04 March, 2025

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Heschel Centre for Catholic-Jewish Relations at the Catholic University of Lublin

Church and World

02 March, 2025

2 min

Shabbat – the Companion of Israel on Its Journey

The Sabbath is a time of refuge, protection, and consolation for the Jewish people and a day of return to God. It accompanies Israel on its spiritual journey, writes Dr. Thérèse M. Andrevon-Gottstein, a French-Israeli theologian engaged in Jewish-Christian dialogue for 30 years, in her commentary for the Heschel Center at KUL on Psalm 92, […]

Shabbat – the Companion of Israel on Its Journey

The Sabbath is a time of refuge, protection, and consolation for the Jewish people and a day of return to God. It accompanies Israel on its spiritual journey, writes Dr. Thérèse M. Andrevon-Gottstein, a French-Israeli theologian engaged in Jewish-Christian dialogue for 30 years, in her commentary for the Heschel Center at KUL on Psalm 92, read in the Catholic Church on Sunday, March 2.

Psalm 92 is dedicated to the Sabbath. “This means that it was recited in the Temple on the Sabbath day, and today it also appears several times in the Sabbath liturgy, which begins on Friday evening,” explains Dr. Thérèse M. Andrevon-Gottstein. The first two verses of the psalm (“A song for the day of Shabbat. It is good to praise the Lord and to sing praises to Your name, O Most High”) already reveal “the greatness of the Shabbat in Judaism, which is much more than a day of rest.”

Who is the Author of the Psalm? Two Interpretations

Two main answers are commonly given when discussing the authorship of the psalm. “Many psalms begin with ‘mizmor le David,’ which means a hymn not in honor of David but authored by David. Psalm 92 would therefore have been written by the Shabbat itself, which has been personalized by Jewish tradition (the Shabbat bride),” points out Dr. Thérèse M. Andrevon-Gottstein. “This psalm would therefore have its source in the Shabbat itself, which praises God by beginning with ‘it is good’ (‘tov’ in Hebrew), echoing the ‘it was good’ (tov) proclaimed by God on the evening of each of the six days of Creation,” she adds.

On the other hand, as Dr. Andrevon-Gottstein notes, “several midrashim (Jewish commentaries) name Adam as the author of Psalm 92 (Vayikra Rabbah 10, 5) in the context of repentance and gratitude toward the Shabbat.” Furthermore, “the midrash commenting on Psalm 92 (Midrash Shocher Tov, 92, 2) suggests that Adam sinned on the day of his creation, the sixth day, at the eleventh hour. He should have been expelled from Eden at the twelfth hour, just before the onset of Shabbat. However, the Shabbat pleaded on Adam’s behalf so that he would not be expelled from Eden before the end of his day: ‘How could the Master of the world punish at the day of my holiness?’ For this reason, Adam intoned the psalm in honor of the Shabbat.”