-
No Rest For The Righteous Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 7, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: No one takes this literally and tries to stay awake 24 hours a day. What Paul means, he does mean very literally, and that is that the Christian must be always wide awake in his relationship to Christ. We must at all times, and in all places, be conscious that we are Christians
- 1
- 2
- 3
- Next
While I was visiting in the hospital one of the workers came in
and a patient said, “Are you still working?” “Yes,” she said, “No rest
for the wicked, and I guess I am awfully wicked.” We have all
heard this at some time or another, but the thought came to me that
it is ridiculous to apply that to manual labor, when as a matter of
fact the righteous have to and ought to work just as hard and
harder. The biblical origin of that statement has an all together
meaning that would not likely be bantered about as a bit of humor if
those who use it knew.
The wicked, says Isa. 57:20-21, “are like the tossing sea; for it
cannot rest, and its water toss up mire and dirt, there is no peace,
says my God, for the wicked. In Rev. 11:14 we read, “And the
smoke of their torment goes up for ever and ever; and they have no
rest, day or night, these worshipers of the beast and its image...”
The biblical context to that statement than is that the wicked person
has a turbulent meaningless life now, because he is not at peace with
God, and will have no rest for all eternity if he does not come to
Christ.
On the other hand, those who do come to Christ enter into His
rest as we read in Heb. 4:1-3, and which Jesus invites us to in Matt.
11:29, where he says, “Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me, for
I am meek and lowly in heart, and you shall find rest unto your
souls.” Rest means a great many things in the Bible. We use that
one 4 letter word to translate over 16 different Hebrew words and 7
different Greek words. The term as we are using it simply refers to
the fact that wicked are not right with God, and so they are restless.
The righteous in Christ are right with God, and so they are restful.
As Augustine put it, “Our souls are restless till the find rest in God.”
Now getting to our text, we see another aspect of this whole
matter. We see that there is a very real sense in which the
statement, which is wrongly applied to the wicked, can be rightly
applied to the righteous. We can appropriate a misused saying and
fill it with biblical content by saying there is no rest for the
righteous. Paul in verse 6 says therefore, that is, since we are
children of the day and not of the night, let us not sleep as do others.
The others being those of the night, or non-Christians. We see here
that there is a sense in which we as Christians are not to rest or
sleep.
No one takes this literally and tries to stay awake 24 hours a
day. What Paul means he does mean very literally, and that is that
the Christian must be always wide awake in his relationship to
Christ. We must at all times, and in all places, be conscious that we
are Christians, and that we have been bought with a price, and there
will be a day of judgment. Being wide awake to this means a life
without rest in terms of our labor to win men to Christ, and in our
striving to be more Christ-like ourselves in every aspect of life.
There is to be no sleeping on the job, for we are to be always wide
awake to our responsibility.
In New York there is a Church Of The Heavenly Rest.
Seminary students jokingly refer to it as The Church Of The
Celestial Snooze. There is a good deal of joking about sleeping in
church, and its humor grows out of the fact that it is often so true.
One sermon snoozer poet wrote, “I do not see my preacher’s eyes,
However bright they shine. For when he prays, he closes his, And
when he preachers, closes mine.” Paul is not writing here about
sleeping in church, but about the sleeping of the church in the sense
of ceasing to be the instrument of God for the advancement of His
kingdom. Paul is concerned about the danger of lethargy and
indifference as to God’s plan in history. It is the danger of becoming
a spiritual Rip Van Winkle. Jesus gave this same warning in His
parable of the 10 virgins. Five of them slept unprepared for the
bridegroom, and they were shut out of the wedding feast. Samson is
also an illustration of the danger of sleeping and not watching.
Paul says it is perfectly consistent for non-Christians to sleep
and be unconcerned about the things of God. They are children of
the night, and that is when people do sleep, and that is when