Sunday, January 23, 2011

Sabbath by Dan B. Allender


Sabbath is one of the books in the Ancient Practices Series and focuses on God’s command to “remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy”. Allender look at the way we view Sabbath today, seeing this day as a day we have to go to church and (if you were raised in the same tradition as me) required nap time. Yet Allender points out that the Sabbath is so much more, a day we set apart from all the other days to rejoice and spend time with God. “Many who take the Sabbath seriously and intentionally ruin it with legislation and worrisome fences that protect the Sabbath but destroy its delight”. Sabbath is more than a day off work, more than a set of do’s and don’ts, more than tradition. Sabbath should be a time we delight in God and in the world God has given us. This delight leads us into worship, not just at a worship service, but in all that we see and do on our Sabbath. Sabbath is a day we spend in the presence of those we love, listening to them, sharing with them, serving them. Sabbath should be a day of joy, yet what differentiates the day for believers is whether “we will invite God to join us in Sabbath joy, to dine with us and celebrate”? Many people see Sunday as the Sabbath, church as our answer to the call for worship, and the Sunday afternoon nap as answering God’s call to rest. Allender helps us realize that our Sunday’s can become Sabbath days, set apart for our good and God’s glory. I confess that in my life this is a great challenge, and as I look at some of the ways the author spends his Sabbath I wonder if those things would ever be possible in my busy world. Yet I also know that the description of Sabbath given by Allender is an echo of the true Sabbath, when we will stand in the presence of Christ and truly celebrate. I would recommend this book to others. I received this book free from Thomas Nelson Publishers as part of their BookSneeze.com book review bloggers program. I am under no compulsion to write a positive or negative review of this book. The opinions expressed are exclusively my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255.

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