Stopping: The Gift of the Sabbath
By
Lynne M. Baab
Published in "Congregations," Summer 2003, Pages
28-30
Jeff, a writer in an advertising
agency, oversees his company’s contract with a large relief
organization. Right after the earthquake in Bam, Iran, that relief
organization wanted to get out a mailing as soon as possible. Jeff
received the assignment on a Friday morning, with the deadline
of Monday afternoon.
He worked all day Friday and Saturday on the project, and by Saturday
evening he could see he would need to put in two more full days
of work in order to make the deadline. When he went home from work
that Saturday, he felt conflicted. For three or four years he had
been observing a sabbath almost every Sunday, with unexpected and
profound blessings from that day of rest.
He finds he gets more done during the week if he observes a day
of rest. In fact, on those occasions when he goes ahead and works
on Sundays, because he just can’t see how the work would
get done otherwise, he feels off balance, scattered and perpetually
behind all week. This odd arithmetic, one more sign of God’s
partnership with us in our everyday life, speaks to Jeff of the
way God honors even our small acts of obedience.
On that stressful Saturday evening after the Bam earthquake, Jeff
decided to keep a sabbath the next day, despite all the evidence
indicating he needed to work on Sunday. He returned to work on
Monday wondering what would happen. All day long he found things
falling into place in an amazing way. He met the deadline comfortably.
And he went away from work marveling again at the mysterious way
God acts.
Growing Observance of the Sabbath
More and more people of all ages are finding joy and fruitfulness in observing
a sabbath. One of my friends is nearing retirement after a lifelong career
in campus ministry. He has just begun to observe a sabbath. He used to believe
we can rest after the work is done. He has finally realized the work is never
done. He reflects, “The sabbath is God’s gracious ‘five
p.m. whistle,’ allowing us to put down our tools even though the work
isn’t finished.”
A surprising number of people in their twenties observe the sabbath.
Many of them say things like this: “The sabbath is one of
the Ten Commandments. We keep the other nine. Why wouldn’t
we keep this one?” A group of twenty-somethings gathers informally
after church every Sunday, rotating houses and apartments, spending
long hours just being together. As some of them have gotten married
and begun to have children, the group has changed shape, but the
commitment to a day of rest from work has remained.
The timing for this increase in sabbath observance couldn’t
be better. As our culture spins faster and faster, as a frantic
pace becomes the norm, the need for down time is ever more apparent.
We are a tired people. Researchers tell us that, on the average,
Americans sleep two hours less each night than we did a hundred
years ago. Researchers also note that during our waking hours,
multi-tasking takes a significant toll, contributing to our stress
levels and thus to our exhaustion.
For those of us who tend towards perfectionism or workaholism,
fatigue is a dangerous condition. We perfectionists and workaholics
tend to cope with uneasy feelings by working harder, our “drug
of choice.” And, of course, fatigue causes a good number
of uneasy feelings. We are lured into a spiral. Working to the
point of exhaustion, we feel off balance because of our fatigue,
and our knee-jerk coping strategy is to work harder, causing deeper
exhaustion. People who study burnout call this pattern “over-functioning,” and
anyone who looks closely can see it all around us in workplaces,
in churches, and even in homes.
Over-functioning has dangerous implications for people of faith.
We believe in God’s grace. We believe, as Philip Yancey says,
that nothing we can do will make God love us less, and nothing
we can do will make God love us more. Unfortunately, over-functioning
undercuts grace in an experiential way that impacts our hearts.
When we over-function, our conscious minds continue to affirm that
living by grace is important, but we are acting as if our actions
are utterly significant and vitally important. In many ways our
actions shape our hearts more than our conscious thoughts do, and
our hearts begin to creep towards the unhealthy belief that we
can earn God’s approval by what we do.
At the end of his space novel Perelandra, C. S. Lewis
creates a long ceremony where the angels who rule the various planets
give speeches about the paradoxes of the world God has made. One
of these angels reflects on the fact that each of us is truly necessary
because God’s love is like a great river, which needs a riverbed
to flow in. Another angel chimes in, adding that each of us is
truly superfluous, because God “has no need at all of anything
that is made.” God’s love comes to us “plain
bounty.”
A weekly rhythm of six days of work and one day of rest affirms
this paradox that Lewis describes. On the six days, we acknowledge
by our actions that we are called to be God’s hands and feet
in the world, that God’s love does need a riverbed to flow
in, that our work is indeed vitally important and significant.
On the one day of rest, we live out the equally important reality
that we are superfluous. God has no need at all of anything we
can do or say or create or imagine. On that day, we live in the
joy of knowing we are beloved because God’s love comes to
us as plain bounty.
One of my colleagues, who has observed a sabbath for more than
30 years, says that on the sabbath she is no longer identified
with any of the roles that fulfills in her working life. On the
sabbath, she is simply a beloved child of God. She reflects that
it took her several years of sabbath observance before she learned
how to step aside from those roles as she began her sabbath, but
now it is like changing into comfortable clothes, the highlight
of her week.
When we over-function, when we work continuously without a rhythm
of work and rest, we are acting as if only one half of C. S. Lewis’s
paradox is true. We take ourselves too seriously. We move dangerously
close to idolatry.
What Does the Sabbath Look Like?
The sabbath has impressed grace on my heart more than anything else in my life.
I have observed a sabbath for twenty-five years, ever since my husband, Dave,
and I spent 18 months living in Tel Aviv, Israel. Our experience of the sabbath
there involved a day with many fewer options: no shopping, no movies, no
meals in restaurants. We didn’t have a car, so the absence of busses
had a significant impact on us and slowed us down incredibly.
We returned to the U.S. determined to bring some of the slow pace
of the sabbath into our lives here. For our first decade of sabbath
observance, we had small children. On our Sunday sabbaths, Dave
did nothing related to his job and I didn’t do housework.
We enjoyed our children without the feeling we should be getting
something else done at the same time. We had one day each week
free from multi-tasking.
As our children approached adolescence, I began a seven-years
stint as a freelance writer and editor. So I added a new discipline
for Sundays. I didn’t go into my home office, didn’t
turn on my computer. Then seven years ago I was ordained as an
associate pastor in a lively congregation, and I moved my sabbath
to Mondays, following the tradition of Eugene Peterson when he
was a pastor. For several years, Dave also had Mondays off, and
those Mondays were tender days of relaxed intimacy, long walks,
leisurely conversations, spiced with some time alone. Three years
ago, Dave’s work schedule changed and he began working on
Mondays. I have spent these last few years observing a sabbath
all alone.
The specifics of what a sabbath looks like has changed with each
life stage, but the common, overarching principle is to cease from
working. Of course, work includes far more than just paid work.
Balancing the checkbook, mowing the lawn, doing laundry, and shopping
for groceries also feel like work to me. The Hebrew word for sabbath
simply means “stop, cease, desist.” We need to ask
ourselves what we need to cease from in order to make some space
for God.
The many excellent books on sabbath keeping suggest a variety
of possible ways to draw near to God on the sabbath. I have heard
people talk about their joy on the sabbath as they walk in nature,
pray thankfulness prayers, practice mindfulness, or spend time
with children reading or acting out Bible stories. Many people
enjoy beginning the sabbath with a festive meal, complete with
candles, special sabbath bread, blessings for the children, and
perhaps some singing.
Setting high goals for drawing near to God on the sabbath has
an inherent danger of continuing a pattern of over-functioning.
What we need most of all in our frantic culture is to stop our
activity. As we learn to stop in a weekly rhythm, over and over,
week after week and year after year, our hearts will absorb something
about God’s grace that cannot be learned from careful Bible
studies or excellent sermons or insightful discussions.
The Benefits of Stopping
A day centered around stopping gives us time and space to see our lives more
clearly, to notice where God has been present in the previous week, to pay
attention to where we have resisted God’s hand in our lives. This noticing
might happen while waking up in a leisurely way, while sitting on a park
bench, or while walking or riding a bike. On every single sabbath, we might
not have profound insights about God’s presence in our lives, but without
taking time to stop and notice where God is working, we will see a whole
lot fewer of the miracles that surround us.
A day free from work enables us to learn thankfulness. In one
Jewish tradition, prayers of intercession are forbidden on the
sabbath because even intercession is too much work for the sabbath
day. Because the sabbath encourages us to cease striving, to let
go of the tasks and goals that fill our minds six days of the week,
we have the space to look around us at the beauty of the world
God made. We have the space to notice the things we want to be
thankful for.
Sometimes on my sabbath I sit in our living room and look at the
trees outside the window. Trees are amazingly beautiful in their
different seasons. As I sit there, I realize that all week long
I have rushed in and out of the living room without noticing any
of those trees.
The trees speak to me of a deep truth. It is right and good that
I work hard on the six days of the week, striving towards the goals
that God has laid on my heart. As I work hard, of course I will
miss some of the beauty that surrounds me. So it is also right
and good that I spend one day each week resting with joy in the
goodness of God, my creator, my redeemer. On that day I can enjoy
the miraculous beauty of the world God made, and I can cultivate
thankfulness.
My heart grieves when people tell me why they cannot possibly
keep a sabbath. “We have too much to do. We couldn’t
possibly keep a whole weekend day free from chores and errands.” I
long to help people understand the theological danger of continuous
productivity. When we are constantly working at something, our
hearts begin to believe we are too significant. God is no longer
at the center of human life. Our own activities move into center
place, and we become idolaters.
Rick Warren’s best-selling book, The Purpose Driven
Life, begins with the profound truth that life is simply
not about us. The book’s popularity attests to a deep ache
for purpose and meaning in the midst of the frantic pace of our
lives today. We long to understand our place in the universe,
to know who we are in the light of God’s love. Over time,
the sabbath helps us live in the truth of who God is and who
we are. The sabbath teaches us grace, helps us stop racing around
as if we are the center of the universe.
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On that day, we live in the joy of knowing we
are beloved...
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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