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In a culture that confuses busyness with holiness and productivity with worth, Sabbath is a holy protest of resistance. It is God teaching His people to say “enough” when the world keeps saying “more.” Sabbath exposes the lie that we are machines as we refuse to be driven by anxiety, achievement, or algorithms. We cease from buying, selling, scrolling, and striving so we can receive time as a gift rather than grind. This is not laziness; it’s loyalty—an embodied allegiance to the Kingdom where people are not commodities, and where rest is not a reward but a sign of trust. To keep Sabbath is to resist a world that never stops—and to witness to a God who did.
By Mount Hamilton Baptist ChurchIn a culture that confuses busyness with holiness and productivity with worth, Sabbath is a holy protest of resistance. It is God teaching His people to say “enough” when the world keeps saying “more.” Sabbath exposes the lie that we are machines as we refuse to be driven by anxiety, achievement, or algorithms. We cease from buying, selling, scrolling, and striving so we can receive time as a gift rather than grind. This is not laziness; it’s loyalty—an embodied allegiance to the Kingdom where people are not commodities, and where rest is not a reward but a sign of trust. To keep Sabbath is to resist a world that never stops—and to witness to a God who did.