24 July 2006

Sabbath Thoughts

Abraham Joshua Heschel in his book The Sabbath says,

"Judaism is a religion of time aimed at the sanctification of time. Unlike the space-blinded man to whom time is unvaried, iterative, homogenous, to whom all hours are alike, qualitiless, empty shells, the Bible senses the diversified character of time. There are no two hours alike. Every hour is unique and only one given at the moment, exclusive and endlessly precious. Judaism teaches us to be attached to holiness in time, to be attached to sacred events, to learn how to consecrate sanctuaries that emerge from the magnificent stream of a year. Sabbaths are our great cathedrals; and our holy of holies is a shrine that neither the Romans nor the Germans were able to burn; a shrine that even apostasy cannot easily obliterate: the Day of Atonement. According to the ancient Rabbis, it is not the observance of the Day of Atonement but the Day itself, the 'essence of the Day,' which, with man's repentance, atones for sins of man."

Having inherited the Christian understanding of time from Judaism, it's worth considering how we are called to live in time. In thinking about the Sabbath and a God-honoring observance of the Sabbath, I've been noticing how I view time as a commodity--something to be spent carefully rather than received as a gift. We don't give our time to God, but God has given our time to us. Stanely Hauerwas argues that "We learn to be in time as God's creatures. In worship we take time, or more accurately, in worship God gives us time." In fact, he gives us time that has been sanctified through the resurrection. The day is holy. "Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy. Six days you shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the Lord your God. On it you shall not do any work....For in six days the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them, but he rested on the seventh day. Therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy (Exodus 20:8-11)." Our understanding of Sabbath provides us with both a work ethic and a rest ethic. God accomplished a myriad of wonderful things that required much effort, thought, personal application, and care in the first six days of the week. Then he rested--and his rest sanctified the day, made it holy. If entering into eternal life is knowing the Father and the Son whom he sent (John 17:3), then we live by entering into his pattern of work and rest.

This pattern isn't one of activity followed by passivity, though. This is strongly demonstrated in the resurrection rest that we are promised--the resurrection wasn't a rest that Jesus effected for himself so he could live forever in a glorified human body. It's a rest he accomplished on our behalf so that we could taste that glorified humanity that we're destined for as we come into worship on Sundays where the full restoration of our fellowship with God is weekly anticipated and preliminarily tasted. He desired that this fellowship would be our reality. Our rest is no more passive than his rest; our rest must also be characterized by bringing restoration and redemption to ourselves, our families, our friends, and to the community we are a part of. "Christians believe that Sabbath has been forever changed through the Resurrection. Jesus was raised on the eighth day, becoming for us a new creation, giving us back time in a way we would not have had without God's raising Jesus from the dead. Just as God entrusted to Israel the Sabbath so that the world might know God's intentions for Creation, so Christian worship on the day of the Resurrection, thereby signaling that God's promise to Israel has gone to all the world. All are created to share the rest, the salvation, that comes from worship of the true God. In our Sunday worship Christians serve the world by showing the world that God has not left us alone and that we have good work to do (Hauerwas)."

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