Sabbath-Keeping — It's
OK to Start Small
By Lynne M. Baab
Published in Presbyterians Today, July/Aug, 2005. Pages 22-24.
The young woman smiled. “You
mean we can start small? We don’t have to do it perfectly
from the beginning?”
We were talking about the sabbath. The husband and wife had been
telling me about their enthusiasm for the sabbath. They had read
a book on sabbath keeping, and they were eager to begin. They
wanted to institute a celebratory meal with candles and prayers
on Saturday evening, with a blessing for their children. They
wanted to have a peaceful morning on Sunday as they got ready
for church. They hoped to teach their children Bible stories on
Sunday afternoons. They were concerned, however, that they were
taking on too much too fast.
The meaning of the word “sabbath” is “stop,
cease, desist, pause, rest.” The first question we need
to address when beginning a sabbath pattern is, “What will
I cease from?” Only after we have clarified that question
can we move on to the second question, “What will I do on
the sabbath to nurture my ability to rest in God?”
The sabbath command in the Ten Comandments directs us to stop
working one day each week. In our world, we need to think creatively
about what constitutes work. Certainly what we do for pay is included
in the category of “work,” but should we also include
running errands and home repairs? Weeding and paying bills? Doing
laundry? The Old Testament recommends celebration and worship
on the sabbath (Lev. 23:3). After we decide what kinds of work
we will cease from, we need to think about what helps us celebrate
God’s good gifts, what helps us allow God to work in us.
We also need to think about the timing of a sabbath. When I talked
with that young couple about starting small, I talked to them
about two possible ways to begin keeping a sabbath.
A Sabbath Day
The Bible talks about a 24-hour sabbath. That full day of stopping was a wonderful
experience for my husband and me when we lived in Israel for 18 months many
years ago, so I always encourage people to begin with a full day sabbath
if they can. Sunday works well because worship with others helps us draw
near to God and sets the tone for the day, but other days are possible, too.
A sunset to sunset sabbath follows the Jewish pattern, and we can begin with
a candle-lit dinner. A rising-to-bedtime sabbath is another option, beginning
as we wake up on this special, set-apart day.
Stopping comes first. We can start small by ceasing to use one
appliance for a whole day, perhaps the television, the phone,
the washing machine, or the car. We can identify the kinds of
work we will cease from for a whole day.
We also need to start small when we think about what we will
do on the sabbath to grow closer to God. A time of prayer, a blessing
for children, a devotional book to read, poetry and art, or a
special meal can help us celebrate God’s goodness, but no
one should try everything at once. For many faithful sabbath observers,
time outside in nature helps slow the pace and encourage thankfulness.
Taking a walk may be a good place to start.
Sabbath Moments
Many people have started keeping a sabbath by starting small in terms of time.
They choose to cease working and find their rest in God for a couple hours
or half a day each week. They set aside their to-do lists, they let go of
their need for productivity, and stop thinking about justifying their existence
by getting things done. They stop.
During that time of stopping, they may spend some time doing
something to nurture their ability to rest in God, perhaps journaling,
reading poetry, looking at art, or reading the Bible or a Christian
book. Many kinds of prayer are appropriate for sabbath time.
The challenge when observing a short sabbath of just a few hours
is truly stopping. In a short sabbath we can engage in things
for the entire sabbath that feel “spiritual” or significant.
It can be tempting to fill a short sabbath with activities: spiritually
nourishing endeavors that indeed help us draw near to God. While
those activities can be good things, all sabbaths need to involve
some moments of true stopping where nothing profound seems to
be happening. That kind of stopping teaches us that God runs the
universe and we don’t.
Creation Abundance and Freedom from Slavery
The sabbath commands in the two versions of the Ten Commandments give different
reasons for keeping a sabbath. The first version, in Exodus 20:8-11, says
that God rested after creating the world, and we should rest on the sabbath,
too. God rested at creation because the world is abundantly provisioned and
exquisitely made. We can evaluate our sabbath activities by asking ourselves
what we can cease from, and what we can choose to do, that help us remember
God’s abundance.
Many people enjoy being in nature on the sabbath, in part because
it helps us connect with the abundance of God’s creation.
Eating good food, giving a friend or a child a back rub, lighting
a fat candle, focusing on prayers of thankfulness . . . all of
these can help us remember and experience God’s bounty.
Just stopping from all activity and taking a deep breath can remind
us that God sustains the universe so powerfully that we don’t
have to be productive every minute.
In the second version of the sabbath command in the Ten Commandments,
Deuteronomy 5:12-15, God invites the people of Israel to “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.” We are encouraged to rest on the sabbath because we
are no longer slaves. In Jesus Christ we have been freed from
all possible kinds of slavery.
Do you feel like a slave to your email? For a day or a few hours
each week, as you intentionally embrace the sabbath, perhaps keeping
the computer turned off would help you experience your freedom
from slavery. Or perhaps it would be most fruitful to focus on
an attitude that enslaves you. The sabbath is a wonderful day
to try not to worry, to avoid thinking about things that make
us angry, or to stop wishing for things we don’t have.
The Sabbath and Grace
More than any other faith discipline I have engaged in, the sabbath has taught
me grace. God has given us good work to do, steward the universe in all kinds
of ways alongside God. Our work is noble and important, but even the best
and most fruitful work can nudge us towards the belief that we are earning
the good things we have. We can so easily fall into the trap of believing
that God loves us for what we do.
Grace teaches us that nothing we do can make God love us more.
Year after year of keeping one day each week free from work has
helped me learn that truth deep inside. God’s love is so
awesome that we can rest for one day each week – or even
just for a few hours each week – in the certainty that God
runs the universe competently and carefully. The freedom we have
in Jesus Christ reaches into every area of our lives, so we can
spend time each week relishing that freedom as we stop moving
so fast and stop producing so much.
Scarcity
Versus Abundance and the Sabbath
Our culture speaks to us very loudly through advertisements
and all sorts of media. “More is better,” we hear
over and over. We receive countless messages that we need to focus
on what we don’t have, and work hard to get it.
- The sabbath speaks to us of God’s abundance. God
rested at creation (Gen. 2:1-3), and we are invited to rest
on the sabbath, because God created the world so abundantly
and God sustains the universe so powerfully.
- The sabbath invites us to focus on what we have,
rather than what we don’t have. The sabbath is a perfect
day to notice the light in a child’s eye, to listen to
the wind in the trees, to smell colorful flowers, and be thankful.
The sabbath encourages us to remember who God is and who we
are – God’s children and friends who have received
so many gifts from the hand of a generous Giver.
- On the sabbath we are invited to notice what God
has done and what God has already given us. Nothing
we can do will make God love us more, so we can stop producing
for one day, or even just for a few hours, and luxuriate in
grace. Resting from work on the sabbath enables us to step
aside from our culture’s cry of “More! More!” and
respond with joy and thankfulness, experiencing for a few
brief, holy moments the abundance we have been given.
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The
meaning of the word “sabbath” is “stop, cease,
desist, pause, rest”...
book
Sabbath Keeping (2005)
exerpt
Chapter One
reviews
A Gentle Antidote to Legalistic Lists
Susan O’Loughlin Ward
Reflections on Rest From the Neonatal
Care Unit
Sarah Sanderson
Dine
on This Sumptuous Feast Rev. Monica
McDowell Elvig
A Day of Rest from the Should's
and Ought's
Jeanette Krantz
articles
A Day Off From God Stuff? "Leadership Journal," Spring 2007
Gifts of Freedom: The Sabbath and Fasting to be published in "Conversations"
The Gift of Rest
Today's Christian Woman (Sept 2005)
Sabbath-Keeping—It's
OK to Start Small Presbyterians Today (July/Aug
2005)
A Day Without a ‘Do’ List Discipleship
Journal (July/Aug 2005)
Stopping: The Gift of the Sabbath Congregations (Summer
2003)
interviews
The Sabbath Doesn't Have To Be Perfect
Beyond a Sunday Nap
buy the book
(Amazon.com)
(ChristianBooks.com)
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