For a certain number of
pastors Monday is their Sunday. A time when they catch their breath, try to do
a bit of revival, and re-center their lives. Personally, I rarely take Monday
off. I think that Rick Warren got it right when he said that he didn’t take
Monday off because it was the day he was most wiped out, “Why,” asked Warren,
“would I take the day off when I feel the worst?”
No matter where we end
up on this one the truth is that for a lot of church planters and a lot of
pastors taking even one day off in seven seems like the impossible. There is
always one more thing to be done, one more call to make, one more…you can fill
in the blank.
One of the wonderful
gifts that God gives in this world of always one more thing to do is the command
(sometimes we do like to be told to do things) to take one day off in seven. To
have a Sabbath. Here’s what it says in Genesis 2. 2By the seventh day God
had finished the work he had been doing; so on the seventh day he rested from
all his work. 3And God blessed the seventh day and made it holy,
because on it he rested from all the work of creating that he had done. Genesis 2.2-3 NIV The seventh day--God
takes off on the seventh day, rests on it.
And as he does so he gives us this gift that just like him we get to
pause, catch our breath once a week.
But to get to this place
of catching our breath we have to have to own some things about ourselves and
God. On this Monday morning one of those
things (another coming in the Friday posting). First thing we learn about
Sabbath is this, it is God’s permission to us to admit that we are not
infinite, that we can not do it all. But
more than that, Sabbath is a time to says, “You know what, it’s not a sin that
I’m limited, it’s OK that I can’t do it all.”
Do you ever get that
feeling from people that really you are supposed to be able to do it all? I
love those studies that tell us that we are supposed so spend so much time
working out, so much time studying, so much time improving this part of our
life or that part of our life, and when you get all done, you discover that if
you did it all it would take about 36 hours a day to do everything the experts
tell us we are supposed to do, not to mention you’re supposed to get about
eight hours of sleep a night. Once
every week, God gives us this gift, it’s the gift of admitting the truth, that
we are limited, finite people. That as
those people life is going too fast and we need to breathe.
Not only do we need to
breathe, God tells us that we have to breathe. Have you ever seen one of those
movies where someone is frantic, running from place to place, looking for
something or someone, trying to get something done and another character comes
alongside of them, and says, “I just need you to breathe, take in a deep
breath, take a few deep breaths, Ok, got it, now, let’s talk, what’s going on.”
That’s kind of how it is when we do Sabbath, God looks at us and says, I just
need you to breathe, take in a few deep breaths, slow down, Ok, got it? Now let’s talk—what’s going on.
On this Monday can you
admit you are not infinite? Can you admit it not just by saying it but by
taking time to breathe?
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