Ángel
Manuel Rodríguez
What
is the rest mentioned in Hebrews 4:1-11, and how is it related to the
seventh-day Sabbath?
Hebrews
4:1-11 has been used, on one hand, to support the observance of the Sabbath commandment by Christians;
and on the other hand, as evidence for the rejection of a literal obedience
to the commandment. Others
have concluded that the passage addresses neither observance nor nonobservance
of the Sabbath. These contradictory positions show that the meaning of
the text is not that obvious.
1. Purpose of the Passage: Hebrews 3:74:11 emphasizes the need for perseverance
and faithfulness in the Christian community. The discussion about Gods
rest is subordinate to that more specific goal and is used to motivate
believers to be faithful. Thats why there is not a detailed discussion
on the nature of the rest God offered His people in the past but is still
available today. It also clarifies the emphasis found throughout
Hebrews 4 on the problem of unbelief and disobedience and the need for
diligence in the Christian life. The passage is not a theological exposition
of the typological fulfillment of the Sabbath, or of the nature of the
Sabbath, or of the eschatological rest. It is simply an exhortation
to faithfulness.
2. Gods Rest: The Old Testament contains a theology of Gods rest in addition to
the theology of the Sabbath that deals with Gods promise of rest
to His people in the land and to His own resting in the temple. Psalm
95:11 demonstrates that the promise of Gods rest found in the Old Testament
was not fulfilled because of the unbelief of His people. Therefore, Hebrews
does not identify the rest with the entrance into the land of Canaan. Consequently, the rest remains to be fulfilled (Heb.
4:1, 9) and believers are exhorted to make every effort to enter this
rest (verse 11). Yet the rest also seems to be a present experience (verse
3). Although that rest is not clearly defined in the text, it probably
designates the blessing of salvation we enjoy now as we wait for
its consummation.
3. Role of the Sabbath in the Passage: Hebrews is not equating the Sabbath rest with the eschatological
rest. It states that Gods eschatological rest, like the Sabbath,
has been available since He finished His work of creation. The Sabbath
rest also illustrates the nature of the rest that is still available as
a cessation from ones works. Hebrews 4:10
uses the Sabbath of Genesis 2:2 as a model for its understanding of the
eschatological rest. The enjoyment of both the eschatological rest and
the Sabbath require ceasing from work. The works Hebrews refers to are
not specifically identified, but it could be suggested that contextually
they are not the works of the law. The Pauline discussion of justification
by faith versus the works of the law is foreign to the argument of Hebrews.
One could suggest that the works mentioned are works of rebellion and
unfaithfulness (cf. Heb. 4:6).
4. A Rest Remains: The rest that remains (sabbatismos, Sabbath observance, sabbath rest [verse 9]) is the rest that was left unfulfilled
in the Old Testament (the katapausis,
rest, resting place [verses 1, 6]). But the word sabbatismos
(sabbath rest)
makes its own contribution to the discussion in that it clearly defines
the eschatological rest (katapausis) as Gods Sabbathlike
rest. That is to say, the seventh-day Sabbath rest illustrates the nature
of the eschatological rest. This suggests that for the author of Hebrews
the theology of the Sabbath was so meaningful that he utilized it to interpret
Gods eschatological rest. The context does not support the suggestion
that the Sabbath commandment had been fulfilled in the rest of salvation
that Christ brought, making it unnecessary for Christians to obey it.
The offer
of the Sabbathlike rest in the Old Testament
did not set aside the literal observance of the Sabbath commandment (Isa.
56; 66:23); likewise, the eschatological rest is like the Sabbath but
does not replace it. Besides, entering Gods rest in Hebrews
4 does not mean that the Sabbath is superseded. To enter Gods rest
requires only perseverance and faithfulness, ceasing from our works, not
the rejection of obedience to the Sabbath commandment. There is nothing
in the text concerning a new type of Sabbath observance
that replaces the literal observance of the fourth commandment.
10/10/02
Copyright © Biblical Research Institute General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists®