Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Does God hate Mondays?
Does God hate Mondays?
Jan 15, 2026 2:08 AM

Garfield became one of the most beloved cartoon characters of his time by saying what so many Americans felt: “I hate Mondays.” Indeed, there is biblical evidence that God did not view Mondays as “good” … and mentators say this has insights about our work, participating in God’s creation, and even our nation’s economic system.

Rabbis who pored over the creation account in Genesis chapter 1 noticed a curious thing: God pronounces each of the seven days of creation “good” once – except for the second and third days, or Monday and Tuesday. Even God Himself did not call Monday “good.” However, Genesis uses the word “good” twice on the third day.

Rabbis and exegetes searched for the reason behind this apparent divine snub. One of these seekers ranks among history’s most influential religious teachers.

Rashi, or Solomon ben Isaac (Shlomo Yitzhaki), mentaries that “have e a foundational element of Jewish education to this day” and “are often taught side by side with theTorah.” The eleventh- and twelfth-century rabbi turned his attention to the Eternal’s unequal distribution of blessings:

Now why does it not say, “that it was good” on the second day? Because the work involving the water was pleted until the third day, although menced it on the second day, and an unfinished thing is not in its fullness and its goodness; and on the third day, when pleted the work involving the water and menced pleted another work, He repeated therein “that it was good” twice (sic): once for pletion of the work of the second day and once for pletion of the work of that [third] day.

Put another way, God honors productivity. Two days’ work were plished on the third day of creation (“Tuesday”), so that day received a double blessing.

“The reason for the difference is G-d is teaching us that we get rewarded based on what we plish,” wrote mentator, who cited this and other teachings to argue that socialism is patible with Judaism. Judaism teaches “according to one’s effort is his reward.” Later mentary held that this phrase, which originally applied to studying religious texts, holds true for all good works. (Christianity has a similar injunction.)

Judaism reveals the divine significance of human productivity in ways ranging from the mystical to the mundane. One Midrash story recounts that Rabbi Akiva offered a general either a pile of grain or a loaf of bread and asked which he would rather eat. Some schools of Judaism tie good works to the dawn of the Messianic age. Kabbalists believe that at creation a series of “Holy Sparks” – God’s light filtered into a form humanity can receive – were placed inside creation. Each time someone performs a good work (mitzvot), the “Holy Sparks are redeemed, purified, and ascend to Above.” Some teach that, once the entire amount implanted in creation has been purified, “the Messianic Period must begin.”

The opening chapter of the Bible, which details God’s work, tells us humanity can participate in the ongoing redemption and multiplication of His creation.Genesis chapter one teaches that all honest work brings blessings, and Mondays are a blessing if we make them fruitful. The human race does this by engaging a market need, soliciting investment, and maximizing productivity of a licit good. Collectivism, which diminishes productivity and equalizes earthly rewards, inhibits this divinely appointed role.

Socialism turns whole epochs of history into an unproductive, never-ending, blessing-deficient Monday.

Jacobs. This photo has been cropped. CC BY-SA 2.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Madison: Religious Conscience Trumps Civil Pronouncements
I have been highlighting James Madison’s words on religious conscience on the PowerBlog over the past several weeks. The HHS Mandate is not simply an issue that can be promised, or willed away. Rick Warren’s statement, “I’d go to jail rather than cave in to a government mandate that violates what mands us to do” is tied to Madison’s thoughts below. Madison has an understanding here that a citizen must be faithful to his religious conscience above and beyond any...
Event: A Call for Religious Freedom
On Thursday, March 1 at 7pm, Acton Institute president Rev. Robert Siricowill speak about the implications of the recent mandate for religious organizations handed down by the Health and Human Services Department of the federalgovernmentunder the Affordable Care Act of 2010. Rev. Sirico will explain the mandate and the February 2012 revision of that mandate, as well as the Constitutional protections for religion and conscience in the United States. The implications for Catholic hospitals, Christian schools, and all faith-based organizations...
Acton Alum Has a New Bestseller on Making a Free and Virtuous Society
Indivisible, a new book co-written by former Acton research fellow Jay Richards, has e a best-seller. From the book’s description: In Indivisible, James Robison, the founder and president of LIFE Outreach International, partners with Jay Richards, Ph.D., a writer who has appeared in both theNew York TimesandThe Washington Post. Together, they tackle tough, controversial political issues facing conservative Christians today, including abortion, stem cell research, education, economics, health care, the environment, judicial activism, marriage, and others. Written to appeal to...
Will Our Future Be Bleak or Blessed?
Rev. Sirico on why we shouldn’t have a bleak outlook on the future: Many people I know are rather despairing about our future. This is contributing to a real and growing pessimism throughout society. I can understand all of these feelings but there is a potential mistake here. I’ve begun to think that those who are too attached to the day’s headline news develop a bias toward thinking that the world is on a permanent downhill slide. The mistake is...
Journal of Markets & Morality 14.2
Beroud, Louis (1852–1930) Central Dome of the World Fair in Paris 1889The newest edition of the Journal of Markets & Morality is now available online to subscribers. This issue of the journal (14.2) is actually a theme issue on Modern Christian Social Thought. Accordingly, all ten articles engage the history and substance of various approaches to Modern Christian Social Thought, with special emphasis on the Reformed and Roman Catholic traditions. There is also another installment of our Controversy section, featuring...
The Lost Dignity of Work
From websites promoting help with Monday morning atheism, to an ever present ‘TGIF,’ a place of honor toward work seems to do nothing but diminish within our culture. The mere suggestion that work is not a curse of the fall is unfortunately quite foreign in many circles. Joseph Sunde at Remnant Culture has written a blog based on his reading of Booker T. Washington’s biography entitled Up From Slavery in which he highlights the high ethic and dignity Washington placed...
Great Lent and the Ascetic Foundations of Society
Today marks the beginning of Great Lent in the Orthodox Church. Not simply a fast, it is a time for that true asceticism which, according to Fr. Georges Florovsky, “is inspired not by contempt, but by the urge of transformation.” There is something of this true asceticism, even if imperfect and plete, at the basis of all human society. One must, even to only a small extent, renounce self-will to be a member of a family, a clan, or a...
Cost-Effective Compassion
What are the best ways to help the poor in developing countries? Answering that question is not as straightforward as you might assume, says development economist Bruce Wydick in Christianity Today. As Wydick notes, most relief and development organizations carry out self-assessments and measure impact based on self-studies, methods that are neither unbiased nor empirically rigorous. So to get a better answer to the question Wydick polled ten other top development economists. He asked them to rate, from 0 to...
Productivity Starts at Home
How much is a homemaker worth? Financial pany Investopedia recently added up what it would cost to hire someone to do cooking, cleaning, child care, driving, laundry, and lawn service equivalent to a full-time homemaker. The pensation would total $96,261. Studies like this one are perennial, as Greg Forster notes, and have been around since at least the 1950s. But whilethe intentions are well-meaning, such studieshave a tendency to reinforce materialistic assumptions about the nature of human relationships in both...
Religious Freedom and the HHS Mandate
Matthew Schmitz over onFirst Thoughtsposted a great article by Peter Berger sharing Peter’s thoughts on the recent HHS controversy. Peter gets at what is really the heart issue here. Though there is fierce debate ensuing about contraception, religious freedom is at the heart of the matter. Peter Berger, the eminent sociologist of religion at Boston University and longtime friend of First Things, offers his readers at the American Interest some background on the HHS controversy, the cobelligerence of Catholics and...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved