From The Times of Israel, February 4, 2016, http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/on-the-7th-day-tune-out-turn-off-unplug/
The sixth portion of Exodus, Mishpatim/Ordinances, is read from the Torah scroll on Shabbat, February 6, 2016. See how my wife Miriam and I link this Torah portion to our life together through photographs and Torah Tweet texts at http://bibleblogyourlife.blogspot.co.il/2014/01/exodus-6-tune-out-turn-off-unplug.html
Exodus 6: TUNE OUT, TURN OFF, UNPLUG
Mishpatim/Ordinances (Exodus 21:1-24:18)
“Six days shall you accomplish your activities and on
the seventh day you shall desist.” (Exodus 23:12) “The seventh day is Sabbath... you shall
not do any creative work.” (Exodus 20:10)
As slaves under Egyptian oppression, the Israelites were
forced to work incessantly with no breaks. Their time was not their own.
A day of rest was a revolutionary concept in the ancient
world with power today to free us from addiction to digital technologies.
The Sabbath was given at Sinai as a gift for all
humanity, a gift particularly valuable to everyone in our fast paced
postdigital world.
In our home on the Sabbath, computer, TV, radio, mobile
phones and landlines remain silent.
On day 7, we don't e-mail, don't tweet on Twitter, don’t
write on Facebook walls, don't link on LinkedIn, don't Google, don't blog.
We don't travel the information or asphalt highways.
Pollution from information overload and carbon emissions is stopped cold on day
7.
No banks of TVs, bank ATM's, phone sales, wireless access
to all Israeli citizens for issuing gas masks, nor coffee shop video
totems.
Shabbat is Ecology Day, a day we leave the world the way
we got it, a joyous day set aside to take pleasure in divine creation.
Shabbat is also a Non-Art Day on which we stop making all
art – postdigtal, digital, and pre-digital.
All activities inappropriate on Shabbat are derived from
the 39 craft categories that went into making the Tabernacle.
Shabbat is a divine design to help make us be more
human. It offers us a quiet pool of time
for enjoying family and friends.
On the eighth day, we can return with renewed energies to
being partners of God in continuing creation.
SHABBAT IS A DIVINE GIFT TO ALL HUMANITY FOR ALL TIME
Below is the Epilogue “Tune Out, Turn Off, Unplug” in my
book PHOTOGRAPH GOD: CREATING A SPIRITUAL BLOG OF YOUR LIFE http://photographgod.com:
Once a week turn off and unplug. Put your cameras, computers, tablets and
smartphones to sleep. Just tune into
God's creations, enjoy family and friends, walk in the forest and fields, watch
the sunrise and sunset, play with your children and make love to your
spouse.
Adopt the formula instituted millennia ago to free the
Israelites from their enslavement in Egypt to free you from the being enslaved
by the ubiquitous digital technologies that too often rule all our waking
hours. The fourth of the Ten Commandments
enjoins us to remember what it was to be a slave who never had a break from the
repetitive sameness of everyday life (Deuteronomy 5:12-15). Make every seventh day Shabbat, different
from the other six days of the week.
Make it an Ecology Day by leaving the world the way we got it. Make it a Non-art Day when we honor God's
creations rather than ours.
As the sun sets on Friday, my wife Miriam lights Shabbat
candles, closes her eyes to her busy week, and blesses Is-Was-Will Be,
sovereign of the universe, who bestows upon us a good and long life. On opening her eyes, she sees calming candle
light ushering in a day qualitatively different from all the other digital days
of the week. Until stars dot the sky
Saturday night, she is invited to keep her eyes opened to everyday miracles of
being.
One day each week, stop doing, stop making, just enjoy
being alive. Delight in all that happens
around you. Don't seek out things to
frame and shoot. Let them be.
Shabbat is a divine gift to all humanity for all
time. You are invited to observe
Shabbat as a powerful way to free you from being enslaved by technological
wizardry. On the eighth day, return with
renewed energies to being partners with God in the continuing creation. Enjoy being immersed in the amazing
technological wonders of our era knowing that you are free to tune out, turn
off and unplug on the next Shabbat.
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