The Sabbath as Rest and Hope for the People of God - Short Studies in Biblical Theology - Paperback

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A concise biblical theology of the Sabbath, showing how God’s gift of rest points to Christ and the eternal rest believers will enjoy in the new creation.

Part of the  Short Studies in Biblical Theology  Series

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Rest. It Is One of the Most Longed-For Things in the Modern World — and One of the Most Misunderstood in the Christian Church.

Most Christians know that the Sabbath matters. They know that God rested on the seventh day, that he commanded Israel to observe it, and that it appears in the Ten Commandments. But what exactly does the Sabbath mean? Has it been fulfilled in Christ — or does it still bind Christians today? What does the New Testament say about it? And what does it have to do with the ultimate hope of the people of God?

These are not easy questions. The Sabbath is one of the most debated and most misunderstood subjects in biblical theology — generating disagreement not just between Christians and the wider culture but within the church itself. And yet, as Guy Prentiss Waters shows in this concise and carefully argued study, the Sabbath is also one of the most rich and hope-giving themes in the entire Bible — a thread that runs from the creation of the world to the consummation of all things, reminding God’s people at every point of both the rest that God provides and the rest that is still to come.

From Creation to Consummation — The Full Arc of the Sabbath Theme

The Sabbath as Rest and Hope for the People of God is part of the Short Studies in Biblical Theology series from Crossway — a collection of brief, accessible, and academically rigorous studies in the major themes of Scripture. Waters brings his gifts as a careful biblical scholar and Reformed theologian to an introductory study that is both comprehensive in its canonical sweep and accessible in its presentation.

He organises the study around the major stages and genres of biblical revelation, tracing the Sabbath theme through each:

Creation — the foundation of the Sabbath The Sabbath does not begin with Moses. It begins with God. On the seventh day of creation, God rested from his work — not because he was tired but because his creation work was complete, good, and crowned with his presence. This divine rest established a creational pattern and a creational invitation: the rhythm of work and rest that God built into the fabric of the world, and the hint of a deeper rest — a participation in God’s own rest — that creation was always moving toward.

Law — the Sabbath at Sinai When God gave Israel the law at Sinai, the Sabbath command was embedded at the very heart of it — the fourth commandment, grounded in both creation (the creation pattern of Exodus 20) and redemption (the Exodus deliverance of Deuteronomy 5). Waters carefully unpacks what the Sabbath meant for Israel, how it functioned within the covenant, what its observance and violation meant for the covenant relationship, and how it pointed beyond itself to a rest that law-keeping alone could never provide.

Prophets — the Sabbath in the context of exile and hope The prophets addressed Israel’s Sabbath failure with both warning and promise. The exile was connected to Sabbath violation — the land needed its rest. But the prophets also held out the vision of a renewed Sabbath observance in the age of restoration — a rest that the whole world would one day share. Waters shows how the prophetic treatment of the Sabbath deepens its eschatological dimensions and points forward to the one who would finally provide the rest that the Sabbath always promised.

Jesus — the Sabbath fulfilled and transformed The Sabbath controversies of the Gospels are among the most significant and most misunderstood episodes in the life of Jesus. Waters shows that Jesus is not abolishing the Sabbath in these controversies — he is fulfilling it. He is the Lord of the Sabbath. He is the one in whom the rest that the Sabbath always pointed toward has finally arrived. And his resurrection on the first day of the week marks a new beginning — a new creation Sabbath — that transforms how his people observe and understand the day of rest.

Apostles — the Sabbath in the New Testament church The apostolic teaching on the Sabbath in Romans 14, Colossians 2, and Hebrews 3–4 is carefully and clearly unpacked. Waters shows how the apostles understood the Sabbath in the light of Christ’s fulfilment — what the weekly day of rest means for Christian worship, community, and hope — and how the Sabbath rest of Hebrews 4 points forward to the ultimate rest still to come.

New creation — the Sabbath’s full restoration The Sabbath points beyond itself throughout the whole biblical narrative — and its full restoration in the new heavens and the new earth is where the thread finally arrives. The rest that God intended from the beginning, that Israel was called to anticipate, that Jesus inaugurated, will finally be fully and permanently realised in the consummation of all things. This eschatological horizon gives the Sabbath theme its deepest meaning and the people of God their ultimate hope.

The Sabbath as Covenant Sign and Hope

Waters consistently shows that the Sabbath is not primarily about rules or restrictions. It is about relationship — about the covenant that God has made with his people and the rest that flows from it. The Sabbath is a covenant sign: a recurring reminder that God’s people belong to the God who rested, who redeemed, and who promises a final rest that will surpass everything the weekly Sabbath only gestures toward.

This understanding of the Sabbath — as a gift, a sign, and a hope rather than primarily a restriction or an obligation — is one of the most important and practically transforming contributions of this book. It reframes the Sabbath question entirely: not what am I allowed to do on Sunday? but what is God saying to me through this recurring sign of rest, relationship, and hope?

What This Book Covers

  • The creation Sabbath — God’s rest as the foundation of the Sabbath pattern and the Sabbath promise
  • The Sabbath in the Law of Moses — the fourth commandment, its creational and redemptive grounding, and its covenant significance
  • The Sabbath in the Prophets — failure, warning, exile, and the promise of restored rest
  • The Sabbath controversies of Jesus — what they reveal about his identity and his fulfilment of the Sabbath
  • The resurrection and the first day of the week — how the new creation Sabbath transforms Christian practice
  • The apostolic teaching on the Sabbath — Romans 14, Colossians 2, and especially Hebrews 3–4
  • The Sabbath and the new creation — the full restoration of rest in the new heavens and the new earth
  • The Sabbath as covenant sign — what the recurring rest says about God’s relationship with his people

What Readers Will Gain

  • A clear, biblically grounded, and canonically comprehensive understanding of the Sabbath theme through the whole of Scripture
  • A richer reading of both the Old and New Testaments — understanding the Sabbath controversies of the Gospels, the apostolic teaching, and the eschatological rest of Hebrews in their full biblical context
  • A transformed understanding of the Sabbath — not primarily as restriction but as gift, sign, and hope
  • A deeper, more concrete Christian hope — grounded in the promise of the final rest that the Sabbath always pointed toward
  • Practical application for how the Sabbath shapes Christian worship, community, and life today
  • A foundation for engaging the ongoing theological debates about the Sabbath with greater biblical clarity and canonical awareness

Who Should Read This Book

  • Christians who want to understand what the Bible actually teaches about the Sabbath from creation to new creation
  • Pastors and church leaders who want to preach and teach the Sabbath with biblical depth and theological precision
  • Christians who find the debates about Sunday observance confusing and want a biblically grounded framework for thinking about them
  • Theology students and seminary candidates studying biblical theology, the law, or the theology of rest and worship
  • Christians in India — where questions about Sabbath observance, Sunday worship, and the relationship between the Old and New Testaments arise regularly in churches of diverse denominational backgrounds
  • Small group and Bible study leaders wanting a concise, accessible, and theologically serious resource on the Sabbath
  • Christians working through the Short Studies in Biblical Theology series who want a comprehensive treatment of this important and often misunderstood theme
  • Anyone who has ever wondered: does the Sabbath still apply to Christians today? — and wanted an honest, careful, biblically serious answer

About the Author

Guy Prentiss Waters is the James M. Baird Jr. Professor of New Testament at Reformed Theological Seminary in Jackson, Mississippi — one of the most respected evangelical seminaries in the United States. He is the author of numerous widely-read works including How Jesus Runs the Church, The Lord’s Supper as the Sign and Meal of the New Covenant, and A Christian’s Pocket Guide to Baptism. He is a careful and respected biblical scholar and Reformed theologian whose work is characterised by rigorous engagement with the biblical text, deep knowledge of the Reformed theological tradition, and a consistent concern that biblical theology should shape the worship, life, and hope of the church. His contribution to The Sabbath as Rest and Hope reflects his particular expertise in biblical theology and covenant theology and his gift for making complex theological subjects accessible and practically useful for ordinary Christians.

About the Short Studies in Biblical Theology Series

The Sabbath as Rest and Hope for the People of God is part of the Short Studies in Biblical Theology series from Crossway — a collection of brief, academically rigorous, and accessible studies in the major themes of Scripture, written by trusted scholars to help Christians trace the great threads of the biblical narrative. Other volumes in the series cover themes including the kingdom of God, the temple, the covenant, and more — making it one of the most complete and reliable libraries of biblical theology available for Christians at every level of engagement.

  • Weight : 0.13 kg
  • Dimensions : 20.3 × 13 × 1 cm
  • Pages : 160
  • Publisher : FOR THE TRUTH
  • Condition : New
  • Format : Paperback
  • ISBN : 9788195940400
  • Language : English
  • HSN : 4901

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