Еврейская Библия
Еврейская Библия

Chasidut к Дварим 5:12

שָׁמ֣֛וֹר אֶת־י֥וֹם֩ הַשַׁבָּ֖֨ת לְקַדְּשׁ֑֜וֹ כַּאֲשֶׁ֥ר צִוְּךָ֖֣ ׀ יְהוָ֥֣ה אֱלֹהֶֽ֗יךָ

Соблюдай день субботний, чтобы святить его, как повелел тебе Господь, Бог твой.

Kedushat Levi

Deuteronomy 28,12. Hashem will open for you ‎His bounteous store, the heavens.” Although we have a ‎statement by our sages in B’rachot 33 that G’d’s only ‎‎“possessions” in His treasure chambers are the four cubits of ‎‎“halachah,” i.e. reverence for Him displayed by meticulous ‎observance of the laws of the Torah, [a statement based on ‎Deuteronomy 10,12, Ed.], we also have a rule that ‎although man’s spiritual journey in this world commences with a ‎dose of reverence and awe for Hashem, this is followed by a ‎feeling of pleasure which proves to have been “hidden” within ‎the folds of the garment called ‎יראה‎, awe. The reason why this is ‎so is that had service of the Lord commenced with feelings of ‎pleasure, its ethical value would have been null and void, as ‎‎“serving” the Lord would have been turned into an entirely ‎pleasurable act, not something that is the result of choosing this ‎option in the knowledge that the alternative appeared to offer ‎more immediate rewards. This is the reason why the pleasurable ‎aspects of practicing reverence and awe for the Lord need to be ‎hidden during life on this earth. When man “tires himself out” ‎during a lifetime of service to his Creator, then G’d will open His ‎treasure chamber in the heavens so that he will enjoy pleasure. ‎This has been alluded to in the words of Isaiah 33,6 where the ‎prophet said: ‎יראת ה' היא אוצרו‎,”reverence for the Lord –that was ‎her treasure. (Zion’s)
The word ‎אוצר‎, usually translated as “treasure, or granary,” ‎applies to something stored out of sight, hidden. This “treasure” ‎normally concealed inside the attribute of ‎יראה‎, “fear, awe,” will ‎be released openly, i.e. in due course G’d will “open” these ‎treasures previously kept hidden as a result of the recipient ‎having served the Lord loyally. Our verse therefore concludes ‎with the simile of beneficial rainfall, i.e. G’d’s treasures being ‎openly revealed to the Jewish people as well as the world at large ‎as His gift to them. [During early Jewish history, when ‎Yitzchok, in a year of famine, and although not a farmer by ‎vocation, could plant and his harvest was 100 fold the harvest in ‎normal years, this convinced the Philistines to remain on good ‎terms with him. (Genesis 26,12-14, and 26-31) Ed.] This is ‎also the reason why the Torah once decrees that we observe the ‎Sabbath by writing: ‎זכור את יום השבת לקדשו‎, “remember the ‎Sabbath Day to keep it holy, (Exodus 20,8) and another time ‎שמור את יום השבת לקדשו‎, “observe the Sabbath Day to keep it ‎holy;” (Deuteronomy 5,12). The first time reference is made to ‎serving the Lord by your actively observing the Sabbath; the ‎second time it refers to the time when you will be passive, i.e. ‎receive the reward for having observed the Sabbath here on earth.‎ ‎
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Kedushat Levi

Exodus 20,8 “keep remembering the Sabbath day to keep ‎it holy.” In the review of the Ten Commandments by Moses ‎in Deuteronomy 5,12 the Torah writes: ‎שמור את יום השבת לקדשו‎, ‎‎“observe the Sabbath day to keep it holy.”
[Moses there adds the apparently unnecessary words: ‎כאשר צוך ה' אלוקיך‎, “just as the Lord your G’d has commanded ‎you.” Apparently, aware of the slight variation in the text from ‎our verse, Moses reassures the people that this is not a deviation. ‎Ed.]
[Most students in elementary school are already familiar ‎with the line in the hymn of ‎לכה דודי‎ that ‎שמור וזכור בדבור אחד ‏השמיענו א-ל המיוחד‎, “shamor and zachor the One and ‎only G’d has let us hear as a single word.” Ed.] The source ‎of the words in the hymn are found already in the Talmud Rosh ‎Hashanah 27. The deeper meaning of this somewhat enigmatic ‎statement is that the commandments of the Torah may be ‎divided into two parts; 1) the actual physical performance of the ‎commandment; 2) awareness at the time of performance of the ‎underlying intention of the Creator when He gave us this ‎commandment.. The qualitative difference between these two ‎aspects of the commandment is that only the performance is of ‎the essence, the underlying intention of G’d when formulating ‎the commandment is secondary.‎
There is, however an exception to this rule, and this ‎exception is the commandment of keeping the Sabbath holy. In ‎this instance the Torah clearly spelled out what our thoughts ‎must be when observing the Sabbath properly, i.e. the fact that it ‎is a testimonial of G’d having created the universe in the 6 days ‎preceding the first Sabbath. When a Jew refrains from doing any ‎of the activities which are forbidden on the Sabbath but he fails ‎to reflect on the fact that the sanctity of this day is due to G’d ‎having bidden us to remember that he created the universe in the ‎‎6 days preceding the original Sabbath, such a Jew has not ‎observed the commandment of “keeping the Sabbath.” Seeing ‎that the ‎זכירה‎, “the remembering,” primarily by reciting the ‎‎Kiddush is an integral part of the Sabbath is cited first ‎shows that as opposed to the other positive commandments ‎where the performance by the body is the primary element, this ‎is not the case in respect of the commandment of the Sabbath. ‎The very expression ‎זכר למעשה בראשית‎, “in commemoration of ‎the process of creation,” (on several occasions (in both the ‎‎shacharit and mussaph prayers) is proof that our ‎sages viewed this element of the Sabbath day as an essential part ‎thereof, no less so than the abstention from the type of work that ‎G’d “rested” from, i.e. ‎וינפש‎, on the original Sabbath of creation. ‎The Sabbath is the symbol of our faith that G’d preceded the ‎universe and therefore is the only Being in the universe deserving ‎to be worshipped as Deity.‎ ‎
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Kedushat Levi

The author of the central paragraph in the mussaph ‎prayer on the Sabbath, which commences with the words: ‎תכנת ‏שבת ...צוית פירושיה עם סדורי נסכיה‎, refers to the fact that the Torah ‎in the Sabbath legislation not only spelled out the commandment ‎of how to observe this day with one’s body, by allowing the body ‎to “rest” (constructively), but also spelled out how to observe it ‎with our soul.‎
When referring to the creative acts that G’d abstained from ‎on the seventh day of creation on account of which we are asked ‎to sanctify the Sabbath, both in connection with the word: ‎זכור‎ ‎in our portion, and again in Deuteronomy 5,12 in connection ‎with the word: ‎שמור‎, we must remember that the “light” which is ‎described in the Torah as G’d’s first act of intervention in the ‎condition of the “world” before G’d created order from chaos, was ‎‎“direct” light, i.e. an emanation from the Creator, a light which ‎expands in all directions of the universe, performing its function ‎commensurate with the needs of the region or domain which it ‎reaches. It then assumes a character germane to that region or ‎domain. In other words, this ‎אור ישר‎, will assume a different ‎intensity in the regions inhabited by the highest ranking angels, ‎the ‎שרפים‎, from the intensity it assumes in the celestial regions ‎inhabited by a lower ranking group of angels known as ‎חיות‎. The ‎same is true when this ‎אור ישר‎, arrives in the regions of the ‎terrestrial parts of the universe, the region known as ‎עולם העשיה‎. ‎At the same time arrival of this “light” also resulted, as an ‎unavoidable consequence, in “reflected” light, a response by the ‎creature who had received it from the Creator. [Compare ‎pages 364/365 where this subject has been discussed previously. ‎Ed.] Each region of the universe receives the amount and ‎intensity of this ‎אור הישר‎ appropriate to its needs.‎
In kabbalistic parlance the nature of the ‎אור החוזר‎, the ‎‎“reflected light,” is perceived as the remnant of the original light ‎which did not remain in the universe as the various universes ‎were unable to ”digest” it so that they could not make use of it as ‎it was too intense and would have destroyed these worlds. Upon ‎the return of this “light” to the Creator, the ‎אין סוף‎, it will be ‎condensed, i.e. its power will be restrained, but in a manner that ‎in the words of Michah 7,18 make it “digestible” only for the holy ‎Jewish people-as described in connection with Exodus 14,21, see ‎pages (364-366).-‎
Our sages in Rosh Hashanah 17 alluded to this idea when ‎they explained the term ‎לשארית נחלתו‎, “to the remnant of His ‎inheritance,” (His own people) in Michah 7,18, as those Jews who ‎transform themselves into truly G’d fearing personalities. ‎Concerning these types of people my sainted teacher Dov Baer ‎has said that the expression ‎שארית נחלתו‎ applies only to those ‎צדיקים‎ who spend almost all of their lives trying to elevate ‎themselves to the level of sanctity of their Creator.‎
The root of the concept of sanctity, ‎קדושה‎, holiness, sanctity, ‎is found where the ‎צמצום‎, the voluntary restriction G’d imposed ‎upon His essence occurs, so that He would not be a destructive ‎force in His own universe. [If we in our parlance, following ‎‎Rashi, translate holiness as “something apart,” this is no ‎contradiction, but a reflection of the difficulty of translating ‎celestial terminology into language used in the terrestrial part of ‎the universe, the part we humans inhabit. Ed.]
When the Jewish people sanctify themselves by means ‎permitted to them, and in that process separate themselves from ‎the pleasures of this terrestrial world, they do so because they are ‎aware that the so-called pleasures of this terrestrial world are ‎intrinsically worthless, so that they try to elevate themselves to a ‎region outside the domain of the terrestrial, physical universe. ‎These “regions” are beyond our ability to define and therefore we ‎are unable to describe them adequately. Seeing that the nations ‎of the world have none of them been found worthy of being ‎שארית נחלתו‎ “a residue of His inheritance,” it cannot be expected ‎of them to show the least bit of understanding of this subject.‎
Suffice it to say that the subject matter we called ‎אור חוזר‎ is ‎the unabsorbed part of the ‎אור ישר‎, the “direct” light that had left ‎the Essence of G’d and dispersed in different regions of His ‎universes, any “excess,” making a “return journey” in ‎preparation for further use by its Dispatcher, the Creator.‎
This inability of the nations of the world to comprehend the ‎nature of the Sabbath is the reason that while they understand ‎the concept of the Sabbath being a day that symbolizes that the ‎Creator had refrained from overt creative activity, they selected ‎for themselves on an arbitrary basis a different day of the week, ‎one that had not been sanctified by the Creator for that purpose. ‎When the Torah, both in our portion and in Deuteronomy, ‎stresses the element of the sanctity of this “Day of rest,” for the ‎Jewish people, it alludes to the unbroken connection between the ‎Jewish people and the celestial regions, in spite of the fact that ‎our bodies (and, temporarily our souls) inhabit the terrestrial part ‎of the universe. [I have used some of my own wording in ‎the foregoing, for reasons of simplicity. Ed.]
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