THE GIFT OF SABBATH REST
The daily pressures of life often get us down. Or as the poet William Wordsworth put it "the world is too much with us". We all need to take a break occasionally in order to recharge our batteries. But how many of us switch off our cellphones and internet connections for one day every week?
This is what technology guru Arthur Goldstuck does, even though he runs an internet research company and is fully wired. As the sun sets on Friday evening he takes a complete break from any gadgetry until the end of the Jewish Sabbath on Saturday evening. Dr Greg Mills, Director of the Brenthurst Foundation, also switches off his emails on Saturdays even though he is not Jewish.
It makes sense on many levels, but the Biblical basis for the Sabbath is the Fourth Commandment: "Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy." This is because God ceased from work after creating the world in six days.
The instruction not to work extends to servants, strangers and even animals. This was an extraordinary restraint in ancient times as it made everyone equal on this day. Not even a king could compel any other person to work on the Sabbath.
It is meant to be a day of spiritual contemplation and time with family before plunging back into the hurly burly of daily life. Activities like switching on a light or driving are forbidden as they involve creative acts whereas the day is meant to teach gratitude and appreciation of nature.