Preamble:
Before God gives Israel a blessing, God teaches Israel what blessing is for.
That is the quiet power inside Numbers. The priests are not told to impress the people, control the people, or burden the people. They are told to bless them.
May God bless you.
May God watch over you.
May God shine His face toward you.
May God give you grace.
May God lift His face toward you.
May God give you peace.
That is not soft religion. That is survival language.
Because a people moving through wilderness need more than rules. They need keeping. They need grace. They need peace. They need the face of God turned toward them when the road is long, the burden is heavy, and the future is not yet clear.
Then Mark brings us into a grainfield on the Sabbath. The disciples are hungry. The religious watchers see a violation. Jesus sees people. And with one sentence, He pulls Sabbath back from the hands of religious machinery:
“The Sabbath was made to meet the needs of people, and not people to meet the requirements of the Sabbath.”
That word lands with weight this weekend, as our nation pauses for Memorial Day. We remember that names matter. Bodies matter. Sacrifice matters. Families matter. Empty chairs matter. Peace is not cheap, and rest is not casual.
So this Sunday, we do not use memory to glorify war. We use memory to honor the cost of peace.
And that is where Mark and Numbers meet.
The Sabbath was made for people.
The blessing was spoken over people.
God’s Name was placed upon people.
So if God places His Name upon the people, then we cannot treat people like obstacles to holiness. The hungry matter. The tired matter. The grieving matter. The burdened matter. The ones carrying memory into this weekend matter.
Holiness was never meant to make people less human.
Holiness blesses.
Holiness keeps.
Holiness shines.
Holiness gives grace.
Holiness makes peace visible.