I
bought my first computer in 1982, a Commodore 64. It used a 340k floppy disc and operated with machine
language. After typing in the machine
code, the little floppy started to whirr ... and whirr ... and whirr a little
more. It whirred so long that I could
get a cup of coffee or make a sandwich.
When it finally loaded the program it worked great. With each program, I started the process all
over again, something they called “booting up.”
I
think the term came from the farm. You
didn’t want to track that barnyard stuff into the house, so when you went
inside, you took your boots off. And,
when you wanted to go to work, you put your boots back on. So, for the little PC, we put our boots on,
or “booted up” the program if we wanted to go to work or play.
Today
I use a laptop. I usually leave it in sleep mode so it wakes right up and we
get going whenever I want. I get my cup of coffee before I turn it on. I like leaving my “boots” on with my laptop.
But sooner or later, it begins to creep along. It has too much going on in its
PC memory, too many programs trying to run at once. Too much “barnyard stuff”
tracked in and making it stink. There is nothing to do but “reboot” it. So, I turn it off and let it reload the
operating system. After the “reboot,” we
are good to go and back up to speed.
We
are a lot like my computer. We fly from
one task to another, filling our lives with frenzied activity, trying to constantly
multi-task between family, business, community and personal obligations. We are
no longer efficient. We do nothing well.
Sometimes we need to “reboot.”
This
is why God gave us the Sabbath. It is
the fourth of the ten “Big Ones.” And, as
Jesus pointed out, it was given to us by God because we need it. “Man was not made for the Sabbath,” Jesus
said. “The Sabbath was made for man.”
If
we want to live full, meaningful, productive and effective lives, we need time
for worship and rest. We need to
“reboot” physically, emotionally and spiritually. We are made in such a way that we have to
power down if we want to power up. This
means turning off the TV, disconnecting from social media and taking a deep
breath. We need to listen to the laughter of children, to birds singing, the
wind in the trees, waves lapping on the shore. We need to listen to God. Meditations in the Bible and fellowship with
other believers help me most.
We
need to take the Apostle Paul’s advice: “Finally, brethren, whatever
is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever
is lovely, whatever is of good
repute, if there is any excellence and if anything worthy of praise, dwell on these things,” (Philippians
4:8).
Sooooo true! D
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