Life · Ministry · Faith

Month: June 2019

How to Rest in Sabbath

“Sabbath is that uncluttered time and space in which we can distance ourselves from our own activities enough to see what God is doing.”
Eugene Peterson

Plan Your Sabbath

1. Answer these questions:
What can only you do?
What do you need to rest from?
What is it that causes you delight?

2. Identify a twenty-four hour period. Often sundown to sundown.

3. Prepare in advance.
Rearrange work. Go shopping. Pay bills. Run errands. Complete household tasks. Cook meals. Gather supplies. Decide what is going to be completed and what will be left undone.

4. Prepare your protective container.
I will do these things: read, walk, sleep, call a friend, etc.
I will not do these things: E-mail, social media, work, etc.

On your Sabbath Stop paid and unpaid work. Rest, actual rest that restores and replenishes. Delight in the wonder of creation. Contemplate and ponder the love of God. This is a day holy to the Lord.

Practice Sabbath

1. Use Ritual
Light candles to signify to everyone and yourself that Sabbath has begun or set out something. A stuffed animal, a vase of flowers. Be creative.

2. Pray a Prayer of Blessing
As you set the item out:
“Blessed are you, Lord our God, King of the universe, who has made us holy through his commandments and commanded us to kindle the Sabbath light.”

On all those gathered in your household:
“May God bless you and protect you. May God’s face shine toward you and show you favor. May God look favorably upon you and grant you peace.” 

3. Practice Sabbath and enjoy God’s gift to you!
If you find that Sabbath has become a drudgery, a day you dread, then it is time to change your Sabbath. Sabbath is a day to wonder at God’s love and his gifts to us. He is the one who made laughter, love, joy, peace, humor, friendship, smiles, wonder, beauty, and rest. These should be in abundance on your Sabbath. Do things that are restorative, restful and reconciling that reconnect you with yourself, others, creation, and God.

“Then Jesus said to them, ‘The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath. So the Son of Man is Lord even of the Sabbath.’” – Mark 2:27-28

Leaving Ourselves Behind

elephants walking through the bush

The story has been told in a million different ways and times. A man goes on a safari. For reasons outside of his control, he arrives late and the expedition party is forced to leave without him. Unwilling to miss the opportunity, he hires a few guides to take him on an express journey through the bush to catch the group. For days they press ahead at a breakneck speed. On the fourth day of travel, his hopes are high. If his calculations are right he should be able to walk into camp just as they are putting dinner on the table. But as he walks from his tent, pumped for another day of running, his guides are sitting around the fire. It is clear they have no intentions of going anywhere today. The man is incensed. After all, he is paying them, but they refuse to move. With teeth clenched and veins popping from his head he asks them why they won’t move. With determination in their voice that clearly communicates this is not up for negotiation, they tell him for three days they have been driving hard. Now they must wait a day for their spirits to catch up.

Have you ever been there, running so hard to achieve a goal, to get things done, that it feels like you have left who you are behind? I know I have.

Sabbath invites us to take moments to rest and evaluate who we really are and what are our real priorities in life. We have the space to ask if the journey we are on is taking us to the place where we want to go.

Sabbath invites us to engage in practices that give life to our soul. That being said, many of us resist Sabbath because we have memories of being forced into silent drudgery. A day without laughter and play. Sabbath should be anything but. It is a day filled with life, love, beauty, fun, play, friends, laughter, things that bring life, clarity, and health to your whole being. It is a day to celebrate the fullness of God’s creation. As a parent, if Sabbath is a day your kids dread, you are doing it wrong.

So how do we do Sabbath? That is a question we will start to answer in the next post.

Have a great week!
Stephen

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