"Preeminent: Remade for Rest"

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    Preeminent: Re-made for Rest

    (Hebrews 3:14-4:13)

    Made for Glory

    Catherine Tufariello imagines the glory of God in a flowering pear in her wonderful poem by the

    same name:

    The ornamental pear

    Bursts almost overnight,

    Its greenness interlaced

    With whorls of cirrus white,

    Five-fingered blossoms curved

    To cup capricious air.

    These blooms, the only fruit

    The tree was born to bear

    Still pink-tipped, sticky fists

    A day or so ago

    Too soon will flitter down

    Like flakes of April snow,

    Confetti from a wedding

    Swept up when guests have gone.

    But now the bride, arms lifted,

    Is dancing on the lawn

    In her embroidered gown,

    Ruched veil and trailing sleeves.

    How did she hide so long

    Unseen among the leaves?

    Exempted from the Fall,

    The need to be of use,

    Resplendent in her prime,

    Prodigal, profuse,

    And holding nothing back,

    She tosses her bouquet,

    Made for joy and pleasure

    On the seventh day.

    Did you catch the end? Made for joy and pleasure on the seventh dayor Sabbath.

    Augustine understood that until we fully realize ourselves as that pear in the hands of our Creator

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    prepared for His joy well never know deep satisfaction. He wrote, Thou awakest us to delight in thy

    praise, for thou madest us for thyself and our heart is restless until it rests in Thee.

    To say rest is the major theme of the second major portion of Hebrews would be an

    understatement. Nine times the author tells us of a rest that God has and offers us which we might

    miss.

    A restless life

    is our default template (v.14-16).

    For we have become partakers of Christ, if we hold fast the beginning of our assurance firm

    until the end, while it is said, Today if you hear His voice, do not harden your hearts, as when they

    provoked Me. For who provoked Him when they had heard? Indeed, did not all those who came out of

    Egypt led by Moses?

    I hear two templates by which our life might be lived. First is the template of a partaker of

    Christ. If we hold fast to the assurance of our beginningthe Gospel of the glory of Christwell know

    rest. The second template is the one we default to.

    As I study Hebrews Im reminded of two destination filters I must strive to understand it through

    to communicate it to you. I must go through Jerusalem and back to the Southwest Suburbs as well as

    mentally transport to three times in ancient Jewish history and then to the 21st

    the first century

    because of the recipients of this letter; Old Testament times following Moses including the Exodus and

    Davids recounting of it in Psalm 95 heavily quoted in these chapters; and the creation week itself.

    Were being told in Hebrews that Old Testament Israel and specifically their endeavor to reach

    the Promise Land is a living metaphor of our experience as Christians.

    threatens to waste a whole lifetime (v.17). Check it out! How much time did the people lose

    because of their hard heartedness and restlessness? They burned up forty years! We could spend our

    whole life being chased or chasing. The wicked flee when no one pursues (Proverbs 28:1).

    disobeys because it distrusts Gods Word (v.18-19). A profoundly important question is asked

    in this passage. To whom did God swear they would not enter His rest? The answer is those who

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    were disobedient. First the Israelites under Moses shrink back in fear from their enemies, question

    Gods goodness and His presence, then when God tells them they cant go in because of their mistrust

    they try to go in! This is the best of the best volumes of mans attempt to self-righteousness. We

    work to fix ourselves, to make ourselves acceptable, to find our significance.

    The ancient people of God are us! Dont you think? This is our life. Something has happened in

    our relationship to work in recent years. Whereas before it was a tool for us to support our family and

    help our kids get ahead, our work has become a way for us to find our self-worth. Our desperate quest

    for individualism has uprooted the purpose of work from a sense of community and made it a pursuit.

    Work has become our fig leaves. Like Adam and Eve were ashamed. We dont have real joy and are

    restless. We know we are missing something of value. So, we look everywhere for it. But fig leaves dry

    out so we have multiple sets of temporary pleasureswork, marriage, parenting, neighborhood.

    Instead of giving we take. We look for something ultimate in them.

    A life which rests in Christ

    is passionate about entering it (v.1). Let us fear lest Entering His rest for us is worth

    spending our emotional and mental assets on. It merits our passion. The template by which we are

    living our life is worth constant scrutiny.

    not only believes God but trusts in His Good News deeply in his heart (v.2). Resting in Christ

    means that I believe Him and I entrust myself fully to Him. Faith is not merely hearing. Faith is the

    union of belief and trust deep in our heart.

    The Gospel is good news because it reverses the template. Instead of working to find

    satisfaction, Gods grace offers us an identity in union with His Son freeing us to liveto really live!

    Thats what Jesus meant when He said, It is better to give than to receive. Instead of parenting as a

    hunt for self worth, I have Christ-worth freeing me to inspire my children to be who God has made them

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    to be. Instead of working my job as an idol from which I might find significance, my value is estimated

    by God as greater than His own Sons life so I can now labor for the glory of Christ.

    rests from its work of life-worship remade by God in His Sabbath (v.3-10). What is this rest

    we must enter? First, it is the Gospel. We see that in verse two. Second, it is illustrated by the ancient

    Jews Exodus from Egypt and pilgrimage into the Promise LandThey shall not enter my rest (v.3b).

    Deuteronomy 15 explains the law of the Sabbath to ancient Israel. And at its core is this precept

    from the Lord, You shall remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt, and the LORD your God

    redeemed you; therefore I command you this today (v.15). In other words, prior to the Exodus Gods

    people were enslaved under a system which estimated their worth by their work. But, now they are

    redeemed. That reversed template becomes the law by which they are to live and work and play and

    raise a family. So, Sabbath rest is a reminder that we, who were once slaves, are now free. Living your

    life by resting in Christ is to live it with the freedom to enjoy His glory.

    Hudson Taylor, the great 19th

    Century missionary to China, was the hardest working man Ive

    ever read about. Yet, in his sons biography of his father, he recalled his dad frequently singing his

    favorite hymn, Jesus, I am resting, resting, in the joy of what Thou art; I am finding out the greatness of

    Thy loving heart. Thou hast bid me gaze upon Thee, and Thy beauty fills my soul, for by Thy

    transforming power, Thou hast made me whole.

    Such restfulness gave Taylor the passion to spend His life for Christ as a joy. Its the reason he

    could write his sister in 1860, If I had a thousand pounds China should have it- if I had a thousand lives,

    China should have them. No! Not China, but Christ. Can we do too much for Him? Can we do enough for

    such a precious Savour? This is not the ranting of a terrified man looking for self-righteousness and

    vindication to merit Gods favor. This is the one who has found the joy of losing his own life to discover

    the life of Christ.

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    Rest is the Gospel. Rest is freedom. And the rest we are offered is the same rest God now

    experiences.

    God rested on the seventh day from all His works; and again in thispassage, They shall not

    enter My rest. Therefore, since it remains for some to enter it, and those who formerly had good news

    preached to them failed to enter because of disobedience, He again fixes a certain day, Today, saying

    through David after so long a time just as has been said before, Today if you hear His voice, do not

    harden your hearts. For if Joshua had given them rest, He would not have spoken of another day after

    that. So there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God. For the one who has entered His rest has

    himself also rested from his works, as God did from His.

    The Sabbath rest God experiences and offers us is not idleness. God is still working. His work is

    a restoration process of His glory revealed in your heart so that you will finally give up your works and

    find rest in Him. Thats what Augustine meant when he said, Thou awakest us to delight in thy praise,

    for thou madest us for thyself and our heart is restless until it rests in Thee.

    embraces the Bible as the sole means of deep satisfaction (v.11-12). Let us be diligent to

    enter that rest. Otherwise, youll fall away from Godlest anyone fall through following the same

    template of disobedience.

    Speaking of our incapacity to know a lasting rest, Blaise Pascal asked, What is it then that this

    desire and this inability proclaim to us, but that there was once in man a true happiness of which there

    now remains to him only the mark and empty trace, which he in vain tries to fill from all hissurroundings, seeking from things absent the help he does not obtain in things present? But these are all

    inadequate, because the infinite abyss can only be filled by an infinite and immutable object, that is to

    say, only by God Himself.

    Verse 12 seems a bit odd because of its harshness. To this point, were hearing rest, rest, rest.

    Now we hear, The Word of God is living and active and sharper than any two-edged sword, and

    piercing asunder soul and spirit, of both joints and marrow, and able to judge the thoughts and

    intentions of the heart.

    Verse 12 describes the ordeal we have to go through to know verse 10s promise of becoming a

    person whose rested from his works. We must be judged. And His judgment must be real and

    penetrating. It must not be just another superficial, shallow religious experience. We must have our

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