Tuesday, November 08, 2005

The Lost Art of Sleeping In

“Ruff!! Ruff!”
“What the…,” exclaimed a weary-eyed sleeper. Fumbling like a drunken bum, he finally found the clock. His brain stared at the devise until it registered the true state of affairs: “It’s 6:00 in the morning!” With a heavy sigh, he turns toward the enticing pillow…

Rummmble! Rooaar!! The screaming, shattering chainsaw chases a terrified man. Running with all his might, he evades the chainsaw, only to see it crashing through another door…and wakes him up to the familiar sound of a lawn mower. This time it’s 7 AM.

Screeching, screaming and shouting, the local street urchins abort his attempted Saturday morning sleep-in at 7:30.

What is the point of sleeping in? No one else does. I seem to remember my parents sleeping in on at least one weekend day. They would warn my sister and me to be quite lest we feel a wrath that would pale the likes of Khan.

However, in the last few years, if we stay up late on a Friday night (which I thought most people our age did, with or without children), it only makes sense that we would try to sleep in a little on Saturday. And I don’t mean until 10:30 either.

Why the change? Could it be that more people are trying to busy themselves these days? Or that they carry the weekday rush into the weekend? The six-year old has to attend pee-wee league, the backyard has to have a new deck and so many things must be accomplished by noon on Saturday. Naturally, both Saturday and Sunday are “get-things-done” days because the rest of the week is filled with extended hours (from bosses and companies who live for money), meetings, veterinarian appointments, sporting events, and what-nots.

Rest is lost. Community is gone. And the church and Sabbath are no longer central to the family units.

In America there is no Sabbath rest. The Gospel is meaningless, so the Sabbath day is meaningless (Heb. 4:1ff) and the church is pushed into the periphery. We live in one of the most unchurched cities in America. And we see that every Sunday morning when by 8:30 we are ready to drive to church, while the neighbors ready their lawnmowers, hedge-clippers and motorbikes.

Perhaps Americans are becoming more busy and less rested as they attempt to drown-out the call of the Gospel. Or perhaps I’m simply asking too much to be able to sleep in just a little.

Nah…

SDG

2 comments:

Wes White said...

Thanks for your thoughts on this post.

I would question, though, whether we really are as busy as we think we are. We are busy because we have to go hunting, visit the mountains, take care of all the stuff that we buy, watch sports on Saturday & Sunday afternoons, go out for dinner, take care of our huge homes, and so on.

We're busy with the "things" (quite literally) of this world because that's where our hearts are. We're not busy with God because our heart is not with Him, and we don't love Him.

If we desired to make God a priority, there has hardly been a society in which we are more capable of doing so. Which one of us would literally starve if we did not work on Sunday? Let's say that we even had to be cut down to a $20,000 a year job so that we did not have to work on Sunday. We may not have a nice TV, nice clothes, or a nice care, but we could survive (especially if we made use of government aid!).

There's no excuse. We're not in fellowship with God because we don't want to be.

polymathis said...

Amen.