Introduction
In our busy world, stress
is looming larger and larger as a major factor in
so many aspects of our lives. More and more we
are learning that to maintain good physical,
mental, and emotional health, we must have
periodic reprieve from the pressures of Twentieth
Century living. We must have rest from our
labors, be they physical or mental.
Millennia ago,
our all-wise Creator and Designer built into His
plan for mankind a day of rest and rejuvenation,
a day of ceasing from work, a day of freedom from
the burdens of physical life. That day is the
Sabbath - a foretaste of the peace and joy of
eternal life, available through Jesus, the
Messiah.
Our prayer is
that you will read this book with a mind that is
open to the truth of God's Word, and with a heart
that desires to taste the blessings that flow to
those who embrace the truth of the Sabbath.
Richard A
Wiedenheft Daniel W. Porter January, 1988
CHAPTER
ONE
Sabbath
or Sunday
Does
It Matter?
Truth is often
stranger than fiction! And this is certainly true
when it comes to the question of which day is the
Sabbath for Christians. Consider the following
commonly accepted ideas on the subject:
1. The early New
Testament Christians began worshiping on the
first day of the week instead of the Sabbath
2. The Sabbath
was a Jewish institution which originated with
Moses.
3. The Sabbath
of the Old Testament was a day of legalistic
restrictions, a burden and yoke for the
Israelites.
4. Roman
Catholic theologians rely primarily on the Bible
for justification for observing Sunday as a holy
day.
If you are
inclined to agree with any of these concepts, you
are in for some surprises. As you read this
booklet you may discover that the truth is indeed
stranger than fiction.
Origin
of the Sabbath
The origin of
the Sabbath rest goes back 2500 years or more
before Moses and the children of Israel. It goes
back to the very creation of the world and of
mankind.
Thus the heavens
and the earth were completed in all their vast
array. By the seventh day God had finished the
work he had been doing; so on the seventh day he
rested from all his work. And God blessed the
seventh day and made it holy, because on it he
rested from all the work of creating that he had
done (Gen. 2:1-2).
How significant!
The very God of
the universe chose to cease from His labor not
because He was tired. For God is not a being of
flesh (Isa. 40:28). Yet He chose to cease, to
rest, to step back and delight in what He had
created. And what's more, He blessed, sanctified,
and made holy the seventh day!
The fact is that
the Sabbath was created by God Himself when man
was created-well over two millennia before Moses.
And resting and fellowshipping with God on that
first Sabbath day was Adam, who had been created
on the day before!
Other passages
of Scripture also indicate that the Sabbath was
given at Creation. For example, in the giving of
the Fourth Commandment, Israel was reminded of
the origin of the Sabbath.
For in six days
the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea,
and all that is in them, but he rested on the
seventh day. Therefore the Lord blessed the
Sabbath day and made it holy (Ex. 20:11).
When was the
Sabbath blessed and made holy? At creation!
Jesus also
corroborates the early origin of the Sabbath. In
upbraiding the Pharisees for their legalistic
approach to the Sabbath, He reminded them that
the "Sabbath was made
for man"
(Mark 2:27). Of course, His
primary point had to do with whether man was
created to serve the day or whether the day was
created as a blessing for the benefit of man. But
in making that point, Jesus showed the Sabbath
was made - not just for Israel it
was made for man! And when
was it made for man? At
Creation! Over 2500 years
before Moses!
CHAPTER
TWO
Was
the Sabbath
Kept
Before Moses?
Some have argued
that what God hallowed at Creation was only the
very first seventh day-not a weekly Sabbath.
Hence, they believe, the Sabbath was unknown and
unobserved during the 2500 years from Adam to
Moses.
It must be
granted that there is no direct reference to
Noah, Abraham, Joseph, or other patriarchs
keeping the Sabbath. But we do know that they
were men of God. And we know that God said of
Abraham that he, "...obeyed
me and kept my requirements,
my commands, my decrees and my laws" (Gen.
2:5). What were those commands, decrees, and
laws? Could they have included the Sabbath?
It can be
demonstrated quite easily that before the time of
Moses the spiritual precepts of the Ten
Commandments were in effect (though probably not
codified as ten commandments). For example, it
was sin for Cain to murder Abel (Gen. 4); King
Abimelech knew adultery was wrong, as did Joseph
(Gen. 20 and 39); Jacob knew stealing was wrong
(Gen. 31).
Can we suppose
that nine of the Ten Commandments were
codification's of existing spiritual laws, but
that the Fourth Commandment introduced a brand
new law? Why should we expect that one to be any
different from the others?
References
to the Weekly Cycle
References to
periods of seven days occur frequently in
Genesis. A number of seven-day time sequences are
mentioned in connection with the Flood (Gen.
7:4,10; 8:10-12). Jacob served Laban for two
seven-year periods for his wives; and he was told
by Laban regarding Leah, "Fulfill
her week..." (Gen. 29:
27-28, KJV). Apparently the week was a routine
part of their measurement of time.
Secular sources
also indicate that the seven-day week was
recognized in Near Eastern cultures from earliest
times - unlike other cultures, which used 3, 4,
5, 6, or 8 day weeks (Encyclopedia
Britannica, llth ed.,
articles "Week" and
"Calendar"). If a seven-day week was
used during these patriarchal times, it seems
likely that the Sabbath would have been part of
that cycle.
Introduction
of Sabbath to Israel
There are two
possibilities relative to the introduction of the
Sabbath to Israel:
1. The Sabbath
was a completely new institution and law; it was
unfamiliar to them since it had never been kept
during the 2500 years from Creation to Exodus;
or,
2. The Sabbath
was familiar to Israel. And although they may not
have kept it as slaves in Egypt, they simply had
to be reminded of what they already knew.
The weight of
evidence rests solidly with the second of these
possibilities.
The very first
place the Sabbath is mentioned in connection with
Israel is in Exodus 16. This introduction is
quite incidental to the main point of the
chapter, which is instruction about manna.
According to Jamieson,
Fausset, and Brown Commentary, "...in
short, the Sabbath Is
mentioned incidentally in considering the
miraculous supply of manna
and not the slightest hint is given of
its being instituted for the
first time on that occasion" (See
on Ex.16:23). God told Israel that they should
gather and prepare twice as much on the sixth day
so their food would be ready for them on the
seventh. Moses told the people simply:
This is what the
Lord commanded: 'Tomorrow is to be a day of rest,
a holy Sabbath to the Lord. So bake what you want
to bake and boil what you want to boil. Save
whatever is left and keep it until morning' (Ex.
16:23).
God wanted them
to be free from mundane physical responsibilities
on the Sabbath. He wanted them to be free to rest
and to worship Him.
Of course, some
of the people couldn't believe that their efforts
of six days could suffice for seven, so they went
out looking for manna on the Sabbath. God
upbraided them sternly for not believing Him.
Many Christians today have the same problem. They
don't think they can survive economically on what
they earn in six days-they feel they have to
moonlight, working on all seven days, dedicating
only a few hours (if any) to worship and
fellowship.
The way in which
the Sabbath is introduced in Exodus 16 stands in
stark contrast with the way the Passover is
introduced in Exodus 12 and 13. Israel knew
nothing about the Passover. It was completely
new, so God had to give them detailed regulations
and instructions about how and why they should
observe it. The fact that major portions of two
chapters are devoted to the introduction of the
Passover points up the incidental nature of the
discussion of the Sabbath in chapter 16.
Conclusion: the
Sabbath was familiar to Israel; the Passover was
not.
Wording
of the Fourth Commandment
Another
indication that Israel was familiar with the
Sabbath is found in the very wording of the
Fourth Commandment. "Remember
the Sabbath day to keep it holy" (Ex.
20.8 KJV).
Jamieson,
Fausset, and Brown Commentary says
of this, ... Remember implies
that it was well-known and recognized"(See
on Ex. 20: 8-1 1). And this opinion is very much
in harmony with the fact that the other
Commandments were not new to Israel. It seems
very improbable that nine of the Commandments
would be codification's of precepts already
familiar to Israel, but that one (the Fourth)
should introduce a completely new law.
All the evidence
points to the conclusion that the Sabbath was a
day of rest and worship from Creation to Exodus.
Indeed, when God thundered the Decalogue from Mt.
Sinai, He referred back to the seventh day of
Creation:
Therefore the
Lord blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy
(Ex. 20.1 1).
Note that it was
not just the first seventh day God made holy. It
was the Sabbath-as a weekly day of freedom and
rejuvenation. It was His wonderful gift and
blessing to all His creation, to all mankind-long
before He began dealing with Israel.
CHAPTER
THREE
The
Sabbath of
the
Old Testament
No one disagrees
with the fact that the Israelites were commanded
to keep the Sabbath. However, there are many
misconceptions about how they
were to keep it.
One typical
perception is that the Old Testament Sabbath was
a burdensome yoke designed by God to be so
rigorous that there was no way Israel could have
kept it. To quote one publication:
The Sabbath of
Adam, Noah and Abraham had been a simple example
of resting, refreshment and recuperation. But at
the Exodus, the Sabbath became a stringent
command which did not allow the Israelites to do
work of any kind. He could not cook an egg, pick
a handful of food to eat on the Sabbath, gather a
few sticks of wood for kindling, light a fire,
carry any item out of the home, and he could not
have any personal pleasure whatever all under the
penalty of death if he did so.... Truly the
Sabbath was very difficult to keep. It became a
bondage-a heavy burden ... a day to be dreaded
and feared (The Sabbath and
The Christian,
Foundation for Biblical
Research, p. 7, 1974).
This is an
absolutely false concept of the Old Testament
Sabbath! Yet it has been accepted by most
Christians throughout the history of the church.
In fact, it was adopted by some of the early
church fathers, who were affected by very strong
anti-Jewish prejudices extant in the Roman
Empire. In an effort to discredit Judaism and
draw a wide distinction between Christians and
Jews, they reinterpreted the Old Testament. For
example, Justin Martyr (A.D. 100-160) taught that
the Sabbath had been imposed on the Jews as "a
mark to single them out for punishment
they so well deserve for their infidelities"
(From Sabbath
to Sunday, Bacchiocchi, p.
186, 1977).
The Word of God
reveals exactly the opposite of these false
concepts!
Sabbath-Day
of Freedom
The Sabbath of
the Old Testament was intended to be a day of
joy, of rest, of freedom-a day of delight for all
mankind-and especially for the nation of Israel
whom God singled out for a special covenant with
Him.
Isaiah wrote of
the Sabbath,
If you keep your
feet from breaking the Sabbath and from doing as
you please on my holy day, if you call the
Sabbath a delight ... if you honor it by not
going your own way and not doing as you please
... then you will find joy in the Lord ... (Isa.
58: 13-14).
Isaiah's picture
is one of joy and delight-hardly one of burden
and oppression.
Psalm 92 is a
psalm for the Sabbath and it characterizes God's
intent for this day:
It is good to
praise the Lord and make music to your name, 0
Most High, to proclaim your love in the morning
and your faithfulness at night ... You have
exalted my horn like that of a wild ox; ... The
righteous will flourish like a palm tree ... they
will flourish in the courts of our God" (vv.
1, 10, 12, 13).
The Sabbath was
intended to be a day of rejoicing, of delight, of
freedom from the responsibilities of the first
six days of every week. It was to be a
humanitarian lifting of the grinding burdens the
Israelites had known as slaves in Egypt-a special
blessing for God's people-a sign of their
relationship with Him.
The freedom of
the Sabbath is also indicated by the Sabbatical
year God gave to Israel. Every seventh year the
land was to be rested; servants were to be
released; debts were to be cancelled. The year
was to be one of freedom, rejoicing, and
rejuvenation for the nation (Deut. 15. 1-18; Lev.
25.1-6).
Unfortunately,
the Israelites didn't grasp the positive intent
and blessing of the Sabbath day (and the
Sabbatical year). If they had, God's simple
command "Remember the
Sabbath day by keeping
it holy... " (Ex. 20:8)
would have sufficed. But it was not in their
hearts to obey God! Just like many people today,
their primary concern was physical security and
financial gain. They viewed the Sabbath as an
intrusion in their lives, as an obstacle to their
pursuit of physical, occupational goals. They
flagrantly ignored the Sabbath or looked for
loopholes; they insisted on working every day and
farming the land every year-all because they did
not trust God as their Sustainer and Provider.
Are you willing
to trust God as your sustainer by resting on the
day He made holy?,
God's
Law Given to Israel
In considering
the Sabbath in the Old Testament, we must
understand the role of God's law in general. When
God began dealing with the nation of Israel, He
codified for them His moral and spiritual laws.
These are embodied in the Ten Commandments and
the Two Great Commandments, which served as sort
of a national constitution. But because Israel
was a physical nation, these broad, general
precepts had to be spelled out in much greater
detail-as is done in modern nations like the
United States.
The Seventh
Commandment, forbidding adultery, was expanded in
a legal way to prohibit various illicit sexual
acts; appropriate punishment for each was
prescribed (Ex. 22: 16, 19; Lev. 18:2-23; Deut.
22:13). Various types of stealing and the penalty
for each were spelled out in detail (Ex. 22.1-15;
Deut. 19:14-1 25:13-16). Various degrees of
murder and manslaughter were defined just as they
are in our modern legal systems (Ex. 21:12-32;
Deut. 19:4-7, 11-13; 21:1-9).
Almost all of
the Ten Commandments, including the Fourth, were
expanded in the letter, in a legal way. Israel
was given additional restrictions regarding the
commanded day of rest. However, these were
different in significant ways:
They were
relatively few in number compared to those given
for some of the other commandments;
Almost all were
given in response to specific incidents of
Sabbath breaking-not as general prohibitions;
and,
They in no way
made the Sabbath a grievous burden as some people
falsely assume.
Restrictions Do
Not Make Burden of Sabbath
Consider, in
context, the Sabbath prohibitions given to
Israel.
Staying at
Home
When the
Israelites insisted on going out to gather manna
on the Sabbath (after Moses had just instructed
them not to do so), God said, "Everyone
is to stay where he is on the seventh day; no
one is to go out" (Ex.
16.29). In the context of looking for manna, this
can hardly be taken as a general prohibition
against leaving one's abode on the Sabbath.
Indeed, the Israelites were commanded to attend
holy convocations on the Sabbath (Lev. 23. 1-3).
Lighting
Fires
Exodus 35.3
prohibits the lighting of fires on the Sabbath.
While some people consider this a cruel
restriction, many Bible commentators believe it
refers to industrial-type fires, which would be
used in construction of the tabernacle (Ex. 35.
4-29-1 see, the Jamieson,
Fausset and Brown Bible Commentary on
these verses). Fires for domestic heating and
cooking would already be lighted before the
beginning of the Sabbath on Friday; and this
single prohibition (even if it did include all
fires) hardly proves that God wanted the
Israelites to be cold and hungry every Sabbath
day. In fact, they had been told to prepare for
the Sabbath by cooking ahead of time (Ex. 16:23).
God's whole
intent was to allow them to be free to rejoice
and rest on the Sabbath. He
did not want them burdened by routine physical
responsibilities, which could have included the
building of fires (quite a project in the
wilderness).
Picking Up
Sticks
Those who want
to portray the Old Testament Sabbath as very
oppressive cite Numbers 15.32. A man was caught
gathering wood on the Sabbath. Moses, unsure of
how to deal with him, kept him in custody until
God revealed that he should be put to death.
Was God being
arbitrary and harsh on a man who simply picked up
a few twigs on the Sabbath?
Well, first of
all, in a camp of several million people,
gathering wood could be a lot of work. Secondly,
Moses was not administering a repressive law. It
was God who decided the man's
fate. And God looked on the
heart and read the motives which apparently were
very much at odds with His will. Indeed, if the
man had wanted to keep the Sabbath as God
intended, he certainly wouldn't have been out
gathering wood. It wasn't just a matter of a
short stroll through the camp and picking up a
few sticks. He was defying the law of God.
Don't Bear
Burdens
Jeremiah forbade
the people to bear burdens on the Sabbath; but
this was clearly in the context of commercial
loads. It certainly didn't mean that a man could
not pick up his bedroll on the Sabbath (Compare
Jer. 17.19-27 with John 5.8-10).
Even after the
Babylonian captivity, the people couldn't resist
the temptation to work on the Sabbath. Nehemiah
observed them treading wine presses, harvesting,
loading produce, and buying wares from the men of
Tyre (Neh. 13:15-22). He rebuked them sharply for
desecrating the Sabbath and finally ordered the
gates of Jerusalem closed Friday evening. He was
forced to legislate obedience to people who
simply had no heart to obey God.
Overall there
are very few specific Sabbath prohibitions given
in the Old Testament. Those which were given were
intended to make the people free for rest and
worship. And if they had loved God and wanted to
obey Him, the Sabbath would have been a fantastic
delight, as it can be for us
- if we want to obey God!
God's Law in the
New Covenant
Under the New
Covenant, God is dealing with individuals, not a
nation. His spiritual laws are not expanded in a
legal way, as they were for Israel; rather, they
are written in our hearts by the Holy Spirit
(Heb. 8.10). God doesn't give us a list of do's
and don'ts regarding sexual sins; rather He gets
to the heart of the matter: "anyone
who looks at a woman lustfully has already
committed adultery with her
in his heart" (Matt. 5:28). He
doesn't define various types of murder; He goes
much further and says, "Love
your enemies" (Matt.
5.44).
In the New
Covenant, God's basic spiritual laws, which were
given to Israel in the Ten Commandments and in
the Two Great Commandments, are the same as
they've always been. But now they are to be
written in our hearts and approached from a
positive point of view.
We no longer
ask, "What do / have to
do?" Rather, we ask, "What
does God want me to do?" We
internalize God's laws-we make them part of our
very being-because they express the will of our
Father who has saved us by grace and put us into
His family.
The Sabbath is
very much apart of the overall will of God - a
day of rest and freedom commanded by him for our
physical and spiritual good.
Importance of
Sabbath to God
The importance
God places on the Sabbath is indicated by the
prominence it occupies in His dealings with His
people.
First, He chose
to include it as part of the Ten Commandments,
which were spoken by His own voice, written by
His finger.
Second, He
called the Sabbath a sign between Him and His
chosen people (Ex. 31.14-17; Ezek. 20.12).
And third,
Israel's desecration of the Sabbath was cited as
one of the primary reasons they went into
captivity. Time and time again God upbraided them
for their stiff-necked attitudes for Sabbath
breaking and idolatry in particular. They
couldn't seem to trust God enough to rest their
land in the seventh year. Finally God gave them
into the hands of the Assyrians and Babylonians.
Many years
later, in reflecting on the reasons Israel went
into captivity, Nehemiah wrote, "What
is this wicked thing you are
doing - desecrating the
Sabbath day? Didn't your forefathers do
the same things, so that our
God brought all this calamity upon us
and upon this city? Now you
are stirring up more wrath against
Israel by desecrating the
Sabbath" (Neh.
13:17-18).
The Sabbath was
an integral part of God's will for mankind as
well as for Israel. He placed a great deal of
importance on it. But even the national captivity
and the preaching of all the prophets did not
change the people's basic self-centeredness.
Indeed, following the days of Nehemiah they went
to the opposite extreme. They made a complete
ritual out of the Sabbath - still missing its
whole meaning and purpose.
CHAPTER
FOUR
Jesus
Upholds Sabbath,
Rejects
Tradition
Sometime after
their return from the Babylonian Captivity, the
Jewish religious leaders began to add their own
traditions to the law of Moses in general-and to
the Sabbath in particular. It was as if by adding
all kinds of regulations they could prevent the
people from breaking the Sabbath-and thus avert
God's punishment for disobedience. But in adding
their own man-made rules, they completely missed
the point of the Sabbath.
Sabbath
Regulations Given in Talmud
Two entire
treatises of the Talmud deal with how the Sabbath
was to be kept. Thirty-nine types of work were
not to be done on the Sabbath. For example,
writing more than one letter was prohibited.
Tying certain types of knots was prohibited, but
others were permitted. A Levite in the Temple
could retie a broken string on a musical
instrument, but he could not put on a new one.
Practicing medicine was not allowed-unless life
was endangered. Hence, a man with a toothache
could rinse his mouth with vinegar on the
Sabbath-as long as he swallowed it (that was
eating); but he could not rinse his mouth and
then spit out the vinegar (that was practicing
medicine).
Travel on the
Sabbath was limited to a specific distance from
one's domicile. However, if one wanted to go
further on the Sabbath, he could legally extend
his domicile by placing some of his belongings at
a distant point; then he could begin counting his
Sabbath's journey from that distant point (A
Dictionary of Bible, James
Hastings, Scribner's, 1903, article
"Sabbath").
No wonder Jesus
called the Pharisees and Scribes a bunch of
self-righteous hypocrites! No wonder He said of
them,
You have a fine
way of setting aside the commands of God in order
to observe your own traditions! Thus you nullify
the word of God by your traditions that you have
handed down (Mark 7.9,13).
By putting all
their emphasis on legalistic do's and don'ts, the
Pharisees had indeed made a burden of the
Sabbath; they had turned a day of joy and rest
and rejoicing into an oppressive yoke. They
completely obliterated God's positive intent for
the Sabbath!
Jesus
Upholds the Sabbath
While Jesus took
great exception to man-made traditions, never
once did He hint that the Sabbath was to be set
aside or changed to another day. Rather, He
upheld the law, focusing on the positive
spiritual intent of the day. He proclaimed
Himself Lord of the Sabbath, the day which had
been set aside by God's example at Creation.
When the
Pharisees accused Jesus disciples of breaking the
Sabbath by shelling out a few kernels of grain
(they called it harvesting), He denounced their
traditions-but He upheld the Sabbath.
The Sabbath was
made for man, not man for the Sabbath. So the Son
of Man is Lord even of the Sabbath (Mark
2:27-28).
When the
Pharisees wanted to accuse Him for healing on the
Sabbath, Jesus asked, "Which
is lawful on the Sabbath; to do
good or to do evil, to save
life or to kill?" (Mark
3:4). He showed the positive intent of the
Sabbath-as a day of release; but never did He
suggest that the Sabbath would be abandoned.
On one occasion,
the ruler of a synagogue was upset that Jesus
healed a crippled woman on the Sabbath and told
the people they should be healed on one of the
six working days. Jesus responded,
You hypocrites!
Doesn't each of you on the Sabbath untie his ox
or donkey from the stall and ... give it water?
Then should not this woman ... be set free on the
Sabbath day from what bound her? (Luke 13:15-16).
Jesus was
showing that freedom was an essential theme for
this day of release.
After Jesus
healed a man with a shriveled hand on the Sabbath
the Pharisees asked Him, "Is
it lawful to heal on the Sabbath?"
(Matt. 12:10). He responded,
If any of you
has a sheep and it falls into a pit on the
Sabbath,
will you not
take hold of it and lift it out? How much more
valuable is a man than a sheep! Therefore it is
lawful to do good on the Sabbath (Matt.
12:11-12).
Again, Jesus
objected to the burdensome, arbitrary, inhumane
traditions of men. But He upheld the spiritual
intent and application, the freedom guaranteed by
the Sabbath command, just as He did for the other
Commandments. (See Matt. 5:21-30; Isaiah 42:21;
Jer. 31:33).
Sabbath
Upheld in Olivet Prophecy
Near the end of
His ministry, Jesus indicated that His followers
would continue keeping the Sabbath after His
death and resurrection. The occasion was the
"Olivet Prophecy" recorded in Matt. 24.
His disciples had come to Him asking about the
destruction of Jerusalem and the signs of His
coming at the end of the age. In verse 16, He
spoke about the people of Judea fleeing into the
mountains. In verse 20 He exhorted the disciples,
"Pray that your flight
will not take place in winter or on the
Sabbath. "
Now, if the
Sabbath was to cease following Jesus' death, this
exhortation would be totally uncalled for. But
such is not the case. The Sabbath would continue
to be a day of rest, worship and rejuvenation for
God's people. Hence, an emergency flight, while
not strictly prohibited, would not be in keeping
with God's purpose for the Sabbath.
The Gospel
record, from beginning to end, is clear: our Lord
kept the Sabbath and affirmed that it was made at
Creation for all mankind. And while He abhorred
the rituals and restrictions devised by men, He
strongly upheld the spiritual intent of the
Fourth Commandment.
Christians who
consider Him their Leader, Teacher, and King
should follow in His footsteps!
CHAPTER
FIVE
Apostles
& Early Church
Observe
Sabbath
Following His
death and resurrection, Jesus gave not so much as
a hint that the Fourth Commandment was no longer
necessary, or that the day of rest was changed to
Sunday. In fact, it is obvious from the New
Testament record that the Apostles and early
Christians continued to keep the seventh day of
the week according to the Fourth Commandment.
There is no evidence they abandoned the Sabbath
for Sunday!
Women Rest on
the Sabbath
Luke 23:56
describes what the women did after Jesus died,
after the veil in the temple was rent in two,
after anything that was "nailed to the
cross" was nailed there:
Then they [the
women] went home and prepared spices and
perfumes. But they rested on the Sabbath in
obedience to the commandment.
While it would
not be surprising that the women observed the
Sabbath after Jesus' crucifixion, the way Luke
records this fact is quite significant. Luke was
undoubtedly a Gentile writing to another Gentile
long after the Resurrection. Yet in no way did he
qualify his reference to the commandment as
having been "old" or "Jewish"
or "done away." It was still "the
commandment," part of God's spiritual law
and will for mankind (See also Romans 3:20, 31;
7:7-14,22; 1 Jn. 5:3; Jas. 2:8).
There is much
more evidence that both Jewish and Gentile
Christians kept the Sabbath during the New
Testament period. The key to understanding this
evidence is the Apostles and early Christians' attitude
toward God's relationship with Israel.
Early Disciples
See Gospel for Israel Only
At the time of
Christ, the Jews believed that God was concerned
with only one nation on earth-Israel. The promises
were for Israel; God's
blessings were for Israel;
the Messiah
would come to save Israel. All other people, they
believed, were simply heathen Gentiles-they were
dogs whom God would begin dealing with only if
they were circumcised and became Jewish
proselytes.
With the
outpouring of the Holy Spirit (Acts 2), the
apostles began to realize the spiritual nature of
the Kingdom of God; but they still saw Jesus as
the Savior of God's people, Israel. They
understood their commission basically in terms of
preaching salvation to Israel. Those who repented
and accepted Jesus had no thoughts of abandoning
the law of Moses. They continued to meet in the
synagogues and worship in the Temple. I n fact,
when Paul went to Damascus to look for Christians
to persecute, he went to the synagogues (Acts
9:2). Even the Romans, at first, considered the
Christians a sect of the Jews, like the Pharisees
or Sadducees.
The early Church
viewed salvation strictly within the context of
God's dealings with Israel.
Gospel Preached
to Gentiles
It was only
after God sent a special revelation that one of
the Apostles first conceived of the idea that the
Gospel might be for the Gentiles too (Acts 10).
Through a vision, Peter was instructed by God to
preach to Cornelius, a Roman centurion.
Peter was
shocked by God's revelation-but he went and
preached to Cornelius' household. The opening
words of his discourse reveal both his attitude
about associating with Gentiles and the message
he received from God:
You are well
aware that it is against our law for a Jew to
associate with a gentile or visit him. But God
has shown me that I should not call any man
impure or unclean (Acts 10:28).
Peter's
acceptance of the Gentiles was the first major
break with the "Israel only"
concept-and it came about only as a result of a
supernatural vision. Up until that time, and even
long afterwards, the prevailing Jewish attitude
was that salvation was for Jews only. In fact,
when Peter returned to Jerusalem after preaching
to Cornelius, he was severely criticized for
having gone into a Gentile home (Acts. 11:3).
How does all
this relate to the Sabbath?
Simply this! I n
view of the strong attachment of the Apostles and
first Christians to Judaism, can we possibly
believe that they had already abandoned the
Sabbath for Sunday? Unthinkable!
Controversy
Arises
As the years
went by, Paul and others began to preach to more
and more Gentiles, hundreds of whom believed.
However, many, if not most, of the Jewish
Christians just assumed that these Gentiles would
be circumcised and become proselytes. They could
not conceive of anyone coming into a relationship
with God without becoming an Israelite. They
continued to discriminate against Gentiles-even
against Gentile Christians.
On one occasion,
at Antioch, Peter was eating with Gentiles-until
certain men from Jerusalem showed up. He was
intimidated by their presence and withdrew from
the Gentiles, as did Barnabas and others (Gal.
2:11-13). Paul was incensed and corrected Peter
publicly- but the incident showed how great their
attachment to the law of Moses was. Can we
possibly assume that they had already abandoned
the Sabbath almost 15 years prior to these
events? Hardly! It was not just a man-made custom
or Pharisaical tradition. It was the commandment
of God!
Paul continued
to insist that the Gentiles did not need to be
circumcised and come under the national (Old)
Covenant with Israel. However, he did uphold very
strongly the spiritual laws of God (Rom. 3:20,
31; 7:7-14, 22).
The controversy
over whether or not the Gentiles had to become
Israelite proselytes grew to such proportions
that a major conference was held at Jerusalem
around 49 A.D. to settle the question (Acts 15).
The conclusion
reached at this meeting was that Paul was
correct; circumcision was unnecessary for the
Gentiles. However, the leaders did write letters
instructing the Gentile Christians to abstain
from fornication, from blood, from things
strangled, and from foods polluted by idols;
these were laws from the Old Testament that were
apparently considered of particular importance to
the Gentiles (Acts 15:20).
Remember, the
whole conference had to do with Gentiles. At that
time there was no thought of the Jews forsaking
the law of Moses. And in that context, it is
obvious that they were not keeping Sunday instead
of the Sabbath. It should also be noted that the
decision of this conference in no way excused the
Gentiles from the moral and spiritual laws of
God, including the Sabbath. The issue was whether
or not Gentiles had to become proselytes,
symbolized by circumcision.
Paul
Participates in a Temple Ceremony
As Paul and
others continued to preach to Gentiles, more and
more turned to God without becoming Jews. At the
same time, however, thousands of Jews continued
to be "zealous for the law" (Acts
21:20-21); and many of them kept on harassing the
Gentiles about being circumcised.
Rumors began to
spread at Jerusalem that Paul was even beginning
to teach the scattered Jews to abandon Moses
(Acts 21:21). So when Paul returned to Jerusalem,
the Apostles there asked him to cooperate with
them in proving that these rumors were false. He
was to go into the temple and join in a
purification ceremony. "Then
everybody will know there is no truth in these
reports about you, but that
you yourself are living in obedience to
the law" (Acts
21:24).
Of course, the
plan "backfired" and Paul ended up in
prison. But the incident demonstrates clearly
that the Apostles-and even Paul-were still very
much in tune with their Jewish heritage. There is
simply no way they were keeping Sunday instead of
the Sabbath!
But what about
the Gentiles? Were they taught to worship on
Sunday?
Paul
Worships with Jews and Gentiles
on
Sabbath
Throughout the
book of Acts, Paul consistently used the Sabbath
for teaching both Jews and Gentiles "as his
custom was" (Acts 17:2; also 18:4). In
Pisidia, Paul and Barnabas went into the
synagogue on the Sabbath where they were asked to
speak (Acts 13:14-15). When they had finished,
some of the listeners asked them to return the
next Sabbath at which time "...almost
the whole
city gathered to hear the word of the Lord" (vv.
42-44).
Notice that Paul
waited a whole week for another meeting. If
Christians had been observing Sunday, there would
have been no reason to wait; they could have met
the very next day. This passage shows clearly the
orientation of both Jews and Gentiles, yes, even
"the whole city," to the Sabbath.
Acts 18:4
describes Paul's stay in Corinth, where he worked
as a tentmaker during the week. And when did he
rest from his physical labor to teach Jews and
Greeks? On the Sabbath, not
on Sunday.
Another
indication of Sabbath observance by both Jews and
Gentiles is the fact that the churches in many
cities were mixtures of both groups. They met
regularly, often in private homes, often in
Jewish homes (Rom. 16:3-5; 1 Cor. 16:19). Now,
given the conclusive evidence that the Jewish
Christians continued to rest on the Sabbath
according to the commandments, it is also quite
obvious that Gentile Christians did so too. For
the Apostles and early Christians-Jews and
Gentiles alike-the Sabbath was part of God's will
for mankind. They continued to observe the
seventh day of the week-not just because it was a
Jewish tradition-but because it was made at
Creation for all men. It was one of God's
commandments. It was observed and taught by their
Savior. And while the Gentiles, and even the Jews
eventually, did not abide by all the civil and
ceremonial laws and traditions handed down from
the time of Moses, they did continue to live by
the spiritual and moral laws, including the
Sabbath.
Sabbath
Observed into Second Century
Following the
destruction of Jerusalem in 70 A.D. and the death
or scattering of many of the Apostles, the
churches of Judea continued to be administered by
Jewish Christians. Post-biblical church writers
Eusebius (260-340 A.D.) and Epiphanius (315-403
A.D.) record that the church at Jerusalem was led
by 15 bishops "of the circumcision"
until 135 A.D., when Emperor Hadrian besieged the
city. Strong Jewish leadership and influence
continued at least until then-, and in that
context, there is simply no way that Sunday
keeping could have arisen among Christians there
during the First Century.
Of course,
Sunday keeping did arise in the church-but not
because of apostolic teaching. Rather it began in
post-biblical times. It began because of severe
anti-Jewish attitudes in the Roman world, because
of strong pagan influences, and because of
political pressures under the godless emperors.
Those pressures caused the early post-apostolic
church leaders to move as far away as possible
from anything that could be considered Jewish-to
move toward the customs and traditions of the
pagan Roman world. In the process, the teachings
of the Word of God, of Jesus and the Apostles,
were severely compromised.
CHAPTER
SIX
The
Sabbath is
Changed
to Sunday
It took many
decades, even centuries, for the post-apostolic
church to change the Sabbath to Sunday. The
substitution did not come about because of the
Apostles teaching. Rather it was the result of
religious, political, and social forces that
existed in the Roman Empire during the first
three centuries after Christ. Church leaders of
that period compromised the teachings of the Word
of God because of pressures from the pagan Roman
world.
In brief
summary, this is what happened: At certain times
the leaders in the Roman world were very
anti-Jewish. As a result, Christians found it
expedient to adopt an anti-Jewish attitude.
Church leaders, particularly at Rome (the seat of
the Empire), moved as far away as possible from
anything that was considered Jewish-especially
the Sabbath. They substituted Sunday, a day that
was much more acceptable in the pagan Roman world
at that time.
Roman
Attitudes
The anti-Jewish
attitude of the Romans during the first and
second centuries A.D. is quite evident in their
writings. Listed below are the names of five
Roman writers and passages that indicate the
attitude of each toward the Jews. The quotations
are taken from the outstanding work From
Sabbath to Sunday by Samuele
Bacchiocchi (The Pontifical Gregorian University
Press, Rome, 1977); page numbers are given in
parentheses.
Seneca (ca. 4
B.C. to 65 A.D.)
This fervent
stoic railed against the customs of this accursed
race [the Jews] ... and especially their
Sabbath-keeping: 'By introducing one day of rest
in every seven, they lose in idleness almost a
seventh of their life...' (p. 173).
Persius (ca. 34
to 62 A.D.)
... presents the
Jewish customs as the first example of
superstitious beliefs. The Jewish Sabbath,
particularly, is adduced as his first proof that
superstition enslaves man (p. 174).
Martial (ca.
40-104 A.D.)
... the
circumcised Jews and their Sabbath are a synonym
of degradation (p. 175).
Plutarch (ca.
46-119 A.D.)
... labeled the
Jews as a superstitious nation and singled out
their Sabbath-keeping (which he regarded as a
time of drunkenness) as one of the many barbarian
customs adopted by the Greeks (p. 175).
Tacitus (ca.
55-120 A.D.)
... surpassed
all his predecessors in bitterness. The Jews,
according to this historian, descend from lepers
expelled from Egypt ... Their indolence on the
Sabbath commemorates the day they left Egypt.
'All their customs,' Tacitus writes, 'are
perverse and disgusting...' (p. 176).
In view of these
attitudes among the Romans, it is no wonder that
Josephus, the Jewish historian of the First
Century, wrote so extensively in defense of his
people even though he sympathized with the
Romans.
Political
Repression of Jews
Given their
anti-Jewish attitudes, it is not surprising that
the Romans should take repressive political and
economic measures against the Jews from time to
time.
Emperor
Claudius, about 54 A.D., expelled the Jews from
Rome, including Jewish Christians Priscilla and
Aquila (Acts 18.2). At that time, Christian Jews
were not differentiated from Jews in general.
They suffered equally under Claudius.
During the 60's
A.D., anti-Jewish sentiment culminated in the
destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple in 70
A.D. Emperor Vespasian abolished the high
priesthood and the Sanhedrin and prohibited
worship at the Temple site.
Around 135 A.D.
Emperor Hadrian made it a crime to practice the
Jewish religion. It became illegal to rest on the
Sabbath!
What would you
do if the practice of your faith became illegal?
Obey God rather than men? Or compromise for the
sake of expedience?
Many Christians,
especially Jewish Christians, continued to
observe the Sabbath as they had been taught by
the apostles. However, as the political pressures
increased, other Christians began to compromise.
They did what was practical, adopting a position
of accommodation with the
Roman Empire and differentiation
from the Jews. They yielded
to the forces of the world around them instead of
being faithful to the will of God.
Anti-Jewish
Attitude Adopted by
Christians
The Apostles
were Jews; and even though they criticized Jewish
leaders for their failure to accept the Gospel,
they continued to hold the Old Testament as the
inspired Word of God; they continued to regard
the Jewish people with love and compassion.
However, Gentile church leaders in post-apostolic
Rome were of a different mind. They adopted the
same anti-Jewish attitudes of their Roman
contemporaries. The quotations given below are
taken from Bacchiocchi's book. Page numbers are
given in parentheses.
Justin Martyr
(ca. 100-165 A.D.; church teacher at Rome)
He [God] imposed
it [Sabbath] on the Jews as a 'mark to single
them out for punishment they so well deserved for
their infidelities' (p. 186).
Marcion (ca. 144
A.D.)
... ordered his
followers 'to fast on Saturday justifying it in
this way: Because it is the rest of the God of
the Jews ... we fast in that day in order not to
accomplish on that day what was ordained by the
God of the Jews' (p. 187).
Victorinus (ca.
304 A.D.; Bishop of Pettau)
[Christians
were] to avoid 'appearing to observe the Sabbath
with the Jews, of which the Lord of the Sabbath
Himself, the Christ, says by His prophets that
His soul hateth' (p. 196).
It is quite
evident that the church fathers adopted the
anti-Jewish bias of the Romans. They actually
reinterpreted the Old Testament to justify their
position-trying to put as much distance as
possible between themselves and anything that
appeared Jewish, particularly the Sabbath.
Political
Church Emerges
As
the Sabbath was gradually denigrated, Sunday was
promoted as a practical substitute. This day was
venerated by many pagans, particularly at Rome.
It was a logical choice and would make the
Christians seem distinct from the Jews and more
like the Romans.
Of course,
church leaders needed a rationale to justify
their adoption of Sunday; but there was little in
the Bible that could be construed to support the
first day of the week. The best reasons they
could come up with were that light was created on
the first day of the week and that Jesus was
alive from the dead on the first day. Not very
strong arguments! However, the real reasons were
purely and simply political and social!
The various
bishops at Rome, because they were at the seat of
the Empire and more in tune with the attitudes of
the Roman world, gained in power and prominence
in the church. They put pressure on other bishops
to accept Sunday; in time they succeeded.
The evidence is
that for several centuries Christians in Asia
continued to keep the Sabbath, or to keep both
Saturday and Sunday. A few even in Rome continued
to do so for some time. But the die was cast. The
power of the bishops at Rome was growing rapidly.
Christians there were gaining the approval of the
Emperors. And once this new religion gained
official recognition and sanction under
Constantine, it was all over for those who sought
to remain faithful to the teachings of the Word
of God. A politicized church had emerged with the
power of the state behind it.
Confessions
by Modern Church Leaders
Modern Roman
Catholic leaders have been quite frank in
admitting that there is no Biblical authority,
but only church authority, for Sunday. Notice
just two quotations:
But you may read
the Bible from Genesis to Revelation and you will
not find a single line authorizing the
sanctification of Sunday. The Scriptures enforce
the religious observance of Saturday, a day which
we never sanctify (James Cardinal Gibbons, The
Faith of Our Fathers, p.
89).
Some of the
truths that have been handed down to us by
tradition and are not recorded in the Sacred
Scriptures, are the following: that ... Sunday
should be kept holy instead of the Sabbath; that
infants should be baptized ... (Butler's
Holy Family Series
of Catholic Catechisms, John
Murphy Co., Boston).
Many other
quotations from Roman Catholic sources are
available in the leaflet "Roman Catholic
Confessions About Sunday," The Bible Sabbath
Association, Fairview, OK 73737.
Protestants have
traditionally rejected the authority of the
Catholic church, relying instead on the Bible.
Many have cried, "The Bible and the Bible
only." Hence they have been forced to comb
the Scriptures thoroughly to find support for
their first-day Sabbath. Their search is quite
fruitless. And some have written frankly about
the lack of Biblical authority for Sunday.
Because it was
requisite to appoint a certain day ... it appears
that the Church did for that purpose appoint the
Lord's day (Augsburg Confession, part 2, art. 7).
The festival of
Sunday ... was always only a human ordinance and
it was far from the intentions of the apostles to
establish a divine command in this respect; far
from them, and from the early apostolic church,
to transfer the laws of the Sabbath to Sunday (The
History of the Christian Religion and Church, Dr.
Augustus Neander).
Many similar
quotations are available from The Bible Sabbath
Association.
The substance of
these and many other frank admissions is that
there is only traditional authority-not Biblical
authority for the adoption of Sunday as a day of
rest and worship. And the fact is that down
through the centuries, many Christians, albeit a
small percentage of all those who claim to be
Christians, have continued to observe the day set
aside by God at Creation. There have been and are
now Christians who rest from their work on the
Sabbath according to the will of God-who enjoy
the freedom provided by the day sanctified by
God, who celebrate His creation, His rest, and
His redemption by resting on the day He set aside
at Creation.
The
Choice is Yours!
You have a
choice. You can follow the traditions of the
church, reasoning, perhaps that it doesn't really
matter or that others are responsible. You can
ignore the Fourth Commandment and miss out on the
blessings that flow to those who experience the
regular rejuvenation of the Sabbath rest.
Or you can study
the Word of God and determine to follow it as
your guide for living. You can follow the example
of Jesus and the apostles in embracing this day
of rest, of freedom, and of fellowship with God.
The choice is
yours. May God guide you in seeking to follow His
will.
CHAPTER
SEVEN
Answers
to Objections
About
the Sabbath
One of the
arguments given frequently to support Sunday as a
day of rest and worship is that the early
Christians worshipped on the first day of the
week. Hence it is important for us to take a look
at these claims and examine the New Testament
passages that mention the first day of the week.
For surely, if Jesus or the Apostles did indeed
abandon the seventh-day Sabbath for Sunday, there
must be some evidence of this in connection with
the mention of "the first day of the
week!"
A
Look at the Numbers
The word
"Sabbath" is used at least sixty times
in the New Testament in connection with more than
twenty separate Sabbath situations. In none of
these is there any hint that the Sabbath rest was
to cease. In fact, the opposite is true, as we
have already seen in previous chapters.
In contrast, the
phrase "the first day of the week" (the
word "Sunday" is never used) occurs
only 8 times; and six of these have to do with
one particular first day of the week-the one
associated with the resurrection of Jesus.
1-4) Matt. 28:1;
Mark 16:2; Luke 24:1; and John 20:l all refer to
the visit of the women to the tomb of Jesus. He
was not there, for He had already been
resurrected. There is no hint in any of these
verses of Sunday replacing the Sabbath. They are
simple time references.
5) Mark 16:9 is
another time reference to the Sunday after the
resurrection; Jesus appeared to Mary Magdalene on
that day.
6) John 20:19
refers to the evening of the same day, when Jesus
met with His disciples. Some claim this was the
first Sunday service. But the facts are quite to
the contrary: the disciples didn't even believe
Jesus was resurrected; they were gathered for
fear of the Jews; and, technically, the event
took place on the second day of the week, which
began, according to Jewish reckoning, at sunset.
Also, on this
same day, although the phrase, "the first
day of the week" isn't mentioned, Jesus met
with two disciples on the road to Emmaus (Luke
24:13). Some have grasped at this account of
their evening meal as evidence of a celebration
of the Lord's Supper. On the contrary, the two
disciples were simply being hospitable, offering
food and lodging to a stranger. The event is
certainly no precedent for Sunday-morning
communion, nor for abandoning the Sabbath.
7) Acts 20:7
recounts Paul's meeting with brethren at Troops,
"on the first day of the week." This
verse is popularly used to support Sunday as a
Christian day of rest and worship. There is
considerable controversy about whether the event
took place on Saturday night or Sunday night;
however, this is beside the point. The meeting
was anything but typical. The disciples were
gathered on a special occasion to hear the
Apostle Paul. The book, From
Sabbath to Lord's Day, even
though very much against the Sabbath, admits- "We
must resist any temptation to
use Luke's account as though
it were a paradigm of 'first day'
observance. Too many of the
features of his account depend on
the extraordinary nature of
this occasion as Paul's last night with a this
particular church" (Zondervan,
1982, p. 133).
8) The last
mention of "the first day of the week"
is found in 1 Cor. 16:2, which verse is
frequently used as precedent for Sunday
collections at church. In fact, it indicates
quite the contrary. Paul's use of the phrase
"lay by him in store" indicates that
whatever was to be done, it was to be done at
home-not at a meeting. The phrase also implies
work on the first day of the week - not rest and
worship. Apparently Paul wanted them to use the
first working day of each week to take inventory,
so to speak, to set aside something for the poor
saints at Jerusalem-so they didn't need to do so
when he arrived.
That's it! Eight
references to "the first day of the
week." And not one of them indicates
anything special or holy about the day. The fact
is that it wasn't until decades after the death
of the Apostles that Christians began to abandon
the Sabbath for Sunday - in response to political
and religious pressures extant in the Roman
World.
There are three
passages in Paul's writings that are frequently
used to prove that Christians should observe no
special day as different from any other day.
These passages are Romans 14:1-5, Gal. 4:10, and
Col. 2:16.
Before examining
these, it is important that we understand
something about Paul's teachings and attitude
about the observance of periodic festivals in
general.
Paul
Observed the Sabbath
First of all,
Paul himself observed the Sabbath, and, at least
on some occasions, other festivals. He kept the
Sabbath with Jews and Gentiles (Acts 13:14, 42,
44; 14:1; 16:13; 17:2; 18:4). He, himself, lived
in obedience to the laws of the Old Covenant
(Acts 21:24; 23:6-1 25:8; 26:5). He spoke and
taught positively about the Ten Commandments,
which included the Sabbath command (Rom. 2:13,
26; 7:7, 12, 14, 22). Even the anti-Sabbath book From
Sabbath to Lord's Day concedes
this point: "On the
other hand, we
have evidence from both Paul himself and the book
of Acts that Paul
continued his own Sabbath keeping" (ibid., p.
182).
In this context,
it is inconceivable that Paul would have taught
Christians to abandon the Sabbath in favor of no
day of rest and worship.
Another factor
is that many, if not most, of the Gentiles Paul
wrote to had been adherents to
the Jewish religion. When Paul first preached to
them, they were in the synagogues worshipping
with Jews (Acts 13:16,26). When James spoke
before the Jerusalem Council, he did so with the
understanding that Gentile Christians were still
meeting in the synagogues on the Sabbath:
For Moses has
been preached in every city... and is read in the
synagogues on every Sabbath (Acts 15:21).
Paul had not,
apparently, taught the Gentiles to abandon the
Sabbath in favor of Sunday. With this background,
we can examine each of the three passages in
question.
Romans
14:1- 5
The overall
subject of this passage is that Christians should
not be judging one another about disputable
matters. Specifically, Paul deals with the
subject of those who were vegetarians as opposed
to those who ate flesh food. He could very easily
have straightened out the dispute by saying
"It's okay to eat flesh." But he
didn't. Rather, he said, "Don't judge."
It is in this
context that Paul mentions, almost in passing,
the matter of observing special days. "One
man considers one day more
sacred than another,- another man considers every
day alike"
(v. 5). H is counsel: "Each
one should be fully convinced in
his own mind."
We don't know
enough about the problems in the Roman church to
be absolutely certain what Paul is referring to.
He could have meant special days for fasting, or
for feasting, or for abstaining from meat (the
primary question at hand). However, it is highly
unlikely that he could have been referring to the
Sabbath-because, as demonstrated above, he
himself observed it and spoke very positively
about the Ten Commandments, which included the
Sabbath (Acts 13:14, 42, 44; 16:13; 17, 2; 18:4;
21:24- 23:6; 25:8; 26:5; Rom. 7:12, 14, 22).
The message of
Romans 14 is "Don't judge!" It
certainly is no proof that the Sabbath of
Creation, the Sabbath that Jesus and the apostles
kept, was done away with!
Galatians
4:10
In this passage,
Paul upbraids the Galatians for "...observing
days, months, seasons, and years!" At
first glance this might seem to condemn the
observance of any periodic festivals - whether a
day (Sabbath) a season (annual festival in its
season) or a year (Sabbatical or Jubilee year).
But an understanding of the context shows quite
the opposite.
The primary
problem in Galatia was that certain Jews were
insisting that if Gentiles wanted to be first
class Christians, they must also be circumcised
and come under the Old Covenant, which God had
made with Israel (through Moses). Paul was
furious! These people were already God's children
through faith in Jesus Christ-they didn't need to
accept the Old Covenant in order to enhance their
standing. However, does this mean that Paul was
condemning all festival observance?
Hardly! Given
his own practices and the fact that many, if not
most or all, of these Gentiles had been adherents
to the Jewish religion, it is inconceivable that
he was condemning festival observance per
se.
The answer seems
to be in the word "observe". This word
can imply meticulous
observance. In other words,
the problem at Galatia was that the Gentiles were
being led by Judaizers to get all involved in the
fine details of festival observance-in the
context of embracing the Old Covenant. They were
more concerned about the form than the substance.
This is hardly a condemnation of the Sabbath.
Colossians
2:16
This verse has
been used to prove almost every point of view
regarding the observance or nonobservance of
festivals, new moons, and Sabbaths. The main
point of the verse is "Don't judge."
And, by itself, it doesn't really prove much more
than that.
Those doing the
judging were probably people of the ascetic
philosophy, who objected to eating and drinking,
particularly as associated with festivals of any
kind. The book, From Sabbath
to Lord's
Day, although written
specifically to promote Sunday, says on this
verse, "The most natural
way of taking the rest of the
passage is not that he [Paul]
also imposes a ritual of feast days,
but rather that he objects to
certain elements of such observation"
(ibid., p. 182).
1 would add,
what Paul objects to is the judging!
And beyond that, there is
simply not enough evidence for us to say it
proves anything one way or the other. It
certainly doesn't prove that Christians should
observe no day at all. (A complete discussion of
Col. 2:16 is available on tape.)
These three
passages are simply Paul's attempt to deal with
specific problems in specific churches of his
day. Because we don't have all the facts
surrounding these problems, we don't know
precisely what Paul is driving at. But there are
plenty of other passages that plainly and clearly
show that Paul kept the Sabbath, and that the
Fourth Commandment is part of God's will for His
children now as it has been since Creation.
CHAPTER
EIGHT
How
to Observe
the
Sabbath
Observing
the Sabbath is one of the greatest blessings and
privileges of being a Christian. It is a day of
commanded reprieve from the mundane cares of
life, a day of freedom-freedom from labor,
freedom to fellowship with God, freedom to
fellowship with family, friends, and brethren,
freedom to join in worship with others, who are
also free on that day; it is freedom to rest, to
be rejuvenated, physically, spiritually, and
mentally.
But how should a
Christian go about keeping this day of freedom?
Basic
Command is to Rest
The Fourth
Commandment is the starting point for learning
how to keep the Sabbath-.
Remember the
Sabbath day by keeping it holy. Six days you
shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh
day is a Sabbath to the Lord your God. On it you
shall not do any work, neither you, nor your son
or daughter, nor your manservant or maidservant,
nor your animals, nor the alien within your
gates. For in six days the Lord made the heavens
and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them,
but he rested on the seventh day. Therefore the
Lord blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy
(Ex. 20:8-1 1).
Unlike any of
the other commandments, the Fourth was instituted
at creation by God Himself. He chose to cease
from His work of creation as an example for us,
even though He doesn't get tired and He doesn't
need to rest (is. 40:28, Ex. 31:17). His example
and the commandment itself show that the Sabbath
is fundamentally a day of ceasing from the labor
of the six working days. It is a day of rest, a
different kind of day!
Of course, many
questions could be asked about the Fourth
Commandment: What is work? What is rest? How do
we keep the day holy in the 20th century? The
Bible provides answers to these and many other
questions. But there is something else that is
far more important!
God's
Law Must Be Written In Our Hearts
There is little
point in discussing how we should observe the
Sabbath until we recognize that God wants
obedience from the heart! We must want
to keep the Sabbath, we must
want to
cease from our labor on this day made holy by
God. Once we have this desire to obey, we can
study the Bible to learn how God wants us to
observe the Sabbath. And what we find is not a
laundry list of do's and don'ts (that's what the
Pharisees of Jesus' day were all concerned
about). Rather we find examples and general
principles, which can teach us how God wants us
to keep His day of rest.
A
Day of Delight
Contrary to what
many people think about the Sabbath, it was
intended by God to be a day of freedom, a day of
delight, the highlight of the week. Notice Isaiah
58:13-14:
If you keep your
feet from breaking the Sabbath and from doing as
you please on my holy day, if you call the
Sabbath a delight and the Lord's holy day
honorable, and if you honor it by not going your
own way and not doing as you please or speaking
idle words, then you will find your joy in the
Lord, and I will cause you to ride on the heights
of the land....
The Sabbath is
not a day for seeking our own selfish, carnal
pleasures; rather it is for seeking God's
pleasure. We should consider it a delight, a
special day at the end of each week-24 hours of
freedom from the pressures of this physical life.
Anyone who thinks of the Sabbath as a day of cant's
and don'ts is either
misguided as to how the Sabbath should be kept or
does not yet delight in obedience to God. People
of Amos' day had this problem; they couldn't wait
for the Sabbath to end so they could get back to
"getting things done":
When will the
New Moon be over that we may sell grain and the
Sabbath be ended that we may market wheat?
-skimping the measure, boosting the price and
cheating with dishonest scales... (Amos 8:5).
To them the
Sabbath was a burdensome interruption in their
commercial quest for physical wealth and
pleasure. It was certainly not written in their
hearts. Anyone who finds himself anxious for the
sun to go down on Saturday, so he can get on to
other things, is missing the point. It is to be a
day of rejoicing, a day for celebrating God, His
creating, His redemption's true delight,
physically and spiritually.
A
Day For Worship
While the Fourth
Commandment itself does not mention worship on
the Sabbath, examples from both Old and New
Testament show that the Sabbath was used
regularly for that purpose. According to
Leviticus 23:3, the Sabbath was a day of sacred
assembly for the Israelites. It was Jesus' custom
to worship in the synagogues on the Sabbath (Luke
4:14-16). The apostles also worshipped on the
Sabbath, both in synagogues and at other places
(Acts 13:14, 42, 44; 14:1; 15:21; 16:13; 17:2;
18:4).
The writer of
the book of Hebrews exhorted Christians to
assemble with one another.
Let us not give
up meeting together, as some are in the habit of
doing, but let us encourage one another-and all
the more as you see the Day approaching (Heb.
10:28).
Certainly
Christians can assemble and worship on any day;
but during the week so many activities and
responsibilities interfere with congregational
and group worship and Bible study. However, on
the Sabbath, God's children are free from
physical duties and obligations. Indeed, they are
commanded by God to be free on that day. Hence,
while every day is suitable for group worship, on
the Sabbath day it is especially appropriate.
Throughout Bible history, God's people have used
it for that purpose.
Jesus'
Example of Sabbath-keeping
Our Messiah was
continually running afoul of the religious
leaders of His day regarding the Sabbath. Many
times they accused Him of doing things on the
Sabbath which, according to their traditions,
were unlawful. I n His responses to them, we can
learn a great deal about how the Sabbath should
be kept.
Lawful to Do
Good.
On one occasion,
the Pharisees, looking for a reason to accuse
Jesus, asked Him if it was lawful to heal on the
Sabbath (it wasn't according to their
traditions). He responded very pointedly,
If any of you
has a sheep and it falls into a pit on the
Sabbath, will you not take hold of it and lift it
out? How much more valuable is a man than a
sheep! Therefore it is lawful to do good on the
Sabbath (Matt. 12:11-12).
We can and
should do good every day, but on the Sabbath we
are especially free to reach out to, others, to
visit the widow, the sick, the orphan (Jas.
1:26-27) and to do good in many other ways. Of
course, one could spend his entire Sabbath doing
good for people and completely neglect to rest,
to worship, or to fellowship; this is not what
Jesus intended. Note that He did not
say that doing good was the primary purpose of
the Sabbath; rather He simply stated that it was lawful.
He did not spend His entire
Sabbath looking for people to heal. But when they
came to Him, He did not turn them away.
But suppose one
makes his living doing good - caring for the
sick, for example. Can he go right on making his
living on the Sabbath? Hardly! The intent and
purpose of the Fourth Commandment is to provide
the seventh day as a day of ceasing that is
refreshing and rejuvenating physically, mentally,
and spiritually. That is hardly accomplished by
doing the same thing on that day that one does
the six working days, even if it is doing good.
Of course, sick people have to be cared for 7
days a week, but if we truly have the Sabbath
commandment written in our hearts, we will do our
best to find a way to accomplish both-to have a
7th day of rest, and to have the sick cared for -
perhaps by those who will be working that day
regardless (non-sabbath-keepers) or by
volunteers.
Taking Care
of Emergencies.
Jesus made it
very plain that it is right to handle emergencies
- even those that involve labor -on the Sabbath.
He gave the example of pulling an ox out of the
ditch (Luke l4:5) and of caring for animals.
Modern examples might be fixing a flat tire, jump
starting a stalled car, putting out a fire,
repairing a broken water pipe.
In Matt 24:20
Jesus spoke of fleeing on the Sabbath. "Pray
ye that
your flight be not in winter, neither on the
Sabbath Day." Fleeing
would certainly be an emergency - something one
would not want to do any day, but especially not
on the Sabbath. Yet, though not desirable, it was
permissible. Some emergencies (like fleeing)
might involve many hours of labor on the Sabbath,
but they would be very rare.
Jesus Was Out
with People.
Jesus did not
cloister Himself away fasting, praying, and
studying all day on the Sabbath. Rather, He was
out with people, at least much of the time. He
was teaching, preaching, healing, talking,
walking. This does not mean it is wrong to pray,
fast, and study, or to spend time alone on the
Sabbath. Indeed, on that day, we are free to pray
and study and we should definitely take advantage
of that opportunity. But Jesus' example, and that
of the apostles, was not one of seclusion on the
Sabbath.
Learning
Not to Judge
Sabbath-keepers
are a very diverse group of Christians living in
a world that virtually ignores the Fourth
Commandment. We are students, office workers,
factory workers, laborers, homemakers. And
because we spend our 6 working days so
differently, our needs for rest and rejuvenation
on the 7th day will vary to some extent. A
student, who spends 6 days grinding away at the
books, will hardly be much refreshed by a Sabbath
of mostly studying. Yet a busy salesman may
relish the opportunity to spend long hours
reading the Bible on the Sabbath. A man who does
heavy construction all week, will look forward to
the Sabbath differently than a woman who has been
cooped up at home with small children all week.
What is a thoroughly rejuvenating and spiritually
uplifting experience for one person, may not be
for another.
The Bible gives
principles regarding how the Sabbath should be
kept; they will be applied in different ways by
different people. Just as other people may honor
their parents differently than we do, others may
keep the Sabbath a little differently than we do.
Perhaps we can learn from them, and perhaps they
can learn from us (Gal. 6:1). We should be
careful not to judge one another (Rom. 14:4,10).
Yet we should all approach the Sabbath with
positive anticipation and learn to delight in
what God wants on that day, rather than what we
want.
Day
of Preparation Important
We live at a
very fast pace. There are so many things to do
work, school, shopping, appointments to keep,
meetings to go to. There's never enough time. It
is so easy to let all these activities and
pressures spill over to the Sabbath. This should
not be. When the sun sets on Friday, a different
kind of time should begin. A time of calm, of
refreshment, of ceasing. Some things will just
have to wait until the next week-or be left
undone. Some opportunities will just have to be
sacrificed in order to obey God.
One of the keys
to a restful, rejuvenating Sabbath is
preparation. In Exodus 16, when God gave the
Israelites manna, He specifically instructed them
to prepare their food the day before. Mark 15:42
also mentions the day of preparation before the
Sabbath. Doing things beforehand is a very
important key to enjoying the Sabbath to the
full. So many routine things, such as feeding
animals, taking out garbage, putting gas in the
car, showering and cooking can be done ahead of
time. The more effective one is in preparing, the
more free he will be on the Sabbath-free to
worship, to rest, to do good, to study, to
fellowship.
Children's
Special Needs
One
of the most important considerations for those
who have children is to recognize that their
needs on the Sabbath are different from those of
adults. To be sure, they need a day of ceasing, a
day of rest and rejuvenation. But their idea of
getting it may be entirely different than an
adult's idea. Sitting long hours in church
getting "spiritual food" may be a worse
burden to them than doing chores around the house
during the week.
Don't
misunderstand. I'm not suggesting they stay home
from church to do the chores on the Sabbath. I am
saying, look at it from their perspective. If you
give them a long list of don'ts (no TV, no ball
playing, no bike riding, no computer games, no
friends over,) and a short list of dos (pray,
study Bible, go to church, sit quietly), you may
make the Sabbath a real burden for them. Do
everything you can to make the Sabbath a day they
look forward to. Use your freedom from weekday
responsibilities to spend time with your
children-doing things that will make the Sabbath
a joy and a delight for them!
Day
to Enhance Our Relationship with God
There are so
many things that could be said about keeping the
Sabbath; it would be so easy to give a set of
rules. We would all feel so secure and
comfortable with everyone keeping the Sabbath
according to the same set of rules. But this is
not God's way. He is not interested in cookbook
obedience to a set of regulations; rather He
wants an intimate, personal relationship. He
wants children who are learning and growing and
developing, not automatons who can follow a code
of rules.
Of course any
individual or group can develop a set of
guidelines based on their understanding of the
Bible. And we can all learn from discussion with
one another about keeping the Sabbath. But we
should learn a giant lesson from the Pharisees of
Jesus' day. They had a stringent code of conduct
regarding the Sabbath. But one rule always begat
another one-to the point that they completely
forgot the original purpose of the Sabbath. Jesus
denounced their approach: "The
Sabbath was made for man
and not man for the Sabbath" (Mark.
2:27-28).
The important
thing is that the law is written in each
individual heart-in your heart and my heart. You,
personally, must want to search the Scriptures
for yourself. You must learn and apply the
principles and lessons you find there in your own
life so you can grow in your relationship with
your heavenly Father.
The Sabbath is a
special day that should be fundamentally
different from the 6 working days of your week, a
day of physical, spiritual, mental, and emotional
rest, a day to enhance your relationship with
God. Sabbath was made for man; it was made for
you as God's gift. It is a day of commanded
freedom. Use it to the full as a blessing for you
and a glory to God!
Do
You Have Questions or Comments?
Other literature
regarding the Sabbath, including the book From
Sabbath to Sunday, by
Samuele Bacchiocchi, is available from The Bible
Sabbath Association, RD 1 Box 222, Fairview, OK
73737; write for more information.
The
Elijah Messenger would be more than eager to
answer any of your questions on what you have
just read. We feel it is our obligation to
explain as much as the Spirit of God inspires us
to do so. In these last days His Spirit is urging
us all to be diligent with what we know and more
importantly not stop searching for the Truth
which is in Christ Jesus our Lord and Savior. May
God Bless.
siracus@idirect.com
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