0100 – Source Code #4 – Keeping the Sabbath

Six days you shall labor, and do all your work, but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the LORD your God. On it you shall not do any work, you, or your son, or your daughter, your male servant, or your female servant, or your livestock, or the sojourner who is within your gates. For in six days the LORD made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that is in them, and rested on the seventh day. Therefore the LORD blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy. (Exo 20:9-11)

One of the longer commandments, the command to observe the Sabbath Day has been the cause celeb for more than one denomination.  For example, the Seventh-Day Adventists make the observance of the Sabbath Day the center of their faith, even to distinguish themselves and be so named. They take their cue from the Law, the Old Testament Law, which they believe is still binding on Christians today. While that would be an interesting rabbit trail to pursue, I would like to take a different tack today.

The statement on the Sabbath Day is based on the historical fact of the latter half of the commandment, one which often gets ignored. God commands His people to observe this day of enforced rest because He took a day of rest after creating the Universe in six days. Why would you think this is important to God?

Did God need to take a day off? Was He in some way diminished after the Creation of the Universe? Was God tired? Did such creative power drain Him? The answer we should already know is “of course not.” God does not change. He is neither strengthened nor diminished by anything He does. He is immutable. So if God did not need a day off, why does He tell us to take a day off?

First, it could simply be to keep up from making work an idol. We are built to be satisfied by working and bringing jobs to completion. When I see a freshly mowed yard, and newly finished house, and project that I’ve been working on finally finished, I am pleased with myself. I tell myself, “I did that” with a smile on my face. We are built to be happy when we complete a task, or at least to feel better, relieved at having accomplished something. Telling us to take a day off forces us to shift our focus from pride in our own work and make room for God.

Second, it could be God’s way of saying that there is nothing so important that we do that we cannot take a day off. The logic goes that if God took a day to rest from all of His labors creating the Universe, then there is nothing so important about what we are doing that we cannot also take a day to rest from our own labors. Again, our focus is shifted from ourselves to God.

However, I think another option may be at work here, pardon the pun. While both of these aspects certainly have meaning and could preach, I might suggest another option. God calls us to rest on the seventh day. Why? Because He rested after creating the World. Why is this significant?

It seems to me that over time, we lose our sense of wonder. Jesus said:

“Truly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.” (Mar 10:15)

Children have the amazing ability to conceive of literally anything, especially the inconceivable, since they have not been taught the laws of reality. They imagine dragons and wizards, magic and princesses. Deus Ex Machina is not in their vocabulary, but certainly in their play. They don’t think about rules or what is supposed to happen, but more about the what if, and the imagination of possibility.

Christians are often accused of not accepting reality, but believing in a fairy-tale, because we believe in a God we cannot see, hear, taste or touch. We believe in a Creation of this Universe 6000 years ago from nothing, by a God we cannot see, and told in a book whose origins we barely understand. We believe in a Savior who we say is alive today but no one today can prove. We accept things by faith. Like Children, we believe in a world we cannot prove.

As we get older, have jobs to hold down, and bills to pay, our sense of wonder erodes in the face of reality. There is no fairy godmother who is going to pay the light bill for us. No Knight in shining armor who will whisk us off to live in his bright and shiny castle, or even help us with rent. As adults, that world was lost in our childhood in the face of work and the drudgery we have committed ourselves to in order to take care of ourselves and our responsibilities.

No I believe there is a third reason that God tells us to rest on the seventh day, and it is to regain our sense of wonder. But instead of an unguided play-time where we invent and imagine, it is a wonder based in the truth that God created the world around us. This invisible, unseen and untouched God created the natural world. This same God loves us and calls us according to His purposes. This God’s Son died for us and gently leads us. We are called to observe this day of rest to restore our focus, or sense of priority, our sense of wonder at God.

IMG_1106I get this every time I look into the sky, especially on a beautiful sunset evening. I am struck with a sense of awe. God did this. Don’t get me wrong. I understand the interplay between air pressure, water vapor, light and dark, that complex ballet of science that takes place every time I look up, but maybe it is the complexity of it, the incomprehensible mechanism of nature itself that draws me to the throne of grace. My God made that. That the God who made all of this calls me His child.

Dealing with the futility I am faced with every day, despite the fact that I gain some pleasure from completing tasks, I need that. I need that awe that is a reminder of God’s presence. It opens my heart to hope and to possibility. Maybe even to wonder.

God commands us to take the seventh day to rest, not because He needed to, but that we needed to be reminded of His work. We need to pause and acknowledge the wonder of what He has made. We need to remember that there is something beyond paycheck to paycheck, beyond the day-to-day, that one day will call us home.

For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain. (Php 1:21)

Not Just Taking Up Space

You Love Me?

You may not know God’s purpose for your life right now. You may believe that your life is on hold, waiting for someone or something to show you your life’s direction. I saw it in the eyes of a widow, whose husband had passed and now she was ill, with no obvious path forward but death. Yet, she persisted day to day, taking endless treatments and visits to the hospital. Why am I still here?

In the face of life’s confusing circumstances, the road ahead is foggy. We ask what possible direction is there when we can’t see it. Yet, when the roads are foggy, I trust the men who built them to keep driving. I don’t stop in the middle of the road, refusing to travel, because I can’t see the way. I trust the builders that there is a road ahead, so I keep driving.

Our lives are not built merely of our own preferences and decisions. There is One who has built the road ahead for us. We choose to travel. We trust that even when we can’t see what’s next, we know the Builder does and has prepared a way. We don’t worry about ravines and rivers because we trust the builders to have built a bridge. Though life brings us valleys and mountains, we have a Builder who has prepared the way.

I had no answer for this widow. I still don’t. But I trust the Lord, and I trust the road He has built. He has given us guardrails on our road, rules for behavior that show us what we ought to do while we wait for the bigger picture to unfold. In her distress, she knew she just wanted to die, but she knew that taking her own life wasn’t an option, so she waited on the Lord. And He did take her in time, in His time.

She didn’t know what purpose God had for her life. But maybe by sharing a little of her story with you, we have discovered it. We are not here to satisfy ourselves, but that through us, others may know about God. Perhaps her purpose was the demonstrate faithfulness to God’s plan for us, even when we can’t see it. So that I can’t see it either, I don’t lose hope.

How to Stay Safe

This is another piece from my archives. Funny, because its true.

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In light of foreign wars, terrorist threats, and violent crimes, many are wondering if any safe places exist anymore for themselves and their families. I received the following informa­tion recently on “How to Stay Safe in the World Today.”

1. Avoid riding in automobiles because they are responsible for 20% of all fatal accidents.

2. Do not stay home because 17% of all accidents occur in the home.

3. Avoid walking on streets or sidewalks because 14% of all accidents happen to pedestrians.

4. Avoid traveling by air, rail, or water because 16% of all accidents involve these forms of transportation.

5. Of the remaining 33%, 32% of all deaths occur in hospitals. Above all else, avoid hospitals.

You will be pleased to learn, however, that only .001 % of all deaths occur in church worship services, and these are usually related to previous physical disorders. Therefore, logic tells us that the safest place for you to be at any given point in time is at church! Bible study is safe too. The percentage of deaths during Bible study is even less.

FOR SAFETY’S SAKE -Attend church and read your Bible…IT COULD SAVE YOUR LIFE!

Why go to Church when my finances are shaky?

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A lot of people are under the impression that the Church is all about money. They will say that the Church only preaches about money, an idea born from the TV preachers. This is a valid charge, since many TV evangelists lay on some pretty thick guilt trips if you don’t send in your check. Some other Churches do make taking up the offering the centerpiece of the service, even to go so far as to check up on your finances to make sure you are giving your full 10% or “tithe”. Frankly, these are both abuses of Church power, and have no place in the Church.

Some use this reason so that the Church won’t ask them for money. People get hit up for money all the time, from the Fraternal Order of Police to the local charity drive. People are standing in the median at the four-way stop, or kids are coming to door asking for donations to this cause or that. Add to this the fact that the Government is always dipping into your check and taking out taxes so they can do their important social programs. Money is a sensitive issue, and everyone needs it.

But we would certainly be justified in talking about you and your money, since many parables and passages of Scripture deal specifically with finances. “Don’t gather up treasures on earth” (Matthew 6:19), the parable of the talents (Matthew 25:14-30), the pearl of great price (Matthew 13:45-46), “go sell all that you have and give to the poor” (Mark 10:21), there were no needy among them since anyone with property would sell it and lay the sum at the feet of the Apostles (Acts 4:34-35) and “God loves a cheerful giver” (2 Cor 9:7). Someone who objects to the Church because it has something to say about their money have to reckon with God, not the Church.

Aside from reassurance that our Church isn’t like that, repeated assurances that we are not after money, some people will still believe that the Church is all about money. And there will still be occasions that we will ask for money. We must remember that some folks have had bad experiences with Churches and money. We need to be sensitive to this, because someone’s grandmother may have been conned by a money-hungry preacher at some point, and now that family is destitute.

But instead of becoming defensive, our first reaction to this objection might be, “how can I help you?” Perhaps there is a person who needs generosity and hospitality before they can respond to God’s grace.

Why go to Church when the weather is bad?

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The sluggard says, “There is a lion outside! I shall be killed in the streets!”
(Pro 22:13)

This is an unavoidable problem like illness. Weather can be severe enough to keep anyone from attending church, whether it be extreme snow and ice, or severe thunder and lightning. There are times when no one should be outside. If the weather is too serious to even creep out of your door, then don’t come. Something as simple as dark can be a hazard for someone who cannot drive at night.

But like illness, weather can be an excuse. Don’t be like the one who peeks outside, and if the weather is uncomfortable, decides to stay in bed. Bad weather will come  and go, but don’t start telling yourself that I can’t go to church today because it might rain, or, “It sure looks cloudy out there. I better stay home.” Honestly, for those able-bodied this should rarely be a reason to avoid going to church.

Using this as an excuse is actually much more revealing. One who stays home because “it just doesn’t look good outside” is someone looking for a reason. Honestly, there have been days when snow was piled up a foot or two deep, but I went over and unlocked the church. I can’t wait to get to church on Sunday morning. It just feels right to me, and if I have to weather a bit of weather to do it, that just makes it a challenge. The non-Christian is certainly discouraged by unfavorable weather, but a warm and inviting Church can conquer weather.

Why go to Church if I don’t feel well?

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It seems especially true in winter that people are sick and they miss church, but this can happen anytime. Now, you can’t blame someone when they are sick that they miss service, right? We all get sick sometimes, and sometimes, we do the Christian thing and don’t share the illness with others. Parents of newborns are encouraged to stay home from church for this reason. But this reason can be used too readily, so that a slight cough and the uneasy headache are called upon as unwitting accomplices in the delinquency of Church attendance.

And what about those who are too old or infirm to attend Church? These are the homebound elderly or those whose chronic illness keep them from attendance. Shouldn’t there be an exception made for these too? Conversely, is the Church off the hook if these people can no longer attend Church?

The Scripture is quite clear to both sides of this. “If anyone is sick, let him call upon the elders. They will come and anoint the sick . . .” (James 5:14) I think it goes without saying that missing a Sunday is excusable, since most illnesses clear up in a week’s time. But this verse seems to speak to the more chronic conditions that keep someone from attending church regularly. The homebound and the chronically ill still need to be fed spiritually. The Church needs to engage them on at least a weekly basis. This verse implies that the one sick at home is not simply to just stop attending, but continue to be involved in the local church, calling upon the elders. If a Church has not made contact with you for being absent, then this verse demands that you contact the church and tell them you are ill and need a visit. Church leaders can’t read minds. Being at Church is so important, even for the sick, that the elders, in their shepherding role, need to continue to minister to them.

Non-Christians don’t really use this excuse, unless they are older. but being older, have a greater need for interaction. This is a perfect situation for outreach, and should not be avoided.

Did JESUS “Fold” the “Napkin”?

Ok, so this one isn’t mine. I found it in my archives, but I thought it would be helpful to illustrate an important point. Just because we read something in an English translation doesn’t mean we can read it back into the original context. This thing makes the rounds every year around Easter. Thought you might be better equipped with this information.

And the napkin, that was about his head, not lying with the linen clothes, but wrapped together in a place by itself. (John 20:7)

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Why Did Jesus Fold the Napkin?

This is one I can honestly say I have never seen circulating in the emails so; if it touches you forward it.

Why did Jesus fold the linen burial cloth after His resurrection? I never noticed this …..

The Gospel of John (20:7) tells us that the napkin, which was placed over the face of Jesus, was not just thrown aside like the grave clothes. The Bible takes an entire verse to tell us that the napkin was neatly folded, and was placed at the head of that stony coffin.

Early Sunday morning, while it was still dark, Mary Magdalene came to the tomb and found that the stone had been rolled away from the entrance. She ran and found Simon Peter and the other disciple, the one whom Jesus loved. She said, ‘They have taken the Lord’s body out of the tomb, and I don’t know where they have put him!’

Peter and the other disciple ran to the tomb to see. The other disciple out ran Peter and got there first. He stopped and looked in and saw the linen cloth lying there, but he didn’t go in.

Then Simon Peter arrived and went inside. He also noticed the linen wrappings lying there, while the cloth that had covered Jesus’ head was folded up and lying to the side.

Was that important? Absolutely!

Is it really significant? Yes!

In order to understand the significance of the folded napkin, you have to understand a little bit about Hebrew tradition of that day. The folded napkin had to do with the Master and Servant, and every Jewish boy knew this tradition.

When the servant set the dinner table for the master, he made sure that it was exactly the way the master wanted it. The table was furnished perfectly, and then the servant would wait, just out of sight, until the master had finished eating, and the servant would not dare touch that table, until the master was finished. Now if the master were done eating, he would rise from the table, wipe his fingers, his mouth, and clean his beard, and would wad up that napkin and toss it onto the table. The servant would then know to clear the table. For in those days, the wadded napkin meant, “I’m finished.” But if the master got up from the table, and folded his napkin, and laid it beside his plate, the servant would not dare touch the table, because………. the folded napkin meant, I’m coming back.”

The Message in the Neatly Folded Napkin in Jesus’ Tomb – Fiction!1

Summary of the eRumor:

According to this forwarded email, the head covering over the body of Jesus Christ in the grave was a neatly “folded napkin.” It goes on to say that among Jews of the time a master would let his servants know whether he was finished eating or coming back to the table by the way he left his napkin. If he tossed it aside, he was finished. If he folded it, he was not finished and would return. The hidden message in the story is that by laying his “napkin” aside and neatly folded Jesus was saying he was coming back.

The Truth:

There are a couple of problems with this eRumor. One is the translation or interpretation of the Bible verse quoted. The other is the alleged Jewish custom referenced in the story.

The Verse

The eRumor is based on whether the cloth was a “napkin” and was “folded” in the empty tomb of Jesus.

The story is based on the account of Jesus’ resurrection in John 20:7.

Here is how that verse is translated in one of the most widely-used versions of the Bible, the King James Version: “…and the napkin, that was about his head, not lying with the linen clothes, but wrapped together in a place by itself.”

We checked seven of the most respected translations of the Bible to see how the translators handled this verse.

Three of them translated the cloth as a “napkin” (King James, American Standard, Revised Standard Version). Others translated it as a “burial cloth” (New International Version), a “handkerchief” (The New King James Version), or a “face-cloth” (New American Standard Bible). The Greek word is saudarion, which comes from a Latin word for “sweat.” It connotes, for example, a towel for wiping sweat. It is used in the Greek for a towel or cloth, but not specifically a table napkin.

The other key word is “folded.” Was the burial cloth or napkin left folded in the tomb?

Two of the translations used the word “folded” (New International Version, New King James Version). Others translated the word as “rolled up” (New American Standard Bible, American Standard Version, Revised Standard Version), or “wrapped together” (King James Version).

The Greek word is “entulisso,” which is from words that may mean to twist or to entwine.

The bottom line is that there is not agreement that it was a table napkin and not agreement that it was neatly folded in any meaningful way. The main meaning of John 20:7 is to convey that the cloth, which was placed over Jesus head or face at burial, was separate from the rest of his grave clothes.

The Story

We have checked numerous Bible study sources and have found nothing about this alleged Jewish custom of the folded napkins. We did not find any Bible scholars who have used this story and illustration about the meaning of the folded napkin.

Additionally we talked with a Jewish rabbi friend of TruthOrFiction.com’s who has been a life-long Orthodox Jew, a Jewish scholar, and lives in Jerusalem, Israel, and he said he’d never heard of it

The only references to this story that we found are from Internet postings and emails that seem to have originated in 2007.

.Updated 1/28/08

The Deductions:2

Well, Aunt Erma, it turns out that there are good reasons why you’ve never heard of this tradition.

I find historical/cultural traditions- particularly Jewish ones- of great interest and value. Yet, they are apparently made up at alarming rates. So, I wanted to verify this story. It turns out that I did.

There are several problems with this story. Separately, perhaps they could be overlooked. Compiled together, the story lacks even a hint of authenticity.

The KJV rendering of John 20:7 reads,

John 20:7 (KJV)

7 And the napkin, that was about his head, not lying with the linen clothes, but wrapped together in a place by itself.

The more modern NIV reads,

John 20:7 (NIV)

7 as well as the burial cloth that had been around Jesus’ head. The cloth was folded up by itself, separate from the linen.

One says “burial cloth” while the other says “napkin.” One says “wrapped” while the other says “folded.” These types of variances in English translations are clues that further study on an original language term is needed.

1- Like many are, this idea is falsely based on a western application of an English term: in this case, the term, “napkin” in the text. When English speakers use that term, we’re thinking Wendy’s drive-thru. Using the English understanding of that term, a scenario was obviously invented. The underlying Greek term is soudarion, which is defined as a piece of cloth used for one of two purposes in the East: to wipe sweat off the face or to cover the face of the dead. As such, no self-respecting Jew would EVER use such an article at a meal setting (it would be either unclean or in the least thought of as unclean), and thus no such mental association would ever be made between the soudarion (or lit. “sweat-cloth”) and a dinner napkin. It would be tantamount to modern day people associating a diaper with a napkin. Only a few (older) translation use the term “napkin” for this reason. It is a technically proper translation, but gives a western reader the wrong impression. More modern translations use other terms, such as “burial cloth” (NIV), “face-cloth” (NASB), “handkerchief” (NKJV), etc.

2- The second problem is with the term “folded,” also necessary to the postulated cultural reference of folding a napkin at the dinner table. That underlying Greek term is entylisso, which is a compilation of two terms, en (meaning “at a primary fixed position” – or “at,” “in,” “among,” etc.) and heilisso, meaning “twisted” or “coiled.” While “folded” is again a technically accurate translation, it conjures up the idea of the creasing and flattening out of an article. In fact, it is more akin to the wadding up and throwing aside (used in the supposed practice of the master leaving the table) than an intentional folding and creasing. This issue may could be explained away if it were not for the problems with the term soudarion. But, coupled together, it’s just another hole in the cheese. Entylisso gives no clear indication that the face-cloth was folded in an intentional way, but rather that it was somehow handled and distorted as being discarded separately from the grave clothes.

3- I have a sizeable arsenal of Jewish background resources. I searched them all to find a reference to this practice and could not find it. Afterward, I set off in research online. Surely you can’t believe everything you read online (as this email demonstrates) but I thought it worth a try to find a legitimate biblical scholar who may have referenced the custom. As it turned out, I found only one Jewish scholar (David Bivin of The Jewish Perspective) who had referenced this custom (of folding the napkin at the dinner table) and he did so in response to this very email. His answer? “There is no historical or cultural documentation which supports claims of this assertion.”

Sadly, you can find this reference in numerous online sermons by pastors who should know better than to randomly quote a tradition they learned of in an email from Aunt Erma.

. . .

Make no mistake: Jesus is returning. But, not because someone had the creative ability to fabricate this outlandish email. He is returning because scripture says he will.

1 http://www.truthorfiction.com/rumors/f/folded-napkin.htm

2 http://www.returningking.com/?p=78

Why go to Church when I am so busy?

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Come now, you who say, “Today or tomorrow we will go into such and such a town and spend a year there and trade and make a profit”— yet you do not know what tomorrow will bring. What is your life? For you are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes. Instead you ought to say, “If the Lord wills, we will live and do this or that.”
(Jas 4:13-15)

How busy are you? When you find yourself incredibly busy, and don’t have any spare time, you need to take moment and ask yourself who are you busy for? What is your goal that you are this busy? Fore example, if you are always busy doing work, what is your goal? Pleasing your boss? Providing for your family? Avoiding something else in your life? If you are too busy for Church, what are you busy doing? Who are you serving? This is only a problem for people for whom Church is not among the higher priorities. And I don’t anyone should demand that Church be the highest priority. That spot should be reserved for Jesus. But if you don’t have five minutes for Jesus, then you are practicing idolatry, and that is sinful.

Now it is important for Christians to make Church as attractive as possible so people will be drawn to Church, rather than repel them. But is that really the priority of Christians as well? What makes a church attractive isn’t the building, the worship service, or the style of preaching, but the spiritual beauty of the people. People who are winsome, thankful, joyful, and peaceful. I would want to worship with believers who care, who always have time, or will make time for me. It is off-putting to worship with people who are always busy because you feel they never have time for you. What kind of person do you want to attend church with? Then that is the kind of person you need to be. Don’t be so busy that you can’t be with God’s people on Sunday morning.