Description
The Sabbath stands as the oldest sacred day of celebration—a time of joy, liberation from labor, and spiritual renewal, allowing us to reconnect with God, community, and the natural world. In A Day Apart, Christopher D. Ringwald masterfully combines journalism, academic insight, and personal reflection to explore the Sabbath’s evolution from biblical Creation to modern times. Through the lens of three families, three faiths, and three millennia of tradition, he reveals the enduring significance of this holy day.
This groundbreaking work is the first to delve into the Sabbath across Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Engaging and accessible, it illuminates the distinct practices of each tradition—Friday’s Muslim Juma, Saturday’s Jewish Sabbath, and Christianity’s Sunday observance—while introducing readers to families, including Ringwald’s own, who embody these rituals and find profound meaning in them.
Tracing the Sabbath’s rich history, the book moves from Genesis and Mount Sinai to the teachings of Jesus and Muhammad, through the upheavals of the Reformation and Industrial Revolution, and into today’s era of the weekend. Ringwald argues that the impulse to set aside a day for rest and reflection is a universal human longing, one echoed across religions and philosophies that affirm life beyond mere labor—a call to carve out time for contemplation, joy, and cultural enrichment.
In our hyperconnected, nonstop world, the Sabbath’s promise of sacred pause has never been more vital. A Day Apart presents a timeless antidote to modern chaos, offering a path to deeper fulfillment and a meaningful escape from the relentless demands of daily life.










