"and He rested on the seventh day"? Now is He subject to "weariness"? Is it not written (Isaiah 40:28) "He does not tire and He does not weary," and (Ibid. 29) "He gives strength to the weary," and (Psalms 33:6) "By the word of the L–rd the heavens were made"? What, then, is the intent of "and He rested"? The L–rd is writing of Himself that He created the world in six days and "rested" as, it were, on the seventh. Now does this not follow a fortiori: If He, who is not subject to weariness, writes of Himself that He created the world in six days and rested on the seventh, then a man, of whom it is written (Iyyov 5:7) "Man is born for toil, how much more so (should he rest)!