It will be a sign between me and the Israelites forever, for in six days the LORD made the heavens and the earth, and on the seventh day He rested and was refreshed.’” Exodus 31:17
“We may take it as a truism that Sabbath is the pivotal issue concerning time in the horizon of mature materiality. Sabbath is the defining moment in all time. All six previous days of the week move toward Sabbath time. It is so for the creation as it is for the Creator (Gen. 2:1–4a). Indeed in Exodus 31:17 we are told what happened to the Creator on the seventh day, when God rested. Our translations say that God was “refreshed.”
But the Hebrew word translated “refreshed” is the verbal form of the word for “self” (nephesh), that is, God was re-selfed after the depleting work of creation. So the human self is depleted or talked out of the self over six rigorous days amid the rat race of the predatory economy. The seventh day is for recovery, celebration, reordering, and affirmation of the human self. In Mark 2:23–28, Sabbath restoration occurs by eating. In Mark 3:1–6, it is by healing. Sabbath rest becomes elemental and indispensable for the well-being of the self.
Unreflective Americans want to abrogate Sabbath by endless busyness, by 24/7 electronic connection, by the practice of spectator sports, and by other preoccupations that numb the human heart and detract from the beauty of the human person. It was already like that in Pharaoh’s ancient Egypt.
In that regime there was no rest or relief from the incessant production requirements of Pharaoh. Then, dramatically, at Mount Sinai, Moses offers ten rules for resistance to Pharaoh’s ten commandments, ten guidelines for an alternative neighborly economy (Exod. 20:1–17). At the center of this new ten is Sabbath. Moses understood that resistance to and refusal of the insatiable demands of Pharaoh require attentive disciplines.”
Walter Brueggemann in Materiality As Resistance: Five Elements for Moral Action in the Real World (Louisville: WJKP, 2020), 53.
What might it look like for God to refresh, or literally, re-self each of us on a weekly basis. This brings into view a renewal for living, giving, serving, and loving generously.
Brueggemann teachings us that this calls for “attentive disciplines” which stand in contrast to the unreflective pattern of filling the day with “preoccupations that numb the human heart and detract from the beauty of the human person.”
This relates to generosity, in part in this way. The life defined by production (think: Pharaoh in antiquity and endless busyness today) paradoxically becomes more productive with this reset.
Ask God what might need to change in your life (what to stop doing) and what attentive disciplines to add (to move toward refreshment) to enhance the overall generosity of your living, giving, serving and loving.
Do whatever He says.
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