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Seventh Heaven: Celebrating Shabbat with Rebbe Nachman of Breslov
Seventh Heaven: Celebrating Shabbat with Rebbe Nachman of Breslov
Seventh Heaven: Celebrating Shabbat with Rebbe Nachman of Breslov
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Seventh Heaven: Celebrating Shabbat with Rebbe Nachman of Breslov

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Deepen your understanding of Shabbat, awaken to the possibilities,
and experience the day with an extra measure of holiness.

Seventh Heaven delves into the art of consciously observing Shabbat—exploring many of the day’s traditional religious practices within the context of life’s spiritual dynamics. With the help and wisdom of Rebbe Nachman of Breslov—one of the most important of the early Hasidic masters—this guidebook offers insight into the deeper meaning and purpose of a broad range of Shabbat observances and seeks to show how each custom or law fits within the whole.

In accessible, easy-to-understand language, 7th Heaven is a spiritual guide for all levels of Shabbat observance:

  • If Shabbat is new to you, or you’ve experienced it only in its popular form, but would like to deepen your understanding and connection.
  • If Shabbat is something you grew up with, but you were never taught the inner meaning of all the customs and laws you were told to obey.
  • If Shabbat has never been a part of your spiritual practice, but you would like to learn more about the Jewish pathway to wholeness and higher consciousness.

Based on the teachings of Rebbe Nachman of Breslov (1772–1810) and those of his closest disciple, Reb Noson, the deep insights into Torah and spirituality revealed by these great Hasidic luminaries are as relevant in today’s world as they were some two centuries ago, when they were first taught.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 22, 2011
ISBN9781580235327
Seventh Heaven: Celebrating Shabbat with Rebbe Nachman of Breslov
Author

Moshe Mykoff

Moshe Mykoff is a writer and translator living in Jerusalem. He has published more than a dozen works, including his best-selling adaptations of Rebbe Nachman's maxims on spiritual growth, The Empty Chair: Finding Hope and Joy and The Gentle Weapon: Prayers for Everyday and Not-So-Everyday Moments (both Jewish Lights), and his translation of seven volumes of Rebbe Nachman's magnum opus, Likutey Moharan (Breslov Research Institute).

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    Book preview

    Seventh Heaven - Moshe Mykoff

    SHABBAT:

    ON THE

    WAY IN

    INTRODUCTION

    CHARITY AND EXPENSES:

    SPIRITUAL CURRENCY

    REVIEWING THE TORAH PORTION:

    TRANSLATING SECULAR INTO SPIRITUAL

    TRIMMING THE NAILS:

    MANICURING A MORE PERFECT EXISTENCE

    BATHING AND IMMERSING IN A MIKVAH:

    THROUGH FIRE AND WATER

    SPECIAL CLOTHING:

    SUITED FOR SHABBAT

    SAMPLING THE FOOD:

    THE WORLD OF GENUINE LIFE

    READYING THE TABLE:

    STEWARDS OF THE QUEEN

    PRIVATE, SECLUDED PRAYER:

    EGO ON THE PYRE

    SONG OF SONGS:

    AN ORIGINAL SOUND

    PSALM 107 AND THE MINCHAH PRAYER:

    DELIVERED FROM DANGER

    REFRAINING FROM CREATIVE LABOR:

    RESTORING THE SPARKS

    ON THE

    WAY IN:

    INTRODUCTION

    I have a precious gift in My treasure vault,

    God told Moshe.

    "Its name is Shabbat.

    I intend to give this gift to the Jewish people.

    Go inform them."

    (SHABBAT 10B)

    Experiencing Shabbat takes preparation. God let us know in advance about this precious gift, that we might gear up for it. To jump from a stationary position into the upward movement of holiness of any kind is all but impossible, and this is certainly the case when it comes to the unique holiness of Shabbat. The preparations we make in honor of the seventh day give us the running start we need.

    A person should rise early on Friday morning in order to prepare all that is necessary for Shabbat. Even if one has a full staff in one’s employ, one should make it one’s business to prepare something personally in honor of the holy day. Thus Rabbi Chisda would mince the vegetables; Rabbah and Rabbi Yosef would chop wood; Rabbi Zeira would light the fire; Rabbi Nachman would arrange his house, bringing out those items needed for Shabbat and clearing away objects used only during the weekdays.

    We should all follow the example of these sages and not say, Don’t expect me to belittle myself [with such menial activities]! On the contrary, it lends one diginity to honor the Shabbat by preparing for its arrival (Shulchan Arukh, Orach Chaim 250:1).

    Preparing for Shabbat means many things. It begins with our looking forward to the upcoming Shabbat and anticipating its arrival from the moment Shabbat ends. This is the meaning of the Torah’s instruction, Remember the Shabbat (Exodus 20:8). From the very first day–even the very first moment–of the week, we are to remember it. The first-century Talmudic sage Shammai did just that. Whenever Shammai ate, he kept Shabbat in mind. On any weekday, if he acquired some tasty food he would set it aside for Shabbat; if something even more desirable then came his way, Shammai would eat the other food and set aside the better one for Shabbat.

    The bulk of our Shabbat preparations are reserved for Friday. The mitzvahs we perform to get ready for Shabbat, both the halakhic requirements and the customs, fall into two parallel categories: outer cleansing and inner cleansing.

    In a general sense, outer cleansing relates to preparing our homes and our bodies; it includes purchasing, preparing and sampling the foods to be served at our Shabbat meals, readying the Shabbat table and donning fine garments in honor of the holy day.

    Inner cleansing relates to preparing our minds and our hearts, shedding the negative feelings and qualities that have clung to them through our involvement in the marketplace. These preparations include reviewing the weekly Torah portion, immersing in a mikvah, and sitting in secluded meditation and self-evaluation, examining all our actions, words and thoughts of the week gone by.

    Then, as sundown approaches, we detach ourselves from all weekday involvements and refrain from the work–the creative activity (melakhah)–that the Torah proscribes on Shabbat. Reciting the special prayers and psalms of Friday afternoon gives us the strength to let go of the week; we begin to enter the Shabbat state of mind, leaving our weekday worries and trials behind us.

    In a more general sense, preparing for Shabbat is representative of man’s purpose in the world. The weekdays are to Shabbat what this world is to the World to Come–both the weekdays and our existence in the world are preparatory stages for something far greater.

    The Talmud sets forth the principle: Only one who has prepared beforehand will be able to eat on Shabbat. This is true on the spiritual plane as it is on the physical. We cannot expect to enjoy all the wonderful spiritual delights of Shabbat–the inner calm, the higher awareness, the sense of connection and oneness–unless we have prepared ourselves during the week. All our spiritual devotions in this world are the preparations we make to enable us to receive the precious gift that God wants us to have: the gift of Shabbat.

    CHARITY

    AND EXPENSES:

    SPIRITUAL

    CURRENCY

    A person with means is required

    to honor the Shabbat

    commensurate with his ability…

    [but] if one has nothing and

    must rely entirely on charity,

    the charity trustees are obligated

    to give that person at least

    three meals and some treats.

    (MISHNAH BERURAH 242:1)

    One should limit one’s weekday expenditures in order to save money to honor the Shabbat.

    Let no one say,

    How am I ever going to save anything?

    On the contrary,

    the more one spends for Shabbat,

    the more one will have.

    (TUR, ORACH CHAIM 242)

    The soul wants nothing more than to grow in its own ways, journeying ever closer to the Source of its spiritual sustenance. Shabbat is a weekly catapult for the soul; it can propel us in the direction the soul wants and needs to go. Yet for Shabbat to aid us most effectively, we have to prepare ourselves for the journey. Making the most of the forward thrust that Shabbat offers requires our cultivating qualities and attitudes that make our hearts more spiritually sensitive.

    During the week there are numerous forces at work in this world that would deny us the vitality of Shabbat and undermine our spiritual progress. These forces affect the places deep within us, places in which we are ethically and spiritually most vulnerable. If they prevail, these adversaries can render us indifferent and spiritually numb, and in doing so can keep us from the vitality and consciousness the soul desires.

    Our attitude toward money is one aspect of our consciousness that is particularly vulnerable and so especially beleaguered. When we are caught in a rut worrying about whether we have enough money; when we are despondent over the fact that we don’t have enough; when we invest all our energy and thought into earning more of it–then the troublesome forces of negativity have scored a

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