“Work shall be done for six days, but the seventh day shall be a holy day for you, a Sabbath of rest to the LORD. Whoever does any work on it shall be put to death” (Ex. 35:2).
When Adam and Eve walked in the garden with the Lord, they rested in Him and enjoyed sweet communion with Him. But when sin shattered that relationship, man’s soul became restless. He now roams the earth, looking to pleasure, to work, and to false religion for the peace and rest that can only come from God Himself. It is this rest that is restored when a person is renewed by the power of the Spirit. Peace is brought to a disquieted soul, and rest is given to the weary. The burden that once weighed heavily upon his back is taken away by Christ, and is replaced by a robe of righteousness that allows him to dwell in the presence of the Almighty, to walk with Him, and to rest in Him. The hope of every redeemed heart as it passes through the waters of this world, through its struggle and its strife, is the hope of eternal rest in the glorious presence of our Creator.
It is significant that here, at the renewal of the covenant before the building of the tabernacle, Moses reiterates the command to keep the seventh day holy. This is the fourth time this law has been mentioned in Exodus, and it is the most quoted law of all the Ten Commandments. This is because it, probably more than any other law, points to the end of our religion: rest in the Lord Almighty. The building of the tabernacle looked forward to the redemption the church would have in Jesus Christ, and the Sabbath day pointed forward to the rest the church would have in Him. This rest begins at the moment of conversion, and will be consummated in heaven when all who are called according to His name enter that eternal rest.
Those who refused to keep the Sabbath day holy were liable unto death. This was the first time a penal sanction was attached to the Sabbath law. It stressed the importance of Israel’s making every seventh day a celebration of the rest God has for His people. To refuse to keep the Sabbath day would have been to dishonor the Lord. Those who had no interest in resting in the Lord could face death. The same could be said for us today, but in a different manner. Many people disagree on the manner in which the Sabbath law should be kept in modern times. But all agree that those who do not know what it means to rest in the Lord, and who have no interest in resting in the Lord, reveal the deadness of their hearts and their unabated hostility toward God.
Do you desire to rest in the Lord? Or do you look to your job, your family, or your recreation for rest? If you find that your heart is anxious, set aside time to rest in the Lord, and enjoy the Christian Sabbath weekly by using that time to worship, to pray, to meditate on His Word, to fellowship with Christians, or to minister to the sick.