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Sermon text for today is Matthew
11, verses 28 through 30. And the topic for today's sermon
is work and rest. Work and rest. Please stand for
the reading of God's Word. Matthew 11, 28 through 30. Come
to me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give
you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn
from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will
find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden
is light. Let's pray. Father, we thank
You for the wonderful truth contained in these words. We thank You
for bringing us here today to rest in the Lord Jesus Christ. We thank You for this very personal
invitation to come to Him. And we wish to do that now, Lord
God. May Your Spirit bring us to Christ, to His Word, that
we may find rest for our souls. In Jesus' name we pray. Amen. Please be seated. In two weeks from today, I'll
begin a series of Lenten sermons on cities. Next week, we'll continue
on the theme of work. And actually, the order of worship
today has a chart on it that will be talked about next week,
not today. So if you saw this, we're excited
about it. Not today. It's homework as it were, I guess,
is the way it's worked out. We'll be talking next week about
exilic discipleship. And how do we go about, what
difference is there in terms of our understanding of work
based upon the fact that we can be seen in some ways analogous
to the times of Jeremiah when God's people were in exile in
a foreign land. So that's where we are, and we'll
talk next week about some of these things. This chart on this
order of worship is actually taken from the epilogue to Tim
Keller's book, Every Good Endeavor. The epilogue is actually written
by someone, I don't remember her name, who's the head of their
faith and work ministry. That's where this chart comes
from, it's not original to me. But today, we want to talk about
work and rest. This idea of exilic discipleship
can be seen in the context of work and rest, because we live
in a world increasingly that doesn't really acknowledge the
Lord's Day, the Christian Sabbath, and the rest that's found in
it. And so we sang a song earlier
that we're in a port protected, right? We're in this blissful
place on the Lord's Day of resting in Jesus. And our culture is
kind of, banging away at that. It's interesting that for thousands
of years, the seven-day week has been the fact of human history. And this, in spite of attacks
in modern days, the French Revolution, you know, wanted a decimal system,
they wanted a ten-day week, tried to do it, unsuccessful, reverted
to seven. After that kind of revolution,
we had the The communist revolution in Russia and the Soviet Union,
and the communists as well, tried to obliterate the seven-day week
and replace it with something else. And again, this was unsuccessful. The pattern of seven days that
God has established from creation keeps coming back. The attack
on the seven-day week today is more interesting, maybe. It's
not as overt. We noticed as we parked this
morning in front of the church that there was a United States
Post Office truck delivering a package somewhere here. They're
starting to deliver on Sundays now. And so what we're doing
today in this culture is we're trying to obliterate the idea
of a seven-day week through no day making any difference. So
it's not replacing it with a ten-day week, it's replacing it with
a no-day week. That the week is insignificant.
And so every day is like another. And so there's really nothing
special about Sunday, the Lord's Day, the Christian Sabbath. Now,
we believe at this church that you can, the church can have
alternate days for worship. but that the normal pattern is
the Lord's Day or Sunday. And so there is this attack now. What's the purpose of it? Well,
I think it's primarily the god of mammon. It's the attempt to
sell more things, deliver more things quickly. It's really money
as opposed to communist ideology or class warfare in the French
Revolution. And it's a much more successful
attack, I think, on the work week. Now why am I talking about
the Lord's Day? Because the context for these
verses today that we just read where he's going to go on in
Matthew 12 to is to talk about the two narrative descriptions. The first is when there are him
and his disciples are walking along picking grains of wheat
and he's accused of Sabbath violations by the Pharisees. And the second
is where he is going to heal a man and again he's accused
of Sabbath violations. So what we have in the text before
us can be seen in one way as an introduction to those Sabbath
narratives. And it's Jesus talking about
the relationship of His commands, which are easy, as opposed to
the Pharisees who built up the Sabbath legislation into all
kinds of stuff that was burdensome to people. Now the import of
today's verses is broader than just that, but that's what it
immediately leads into. So my tack here today will be
to talk about these verses from Matthew 11, and then make some
comments after we look at these verses to talk about the significance
of all this to the Lord's Day, or what the Westminster Confession
of Faith calls the Christian Sabbath, because that's kind
of what the narrative goes on to talk about. So let's talk
about these verses. as a way of opening up this topic
of work and rest. So he talks about work here,
and he talks about a kind of work that's quite toilsome. And
as he talks about that, he instructs us about his being the one that
we come to for rest. One other thing, the introduction,
you know, Moses, whoops, Moses the book of Deuteronomy
is I think from one perspective a series of sermons on the 10
words. And so the sections of Deuteronomy are marked out in
relationship to the 10 words. And so I think that's what it
is. And in the section on the Lord's Day I believe. that the
arcane or unusual law, don't boil a kid in its mother's milk,
is actually the introduction to then a discussion of Sabbath
in Moses' sermon. So he begins with the illustration. What's the point of the illustration?
The point of the illustration is that you don't take something
that's supposed to be nourishing for the child of a sheep or a
cow or whatever it is, the offspring rather, excuse me, using the
word child. But for the offspring, the mother's milk is supposed
to be nourishing, and instead you're going to use the thing
of nourishment to kill it. You're going to boil it in that
milk. So the idea of the law, not to boil a kid in its mother's
milk, is don't take what's to be nourishing and yet use it
to hurt or kill your children. And then that's an introduction
to the Lord's Day or the Sabbath, rather, in the Old Testament,
in Moses' sermon. And you see, that's exactly,
I think, what Jesus is doing here. This discussion of burdens
and burdensome laws and regulations from the Pharisees that he's
alluding to is a way of taking what was good, what in another
narrative of Jesus and the grain, Jesus will tell us that the Sabbath
is made for man, not man for the Sabbath. The Sabbath is nourishing. It's a good thing. It's a day
of rest and gladness, right? Most beautiful and bright. The
Christian Sabbath, the Lord's Day, is that. And when we take
it and add a bunch of rules or regulations, it's to boil a child
in his mother's milk. And if we take it and get rid
of the light yoke of the actual rules of the Lord Jesus relative
to the Lord's Day, then we're also taking something to be nourishing
and removing it. If we try to obliterate the idea
of the seven-day week with the Lord's Day, a day of rest and
days of work, Again, we're taking what's to be nourishing to the
next generation, and we're removing that nourishment. We're starving
people to death. And so you get the analogy, right?
So I think that's kind of what's going on here, and that's a good
illustration, boiling a calf in its mother's milk, it's a
good illustration of what I think we're to avoid and what we're
to embrace in this idea of the Christian Lord's Day as a day
of rest and gladness and a great source of blessing to us. One
other thing before we begin. It's probably good we handed
this out early. In the epilogue of Keller's book,
Every Good Endeavor, this woman who leads the faith and work
ministry says that there's kind of a threefold action to what
they do and how they set up their faith and work ministry. And
it has to do with teaching discussing and then mobilizing. So you know
the idea is that I instruction is being brought. This is the
18th sermon on work. So this is the teaching part
right. And we may have, if you had a faith to work ministry
going on, there would be classes about biblical perspectives on
work. And we've talked a lot about that throughout these 18
sermons. But the second phase that they
see as useful is discussion. And so this is why I want to
make urge you to get involved in one
of our community groups. It's not the only place you can
discuss the instruction either through my sermons or reading
books or Sunday school classes, whatever it is about work, but
it is a very useful place to have ongoing regular discussions
of the teaching relative to your work. You can't reconstruct work
just by getting some ideas and that's it. No, the ideas have
to be talked over and discussed And then you can move to implementation.
The community group is useful for discussion and for holding
you to some degree to some accountability for implementing changes in your
vocation. You know, I heard about a community
group discussion last week about passion and how does that look
and what do you do when the work you're doing doesn't seem to
be very passion-inspiring, et cetera. And that's a good discussion
to have of what I taught last week from the scriptures in a
community group so that you can then move to mobilization. These
sermons do no good if they're just an interesting intellectual
exercise, as accurate as they might be. And there's always
varying degrees of that. But if I've done a decent job
of being accurate to the text, I don't think unless you move
through discussion of mobilization, This doesn't be good. And in
fact, if you're here today and you hear things, for instance,
about the Christian Sabbath or Lord's Day, and if you don't
move to mobilization to make some degree of changes to your
life, it's just reinforcing your current pattern, then it's actually
worse for you. You know that, right? When you
come here, it's a bad thing. Potentially for you, because
when you hear the word of God, you're under increased obligation
to respond to that word with obedience. So if you just end
with the intellectual component and don't move through community
life to discuss and implement what the scriptures teach us,
then actually it's not just no good for you, it's actually negative
for you. You're in a worse state than
you started with. Because now you've got knowledge that you
haven't owned. and you're culpable for that. So hopefully you understand that
already, but it's important that we talk about that here. All
that we've said about work, really, can be boiled down to what this
text says. What do I mean by that? We have
here the simplest, most personal gospel message, evangelism, statement
in the Bible, I believe. It's quite simple. It's very
personal. And it is evangelism. What is
it? Come to me. That's it. That's the essence of the Christian
message is that God's people, the creation of God's hands,
humanity, are supposed to come to Jesus, right? And there's
lots of implications of what happens when you come to Jesus.
He says He has a yoke. He says you've got to learn from
Him. So there's the idea of submission as you come. But at the end of
the day, what you're doing here today, whether you've understood
it or not, We're all, you and me, we're all coming to Jesus
today to hear His Word, to be filled by His Spirit, to be ministered
to by that Spirit so that the heaviness, the difficulties,
the troubles that we experience in our lives can be lifted and
that we can find rest. So what we have here is a very
personal evangelistic message, we can say. And ultimately, 18
sermons on work, it's all about coming to Jesus when we go to
work. Passion is driven by serving
Jesus. If we don't come to Jesus and
find Him in our workplace, then we've kind of lost the whole
origin of everything else that happens. And so when we come
to Jesus, He teaches us about what our work is to be, why He's
having us work, what the significance of it is. You know, you can talk
about the two great deals, providence and culture making, right? We
build culture through our work. We're part of a tremendous networks
throughout the world of advancing culture. And we're part of a
tremendous network providing for people, right? Providing
for their necessities, providing for their joys, providing for
the things that will make them more productive in culture building
and providing for other people. And what we're doing is love.
Now those are all truths we've talked about in this series.
And it's the result, those are not abstract concepts. Those
things happen because Jesus is the culture builder. Jesus is
the provider. Jesus and the triune God is the
source of all love. And so as we come to Jesus in
our work, as we bring Jesus into our work, then it's going to
transform it and the end result will be better than it started.
And the end result here, what's the end result of this call to
come to me that he says? Well, the end result is given
to us a couple of times. He says, I will give you rest.
Rest is the end result. Rest is the end result of this
highly personal evangelism phrase. When you talk to your fellow
workers or your friends or members of your community about Jesus,
this text, hopefully, will be one that you'll remember. That
sometimes you won't say repent of your sins. Sometimes you won't
say confess your faith in Jesus or urge people to do that. I
mean, those are good things. Sometimes you won't say, be a
follower of Jesus. That's a good thing too. And
the text goes on to imply it. But the message is really as
simple as urging people in the midst of their heaviness, in
the midst of difficulties, in the midst of being heavy laden
and burdened, to come to Jesus so that they can find rest. Rest
for their souls. It's as simple as that. All I
want to do here is just go through some of these basic terms that
are used in the text before us that follow this invitation to
come. We have three verses. We've got
maybe eight words that are used in these three verses. And it'll
be helpful to us to kind of understand what these words are. And implied,
of course, is that true rest, the kind of deep, satisfying
rest which we'll talk about in a couple of minutes, is only
possible as we come to Christ. Apart from Him, there is no rest.
There is no what God calls rest. Alright, so what does He say?
He says, come to Me. That's the invitation. And who
are the ones who are come? Well, they have two conditions
going on. Those who labor and those who are heavy laden. And
those who labor and heavy laden who come to Jesus, He gives them
rest. What does it mean to labor? Well,
this word is used in a variety of ways. It can be just simple
work, and it can also be used to describe those who are wearied
by work, or wearied or oppressed by other particular situations. Labor isn't necessarily always
a bad thing. Let me read a couple of verses
here that explain this. Actually, let's start with one
in Matthew 6 in the Sermon on the Mount. that we can expand out a little
bit and talk about the implications of it. Listen to this. This is
Matthew 6 and the teaching of Jesus relative
to the flowers of the field, right? Let me just read this this entire
section. No one can serve two masters
for either he will love the one and hate the one and love the
other or else he will be loyal to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and mammon.
Now that's a verse for our age. You know I think that's the root
cause of the disintegration of the sort of rest the weekly cycle
of six days working one day of resting in Christ. of being obliterated
because the culture is trying to serve mammon. Anyway, therefore
I say to you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat
or what you will drink, nor about your body, what you will put
on. Is not life more than food and
the body more than clothing? Look at the birds of the air,
for they neither sow or reap nor gather into barns, yet your
heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than
they? Now we can blow past that and we usually do. But what is
he talking about? He's talking about the relationship
of work to the kind of rest that we're talking about, labor and
rest. And he's using agricultural terminology, which remember is
the metaphor for all work, all culture building activities in
the scriptures. And he says, you've got these
birds that neither sow or reap or gather. So they're not engaging
in vocational labor, and yet God takes care of them, right?
The implications, of course, we are to gather and sow and
reap, but God will take care of us is the point that he's
trying to make here. So in our work, in our planting and sowing
and in our reaping, there's to be a deep rest at the bottom
of that work that knows that ultimately God will take care
of us even if those things can't be done for a particular season.
You understand? So underneath our work, this
text is telling you, it's a vocational text. And it tells us at the
base of your vocation tomorrow, where you're going to find energy
and passion for the work that you do is to understand the value
you have to the Heavenly Father and how underneath it all, even
if those things are taken away through unemployment, national
catastrophe, even your own moral difficulties and shortcomings,
if you lose work, your Lord God is going to take care of you
still. And that ultimately, he's the one taking care of you and
your work, not you, even though you're working away. So I think
that's what this text is talking about. Which of you, by worrying,
can add one cubit to his stature? So why do you worry about clothing?
Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow. They neither toil
nor spin. There's our word, labor. The
lilies of the valley neither labor. Come unto me all you who
labor and are heavy laden. The lilies of the valley neither
labor nor spin, and yet they're arrayed in beautiful clothing,
our Savior tells us. So again, we can blow past that
as just sort of a general statement, but make it personal. Understand
that your labor to produce things that'll be good for your body
and protective in a beautiful way for your body, clothing,
that ultimately there's a rest underneath that because you don't
need to do those things for that to be accomplished. Or better,
that God is empowering you with energy. to do that work so that
you don't do it in a way that thinks somehow you're going to
do it, you're going to provide for yourself somehow. Worry. Anxiety. That's the kind of heavy
ladenness that we don't want to have and that our Savior is
telling us about in Matthew 6 that we should not engage in. What
does He go on to say, of course? Seek first the Kingdom of God
and His righteousness All these things shall be added unto you.
Therefore, don't worry. Seek the Kingdom. And all these
things will be added. Normally through your work, your
vocation, but underneath it all is a deep rest knowing that God
is going to provide for you and your loved ones. If you do what? If you seek the Kingdom. What's
the other way that Jesus talks about that? If you come to Him.
Come to Me. And you'll find Rest, all you
that labor and are heavy laden. Come to Me. Seek the Kingdom.
Seek the Kingdom is one way of phrasing salvation and coming
to Jesus, but this nice, simple, personal way that Jesus talks
about it here is very significant. I think this is the only place
in the Bible where it's given in that kind of simplicity of
form. He says, come and follow Me sometimes, but this is come
to Me. So that underneath all these
other expressions, we think seeking the kingdom is the answer. And
we see the kingdom somehow detached from the king and we've messed
up. You see, Jesus says, if you're
going to seek the kingdom, it means you're coming to the king. You're having a relationship.
You're loving Him and embracing Him. And as a consequence of
that, His will for your life, His word as it helps you as a
disciple of His to follow Him. But that follows, discipleship
follows, coming to Him. That's the root thing that's
going on in Matthew 11. Now, I don't think you can come
to Him if you don't submit to Him. But the point is, the emphasis
here is on this personal coming to the Lord Jesus Christ. And
those that come are those who labor. Ok, a few other quick
verses about labor, right? So in Luke 5, Simon answered
and said to Him, Master, we have labored We have toiled all night
and caught no fish. So fishermen labor. So labor
is used of normal vocational work. It's done with a heavy
exertion. It's used that way. In John 4,
verse 6, now Jacob's well was there. Jesus, therefore, being
wearied from his journey, stops for water. So Jesus is one of
those who labor and becomes wearied through the work that he's doing.
So all you who labor doesn't necessarily mean you're laboring
improperly or in a bad way. Labor is used of positive work
as well. And even our Savior labored,
became weary through his toil in doing his ministry. So no matter what state we find
ourselves, coming to Jesus brings us rest. So the point here is
this term labor is fairly expansive. It's fairly broad. A lot of other
scriptures that we could talk about. For instance, in Acts 20, verse
35, I have shown you in every way by laboring like
this that you must support the weak. So part of our labor is
to support the weak. And later we'll read in one of
the epistles that the thief who stole, let him steal no longer,
but work with his hands, labor with his hands that he may have
to give to those who are poor. One of the major reasons we work
or labor The rest underneath that is the idea of extending
the grace of God to the poor. So this first term. Come to me
all you who labor. That includes you know exertion
through vocational calling as well as all kinds. It's a broad
term in other words. And those of you who are heavy
laden. So only two places in the Bible where this heavy laden
comes in. This is one of them. And then
later a ship that is Paul warns that the goods of a ship the
cargo of a ship are going to be lost in a storm at sea. And
the cargo, the word that's translated cargo in some versions, those
goods in the cargo, that actually means the laden place. So a ship
is heavy laden with a bunch of material, right? So you go down
to the docks here in Portland and you see them put those big
container ships on there. And so the ship is laden, heavy
laden, with the things that are put upon it. So you take these
two terms together, all those who are weary through their trials,
that's kind of an internal condition, and those who are heavy laden
and external things being placed upon your back, those people
come to Jesus and He will give us rest. Now, in the immediate
context here, as I said, he's just kind of rebuked Pharisees
and teachers for their extra rules they placed upon the law.
He's rebuked them for their unbelief and for wanting other people
to be heavy laden with regulations that God doesn't play. So in
the first instance, what Jesus is talking about here are people
who labor and are heavy laden under the added laws of the scriptures
that the Pharisees brought. If we wanted to make an analogy
today, you know, you could look at people who say that you should
never drink, that you shouldn't dance, shouldn't go to movies.
Those are extra, you know, laws placed upon Christians. And I
don't think there's much laboring going on about that today, but
there probably was at various times in history. So man made
additions to the laws of the immediate context of what he's
saying. But as well, we can see in this the effects of sin, right?
Sin produces a weariness of life. The burden on the back is the
image in Pilgrim's Progress of the debt, the weight of sinfulness. And so, gee, this is a perfectly
acceptable verse in terms of conversion, but I think it also
has application, as I said, to our work and to the heaviness
that we can feel. Now, it has a lot broader application.
What Jesus is telling you here today is, you've come here. You've got problems. Maybe they're
health problems. Maybe they're money problems.
Almost always there's relationship problems, right? Maybe you're
being persecuted by a bad boss at work. Or maybe you're laboring
and are heavy laden under your own sin. You can't get away from
certain sin patterns, right? So as you come here today, when
you come to worship, You know, I think this verse is what worship
is all about by way of application. We're coming to Jesus. He's assuring
us that our life is hidden in Him. We're seeking the Kingdom.
And He assures us that all the things that we're worried about,
heavy laden, weary over, He's going to give us rest for those
things. Now, he may not change the external conditions, frequently
he doesn't, but he puts a different mindset in your life, helping
you to see your state of salvation in him, and that he's using everything
together for your good, And that he's using even the labors you
perform in the workplace for a lousy boss, you're using that
to build culture, to provide for people's needs, and to enhance
love in the ultimate long-term results of work. And so he tells
you that. And so this sermon series on
work is part of coming to Him, hearing what He has to say through
the Word, and having our weariness and the loads that we suffer
under removed from us. So today, that's what I want
to call you to do. In worship, as we sing songs,
as we hear the Word of God, as we partake of the table, All
of this I want you to see as you coming to Jesus, wearied,
heavy laden, and He is providing you rest. Now this term rest
is comprehensive. So He's not just talking about
physical rest. He's talking about much more
than that. I'm going to read a few verses that use this term rest
in the New Testament. We read in Matthew 26 in the
garden, he goes to his disciples and he says, what, can't you
stay awake? He says, are you still sleeping and resting? So rest can refer to physical
rest and actually sleeping rest. So he provides a degree of physical
rest for us. In Matthew 6.31, he says to his
disciples, come aside by yourselves to a deserted place and rest
a while. Now the emphasis there is not
that you're going to have the normal kind of rest from your
labors through sleep. But you sort of take a break
and you refresh yourself, right? And you kind of reconsider what
you're doing and you rest. So it's not just physical is
the point here. That isolation from work for
a period of time, vacation, family, whatever it is, produces a rest
that you go back to work with that's substantial. In 1 Corinthians 16-18, Paul
says, for they, the saints, refreshed my spirit and yours. So rest is seen here in the context
of other believers. One of the things we're supposed
to do, and sometimes it happens and sometimes it doesn't on the
Lord's Day, is there is to be a refreshing of our spirits.
A resting of our spirits. When we come to Jesus, acknowledging
our heavy ladenness, acknowledging our labors, our need for refreshment. He refreshes us, certainly through
the context of the worship service and what he says to us. But clearly
this text, as well as others that Paul wrote, tells us that
rest comes from community. It comes from people. You're
here today, perhaps, probably, to refresh somebody. Paul does
this several times in his epistles. He talks about people who have
refreshed him and the need for saints to refresh one another. Now, what we're talking about
here really has a lot to do with the Lord's Day and the Christian
Sabbath as I said. Right. What do we see in Exodus
20 in the Sabbath commandment. We see the command to rest one
day out of seven this cycle of work and rest. And certainly
the idea there is to rest physically so you're not laboring hard that
day. That's certainly there. But beyond
that, what we see then in the legislation that accompanies
Exodus 20, in Leviticus 18, we read that every Sabbath day was
to be a day of holy convocation. We get it wrong if we think that
the Sabbath ever was meant to just be a day where you're off
by yourself somewhere, worshiping God by yourself. That's not refreshing. I mean, it can be. But what God
wants us to do is to enter into community for a period of that
day, because we're going to find refreshment through the communion
of saints. So Jesus refreshes us through
causing us to put off the normal physical work we do today. And
He refreshes us, as these texts show us, He gives us rest. as
we refresh one another in the Lord, which means we're to speak
to one another, not about just any old topic that comes up,
but our refreshment, Paul says, comes in the Lord. So we should
be refreshing each other, discussing things of the Lord that He's
doing in our lives, trying to be an encouragement to one another,
and to seek out somebody today that needs refreshing. And you'll
find that if you need refreshing, if you try to refresh somebody
else, then you're going to be refreshed by that activity as
well. So coming to Jesus. has as its implication that you're
going to find rest. And the Bible teaches us that
part of the rest you find is the refreshment of other believers.
And so what we see here, again, is that when you come to church,
when you come to worship God, there is the rest that He provides
for your souls by assuring you of the forgiveness of sins. Right? By assuring you that He accepts
you. It's that simple. And you find rest for your souls
through the refreshment that we give to one another. We put
off the heavy ladenness of whatever work we're doing, the labors
of that. We put off any expectations that
other people may put on us that are unrealistic. For many of
us, the rest that we find in the Lord's Day is by telling
ourselves, God has accomplished all things for my salvation and
my well-being. In other words, it's not necessarily
an employer or an enemy who puts unrealistic expectations on you
and makes you heavy laden. Frequently, it's yourself. Why
didn't I do this? Why didn't I do that? Gosh, I'm
a jerk. Right? You get that voice in your head
all the time. I saw Birdman and he's always being told, you're
no good, you're a lousy guy. I get that voice all the time.
And I assume some of you do as well. And so some of the things
that we need rest from when we come to Jesus in worship is to
quiet the voices of self-condemnation. Right? And to not tell ourselves
how horrible we are. Not listen to it actually. We're
to speak to ourselves what the sermon and the liturgy of the
church speaks to you. That your sins have been forgiven. That you're accepted in the Lord
Jesus Christ. And as you come to Him, He will
give you rest from all of those expectations, all of those difficulties,
right? So He gives us physical rest.
He gives us refreshing rest through the community of saints. And
then He gives us the rest of knowing that our sins have been
atoned for. It's interesting because in Exodus
20, the Sabbath regulation says you're to rest because God rested
on His work. By the way, one other thing about
that before we get to Deuteronomy 5. Exodus 20. What did God do
when He rested on the seventh day? Did he just sort of take
time out and just sort of chill? No, I don't think so. I think
what God was doing through his work and then primarily on the
Lord's Day, or on the Sabbath rather, was to see the delight
of what he had done. I think that part of our rest
is looking back on the work that God has accomplished through
us. and saying, praise God for this,
right? Whatever I did successfully this
last week, building relationships, in my work product, whatever
it is, the rest is physical rest, of course. It's refreshment from
other people. But it's also taking delight
in what God has made, and your, perhaps, very small part in that
as well. So the rest has that aspect to
it too. So that's Exodus 20. Deuteronomy
5, on the other hand, the re-giving of the 10 words, and the fourth
word in Deuteronomy 5, The entire thing now is based upon their
being redeemed from Egypt. So in Exodus 20, God worked six
days, rested the seventh, you do too. Deuteronomy 5, God has
redeemed you from Egypt. So rest as a commemoration, as
a reenactment as it were of that. So that's creation in Exodus
20 and redemption in Deuteronomy 5. And so part of our rest that
Jesus is talking about here is creation rest, recreation rest,
but it's also redemptive rest. It's rest knowing that God has
accomplished salvation for us. He's saved us from our sins.
He's made final atonement for those things. And He's delivered
us from unjust economic systems. It's like a Marxist now or something.
But that's what He says. Remember that what He brought
them out of was a place where there was no Sabbath. Just like
pagan worlds, they had to work because they were not looked
at as with regard. They worked seven days a week
and they worked hard. They were simply units of production
in a materialistic building project that Pharaoh had demanded that
they do. They were slaves. And this culture is moving back
toward that by obliterating or trying to obliterate the Lord's
Day or Christian Sabbath. We stop work one day out of seven
and we tell ourselves God has freed us from the enemies of
Christ who want to turn people that can be controlled into units
of production and nothing more. He's redeemed us out of those
situations and ultimately he's redeemed us from our sins is
the clear implication. So when Jesus says come to me
you who labor and are heavy laden And I will give you rest. That
is a summation of history. That's a summation of who you
are, what happened to you through the fall, and what God has now
accomplished the reversal of in the sacrifice of the Lord
Jesus Christ for us. He calls us today to come to
Him. All of us who are weary, heavy laden, He gives us rest. The implications of this are
dramatic. And they're implications for
our work. Because it's people who have
that kind of assurance that God has rolled away our heavy ladenness
and the kind of toil that would oppress us. and provided us rest
for our souls. That's the kind of people who
go into the week tomorrow with Jesus. And as a result of that,
having passion for their work, being able to work quickly. Right. And with discipline in the context
of the workplace. The Lord's Day sets up the rest
of the blessings of culture that God has created you to be through
your work and your labor. So when we talk about Jesus'
rest for us in Matthew 11, we're talking really about the whole
Gospel message, the whole of human history, and what He has
accomplished for you. We should read the next couple
of verses. He says, take my yoke upon you. So there is submission.
There is a yoke. And what He's going to do is
not obliterate the Sabbath or Lord's Day, But what he's going
to do is say that yoke, applying it to the fourth word, is easy.
It's light. And in fact, it actually produces
refreshment for your souls, as opposed to what the Pharisees
are laying upon you, which produces heavy ladenness for your soul.
Take my yoke upon me. Learn from me. So his yoke is
one of discipleship. Learn from me. Why? Because I
am gentle. I'm meek. and I am lowly in heart,
and you'll find rest for your souls again." That the rest will
now extend into your very souls, the whole person of who you are.
So Jesus, in that short summation, goes on to expand it a bit and
tell us some of the details. Coming to Jesus means accepting
His yoke, His instruction, His interpretation of how God wants
us to live. And in that interpretation of
being disciples of His, We'll find rest for our souls. And then he says, my yoke is
easy, my burden is light. So Jesus is that. Now it's interesting
because in the Old Testament in Exodus, Moses is talking to
Yahweh. And Yahweh tells him, follow
me and I will give you rest. I will provide rest. Jesus is
declaring here, once more, that He's Yahweh. He's the one who
will produce and to give us rest for our souls. Secondly, in the
Old Testament, wisdom frequently called people to herself, right?
In the Proverbs, come to me, right? And in the Wisdom of Sirach,
which is not an inspired book, but it's old literature written
primarily by faithful followers of Yahweh, it says the same thing. And in fact, it has language
very similar to what our Savior tells us here. Become a disciple
of the Master, right? And in that discipleship, you'll
find rest for your souls. As you move through coming to
Jesus, becoming His disciple, learning what He says to you,
Taking upon yourself the yoke of a disciple, then you'll find
rest for your souls. Now, he's contrasting himself
with the Pharisees again. What does he tell us in other
gospel accounts? They put burdens upon people. that they could
never bear. In Acts 15 of the Jerusalem Council,
let's not put burdens upon people that they can't bear. Let's not
teach people that they have to work their way to salvation.
That's a burden the Pharisees put upon people that couldn't
be born. So he's contrasting himself with that. You don't
have to do anything ultimately for salvation, but come to Jesus. And as you come to Him, He forgives
your sins. And then you walk in His ways
and you find ongoing rest for your souls. Why? Because His
character is gentle. That's what Moses said about...
That's what the Bible tells us about Moses, by the way. And
so Yahweh telling Moses He'll provide rest for His people lines
right up with what Jesus is telling us here. Jesus is the greater
Moses, the great Moses. Jesus is Yahweh. Jesus is wisdom
calling us today to follow in His paths. And He gives this
tremendous blessing and assurance that as we simply come to Him,
be His disciples in this sermon series about what work is about,
we'll find rest for our souls. And that rest will provide the
kind of energy and passion and ability to work in the workplace
with the understanding of the Lord Jesus Christ. Eric Lidell
in that great old movie, I know a lot of young people haven't
watched it, but Chariots of Fire, right? So he's the guy, that's
a true story, ran in the Olympics in the last century. And he's
contrasted in the movie with another runner who was also a
historic personage, who was Jewish. Lidell is a Christian. Scottish,
and there's this contrast between the two. And in the screenplay,
at least, in the movie, the Jewish runner says, I want to win so
I can justify my existence. So I can justify my existence.
I don't know if the actual man actually said that, but that's
the way the screenplay was written to reflect what was being talked
about. Liddell, on the other hand, doesn't need to justify
his existence at all. He runs because God has made
him fast. It's that simple, he tells his
sister. His sister says, don't do important work. Do missionary
work. Don't do running work. He says,
look, God made me fast. I feel the pleasure of God when
I run and run fast. Now, that's you at work, folks.
God has made you for the task you've been called to do. That's
you in your family setting. That's you as a wife. That's
you as a husband. That's the way God has made you. Delight
in that. Not in a way to find your acceptance
with God. Come to Jesus in your role at
work, in the home, in your community. And you'll find rest for your
souls. And it's a rest that will make you run fast. That will
give you accomplishment. famously refused to run on Sunday,
the Christian Sabbath. He could have had a gold medal
that day. He says no. And in the movie there's this
tremendous picture, imagery. Liddell is preaching in a church
someplace on Sunday and the guys that do compete on the Lord's
Day in the Olympics, they're falling in the mud, it's raining
on them, they're struggling, they are heavy laden, they are
toiling, they are burdened, right? So you have this contrast between
people who come to the rest that is Jesus Christ as epitomized
in the Christian Sabbath, the Lord's Day. You have Laidel in
that position. And he then goes on the rest
of the week to win more medals than they thought he would win.
He's rested. He's ready. Because he's sought
the kingdom first, which means he's come to Jesus. And the other
runner, who was seeking to justify existence, doesn't realize how
many gold medals that guy gets. He's never going to justify his
existence. That is a hard task, Master.
God says that Jesus is the one who paid the price for our sins.
We can have a deep rest under our work, not working to justify
ourselves, to prove how important we are, to meet some demands
of our heart or our brain or the culture upon us, ultimately.
We go to work because we love it to serve Jesus in what we
do. And we have the deep rest of
knowing that we take this day off because of God's creation
and God's redemption. And as a result of that, we go
into the work week tomorrow with renewed passion. Let's pray. Father, we pray that today we
would remember this message to come to you, to come to Jesus,
your son, and to you through Jesus, that this is the only
source of rest and peace. Lord God, you know that there
are people here today probably many of them, who feel heavy-laden,
who feel that they're under some burden, who are toiling, Lord
God, with situations they can't figure out a way out of or a
way through. I pray You would bless them,
Lord God, that they would come to Jesus, even now, recognizing
that in Him all things have been accomplished for their salvation.
Bless us, Lord God, throughout the rest of this service by ministering
rest to us, refreshment, and assurance that the Lord Jesus
Christ loves us and is handoms upon us for blessing. In His
name we pray, Amen.
Work and Rest
Series Series on Work
| Sermon ID | 2121519134810 |
| Duration | 51:21 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | Matthew 11:28-30 |
| Language | English |
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