Posted by
Bob Siegel on Thursday, March 27, 2008 8:49:03 PM
“Are most Christians
being disobedient about the Sabbath? Recently I met some people from the Seventh Day Adventist Church. They claim that Saturday is the true Sabbath day,
not Sunday. That’s why they hold their church services on Saturday. They even
have Sabbath School instead of Sunday School.”
Let’s quickly deal with the easy part of the question. Then
we’ll get into the heart of it. For the
record, Saturday is the Sabbath day, not Sunday. The Seventh Day
Adventists are correct about the day. However, we’re avoiding an even more
obvious question: So what? It’s not as if we are getting a new revelation here.
Those who worship on Sunday are already very aware that the original Jewish
Sabbath was on Saturday. They know this even if they go their whole lives
without meeting a Seventh Day Adventist. They do not worship on Sunday because
they are confused as to what day of the week it is. They worship on Sunday
because that’s the day Jesus rose from the dead. There is no command in the New
Testament as to what day one must go to church. It just so happens that Sunday
was chosen for a particular reason and this tradition has remained.
Now, it’s true that sometimes Christians (aware that
Saturday is the Sabbath) still incorrectly refer to Sunday as a Sabbath. I say incorrectly
because Sunday is anything but a day of rest and that is what the original
Sabbath was about, rest. True, it was
meant to be a day of reflection as well, but primarily the Sabbath was a day
when people stopped working.
“For six days, work is to
be done, but the seventh day is a Sabbath of rest, holy to the LORD.” Ex. 31:15
Is Sunday a restful day for your pastor? It’s probably his busiest day of the
week. Is he being a bad example by
“working hard” in front of us? What about the rest of the staff? What about the deacons, the Sunday School
teachers, the ushers, those who work in the nursery? In fact, to any church member, Sunday is not
supposed to be a passive experience but very active with heart felt worship,
meaningful fellowship and interaction, even the confession of sins. Is this a
rest? If you think it is, I hope I never
go on a vacation with you. On my day off, I lay on the beach. I don’t go to
church. In fact, on my day off, I can think of about a hundred things I’d
rather do than go to church.
Ok, now that we’ve
straightened out which day the Sabbath comes on, let’s move on to what was
probably the heart of the surface question: Are Christians commanded to obey
the Sabbath Day whatever day of the week it is?
They are not! Jesus came to offer a New Covenant.
“Do not think that I have
come to abolish the Law and the Prophets.
I have not come to abolish them, but to fulfill them” (Matt. 5:17).
As Christians we are no
longer under the law but rather a fulfillment of the law. What does this mean
exactly? In what way is the law fulfilled?
To start with, instead of outward commands, God offers us a relationship
with His Spirit who changes our hearts and makes us (hopefully) so loving that
we no longer need commands such as “Don’t Kill” or “Don’t Steal” or Don’t Mess
Around With Your Neighbor’s Wife.” If we
are already loving, if we are already unselfish, if we are already treating
people the way we want to be treated, those incentives will come naturally.
“In everything, do to
others what you would have them do to you.
For this sums up the Law and the Prophets” (Matt. 7:12).
We call this a fulfillment of the Moral Law. The other part
of the law, Ritual Law, was fulfilled through Jesus’ death on the cross. The
animal sacrifices of old were a foreshadowing of what Jesus would later do for
all people. The blood of lambs and bulls provided a picture of atonement so
that people needing to be saved by Jesus could be saved before He even came.
Admittedly, there is some confusion and controversy over
exactly what kind of law the Sabbath was, ritual or moral. I would place it in
the category of a ritual such as other commanded feasts and holy days. But
wherever we place this custom, it is undeniable that the Sabbath was a part of
the Mosaic Law one way or the other and this law has been fulfilled by Jesus
who asks us to live under the New Covenant.
When a church like The Seventh Day Adventists
single out a
command such as the Sabbath as a law that we must continue to honor,
they open a
whole new can of worms that Paul addressed when he wrote the
Galatians. The Galatians had isolated circumcision as a
practice to continue even under the New Covenant. Paul told them
that if they were going to
return to the law they must embrace the entire law (Gal 5:3). They
could not
cherry pick the ones they wanted and ignore all the others. Nobody
today, claiming to follow the law, takes Paul's words to heart.
Oddly enough, The Seventh Day Adventists themselves serve as
the greatest example of the irony. Have they returned to the animal sacrifices
(almost half of the laws)? Of course
not. But they have added a new a prohibition against eating meat. Yes,
my Adventist friends are vegetarians. This is somewhat perplexing in as much as
meat was not only allowed in the Old Testament but actually commanded in certain
feasts like the Passover. So why aren’t
they honoring that part of the law?
But I don’t want to address this question through arguments
of logic or consistency alone. The scripture actually settles the issue quite
clearly:
Col 2:16-17
Therefore do not let anyone
judge you by what you eat or drink, or with regard to a religious festival, a
New Moon celebration or a Sabbath day. These are a shadow of the things that
were to come; the reality, however, is found in Christ.
It is difficult to hold on to some kind of New Testament
Sabbath command after reading a verse like this.
“But now I’m more confused
than ever. I can understand how Jesus fulfilled animal sacrifices. That makes
sense. I can also see how the Holy
Spirit put God’s law in our hearts, fulfilling the Moral Law. But how did Jesus
fulfill the Sabbath?”
That’s an excellent question and the book of Hebrews
provides a long, detailed, complicated answer. Relax. Here are the cliff notes:
Originally it was God who rested from creation on the seventh
day. To some of the ancient Rabbis, this did not mean a literal 24-hour day.
They believed that the seventh day, or Sabbath Day, continues and that enjoying
God’s creation is an ongoing, non-stop celebration of the Sabbath Day.
Had life remained a paradise, this rest, or celebration,
would have been easier to understand. Unfortunately, when Adam and Eve fell
into sin, everything changed, including the world itself.
Rom 8:20-21
For the creation was subjected to frustration, not by its own choice,
but by the will of the one who subjected it, in hope that the creation
itself will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the
glorious freedom of the children of God.
When Jesus returns, He will restore the world to the Garden
of Eden type paradise it once was. This means enjoying the Sabbath and living
in God’s kingdom are one and the same thing. Christ has not returned yet but He
does offer a relationship with you now, a relationship in which the kingdom
of God can rule in your heart and
give you peace. This experience, according the author of Hebrews, provides a
sample or foreshadowing of Christ’s future kingdom. He called it “tasting of
the powers of the age to come" (Heb 6:5).
In short, being delivered from sin, placed in harmony with
God’s kingdom, His rule and His paradise creation, is the authentic way to
experience the Sabbath. It’s true that God also gave the ancient Hebrews a day
of the week that looked toward this, a day to rest from their labors and
meditate more on Him. This is still a good idea as far as practical advice goes
but there is no longer any commandment or any holiness associated with a particular day
of the week. What is special is resting from our own labors and basking in our
relationship with the Spirit of God who gives us a sample of what it will be
like when the whole world is restored to God’s Paradise,
also called God’s Sabbath.
Scripture
taken from THE HOLY BIBLE
New
International Version NIV
Copyright 1973, 1979, 1984 by International Bible
Society
Used
by permission of Zondervan Publishing House.
All
rights reserved.
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