Thursday, July 31, 2014

How important is rest?

• The Gospel is for all of life

Recently Bloomberg News carried a sad report from China.* It began:

Chinese banking regulator Li Jianhua literally worked himself to death. After 26 years of “always putting the cause of the party and the people” first, his employer said this month, the 48-year-old official died rushing to finish a report before the sun came up.

China is facing an epidemic of overwork, to hear the state-controlled press and Chinese social media tell it. About 600,000 Chinese a year die from working too hard, according to the China Youth Daily. China Radio International in April reported a toll of 1,600 every day.

A similar problem exists in Japan. The Director of Asian Studies at the Japan campus of Temple University in Tokyo was asked for perspective. He said, “More than in the Anglo-American corporate system, in Korea, China and Japan -- the countries of the Confucian belt -- there’s a belief in total dedication. Any job worth doing is worth doing excessively.”

What is the Gospel’s perspective on work and rest? Look at Mark 6:1-2, 30-32:

Jesus went away from there and came to his hometown, and his disciples followed him. And on the Sabbath he began to teach in the synagogue. . . .

The apostles returned to Jesus and told him all that they had done and taught. And he said to them, “Come away by yourselves to a desolate place and rest a while.” For many were coming and going, and they had no leisure even to eat. And they went away in the boat to a desolate place by themselves.

The passage provides four key perspectives.


•To follow Jesus as Lord, we will observe the Lord’s Day Sabbath. The disciples in Mark 6 followed Jesus and did what he did on the Sabbath.

There is much in the Gospel about the Sabbath. We only have space to make some summary observations. It was Jesus’ custom (Luke 4:6) to keep the creation pattern of six days of labor and one day of rest and holy convocation (public worship, public instruction from Holy Scripture). He declared himself Lord of the Sabbath (Matt 12:8; Mark 2:28; Luke 6:5). After his resurrection on the first day of the week (Mark 16:9), he met with his disciples on the first day of the week (Matt 28:5-9; Mark 16:9; Luke 24:13-15, 33-26; John 20:19, 26). His disciples had their gatherings on the first day of the week (Acts 20:7; 1 Cor 16:1-2). In early Christian literature, the first day of the week was called “the Lord’s Day” (Rev 1:10; The Teaching of the Twelve [Didache] 14:1-3).

How should we observe the Lord’s Day? Mark 2: 23-28 (the Message) counsels us:

One Sabbath day he [Jesus] was walking through a field of ripe grain. As his disciples made a path, they pulled off heads of grain. The Pharisees told on them to Jesus: “Look, your disciples are breaking Sabbath rules!”

Jesus said, “Really? Haven’t you ever read what David did when he was hungry, along with those who were with him? How he entered the sanctuary and ate fresh bread off the altar, with the Chief Priest Abiathar right there watching—holy bread that no one but priests were allowed to eat—and handed it out to his companions?” Then Jesus said, “The Sabbath was made to serve us; we weren’t made to serve the Sabbath. The Son of Man is no lackey to the Sabbath. He’s in charge!”


•To follow Jesus as Lord, we will care about relationships. “The apostles returned to Jesus and told him all that they had done and taught.”

Luke 7:36-50 provides an excellent illustration of how Jesus acted all during the weekly cycle of work and rest. On the one hand, Jesus cared about respectable and socially connected people, and so he accepted a dinner invitation from a Pharisee. On the other hand, Jesus cared about “the least, the last, and the lost” – the disreputable, the marginalized, the despised. He had the reputation of being “the friend of tax collectors and sinners” (7:34). At the dinner party (likely of just men, based on the custom of the time), a disreputable woman barged in, started weeping many tears on Jesus’ feet, wiped up the tears with her hair, kissed his feet, and then poured an expensive perfume on his feet. The respectable man thought, “If this guy is really a prophet like I surmised he might be, he would have realized that this woman is a ‘sinner’ and would have never let such an unclean person even touch him, let alone be in his presence.”

Jesus told him a story (7:41-48 MSG):

“Two men were in debt to a banker. One owed five hundred silver pieces, the other fifty. Neither of them could pay up, and so the banker canceled both debts. Which of the two would be more grateful?”

Simon answered, “I suppose the one who was forgiven the most.”

“That’s right,” said Jesus. Then turning to the woman, but speaking to Simon, he said, “Do you see this woman? I came to your home; you provided no water for my feet, but she rained tears on my feet and dried them with her hair. You gave me no greeting, but from the time I arrived she hasn’t quit kissing my feet. You provided nothing for freshening up, but she has soothed my feet with perfume. Impressive, isn’t it? She was forgiven many, many sins, and so she is very, very grateful. If the forgiveness is minimal, the gratitude is minimal.”

Then he spoke to her: “I forgive your sins.”

In work and rest, Jesus put people ahead of ceremonial laws and artificially-constructed barriers  of class, gender, race, and religious prejudice.


•To follow Jesus as Lord, we will work hard. “… all that they had done and taught.”

John chapter 5 provides a revealing example of this principle. On the Sabbath Jesus publicly healed an invalid who had been forced to lie on a mat and be carried around for 38 years. The Jewish authorities were outraged that he was doing work on the Sabbath. His defense was: “My Father works until now and I work” (John 5:17). This statement expresses the commitment of God the Son to work in full unity and harmony with God the Father’s commitment to work.

In this commitment to work, note that there is a unique relationship between Jesus the Son and God the Father. First, this is shown by the simple coordination of the two sayings. He does not say, “My Father is working and therefore I am working,” but “My Father is working and I am working,” placing Father and Son on equal footing. Second, according to Jewish thought (Exodus Rabbah 30:9), God alone is allowed to work on the Sabbath and Jesus is claiming the same right. Therefore, he is making himself equal to God. His listeners understood that implication clearly and, therefore, felt it was blasphemy and wanted to kill him (John 5:18).


•To follow Jesus as Lord, we will take time to rest. “Come away … and rest a while.”

In a recent radio spot of the “High Calling of Our Daily Work,” 5/18/2014, Howard E Butt, Jr. illustrated this principle:

From 1916 to 1939, Justice Louis Brandeis sat on the U.S. Supreme Court. Once, right before the start of an important trial, Justice Brandeis took a short vacation—and drew heavy criticism for it. But Brandeis delivered an excellent defense. “I need rest,” he said. “I find that I can do a year’s work in eleven months, but I can’t do it in twelve.”

To follow Jesus as Lord at work and at rest, remember the principle of the Lord’s Day, remember the importance of relationships, remember the obligation of hard work, and remember the need for rest.

Source
* Shai Oster, “They’re Dying at Their Desks in China as Epidemic of Stress Proves Fatal,” Bloomberg 6/30/2014. http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-06-29/is-work-killing-you-in-china-workers-die-at-their-desks.html

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