Thursday, March 16, 2017

Is the Sabbath for God, or for us?

"Then the LORD said to Moses, “The man must be put to death! The whole community must stone him outside the camp.”"
Numbers 15:35

“Then Jesus said to them, “The Sabbath was made to meet the needs of people, and not people to meet the requirements of the Sabbath.”
Mark 2:27 

These two verses seem in conflict with each other. In Numbers, God orders the stoning of a man for gathering wood on the Sabbath. In Mark, Jesus tells us that God created a day of rest for US, and not the other way around (creating us to fulfill the laws of the Sabbath). If God created a day of rest for us - a gift to help us recharge and be our best on our productive days - then why would he stone a man for working on the Sabbath? Was this just part of keeping the Israelites holy, ensuring they stayed in line? In my version, God would have explained his reasons for the Sabbath, guiding through gentle love rather than wrathful vengeance. But in all the stories we've read about the Israelites, they were a hardheaded bunch who complained and rebelled even as they were being rescued and provided for. A gentle explanation may have fallen on deaf ears, and could have also created perceived leniency - leading to a slippery slope of backsliding on any of God's laws. 

My takeaways from these passages: I don't have to understand everything God does. There are some things I just don't agree with, but I also can't see the big picture. God has reasons for everything because he can see all, knows all, and is working toward the greater good. This life is fleeting, but God's kingdom is forever. The life taken from the man who was stoned was just a blip on the forever life we will all receive when God welcomes all of us back home. 

Finally, thank the Lord for Jesus, who took on our sins and imperfections, and tore the veil that separated us from God. No longer are we subject to strict rituals and terrible wrath for our sins. Instead we are offered grace and forgiveness, and allowed to experience the fullness of God's love. 

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