Opening Prayer: Lord God, thank you that stopping and resting are a part of who you are; they are woven into the very fabric of creation. Help us to learn from you how to do them well, so that our lives, and our work, will have the presence and the power you intended them to have. Amen.
Scripture: Exodus 20:8-11
Journal: Do you have a hard time stopping? Why or why not? Does resting make you feel guilty? Where does that come from? What would it look like to stop and rest the way God intended for you to?
Reflection: Some things look much easier than they actually are. Stopping, for instance.
When we were first married,
my wife won a free weekend at a ski resort in North Carolina as a part of a sales
contest at her work. Neither one of us
grew up snow skiing, but it sounded like fun, and it was, after all, absolutely
free. So we went for it.
Our ski chalet was right on
the slopes, so we rented equipment, walked out our back door, and watched the
skiers swooshing by. It didn’t look too
hard, so we put on our skis and boots and decided to give it a try.
My wife took off first,
heading straight downhill quickly and disappearing from sight, so I decided to
do the same. And as I picked up speed, I
had a shocking revelation: I did not know how to stop, or even to slow down,
for that matter. In hindsight, it
probably would have been something good to find out in advance.
So when you don’t know how
to stop, there’s really only one solution; you start looking for the best place
to crash. Which is exactly what I did;
hoping to crash in as good a place and as soft a way as I could. But no dice.
The crash was epic. And in the
end, there I was, covered in snow, equipment littering the hillside.
As I was trying to gather
myself and considering how I would gather all of my equipment, a bunch of
little kids in ski school coasted by.
Their teacher encouraging them the whole time with the words, “Pizza! French fries!”
“Ah, pizza,” I thought to
myself. “That’s what I’m missing. That would have been good to know.”
We humans need stopping
lessons. We are really good at “french
fries,” but not so good at “pizza.” And
if we don’t know how to slow down and stop, the only other alternative is to
crash. I guess that’s why God decided to
weave stopping and resting into the story of creation (Genesis 2:2-3). And then to remind us of it again and again
all throughout the Scriptures. He even
put it in the Ten Commandments, reminding us that if God himself stopped and
rested, how can we possibly expect it would be any different for us?
“Remember the Sabbath day by
keeping it holy,” God told us in Exodus 20:8.
“For in six days the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea, and all
that is in them, but he rested on the seventh day. Therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day
and made it holy.” (Exodus 20:11)
From the very beginning God
was giving us stopping lessons, because he knew how vital stopping and resting
were to our being able to live the lives he intended us to live. How important they were in us becoming the
people he dreamt us to be. In fact, when
we refuse to stop and rest, we actually tear away at the image of God planted
deeply within us.
His stopping lessons
included two things. First they involved
stopping. That is what the word Sabbath
literally means. Thus, we must stop
regularly, or we will crash and burn.
But, as I learned the hard way on the ski slopes, stopping is not as
easy as it seems. We tend to live our
lives at a certain speed, which creates a certain momentum. Therefore, we cannot expect to go one hundred
miles an hour right up to the stop sign and stop on a dime. It just doesn’t happen that way. The momentum of our lives will carry us way
past the stopping point. You see,
stopping is a process, not a moment.
Slowing must precede stopping. We
can stop physically, but it still takes a while for our heads and our hearts to
catch up. We need to give them time and
space to finally come to stillness. We
need to install brakes in our soul, if you will, to combat the foot-on-the-gas,
peddle-to-the-metal way that we typically live our lives. And then we need to learn how to start
applying those brakes well in advance of the stop sign. That’s what many of the spiritual disciplines
are for: silence, solitude, prayer, retreat, and Sabbath keeping, to name a few. If we can learn to live at a certain pace,
and with a certain rhythm, we will become much more proficient in the art of
slowing and then stopping. It will not
just happen on its own.
But God didn’t just stop
with stop, he also told us that we must settle in. That’s the literal meaning of the Hebrew word
used for rest in Exodus 20:11 (nûaḥ). So
not only must we learn how to stop, but we must also learn how to settle in to
that stopping. We must learn how to be
fully present and alive and attentive to him and to ourselves in that
resting. We must learn how to dwell with
him, abide in him, and savor the time and connection with him. We must give free reign to the Spirit of God
to form his very life in us, to breathe his Divine breath in us, that he may
then breathe it through us as well.
We must make slowing and
stopping and settling in a priority.
They must become a part of our rhythm of life. Otherwise, the only alternative is to crash
and burn. And take it from one who
knows, that’s not a pretty sight.
Prayer
Closing Prayer: Lord God, you stopped and rested on the seventh day. Why do we refuse to do the same? Help us, O Lord, to learn the rhythms of the created order. Help us to learn what it means to stop and rest in you. Amen.
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