Fr Wang has written some nice theology for us to meditate on today as we enjoy our Sabbath rest. Do go and read it all as I am only quoting from a portion of it to get us thinking. Perhaps we can discuss some Christian ways to keep the Sabbath holy as we rest in the resurrection hope of Christ our Saviour.So the Sabbath ‘forces’ us to remember that we don’t belong to ourselves or completely determine the meaning of our own lives. Our life is given. Our freedom, to the extent that we can discover and live it, is given. That weekly moment of rest and letting go is in one sense a restriction, because we can’t do everything we would like to do; but in another sense it is the very foundation of all our activity and striving, because it helps us remember that this freedom is not something we can create for ourselves. There are many ways of making the Sabbath holy, but the primary meaning of the Sabbath lies in ‘consecrating’ the whole day, in setting it apart from the rest of the week.
Of course there are many other meanings to the Sabbath, many other ways in which it must be kept holy; and for Christians it is given a radical new meaning in the light of the Resurrection. These thoughts arise just from reflecting on the explanations given in the Decalogue. The Sabbath is about God and about us as human beings. It’s both a theology and an anthropology. We lay hold of all this simply by the discipline of letting go – as far as possible – of work and shopping for one day a week…
1 comments:
Wonderful post, great ideas and so important for us to teach our children.
Our Protestant friends seem to take "Keeping the Sabbath Holy" a bit more serious than our life-long Catholic friends & family. But we just werern't really taught very well... Now my 16 year old son asks if we can please avoid shopping on Sunday to respect the Lord's Day!
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