What if the Jewish secret to creating your best work is actually learning how to do absolutely nothing?
Is Shabbat really about rest… or is it about creation? Is it about ceasing from activity—or a unique form of production?
The Torah says something strange: during the Sabbatical year, you don’t eat crops—you eat “Shabbat.” And when we are commanded to keep the Sabbath—we are told to make it.
In this episode of Madlik, Geoffrey Stern and Rabbi Adam Mintz challenge one of the most fundamental assumptions about Shabbat—that it’s simply a day off. Through classical commentaries and close reading of the text, they uncover a radical idea:
Real creativity may begin only when we stop trying to create.
From the paradox of Shabbat Ha’aretz To’achlu to the command la’asot et haShabbat, this conversation explores how rest, release, and withdrawal can become powerful acts of creation, identity, and meaning.
If you’ve ever struggled with slowing down—or wondered what Shabbat is really about—this episode offers a completely new lens.
Key Takeaways
- Shabbat Isn’t Passive — It’s Creative.
The Torah doesn’t just say observe Shabbat—it says “make” Shabbat. Rest isn’t the absence of creation—it’s a different kind of creation.
2. Letting Go Produces More Than Holding On
In Shemitah, you don’t eat what you grow—you eat what grows when you release ownership. Real abundance comes not from control, but from hefker, withdrawal, and trust.
3. Shabbat Only Exists Because We Create It.
Unlike every other mitzvah, Shabbat has no physical form. It becomes real only when we live it— by stopping, we actually bring it into existence.
Timestamps
[00:00] Creation Through Stopping
[01:14] Lag BaOmer And Sevens
[02:01] Shmita Text And Shabbat Haaretz
[03:41] Rashi Ramban And The Oxymoron
[08:23] Nullification And Ownerless Yield
[11:20] Tzimtzum And Hidden Goodness
[15:12] To Do The Sabbath
[16:39] Making Shabbat Commentaries
[19:29] Sponsor Break
[23:10] Torah Temimah Makes Shabbat Real
[26:00] Shabbat As Human Construct
[28:42] Closing Lag BaOmer And Chazak
Links & Learnings
Sign up for free and get more from our weekly newsletter https://madlik.com/
Sefaria Source Sheet: https://voices.sefaria.org/sheets/723691
Transcript here: https://madlik.substack.com/
Geoffrey Stern [00:00:06]:
We think that when we let the land lie fallow, when we take a sabbatical, when we rest on the seventh day, we’re turning off, dropping out, that creation simply stops. But what if we’ve been misunderstanding the seventh year and the seventh day all along? It’s not a day off. It’s not about rest. It’s actually about creation, but not the kind we’re used to. It’s a creation that only happens when we stop trying to create. Welcome to Madlik.
My name is Geoffrey Stern, and at Madlik, we light a spark or shed some light on a Jewish text or tradition. Along with Rabbi Adam Mintz, we host Madlik Disruptive Torah on your favorite podcast platform. And now on YouTube and Substack. We also publish a source sheet on Safaria and a link is included in the show Notes. This week we read Behar-Bechukotai and finish the book of Leviticus. Join us as we challenge the biggest perception of the Sabbath. That it’s a day that we rest from creation. Join us for Made on Shabbat. Well, we’re finally finishing Leviticus and you are dressed up because tonight when we record is Lag b’Omer and you’re going to be officiating at a wedding.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:01:23]:
No better way to celebrate Lag B’Omer than to officiate at a wedding. So happy. Almost lag B’Omer, everybody. And enjoy whatever you plan to do on this on this holiday.
Geoffrey Stern [00:01:35]:
Fantastic. And you know, Lag B’Omer is part of the omer. It’s part of counting. It’s a cycle of seven. It’s kind of clearly linked to the seven days of creation which is Shabbat, and the seven year cycle which is the Sabbatical and the Shemitah. So it’s all connected, isn’t it? And maybe tonight we’ll even find it’s something to be happy about. So here we go. We are in Leviticus 25:1 God spoke to Moses on Mount Sinai, speak to the Israelite people and say to them, when you enter the land that I assign you, the land shall observe a Sabbath of God. Six years you may sow your field, and six years you may prune it the vineyard and gather in the field. But on the seventh year, the land shall have a shabbat, a complete rest, a Sabbath of God. You shall not sow your field or prune your vineyard. You shall not reap the aftergrowth of your harvest or gather the grapes of untrimmed vines. It shall be a year of complete rest for the land. And in verse 6 it says, Now The Sabbath yield…. In the Hebrew, it says Shabbat Aretz, the Sabbath of the land. Our good friend Everett Fox says, now the Sabbath yield shall be to you for your servant and for your handmaid, for your hired hand, and for the resident settler who sojourns with you and your cattle and the beasts of your land may eat of its yield. So, Rabbi, we are going to focus on an enigmatic expression. You know, somebody could say it’s a typo. Somebody could say that maybe it was transcribed improperly and we shouldn’t build a mountain on a. Mohil. I will argue that some of the explanations that we’re going to get are so pristine or so valuable it works building the Mohil. So the. The problem is it says והיתה שבת הארץ לכם, it doesn’t say והיתה תבואת הארץ לכם the crops that you collect. So as Rashi says, since Scripture does not say Vahayita Shabbat, Vahayta tavu ata, aretz lahem la Chichay, that the crops or the yield of the land should be to you. But it says, it says only that which has been treated according to the sabbatical year has been dedicated free to all of you. So there is a problem here, that you are actually not harvesting the Shabbat. You’re harvesting the harvest of the sabbatical year. And so what Rashi learns from here, which follows the sifra and the midrashim, is that when it says that you harvest the Shabbat haretz, it means those crops that have been let to lie fallow and can be yours, and it excludes maybe some other crops. But it is a challenge of wording here. And that’s what we’re going to kind of follow the commentaries on. Ramban says the Sabbath Haaretz, the Sabbath produce of the land shall be yours, he says, or it may be the year itself is called Shabbat Haretz, just as the seventh day is called Shabbat of Hashem. So just like we refer to it as Shabbat Hashem, here we’re calling it Shabbat Haaretz. The reference thereof is to the produce of the Sabbath year. So what intrigued me, Rabbi, and this is why we’re talking about the side of Shabbat when we normally think of Shabbat as a day where you don’t produce anything, and the sabbatical year, the produce of the sabbatical year, when we don’t normally think of the sabbatical year as producing anything. That was the irony. That was the contrast that intrigued me. And so far we’ve looked at two commentaries, Rashi and Ramban. And they all recognize the linguistic problem, but Rashi has a halachic outcome from it, which is only crops that have been let follow. So let’s say you had a farmer who wasn’t following the rules, and then halfway through the year, he said, you know what? I’m going to make it hefker. I’m going to make it available that you might not be able to harvest. It’s like too little and too late. And according to the Ramban, he almost makes this sabbatical year like an Earth day. Just like Sabbath of the week belongs to God, the Sabbath of the Shemitah, of the Sabbatical cycle belongs to the land. But they’re all dealing with this Shabbat haretz.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:06:41]:
Yeah, I mean, you have to deal with Shabbat haretz because it’s almost like an oxymoron. It’s almost like two words that don’t fit together, because Shabbat means Shabbos and Haaretz means the land. What does the land have to do with Shabbos? So, you know, they have to be what the significance of Shabbat HaAretz is, if the Torah puts those two words together.
Geoffrey Stern [00:07:06]:
Yeah. And of course, I think just looking at the two commentaries that we have, Ramban makes a lot of sense because we’re letting the land rest. So you have a Shabbat, God has a Shabbat. The sabbatical year is the Shabbat haretz. And that’s why I said it kind of reminds me of Earth Day. So the Hizkuni says what the earth produces during that year is for all of you to serve as food. You are not obligated to tithe any part of it, nor to set it aside for the poor. It is not yours to distribute. Neither is what it produces to be converted into libations to be offered in the Temple. So I take this as almost a commentary on the Ramban. The Ramban says that this is the Shabbat of the land. And if you follow the Hizkuni, it means the land and not God’s, unlike normal produce that you have to go to the Temple and you have to give a little bit to God, a tenth. This is the land’s gift to you, but it clearly is. It belongs to you. Again, they’re learning all sorts of interesting things from what you call this oxymoron, we get to a commentary who I had not heard of before, but this is the one that really started me thinking. It’s called Haktav v’hakabalah. It seems that he wrote at the beginning of the Haskalah of the Enlightenment. And he. He was trying to show how all the laws of the oral tradition are actually in the Torah.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:08:45]:
That being said, now just explain that for one second. That’s what the modern. Many of the modern scholars tried to object to. You know, that the Oral Torah was made up. Right. There’s no connection between the Oral Torah, the written Torah. So he was a traditionalist. Rabbi Yaakov Tzvi Mecklenburg and he tried to show that the entire Oral Torah was rooted in the written Torah. So he actually was important.
Geoffrey Stern [00:09:11]:
Okay, fantastic. But he has a turn of phrase here that sets your teeth on edge. He goes, hashabat lo ta’achal, you don’t eat the Sabbath. He says, this is a problem. The Sabbath of the land shall be for you to eat. You do not eat the Sabbath itself. Therefore, the commentaries add implicitly the produce of the Sabbath of the land. So I think he’s arguing that you can’t understand it literally. It doesn’t read properly. That’s. But I take him to show that we have a problem here. Houston, we have a problem. You can’t eat the Sabbath. And then he goes on to say something absolutely brilliant. He says, that is from that which we have rendered ownerless. So he picks up on what Rashi said, that Rashi says it shows that you can only eat the stuff that was set aside by the farmer at the beginning of the sabbatical year. And so that is what it means, Shabbat Aretz According to them, the word Shabbat here carries the sense of you shall cause to cease, as in you shall remove leaven, meaning nullification, and making it ownerless So he is saying that what we learn between Shabbat Haretz is this sense of nullification. You know, Rabbi, we’ve talked about how much I love the concept of Bitul Chametz before Pesach. I love Bitul nidarim before Yom Kippur. Here we have built into the Sabbath, in this case, the Sabbath of the land. This concept of it’s ownerless. You have to let it go, and you have to let it go in order to be free. But he literally uses these words, and it becomes fascinating. The Mei Hashiloach. Another commentary.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:11:25]:
Wow, we’re going all over the place
Geoffrey Stern [00:11:26]:
today that I don’t quote very much, says, behold, the blessed one shows Israel that the life of Israel runs counter to nature. For according to nature, a person must act, and through those actions receive sustenance and influence. This, however, applies only to the nations of the world, whose life does not emerge from contradiction. Tzimzum and cessation. We’ll get to those heavily loaded words in a second, he says. But the life of Israel is beyond the grasp of this world. Their primary influx comes Davka, precisely from contraction and from cessation, from pulling themselves back through their resting in the seventh year, from working the land, likewise from adding from the Hol, the ordinary unto Kedushah, the sacred. Reminiscent of last week’s segment, he goes on to say, and this is the meaning of the Sabbath of the land shall be for you to eat that from the very act of ceasing they receive good sustenance, for within the cessation is hidden the greater part of goodness. What he is saying is the. The Shabbat. The concept of Shabbat, of pulling back is actually the produce itself. This is the output, this is the production. It’s really quite, I think, poetic.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:12:53]:
That’s very creative.
Geoffrey Stern [00:12:56]:
So to fill in our listeners, when he says the word Tzimzum, which is contraction, that clearly makes us think of a Kabbalistic notion made by the Arizal that God, instead of creating the world by emanating His presence onto it, actually MeztamTzem pulled himself back and made room for creation. But he’s only kind of intimating that. What he’s saying here is the very concept of Shabbat, when we pull back from working the land, and by association, maybe when we pull back from working on Shabbat, we are actually doing something positive. We are. He doesn’t quite say this mimicking God when he created the world. And of course there is a connection between Shabbat and creation because it’s the day that God rested. But it’s just. It’s lyrical, it’s fascinating, it’s poetic, and it’s powerful.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:13:54]:
Now, the idea that we’ll mimic God in the Shmita year also is really interesting because creation just has that God took off on the seventh day. But the idea that from there we learn that you have to let the land lay fallow every seven years is a jump of the Mei Hashiloach, which is fascinating.
Geoffrey Stern [00:14:14]:
And it’s what it’s. The jump is that if it was just on the seventh day, you could say there’s a direct parallel between God’s seven days and ours. But if you go now to the Shmitah, what it’s saying is there’s a parallel between how God acts and how we try to act Whether it’s seven days or seven years, this concept for a Jew and what it’s saying is this is baked into the Jewish psyche. And the Weltanschauung is that when we pull back, when we stop, we are actually giving room for creation. And that is the subject matter of today’s discussion. But it comes from these. I wouldn’t say they’re ancient sources. The Mei Hashiloach is also probably what, the 1800s.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:15:00]:
1800s, correct.
Geoffrey Stern [00:15:01]:
Yeah, but I just love the fact that they’re not standing on a soapbox and making this point. But the point is coming out and it’s absolutely fascinating. So I want to pivot from this strange word, Shabbat Harets, to another strange word that has always intrigued me, which is la sot et has to do the Sabbath, if that sounds familiar to you. When we make kiddush on Shabbat, we say the children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath for some move in Israel at Ashabbat. And then it says to make take the Sabbath laso at Hashabbat, which again is strange. Rabbi, if you think that the Shabbat is all about not doing work, ceasing, what actively are you doing?
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:15:51]:
God’s the one, if anyone. God’s the one who makes Shabbat.
Geoffrey Stern [00:15:56]:
Yes. So it’s right. You can see why I combined the two concepts. They’re both enigmatic and they make us think about Shabbat differently and production on Shabbat differently. So it comes from Exodus 31:16, and it says the children of Israel ought to keep the Sabbath, to make the Sabbath observance throughout their generation as a covenant for the ages. That’s Everett Fox’s translation. But it says for some of Israel at the Shabbat, and there you clearly have observed the Sabbath la Sote at the Shabbat, literally to do the Shabbat. And that is an enigma that again, the commentaries are going to help us with. Commentary that we’re looking at is the Ibn Ezra. And he says the meaning of lasot in lasot et Hashabbat, he says, is thus similar to the meaning of lasot and get dress. And he hastened to dress. He is part of a group of commentaries that say when you make Shabbat, you prepare for Shabbat. It almost goes onto the preparations of the day. But again, he can’t ignore it. He’s trying to find what can you actually be doing that is related to Shabbat, where you don’t do anything. The Seforno says the Shamuveni Yisrael Etashabbat in this life to make the Sabbath on a day that is totally Shabbat. Bayom Sekoulo, Shabbat. So again, they’re taking the word lasot Shabbat very seriously.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:17:33]:
And what just the drosha. That’s not really what it means. You would say that’s a Dvar Torah, right?
Geoffrey Stern [00:17:40]:
It is a Dvar Torah. And I warned you we were going to be very close to a Dvar Torah. The Rabbeinu Bachia says very similar. Observe the Sabbath day actively. The plain meaning of this is to provide himself with the necessities required on the Sabbath. That was similar to the Ibn Ezra. A midrashic approach. Anyone observing the Sabbath properly on terrestrial earth is considered as if he had made it in the celestial region. What is meant by this midrash in the Mechiltah is that keeping the Sabbath is testimony that a person is a true believer in God and his Torah. Anyone who ignores the laws of the Sabbath thereoi testifies that he is a heretic and does not believe. So the way I read this, Rabbi, is I focus less on your making Shabbat in another world. And I focus more on the fact that when you keep the Shabbat, you’re making a profound step statement, and that is positive. When you keep the Sabbath, you are. We all know in India they call the Jews the Sabbath keepers. It defines them, it becomes their fingerprint. But I think the way I translate is that, yes, you are creating on something on Shabbat. Because by keeping Shabbat, you’re standing on a soapbox in Hyde park and you’re making a statement. You’re creating a reality. So I don’t have so transcendental and go into creating it in another world. And I think I’m permitted to read that into Bachia.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:19:17]:
Yeah, no, I think that’s right. And Bachia is much less of what I call the Dvar Torah. It’s much closer to what the words really mean. La sota ta Shabbat.
Geoffrey Stern [00:19:29]:
And now a word from our sponsor. If there’s one thing we value at Madlik Podcast, it’s reading text and talking about them. That’s why I’m excited to share something I created called VoiceGift PLAY. It fits in the palm of your hand like a remote control and clips onto any book. It’s inspired by those old school museum audio guides. But this is personal. VoiceGift PLAY stores up to 10 hours of audio across 999 numbered recordings. You simply enter a number to record a comment, memory or explanation and enter the same number to play it back. It’s perfect for B’ Nai mitzvah, practicing their layning, capturing grandpa’s favorite tune, or recording Had gadya in a voice that matters. Go to Voice.gift, that’s http://www.voice.gift and use code MADLIK for 15% off. Thanks. And now back to our podcast. So, and his third thing is, this is also why lasot was used here instead of the more common Lishmor ota. The Torah wanted to allude to the fact that the Sabbath observance is a concept which also exists in the celestial regions. Lashon haze b’atzmo la’asot et hashabat. Again, what I’m trying to do is when you keep the Shabbat, you are mouthing, you are enunciating a human construction. You are saying we stand for something that is not necessarily rooted in the material world. It transcends that. So now we go to our good buddy Casutto. And Casutto is amazing. He says Shabbat to make the Shabbat, there is here kind of word play מעין משחק מלים. What does he mean by that? This is how it is kept. Not by doing work, but by doing the Sabbath. Perhaps the word to make also hints at the conclusion of the first section about the Sabbath in Genesis, which God created to do so. Asher bara elohim la’asot. So what he says is very similar to what we were saying a while ago, where we are following God’s lead and at this strange concept where God created the Sabbath. And Asher bara elohim la’asot. There was this sense of creating by stopping to work. I love the fact that Kesuto says this is like מעין משחק מלים!
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:22:14]:
Right. Okay. The idea is that you write the creation is the ability to stop to work. Right. That’s a pretty sophisticated idea that you need to create. The ability to not, I guess people who work, people who run businesses, know that you need to be focused in order not to work. Sometimes it’s easy to work. It’s hard not to work.
Geoffrey Stern [00:22:42]:
I love that. I just because you said economics, I started to think of the concept of opportunity cost. There’s a cost when you don’t do something. Not doing something also creates, whether economic good or loss. But I love the fact that. Fact that these, as you say, are very sophisticated concepts and they’re coming through the commentaries on these, on these. pesukim, the Torah Temima, maybe you can fill our listeners in a little bit on the Torah Temima, my sense is this was a great scholar who, when you go through the Torah Temima Chumash, you see every place in the Talmud that that piece of pasuk is referenced. But clearly we’re going to see. He also gave a commentary when he felt he had to.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:23:37]:
So I just want to tell you that was written also around the year 1900. And what he did was he tells you, he lets you know all of the Talmudic references that quote that verse in the Torah. You know, today we cheat because we have AI. That’s easy to do, but he did it without AI, which was pretty impressive.
Geoffrey Stern [00:23:58]:
So listen to what he says in the small print. He starts by quoting the Talmud to make the Sabbath it is taught. Reb Eliezer Ben Porta says, the children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath to make the Sabbath. This teaches that anyone who keeps the Sabbath is considered as if he has made it. Wow, he’s making the Shabbat. This is really in line with what we said a second ago. Now listen to the Torah Temimah The reasoning of this interpretation is straightforward. The verse emphasizes to make the Sabbath. But what making applies here according to the simple sense it should have read, the children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath for their generations and no more. Because of this deviation in language, we derive that whoever keeps the Sabbath is as if he made it. From this shift in language, the sages derive their teachers teaching. And now he goes on. And the meaning of this general principle that whoever keeps the Sabbath is as if he has made it can be explained as follows. The commandment of Sabbath is different from all other commandments. All other commandments have visible concrete forms. Titsit, the fringes. tefilin; the boxes we put on our hand and on our head. Shofar, Sukkah, Lulav, they’re all material. Even when they are not being performed, they still exist as recognizable objects distinct from those of other nations. But the commandment of Shabbat is not like this. Without its actual observance, there is no recognizable indication that the day actually is Shabbat. The nature of the day itself is no different from other days. Therefore, its very existence is only recognizable through its being performed and observed. And thus anyone who keeps the Sabbath is considered as if he has made it, because through his actions he makes it recognizable and defined. This takes what I said before of standing on a soapbox in Hyde park to a totally new level. You are not just preaching an ideology, you’re creating a human construct. If we did not keep the Sabbath, there would be no Sabbath. There’s no significance to the seven days. And what connects it also to the shmita. If we didn’t keep every seventh year as a sabbatical year and stop working, there’s nothing in the fabric of the universe that says rest; stop. We really are creating the Sabbath and the sabbatical. These are conventions.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:26:37]:
Well, we use the cycle, we create the calendar, right. And by observing Shabbos and by observing Shmitah. And that’s why it’s la’.
Geoffrey Stern [00:26:47]:
Ah.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:26:47]:
So.
Geoffrey Stern [00:26:49]:
So it’s just pretty amazing. I think that if you look at the two sets of commentaries on the two different verses, certainly I’ve picked and chosen, but all of them talk about this ability to create something from nothing, to create something by possibly letting go or pulling back, whether it’s tsimtsum, whether it’s copy, what is transcendent and godlike about just letting the space create newness. I think it really gives us a whole new kind of vision of what Shabbat is. You know, there are those that say Shabbat is the great gift of the Jews to the world. And, you know, you can make a case just on a day-off and the social implications of leisure. But this takes it to another level.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:27:42]:
Yeah, this is fantastic. Okay, let’s hear it for the Torah Temima. The Torah Temima., you know, the way it’s written is that on top, in big letters, they tell you what the Talmudic quote is. On the bottom, in really small letters, he has this commentary. And, you know, the jewel is in the small letters. So you need to concentrate. I’ll just tell you that my father, for all the years, he used to have a Torah Temima. in his tallis bag. And on Shabbos, during Torah reading, he would study the Torah Temima., he thought the Torah Temima was the most brilliant and the most fascinating.
Geoffrey Stern [00:28:15]:
I have to agree. And I have to say that when my oldest son became bar mitzvah and somebody said to me, what should we get him? I get him a Torah Temima.. I don’t know whether it’s been translated into English.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:28:26]:
Is it in English on Sefaria or you translated this?
Geoffrey Stern [00:28:29]:
I translated it. But I. I just, as you say in the fine print, he really comes through. And he doesn’t always do this. Sometimes he just does enough.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:28:41]:
Correct.
Geoffrey Stern [00:28:42]:
Anyway, let us always associate the joy, the positivity and the creativity of when we count and we reach a milstone like L’ag B’Omer or, like seven days of creation or the sabbatical. And let us always find new insights into our ancient traditions. And texts.
Rabbi Adam Mintz [00:29:04]:
And this week we finish a book of Leviticus Chazak. Chazak. Finit. Chazak. Shabbat Shalom, everybody. See you next week.
Geoffrey Stern [00:29:13]:
See you all next week.



