Life has always been stressful. . . .
Life has always been stressful. However, in recent years, with advances in
technology (mobile phones, wireless internet, laptops, etc.), you can literally
work “around the clock”—and a good many of us are! We eat on the run; we have conference calls while
out on the road; we check our emails late into the evening, and again first
thing the next morning.
Thankfully, God anticipated all of this, and thus commanded
us to rest at regular intervals. Notice
that I didn’t say “strongly recommended.”
Keeping the Sabbath is not a recommendation; it is a requirement.
In fact, it is the longest commandment, and the only one
which is explained differently in the Exodus and Deuteronomy versions of the
Ten Commandments. In Exodus, the
rationale for keeping the Sabbath is based on the story of creation. Since God worked six days and rested on the
seventh—so should we!
However, when this commandment is stated in Deuteronomy, the
reason given is not the creation story, but because “we were once slaves in
Egypt and God freed us from our slavery.”
From this perspective, we begin to realize that work, and the incessant
tyranny of our schedules, can become just as oppressive as Pharaoh himself!
For example, when we say to ourselves, “If I don’t keep at
it, I will never finish on time”—then we become slaves of the clock. When we say, “If I don’t keep at it, I will
never complete my work”—then we become slaves of productivity. When we say, “If I don’t keep at it, my
competition will get ahead of me”—we become slaves of achievement and
success. And of course, the bottom line
is that God does not want us to be slaves of anyone or anything. We have been set free from slavery!
I suppose it really comes down to this: Who is calling the
shots in your life right now? Is it the
clock? Is it the “to do” list? Is it climbing the corporate ladder? Because if the answer is anything other than
God, then you may need to take a Sabbath break, in order to remind yourself
that God is the only One we are called to serve.
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