24 October 2018

Judas, Israel and Wentworth

Bob published this on his Facebook page on 
October 18 at 6:38 AM 
My reply to the noise from The Conversation (https://theconversation.com/shifting-the-australian-embassy…) : My response: "Tony Walker calls our PM’s discussion of moving the embassy in Israel to Jerusalem “opportunistic”, ‘craven’, ‘chicanery’ and ‘a cynical exercise in vote buying.“ In what other non-capital cities does Australia have our embassy? Jerusalem has been the capital, the focus of the Jewish people’s history there for 3,000 years. Jerusalem has been her national capital since 1949. The Knesset (Parliament) and Supreme Court have been there since the country’s founding. Recognising the capital of a country as the home of our embassy is the proper respectful decision we should have made decades ago"
On Monday, in answering the same Conversation AND ABC report, the Honest Reporting website offered this view about Judas and anti-Semitism. https://honestreporting.com/antisemitism-judas-slur-on-australian-jewish-voters-wentworth-tony-walker/

It will be interesting to see how far this goes, and whether the ABC or Conversation will apologise for this. 
We are glad to be watchdogs along with HR in this regard.

07 October 2018

Broadway: The Book of Mormon in Australia, a review

The show is not new, but it was new to me last night. Reviewing a long-established musical is a bit unnecessary for many, but I like to ponder what I saw and heard, and to share it with you, my faithful followers. Some spoilers are here, but since the play has been out for so long, I feel the liberty. So here goes.

The themes included truth-telling vs lying, Americana (represented in Salt Lake City and Orlando, Florida) vs the rest of the world, and religion itself, of course. The dynamics of working and living life together plays out as does humility as a positive human trait. So much in a song-and-dance extravaganza. 

Let's unpack this.

Listen to these lines from the opening song. While everyone is ringing doorbells and trying to wiggle their way into people's homes, Arnold Cunningham, a missionary trainee, is being direct:

"Hello, would you like to change religions? 
I have a free book written by Jesus"

All a leader of the missionaries quickly replies with:
"No, no, Elder Cunningham 
That's not how we do it
You're making things up again 
Just stick to the approved dialogue

Elders, show him"

There is an approved method of everything, how to eat, where to go, with whom or not with whom to go, what to do when you are tempted, or when you have feelings at all. And Arnold is an out-of-the-box character who looks more like Lumpy Rutherford or Milhouse. He's just not the same as the others. They are all neat and tidy, trim and capable; he's anything but that. 

They are so much the same, they sing, "Our shirts are clean and pressed,
And our haircuts are precise!" Even their harmonies are tight. 

Truth telling
The theme of truth-telling plays out throughout the show as in the song, "Turn it off", ELDER MCKINLEY sings, "Being gay is bad, but lying is worse,
So just realize you have a curable curse,
And turn it off! (Turn it off, turn it off!)"  

And when Joseph Smith, founder of the religion, is dying in the historical flashback, he sings, "Oh, God... why are you letting me die?
Without having me Show people the plates?
They’ll have no proof I was
Telling the truth or not.

They’ll have to believe it just...
Cause.
Oh! I guess thats kinda what you
Were going for...."

When Arnold begins to give the Ugandan villagers hope by telling them untruths from his own creativity, we hear this song, 

"CUNNINGHAM:  And lo, the Lord said unto the Nephites: 
"I know you're really depressed, what with all your... AIDS,
and everything... but there is an answer in Christ."

NABULUNGI:
You see? This book CAN help us!

CUNNINGHAM:
I just told a lie.
No, I didnt LIE...
I just used my imagination...
And it worked!

CUNNINGHAMS FATHER:
You're making things up again, Arnold"
And Arnold's answer, as he mans up to his father, is, "But it worked, dad!"
Then later MORONI, MORMON, SMITH, DAD, and HOBBITS all say to Arnold, 
"You're making things up again, Arnold."

America as the Messianic hope
The theme of America as the Messianic hope for the Ugandans and for the religion world of the 19th century is played out often. Smith is introduced as the All-American prophet. The phrase "All-American" may be lost on Aussies, but is a collegiate one in the US, emphasising the ivy-league, Ralph Lauren-wearing, preppie look which the Mormons evidence. 

Villager Nabalungi sings, "Now salvation has a name--
Sal Tlay Ka Siti" Salt Lake City. If there's going to be a salvific venue for the New Jerusalem, it ought not be in the biblical locations chosen by the Lord, but one chosen by ...um... Joseph Smith  Moroni, and Brigham Young. And it ought to be in the US of A. By the way, Nikki M. James originated this role on Broadway in 2011 and she is here in Sydney to play it. It's perfect for her; no wonder she won the Tony for her role. 

Price sings about his own faith, and it's based of course, in the USA, as he sings, "That Jesus has his own planet as well. And I believe That the Garden of Eden was in Jackson County, Missouri." (More on the Garden of Eden. Oy.)

Character trait: Humility
Pride vs Humility has its theme revealed over and over. 
Elder Price, another 19-year-old on mission to Uganda sings, "And set that worlds people free! And we can do it together, You and me-

But mostly me!
You and me-but mostly me, Are gonna change the world forever.
Cause I can do most anything!"  

Kevin Price is everyone's favourite in the training class at the mission, and Kevin is fairly sure that God will give him his heart's desire. To go to Orlando, which ends up looking like "Mormon Hell" in a dramatic song-and-dance after interval. 

Religion is mocked
Religious propriety is rudely dispelled from the fourth song "Hasa Diga Eebowai" which is as rude a phrase to say to God as anything you might imagine. It's a way of dealing with life's troubles there in the village in rural Uganda, and sets the opposite pole if you will, the yang, against which the yin of Mormonism is trying to dominate and win to its side. Religion is unnecessary for the tribe as there is death, and AIDS and a horrible war-lord, starvation in the setting. What good would the book of Mormon bring to this hopeless community?

This song is a typical South Park 'answer' to the 1994 movie, Lion King (which is often mentioned)'s answer to life's troubles, with the Swahili "Hakuna matata" (No worries). Watch and remember and sing along here.

In the historical introduction of Mormonism, with a bit of Broadway license, they sing, "You all know the Bible Is made of Testaments Old and New.
You’ve been told its just those two parts,
Or only one, if you're a Jew." (This was cute for us Jews in the audience who understand that the Tenach, called the Holy Scriptures is the one Christians call the "Old")"But what if I were to tell you
Theres a FRESH third part out there?
That was found by a HIP new prophet
Who had a little...
Donny Osmond flair?" (Donny is a Mormon)
                          


BTW, on the right is Seth McFarlane, and he looked so much like Donny, I just had to put his photo in this blog. 

More anti-religion is evident in the commentary on the call of Joseph Smith in Rochester, New York, in 1823 or so, as he is told to go and dig up the golden plates with the prophetic information. Arnold says, "Wow, God says go to you backyard and start digging, that makes PERFECT SENSE!" which of course, means it makes no sense. Of course, we find out later that Arnold has never read the book at all, and will end up making up an entire different religion and information about how to handle diseases, bullies, and history itself. 

I had heard that Mormons considered themselves true Jews, and wasn't until I heard the song about the All-American Prophet,
"We were Jews who met with Christ,
But we were...
All-American!

But don't let anybody see these plates Except for you...
They are only for you to see...Even if people ask you to show
The plates to them, DONT.

Just copy them onto normal paper.
Even thought this might make them
Question if the plates are real, or not,
This is sort of what God is going for...."

Yes, the lyricists Trey Parker, Robert Lopez, and Matt Stone were going for mockery and sacrilegious comedy and they knocked it out of the park.  

Community is sacred
Whether it's the Ugandans, who all turn into Mormons or who reject Mormonism, they do things together. They starve together and they hope together. The Mormon missionaries have to live as tandems for two years and upon failing to do so, Kevin Price is sent in his dream to Spooky Mormon Hell. What is the cause? He didn't stay with Arnold.

"
I left my mission companion
All alone...

And who else is in this hell? Genghis Khan, Jeffrey Dahmer, Hitler, and OJ-defender Johnnie Cochran!

Against all the evil these four committed, ELDER PRICE sings, "You think that's bad?
I broke rule seventy-two!" (which is about abandoning your companion)

Turning "I am" to "We are" is what community requires, and the song "I am Africa" does just that. 
"I am Africa...
With the strength of the cheetah,
My native voice will ring...

ELDERS:
We are Africa!
We are the heartbeat of Africa!"

And their final hymn sings, "I am a latter day saint,
along with all my town
we always stick together come one more"

I suppose the real issue is HOPE which "Tomorrow is a latter day" shouts. 

"We'll be here for each other every step of the way
and make a latter day tomorrow (han-a-hay-yah)
Americans are ready for the cure for AIDS
but they're saving it for a latter day,
tomorrow is a latter day."

MY CONCLUSIONS
1) The themes of truth telling, hope, community and humility all speak to me, and I applaud them. Walking away from the theatre and pondering such good philosophical ideas is a plus for me in judging an experience. 

2) America being the focus of the religion is classic Americana. I grew up in the USA and geocentricism is a national pastime to many. Triumphalism is often an American characteristic. And at times feeling like winners makes sense since the US helped win World Wars 1 and 2, along with the Cold War and has maintained world dominance in economics, at least, so they say. But being smug and triumphalistic is inconsistent with the humility incumbent on true religion.

3) The mockery of religion is timeless and an easy punch. Among the Broadway faithful, ridiculing Christianity is especially tiring. Sacrilege is the style of the South Park writers, and a bit wearying.for me as one of their non-disciples. There were times when a song finished and the crowd applauded. I was torn sometimes as the song was antithetical to my personal views (but I did appreciate the music and the dancing.)

4) Honestly the true hope, which really is available to all people, is found in Jesus the Messiah, not in the Mormon church. And I'm so glad that the community of those who know the Lord is growing each day, whether in Uganda, here in Australia, or in Rochester, New York. 

Maybe tomorrow will be the latter day, or the last day, but whenever the Lord Jesus returns to set up His kingdom, the location will not be in Utah, nor in Sydney, but will be in Jerusalem. In that day, the Lord will be One and His name One. 

Until then, God can save Mormons, and Jews, Chinese and anyone, including you! How? By faith in the atoning work of Jesus, as He died on the cross as a sacrifice for our sins. We encourage you to profess faith in Him. Not Moroni, not Joseph Smith, but Jesus, who would never call you biological names. Call on Him, and you will be saved.

05 October 2018

Turning 20

Jews for Jesus opened in 1998 here in Australia, when the Family Mendelsohn moved from New York City to launch the organization. Who knew that 20 years later, we'd still be here, sharing Messiah among the Jewish people, and with anyone else who is listening?

We gathered at the shop the other day with some friends and donors to celebrate the last two decades, with song, and stories, with food (of course), and with great gladness for all God has done and is doing among our people.

If you have been part of our story, we thank you. Some have sent us funds, or letters of encouragement. Some have dropped by the shop and purchased goods, and had a cuppa and muffin. Some attended public gatherings for the Jewish holidays or were part of our Paddington outreach, have letterboxed for us, or handed out tracts on the streets of Adelaide, Melbourne, Perth, Brisbane, or here in Sydney. We have had volunteers from churches and some who came alone. If any of these are you...please receive our heartfelt gratitude. We appreciate you!

If you are still pondering if Jesus is the Messiah, wondering if our lives matter to the Almighty, if you would like the assurance of significance in light of the loss of community-- then we offer prayers for you today. And we are available to chat or email or Skype. We can also come to visit you, or you can come visit us. God wants you to be in His family. He wants relationship with you. And sometimes He extends that information and that welcome even through us.

May all the world believe in Yeshua, and find eternal life in Him, who is life.


02 October 2018

The Sabbath, the Jews and the Lord of the Sabbath


Given on 30 September
Macquarie Anglican Church

Introduction
Thank you for welcoming me to the pulpit today, to share the message about the Jewish people and the Sabbath. And today we’re going to focus on Leviticus 25 and God giving Torah to the Jewish people on Mt Sinai, and some selected readings from the Gospels.

Maybe because I’m giving this message in a church on a Sunday, once a Jewish man wearing a kippah is introduced as the preacher, some in the church will get nervous, especially if they hear the phrase ‘Mt Sinai’ in his introductory comments. The immediate suspicion among many would be “Oh no, this guy didn’t read Galatians and wants to get us ‘under the Law.’ Or “Oh no, another sermon trying to get me to live in a rule-book religion.” Let me say, from the outset, the purpose of this talk is to focus us on Yeshua himself, to see what He did with this topic, and to see how often he would use the idea or the rules of the Jewish Sabbath to point people to himself. That, my friends, is today’s purpose. Let’s focus on the Yeshua of the Bible and see what we can learn as 21stCentury people. Fair enough?

Setting
I love rhythm. I enjoy a good beat on a drum set, and the commensurate pace of a song or the pace of a swimmer in the Olympics. Everything in life, including the delivery of this sermon, requires a pace, a rhythm. So, when we read in Leviticus 23 that the Jewish people are to meet up with the Almighty on certain days during the year, I see it as his setting us a pace of life. God wanted Israel to have appointments each year AND the first rhythmic beat was the weekly Sabbath.  

Perhaps you already know the annual celebrations and gatherings of the Jewish people: Passover, Shavuot (Pentecost) and Sukkot (Tabernacles) and other ceremonial times. Leviticus 23 begins the list of appointments, when God wants to meet with us, with the weekly Sabbath. There is never any indication that the weekly Sabbath includes a weekly gathering like those in religion have standardized using worship meetings, with song services, prayers, public preaching and offerings. This would have been unknown to the Jewish hearers and to Moses 3,500 years ago. But that there is a weekly observance of Sabbath is clear from the text. 

Leviticus 24 includes laws about the Tabernacle, worship, the laying out of bread for the weekly Sabbath and the use of oil for the menorah. Also two of the 10 commandments are reiterated: murder and blasphemy.

Sabbath for the community

Then we arrive at our text on which I’m focusing.  The first command tonight is make sure the land has a Sabbath.  Let it lie fallow and don’t even pick the grapes in the 7thyear. No tilling, no harvesting, no working the land. Leave it alone. 

Then to amplify the mechanism of rest, God commands a 50thyear, the year of Jubilee, to be added to the cycle. Thus, not only the 49thyear but also the 50thyear will be a time of rest. And not only for the land. During that year, all tribes are reconfigured. People return home to their tribal roots.  And pro rata re-purchasing happens of crops and land. The command is “do not wrong each man his countryman.”  The root word of the verb is yanah meaning oppressor tyrannize as well. 
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So, Sabbath means that we are somehow corporately responsible to one another, to treat other people well, not to oppress or tyrannize, not to wrong other people, especially our own countrymen. Observing the Sabbath in this text does not mean that I alone am to rest from my work, in an individualized state of private religion. It means we are to rest, each week, each 7 years, and each 50 years. Sabbath shouts community.

Not only is it for the people of Israel, it’s also for the male and female servants, for the cattle, for the strangers who reside with us. The place is to be shut for everyone! Have you seen this in operation in Israel? I missed the train, the 2:30 pm train a couple years ago in Caesarea, on a Friday afternoon, to return to Tel Aviv, because they all-- railroad workers, army soldiers, chefs—everyone took the night off, even the late afternoon to prepare for Shabbat.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobmendo/40058467921And I was caught out. I had to arrange a different way home because the trains were shut tight. Back in Bible days, cattle wouldn’t have understood the spiritual truths of Sabbath, but their position with Israel required their participation in the weekly event.

Torah usage
But before we carry on with more about our responsibilities or what else we can learn today, let’s back up and see the biblical beginnings of Sabbath and also how Yeshua dealt with this.

The first use of the word ‘Sabbath’ is in Exodus, the 2ndbook of Moses. I know, you wanted me to say Genesis. In Creation, God blessed the 7thday, but it wasn’t titled ‘Sabbath’ until Exodus 16. There we read that God tells the Jewish people, who had just crossed the Red Sea, to bake and boil enough on Friday for two days. Why? Because the next day would be a Sabbath. Obviously, God meant that the kitchen would usually be closed to such work the next day.  And manna was all we had to eat in those days.

Purpose of Sabbath: Trusting God/ Rest
Other instances of Sabbath and manna in Torah are the double supply on Fridays and commensurate penalty for stocking up on other days and for going out to get more on Saturday. In other words, stick to God’s calendar and you will be right. And trust Him in all your days and all your ways.

There are two listings of the 10 Commandments (Exodus 20 and Deuteronomy 4) God gives two different reasons for us to observe and remember the Sabbath: creation and the Exodus from Egypt. Each of those two reasons reminds us to trust God, who can create everything from nothing, and who can deliver hopelessly enslaved people after hundreds of years. 

Think about trust on another level. Taking a day off each week is very unusual worldwide. In China, Thailand, even in Sri Lanka, in so many locations to this day, people go to work all week. No one takes a day off.  We in Australia don’t understand this because religionists who included Sabbath in their philosophy shaped our country. Think back to Egypt, where slaves worked every day. So, when God told the Jewish people to take a day off each week, he was asking them to donate 14% (1/7th) of their income. In other words, by not working one full day, they were not producing; they were not harvesting; they were not making money. So, God was saying that Israel was to live on the 86% as if it were 100%.  That’s not new for those of you who are believers. God asks us to donate a percentage of our income to the poor and to the community of faith, and to live on the leftovers. Sometimes that’s 90% and sometimes much less. No matter how much you donate, the reality is that the amount we are not making requires the same faith from us today. 

So, if there’s a Torah lesson from the idea of Sabbath it’s that we are designed to trust God in all our lives.

Time to Cease
Before I go on, let me tell you what the word Sabbath literally means. Most of you would say restand in a way that’s true but remember that the Bible says God rested on the 7thday. In our modern understanding, rest implies weariness and exhaustion. But God is never exhausted or weary. The Scripture says He does not grow weary, doesn’t sleep, and doesn’t slumber. (Psalm 121, Isa. 40). So, the better definition would be to cease from something(usually your work).

Thus, God ceased from his work, and other times we read of God putting an end to the wicked (Hosea 1.4, Isa. 13.11), or music stopping (Isa. 24.8) or the work of construction stopping in Nehemiah (6.3). But usually Sabbath means the 7thday of the week, what we call Saturday, and is used that way throughout the Bible.

The time to cease was for most all Israel, but there were some who had to work. That included the priests and those who served; they did not have the day off. They had to perform multitudes of sacrifices, which were more abundant on Shabbat than any other day. Also, warriors had to continue to serve the military, especially after Israel lost a terrible war when some refused to ‘work’ on the Sabbath. 

The rabbis argue (that’s not news) about how long Adam and Eve were in the Garden, but if I read it correctly, the rest that was planned for our First Parents never reached fullness. God kicked us out of the Garden of Eden. “Yet God’s judgment is tempered with mercy. In His grace, He immediately turns His attention to redeeming humanity, a subject that will occupy the rest of the Bible. Despite the absence of an eternal Sabbath, God will institute a weekly Sabbath that reminds His people of Eden and simultaneously shows them the way back to life with God. There is yet hope!” (Rich Robinson, Christ in the Sabbath, p 26) https://www.flickr.com/photos/jewsforjesus/12445781054

Another Day awaits us
In fact, in the book of Genesis, we see a different ‘ending’ for the day later called ‘Sabbath.’ Most days end with the biblical phrase ‘it was evening and morning,’ but not for the 7thday. I believe that in essence, “Sabbath” is the condition which characterizes life in Eden.

Had Adam and Eve not sinned, their life and fellowship with God would still be ongoing—if you will, an eternal Sabbath day. That’s important to note, as the writer of Hebrews in the Newer Testament will emphasize that Sabbath which awaits the people of God. (Heb 4.9)

And in fact, that Adam and Eve were cast out of the Garden of Eden (The word “Eden” means Pleasure), there remains therefore a rest again, somewhere down the proverbial track for us all. Joni Mitchell wrote in her classic poem in 1970 entitled “Woodstock” that we have got to get ourselves ‘back to the Garden.”

Excursus on modern work if you have time:[1]

Then there are those who don’t work at all, retirees, unemployed for various reasons, and lazy people about whom the Proverbs has much to say.

But today we are speaking about the ordinary workweek prescribed in the Bible, working 6 days and taking the 7thoff. 

Modern components
https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobmendo/30578568423In modern days, to ‘observe’ Sabbath includes the food as on many Jewish holidays. They include the sweet Sabbath bread, https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobmendo/3413886104   Challah that more often than not is braided, as well as a sweet red wine, and the lighting of candles all on Friday evening.https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobmendo/3529439499Also that night many will gather in synagogue services or simply stay home and sing songs (Z’mirot).https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobmendo/3728763663

Then on the daytime on Saturday, again synagogue attendance fills many Jewish people’s calendars, not only for one hour, but also for the whole day. Lunch together, study, https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobmendo/5170950825 a bit of rest, a third meal (Shalos s’eudot), and final prayers. People walk to synagogue within the half-mile range allowed since starting a fire, and thus driving a car, is not permitted.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobmendo/4784644434

During Sabbath, husbands and wives are encouraged to have marital relations on non-menstrual days. In fact, the Sabbath itself is represented as a queen. Each week when I was practicing Orthodox Judaism, I would visit the mikveh, the ceremonial cleansing pool, and ready myself to meet Queen Sabbath. 

Many families will have gatherings and their own special traditions of course, and many messianic congregations will encourage this as well.

Rabbinic Challenges
Let’s read Matthew chapter 12[2]and notice a fairly substantial conflict between Yeshua and the rabbis in leadership in his day. Back in the days of the creation of the Talmud, that is, between the time of Jesus and four hundred more years, we discover some language that might help us in discovering what changes Yeshua would bring to the Jewish people.  Understand this though, that throughout his life Yeshua would have been very comfortable in celebrating, honouring, observing and keeping the Sabbath. He went to synagogue normally, taught at times on Sabbath, and even enjoyed shared meals on the Sabbath. 

But problems arose when the rabbis, who wrote the Talmud, https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobmendo/26041512391after Jesus died, kept sealing holes in the story, in the Torah, in the legislation which came from their fathers and legal forbears. Basically, they argued that what their leaders concluded had actually been given to Moses back in the evening on Mt Sinai. The written Torah was given by daytime; the Oral Law (Talmud) was given at night.  Thus, they argued that all the legislative regulations of the rabbis were divine and inspired. That’s where Jesus disagreed with them. And in Matthew 11, he had just concluded this time of teaching with “My yoke is easy; my burden is light.”

It appears that Yeshua broke the rabbinic rules on many occasions, but he never broke the Torah’s legislation. He authorized three things in the first story, the one with the grain fields that were listed in the 39 types of forbidden work.[3]Specifically they are 1) reaping, 2) threshing, and 3) winnowing. Yeshua appeals to contrary evidence, specifically from the Older Testament saying that King David did the same thing, without negative consequences. In other words, the true authorized legislation could not be Mosaic since David was guiltless long after Moses. And the bread he took was the bread about which we read earlier in tonight’s reading.

His argument is that if David and his men (1 Samuel 21) were allowed to transgress what looks like the letter of the law but was not a transgression because they had a need, then they ought to allow such in the case of Jesus, since he and his disciples also had a need. The Pharisees allowed for work to be done on the Sabbath if human life were endangered as must have been in the Davidic episode (thus Zeitlin, cited by Lachs; cf Cohn-Sherbok). Yeshua takes that further to allow for work to be done if someone considered a need, hence the eating of the grain, and he follows this with another argument, and uses a rabbinic method titled kal vachomerLiterally this means "light and weighty.” It’s a principle of biblical interpretation by which a conclusion is drawn from a minor premise to a more major or stricter one. We might use the phrase in English, "all the more so."

He amplifies that beyond the bread story, the priests had to work on the Sabbath, and double duty at times.  [“Temple service takes precedence over the Sabbath” (recorded in the Talmud: Sabb.132b).] Yeshua says kal vachomer, if that light rule is allowed, then the greater rule is to be followed as well.  And since he is the greater Son of David, His appeal is actually an announcement of His own person. He says he is greater than the Temple. In other words, His real answer: you are not in charge. I am. What an explosive argument!

So as is typical of Yeshua, he gives a haggadic argument (David’s story), a halachic argument (priests working), and draws some conclusions including the famous line: The Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath.[4]But his conclusions splash us up onto the next story.

After this episode, Matthew tells us a story with the healing of the man with the withered hand. The story begins with a teaching moment, “Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath?” And there is not one verse anywhere in the Bible where healing is illegal, but by convention, healing was not permitted unless a person’s life was in imminent danger.

Yeshua answers the questioning ones with another kal vachomer interpretation, saying if you would save an animal that falls into a pit,[5]then surely people are more important than animals, and Yeshua instructs the man with the withered hand to trust Him and stretch out his own hand. The man does and is healed immediately. 

Now I think sometimes Yeshua did these things to stir things up a bit. In other words, he could have healed the withered hand on Sunday or Tuesday if he wanted, but so that the people had to deal with his Lordship, he healed on the Sabbath. 

He did the same with the man who was by the pool in John chapter 5. He heals the lame man and tells him to “take up your pallet and walk.”[6]He could have healed the man on Tuesday or any other day, but his point was twofold: to heal the man and thus have mercy (Hosea 6.6) and to show the Jewish leadership that He was Lord of all.  The Pharisees confronted the healed lame man about carrying on the Sabbath, one of the 39 types of forbidden work. He basically said, “You guys left me lying there 38 years. This guy healed me in a moment. You keep your religion; I’m going with the healer guy!”

Some of the Pharisees said that man was made for compliance with Torah, that God made Israel for honouring the Sabbath. Yeshua said, “Nope.” He declared, “Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.” (Mark 2.27)

Final Remarks
Some final remarks if I might.
1) I’ve never seen a verse in the Bible where worship and public gathering is associated with Sabbath, but that doesn’t mean that I hate gathering with believers or attending synagogue. What this means is that I choose to guard my family shutdown time and also want to leave room for community in my observation of Sabbath.

2) The Bible tells me that some believers will honour and keep Sabbath as a special day and others will not. It also says that we are to let people do as they do as ‘unto the Lord.’ (Romans 14.6) People who observe a special day as well as those who do not have this charge: do what you do unto the Lord. That same idea was in our reading today, Leviticus 25.2 “‘When you come into the land which I shall give you, then the land shall have a Sabbath to the LORD.” h`DwhyAl

Whether we eat or drink, whether we observe a day or consider all days alike, the “unto the Lord” is the operative phrase.  So, it’s not a matter of gaining points or earning a higher place in heaven, but a matter of honouring God and being personal with him in this regard.

3) No amount of biblical compliance will earn you greater proximity to the Almighty or cause you to abandon him. Any religion, which turns into a ‘checklist religion’, is a false system, which will eventuate into only one of two results, and neither is good. If you satisfy the requirements, you will be smug and self-considering. Your trust will be in yourself and your accomplishments. You think you will have earnedGod’s favour. If you fail in satisfying those demands, you will feel condemned and thus far or at least further from the Almighty. 
Neither result—pride or condemnation—accomplishes grace. 

4) I appreciate being allowed to weigh in on this subject with you. I hope you will continue to consider taking a rest day once each week, not twice or three times, and that you work the other 6 days. I hope you find deep times with Messiah in those Sabbath days and that your drum beat will keep you with Him in the rhythm of the heavens.  It’s all about trusting God, isn’t it? And honouring the True Lord of the Sabbath.

For a comprehensive biblical read of the subject, please pick up the book Christ in the Sabbath by Rich Robinson 

ENDNOTES

[1]Americans are catching on to the European style of workweek however. I read some website which reported this: Compressed workweeks – the delightful term human resources people use for putting in 40 hours in fewer than five days – are “a great way to provide employees the flexibility to meet the demands of work and life outside of work,” says Lisa Horn, co-leader of the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) Workplace Flexibility Initiative and partnership with theFamilies and Work Institute.
“A four-day workweek allows you to continue to contribute on the job while gaining the time to pursue a long-neglected avocation, to help care for the grandchildren or to simply enjoy the other parts of life,” says Cali Williams Yost, chief executive and founder of Flex+Strategy Group in Madison, N.J.
Brooke Dixon, co-founder and chief executive of Hourly.com, a site that matches job-seekers with employers, says “well above half our users are looking for something other than a traditional workweek.”

[2]At that time Jesus went through the grain fields on the Sabbath, and His disciples became hungry and began to pick the headsof grainand eat. But when the Pharisees sawthis,they said to Him, “Look, Your disciples do what is not lawful to do on a Sabbath.”  But He said to them, “Have you not read what David did when he became hungry, he and his companions,how he entered the house of God, and they ate the consecrated bread, which was not lawful for him to eat nor for those with him, but for the priests alone?Or have you not read in the Law, that on the Sabbath the priests in the temple break the Sabbath and are innocent?But I say to you that something greater than the temple is here.But if you had known what this means, ‘I DESIRE COMPASSION, AND NOT A SACRIFICE,’ you would not have condemned the innocent.For the Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath.”

Departing from there, He went into their synagogue. And a manwas therewhose hand was withered. And they questioned Jesus, asking, “Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath?”— so that they might accuse Him.  And He said to them, “What man is there among you who has a sheep, and if it falls into a pit on the Sabbath, will he not take hold of it and lift it out?How much more valuable then is a man than a sheep! So then, it is lawful to do good on the Sabbath.”Then He said to the man, “Stretch out your hand!” He stretched it out, and it was restored to normal, like the other. But the Pharisees went out and conspired against Him, as tohow they might destroy Him. (Matt. 12.1-14) 
[3]1.Flaying 2.Tanning 3.Scraping hide 4.Marking hides 5.Cutting hide to shape 6.Writing two or more letters 7.Erasing two or more letters 8.Building 9.Demolishing 10.Extinguishing a fire 11.Kindling a fire 12.Putting the finishing touch on an object 13.Transporting an object between a private domain and the public domain, or for a distance of 4 cubits within the public domain. 14.Beating wool 15.Dyeing wool 16.Spinning 17.Weaving 18.Making two loops 19.Weaving two threads 20.Separating two threads 21.Tying 22.Untying 23.Sewing stitches 24.Tearing 25.Trapping 26.Slaughtering 27.Sowing 28.Plowing 29.Reaping 30.Binding sheaves 31.Threshing 32.Winnowing 33.Selecting 34.Grinding 35.Sifting 36.Kneading 37.Baking 38.Shearing wool 39.Washing wool
[4]From the Word Biblical Commentary: The Son of Man, ie, Jesus, is said here to be the “Lord of the sabbath” in the sense that he has the sovereign authority to decide what loyalty to the sabbath means (cf the freedom of a prophet concerning the law in Yebam 90b). This is obviously part of the larger fact, to which Matthew has already introduced the reader, that as the promised one, the Messiah, Jesus is the authoritative and definitive interpreter of the Torah.
[5]The Qumran community disallowed even this activity on the Sabbath (CD 11:13–14)
[6]John 5.1¶ After these things there was a feast of the Jews, and Jesus went up to Jerusalem. ¶ Now there is in Jerusalem by the sheepgatea pool, which is called in Hebrew Bethesda, having five porticoes. In these lay a multitude of those who were sick, blind, lame, and withered, [waiting for the moving of the waters; for an angel of the Lord went down at certain seasons into the pool and stirred up the water; whoever then first, after the stirring up of the water, stepped in was made well from whatever disease with which he was afflicted.] A man was there who had been ill for thirty-eight years. 
When Jesus saw him lyingthere,and knew that he had already been a long timein that condition,He *said to him, “Do you wish to get well?”The sick man answered Him, “Sir, I have no man to put me into the pool when the water is stirred up, but while I am coming, another steps down before me.” 
Jesus *said to him, “Get up, pick up your pallet and walk.”Immediately the man became well, and picked up his pallet and beganto walk. Now it was the Sabbath on that day. 
So the Jews were saying to the man who was cured, “It is the Sabbath, and it is not permissible for you to carry your pallet.” 
But he answered them, “He who made me well was the one who said to me, ‘Pick up your pallet and walk.’

A Biblical Theology of Mission

 This sermon was given at Cross Points church in suburban Kansas City (Shawnee, Kansas) on Sunday 17 November.  For the video, click on this...