Thursday, November 12, 2015

Our True Sabbath Rest - November 12, Readings: Ezekiel 31-32, Hebrews 4:1–5:10, Psalm 119:173–176, Proverbs 27:22–23

Links to Today's Readings

Most of us live lives of stress and of tumult. Even when we lay our heads down on the pillow at night, our brains continue to race - thinking about money or relationships or job stress or life circumstances or whatever else life has thrown at us. Rest comes hard. Relaxation isn't always easy.

But in Hebrews 4 we find out about a different kind of rest, the kind that God gives to those who repent of their sins and believe in his Son. Verse 1 makes an assertion and gives a warning.
Therefore, while the promise of entering his rest still stands, let us fear lest any of you should seem to have failed to reach it. 

God promises us that there is rest - his rest, perfect rest. But he is talking about far more than just a good night's sleep, more than relaxation or unwinding from the stresses of life. God's rest is a life of complete trust in God, a life lived by faith instead of the stress and strain of good works. We cease to depend on ourselves to achieve righteousness and to please God and trust in the finished work of Christ - that true rest.  

This is our true Sabbath rest as believers, a rest from our own works. As God rested from his works, we are to rest from ours. Consider verses 9 and 10. 
So then, there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God, for whoever has entered God's rest has also rested from his works as God did from his.
We are not talking about taking a break from holiness, but living the life that God wants by faith, not by our own effort. It is about total dependence on God and not on a set of rules or on my own efforts. I am redeemed because of what Christ did - I simply trusted my life to him. And I am made holy by the work of Christ as well, trusting fully in his presence and power, his Spirit and his finished work. 

But there is a warning attached to verse 1. This perfect rest that God has provided for us, this Christ-purchased and Christ-provided rest is not automatic. Many of God's people miss it. Instead of living in dependence on the Christ who gave all for them, they stress and strain to make it on their own, depending on themselves and their own resources instead of on God. And it is such a waste. Verse 11 sums it up. 
Let us therefore strive to enter that rest, so that no one may fall by the same sort of disobedience.
Now that's a strange statement, isn't it? "Strive to enter that rest." Work hard to rest? But that odd wording demonstrates an important point. We must daily put our faith in God, renounce dependence on our own works and our own abilities and rest fully in him. Every single day. It is a constant battle, one that is accomplished by dependence on God, but it is a battle nonetheless.

May be battle every day, working hard to rest in Christ. Coming to understand that conundrum may not be easy, but it is one of the secrets of understanding Christian living. 
Father, I rest in you and trust in you. When I've trusted in myself, I have lived in fear and stress, and I have failed. But when I walk in faith, you are faithful. Thank you for your wonderful rest. 

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