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"THE REST OF THE WEEK!"
TEXTS:
Exodus 20:8-11; Genesis 2:15; Nehemiah 13:15-22
INTRO:
Of the 10 commandments this is the one taken most lightly by both
Christians and non Christians.
This is
the only of the 10 Commandments not repeated in the New Testament
Many feel it is not bound upon us because of this, which is
technically correct But we still need to keep the Lord's Day and
the lessons learned from the teachings of the Sabbath help us to
understand this
As we go
thru this lesson, substitute the Lord's day for the Sabbath and you'll
see what I mean!
Against
the other commandments like, "Thou shall
not kill", "Thou shall not steal," and
"Do not commit adultery" it seems
rather mild and innocuous.
Nothing
could be further from the truth however! As the final commandment on
tablet #1 dealing with man's relationship with God it concludes all that
we need to know in order to have a full life.
ALL the
commandments are needed for full life as God intended.
God's
rightful place and man's rightful place cannot be understood in life
without this commandment.
This
commandment really has two parts to it:
(1. Keep
the Sabbath day holy
(2. Six
days shall you work.
We
cannot find meaning in work without worship, and worship without work
has no practical value!
It is
the combination of both worship and work that creates a full humanity
and purpose to life, if our work is for ourselves it has no lasting
sense of purpose.
We
cannot experience work as a joyous thing without realizing that our work
is being done for something greater than ourselves, and worship without
work gives no expression of God's power in our lives to those of this
world.
PROP. SENT:
The Bible teaches us that to experience the fullness of our humanity we
must both consistently worship God and work. Worship fits us to work.
We must
honor both parts of this commandment to know God's best in life.
I. MAN -
THE WORSHIPPER Ex. 20:8,10-11
A.
Relationship 20:8
1. The
first part of this commandment deals with worship before work.
a. The
Sabbath was God's final day of creation, but it was man's first day of
existence .. so man begins his journey with worship before work!
b.
Worship makes a man fit to be a worker.
2.
Without worship our work has no lasting value, it is only temporal.
a.
Certainly nothing man can do as work has any eternal significance to it
if it is not done out of a relationship with an eternal God.
3. Why
is all this true?
a. Man
is a spiritual being, and if what he does has not come from a spiritual
perspective it has little value to it.
b.
Worship frames everything in our lives by giving significance to
everything beyond a materialistic framework.
4. God
desired fellowship with Adam before sending Adam into the garden to work
it.
ILLUS:
I have asked three close friends to monitor me and tell me when I am
allowing busyness to crowd out fellowship with God. -- C. John "Jack"
Miller in Leadership, Vol. 10, no. 4
5. The
purpose of this commandment was to prevent man who worked most of the
week from losing the spiritual dynamic to his life and thus the purpose
to his work and life.
a.
Failure to worship will have an impact of the satisfaction of our work!
b.
Worship renews our spirit which is what energizes our body!
ILLUS:
Worship renews the spirit as sleep renews the body. Richard Clarke Cabot
(1868-1939)
B.
Rest 20:10-11
1.
Worship enables us to "rest"
before God.
a. This
isn't primarily a physical rest as much as it is a spiritual rest!
(1. It
is a resting from saving ourselves!
(2. It
is resting in God's love and cleansing power.
b.
However, the spiritual rest can have profound impact on our physical
being!
ILLUS:
A study was made at
Harvard University of the effect of meditation on older people. They
discovered that meditation lowered blood pressure, improved mental
function, and extended the life span. While we may not all agree on
transcendental meditation, Christians have long believed that meditation
in worship made life deeper if not longer, and richer, and fuller. --
Robert C. Shannon, 1000 Windows, (Cincinnati, Ohio: Standard Publishing
Company, 1997).
2. Too
often we fail to understand the significance of worship, so many see it
as unimportant since we do so many of the same things over and over in
the same way when we worship.
a. We
fail to understand however how important many of these "spiritual"
dynamics are in the way they affect our lives.
b. To
"remember" the Sabbath day and to keep it holy may mean repeating many
of the same spiritual dynamics over and over in our lives, but these
very exercises become the core strength that enables us to deal with a
materialistic universe and the problems we face in the work place.
ILLUS:
In the movie Karate Kid, young Daniel asks Mister Miagi to teach him
karate. Miagi agrees under one condition: Daniel must submit totally to
his instruction and never question his methods. Daniel shows up the next
day eager to learn. To his chagrin, Mister Miagi has him paint a fence.
Miagi demonstrates the precise motion for the job: up and down, up and
down. Daniel takes days to finish the job. Next, Miagi has him scrub the
deck using a prescribed stroke. Again the job takes days. Daniel
wonders, What does this have to do with karate? but he says nothing.
Next, Miagi tells Daniel to wash and wax three weather-beaten cars and
again prescribes the motion. Finally, Daniel reaches his limit: "I
thought you were going to teach me karate, but all you have done is have
me do your unwanted chores!" Daniel has broken Miagi's one condition,
and the old man's face pulses with anger. "I have been teaching you
karate! Defend yourself!" Miagi thrusts his arm at Daniel, who
instinctively defends himself with an arm motion exactly like that used
in one of his chores. Miagi unleashes a vicious kick, and again Daniel
averts the blow with a motion used in his chores. After Daniel
successfully defends himself from several more blows, Miagi simply walks
away, leaving Daniel to discover what the master had known all along:
skill comes from repeating the correct but seemingly mundane actions.
The same is true of godliness. -- Duke Winser,
El Segundo, California. Leadership, Vol. 16, no. 4.
3. These
are not empty rituals we go through when we sing hymns of worship and
praise to God, nor is it just an "offering" of money that we collect,
nor an exercise in patience to sit under a sermon - these acts of
worship frame our lives and understanding of God and thus ourselves so
that when we "work" in this world there is a whole different
understanding of our role in life.
a. The
Sabbath is thus a "rest" in God, a time for our soul to refresh itself
as much as it is to prepare us for work in the world.
b. The
man who fails to worship by honoring the Sabbath is a man that will not
find satisfaction in life or work in the way God designed us to
experience it.
4. In
this sense the Sabbath was not made for God, it was made for man, a
statement Jesus clearly says in Mark
2:27 "Then he said to them, 'The Sabbath was made for man, not man
for the Sabbath.'"
II. MAN
- THE WORKER Ex. 20:9; Gen. 2:15; Neh. 13:15-22
A.
Responsibilities 20:9; Gen. 2:15
1. While
the first half of the 4th commandment is
"Keep the Sabbath day.." the second part is
"Six days shall a man work…"
a. The
full value of being a human being as God intended cannot be experienced
without both WORSHIP and
WORK.
b. The
4th commandment requires both.
2. A
society that fails to realize that their citizen's sense of self respect
comes only from a Worship ethic and a Work ethic will fail to develop a
strong society.
a. A
society that is devoid of spiritual foundations will lack a sense of
true mission.
b. A
society that makes welfare without work will strip it citizens of
dignity and purpose.
c. The
human spirit must have both worship and work to know their humanity as
God intended it to be.
3. Work
was a part of Adam's humanity BEFORE he sinned! (See
Gen. 2:15)
a. Adam
was commanded to work the garden before he fell in sin.
b. Man
was not created to
JUST
worship, but to worship and work!
c. It is
for this reason that any system to help the poor that avoids both
elements, a spiritual context and a creative one will leave those who
receive help "dignity poor" and lacking true self esteem.
(1. The
Old Testament welfare system is a good example of both:
(a. The
spiritual context said the poor were valuable and the rich had a
responsibility to them by leaving the corners of their fields for the
poor to glean.
(b. By
leaving the corners of the field for the poor, the poor had to work to
gather in what was provided so that work was a part of the process and
thus preserving their own dignity and self respect.
(c. In
this way there was responsibility and dignity for both the rich and the
poor. Each had to DO something.
(2. The
New Testament certainly had a similar emphasis based on the Apostle
Paul's words to the Church in Thessalonica,
2 Th 3:10-12 "For even when we were with you, we gave you this rule:
"If a man will not work, he shall not eat." We hear that some among you
are idle. They are not busy; they are busybodies. Such people we command
and urge in the Lord Jesus Christ to settle down and earn the bread they
eat."
4.
Failure of humans to worship also leaves them without true dignity and
self respect, for there is no larger context to what they do than
themselves!
a. Too
many people assume that activity or work alone will fulfill them.
b.
However, they soon discover that it is not activity that proves anything
of value, only activity within a context of an eternal perspective that
can add meaning.
ILLUS:
Activity itself proves nothing: the ant is praised, the mosquito
swatted. - Edythe Draper, Draper's Book of Quotations for the Christian
World (Wheaton: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 1992). Entries 112-115.
B.
Rewards Neh. 13:15-22
1.
Nehemiah understood how easy it is breaking the 4th commandment,
and also
how quickly God's blessings disappeared when
Judah
did break it,
so he
goes into action to restore the Sabbath in order to restore God's
blessings on them as a nation, a nation that was recovering from
captivity.
a. While
they may be free again, captivity can come in other ways, and their
neglect of the Sabbath was setting the stage for a new kind of
captivity.
b. Since
Nehemiah knew that the biggest battle was going to be with the merchants
and the buyers he starts with them.
c. He
forbids the doors to town to be open on the Sabbath.
d. He
won't let the merchants even in, and by closing the doors the buyers
couldn't get to the goodies!
e. He
finally tells them after a couple of attempts to get their wares in that
if they persist he will "make some heads roll"!
2.
Nehemiah understood that leadership was needed to restore the proper
place of the Sabbath in the life of
Judah.
a. Dads,
are you taking leadership in your homes to restore the Sabbath principle
for your wife and children?
b. Once
Nehemiah demonstrated his own leadership in this, he called upon the
Levites to "PURIFY THEMSELVES"
to enforce it.
A call
for others to join him in being an example.
c. Stay
at home parents do not produce go to Church children!
3. While
we emphasize to our children and society the importance of
"Thou shall not kill, Thou shall not steal, Thou shall not commit
adultery"
I
wonder if we do as much to say, "remember
the Sabbath day to keep it holy?"
4.
Nehemiah's concerns were simple, their forefathers had neglected the
Sabbathand God had therefore allowed calamity upon them as a nation, if
they want God's blessings and rewards they would have to emphasize as
much the Sabbath as any of the other commandments.
a.
Reward came with responsibility
b.
Reward came with taking God at His word about the Sabbath.
5. God
was trying to raise them up as a nation, the Sabbath was meant to
strengthen them as a people.
a. The
world may not understand the importance of the Sabbath, but we need to
show that it is important.
b. The
Sabbath would raise up a nation to be all that God would have them to
be.
ILLUS:
Adrian Rogers, former president of the Southern Baptist Convention,
tells about the man who made his sons work in the cornfields while their
peers spent the afternoon at the swimming hole. Someone scolded the
father saying, "Why do you make those boys work so hard? You don't need
all that corn." The wise father replied, "Sir, I'm not raising corn. I'm
raising boys." -- Quoted by Marvin Hein in The Christian Leader (Nov.21,
l989). Christianity Today, Vol. 34, no. 2.
6. Just
as skipping too much work has penalties, skipping the Sabbath has
spiritual penalties also.
a. It is
important to be faithful to worship.
b. It is
important to be faithful to work.
7. How
well do you keep the Sabbath?
a. Are
you good at only "half" of this commandment,
"6 days you will work…?"
b. Why
settle for only half a blessing?
The
Sabbath was the last day of creation for God, it was man's first day of
existence with God.
We begin
our week with worship and then enter the week with work. God came first!
The 4th
commandment has 2 parts to it:
(1.
Worship - Sabbath, and (2. "6 days you
will work" - creativity.
Man is
never fulfilled without both worship and work.
A
failure to honor both will result in loss. Do you remember the Sabbath
to keep it holy?
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