Have you learned to appreciate, to enjoy, to welcome, the holy Sabbath day each week? If so, you have also begun to appreciate the Lord Jesus Christ, because His presence is in the holy Sabbath. And that’s Good News!
To love the Sabbath, not only because it is a day of physical rest from the week’s hard work and stress, but because—well, let’s look at a beautiful hymn that crystallizes the joy of the Sabbath: “O day of rest and gladness, O day of joy and light.” Ah yes, one day in the hectic week of cares, of pure joy!
“O balm of care and sadness, most beautiful, most bright.” Here we have a metaphor,—the Sabbath is like soothing ointment for a wound.
“Thou art a port protected from storms that round us rise.” Have you ever been in a wild storm at sea with the ship tossing dangerously, and then felt the unutterable joy of gliding into a quiet harbor? “Thou art ... a garden intersected with streams of paradise,” says the poet Christopher Wordsworth, further.
And then, “Thou art a cooling fountain in life’s dry, dreary sand; [and] from thee, like Pisgah’s mountain, we view our promised land.” That’s a reference to the lofty top of what is also spoken of in the Bible as Mt. Nebo, where the Lord led Moses to view the glories of the Promised Land before he went to sleep in the arms of God. From Mt. Pisgah today you can see far south to the Dead Sea as far as En-geddi, to the north as far as the snow-covered peak of Mt. Hermon, and to the west to encompass what was in Moses’ day the land the Lord gave to Israel.
And so, on each holy Sabbath day it is yours and my privilege to catch a glimpse of brighter scenes to come, another poet says, to feel the thrill deep in our souls of a joyous eternal life “in Christ” our Life-giver. Don’t miss out on this joy; it’s free, just for the believing. “Remember” it all through the week!
Be sure to check your e-mail for "Dial Daily Bread" again tomorrow.
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