|
1. The Remedy For High Tension LivingJesus understands the problems of families under stress and He wants us to grasp this fact first of all: spiritual rest is part of the quality of life: "COME TO ME, all you who are weary and burdened, and I WILL GIVE YOU REST. Take my yoke upon you and LEARN FROM ME, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find REST FOR YOUR SOULS."-Matthew 11:28-30. (Unless otherwise noted, all Scriptural texts in the DISCOVER guides are from the New International Version of the Bible [NIV].) The Bible suggests we experience this kind of rest in two ways: coming to Christ on a daily and a weekly basis.
2. A Daily Link With JesusJesus should have been "running out of time" all the time. Crowds constantly clamored for His attention. In a brief period of three-and-a-half years He had to carry out a spiritual revolution that would change life on planet earth forever. He was constantly dodging Pharisee spies and plots. And yet Christ communicated a peaceful, tranquil spirit to everyone around Him. How? He invested time each day communing with His Heavenly Father. He depended on His Father continually for the resources to meet life's challenges. "Just as the living Father sent me and I LIVE BECAUSE OF THE FATHER, so the one who FEEDS ON ME will live because of me."-John 6:57. Our Saviour depended on the Father. If we are to live the serene, steady life that He did, we must daily "feed" on Jesus-let His Word and Spirit fill us and shape us. The best way to counter the forces burning us out as individuals and tearing us apart as families is to invest quality time with Christ. He tells us: "REMAIN IN ME, and I will remain in you. . . . APART FROM ME YOU CAN DO NOTHING."-John 15:4, 5. One of the greatest needs of our time is for people to tap the spiritual resources available through forming a day-by-day relationship with Jesus. Guides 14 and 15 showed us how we do that through daily prayer and Bible study. One very important point that needs to be emphasized about our relationship with Christ is this: His finished work on the cross. True rest, real security, can only exist because Jesus cried out as He died, "It is finished" (John 19:30). In other words, His work of redemption was completed. "But now he [Christ] has appeared ONCE FOR ALL . . . TO DO AWAY WITH SIN by the sacrifice of himself."-Hebrews 9:26. "WE HAVE BEEN MADE HOLY through the sacrifice of the body of Jesus Christ ONCE FOR ALL. . . . By one sacrifice HE HAS MADE PERFECT FOREVER those who are being made holy."-Hebrews 10:10, 14. When Jesus died, He did "away with sin." The devil can no longer hold our sins against us, for our Substitute made full provision at Calvary for forgiveness. Since Jesus "has made perfect forever those who are being made holy," Satan can no longer hold our failures and inadequacies against us. That's why it's said that the believer who has confessed his or her sins can "rest" in the finished work of Christ. We've made it; we're accepted. Guilt is the force that drives most compulsive behavior. Guilt lies behind much of the frantic pace of our lives today. But Jesus solved the guilt problem once and for all at the cross. Jesus' cry, "It is finished," sealed His promise of "I will give you rest" as an established fact. Christ completed the work of saving us at Calvary, then He rested in the tomb over the Sabbath, and rose from the grave Sunday morning as the Victor over sin and death. The Christian can have no greater assurance than to rest in the finished work of Christ. "Therefore . . . let us draw near to God with a sincere heart IN FULL ASSURANCE OF FAITH, . . . let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for HE WHO PROMISED IS FAITHFUL, and let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds."-Hebrews 10:19-24. Because He "who promised is faithful," we can enter into the salvation-rest Jesus has promised. The stability, peace, and rest we experience in Jesus every day is a result not of anything we do, but of what He did at the cross. We can rest in Christ because our salvation is assured. That assurance creates a response of loving obedience [as we saw in guide 15]. And it motivates us to spend time with Christ each day, feeding on His Word and breathing in the atmosphere of heaven through prayer. A rendezvous with Jesus helps us turn a stressed-out lifestyle into a peaceful and purposeful life.
3. A Weekly Link With JesusAfter Christ created the world in six days (Colossians 1:16-17), He provided Sabbath-rest as a weekly opportunity for us to cultivate our connection with Him. "God saw all that he had made, and it was very good. And there was evening, and there was morning-the sixth day. Thus the heavens and the earth were completed in all their vast array. By the seventh day God had finished the work he had been doing; so on the seventh day he RESTED from all his work. And God BLESSED the seventh day and MADE IT HOLY, because on it he rested from all the work of creating that he had done."-Genesis 1:31-2:3. As their Creator, Jesus "rested" on the first Sabbath with Adam and Eve, and He "blessed" that day and "made it holy." God established a seven-day weekly cycle-not for His own benefit, but for Adam and Eve and for us today. Because He cared so much for the two people He had made, He planned that every seventh day throughout their lives should be dedicated to seeking His presence. Each Sabbath, as He called it, was to be for them a day of both physical rest and spiritual refreshment. The entrance of sin into our world only made the need for Sabbath rest more acute. The same Saviour who promised Adam and Eve "rest," gave the law to Moses on Mount Sinai (1 Corinthians 10:1-4) about two thousand years later. Jesus chose to place the Sabbath-rest commandment at the very heart of the Ten Commandments. The fourth commandment reads: "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, neither you, nor your son or daughter, nor your manservant or maidservant, nor your animals, nor the alien within your gates. 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. God established the Sabbath as a day to "remember" the Lord who "made the heavens and the earth." Sabbath rest each week links us with the Creator who blessed this day and set it apart. When Jesus lived on earth, He took advantage of every opportunity to sustain His union with the Father. He benefited from Sabbath rest, as Luke tells us: "He went to Nazareth, where he had been brought up, and ON THE SABBATH DAY he went into the synagogue, AS WAS HIS CUSTOM."-Luke 4:16. If the divine-human Jesus needed to rest in His Father's presence on the Sabbath day, we human beings certainly need it more. When Jesus swept aside the legal restrictions the Jews had placed on the Sabbath (Matthew 12:1-12), He pointed out that God had made it to benefit people: "He 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. Jesus highlighted the importance of the Sabbath even in His death. He died on Friday, "the Preparation Day, and the Sabbath was about to begin" (Luke 23:54). At that moment He declared, "It is finished," that is, His work of coming to this world and dying as substitute for the human race was complete (John 19:30; 4:34; 5:30). The great work of redemption had been accomplished. Then to celebrate His finished mission, Jesus rested in the tomb over the Sabbath. Just as Christ completed His work of creation on the sixth day and then rested on the seventh day, so through making atonement at the cross He completed His work of recreating people on the sixth day, and then rested on the seventh. On Sunday morning Jesus came out from the tomb, a victorious Saviour (Luke 24:1-5). He had already asked His disciples to maintain the Sabbath encounter with Him after His resurrection. Speaking of the destruction of Jerusalem, which took place nearly forty years after His death, He charged them: "Pray that your flight will not take place in winter or on the Sabbath."-Matthew 24:20. Our Saviour wanted His disciples and their converts to continue the practices He had taught them. He wanted them to experience both salvation-rest and Sabbath-rest. They did not disappoint Him. The disciples continued to observe the Sabbath after Christ's death (see Luke 23:54-56; Acts 13:14; 16:13; 17:2; 18:1-4). The beloved apostle John kept up his weekly link with Christ on the Sabbath day. In his later years he wrote, "On the Lord's Day I was in the Spirit" (Revelation 1:10). According to Jesus, "the Lord's Day" is the Sabbath, "for the Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath" (Matthew 12:8). On the Sabbath we celebrate the Lord's two greatest accomplishments on our behalf: creating us and saving us. This Sabbath experience will continue in heaven: "'As the new heavens and the new earth that I make will endure before me,' declares the LORD, . . . 'from one Sabbath to another, all mankind will come and bow down before me,' says the LORD."-Isaiah 66:22, 23. God originally established the Sabbath as a memorial of creation, so it's fitting that His last-day message should include a call back to worshiping our Creator through obeying His commandments (Revelation 14:7, 12). This message from the last book in the Bible includes observing the Sabbath commandment as a memorial to the Creator.
4. The Benefits Of Sabbath-RestGod gives those who delight in the Sabbath a great promise: "If you keep your feet from breaking the Sabbath and from doing as you please on my holy day, IF YOU CALL THE SABBATH A DELIGHT AND THE LORD'S HOLY DAY HONORABLE, and if you honor it by not going your own way and not doing as you please or speaking idle words, THEN YOU WILL FIND YOUR JOY IN THE LORD, and I WILL CAUSE YOU TO RIDE ON THE HEIGHTS OF THE LAND AND TO FEAST ON THE INHERITANCE OF YOUR FATHER JACOB."-Isaiah 58:13, 14. This passage suggests the Sabbath is a doorway through which we can experience the best things in life: we "ride on the heights" and "feast on the inheritance." People today are trampling over each other in the rush to "have it all." Individuals are burning out and families are falling apart under the strain. But God presents the Sabbath as a much better way to get there-to the good life-from here. Let's look at some of the specific benefits of Sabbath rest.
5. A Foretaste Of Heavenly RestWe can sum up the benefits of linking up with Jesus through a daily and a weekly encounter in one word-rest. The word "Sabbath" comes from a Hebrew word that means rest, so it's not surprising that the Scripture calls the seventh day "a Sabbath of rest" (Leviticus 23:3). It serves as a foretaste of the perfect rest we'll experience in heaven. "[God] has spoken about the seventh day in these words: 'And on the seventh day God rested from all his work.' . . . THERE REMAINS, THEN, A SABBATH-REST FOR THE PEOPLE OF GOD; for anyone who enters God's rest also rests from his own work, just as God did from his. Let us, therefore, make every effort to enter that rest."-Hebrews 4:4, 9-11. "Sabbath-rest," the experience we gain through Sabbath-keeping, gives us a weekly hint of the joy the eternal rest of heaven provides. This rest isn't just inactivity, it refers to the sense of security, peace and well-being that lie at the root of the truly abundant life. This kind of spiritual rest can be appreciated only through experience, and the testimony of those who have experienced salvation-rest and Sabbath-rest is universal: If you enter into the rest of Jesus through a daily and weekly connection with Him, you will discover the greatest joy in life. Our Lord Himself gave us the Sabbath at creation. It was not given to the Jews, but to the entire human race, two thousand years before there was a Jewish people. Jesus "blessed" and "sanctified" the Sabbath. It is a special day set aside by God for renewing our spiritual life. It is part of His Ten Commandment law. God said "remember," but most of the world has forgotten. Would you like to thank Jesus for His gift of rest? Would you like to tell Him you desire to keep His Sabbath each week? Would you like to say, "Yes Lord! I desire to find delight in the day you have established." Why not make that commitment right now: Dear Heavenly Father: I thank You for the promise of salvation-rest each day to meet the challenges of life, and for the promise of Sabbath-rest each week to cement my relationship with You. I thank You for the promise of power from above to change my heart and give me right desires and motives. Please make me loyal to the Saviour, who gave up everything so I could experience life in all its fullness. Make me responsive to Your will. Help me always to welcome the opportunity to experience heavenly rest. In Jesus' name. Amen.
|
Copyright © 1996 by The Voice of Prophecy,
Box 55, Los Angeles, California 90053
Unless otherwise noted, Scriptures are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version.
Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan Bible Publishers.
Web page designed and maintained by Darryl & Cheryl Hosford, of Hosford Web Service.