By Pete Wilson
I
think one of the first steps in embracing the Sabbath is you’ve got to
get it out of the category of I “have” to do this and starting thinking
about it as I “get” to do this.
It’s funny, but growing up I always thought the “Sabbath” was some
legalistic rule that only Jews still followed. In fact, the neighborhood
that I grew up in as a kid had a pretty high population of Orthodox
Jews living there. I can remember on Saturday morning watching families
walking to church and feeling sorry for them because they couldn’t drive
their car. I had heard that they couldn’t even watch TV on the Sabbath.
Sounded like a perpetual weekly grounding to me!
In my mind Sabbath was some sort of punishment.
In reality, the fourth commandment, to take a Sabbath, a day each
week and not do any work was a gift from God to His people. In Egypt,
the Israelites were forced to work every day without a break being
treated as objects to be exploited, not people. Many people think part
of the reason the Sabbath was commanded was to remind them that they
aren’t in Egypt anymore, that their value doesn’t come from how much
work they can produce.
Their significance comes from the God who rescued them, the God who loves them.
I think once again we need to be reminded of this truth. So many of
us are virtual slaves to our culture mistakenly thinking our value is in
what we can produce. So we work harder and harder. Sleep less and less.
And we, in fact, produce a crazy amount of stuff, but the irony is this
“full” lifestyle leaves us feeling quite empty.
Why?
Because God cares more about who you’re becoming than what you’re accomplishing.
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