Git down and rest a spell. We got stew ready.”
–C. Wayne Winkle (Down the Long Trail)
“Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”
“Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”
–Matthew 11:28(NKJV)
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I wrote yesterday about a subtle way that we slide from the way of the Lord. I want us to look at another way this morning. Throughout the years I have heard many decry the “Law”, that we no longer have to keep it, that we live under grace. True, but only that we are under grace, the Law is there for us to keep. It is a measuring tool that shows the standard that is to be kept and that we often fall short. The extreme grace people say that they are no longer under the law at all and they are free to do what they will. I echo the words of Paul, God forbid! Richard Dresselhaus states, “God’s way is lawfulness…but man’s way is lawlessness. That is…God’s way is restraint…and man’s way is life without restraint.” D.L. Moody said that “God has given us the law to measure ourselves by…” For sure there are cultural laws and laws of society that do not pertain, however the relational laws and moral laws remain.
Today, I want to look at the Fourth Commandment–“Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy.” (Exodus 20:8, NKJV) Sabbath? What are you talking about? The Sabbath was Saturday. Yes, but if you think that you’re missing the greater concept. I remember, years ago, when Safeway was one of the few stores open in Boulder on a Sunday. Around 12:30 there would be an influx of people–church-goers. My Mom was a checker (cashier) and she often had to work on Sunday. These people would come to the store and while my Mom was checking out their goods, they would bemoan her fate. “It’s a shame that you have to work on Sunday,” they would say. My Mom, without expression would reply, “Someone has to wait on you church-goers who go shopping.”
Alistair Beggs has written, “Somewhere along the way, some have decided that the fourth commandment is not like the rest of the commandments but rather is a relic that belongs in the past. In truth though, the command to remember the Sabbath and keep it holy has abiding significance for us all, even today.” This commandment is as binding as the other nine. True, our society has changed, and many are required to work on Sunday, but that does not negate the concept of the day set aside for the Lord. Over the years I have answered students that if the father or mother has to work on Sunday another day should be set aside for contemplation of the Lord. Begg gives reasons for the downgrading of this commandment, “We don’t like its implications. We don’t like the way it intrudes into our lives, our leisure, and whatever else takes precedence in our hearts.”
The Sabbath Day/Sunday ought to be treasured. It should be a day not of what we have to do, but of what we love to do. It should be a day of enjoying the Lord’s presence, the study of God’s word, and the fellowship of God’s people. (Begg) The question is how do we keep the day of rest–the Lord’s Day? Is it a day off for recreation? Perhaps a day for the kid’s ball games. (Incidentally, one of the reasons I put aside baseball and playing on the base softball team was that every Sunday was a game day).
Is there something keeping you from reading God’s Word on Sunday? Is the day filled with activities that keep you from praying, studying, resting in the Lord? Do we work, work, work, and push that work onto Sunday? Begg relates, “We should make it our aim not to let the cares of the other six days push into our spiritual enjoyment of the first day of the week.”
In keeping the Sabbath/the Lord’s Day be careful of being pharisaical, of developing your own self-righteousness. Make it a day of rest, and enjoyment with fellow believers, with family and close friends. Truly let it become a day of being in the presence of the Lord, and not stopping it after leaving the walls of the church. Exodus 20:11, tells us, “…Therefore the LORD blessed the Sabbath day and hallowed it.”
———————————-
I wrote yesterday about a subtle way that we slide from the way of the Lord. I want us to look at another way this morning. Throughout the years I have heard many decry the “Law”, that we no longer have to keep it, that we live under grace. True, but only that we are under grace, the Law is there for us to keep. It is a measuring tool that shows the standard that is to be kept and that we often fall short. The extreme grace people say that they are no longer under the law at all and they are free to do what they will. I echo the words of Paul, God forbid! Richard Dresselhaus states, “God’s way is lawfulness…but man’s way is lawlessness. That is…God’s way is restraint…and man’s way is life without restraint.” D.L. Moody said that “God has given us the law to measure ourselves by…” For sure there are cultural laws and laws of society that do not pertain, however the relational laws and moral laws remain.
Today, I want to look at the Fourth Commandment–“Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy.” (Exodus 20:8, NKJV) Sabbath? What are you talking about? The Sabbath was Saturday. Yes, but if you think that you’re missing the greater concept. I remember, years ago, when Safeway was one of the few stores open in Boulder on a Sunday. Around 12:30 there would be an influx of people–church-goers. My Mom was a checker (cashier) and she often had to work on Sunday. These people would come to the store and while my Mom was checking out their goods, they would bemoan her fate. “It’s a shame that you have to work on Sunday,” they would say. My Mom, without expression would reply, “Someone has to wait on you church-goers who go shopping.”
Alistair Beggs has written, “Somewhere along the way, some have decided that the fourth commandment is not like the rest of the commandments but rather is a relic that belongs in the past. In truth though, the command to remember the Sabbath and keep it holy has abiding significance for us all, even today.” This commandment is as binding as the other nine. True, our society has changed, and many are required to work on Sunday, but that does not negate the concept of the day set aside for the Lord. Over the years I have answered students that if the father or mother has to work on Sunday another day should be set aside for contemplation of the Lord. Begg gives reasons for the downgrading of this commandment, “We don’t like its implications. We don’t like the way it intrudes into our lives, our leisure, and whatever else takes precedence in our hearts.”
The Sabbath Day/Sunday ought to be treasured. It should be a day not of what we have to do, but of what we love to do. It should be a day of enjoying the Lord’s presence, the study of God’s word, and the fellowship of God’s people. (Begg) The question is how do we keep the day of rest–the Lord’s Day? Is it a day off for recreation? Perhaps a day for the kid’s ball games. (Incidentally, one of the reasons I put aside baseball and playing on the base softball team was that every Sunday was a game day).
Is there something keeping you from reading God’s Word on Sunday? Is the day filled with activities that keep you from praying, studying, resting in the Lord? Do we work, work, work, and push that work onto Sunday? Begg relates, “We should make it our aim not to let the cares of the other six days push into our spiritual enjoyment of the first day of the week.”
In keeping the Sabbath/the Lord’s Day be careful of being pharisaical, of developing your own self-righteousness. Make it a day of rest, and enjoyment with fellow believers, with family and close friends. Truly let it become a day of being in the presence of the Lord, and not stopping it after leaving the walls of the church. Exodus 20:11, tells us, “…Therefore the LORD blessed the Sabbath day and hallowed it.”