The key to understanding how Jesus is our Sabbath rest is the Hebrew word sabat, which means "to rest or stop or cease from work." The origin of the Sabbath goes back to Creation. After creating the heavens and the earth in six days, God "rested on the seventh day from all His work which He had made" (Genesis 2:2). This doesn’t mean that God was tired and needed a rest. We know that God is omnipotent, literally "all-powerful." He has all the power in the universe, He never tires, and His most arduous expenditure of energy does not diminish His power one bit. So, what does it mean that God rested on the seventh day? Simply that He stopped what He was doing. He ceased from His labors. This is important in understanding the establishment of the Sabbath day and the role of Christ as our Sabbath rest.
God used the example of His resting on the seventh day of Creation to
establish the principle of the Sabbath day rest for His people. In
Exodus 20:8-11 and Deuteronomy 5:12-15, God gave the Israelites the
fourth of His Ten Commandments. They were to "remember" the Sabbath day
and "keep it holy." One day out of every seven, they were to rest from
their labors and give the same day of rest to their servants and
animals. This was not just a physical rest, but a cessation of laboring.
Whatever work they were engaged in was to stop for a full day each
week. (Please read our other articles on the Sabbath day, Saturday vs. Sunday and Sabbath keeping
to explore this issue further.) The Sabbath day was established so the
people would rest from their labors, only to begin again after a one-day
rest.
The various elements of the Sabbath symbolized the coming of the
Messiah, who would provide a permanent rest for His people. Once again
the example of resting from our labors comes into play. With the
establishment of the Old Testament Law, the Jews were constantly
"laboring" to make themselves acceptable to God. Their labors included
trying to obey a myriad of do’s and don’ts of the ceremonial law, the
Temple law, the civil law, etc. Of course they couldn’t possibly keep
all those laws, so God provided an array of sin offerings and sacrifices
so they could come to Him for forgiveness and restore fellowship with
Him, but only temporarily. Just as they began their physical labors
after a one-day rest, so, too, did they have to continue to offer
sacrifices. Hebrews 10:1 tells us that the law "can never, by the same
sacrifices repeated endlessly year after year, make perfect those who
draw near to worship." But these sacrifices were offered in anticipation
of the ultimate sacrifice of Christ on the cross, who "after He had
offered one sacrifice for sins forever, sat down on the right of God"
(Hebrews 10:12). Just as He rested after performing the ultimate
sacrifice, He sat down and rested—ceased from His labor of atonement
because there was nothing more to be done, ever. Because of what He did,
we no longer have to "labor" in law-keeping in order to be justified in
the sight of God. Jesus was sent so that we might rest in God and in
what He has provided.
Another element of the Sabbath day rest which God instituted as a
foreshadowing of our complete rest in Christ is that He blessed it,
sanctified it, and made it holy. Here again we see the symbol of Christ
as our Sabbath rest—the holy, perfect Son of God who sanctifies and
makes holy all who believe in Him. God sanctified Christ, just as He
sanctified the Sabbath day, and sent Him into the world (John 10:36) to
be our sacrifice for sin. In Him we find complete rest from the labors
of our self-effort, because He alone is holy and righteous. "God made
him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the
righteousness of God" (2 Corinthians 5:21). We can now cease from our
spiritual labors and rest in Him, not just one day a week, but always.
Jesus can be our Sabbath rest in part because He is "Lord of the
Sabbath" (Matthew 12:8). As God incarnate, He decides the true meaning
of the Sabbath because He created it, and He is our Sabbath rest in the
flesh. When the Pharisees criticized Him for healing on the Sabbath,
Jesus reminded them that even they, sinful as they were, would not
hesitate to pull a sheep out of a pit on the Sabbath. Because He came to
seek and save His sheep who would hear His voice (John 10:3,27) and
enter into the Sabbath rest He provided by paying for their sins, He
could break the Sabbath rules. He told the Pharisees that people are
more important than sheep and the salvation He provided was more
important than rules. By saying, "The Sabbath was made for man, not man
for the Sabbath" (Mark 2:27), Jesus was restating the principle that the
Sabbath rest was instituted to relieve man of his labors, just as He
came to relieve us of our attempting to achieve salvation by our works.
We no longer rest for only one day, but forever cease our laboring to
attain God’s favor. Jesus is our rest from works now, just as He is the
door to heaven, where we will rest in Him forever.
Hebrews 4 is the definitive passage regarding Jesus as our Sabbath rest.
The writer to the Hebrews exhorts his readers to “enter in” to the
Sabbath rest provided by Christ. After three chapters of telling them
that Jesus is superior to the angels and that He is our Apostle and High
Priest, he pleads with them to not harden their hearts against Him, as
their fathers hardened their hearts against the Lord in the wilderness.
Because of their unbelief, God denied that generation access to the holy
land, saying, “They shall not enter into My rest” (Hebrews 3:11). In
the same way, the writer to the Hebrews begs his readers not to make the
same mistake by rejecting God’s Sabbath rest in Jesus Christ. “There
remains, then, a Sabbath-rest for the people of God; for anyone who
enters God’s rest also rests from his own work, just as God did from
his. Let us, therefore, make every effort to enter that rest, so that no
one will fall by following their example of disobedience” (Hebrews
4:9–11).
There is no other Sabbath rest besides Jesus. He alone satisfies the
requirements of the Law, and He alone provides the sacrifice that atones
for sin. He is God’s plan for us to cease from the labor of our own
works. We dare not reject this one-and-only Way of salvation (John
14:6). God’s reaction to those who choose to reject His plan is seen in
Numbers 15. A man was found gathering sticks on the Sabbath day, in
spite of God’s plain commandment to cease from all labor on the Sabbath.
This transgression was a known and willful sin, done with unblushing
boldness in broad daylight, in open defiance of the divine authority.
“Then the LORD said to Moses, ‘The man must die. The whole assembly must
stone him outside the camp’” (verse 35). So it will be to all who
reject God’s provision for our Sabbath rest in Christ. “How shall we
escape if we neglect so great a salvation?” (Hebrews 2:3).
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