Somewhere along the way we reduced the ten commandments to nine. A half-century ago, businesses were closed on Sunday and sporting events recognized Sunday as a day for worship. All that has changed. Today our calendars are filled up to a 24/7 frenzy. We effectively eliminated the fourth commandment as irrelevant and archaic: “Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy.”
When Jesus said that man was not made for the
Sabbath but the Sabbath was made for man, he affirmed the need for the Sabbath
in our lives. He underscored the importance of the Sabbath to all of us for
mental, emotional, spiritual and physical health.
In 1924 Scotland’s Eric Liddell, the fastest runner in the world, refused to
compete at the Olympics on the Lord’s Day. When the King of England commanded him to run
for his country on Sunday, Liddell respectfully replied he had a higher
king. The Academy Award winning movie, Chariots of Fire portrays Liddell
reading Isaiah 40:31 to a congregation on Sunday while young men stumble and
fall on the mud-splattered track. “Those who wait for the Lord will gain new
strength; they will mount up with wings like eagles, they will run and not get
tired, they will walk and not faint.” The
next week, Liddell ran the 400 meter, a race for which he had not trained, won
the gold and set a new world record.
Sabbath requires time for rest, silence,
solitude and worship, but it is more than a day of rest. It is a way of life
that is filled with wonder, worship, awe and delight. When Jesus declared
himself the Lord of the Sabbath, he offered to us a better way. He said, “Come
unto me all you who are weary and heavy laden and I will give you rest. Take my
yoke upon you and learn of me, for I am gentle and humble in heart and you will
find rest to your souls.”
Tinsley's Civil War Novel, Bold Springs, is free Feb. 10-13 as an eBook on Amazon. Chosen Best Christian Historical Fiction by Reader's Favorite, 2022.