"If you keep your feet from breaking the Sabbath
and from doing as you please on my holy day,
if you call the Sabbath a delight
and the LORD's holy day honorable,
and if you honor it by not going your own way
and not doing as you please or speaking idle words,
then you will find your joy in the LORD." (Isaiah 58:13-14)
"Doing as you please"
"Going your own way"
These are the phrases that slapped me silly a few weeks ago when I read them in the Bible. Like a vast majority of today's Christians, I really hadn't given much thought or consideration to what the Sabbath means, or how to go about honoring it.
This much I knew: the day didn't matter. Calendars have been shifting for decades (well, centuries might be more accurate), but to make a definite statement like "Sunday is the ONLY Sabbath day God recognizes" is just an invitation for spam. (Especially on a public blog like this...)
So, while the actual DAY didn't matter, I still believed it was important to have A day to set aside and rest. This also kind of tripped me up, because, to be rather frank, basically every day is a day of rest for me. With only one child to entertain and maintain, I find my life as a stay-at-home Dad to be surprisingly easy. Unless Kyler gets a hold of a Pixie Stix and radioactivates his blood with it, he's a fantastically easy and enjoyable kid to be around.
So, when I considered that most of my week is pretty laid-back and restful to begin with, how to make the Sabbath any MORE a day of rest was puzzling. That is, until I found the verse in Isaiah.
Then it all became painfully clear.
The Sabbath is not all about me. It's not just about resting and relaxing and kicking back. It should also be a day of reflection and concentration on God. But more than that, it's to be a day that I don't "go my own way" or "do as I please."
This hit home. Seriously, I'm all about going my own way and doing as I please. Being home all day, I pretty much set my own schedule. I have plenty of time to sell things on eBay, visit a local bookstore, surf the web, listen to new music downloads, watch a DVD, etc. For a long time, it’s been all about me, and I'm coming to realize that with soberness.
So, after reading these verses, I'm determined to make a change in my life. I am going to honor the Sabbath like it should be, in the way I know how. It will be a day set apart to God and to others. I will sacrifice myself and my own plans, schedule, wants and desires, and instead think about what God would have me do and how I can help those around me.
No music. No movies. No novels. No idle surfing. No mindless entertainment. Nothing about forwarding my own personal agenda anymore. I will change the way I live, starting today. (Well, actually, starting a few Sundays ago...) (I should point out that, yes, this means I will be taping “Arrested Development” to watch on Monday…)
So that's my report on the Sabbath, and what it means to me. Thank you... (places his paper on the desk and returns to his seat at the back of the class... where he was watch, and observe, and learn....)
Kevin