
Volume
2, No. 2
February 21, 2002
Reclaiming
the Sabbath
is off to a flying start at Resurrection, Spring. Thirty members of the
congregation are enrolled in the initial ten weeks leadership training process.
We have completed three weeks on Tuesday evenings from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m.
The group is very enthusiastic. The challenge before them is to discover
ways by which these studies may be taken to the other members of the
congregation from Sunday School and confirmands to single adults, families and
seniors.
Following
is the table of contents of the workbook. Each week group members receive
an outline of the evening's lecture and study materials to work on during
the week.
RECLAIMING
THE SABBATH
Resurrection Lutheran Church
Spring, Texas
Leadership Training
Weekly Topics
1. Introduction to the Beatitudes
The Cultural Shift of the 20th Century
2. The Beatitudes - Introduction
Creation and the Seventh Day
3. Beatitude One
The Sabbath and the Old Covenant
4. Beatitude Two
The Sabbath and the New Covenant
5. Beatitude Three
The Sabbath and the Early Church
6. Beatitude Four
The Sabbath and the Reformation Church
7. Beatitude Five
God’s Word of Power in Worship
8. Beatitude Six
The Place of Tradition in Worship
9. Beatitude Seven
The Sabbath and the Family
10. Beatitude Eight
Plans for recruitment and training
The
foci of our studies
are threefold: First we're asking what is going on in the American culture in
which we live. Secondly, we are praying that the Lord of the church will
grant us wisdom to reclaim all that He has to teach us about the Sabbath
in our lives. Finally, each class member is using provided materials to do an
in-depth study of the Eight Beatitudes, asking particularly what blessing the
Lord wants to pour into the life of His child.
In terms of the culture consider the following quote from an article
entitled "Time and Busyness" by Kerby Anderson at Leadership
University's website: http://www.leaderu.com/index.html
"It wasn't supposed to be this way. Testimony before a Senate subcommittee
in 1967 predicted that "by 1985, people could be working just 22 hours a
week or 27 weeks a year or could retire at 38." The major challenge facing
people in the 1990s should have been what to do with all the leisure time
provided by our technological wizardry.
Instead, technology has been more of an enemy than an ally. "Technology is
increasing the heartbeat," says Manhattan architect James Trunzo, who
designs automated environments. "We are inundated with information. The
mind can't handle it all. The pace is so fast now, I sometimes feel like a
gunfighter dodging bullets."
Actually, the problem isn't so much technology as it is the heightened
expectations engendered by it. The increased speed and efficiency of appliances,
computers, and other machines have enabled us to accomplish much more than was
possible in previous decades. But this efficiency has also fostered a desire to
take on additional responsibilities and thereby squeeze even more activities
into already crammed calendars.
As the pace of our lives has increased, over-commitment and busyness have been
elevated to socially desirable standards. Being busy is chic and trendy. Pity
the poor person who has an organized life and a livable schedule. Everyone, it
seems, is running out of time."
There are, of course, other factors
that are leading people away from worship and the hearing of God's Word, to say
nothing about the critical importance of taking time for rest, for family and
for relationships. Os Guinness in his 1998 book,
Dining with the Devil: The Megachurch Movement Flirts with Modernity
constructively critiques the church growth movement and the new mega- churches,
focusing especially on the use of the new ground of modern insights and
techniques. He seeks not to dismiss the church growth movement, but rather
to critique the perils and pitfalls that come from the new ground. Modernity,
he writes, undermines the churches’ capacity both to demonstrate the
integrity and effectiveness of faith and to provide an answer to America’s
crisis. . . the overwhelming thrust of modernity has been to replace words with
images and reading with viewing. On the other hand, the words that remain have
been weakened because they have become technical, specialized and abstract to
most people. So much for Guinness. The question we face is how we can
proclaim and share the Word of God in all its richness and how that Word may
truly become the means by which we grow in our relationship with the Lord Jesus.
Our second focus is upon an in-depth Bible
study of the Sabbath . We are discovering that the Bible
has many, important things to tell us about the created rhythm of six days
work and one day of rest, a rhythm that is now almost completely ignored. In
addition, we are learning the critical importance of gathering for worship and
the hearing of God's word so that our faith may be strengthened and
sustained. Jesus is our Rest. Without Him, we are without rest and peace
in our lives. Following is a sample from the Bible study for the
fourth week of Reclaiming the Sabbath:
Jesus preferred the Sabbath as the day for
working His miracles or signs.
· Matthew 12:9-14 - He healed a man’s deformed hand
on the Sabbath.
· Mark 1:21-28 - He cast out a demon on the Sabbath.
· Luke 13:10-17 - He healed a crippled woman on the Sabbath.
· Luke 14:1-6 - He healed a sick man on the Sabbath, while
dining in the home of a Pharisee.
· John 5:1 ff. - He healed a paralytic by Bethesda Pool on
the Sabbath.
· John 7:16-24 - Jesus defends His healings by pointing out
that, if required, Circumcision was even done on the Sabbath.
· John 9 (v.14) - Jesus is challenged for healing a blind man
on the Sabbath.
The Sabbath is the day above all others when
He works, as does His Father.
· John 5:16-30 - His Father never stops working, so why
should He?
Resurrection will continue the process of
Reclaiming the Sabbath through the remainder of this year and to
the fall of 2003. In the Spring of 2003 Pastor Steve Sohns will be
on a four months Sabbatical. When he returns, both pastor and flock look
forward to having been renewed and strengthened for their combined work in
the Kingdom.
Plans are developing to produce these Sabbath studies in book form in the near
future. If you would like more information about this entire
process, please drop us a note. You might also want to contact Pastor Steve
Sohns at Resurrection, Spring (pastor.steve@churchthatcares.org
).
CrossTies Board meets this month
at Resurrection, Spring, Saturday, February 23, 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Guests
are always welcome at the meetings.
Check out our web site @ http://www.crosstiesministries.org/
God bless your ministry and your family,
Dr. Al Franzmeier, Executive Director
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