Vol. 24, No. 2 |
Summer 2001 |
Sabbath Sense: A Spiritual
Antidote for the Overworked
by Donna Schaper.
Innisfree Press: Philadelphia, 1997
121 pages, softcover
Reviewed by Betsy Alden
Waiting till the eleventh hour to write this
book review is so typical of my work/life that I don't even find
the book's subtitle ironic! The truth is that each day is
sufficient unto the day, and seldom does any task or assignment or
project get completed till it is due--or overdue! So goes my life,
and the lives of most women I know who have careers, families,
homes, and friends. Which is why I resonate so strongly to
Schaper's notion of Sabbath Sense!
Who of us has not yearned for long, leisurely
Sabbaths of rest and refreshment, even as we struggle to achieve
some balance in our over-scheduled lives? Yet there never seems to
be enough time! Now I wonder that most of us simply haven't been
sensible enough to see Sabbath as Schaper has come to embrace
it.
This poetic and profoundly helpful little book
deconstructs and reconstitutes the concept of Sabbath so that we
can both cherish and create Sabbath "moments" in the
dailiness of our lives. Sabbath Sense is a method for
honoring Spirit, a way to "take back our time and take care
of our souls--one moment at a time." The focus is on
spiritual "pauses," rather than a traditionally
designated day of the week. And the idea is to cultivate a sense
of Sabbath whenever and wherever we are experiencing a holy
moment, a sense of divine Presence in our lives. This, says
Schaper, may be claimed as "spiritual leisure," and from
it we may actually derive those benefits of renewal we usually
associate with Sabbath-time.
Conceiving of Sabbath as a state of mind,
rather than as a day of the week can free us from those wistful
"Someday…" dreams of finally "finding time"
and awaken us to the everyday gift of being more attentive to the
spiritual refreshment available to us in the midst of it all.
Schaper advocates that we trade our duty-driven work-ethic for a
freely-chosen play-ethic, in which we celebrate rituals like
family mealtimes, gardening, reading the paper, wearing a piece of
heirloom jewelry, cooking a beloved friend's recipe, or building a
rock garden. This sense of Sabbath could infuse the joy and
peace we crave from our spiritual life into so much more of
what we do. She urges us, in the way of mindfulness teachers, to listen
to our bodies and discover the mystery and paradox in our lives,
even while we are busily engaged in living.
In eleven brief chapters, we find variations
on the theme of practicing Sabbath Sense--and their titles convey
their good sense: "Playing at Work," "Putting
Margins on the Pages of our Days," "Creating Spirit
Space," "Clutter-free Living," and, my favorite,
"Spiritual Fitness: Allowing for the Unfinished"! Of
course I starred this passage, which so vividly captures our
plight:
Wasn't it nice, God will say, that you
didn't look at your watch or do errands instead of taking your
morning walk? Making like a human being instead of a clock is
such an accomplishment.
Congratulations, God will say, and of course
it will be exactly the opposite of what everyone else says. When
I am late for the meeting because I stole the errand time from
the meeting time, nobody praises me. When the mail and the
messages stack up on the kitchen counter like planes over La
Guardia, nobody says congratulations on my pleasant walk. They
present their poverties. I present my walk.
And, of course, a little child shall lead us
to the sanity and sense of reviving our play-ethic. Schaper
reminds us of the joy of children playing on a carousel, which
they call a merry-go-round; yet most adults use the same
image as a pejorative metaphor for the whirling, non-stop pace of
our lives. Perhaps we are not merry because we are concentrating
on doing, and not on being, in our daily rounds!
(Over my office bookshelf, next to a Sophia/Wisdom image, I keep a
cartoon which shows Ziggy gazing out the window saying ,
"With so much to do, sometimes it's nice just to Be!!….That
must be why we're called human Beings and not human Doings!")
Amen! Let us reclaim merriment in the fullness of our
lives!
The point is, as Virginia Woolf put it so well
in To the Lighthouse:
What is the meaning of life? That was all--a
simple question; one that tended to close in on one with years.
The great revelation had never come. The great revelation
perhaps never did come. Instead there were little daily
miracles, illuminations, matches struck unexpectedly in the
dark; here was one…
Just as Sabbath Sense provides a
"spiritual antidote for the overworked," this
prescription, if taken to heart, could bring healing not only to
our own lives, but to a society which is also desperately
in need of renewal. For as we become increasingly caught up in
those spiritual pauses, we are nourished and inspired in our
redemptive outreach to other systems and structures which are
constantly urging us to do it all, do it right, Just Do It!!
Instead, Schaper urges us to participate in the Sabbath of Enough,
where we may delight in the sufficiency of the day and give thanks
for our abundant lives. And in coming to our (Sabbath) senses, we
will know the glory of God-with-us, and, fulfilling the original
intention of Sabbath, "keep it holy."
Reviewer Betsy
(Turecky) Alden is the Coordinator for Service-Learning at
Duke University in Durham, NC, and teaches courses in feminist
leadership at Duke. A United Methodist clergywoman for 25 years,
she has served in ministry in higher education in Dallas, TX and
on the national staff of United Ministries in Education, as well
as teaching at the University of New Mexico and TVI Community
College in Albuquerque. She has three children and three lively
little grandsons and says she needs all the Sabbath Sense she can
get!
Betsy wrote this
review for EEWC Update while fulfilling her job responsibilities
at Duke and commuting on weekends to Indiana, where she was moving
her father into assisted living and clearing out 150 years of
memorabilia in a 15-room country house. She finished the review on
a weekend in which she performed a 6:30 p.m. wedding, then rushed
to the birth of her newest grandson who arrived a week early. She
was holding and rocking him just 10 minutes after his birth at
7:15! You can read more about Betsy on the Web at http://www.pubpol.duke.edu/people/faculty/alden/bio.html
© 2001
Evangelical and Ecumenical Women's Caucus
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