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Why do some Christians keep the
Sabbath day?
by David Hill
CONTENTS
Introduction
Argument One - Christ abolished the Law
Argument Two - God substituted Sunday
Argument Three - Sabbath given exclusively to Israel
Argument Four - Every day is a Sabbath Day
Argument
Five - Sabbath Keeping is Legalism
Conclusion
All Scripture references
are quoted from the New King James Version © Thomas Nelson, Inc. unless
otherwise indicated.ntroduction
"Remember the Sabbath Day, to keep it holy."
As a child in the sixties our Sundays were special. In the early mornings
we were busy with the donning of our “Sunday-best”. That was, for my brothers
and I, a starched white shirt complete with a tie around the neck and a
few globs of hair oil to keep our short combed-back hair in place for most
of the day. Sunday school and church took up our mornings and occasionally
in the afternoon a beach mission found us down at the sea-side. In our church
attire we sat quietly in the warm sand beside other boys and girls dressed
in swimming-togs who licked on big dripping ice-blocks as they listened
to the Bible stories. Our role was to sit still and look interested so that
other children might be drawn in from the water to hear the gospel story.
And so we did, being careful not to be too quick to answer the questions
so that those young unsaved souls may have a chance to join in. Sinners
they were for sure, for no Christian child would go to the beach on the
Lord's day.
In Sunday school I was taught to honor
Sunday, as the "Lord's Day". Although I dutifully kept the day holy, I never
really knew why it was holy. We were taught that God rested on the seventh
day and set it apart from all other days. We were told that the Jews kept
the Sabbath day, the seventh day of the week. We knew that our "sabbath"
was now Sunday, but as to how this came about we were never told.
As I grew up I rarely questioned my parent's
religious beliefs. Yet, in my heart, I felt a strange uneasiness every time
I heard the Ten Commandments read. Each commandment was clear and true except
for the fourth. That Sabbath commandment always needed to be added to or
explained away to make it palatable. While studying for Scripture exams
in a Methodist Sunday school I learnt to recite catechisms 71. and 75.
Quote. "71. "WHAT IS OUR DUTY TO GOD?" Our duty to God is contained in the
first Four Commandments: ..........
(iv) Remember that
thou keep holy the Sabbath day
75. WHAT DOES THE
FOURTH COMMANDMENT MEAN? God has set
aside one day in seven so that we may rest from work and worship Him." Unquote.
(Emphasis supplied)
True, God has set aside one day in the week, but which day? From what I
knew of Scripture there was only ever one day set aside, that is the seventh.
Who was it then that blessed Sunday, declared it holy, and established it
as the Christian’s day of rest and worship? Surely you would think that
such an important change would be recorded in the New Testament, but no
record of a change can be found.
As a teenager I started attending a Baptist church. Some years later, I
was baptised by immersion believing that my former sprinkling as a child
failed to fulfil the requirements of God as set out in the Bible. Then after
several years I came to a point in my life where I felt that it was necessary
to rediscover for myself all the biblical truths that were instilled in
me as a child. I assumed that what I had been taught was true, but I wanted
to be sure that the doctrines I held were firmly grounded in God’s revealed
truth. During the course of my study, the Sabbath became the topic in question.
Looking for reassurance that Sunday is the Lord's day, I studied some of
the writings of those who support Sunday-keeping. I found that the strongest
argument for Sunday observance was based on certain historical evidence
that suggested that it had been observed for most of the recorded history
of the "church".
However, I wasn't satisfied with tradition
as my principal basis for belief in the doctrine of the Sunday Sabbath.
I searched again for a more biblical answer to the question. I found a disturbing
division in the Protestant interpretation of the “Lord’s Day”. There are
those who claim that God substituted the first day of the week, the "Christian
Sabbath" for the old seventh day Sabbath of the Bible. Others claimed that
the Sabbath law was done away with on the cross, leaving no obligation to
observe any day as a holy day of rest. Still others recognize the validity
of the commandment in part, believing that it applies spiritually to a life
of rest rather than an actual weekly day. After studying the popular theories
I was faced with a dilemma. Each position seemed to contradict the other.
If the Sabbath commandment was “done away with” at the cross then the command
to rest and keep holy could not be transferred to Sunday nor could it be
spiritually applied to our lives on a daily basis. Should I choose one of
them or to reject them all? I was forced to go back to the study of the
Bible alone, and look at the Sabbath question more objectively.
What I found was not the reassurance I
had originally hoped for. In fact what I did discover was almost totally
opposite to my preconceived notions on the Sabbath.
It is unfortunate that many Christians never consider the question of the
Sabbath. It is so easy to follow tradition and accept that tradition represents
a true interpretation of the Scriptures. The Bible is clear,
And on the seventh day God ended His work which He had done, and He rested
on the seventh day from all His work which He had done. Then God blessed
the seventh day and sanctified it, because in it He rested from all His
work which God had created and made.
If we are to adopt any position which stands contrary to this historical
event the onus in on us to furnish sufficient proof that our stand is legitimate.
Each chapter of this booklet examines
a common justification for the rejection of the Bible Sabbath. The booklet
loosely follows the path of my struggle through the Sabbath question.
Argument One
"Christ abolished the Law and in doing so rescinded the command to observe
the Sabbath."
As a young Christian I was often told that "... We are not under law but
under grace...." I was told that Christ did away with the Law, including
the Ten Commandments, thereby relieving us of our obligation to keep them.
But does this idea agree with the teaching of the Lord Jesus Christ? Jesus
said of the Law,
Do not think that I came to destroy the Law or the Prophets. I did not come
to destroy but to fulfil. For assuredly, I say to you, till heaven and earth
pass away, one jot or tittle will by no means pass from the law till all
is fulfilled. Whoever therefore breaks one of the least of these commandments,
and teaches men so, shall be called least in the kingdom of heaven; but
whoever does and teaches them, he shall be called great in the kingdom of
heaven.
Christ's purpose was to fulfil the written law not to destroy it. It has
been said that the written law of God is the agent that identifies those
thoughts and actions that constitute sin. The Apostle Paul wrote, “… I would
not have known sin except through the law...”. John wrote, “Whoever commits
sin also commits lawlessness, and sin is lawlessness.” However, sin is not
merely a failure to comply with a predetermined standard. The law is more
than a manual for right behavior. It is a pattern of godly behavior, a reflection
of God’s own character. When we break God’s law and sin, we “fall short
of the glory of God” because we defy the revelation of the righteous nature
of God. Christ, “the image of the invisible God” , never failed to live
according to God’s righteous nature and character. He fulfilled all the
righteous requirements of the law. His example adds a new dimension to the
law.
In fulfilling the law, he could not have
destroyed the law. The use of the conjunction "but" here implies that destroying
and fulfilling are opposed to each other and cannot mean the same thing.
The word translated "fulfil" (plreosai), does not imply "putting an end
to". The injunction against the one who “breaks one of the least of these
commandments, and teaches men so” reinforces the obvious meaning. The weight
of these words cannot be dismissed.
HOW DID PAUL DEFINE FULFILMENT OF THE LAW?
For more light on Christ’s
fulfilment of the written law we may ask how the apostle Paul understood
the fulfilment of the written law.
Owe no one anything except to love one another, for he who loves another
has fulfilled the law. For the commandments, "You shall not commit adultery,"
You shall not murder," "You shall not steal," "You shall not bear false
witness," "You shall not covet," and if there is any other commandment,
are all summed up in this saying, namely, "You shall love your neighbour
as yourself." Love does no harm to a neighbour; therefore love is the fulfilment
of the law.
Can you grasp the importance of those verses? Paul, speaking specifically
about the Ten Commandments, urges us to fulfil those laws by acting with
love toward our neighbour. His reasoning is that commandment to love your
neighbour includes all the written commandments pertaining to our relationship
with others. Love does not exclude them. Paul quotes the very commandments
that some say were destroyed to show how relevant they are to Christian
love. We are expected to fulfil the law. Love toward God is the essence
of the first four commandments and love toward your neighbour is the essence
of the last six.
If there are still questions as to what is actually meant by Christ’s fulfilment
of the law, then some further reading of Matthew chapter 5 should answer
these. In this chapter, Christ’s sermon gives several examples of the law
and its 'fulfilment' or amplification and the relationship between the letter
of the law and the spirit of the law is beautifully expounded.
DID CHRIST DO AWAY WITH THE LAW ON THE CROSS?
It's claimed by some, that in his letter to the Colossians Paul taught that
the law was abolished. "And you, being dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision
of your flesh, he has made alive together with him, having forgiven all
your trespasses, having wiped out the handwriting of requirements that was
against us, which was contrary to us. And he has taken it out of the way,
having nailed it to the cross."
Paul was writing to Gentiles. They were uncircumcised and dead in their
sins even though they did not have the Law in its codified form. Here he
tells them the good news that in Christ they were circumcised and raised
to new life, having been forgiven for all their sins.
He refers to the ‘blotting out’ of the
“handwriting” that was against “us”. Note that he says “us”, purposely including
both Jews and Gentiles. We can thus gather that whatever he was writing
about it was not a set of ordinances that applied exclusively to Jews. Blotting
these out, or nailing these to the cross would not have done a thing for
Gentiles.
Mark's Gospel, Chapter 15 verse 26, implies
that according to custom a criminal was crucified with his crime written
on a sign and nailed to his cross. We are told that when Jesus was crucified
"the inscription of his accusation was written above: THE KING OF THE JEWS."
This sign was written in three languages so that it served as a deterrent
to as many as would read it. His "inscription of accusation" was his alleged
violation of Roman law, a crime of which he was not guilty. He was without
sin! By contrast, against humankind and contrary to us, is a long list of
valid violations of God’s law. When Christ died he took those accusations
and made them his own and suffered their penalty.
The handwriting (Greek word cheirographon ) has been identified by scholars
as a term used for a certificate of debt . Dunn points out that this word
was used in an apocryphal writing to explicitly denote a record book of
sins. Understood as our inscription of accusation the “handwriting of requirements
that were against us” aptly fits the metaphorical picture that Paul is painting.
Until the death of Christ, the record of humankind’s sin was a 'certificate
of debt' that could only be paid by death. It stood in the way of our relationship
with God. It was contrary to our hope for eternal life. This record of our
sin was nailed to his cross and he paid the penalty for our sin, thus taking
away our record of guilt and substituting it with blessed forgiveness. What
a wonderful Saviour!
There is yet another reason to believe
that this passage is not referring to the law. It concerns the plural word
(dogmasin) which is translated: requirements (NKJV), decrees (NASB), regulations
(NIV), ordinances (KJV, ASV), and legal demands (RSV). This word is important,
for without it, a connection to the law could not be suggested. If we examine
the passage we can see at least three things that Christ did with our ‘certificate
of indebtedness’. 1. He blotted it out. 2. He removed it from the midst.
3. He nailed it to the cross. Note that Paul did not say them. All of these
actions pertain to the cheirographon (singular) not to the dogmasin (regulations)
which is plural. They should not be automatically applied to the ‘regulations’.
It is our debt under the law of God which was nailed to the cross not the
law itself.
The only way to get an ‘abolished law’
out of this passage is to confuse the debt of our sin with the law of God
itself. If we do this, the connection with our forgiveness through the sacrifice
of Christ is lost (verse 13) and we make the cancelling of the law the means
by which we are forgiven.
If the laws that prohibited idolatry,
blasphemy, Sabbath breaking, disrespect to parents, adultery, murder, stealing,
lying, and covetousness were cancelled, how could Paul speak later of the
written law as being a valid means of knowing when we have sinned.
…for by the law is the knowledge of sin.
What shall we say then? Is the law sin?
Certainly not! On the contrary, I would not have known sin except through
the law. For I would not have known covetousness unless the law had said,
"You shall not covet."
Would Paul and James have undone the work
of Christ and quoted from the fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth
commandments in their epistles if Christ through his death had abolished
them? If the law was abolished, how could the Gentiles be guilty of trespasses
given that Paul also writes, “… sin is not imputed when there is no law”.
The Law is eternal (Psalm 119:160) and
it is only by breaking that holy law that we are guilty and deserving of
death.
SACRIFICES
Some may ask then about the Levitical sacrifices? Didn't they cease when
Christ became the Sacrificial Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the
world? Yes! It is true that the sacrificial system ceased at Christ's death.
The levitical priesthood, tabernacle services and associated ceremony became
superseded by the priesthood of Christ 'according to the order of Melchisedek'.
But this didn’t happen because the law was repealed. The animal sacrifices
were merely ceremonial types that pointed forward to the day when the true
Sacrifice would be offered. Once atonement for all has been made there is
little point in offering sacrificial tokens of the Atonement that has already
been effected.
For the priesthood being changed, of necessity
there is also a change of the law.
The daily sacrifices were
no longer required because the once-offered true Sacrifice had come. So
then, the law of sacrifice stands and although the need for a sacrifice
remains current, it is perpetually satisfied in Christ's once-and-for-all-time
sacrifice.
THE ENMITY OF THE LAW ABOLISHED
Another passage that is used to support the doctrine of the abolition of
the law is Ephesians 2:14-16.
For he himself is our peace, who has made both one, and has broken down
the middle wall of division between us, having abolished in his flesh the
enmity, that is, the law of commandments contained in ordinances, so as
to create in himself one new man from the two, thus making peace, and that
he might reconcile them both to God in one body through the cross, thereby
putting to death the enmity.
In his letter to the Gentile Christians in Ephesus Paul explains that in
Christ the enmity between Jew and Gentile is finished. The Mosaic laws excluding
the uncircumcised Gentile from the temple-based worship of the one True
God under the Levitical system are rendered powerless. In his flesh the
uncircumcised are made circumcised, the unacceptable are made acceptable,
and all are reconciled to God. The primary subject matter of these two verses
is the broken walls of division between Jew and Gentile, and Paul refers
to a change in this specific context only. Paul clearly made a distinction
between “the law of commandments contained in ordinances” and the commandments
of God. He wrote in 1 Corinthians 7:19,
Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing, but keeping the commandments
of God is what matters.
It is also interesting to note that the
Greek word katargeo translated "abolished" in Eph. 2:15 has the meaning
to ‘render ineffective the power or force of something’. The middle wall
of division that was between Jew and Gentile was empowered by the racially
based regulations that served to set the circumcised Jew apart from the
uncircumcised Gentile. The particular laws referred to here are most probably
the Levitical laws of ritual cleanliness and the traditional Jewish oral
law relating to ordinances. These laws of segregation engendered enmity
between Jew and Gentile and had been the cause of division in the early
church. Their purpose was to preserve Israel as a distinct nation. The most
significant of them was the law of the ordinance of circumcision. The Jews
believed that they could not even eat at the same table as the uncircumcised
because of their uncleanness. This caused considerable hostility and was
a hindrance to the spread of the Gospel. (Galatians 2:11-13) But for all
its disadvantages, circumcision was not completely abolished in Christ,
rather, the uncircumcised received circumcision in Christ.
In him you were also circumcised with the circumcision made without hands,
by putting off the body of sins of the flesh, by the circumcision of Christ,
...
The laws of physical circumcision were reduced to inactivity because their
power to cause justifiable enmity was cancelled by Christ in his flesh.
When Jesus discussed the enmity between Jew and Gentile with the Samaritan
woman at the well (John 4:20-24) he referred to a time when that enmity
would give way to the true worship of the Father - no longer the worship
of God at the temple in Jerusalem but the true worship of God in spirit
and in truth. The believing Jews and believing Gentiles could now gather
for worship on the Sabbath day as brothers and sisters in the family of
God.
PAUL AND THE COMMANDMENTS
If Paul had advocated the abolition of the Ten Commandments in Eph 2:14-16
it would seem very strange that he used one of these 'abolished commandments'
to instruct the church just four chapters later in the same letter where
he wrote, (Eph 6:2,3 quoting Deut. 5:16)
“Honour your mother and your father," which is the first commandment with
a promise: "that it may be well with you and you may live long on the earth.”
Paul here acknowledges the existence of
the Ten Commandments by referring to this commandment as 'the first with
a promise'. For at least two reasons (apart from the obvious quotation)
we can be certain that Paul is referring to the written law of the Old Testament
rather than some intangible “law of Christ” or “law written on the heart”.
First, only laws that are listed or catalogued can have a numerical order.
Second, only a verbally articulated law could have an accompanying promise.
The very nature of a general promise demands that it be publicly stated.
Paul uses the quotation from Deuteronomy 5:16 to support his conclusion
that obedience to parents is right.
In doing so he not only confirms that
the Decalogue is still valid for Christians but goes further to imply that
even the promises attached to those commandments apply to the Gentile Ephesians.
It follows therefore that they still apply to us today. That is to say that
all the blessings that come through obedience to God's Law are poured out
today on those who obey his commandments. In this case, long life. In the
case of the Sabbath commandment, blessing and joy. (Isaiah 56:2,7)
Thus says the LORD: "Keep justice, and
do righteousness, For My salvation is about to come, And My righteousness
to be revealed. {2} Blessed is the man who does this, And the son of man
who lays hold on it; Who keeps from defiling the Sabbath, And keeps his
hand from doing any evil. Isa. 56:1-2
If you turn away your foot from the Sabbath, From doing your pleasure on
my holy day, And call my Sabbath a delight, The holy day of the Lord honourable,
And shall honour him, not doing your own ways, Nor finding your own pleasure,
Nor speaking your own words, Then you shall delight yourself in the Lord;
And I will cause you to ride on the high hills of the earth, And feed you
with the heritage of Jacob your father. The mouth of the Lord has spoken.
Isa. 58:13
It must be concluded that either Paul's attitude to God's Law was drastically
inconsistent, or that we have misinterpreted his teaching. Can the concept
of an “abolished law” be reconciled with these words from his epistle to
the Romans?
"Do we then make void the law through faith? Certainly not! On the contrary,
we establish the law." Rom. 3:31
"Therefore the law is holy, and the commandment holy and just and good."
Rom. 7:12
... "for by the law is the knowledge of sin." Rom. 3:20
If, as Paul writes, the law is holy law and it is by the law that we have
the knowledge of sin, then it follows that we should acknowledge the law
(including the Sabbath commandment) as being a valid means of defining sin.
John wrote,
Now by this we know that we know him, if we keep his commandments. He who
says, "I know him" and does not keep his commandments, is a liar, and the
truth is not in him.
Close examination of the New Testament
reveals that neither Christ nor Paul taught the destruction of the law.
Whatever the source of this widely accepted doctrine, it is not the Holy
Scriptures. If the Sabbath day is not valid for Christians today then it
must be for some other reason. Let's look at another.
Argument Two
"God has substituted Sunday for the Sabbath Day"
When I first studied the Sabbath, I unreasonably put the onus on the Sabbath
keepers to prove that the seventh day was relevant for the Christian today.
I had assumed that Sunday worship was introduced by apostolic example and
recorded in the Scriptures. I had throughout my life kept Sunday sacred,
refraining from secular pleasures and interests in reverence to God. I had
done all this without one word of commandment from God's word. I had, without
authority, transferred the holiness of the Sabbath day to Sunday.
I later realized that God sanctified the seventh day at creation, and the
principle of the holy rest was instituted at this time by the very example
of God himself on the seventh day of creation. (Genesis 2:3)
If I was to be so bold as to hallow another day then the onus was on me
to prove that God had indeed substituted Sunday for the Sabbath. As Christ's
own example was to keep the Sabbath day, I looked to the apostles for their
example.
To my dismay, I had to admit that if God did substitute another day for
the Sabbath then he failed to leave a record of his doing so. Nowhere from
Genesis to Revelation does the Scripture tell us to observe any day of the
week in lieu of hallowing the seventh day Sabbath. In addition to this fact,
if there was a substitution made, the disciples completely ignored it. For
there is no record in Scripture of any Christian resting on Sunday or regularly
keeping it as a day of worship. There is however ample evidence to show
that the disciples continued to keep the seventh day Sabbath.
THE EXAMPLE OF PAUL
Paul
and Barnabas in Acts 13:14, ... went into the synagogue on the Sabbath Day
...
On that occasion Paul was given an
opportunity to speak. After they left the synagogue, many Gentiles asked
Paul to preach again next Sabbath.(v.42). If Paul was keeping Sunday at
that time, he could have invited them to hear him preach the very next day,
but he waited till the next Sabbath.
Wherever Paul travelled, his custom was
to go to the synagogue on the Sabbath day. When in a pagan city where there
was no synagogue Paul went out of the city to the riverside, where prayer
was customarily made, but once again on the Sabbath day. (Acts 16:13)
And on the Sabbath day we went out of the city to the riverside, where prayer
was customarily made.
When Paul arrived at Thessalonica he went to the synagogue on the Sabbath
day. (Acts 17:2)
Then Paul, as his custom was, went in to them, and for three Sabbaths reasoned
with them from the Scriptures
In Corinth, Paul worked with Aquila and Priscilla who were like him, tentmakers.
(Acts 18:4)
And he reasoned in the synagogue every Sabbath, and persuaded both Jews
and Greeks.
When Paul was finally thrown out of the synagogue he went next door to the
house of Crispus. He stayed on with Aquila and Priscilla in Corinth for
eighteen months. (Acts 18:11) On leaving Corinth, they headed for Ephesus
where Paul and Aquila and Priscilla once again worshipped in the synagogue.
Paul spoke every Sabbath for three months in the synagogue at Ephesus. (Acts
19:8)
Did Paul simply use the Sabbath to reach the Jews and Proselytes and then
later teach them to change their day of worship to Sunday? His later actions
in Jerusalem do not support this view.
When Paul came to Jerusalem, he met with James and the elders of the Jerusalem
Church, (Acts 21:20-24)
And they said to him, "You see, brother, how many tens of thousands of Jews
there are who have believed and they are all zealous for the law;
but they have been informed about you that you teach all the Jews who are
among the Gentiles to forsake Moses, saying that they ought not to circumcise
their children nor to walk according to the customs.
What then? the assembly must certainly meet, for they will hear that you
have come.
Therefore do what we tell you: We have four men who have taken a vow. Take
them and be purified with them, and pay their expenses so that they may
shave their heads, and that all may know that those things of which they
were informed concerning you are nothing, but that you yourself also follow
the rules and keep the law.
Paul's cooperation with his fellow Christians
in this ritual was not a deception. Paul did keep the Law and was eager
to prove this to his fellow Christians. This keeping of the Law (by implication)
included Sabbath keeping.
Unfortunately, non-believing Jews stirred up trouble for Paul when he entered
the Temple and had him arrested. When brought before Felix, Paul said in
his defence, (Acts 24:14)
But this I confess to you, that according to the Way which they call a sect,
so I worship the God of my fathers, believing all things which are written
in the Law and the Prophets.
Though the Jews brought many accusations against Paul, not one Jew ever
brought an accusation of Sabbath breaking against Paul or any of the disciples.
The Pharisees were very quick to wrongfully
accuse Jesus of Sabbath breaking when he healed on the Sabbath. (John 9:16)
It seems a little strange then that this same line of attack was never used
on the disciples who supposedly rejected the Sabbath entirely.
Another disciple that continued to keep
the law of God was Peter. When in a vision a voice from heaven commanded
Peter to kill and eat unclean animals, Peter refused.
"…'Not so, Lord! For nothing common or unclean has at any time entered my
mouth.' Acts 11:8
It certainly seems odd that Peter would
so strongly resisted the breaking of the Old Testament dietary laws if he
had been accustomed to breaking the Sabbath commandment for several years.
(Acts 10:14)
PAUL'S FAREWELL DINNER
There is one particular gathering of disciples recorded in Acts 20:7-12
that is often held up as proof of Sunday worship. Luke only records it because
on this occasion a miracle took place. The circumstances that led to this
miracle are very important to the story and are related here.
Now on the first day of the week, when the disciples came together to break
bread, Paul, ready to depart the next day, spoke to them and continued his
message until midnight. There were many lamps in the upper room where they
were gathered together.
Paul was on his way to Jerusalem knowing full well that it could be his
very last journey. (verse 25) He could stop in Troas seven days only. Imagine
if Paul came to your local church for a week. Would you wait until his last
day before you held a meeting and then sit up till daybreak listening to
his teaching? It is far more likely that every night of that week the disciples
gathered together after sunset and shared their meal together to listen
to Paul's teaching. We know that they were fully prepared for a night meeting
because there were many lamps. This was a special meeting. It was a farewell
to Paul who knew that trouble would be in store for him in Jerusalem. Paul
spoke until midnight at which time the young man fell from the third storey
and “was taken up dead”. After the man was healed they shared their meal.
The meeting resumed and Paul spoke till daybreak. This format could hardly
be typical of a first century worship service, yet some will assert that
this isolated instance should be taken as proof of regular weekly Sunday
worship!
If the church was actually in the habit
of meeting on the Sabbath day (which concludes at sunset), then it is quite
likely that they would have all gone home and brought food back for a last
chance farewell meeting on Saturday night, the first day of the week. As
"the first day of the week" can mean either Saturday evening or some time
before Sunday evening, a Sunday meeting cannot be proved by these verses.
The translators of the Good News Bible have acknowledged this fact in their
translation of the verse, (Acts 20:7)
On Saturday evening we gathered together for the fellowship meal.
Note also that the term 'break bread' is used in its general sense of partaking
of a meal. (Acts 2:46) There is nothing in this passage to suggest that
this is anything more than a simple sharing of food.
Another verse that confuses some is 1
Corinthians 16:2. Paul is speaking to the Christians who had believed during
the time that "he reasoned in the synagogue every Sabbath". (Acts 18:4)
When he was no longer welcome in the synagogue he held his meetings in the
house next door. This action implies that he continued his Sabbath day preaching
so that the synagogue worshippers would be attracted to his meetings instead
or after synagogue. As a result, the ruler of the synagogue, Crispus, became
a believer.
Now Paul was appealing to the Corinthians to help the suffering believers
in Jerusalem. And he asked,
On the first day of the week let each one of you lay something aside, storing
up as he may prosper, that there be no collections when I come.
Why didn't Paul want to have a collection when he came? For the same reason
that he did not want the collection done on the Sabbath! The matter of what
and how much should be given was a personal concern for each one, in proportion
to his capabilities. It involved an end of week stock-take, working out
what were surpluses that could be stored up and what could be spared as
an offering. The monetary system in those days was not as sophisticated
as it is today. Most people worked on a day-to-day basis. They often didn't
know what they would earn until they earned it. Only in hindsight could
they work out what they could afford for an offering. It was something that
could only be done at home, not at church. The offerings themselves most
likely included non-perishable goods as well as money as more than one person
was needed to convey the gift to Jerusalem. (next verse) It stands to reason
that if drought was the reason for the saint's hardship then gifts of food,
wine, and oil, would be far more valuable than gold. Is there evidence of
a drought in those days? The Jewish historian Flavius Josephus tells of
such a drought around this time and confirms that Queen Helena on her arrival
in Jerusalem found many Jews dying for lack of food. She sent servants with
money to Alexandria and Cyprus to purchase corn and dried figs. (Antiquities
of the Jews. Book XX Ch II, 5) Acts 11:28-30 also confirms the presence
of a drought.
Then one of them, named Agabus, stood up and showed by the Spirit that there
was going to be a great famine throughout all the world which also happened
in the days of Claudius Caeser.
Then the disciples, each according to his ability, determined to send relief
to the brethren dwelling in Judea.
This they also did, and sent it to the elders by the hands of Barnabas and
Saul.
The messy business of collecting these offerings was hardly an activity
for a holy day. Even Paul's time with them was too precious to be wasted
on such menial tasks. It was a chore fit for a common work day. The first
day of the week was the first opportunity after the working week (excluding
the Sabbath) to store up and make an assessment of the household needs.
This verse does not suggest a meeting or a gathering of any kind on the
first day of the week, on the contrary, it implies a keeping of the seventh
day Sabbath.
Whenever Paul and the other writers of
the New Testament (under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit) refer to the
seventh day they give it the descriptive and revered title "Sabbath". The
first day of the week is never given any special reverence or title. Its
designation is solely derived from its relationship to the Sabbath day.
These writers did not translate the name for the seventh day into the Greek
language by using a Greek or Roman equivalent. They preserved the concept
of the special nature of the day by using the transliterated form sabbaton.
Thus in Scripture the word continued to carry its meaning of "a day of rest"
with all the connotations of its heavenly appointment. History shows that
the first Sunday keepers were quick to adopt the title "Lord's day" for
Sunday. If the sanctity of the Sabbath had been transferred to Sunday, then
wouldn't you expect Paul to choose a more exalted title for the first day
of the week, giving it at least the same honour as his old holy day?
THE DISCIPLE'S SUNDAY MEETING
There is a record in John 29:19 of a gathering of the disciples on Sunday
after the resurrection of Christ. "Then the same day at evening, being the
first day of the week, when the doors were shut where the disciples were
assembled, for fear of the Jews,"...
This was not a religious meeting held on Sunday to celebrate the resurrection,
for some still doubted that there had even been a resurrection. It is evident
that they were there simply hiding 'for fear of the Jews'.
There is no evidence in the New Testament to suggest that the disciples
of Jesus kept Sunday as a regular day of worship or as a day of rest. There
is no reference to the keeping of any day other than the Sabbath. Some Sunday
keepers claim that Sunday is a memorial of the Resurrection, based on the
belief that Christ rose on that day, but by whose authority do they speak?
Although Jesus did command his disciples to celebrate his death, he never
asked them to celebrate his resurrection.
Even if Sunday was a valid celebration
of the Resurrection it does not automatically cancel the divinely appointed
Sabbath. If a substitution did take place then it must be shown how the
new cancels out the old. No event in human history regardless of its importance
can change the fact that the rest and blessing of God on the seventh day
of creation is the origin of the Sabbath. The significance of God's sacred
rest day and its relation to the seventh day of each subsequent week was
put in place by the word of the Almighty. The Bible does not establish every
first day of the week as a celebration of the day of Christ's resurrection.
The relationship presumed by some Sunday keepers is without the support
of Scripture. The command to rest or to keep holy was never applied to Sunday.
The solemnity of the Sabbath was never transferred to Sunday.
Proponents of the "substitution" argument at least acknowledge the fact
that "a Sabbath day" still exists, even if they do believe it to be Sunday.
They realize that a Christian needs a holy rest day, for both physical and
spiritual refreshment.
If you keep your feet from breaking and Sabbath and from doing as you please
on my holy day, if you call the Sabbath a delight and the Lord's holy day
honourable, and if you honour it by not going your own way and not doing
as you please or speaking idle words, then you will find joy in the Lord,....
Isaiah 58:13,14 (NIV)
Our impious society scorns the suggestion of the observance of a holy day.
Man has no interest in the things of God. Worldliness within the Church
has, in recent times, led to the erosion of the Lord's day from a day of
worship to an hour of worship. God has been denied the portion of our time
that has been declared holy and is owed to Him.
Argument Three
"The Sabbath was given exclusively to Israel and was part of the Old Covenant"
Most of us would agree that the Sabbath commandment (as one of the Ten Commandments)
formed a part of the terms of the Old Covenant. But does the introduction
of the New Covenant do away with the Sabbath Commandment? To answer that
question we must look a little closer at the creation and implementation
of the Sabbath. Fortunately for those who seek the truth, Christ spoke clearly
about the subject.
Listen to the words of our Lord Jesus
Christ as recorded in Mark 2:27.
The Sabbath was made for man ...
Notice two things here. The Sabbath was
made. It was the creation of Jesus Christ, for "All things were created
through him and for him". Col 1:16. Secondly, when Jesus Christ made his
Sabbath day he made it for man. When? After the seventh day of creation.
(Exodus 20:11)
For in six days the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea and all
that is in them, and rested the seventh day. Therefore the Lord blessed
the Sabbath day and hallowed it
Now there was only one man alive at that
time - Adam, the common ancestor of every human being on this earth. So
the Sabbath day was created for the benefit of every man, woman and child
on this planet. But how is a Sabbath day created? He created
the Sabbath day by resting on that day. Genesis 2:3.
Then God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it, because in it he rested
from all his work which God had created and made.
There are three significant things to note in this verse. First, God blessed
the seventh day. He singled out that particular day for blessing. In Genesis
27 Isaac could not rescind the blessing he bestowed on Jacob even though
it was gained by dishonest means. Likewise, the Bible bears no record of
the Almighty annulling the blessing of the Sabbath day or of His blessing
another day.
Second, God sanctified the day. Sanctification
is a declaration of holiness. This day was set apart for holy use. Throughout
the Old and New Testaments we see examples of many things set apart for
holy use. Many inanimate objects were set apart for use in the worship and
service of the Lord. God ordained this day to be set-aside for men to worship
and honour him. This sanctification was for man's benefit so that man might
acknowledge this day as a time set apart for God.
Third, God rested from his work of creation on this day. It wasn't exhaustion
that caused God to rest. His rest was an example provided for our benefit.
The Sabbath rest, as explained to Israel, is an acknowledgement of the Creator's
example of rest on the seventh day of creation. We have no mandate to rest
on any other day.
There are the three features
of the Sabbath, blessing, holiness and rest. Yet, at this point of time,
we are thousands of years away from the birth of Israel and the Old Covenant!
God had not yet written out his laws on tablets of stone but they did exist,
not in letter but in Spirit. Affirming the view that God's Law existed before
Sinai, Genesis 26:5 says, "because Abraham obeyed my voice and kept my charge,
my commandments, my statutes, and my laws."
SIN AND THE LAW
Mankind first become aware of God's
law in the Garden of Eden. When Adam and Eve ate the fruit of the forbidden
tree, the knowledge of good and evil was imparted to them. God said in Genesis
3:22, "Behold, the man has become like one of us, to know good and evil."
The knowledge to recognise good and evil
is given through the means of law. Law is the tool for the discernment of
good and evil. Armed with the knowledge of law, man is capable of choosing
the action that he knows to be evil. Romans 7:7 and 8 says,
... I would not have known sin except through the law." "...... But sin,
taking opportunity by the commandment, produced in me all manner of evil
desire. For apart from the law sin was dead.
Examine the actions of Cain in Genesis
4. Do his actions appear to be those of an innocent person? No. When he
became angry, God warned him,
If you do well, will you not be accepted?
And if you do not do well, sin lies at the door. And its desire is for you,
but you should rule over it."
Cain knew right from wrong. He knew that if he did right God would accept
him. He knew that he could choose to sin or overcome the temptation. He
chose to sin and knew he was guilty, for he tried to cover up his action
by a direct lie. He knew the commandment "You shall not murder."
Other examples of the existence of God’s law prior to Sinai are seen throughout
the Old Testament. The law and the ideal of marriage date back to the creation
week. Its validity and superiority over the written law of Moses is attested
by the words of Jesus in Mark 10:2-9. The principle of making offerings
to God was around in Abel's day. Noah clearly understood the distinction
between clean and unclean animals. He was commanded to abstain from blood.
(Gen 7:2) Noah's sons knew it was right to "Honour your father and your
mother." Abraham gave a tithe to Melchisedek, priest of the Most High God.
Sexual immorality was understood to be sinful, hence the destruction of
Sodom and Gommorah. Pharaoh knew the law forbidding adultery. (Gen 12)
If God's eternal spiritual law was not
the yardstick by which the wicked were judged, then by whose law were they
judged to be guilty? But did the observance of the Sabbath day precede the
establishment of the Old Covenant? Yes, and this can be positively shown
from Scripture.
THE SABBATH BEFORE THE OLD COVENANT
Four hundred years of heathen Egyptian culture and many years of slavery
had robbed the Children of Israel of their knowledge of God's way. This
may well have included their knowledge of the Sabbath. God called them out
of Egypt, a type of God's calling us out of sin and this world. Once clear
of Pharaoh's armies God tested them, "whether they will walk in my law or
not." Exodus 16:4
At this time God had not yet spoken His law from Mt Sinai or written the
Ten Commandments into stone tablets by His finger. God said to Moses:
"Tomorrow is the rest of the holy sabbath unto the Lord:" Exodus 16:23 (A.V.)
God tested Israel by providing manna to
gather on every day except the Sabbath. On the Sabbath day they were to
eat the surplus of manna that God gave them on the previous day. They were
commanded not to go and gather it on the Sabbath. (the principle of rest
from labour) Even though God had not yet commanded them to "remember the
Sabbath day, to keep it holy" He did not want them to gather on that sacred
day, clearly suggesting that the Sabbath command already existed though
not generally practised by Israel at this time.
Six days shall ye gather it; but on the seventh day which is the sabbath,
in it there shall be none. And it came to pass that there went out some
of the people on the seventh day fore to gather, and they found none. And
the Lord said unto Moses, How long refuse ye to keep my commandments and
laws? Exodus 16:26-28 (A.V.)
Some three chapters later in Exodus 20, you will read the first words of
the Ten Commandments and the first mention of the covenant with Israel in
chapter 19. The Sabbath was clearly in force before the Old Covenant was
made and was part of the spiritual law that preceded the written law. It
was this law that Moses was already teaching prior to the giving of the
Ten Commandments. (Exodus 18:16)
The command to rest on the Sabbath was
introduced prior to the Old Covenant being made. Had the Israelites never
entered into a covenant with God they would still have known that God expected
then to rest on His holy Sabbath day.
As Sabbath keeping was required
of Israel before the conditions of the Old Covenant were made known to Moses
it stands alone, and an annulment of the Old Covenant does not automatically
revoke God's command to rest on the Sabbath.
THE SABBATH LAW FOR ALL
Now let’s look at the sabbath law in Exodus 20 verse 10.
but the seventh day is the Sabbath of
the Lord your God. In it you shall do no work: you, nor your son, nor your
daughter, not your manservant, nor your maidservant, nor your cattle, not
your stranger who is within your gates.
The Sabbath day was not given exclusively to the Israelites but to every
person, male and female, slave and free, Israelite or alien, and even to
the cattle. God could not have made it clearer. The holiness of this day
is for everyone. By contrast, there were laws there were exclusively for
Israel. Compare the universality of the Sabbath laws with the more exclusive
Passover laws.
.... This is the ordinance of the Passover: No outsider shall eat it. But
every mans servant who is bought for money, when you have circumcised him,
then he may eat it. Exodus 12:43.44
And when a stranger sojourns with you
and wants to keep the Passover to the Lord, let all his males be circumcised,
and then let him come near and keep it; and he shall be as a native of the
land. For no uncircumcised person shall eat it. Exodus 12:48
The Passover was only to be eaten by the Israelites or those who were admitted
to the Israelite nation by circumcision. This is very clear and strong language.
But listen to what Paul says to those uncircumcised Gentiles who have been
'circumcised in Christ' and have become adopted into the family of God.
1 Corinth 5:7,8
For indeed Christ, our Passover, was sacrificed for us. Therefore let us
keep the feast,...
Gentiles in Christ are not excluded from
the Passover. In Christ the former racial distinctions are set aside and
the converted Gentile is now absorbed into the family of God and extended
the same privileges as the native-born Israelite. The prophet Isaiah spoke
this of:
I will give them an everlasting
name That shall not be cut off. Also the sons of the foreigner Who join
themselves to the Lord, to serve him, And to love the name of the Lord to
be his servants- Everyone who keeps from defiling the Sabbath, And holds
fast to my covenant Even them I will bring to my holy mountain, And make
them joyful in my house of prayer. Isaiah 56:5,6,7
THE CIRCUMCISION CULT
From our previous discussion of Acts it is evident that many of the early
Gentile converts were Jewish proselytes who were contacted through their
synagogue attendance. However, as the gospel spread, many rank pagans also
came to know the Lord. These had not previously been schooled in the Law.
When the Jewish believers confronted these converting Gentiles, a problem
arose. It was a custom of the Jews that they did not mix with uncircumcised
Gentiles. Some therefore remained separate and would not eat with them so
as not to compromise their ritual cleanliness. The latter group, known as
the ‘Circumcision’ insisted that these new converts be circumcised. It is
likely that this requirement was partly motivated by a lack of understanding
of the gospel in the Gentile context and partly by a fear of ritual defilement.
A dispute arose between Peter, Barnabas and Paul due to the failure to clearly
address this issue. (Gal 2:11)
THE JERUSALEM DECREE
The issue became divisive, and a decision
had to be made. The matter was referred to a meeting of the brethren in
Jerusalem and the result was a ruling known as the 'Jerusalem Decree'. The
decree allowed the Jewish Christian freedom to associate with the Gentile
believers without risking defilement.
At that time Jewish Christians were able
to worship at the Temple and so retain their customs and laws including
various sacrifices and offerings. (See Acts 21:20-25). Some of these Jewish
believers expected the new Gentile converts to become circumcised so that
they too could participate in the Jewish religion according to the law of
Moses. This was not the teaching of Paul or the Apostles, especially Peter,
who had learned through a vision as recorded in Acts 10-11, that the Jews
should accept the uncircumcised Gentile believers just as God had accepted
them.
Under the agreed terms of the decree certain basic requirements were recommended.
The restrictions placed on the Gentiles were taken from Leviticus chapters
17 and 18. In chapter 17, verses 8,9,12,13 and 15, and in chapter 18, verse
26, indicate the need for sojourners and strangers in Israel to adhere to
the abstinence from blood, offerings to idols and sexual immorality. The
listed requirements are the minimum that the law requires of a person who
chooses to live and fellowship in an Israelite society.
One may be accustomed to regarding this decree as though, to make it easy
for new Christians, only a few important rules were deemed to be of value
while the rest of the law was to be ignored. However the decree does not
furnish any proof that either Jews or Gentiles were no longer under an obligation
to keep the Ten Commandments. Examined in its context it is actually an
application of the Law to the specific needs of the early Church context.
Therefore I judge that we should not trouble
those from among the Gentiles, who are turning to God, but that we write
to them to abstain from things polluted by idols, from sexual immorality,
from things strangled, and from blood. For Moses has had throughout many
generations those who preach him in every city being read in the synagogue
every Sabbath. Acts 15:19-21
Note the phrase, "are turning to God". This was not a letter written to
all Christians but was penned exclusively for "those from among the Gentiles".
This wasn't a universal ruling for all Christians but was specifically addressed
to those who had no prior knowledge of God’s law. The last sentence gives
the reason why it was not necessary to rewrite the Moral Law in this decree.
For the books of the law were read in every city in the synagogue every
Sabbath. God’s law could be heard every Sabbath at the public reading of
the Scriptures in the synagogue.
If the Ten Commandments did not at that
time apply to the new Gentile converts then it doesn't seem logical that
these other laws would apply either. Common sense tells us that it would
be of little use keeping away from things offered to idols, from things
strangled, from sexual immorality and from blood if they were still cheating,
lying, murdering, coveting and blaspheming. The apostles confidently relied
on the reading of the law in the synagogue to educate the Gentiles in these
areas.
This Jerusalem decision did not please
everybody and so the Circumcision group lived on. Almost every epistle written
by Paul warns the young churches to beware of those of the ‘Circumcision’.
The fact that the Circumcision group had such a wide area of influence is
further proof that the young Gentile church, including the Roman church,
observed the Sabbath in their early years. Had the Sabbath been replaced
by Sunday no member of the fiercely legalistic Circumcision group would
have had any cause to mix with Sabbath breakers on Sunday and this whole
problem of fellowship would not have arisen.
SAVAGE WOLVES EMERGE
As the believers were progressively expelled from the synagogue as prophesied
by Jesus (John 16:2), the need for apostolic instruction increased. Letters
from the disciples would have been helpful, but the lack of teachers of
sound doctrine possibly played a big part in the loss of truth and in the
infiltration of false apostles.
Before long, church after church fell prey to those who would lead the church
into compromise with paganism. The extremes of the Circumcision group who
wished to convert all to Judaism gave the 'mystery of lawlessness' (2 Thess.
2:7) an opportunity to allow false teachers to turn grace into licence (Jude
1). Instead of steering the new Gentile converts away from paganism into
righteousness by faith, false teachers sought a compromise between pagan
customs and Christian doctrine; hence the merger of Christianity and Paganism
that we see today. False teachers 'christianised' the pagan festivals. They
chose to worship and rest on the 'venerable day of the sun' rather than
the Sabbath. They have ignored the commandments of God, worshipping idols
and images. They have persecuted the saints of God, who keep his commandments.
Jesus said, "If you love me, keep my commandments".
Argument Four
"Every day is a Sabbath day because we rest in Christ. There is no need
to keep any particular day of the week."
It is a wonderful truth that we do rest
in Christ. But can we keep the commandment of God in spirit by ignoring
the letter? Can we for instance murder, as long as we don't become angry?
Or perhaps it is right to commit adultery as long as we are not guilty of
lust? (Matt. 5:21,28) How then is it possible to refuse to keep the Sabbath
day and yet keep it in spirit?
Baptism is a fitting illustration of how the physical relates to the spiritual.
The baptismal candidate should identify with Jesus Christ in his death,
burial and resurrection. If he or she does, then God raises that person
to new life in Christ. But the candidate's experience of baptism in its
spiritual sense does not mean that water baptism becomes unnecessary. On
the contrary, the candidate's spiritual experience will strengthen the desire
for complete obedience.
Many Christians see the Ten Commandments as belonging to the Old Covenant
only. They fail to see the relationship between God's Law and the New Covenant.
... I will make a new covenant .... I will put my law in their minds, and
write it on their hearts;..... Jeremiah 31:31-33
The New Covenant is about God's Law, including the Ten Commandments, being
written in our minds and on our hearts. Now through the Spirit we can keep
the law in the Spirit, as opposed to the keeping of the law in the letter
though human endeavours.
He is the mediator of the new covenant, by means of his death, for the redemption
of the transgressions under the first covenant, that those who are called
may receive the promise of the eternal inheritance. Hebrews 9:15
One must transgress under the first covenant in order to be redeemed through
Christ's death and become a partaker of the new covenant. Therefore the
transgressions that necessitate our redemption are those we have committed
under the first covenant. Transgression is breaking the law of the Old Covenant,
the Ten Commandments.
The idea of keeping the fourth commandment
in spirit only, presents quite a few problems in practice. Let's study the
wording of this commandment. This commandment is fourfold. It is a command
to remember, to keep holy, to labour and to rest.
Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy, Six days you shall labour and
do all your work,
How do you spiritually remember the seventh day by forgetting it completely?
How do you spiritually keep the Sabbath holy by defiling it? And how is
it possible to spiritually labour six days if you're supposed to be spiritually
resting every day in the Lord. The command is to labour as well as to rest!
If the particular day that God chose is no longer holy to us, on whose authority
do we declare the seventh day no longer holy? Only a higher authority than
God can override God's declaration of holiness. Peter was warned against
a similar thing in Acts 10:15. How does resting in the Lord eliminate our
need for meeting together and worshipping God? How can we say that the day
that God set aside for the purpose of rest, worship and separation from
the secular things of life is no longer of any value to the Christian? If
it is still of value to the Christian then why would God want to get rid
of it?
THE SABBATH REST IS A "TYPE"
The rest we have in Jesus in this life
is not the only kind of rest of which the seventh day is a "type". Turn
to Hebrews 3:14 and 4:1-12 in your Bible and read the whole passage. Only
the key verses will be reprinted here.
Verse 14. "For we have become partakers of Christ if we hold the beginning
of our confidence steadfast to the end."
Chapter 4 Verse 1,2,3 "Therefore, since a promise remains of entering his
rest, let us fear lest any of you seem to have come short of it. For indeed
the gospel was preached to us as well as to them; but the word which they
heard did not profit them, not being mixed with faith in those who heard
it. For we who have believed do enter that rest, as he has said: "So I swore
in my wrath, They shall not enter my rest"
Verse 4,5,6. "for he has spoken in a certain place of the seventh day in
this way: "And God rested on the seventh day from all his works"; and again
in this place: "They shall not enter my rest." Since therefore it remains
that some must enter it, and those to whom it was first preached did not
enter because of disobedience,"
Verse 9,10 "There remains therefore a rest for the people of God." For he
who has entered his rest has himself also ceased from his works as God did
from his."
Verse 11 "Let us therefore be diligent to enter that rest, lest anyone should
fall after the same example of disobedience.
Verse 12 "For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any
two edged sward, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of
joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the
heart."
Notice that verse 9, when literally translated from the Greek reads,
therefore remains Sabbath keeping (sabbatismos) for God's people.
In the King James Version, 's…ÐÝþGET http://americanplaced in the margin.
In Christ we have a foretaste of the coming rest of God when all our works
will cease. The rest that is experienced through faith and trust in Christ
is with us today in a very real sense. Yet the primary concern of this passage
is the future fulfillment of the 'Sabbath' rest which will only be fully
realized when Christ returns. Without denying the rest we have in Christ,
these verses clearly associate the seventh day sabbath with the promise
of our future rest. Disobedience will disqualify us from reaching our rest.
Note verse 11.
Let us therefore be diligent to enter that rest, lest anyone should fall
after the same example of disobedience."
What particular act of disobedience could this be referring to? The answer
is found in Ezekiel 20 where we read of this very same example of disobedience
in the wilderness when God swore an oath that they would not enter the Promised
Land. Note particularly verses 15 and 16.
So I also lifted my hand in an oath to
them in the wilderness, that I would not bring them into the land which
I had given them, flowing with milk and honey, the glory of all lands, because
they despised my judgements and did not walk in my statutes, but profaned
my Sabbaths; for their heart went after their idols."
This is the example of disobedience that
we should be careful not to fall by! They knew which day was the sabbath
day, they knew what God required, but they wilfully disobeyed and follow
their false gods instead. Should we continue to ignore the Sabbath day of
the Lord?
..... Thus you have made the commandment
of God of no effect by your tradition. "Hypocrites! Well did Isaiah prophesy
about you, saying:
'These people draw near to me with their mouth,
And honour me with their lips,
But their heart is far from me.
And in vain they worship me,
Teaching as doctrines the commandments of men."' Matt 15:6,7,8,9
Argument Five
"Sabbath keeping is legalism"
Whenever people begin to discuss the issue of Sabbath-keeping the accusation
of being a legalist will rear its head. The charge of legalism is freely
bandied about as though the Christian has no right to allow his spiritual
relationship with God to dictate his actions in the physical life. Such
physical things as Sabbath-keeping, fasting, and tithing are not inherently
legalistic although each can be abused and become no more than legalism.
Since legalism is not a Biblical term it should be defined. Galatians 5:4
says,
You have become estranged
from Christ you who attempt to be justified by law; you have fallen from
grace.
To me, this is the definition and fate of the legalist. When a person takes
their eyes off the Lord Jesus Christ and begins to trust in their own righteousness
for salvation they fall headlong into the snare of legalism. But this is
not what is advocated by the keeping of the Sabbath. Obedience is not legalism.
Righteousness by faith is not legalism.
It is absurd to suggest that we should sin in order to prove our dependence
on salvation by grace. (Romans 6:1)
WHAT IS SIN?
There are many varied definitions of sin
but simply defined from the Scriptures, "Sin is lawlessness." (1 John 3:4)
What is lawlessness? “Lawlessness” is defined by the Oxford Dictionary as:
Disregard for the law. Paul spoke of the mystery of lawlessness [disregard
for the law] at work in his day. (2 Thess. 2:7) The Man of Sin, the son
of perdition, is called the ‘lawless one’. Lawlessness is his trademark!
Not everyone who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' shall enter the kingdom of heaven,
but he who does the will of my Father in heaven. Many will say to me in
that day, 'Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in your name, cast out demons
in your name, and done many wonders in your name?' And then I will declare
to them, 'I never knew you; depart from me, you who practise lawlessness!'
Matt 7:21-23
Lawlessness is also the trademark of the false Christian! The law, including
the Sabbath, stands as a witness against these rebellious ones. (1 Tim.
1:9)
My own experience is that keeping the
Sabbath does not create in one a sense of self-righteousness. If anything,
the Sabbath serves as a reminder of one's inadequacy (in our own strength)
to keep God's commandments. Try it! You will quickly find that keeping the
things of God foremost in your mind throughout the day doesn't come easily.
There are many distractions and inevitable hardships. (2 Timothy 3:12)
Sin is disregarding the law of God. How then can keeping the law of God
be sin? Can there be any evil in doing what God commands just because, out
of faith and love for Him, we want to please him?
The sin of legalism is one of trusting
in one's own righteousness, rather than trusting in the righteousness of
Christ. Our Lord Jesus Christ kept the Sabbath. The disciples kept the Sabbath.
There are still today those who keep the commandments of God and have the
testimony of Jesus Christ. (Rev 12:17)
WHATEVER IS NOT FROM FAITH IS SIN
Another verse that is worth looking at
is Galatians 4:8-11 (NIV)
8 Formerly, when you did not know God, you were slaves to those who by nature
are not gods. 9 But now that you know God—or rather are known by God—how
is it that you are turning back to those weak and miserable principles?
Do you wish to be enslaved by them all over again?10 You are observing special
days and months and seasons and years! 11 I fear for you, that somehow I
have wasted my efforts on you.
The passage is speaking to former pagans who are in some way returning to
the bondage of weak and beggarly elements. Although the Sabbath is not mentioned
some have assumed that 'observing days' is an allusion to Sabbath keeping.
As the letter was written to correct certain
misconceptions of the role of the law in the plan of salvation, it is argued
that days and months and seasons and years refer to the biblical holy days
and weekly Sabbaths. However, those who hold a Sunday Sabbath must reject
this explanation for if Paul was berating the Galatians for keeping the
seventh day as a Sabbath, then his disapproval of such practices would also
apply to the first day of the week.
This is one portion of the letter that
has a direct reference to the past pagan practices of the Galatians. Though
not often translated as such, the statement could have been posed as a question.
Do you wish to be enslaved by them again
as at first? 10 Are you observing days and moons and seasons and years?
Astrology, predictions, superstitions about days, moons and seasons were
an integral part of pagan culture. Each god had his/her own special day.
The seasons and their meaning were very significant in pagan religion and
mythology. The Scriptures warned against such practices,
You shall not eat anything with the blood:
neither shall ye use enchantment, nor observe times. Leviticus 19:26
The letter to the Galatians counteracts the teaching that circumcision and
observation of the law of Moses are necessary for salvation. Paul saw a
parallel between the bondage of the superstitious observation of the elements
of nature, (sun, moon stars, earth, water, wind and fire) from which these
Gentiles had been delivered, and the bondage of the legalistic teaching
of the Circumcision group. If this passage is taken to mean that Paul was
condemning the observance of all Jewish customs and biblical holy days then
he is no more than a hypocrite, since Paul kept these himself. (Acts 18:18,21
KJV) His plea, "Brethren, I urge you to become as I am ..." becomes meaningless.
(Gal 4:12)
On closer examination, it is evident that Paul's criticism focuses on their
attitudes rather than to their actions. Their eagerness for the observance
of the full spectrum of Jewish ritual was an enslavement to them. They desired
to enter into favour with God via circumcision and conformity rather than
accept the sufficiency of Christ for their salvation and sanctification.
Paul deliberately reminds them of their former association with idols and
superstitious observance of times to illustrate that their present mindset
was merely substituting their faith in Christ for another set of powerless
traditions. Whatever is not from faith is sin. In their uncircumcised state
these Gentile Christians had all they needed for salvation, yet they were
not content with that. They seemed to want to walk by sight rather than
by faith. Worship must come from the heart of faith. There were times in
Israel’s history, when God voiced His disapproval of the Israelites’ worship
when their motives were not pure.
Your New Moons and your appointed feasts
my soul hates. Isaiah 1:14
As an integral part of worship the Sabbath needs to be kept out of pure
motives. A legalistic (works for salvation) attitude toward the Sabbath
does not please God. An attitude of obedience to God is what is required.
Jesus taught his disciples how to properly keep the Sabbath day. The Pharisees
of Jesus’ day had turned the joy and delight of the Sabbath celebration
into a day of pedantic restrictions. As Lord of the Sabbath, Christ understood
and taught the true purpose of the significance of the day. He confronted
the Pharisees’ judgement of his disciples’ actions and defended their innocence.
Paul also understood Christ's teaching
on the Sabbath and defended the Colossians against those who criticised
their manner of worship.
Therefore let no one judge you in food or in drink, or regarding a festival
or a new moon or sabbaths, Colossians 2:16
Although this verse has been used to infer that the Sabbath has been discarded,
there is nothing to suggest this in the wording of the verse. Are the Colossians
being criticised for the manner in which they were eating, drinking, and
keeping feasts, new moon celebrations and Sabbaths or were they being criticised
for their abandonment of food and drink restrictions, festivals, and Sabbaths?
A clue is given in the identity of their accusers whose traits were: false
humility, worship of angels, preoccupation with the supernatural world,
holding man-made commandments and doctrines, false wisdom, self-imposed
religion, false humility, neglect of the body. It would appear that these
critics were not “Judaizers” but Ascetics who were trying to impose their
oppressive rules upon the worshippers of God in the church at Colosse who
were at that time keeping the Sabbaths according to the Scriptures. Douglas
R. De Lacey writes,
The ‘judgment’ seems to be criticism of
the Christians’ present practice, apparently of eating and drinking and
enjoying Jewish festivals, in contrast to those whose watchword was "do
not handle, do not taste, do not even touch" (Col 2:21)
ESTEEMING SPECIAL DAYS
Now let’s consider Romans 14:5-6 (NKJV)
One person esteems one day above another; another esteems every day (alike).
Let each be fully convinced in his own mind. {6} He who observes the day,
observes it to the Lord; and he who does not observe the day, to the Lord
he does not observe it. He who eats, eats to the Lord, for he gives God
thanks; and he who does not eat, to the Lord he does not eat, and gives
God thanks.
This chapter is introduced as pertaining
to doubtful things and is predominantly about matters of food. (Food matters
are expressly mentioned in nine verses out of twenty three.) There is no
direct reference to the Sabbath here. In fact a discussion of a topic as
important as the Sabbath in vv 5 & 6a would seem somewhat out of place in
this chapter as a change in the observance of the day of worship would hardly
be a purely individual concern. It would be an issue seriously affecting
the whole church.
The discussion of the significance of
certain days can be understood as part of the discussion of food matters
rather than as a digression. The observance of “days” would best fit the
immediate context if the particular days being discussed concerned fasting.
It is conceivable that the problem being addressed was a dispute over the
appropriate days for fasting. There was a tradition among the Pharisees
that they should fast twice a week, on Monday and Thursday. As the fasting
mentioned here is a voluntary practice, Paul’s exhortation, “Let each be
fully convinced in his own mind” is an appropriate response to the situation.
If Paul was referring to the Sabbath it
is strange that he didn’t just write, “He who observes the Sabbath etc”.
The fact that Paul did not specify an actual day could suggest that Paul
was referring to a number of different days that had significance for Jews
but not for Gentiles. The Feast of Purim and the Feast of Dedication (Hanukkah)
are examples. It is evident that in addition to fasting days, other significant
days qualify as the possible subject of Paul’s response.
Protestant Christians who trace their
roots to Martin Luther must ask themselves if Martin Luther came out of
Catholicism completely. Baptists and those who believe in full immersion
must acknowledge that Luther's understanding was not fully complete as Luther
never opposed infant baptism. Is there now a need for yet another reformation?
Could the major reformers have missed the truth of the Sabbath?
Conclusion
Did you realize that the
first day that Adam spent on this planet was spent in fellowship with God?
Imagine the love and joy that was shared between the Man and his Creator
as they fellowshipped together for the first time. That day was the seventh
day of creation. God wants mankind to remember that day because He wants
to bring us back into perfect fellowship with Him. Since the day of man’s
rebellion God has worked consistently to bring Adam's race back into the
sweet fellowship of that blessed seventh day. This is the goal of the plan
of salvation. This restoration is hope of Christ’s death on the cross. Your
Heavenly Father longs to renew the fellowship of that first seventh day.
That is the significance of its holiness. The seventh day points back to
creation and forward to the Day of the Lord. It is a bridge that spans the
millennia between Adam's broken fellowship and our future glory. The Sabbath
was a special sign to Israel because it was a promise of the rest waited
for them in the Promised Land. Through disbelief they never entered that
rest. (Hebrews 4:6) The Sabbath to the Christian is an even greater sign.
It is a promise of eternal rest with God.
Therefore, since a promise remains of entering his rest, let us fear lest
any of you seem to have come short of it. Hebrews 4:1
God, through Christ, created the Sabbath day on the seventh day of Creation
by His blessing, resting and setting apart of that day. As this day was
created for the benefit of mankind, God commanded man to observe the day
by rest after his own example. Later, a written version of the Sabbath commandment
was included in the Ten Commandments. At different times throughout the
recorded history of Israel, the Sabbath was profaned and idolatry flourished.
Periods of Sabbath indifference and apostasy were followed by periods of
punishment and exile. When Jesus Christ came both he and his disciples kept
the Sabbath. The Lord Jesus, perceiving man's misconception of his Divine
Purpose, categorically denied any intention of destroying the Law. Foreseeing
the coming lawlessness, he clearly reproved anyone who "breaks one of the
least of the commandments, and teaches men so". This is why Christians should
keep His Sabbath day holy.
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