Hebrews 4

Apr 19, 2026    Pastor Sean Williams

Sabbath doesn’t simply mean rest; it means to cease, to stop striving. And what you enter when you stop is not emptiness, but shalom, not just peace as the absence of trouble, but wholeness in the presence of God, a deep settling of the soul. Augustine captured it after a lifetime of searching: “You have made us for yourself, and our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” From Genesis, we see this rest was God’s intention: creation finished, humanity placed into a world already complete, no striving, no anxiety, only communion. But in one moment of distrust, we stepped out of dependence and into striving, and ever since humanity has been restless, running, achieving, numbing, trying to hold what only God can carry. Yet God never stopped calling His people back: manna in the wilderness, Sabbath rhythm in the law, prophets grieving a people who “forgot their resting place.” Hebrews then reveals the point: there remains a rest still open, not entered by effort but by faith, and that rest is not a principle, it is a Person. Jesus, who says, “Come to Me, all who are weary,” and from the cross declares, “It is finished.” Sabbath was never a rule to perform but a gift to receive, rest is returning to Him, where striving ends and life begins.