The “Rest” of the Story: The Good Work of Sabbath

Obedience is a rather narrow road. Disobedience, on the other hand, comes with a great, sweeping plain of options. Because we are like the Pharisees, we find it easy to convert the law of God into sundry sins of omission. We’re much better at not doing what we’re not supposed to do than we are at doing what we’re supposed to do. Thus, we reduce the Sabbath to all the things we’re not allowed to do. We work at fine-tuning the definition of “work” so we can make sure we don’t do it on the Sabbath. In so doing, as is our wont, we miss the point.

Were we to divide the Ten Commandments not according to duties toward God and duties toward man, as many do, but instead on the basis of prohibitions and commands, the Sabbath commandment would end up with the commands. It is less about what we are forbidden to do and more about what we are commanded to do.

First, believe it or not, the Sabbath commandment commands us to work. “Six days shalt thou labor” isn’t an interesting prelude designed merely to set the context for the command to come. It is a command in itself. We’re supposed to be busy with the work set before us. To be passionately pursuing the kingdom of God. We are to recognize that we live in the not-yet of the kingdom. Not all enemies have yet been made a footstool. We have not yet fully exercised dominion over the creation. The reign of Jesus is not yet universally recognized.

The Westminster Shorter Catechism asks, “How does Christ execute the office of a king?” Its answer: “Christ executes the office of a king in subduing us to Himself, in ruling and defending us and in restraining and conquering all His and our enemies.” As we rule with and under Him, this is the work we are called to — seeking His kingdom, making manifest His reign.

Second, as the Sabbath commandment moves to the day of observance, it does not command that we refrain from work — it’s far more profound: we are to rest. We think we are keeping the commandment if we refuse gallantly to do any of the work that is piling up and causing us to lose sleep at night. Instead, we are sinning. Rest isn’t just ceasing from working; it is also ceasing from worrying. It’s not easy. Indeed, in a manner of speaking, rest, especially ceasing from worry, is hard work. It takes discipline and fortitude to let go of all that has us worried.

We have not succeeded if our worries are more pious, either. That is, we aren’t failing to keep the Sabbath when we worry about the big meeting at work on Monday, but successfully keeping it when we are worried about our persistent failure to mortify that particular sin that so troubles us. Worry is worry, and it has no place in our Sabbath celebration. The Lord’s Day is a feast day and should be treated as such.

We rejoice and we get over our worries when we come to understand that the Lord’s Day is that time when we leave the “not yet” of the kingdom, and enter into the “already.” Is it not the case that the defining quality of eternity is the blessing of drawing near to the living God? When we feast at His Table, is He not declaring His blessing upon us? Is He not blessing and keeping, making His face shine, being gracious unto us? He lifts up His countenance on us, giving us peace.

When we worry about the more mundane things, we are failing to heed the call of Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount to set aside those worries, to not be like the Gentiles. We are called instead to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness. When we worry about more spiritual matters, especially our own sins, we are missing the very heart of all Lord’s Day preaching — we, the repentant, are forgiven in Christ. We have, by His sovereign grace, succeeded in our quest — we have received His righteousness.

Sabbath, then, is shalom, and shalom is Sabbath. We have rest because we have peace and peace because we have rest. We have both because Jesus is not just Lord of the Sabbath and the Prince of Peace but is also our Sabbath, our Peace.

There is a right way to keep the Sabbath in our context. There is a right answer to the questions that divide us- is this allowed or that; this day or that day. In the end, however, whatever positions we take the key question is ultimately the gospel question: Are we resting in the finished work of Christ?

The most faithful Sabbath keeper will in the end be the most joyful Sabbath keeper. Sabbath, in the end, isn’t something to be observed but something to be celebrated. And we celebrate not merely a day off from work. We celebrate the victory of our King. We are of good cheer, for He has overcome the world. And we reign with Him.

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The Cosmology of Elfland: Rejecting A Clockwork Orange

We are all the children of the Enlightenment. Even if we couldn’t begin to define “Enlightenment,” or if we know what it is and see it as an Endarkenment, we’re still shaped by it. It’s in our blood and sinews, programmed in us down to the zeros and the ones. It is, despite the current reign of postmodernism, the air we breathe and the water we swim in.

Consider our problems. When we are ailing, our assumption is that a pill will fix it. If our ailments are mental the solution is more education. When they are spiritual we look for a program to patch the malware. If output isn’t what we desire, we just change the input. We genuinely seem to believe that with the right technology, the right social structure, the right education, the right diet, we’ll find ourselves back in Eden, but better. Because we’ll have I-phones.

Or consider how we look at the universe. As Christians we affirm that God created it. Which is gloriously true. We affirm that He orders it. Again, gloriously true. Then, however, we make the fatal mistake of believing that it, the created order, is the ultimate machine, that the swirling nebulae are but the perfectly designed cogs, wheels and pulleys of a giant Swiss watch.

To riff on the inestimable GK Chesterton, we need to embrace the cosmology of elfland. The truth is that the created order is infused with all the wonder, beauty and whimsy of the Creator. The Bible tells us that serpents and donkeys can talk. It reveals that seas can split, that ax heads can float. The Bible tells us that “gods” have married women and produced giants as offspring. Stars sing, and God knows each of their names.

On more than one occasion, a Man fed thousands with just a few loaves of bread. That Man had been born to a virgin. He turned water into wine, made lame men walk and blind men see. That Man was also God in the flesh. He died, but walked out of His tomb three days later. Of course this reveals the glory of God. It reveals that God is not stuck on the outside looking in.

It also reveals, however, the very nature of the world we live in. We are closer to Middle-Earth, Narnia and the Wizarding World of Harry Potter than we are to a clockwork orange, a mere machine monstrously pretending to live. Maybe instead of objecting to books with magic we should object to books that have no magic. They lie about reality. The world we live in is magic, His magic. Our heavenly Father is in charge. His Word leaves His lips, tumbles through the nothing and pulls galaxies out of a hat.

Caterpillars become butterflies. Valleys filled with dry bones become congregations singing His praise. Two become one and bring forth still more. Rebels become princes and libertines priests. And all of this wonder, from the farthest reaches of space to the bigger on the inside dance of the quarks, is but a shadow of the real world He is taking us to. Glory, hallelujah.

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Ruth and Naomi Redux; Tony Reinke’s God & Technology Book

The return of Curating Your Book Library, prompted by Tony Reinke’s excellent book, God, Technology and the Christian Life. Plus, the workers are few and the shame of believers ashamed of God. Where else are you going to find all that? Help yourself. Take two and share with a friend.

This Week’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Pray for One Another; Bear One Another’s Burdens

The most common lie told by Christians may well be- “I’ll pray for you.” Why would we lie about such a thing? It’s pretty simple. First, we know we’re supposed to pray for each other. Second, we’re not very good at praying. Third, we look good when we claim we’ll pray. And those to whom we make this promise have no way of knowing if we keep it. The One to whom we pray, however, knows every idle word and every idle promise. We make fun of the Pharisees for praying loud and public prayers to win the acclaim of others. On the other hand, we promise loudly and publicly to say prayers we don’t even say.

We do not pray for one another because we believe some silly notion that God is moved by numbers. It is a blasphemous thought to imagine our loving Father in heaven keeping a tally of how many have prayed for this or that and waiting until some magic number is hit before He acts. The prayers of a righteous man availeth much, not the prayer of righteous men. The value of spreading our prayer requests far and wide, and the value of taking up those requests from far and wide is found in what these prayers can do for the one praying them.

When I pray for myself, as I ought to do, it is easy for my focus to stay more on the giver of the prayer than the Receiver. That is, my focus can remain on me. When, however, I devote time, energy, attention to the needs of others, suddenly my focus turns away from myself to two far more important foci- the one in the need and the One who meets the need. Praying for others gets me off myself in a way that praying for myself might not.

Second, my prayers for others remind me of the love my Father has for others. Peace, love, community among believers comes less when we work harder at being better, more when we remember better that we and our sins are all covered by the blood of the Lamb, that we are all the beloved children of the Father. If the whole of the body of Christ were more concerned about others than themselves, good things will surely follow.

Last, praying for others is what I’m supposed to do. As with all of God’s law, obedience redounds to our own well being. God’s law isn’t a set of restrictions used to measure our commitment to the Lawgiver. It is instead an invitation to joy from our Father who loves us.

What should we be praying for each other? That we would walk faithfully with our Lord. That we would embrace more fully the grace He has already given us. We should pray that we would put to death our own flesh. That He would use us to manifest His own glory and the glory of His kingdom. That we, His bride, would be a crown of glory to Him, our husband and King.

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Study Tonight- Parables: Lost Treasure, Pearl of Great Price

Tonight we continue a new study exploring the parables of Jesus. Last week we considered the Sower. Tonight- the Lost Treasure and the Pearl of Great Price. We serve dinner at 6:15, and begin the study at 7:00. We also livestream on Facebook Live, on the account I share with Lisa, RC-Lisa Sproul. Typically, a day or so later, we post the study right here. Scroll down for previous studies. We’d love to host you in our home, or out in cyberspace.

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Do abortion opponents only care about babies until birth?

An easy no. But wait, there’s more. Not only is the answer no, but the one raising the question/accusation has revealed an unfathomable level of ignorance/dishonesty. It’s a mute talking point brought to you by the ghouls who murder babies.

Those committed to protecting all babies are statistically far more likely to support needy families caring for born babies. As I often point out when privileged to preach outside abortion mills, “We who are here proclaiming Jesus to you, who are offering counsel, financial assistance, gifts in kind, are not paid. It costs you nothing. Those inside with you who are insisting we are the bad guys won’t do anything unless you give them the money. Whose counsel should you trust?”

This ridiculous trope has legs, not surprisingly, because of the unexamined statism in the one making it. Most people committed to the unborn are likewise skeptical of government assistance programs. We vote for candidates who at least pretend to want to stop the robbing of Peter to pay Paul, redistribution programs. I hope that part is true. What doesn’t follow, however, is that opposition to redistributing wealth puts one in opposition of all the Pauls receiving funds taken from all the Peters.

Do not flinch in the face of those who accuse you of being hypocritical for supporting legal protection for the unborn and not supporting cradle to grave welfare. Apples and apples. Because with the former we are seeking to protect the right to life. With the latter we are seeking to protect the right to private property. Nothing in the least inconsistent there.

I love it when the accusation gets even more personal. Many times I’ve been asked/accused “What have you ever done for a child that survived the womb?” My answer? “I’ve, along with my dear wife Lisa taken up the responsibility to meet all the material needs, every last one for the entirety of childhood. Also, we’ve taken up the responsibility to meet all the educational needs, every last one for the entirety of childhood. We’ve taken up the responsibility to meet all the spiritual needs, every last one for the entirety of childhood. All needs we either do or would provide.”

All this, and much, much more for two humans who were headed to their deaths. Who by His grace have now lived all their lives not as wards of the state nor wards of our family, but as members of our family. Their names are Reilly and Donovan… Sproul. Please note, however, that we did not do this simply to prove our bona fides as defenders of life. We do this because, as God promises in Psalm 127, these boys are deep blessings to us from His hand. They have rescued us.

This slanderous accusation, that we who love the unborn do not love the born, is fools speaking gibberish in a vain attempt to drown out their own consciences. Pay it no heed.

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Victory By Death: The Way of the Cross, The Way of the Way

The Devil delights in false dichotomies. When he persuades us that our choices are between this foolishness and that weakness — heads, he wins; tails, the kingdom loses. When we are lukewarm in our commitment, when we think the kingdom of God is just some ethereal thing that no one can see, the Devil encourages us in just this direction. We see the kingdom as only future, and so sit on our hands waiting. Such is not, of course, a passionate seeking of His kingdom or His righteousness.

The Devil does not, however, fear kingdom zealots. He offers those whose passion burns to make known the reign of Christ a whole different temptation. The Devil encourages these to take up arms, to bear the sword. He seduces them into thinking they can make the kingdom come by force.

The first option denies we are at war. The second option denies that our weapons are not carnal. We, the Bible tells us, are at war and our armory is stocked with potent, spiritual weapons.

Consider first the reality of the war. God promised in Genesis 3: 14-15 that He would put enmity between the Serpent and the woman, between their respective seeds. Thus, we have an identifiable enemy — all those who are yet outside the kingdom of God. This enemy, of course, actively fights its war against us and our King. Thus, we are at war. The Lord calls us to tear down strongholds, to destroy every lofty thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of God. We are commanded not to be conformed to this world, but to be transformed.

We also have an objective. Believers long to see the reign of our Captain made manifest the world over. We are seeking His kingdom. His promise is that a day is coming when every knee will bow and every tongue will confess that He is Lord. Indeed, He will come from His throne, we are told, when all His enemies are made a footstool. The language of warfare fills the Word, from beginning to end, despite our crafty Enemy’s attempt to cry “peace, peace,” when there is no peace.

Our Enemy, under no self-constraint, uses carnal weapons. Indeed, everything about his warfare is carnal. His spear pierced the side of our Lord. He hurled the stones at Stephen. The serpent worked through sundry caesars, leading the early Christians to the Colosseum for sport, lining the Appian Way with hundreds of crucified disciples of our crucified Lord. He animated the lies of Islam, whose scimitar first seized Jerusalem and later reached even into Europe.

The Devil, however, rejoiced more over the counterattack on Jerusalem than he did the seizure of it. That is, the greater victory wasn’t the success of the sword on his side of the battle but the taking up of the sword on our side. He wins lesss by fighting with carnal weapons but by seducing us into fighting with carnal weapons.

The Bible, of course, leaves room for legitimate use of force. The use of the sword in defense of our land or of our families is not only permissible but mandatory. But we do not build the kingdom with the sword. Our weapons are not carnal. The kingdom advanced far more potently through the humble martyrs’ deaths than it did through the fighting of the valiant soldiers of the Crusades. We don’t kill for the kingdom but die for it.

Barbarians are also at our gates. Our walls crumble, and it seems in the West that a new dark age is here. We find the evidence less in the rhetoric of the radical left, the cultural degradation pouring from New York and Hollywood, and the sexually confused marching in our streets, and more in the church that has lost sight of its God-given weapons. Believers move from defeat to defeat because we fight with coalitions, with media campaigns, with slick marketing, with compromise. We have washed away all our saltiness because we’ve forgotten how the kingdom comes.

We seek His kingdom as we seek His righteousness. The world is preserved, and the boundaries of the kingdom expand when we live as His children in simple, trusting obedience. The world is changed by changing diapers, by hugging wives, by doing chores diligently, and by singing joyfully. War is fought by peaceful countenances. Loyalty makes walls come tumbling down.

We do not, as the crusaders did, leave our hearths and homes, our wives and children, cross land and sea, and hack and poke with sword and spear. Instead we cross the room, pray blessing on our children, and dance with our wives. We sit at the table, eating the fat of the land, talking about the glory of His provision in all our days. Practicing true religion, we visit the orphan and the widow. We preach the Word in season and out. As we gather we break bread and we drink the cup. And the Serpent trembles in his bunker.

As little children, we know it is the little things that change everything. The Serpent’s kingdom is brought low when the servants of the King are lifted on high, in worship. Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, and the gates of hell come tumbling down.

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The Parables of Jesus- A Man Went Out to Sow

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Our First of Our New Study- The Parables of Jesus

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Our Last Study on Truths You Can Count On: Last Word

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