October 4, 2019

The Great Physician X: A Tale of Two Woodchoppers




שַׁבָּת Shabbot, The Sabbath is the second concept from the world of the Old Testament which helps explain the concept of self and wholeness. In the Old Testament is the idea of שַׁבָּת “sabbath” Shabbat or rest and cessation of the world’s routine that drags us down. A chance to unplug from the world and plug into eternity. A time to sharpen our axes and saws. Sometimes you just need to go offline. I stopped doing this blog for over three years. I powered down. I had to. Time and life circumstances didn't allow me the time I needed to do exegesis and study properly. Sabbaticals save resources, recharges batteries and renew spirit/Spirit.

While, for some, the sabbath and church going as an institution may conjure up painful memories of religious dogmatism, polemics, legalism, exclusiveness, charlatanism and intolerance, in reality it is the opportunity to re-examine one’s life weekly or at times daily. When we look at it as an avenue to health, renewal, and freedom the sabbath opens more doors than it closes. The sabbath wasn't intended by God to be a confining encumbrance, but rather as a wholesome resource for blessing. It was given a prominent role in Israel’s covenant tradition and laws / commandments. It was thereby borrowed and carried on by Christians.

It is only the sabbath a festival of ancient Israel significant enough to be included in the Ten Commandments (Exodus 20:2-17; Deuteronomy 5:6-21). Like the other nine commandments, the sabbath is considered constitutional and basic to Israel’s continued life and well-being. The violation of the sabbath, as with most of the rest of the Ten Commandments, was to result in the death penalty (Exodus 31:14-15, Numbers 15:32-36). You could literally be put to death or incur a death penalty for not resting. The irony here should not be lost. A failure to not rest, to stress and not relax causes anxiety which in turn shortens one’s lifespan. To not stop and rest (and worship) was detrimental to one’s health anyway. Literally.

Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life? Mark 6:27

The sabbath literally gives a person time to reflect. On what? Time...the future and past of course. Reflect over one’s life but what God had done for the individual and their community/ nation. Call it a weekly day of memorial. Just as any good believer acknowledges God’s true ownership of the earth/land so to the Sabbath acknowledges God’s ownership over man, time and eternity. The Sabbath brings to the fore not just spatial but also temporal.

When we look at the institutions of the sabbatical year(s) as a whole (when the land was to lie fallow for a year) and the seven sabbatical years plus one, the fiftieth year of jubilee (when all property was ideally to revert to its original owners), so through the sabbath Israel had opportunity to acknowledge God’s lordship and ownership of space, time, and life and be reminded of it weekly. God would never be far from the believer in either space or time in their lives. A living constant God. A God who had rested on the seventh and final day of Creation. God is commanding man to emulate Him in their labors, service and…their rest.

The deep significance of the sabbath to believers should be clear, from the beginning, in the observation that the sabbath (Genesis 2:1- 3), not the creation of humanity (1:26-31), constitutes the real climactic outcome of the opening chapter(s) of Genesis. In the godly mind, God’s primal sabbath rest provided insight into and anticipated the very goal the Creator set for the ongoing creation or labors of men. To bring glory to God Himself.

Essentially the sabbath stood as an agent of restoration, health, and wholeness for Hebrew society as a whole. As Exodus 20:10 stated:

“…in it [the sabbath] you shall not work, you, or your son, or your daughter, your manservant, or your maidservant, or your cattle, or the sojourner who is within your gates”. The motivations are clear, “…so that your ox and your ass may have rest, and the son of your bondmaid, and the alien, may be refreshed.”

In the sabbath we see time itself as sacred. Time is God’s. We all live on borrowed time that is God’s. Time which He can reclaim at any point He wishes. The sabbath day was understood to be a “holy day”. It was a day set apart from all other days of the week. It was to be kept “holy” and not to be profaned. Just as a believer was to be set aside and holy for use by God. In this way we see the sacredness of saved believers existing and living within time…both being creations of their Creator. Existence of man is not possible without the time to live a life within.

The observance of the sabbath therefore bound the creation and the Creator temporally and each week would be a renewing invitation of a Hebrew/Christian society to respond in praise to the One who created time and space. In the covenant relationship initiated at Sinai God said to Israel:

“You shall keep my sabbaths, for this is a sign between me and you throughout your generations, that you may know that I, the LORD, sanctify you....It is a sign forever between me and the people of Israel... ” (Exodus 31:13, 17)

The Tale of Two Woodchoppers

Once upon a time there were two woodcutters named Peter and John. They were at loggerheads over who chopped more wood. One day they held a competition. The rules: Whoever produced the most wood in a day would win. The next day both started chopping wood. An hour later Peter stopped. When John realized that there was no chopping from his opponent’s side he continued to cut down his trees with renewed zeal. After 30 minutes passed, John heard his opponent chopping again. Both carried on synchronously. John was starting to tire when the chopping from Peter stopped once again. Sensing victory John continued fervently. This continued all day. Every hour, Peter would stop chopping for 30 minutes while John kept going. When the competition ended, John was confident that he had won. To John’s astonishment, Peter had cut down more wood. “How did this even happen? I heard you stop working every hour for 30 minutes!”, queried John. Peter replied, “It’s actually simple John. Every time I stopped work, I was sharpening my axe.”
#sabbath, #time #resurrection

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