Posted tagged ‘sabbath’

Sabbath Flu

December 12, 2023

There remains, then, a Sabbath-rest for the people of God;  for anyone who enters God’s rest also rests from their works, just as God did from his.(Hebrews 4:9-10)

I receive a flu shot each year during the same doctor’s appointment of my annual physical exam. Unfortunately, this year my exam isn’t until the day after Christmas. That means two things: I’ll step on the scale like a side of beef with the excess Christmas fudge refusing to let go of my belly, and secondly, I have a welcome mat laid out for any flu bug that needs a home. I still have some hope that the first thing won’t happen, but the second became a reality this past weekend.

For three days, I had to rest, moving from misery to moaning to moments of feeling normal to recovery. My new resident had my full attention, and all I could do was…rest.

Rest. That word that gets associated with unpleasant things like arrest, cardiac arrest, restraint, restrict, restlessness, and “rest areas” along highways that get closed because of illegal activity occurring there. Rest is what we need and what we so often push to the back of the top shelf in the cupboard. We’ll get to it…sometime.

When I was in Israel many years ago, I remember the elevator of our Jerusalem hotel switched to Shabbat mode for the Jewish sabbath. That meant it would go one floor at a time, the doors would open and close, and it would proceed to the next floor. We were on the 9th floor so it took us a while to get down to breakfast, which consisted of only cold foods. Nothing had to be cooked. The emphasis was on following the Jewish law, restrictions (there’s that word again). In other words, forced rest. What it made me ponder was how easy it is in our culture to push rest out of the way. Sometimes we need to be forced into it.

For followers of Jesus, I’ve noticed that the specialness of the Sabbath has gradually been eaten away like an eroding shoreline. I write this as one of the guilty. In a culture of convenience, it is easy to run to the store to pick up hamburger buns for the afternoon cookout or head to the mall to scour the sales. Youth athletic contests dot our Sunday mornings. NFL games have even pushed up their kickoff times. Sunday is no longer a day of rest but of taking care of all those things we didn’t get to in the other six days of the week.

Golly gee! For us to rest at all, not just on Sunday, is a foreign concept for many of us. We need to take an online course on “resting.” Many of us have bought into the mindset that says if I’m not doing something, I’m being a slouch, a slackard, on the road to worthlessness.

And here’s the thing! Are we any better off for our hyper-living lifestyle? Has the condition of the world improved with the constant buzzing of human bee activity? Has “holy space” become an antiquated idea that has had its day?

Getting the flu caused me to realize my limitations, my humanness, my vulnerability, and the necessity of putting on the brakes.

Unplanned Open Day

January 23, 2019

WORDS FROM W.W.                                                     January 23, 2019

                             

Yesterday schools, the public libraries, military bases, and other spots that are usually open…weren’t! The Colorado Springs area got blasted with a blizzard during the night and into Tuesday. The wind gusts scooted the swing across the deck behind our house. The cover on our hot tub was blown open (and I can’t wait to see what our next utility bill will be)! Roads were closed as snow drifts were shaped and created.

It was a planned day that suddenly became unplanned. Snow days have that effect. What hadn’t become a possibility pushes all the plans out of the way as it goes from the back row to the front and only seat!

There is something refreshing about a planned day that suddenly becomes open and free, unless you’re one of those drivers who gets stuck on the side of the road when the temperature is 4 degrees. There is something freeing about realizing that there is nothing you can do the whole day. You are homebound, away from the classroom or office, whether you want to be or not…and you breathe in a deep sense of peace!

Our lives are consumed by schedules and tasks. When I pastored I would make a list at the beginning of each week that would be filled with all the jobs to complete, the people to visit, and the meetings to attend. It covered a page, two columns wide, top to bottom. I’d cross off completed tasks, but each week the page would get filled back up. 

To be told that it’s okay to chill for a day, to be unproductive, to sit back in the recliner and read a James Patterson novel…it brings a smile to our face. We come face-to-face with the fragile nature of our plans and the harsh truth that we aren’t always the ones who can be in control.

Yesterday I worked on a jigsaw puzzle, read for a couple of hours, took a long nap, and wrote the first few hundred words in a new story I’m writing. In sharing what I did I must say that I didn’t seek to do them so I could have a sense of accomplishment. Each of them happened in the midst of my relaxed outlook.

It was as if I received sabbath rest on a Tuesday. There is a hint of God’s intentions in it, a calmness in the midst of the blizzard. It reinforces my belief that some of life’s biggest surprises come in the unplanned moments.