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Labor Day



It's Labor Day once again, which brings up some very important questions. Where is the best Labor Day sale? Where did I put my dark hats?

Labor Day has been around since 1880; after 137 years, perhaps its time to dust off a holiday, shine some light on it and figure out what it's all about. Or more importantly, what it can mean to us.

Labor Day originated as a way to celebrate the hard working folks of our nation, who toiled with muscle and sweat to build the infrastructure of this nation.

There were the people who thought up the ideas, created the companies and made the profits. But then there were the workers. They got up early in the morning and went to work carrying the burden of industry on their shoulders. Often times the laborers are overlooked and even taken advantage of. So the Central Labor Union came up with a day to remember the ones who do the work.

On the Jewish calendar, Labor Day always occurs in the month of Elul, the month of preparation for the High Holy Days. On Rosh Hashanah, we mark the anniversary of the creation of the human being and rededicate ourselves to the purpose we fulfill in G‑d's grand plan in creating the world. That purpose, the Midrash tells us, is that G‑d desired to have a dwelling place in the lowest realm.

"Where is this lowest realm?" you might ask. "Lowest realm," the Chassidic masters explain, does not refer to a geographic space but to a state of mind. A state of mind that does not readily perceive the Divine, and could actually want to do something contrary to G‑d's will. The lowest realm is me and you.

Is your state of mind a place where G‑d can call home? If it is, congratulations! You need not read the rest of this article. But for most of us, G‑d is still somewhat of a stranger (or, at best, a tolerated houseguest) in our lives, still waiting for us to build Him that home He desires.

What does it take to engender such a transformation? Some would say that what's needed is enlightenment. If we could achieve enlightenment, we would have a loftier world-view and we would become transformed. Indeed, there are many religions where this is the goal.

But Judaism has a different take on the matter. If our purpose in life is all about enlightenment, then once we achieve that enlightenment, we would no longer qualify as that "lowest realm" where G‑d wants to live. If we are truly to make G‑d a home in our "lowest realm," then we need to invite Him into that state of mind where we are actually not in the mood to do the job. Where we're doing something because it's the right and needed thing to do--not because it's our idea, or because we understand why it's needed, or like the idea of doing it. Rather, we do it because it's what's required from us to be done. In English we call this labor. In Hebrew it's called avodah.

The first man was placed in the Garden of Eden on the first Rosh Hashanah. For what purpose?

G‑d took the man and put him into the garden of Eden, to work it and to preserve it (Genesis 2:5).

If the purpose of creation were enlightenment, this world is quite a cosmic detour. The purpose, however, is to transform the world and ourselves into conductors of the Divine. And the place to start is the lowest realm of our own consciousness. The place where we not feel the awesome flow of the Divine light a mitzvah brings into the world, but we do it anyway as an obedient laborer: we know there is a job to do, and we do it. This is how to build the infrastructure of our spiritual selves.

When prayer doesn't seem to "do it" for you, when learning Torah is the last thing on your mind, this is your opportunity. This is the moment that G‑d has been waiting for.

Performing when we are not in the mood is the true act of love. We are not doing it because we feel excited about it, but because this is who we are. This is the theme of the Jewish month of Elul. In Hebrew, the name Elul is an acronym for a verse from Song of Songs: Ani l'dodi v'dodi li - "I am to my Beloved, and my Beloved is to me." I am to my beloved refers to the labor that we must put in before we receive inspiration. My Beloved is to me refers to the gift of Divine inspiration, the reciprocation for our service.

Why do it without inspiration and feeling? Because this is the "lowest realm," the space which G‑d desires to inhabit. And when we know that we are affecting Divine joy through our service, it can be a labor of love.


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By Yisrael Rice   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author

Rabbi Yisrael Rice is the Executive Director of Chabad of Marin, Marin County, California and Chairman of the Editorial Board of the Jewish Learning Institute. He is the creator of the "Infinite Within" seminar and author of "The Kabbalah of Now."


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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Sep 3, 2007
beautiful
Thank you R. Rice for this article. For those of us who are lazy this is a reminder and for those of us who are not this is a reward. The Rebbe said that all the work had been done already so the bigest labor now is to greet Moshiah. Hopefuly we will start this Rosh Hashana in the world G-d planed in the first place. A sweet new year!
Posted By Lieba-Masha Kaminetsky, Barnaul, Russia

Posted: Sep 3, 2007
God desires to be in the lowest realm?
First, I think, "my beloved" is G-d and not my labor. Of course He wants have a home in the lowest realm, when we are sad and down. But He wants to have a home within us, whether we are sad or happy. He should not like that home, when we are happy land loving Him?
For me there is never any fear, that I do not belong to the "lowest realm".
Feeling miserable is not something to be proud about.
Reading the WISDOM OF THE REBBE every day brightens me up. And then I feel especially good with my Beloved and my Beloved with me, I think.
He loves us in any way and at any time.
Posted By Michal

Posted: Sep 3, 2007
Chassidus for all
Thank you for a beautifully written essay. You've taken fundamental concepts in Chassidus and explained them in a relevant and real way. What a meaningful perspective on Elul - I will try to think about this whenever I'm "not in the mood". Yasher Koach!
Posted By Chana, Brooklyn, NY



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