4.6 • 11K Ratings
🗓️ 27 December 2024
⏱️ 62 minutes
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0:00.0 | Here at the end of the year, I wanted to share one of my favorite episodes of the show that isn't about politics. |
0:05.6 | It's about something that certainly I could do a better job of, which is Rest. |
0:10.3 | This is with the writer Judith Schullivitz. |
0:12.8 | It's about the practice of Sabbath. |
0:15.1 | We talked back in 2023, but it's one of those shows that is rung in my head far longer. |
0:25.6 | Music but it's one of those shows that is rung in my head far longer. From New York Times' opinion, this is the Ezra Klein Show. |
0:57.0 | Thank you. This episode for me today has its roots way back. And so I'm going to take a moment in setting it up. |
1:02.8 | When I was in college, a rabbi I knew, he gave me Abraham Joshua Heschel's book, The Sabbath. |
1:07.3 | And I love that book. I've probably read it a dozen times since. |
1:12.3 | And the reason it's mattered to me so much for so long is not just about the idea of the Sabbath. It's a critique of the way many of us certainly may live, a critique of the way our |
1:19.9 | world has been designed. Heschel's argument is it the modern world that is obsessed with questions |
1:25.4 | of space. We spend our days trying to master |
1:28.3 | the spaces in which we live, building in them, acquiring from them, traversing them. And what we |
1:34.1 | spend to do that is the time that we have to live. He writes, quote, most of us seem to labor for the |
1:41.0 | sake of things of space. As a result, we suffer from a deeply rooted |
1:45.3 | dread of time and stand aghast when compelled to look into its face. That line has always felt |
1:52.7 | true to me. It's always felt true about me. But I mostly ignored its trueness. There's stuff |
1:59.6 | to do every day. Maybe what's changed recently |
2:02.1 | is that I've gotten older. Maybe it's that I've had children or I'm seeing my own parents' age. |
2:06.8 | But I've had more trouble ignoring that trueness. I don't think the speed at which I live, |
2:13.4 | at which I move through time, at which I see the people around me living and moving through time, |
2:17.8 | is a speed that any of us really want. I don't think the habits that I've cultivated here are really |
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