Sabbath rest and healing - June 2 sermon

2 Pentecost: Proper 4/Year B/June 2, 2024

Deuteronomy 5:12-15; Psalm 81:1-10; 2 Corinthians 4:5-12; Mark 2:23-3:6

 

I invite you to settle into a moment of sabbath rest and silence as I begin with this prayer…

Opening Prayer: For Quiet Confidence (BCP 832)

O God of peace, who has taught us that in returning and rest we shall be saved, in quietness and confidence shall be our strength: By the might of your Spirit lift us, we pray you to your presence, where we may be still and know that you are God; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

 

Pause for time of silence…

 

How hard was that for you? How awkward did it feel? Was your mind still racing and working overtime as we sat in silence? Were you getting anxious for me to end this time of silence? Or did you welcome this moment of quiet? Did you allow your mind to cease from its’ worry for just a short while? Did you feel your body slowly relaxing or not?

It has become harder and harder for folks in our face-paced, information overload, consumer driven society, to truly embrace the Sabbath that God has commanded of us. If we allow ourselves to get caught up in it all, it never ends…we have everything at our disposal 24 hours a day: keeping up with the national news, shopping online or in person, the ability to keep up with work no matter where we are…the ability to search for all kinds of answers and information that we think is important for us to know or be in the know about because they are just a fingertip swipe across our iPhone screens or on our computers…

You know what else never ends…if we continue to be “on” 24 hours a day? The worries, the fears, the anxiety of never having enough, the growing sense of hopelessness because of all that is happening around the world, and in our own neighborhoods, the oppression of others, the continuance of systems that perpetually separate us from one another, and exploit people’s lives, and allows no time of rest or healing for all of God’s people…

In today’s gospel, Jesus makes it clear what keeping the Sabbath is about…it’s about setting aside time for rest and healing for all God’s people…not just a select few…it’s about taking time to focus on what truly matters in this life…attending to our relationships with God, one another, and all of creation.

We can’t do that if we are continually fixing our attention on all the 24 hour temptations and distractions that seek to separate us, instead of unite us to one another…we can’t do that until we can make it a regular practice in our own lives to get off the 24 hour runaway train…to be still and know that God is God, and we are not…so that in returning and rest we all shall be saved…and in quietness and confidence, we can remember where the strength to heal our relationships with one another in the world comes from…the God of love and light made known to us in the face of Jesus Christ, and through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit who invites us to settle in to those moments of sabbath rest…true rest for our restless hearts…

So, that rested, grounded in the love and light and hope and peace of God…we can go out into the world to love one another in such a way that allows for others to have that same pleasure of rest and healing…all for the sake of God’s love and abundant joy that is intended for all God’s people…

As we move into a new season of the church year and summer season, I invite you to think about how you might go about being more intentional about keeping the sabbath…as one whole day…or as small sabbath moments throughout the week…

Maybe that looks like taking a leisurely stroll somewhere, or relaxing and watching some favorite old movies, or picking up a book to read and dozing between chapters…Maybe it means enjoying an afternoon or evening music concert…Maybe it means you turn off all electronics for a time…or making a decision not to buy anything…

Maybe it looks like setting aside time to focus on one simple prayer, using the one I opened up my sermon with today, maybe it’s other prayers in our book of common prayer that invite us to pray for those who work while we sleep, to pray for children and families growing up in uncertain times, to pray for those struggling with addiction, to pray for those whose increasing years bring them weakness, distress, or isolation; maybe your sabbath times will be through your experiences of worship this summer, as we alternate between quiet services and services with music…as we incorporate more intentional times of silence in the midst of our various worship services…maybe you will join with others on Mondays @ 11am in the See House….practicing reading and praying the Sunday gospels, in a slow, reflective way…maybe you will try out the short noonday prayer service held on zoom every Wednesday…or maybe you will join others on the Scripture Walks through Totem Park on the 1st & 3rd Wednesdays of the month…

This summer, I encourage you to explore and seek ways, new ways perhaps, that will enable you to enter into the sabbath rest and healing of God… So, that rested, grounded in the love and light and hope and peace of God…you can go out into the world to love one another in such a way that allows for others to have that same pleasure of rest and healing…all for the sake of God’s love and abundant joy that is intended for all God’s people…

 

 

Closing Prayer/Hymn: Still, still with thee (vs 1-3)

Voices Found, #30

 

1        Still, still with thee, when purple morning breaketh,

          when the bird waketh, and the shadows flee;

          fairer than morning, lovelier than the daylight,

          dawns the sweet consciousness, I am with thee.

 

2        Alone with thee, amid the mystic shadows,

          the solemn hush of nature newly born;

          alone with thee in breathless adoration,

          in the calm dew and freshness of the morn.

 

3        When sinks the soul, subdued by toil, to slumber,

          its closing eye looks up to thee in prayer;

          sweet the repose beneath thy wings over shading,

          but sweeter still to wake and find thee there.

 

 

Rev Julie Platson, Rector

St Peter’s by the Sea Episcopal Church, Sitka,