closer to a daily discipline of standing before God than a customer-service relationship with Him.
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