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An Invitation to Sabbath: Rediscovering a Gift

Report of the Work Group on Sabbath Keeping to the 212th General Assembly

 
         
 

. . . in six days the Lord made heaven and earth
the sea and all that is in them, but rested the seventh day;
therefore the Lord blessed the sabbath day and consecrated it.

(Exodus 20:11)

. . . a sabbath rest still remains for the people of God;
for those who enter God's rest also cease from their labors
as God did from his.

(Hebrews 4: 9-10)

 
  Gold Divider Rule
  The Need for Sabbath

There is a deep need today to rediscover the gift of Sabbath. The need declares itself in the most intimate places of the human heart and in the broadest spheres of social and economic interchange. It asserts itself even where Sabbath is only a distant memory, even where the word "Sabbath" is not known at all. Across barriers of age and culture, the need speaks, presses, makes itself known.

For some the need for Sabbath emerges as a cry from within. Exhausted, we yearn over the loss of time to rejoice in those closest to us, or simply to play, to rest and be still, to delight in the goodness that we believe yet surrounds us. We yearn, and in our yearning we ache.

For some the need for Sabbath names itself in quiet grief. Grief that we are moving faster and faster in our lives, but the only progress we seem to make is into a greater emptiness. Grief that the ways we have strained so conscientiously to live are simply not working. Grief that although we partake abundantly from the table our culture spreads before us, we come away from the table still hungry, as hurried and pressed as ever rather than nourished and renewed.

As a society, we know well the statistics that delineate a particular form of progress: the ideal economic growth rate is 3% to 5% per year; adjusting for inflation, United States citizens spend more than twice as much for material goods and services as they did fifty years ago; we buy homes almost three times larger than we did following World War II and fill them with twice as many things; we work longer hours, more of us hold multiple jobs, and we now live to the full what some decades ago was proclaimed as "the gospel of consumerism." 1

Yet these same statistics give rise to questions. For an increasing number of us the questions themselves articulate the need for Sabbath. Can the finite resources of the earth sustain the economic growth our culture demands? Can persons and can families survive the drivenness of a life that finds its "good news" in ever more rapid consumption? Are fundamental elements of justice sacrificed as people work longer and longer hours just to keep the system going, and as the gap between those who have the means for leisure and those with no means at all grows wider by the year? 2

And in the Church, the need to rediscover the gift of Sabbath sounds through both the best and the most harried realms of our common life. At best, we desire to know more fully the overwhelming mystery of God's all-restoring love. We yearn to be still and see afresh the miracles that surround us. We long for disciplines of time and practice that will let us simply rejoice in the One we seek to serve. At worst we find ourselves exhausted from trying too hard to serve the divine grace we proclaim. Collectively, we long for a goodness that seems to have fled.

"Days pass and years vanish, and we walk sightless among miracles," go the words of a Jewish prayer used on the eve of beginning Sabbath. "Sabbath is a gift, but we are so reluctant to accept it, that God had to make it a command," writes contemporary religious leader Barbara Brown Taylor. 3 In the context of wide and deepening need for Sabbath, both statements speak an honest word. They also speak a healing word. Acknowledging the loss inherent in our reluctance to pause at all, they point our needy spirits to an overwhelming gift offered by the Living God.

Sabbath comes to us as a many-layered gift. In its manifestation it shines as a gem of limitless facets, infinite and uncontainable yet taking particular forms. Divinely fashioned, even its mode of coming from God is multiple. In the Book of Genesis, God breathes Sabbath into the very fabric of creation. It takes form as the seventh full day, the day on which God rested and rejoiced in the goodness of all that God had made (Genesis 2:1-3). At Mount Sinai, God speaks Sabbath as a sacred mandate. God's people are forever to remember the Sabbath. They are to set aside one full day in seven and keep it holy to the Lord (Exodus 20:8-11). In the gospels, Sabbath repeatedly provides both time and space for Jesus' witness to the life-transforming power of Abba. And it is as we enter the multiple dimensions of Sabbath that we begin to know most fully the immensity of the gift.

Sabbath is for our joy and our rest. "The Sabbath was made for humankind and not humankind for the Sabbath," proclaims Jesus just after his disciples have feasted on the Sabbath day (Mark 2:27). The commandment to keep Sabbath, according to John Calvin, reflects God's genuine concern for God's people. Again says Calvin, "Work is good, but when we work all the time work becomes a curse not a blessing." 4 And so Sabbath invites us to rest and take joy in what already is, even as God rested on the seventh day and rejoiced in all the goodness of creation.

Sabbath is for deepened communion with the Living God. As we unwrap the gift of Sabbath, it yields to us blessings beyond our much needed rest and joy. In the spiritual practice of Jews and Christians alike, Sabbath is a time for us to be shaped within. "On the Sabbath," writes Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, "we especially care for the seed of eternity planted in the soul." 5 John Calvin simply tells us, "On the Sabbath, we cease our work so God can do God's work in us." 6

Sabbath draws us into the sacred rhythm God has woven into all of life and all creation. Sabbath invites us to the three-fold liturgy of rest, redemption and renewal. With the most intimate of acts, and the broadest, we celebrate this liturgy. We immerse ourselves in its goodness when we pause for a brief prayer, or for an instant of stillness, or for saying "Amen!" to the grace we sense surrounds us. In such sabbath moments, we mirror the rhythm of Sabbath. And from the early movements of biblical faith, the Living God has called us to ever wider patterns of sabbath living. The earth itself need the rhythm of rest, redemption and renewal, so every seventh year the land is to lie fallow and receive the gift of sabbatical life (Leviticus 25). On the widest scale of all, the Sabbath is a graced foretaste of the eternal rest, redemption and renewal all creation shall know when Christ comes in glory. Sabbath draws us toward both the minute and the infinite. When we give ourselves to Sabbath, it becomes time that interprets all our times.

Sabbath is profoundly prophetic. From its beginning, Sabbath has declared that the Living God is the one source and aim of all our life. "Sabbath keeping," said Calvin, "is a way of living out our belief that we are not our own; that we belong to God." 7 Not possessions. Not the striving after them. Not dominance over other human beings. In the biblical teachings, the sacred rhythm of rest, redemption and renewal calls for release from debt and the complete redistribution of resources every fiftieth year in the Year of Jubilee (Leviticus 25). In virtually every age, and surely in our own, to live in the world as belonging to God is to follow a discomforting and prophetic path.

Sabbath is for our life in community. Although the blessings of Sabbath are often richly personal, the gift of Sabbath is not a private gift, nor has it ever been presented as such. At Mount Sinai, Sabbath came to the entire community. It was for all ages, all stations in life. No one stood outside the call to rest in the presence of God. In Judaism, for better than two millennia the observance of Sabbath has bound together a widely scattered people. In Christianity, the Sabbath, or Lord's Day, is both communal and Christ-focused. It summons the followers of Jesus to enter together into the presence of the One whose grace is sufficient for all our human need (Hebrews 4).

Steadily, persistently, the layers of Sabbath beckon. It is likely we shall never enter all of them in a single moment. Yet as we see the depth of need around us, and as we sense the vastness of the gift, a simple question arises for us just as it has through the ages: How can we now more fully live the gift we have been given?

To live the gift of Sabbath is, of course, to receive it openly and with gratitude. It is to savor Sabbath's freshness. It is to walk in Sabbath's ways, even when those ways set us apart from the culture that surrounds us.

And clearly, from the earliest of traditions, to live the gift of Sabbath is to hallow time. In the fourth commandment, the foundational emphasis is neither on work nor on the prohibition of work, but on keeping time holy: "Remember the Sabbath day, and keep it holy." (Exodus 20:8)

In the Deuteronomy tradition, to live the gift of Sabbath is to take a day of rest from labor, because God delivered us from the oppression of hard taskmasters in Egypt. "Remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt, and the Lord your God brought you out from there with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm; therefore the Lord your God commanded you to keep the sabbath day." (Deuteronomy 5:15)"

 
         
 

In the Reformed tradition, from its earliest confessions to the present Directory for Worship, to live the gift of Sabbath is to engage in simple, time hallowing acts:

  • seek rest from daily occupation;

  • share with others in worship;

  • take time with God's word;

  • engage in acts of compassion;

  • enjoy activities that refresh and renew the spirit.

Our long tradition guides us and yet still the question presses. The hallowing of time is ever specific. For our own particular age we seek a clearer vision. In our culture, with all its rush and its fracturing of human bonds, how can we live the hallowing of time?

 
         
 

Answers emerge. They emerge in part from new Sabbath life that already stirs among us. They emerge in part as wholly fresh beckonings that at once enliven and convict our spirits. None of the answers is yet complete. Like Sabbath itself, though, they come as a grace. We would do well to hear and accept with joy the strong invitation they speak. It is invitation to . . .

    Restore, at all levels of our common life, the practice of keeping every seventh day as the Lord's Day, a Sabbath holy to God. In our present context, this will not be easy. It is also a task we can no longer ignore.
    Celebrate the places where Sabbath life already grows. Children's books that tell anew of God and of rest and of joy; rich ethnic traditions that flow from centuries of devotion; the simple and sometimes struggling efforts of persons to carve out time to rejoice in God and one another; renewed attention to the Year of Jubilee and to allowing Sabbath for the land - all these point the way to the recovery of Sabbath. They mark the fresh stirrings of Sabbath in our midst. As we honor them we shall honor and receive afresh the gift.
    Share deeply in mutual support and dialogue. Single parents, young families, persons living alone, older couples have different patterns and diverse needs in developing Sabbath life. Yet even if our hallowing of time must be alone, we need the support of the community to do it. And as we share with one another our various ways of spending time with God, our common vision of Sabbath will grow both full and clear.
    Live prophetically. If we live Sabbath's rhythm of rest, then we must dare claim that rest for all people, including the poor, including ourselves. And we must dare tend our environment as a treasure for the ages. To do this in our materially driven culture is to walk the way of the prophets.
    Examine and amend the spirit draining patterns of our corporate life. At all levels of our denomination, persons struggle with exhaustion. What patterns of drivenness do we need to let go of in our congregations? Presbyteries? Synods? General Assembly? What forms of true spiritual rest do we need to embrace?
    Come again and again to the table where we are truly fed. The table of the present age dazzles but clearly it does not feed. The table of Sabbath is far simpler. Its nourishment is deep. It is the table of the One who says, "Take. Eat. This is my body. This is my blood. This is for you." In coming regularly to the table of our Lord, in searching out the times for this and in living the discipline of it, we shall together enter the ever-widening mystery of grace that breathes through all of the Sabbath invitation.

In recovering Sabbath, we are in many ways as little children, beginners, explorers. Yet the gift is before us. The need burns within us. The ways of fresh iving start to emerge. And if we continue to grow in the ways we are beckoned, we may, by God's grace, join the company of those who through the ages have proclaimed with their very lives what it is "to glorify God and to enjoy God forever." 8

 
  Gold Divider Rule
  Members of the Work Group on Sabbath Keeping

Nancy Becker
Charles Marks
Angie Bohannan
John Sonnenday
Ruy Costa
Brad Kent, staff
Steve Doughty
Kris Haig, staff
Jean Floyd Love

A full color printed brochure version of this document is available for $0.50 per copy.

To order, call the Presbyterian Distribution Service at (800) 524-2612 and request PDS # 70-440-00-001 or order this resource online.
 
  Gold Divider Rule
  NOTES

1. Wayne Muller. 1999. Sabbath: Restoring the Sacred Rhythm of Rest. New York: Bantam Books. [BACK]

2. Ruy Costa. "The Political Importance of The Sabbath." Massachusetts Council of Churches (n.d.) [BACK]

3. Barbara Brown Taylor. 1999. "Remember the sabbath." Christian Century (May 5). [BACK]

4. John Calvin. Commentaries. Grand Rapids: Baker Book House (1993). [BACK]

5. Abraham Heschel. 1951. The Sabbath. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. [BACK]

6. John Calvin. Institutes of the Christian Religion. Philadelphia: Westminster Press (1960). [BACK]

7. John Calvin. Commentaries. Grand Rapids: Baker Book House (1993). [BACK]

8. Book of Confessions, 7.001.
[BACK]
 
         
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