
The
Sabbath
by
M.
L. Andreasen
Chapter 1 The
Sabbath
p.
7 -- The Sabbath is one of God's choicest gifts to man. It was
brought to earth by God Himself, as the crown and glory of the finished
creation. Wondrous in beauty must that first Sabbath have been as
God, at the end of the six days, rested from all His works which He
had made. The heavens were studded with jewels, and the earth was
filled with a thousand delights. Earth, sea, and sky proclaimed the
glory, and power, and love of God. It would seem that love could do
no more than God had done for His own.
And
yet God was not satisfied. He had given the earth to the children of
men; now He added a bit of heaven. Once a week the Sabbath was to come
to earth; once a week God would in a special manner meet with His children;
once a week heaven's peace would rest on the whole creation. Coming
down from god out of heaven, the Sabbath would descend with healing
in its wings, bringing to man rest, peace, and blessing, yea, God Himself.
Thrice blessed, it was the golden clasp that bound earth and heaven
together, the golden chain that bound the soul of God. As God and man
communed together that first Sabbath on earth, the morning stars sang
together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy.
But
sin and sorrow came in and marred God's perfect creation. Long has evil
prevailed, and at times it has seemed that God has forsaken man
p.
8 -- and left him to his own folly and destruction. From the anguished
hearts of millions has ascended the cry to God, How long, O Lord, how
long! Yet God has not left the earth,
nor man. He still meets with His own; He still sends them the holy Sabbath
with balm for the weary, quiet for frayed nerves, comfort for distressed
hearts, peace for anxious and troubled souls. For a war-weary world;
for hearts that are failing for fear and for looking after those things
that are coming to the earth; for bereaved families who mourn the loss
of loved ones; for sin-sick souls who long for assurance and peace,
God still
has a message. Earth may resound with the roar of cannon and the shriek
of falling bombs, the droning of messengers of destruction may fill
the air; but the sun still rules the heavens; the stars, calm and serene,
follow their appointed path; and God is still on the throne. At the
determined time He will speak, and will not keep silence. Men shall
still hear His voice.
If
ever the Sabbath was needed, it is now. Amid the tumult of nations,
amid the clash of arms, God's voice is heard calling men to worship,
to communion, to the Sabbath rest that remains for the people of God.
The time has come, and is long overdue, for a Sabbath restoration and
reformation. The evil one has almost succeeded in depriving men of God's
Sabbath gift, and the church is apathetic. It is time for the Christian,
for
the church, to awake, and go out to battle for the faith once delivered
to the saints. It is
p.
9 -- time for all to "remember the Sabbath day, to keep it
holy."
Two
Institutions
Two institutions have come to us from the Garden of Eden; marriage and
the Sabbath. Only one of these the Sabbath, carries over into the earth
made new. Of marriage it is written: "When they shall rise from
the dead, they neither marry, nor are given in marriage; but are as
the angels which are in heaven." Mark 12:25. On the contrary, this
is said of the Sabbath: "As the new heavens and the new earth,
which I will make, shall remain before Me, says the Lord, so shall your
seed and your name remain. And it shall come to pass that from one new
moon to another, and from one Sabbath to another, shall all flesh come
to worship before Me, saith the Lord." Isaiah 66:22, 23.
This
makes the Sabbath unique. Throughout changing customs and varying dispensations,
amid the passing of empires and the crash of nations, surviving floods,
famines, and even "the end of all things," the Sabbath stands
unmoved and supreme. It, of all institutions, alone abides. Made by
God and given to man for an everlasting possession, it endures as eternity
itself.
We
are not informed about Sabbath observance among the angels; we have
no knowledge of what inhabitants of other worlds are doing in regard
to Sabbath rest; but we do know that the Sabbath was made for and given
to man and that Christ claims lordship over it. Mark 2:27, 28.
p.
10 -- This makes it a divine-human institution, fitted to beings
made of clay, but in the image of God, partakers of the divine nature.
The
Sabbath
The Sabbath commandment, by its very nature, underlies all the other
commandments; in fact, it is fundamental to religion itself. It is the
one commandment which provides time for worship, for contemplation,
for communion with nature and with God.
Were
there no Sabbath, every day would be a day of labor, and life a continuous
round of secular pursuits. Nature, as such, knows no Sabbath. The corn
grows every day; so do weeds. The storms, rains, hail, observe no Sabbath.
Disasters occur, fires rage, accidents happen, regardless of the day
of the week. Multitudinous secular duties call for constant attention,
and even seven days a week at times seem not enough to do all the work
that needs to be done. Were it not for the Sabbath, men would labor
every day and yet not get their work done.
But
God recognizes the need of rest, spiritual and physical. In the midst
of life's pressing demands He calls a halt and bids men cease their
activity and give attention to the things of the spirit. To their own
astonishment, men find that taking time out for spiritual duties does
not hinder but rather helps in temporal affairs; that the physical rest
on the Sabbath does not delay their work, but gives them added zest
and strength for
p.
11 -- their common pursuits on the other days of the week. They
have found by experience that resting on the Sabbath enables them to
do as much work in six days as they formerly did in seven. But over
and above any physical gain is the invigoration that comes to the soul
through time spent in contemplation, as man in worship comes face to
face with himself and with his Maker, and considers the vital themes
of life - death, heaven, eternity, duty, and privilege - and probes
the depth of his own existence as related to the plan of God.
Spiritual
Service
The Sabbath raises man from the level of earthly existence to the plane
of the spirit. Six days man toils to provide the needed food, clothing,
shelter, and protection against possible contingencies. On the Sabbath
he is lifted above all earthly considerations, and communes with his
God. On that day he takes his rightful place in creation, lifts his
mind to things above, lays aside all that binds him to earth, and enters
into the heavenly rest. He meets with those of like precious faith,
partakes of the bread which comes down from heaven, sits at table with
his Lord, and receives His parting blessing as he turns again to his
earthly pursuits for another week.
The
Sabbath provides the occasion for spiritual service and contemplation.
On that day he may consider the marvelous things out of God's law; he
may view the glory of God in the heavens above and the earth beneath;
he may commune
p.
12 -- with God and his own soul. Were it not for the time thus provided,
man would sustain an irreparable spiritual loss. The Sabbath gives the
needed time for contemplation of life and its duties, for God, heaven,
and religion. Take the Sabbath away, and the foundation of the other
commandments is removed; there would be no stated time for worship,
no time dedicated to the consideration of our responsibilities to God
and man. Without the Sabbath, life would be an endless round of duties
and labor, spiritual things would be neglected, and man's highest end
would not be attained. If there is to be religion at all, God must provide
time for it. This God has done.
Attack
Upon the Sabbath
From this it can easily be understood that any attack upon the Sabbath
is an attack upon religion itself, a thrust aimed at man's spiritual
nature. We need not wonder, therefore, that Satan is specially interested
in the destruction or the perversion of the Sabbath. If he can destroy
it, he has cut the link of communication with heaven. He has sapped
the lifeblood of religion, without which Christianity will soon sicken
and die. An attack upon the Sabbath is a stab at the heart of worship,
at the heart of both an and God.
The
nature of the Sabbath makes it peculiarly susceptible to attack from
the evil one. It is in onceivable that Satan could ever persuade Christendom
that stealing or committing adultery is harmless or permissible. Yet
the Sabbath
p.
13 -- commandment is as surely a part of the moral law as are the
others. It is doubtful that Satan could ever persuade Christians that
any of the other commandments can be violated with impunity. Yet he
has done this with the fourth. How has this been possible? What are
the reasons for his success? This will be discussed fully later.
Attacks
upon the Sabbath throughout the ages have been numerous and persistent,
and they have all been grounded upon human reasoning as against the
command of God. Men can see no reason why any other day than one commanded
by God is not just as good. Men cannot see why one day in seven is not
just as good as the seventh day. The answer, of course, is that the
difference lies in God's command. It is at this point that man's reason
sets aside a positive command of God. It is not merely a question of
this or that day, but the greater question of obedience to God's command.
The
attacks made on the Sabbath have not come merely or even generally from
believers or opponents of God. Satan's ingenuity and master mind show
themselves in his capacity for enlisting Christians-laymen, preachers,
and bishops - in his attack on the Sabbath. Men of learning, men of
science, have joined the fray, and the array of talent mustered against
the Sabbath is quite formidable. But truth will triumph at last.
One
of the most effective and far-reaching attacks upon the Sabbath has
come as a by-product of the theory of organic evolution, almost
p.
14 -- universally accepted by scientists. We consider this attack
from the scientific angle the most insidious of all, for more than anything
else it destroys faith in the Bible and the
record of creation. While a full consideration of this subject does
not come under the purview of this volume, it is essential that we give
it at least passing attention. This we shall do.
p. 15 -- Chapter 2 An
Enemy of the Sabbath
The commandment, "Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy,"
rests upon the fact of creation. "In six days the Lord made heaven
and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh
day: wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed it."
Ex. 20:11.
God
worked six days and rested the seventh. This fact forms the basis and
ground of the commandment. As the Sabbath is a memorial of the fact
of creation, it must of necessity remain as long as creation remains.
Evolution
disputes this fact of creation by divine fiat as recorded in Genesis.
The theory does not provide for, nor admit of, creation in the Bible
sense of the word. There are those among the believers in evolution
who admit that God might have created the first spark of life which
later grew and developed into the life which surrounds us today, but
that God created the world as we see it today in its highly developed
form, and that He did so in six literal days, is categorically denied.
In so far as creation was divided into six epochs, evolutionists reason
that these six periods must have been of undetermined length, each probably
hundreds of millions of years.
It
is clear that in any such scheme a twenty four-hour Sabbath recurring
weekly finds no place. All will admit that if the six days of creation
are
p.
16 -- lengthened into six long periods of time, and if God rested
the seventh period - which has not as yet ended, and in which we are
still living - there is no possible ground for
keeping a weekly Sabbath as a memorial of God's rest. If, on the other
hand, we believe the simple Genesis account that "in six days the
Lord made heaven and earth," and that He rested on the seventh
day, then we can see reason for man's following in His footsteps and
obeying His command to rest as He rested. If the theory of evolution
is true, then the ground of the Sabbath as presented in the fourth commandment
is
untrue and irrelevant. There can be no harmony or compromise in these
two opposite positions. If one is true, the other falls to the ground.
It is for men to choose what and whom they will believe.
The
Higher Critics
A hundred or more years ago few had seriously challenged the historicity
of the creation record found in the Bible. True, voices here and there
had been lifted against a literal view of the creation account, but
on the whole there had been no serious challenge.
Then a change occurred. Higher criticism began to make itself felt,
while at the same time a new day dawned in science. Without any necessary
collusion, the two worked hand in hand to produce a new era in religion
- or might we better say a new religion? for this is really what happened.
The confidence that had formerly been
p.
17 -- reposed in the Bible was transferred to science. No longer
did men believe that creation had taken place as the Bible recorded
it. Science gave a different version, and this version the critics accepted.
The
higher critics insisted that the Biblical creation account was confused
and not historically true. An editor, they stated, had attempted to
put many conflicting traditions together to form a connected story;
but if his intent was to make it appear that Genesis was the work of
one author, he had not succeeded. The critics had unmasked the clumsy
attempt. Not one man had written Genesis, nor two, nor ten. If the editor
thought that he had deceived the critics, he was mistaken. They proceeded
to lay bare the whole story of the composite authorship of Genesis,
and took the editor to task. The story which the critics unfolded was
that Genesis was a collection of fables, myths, legends, folklore, tradition,
with some little history added, all of which probably had some remote
ground in fact, but was so confused as to be of little value as a reliable
source of information.
These
conclusions of the Biblical critics played into the hands of the scientists
and greatly strengthened their case. The Bible account could not be
depended upon; this was the conclusion of the critics, and the scientists
agreed. The two stood on common ground. Scientists doubted the Bible
account of creation; the critics admitted that it was folklore and myth
and not intended to be taken literally. Thus the case was won for
p.
18 -- evolution. The critics joined the scientists, and the case
was settled. Both parties
pronounced their work good, so good in fact that "there are no
rival hypotheses except the outworn and completely refuted idea of special
creation, now retained only by the ignorant, the dogmatic, and the prejudiced."
- Evolution, Genetics, and Eugenics, p. 59.
What God Thinks
God is patient with men's failings and their ignorance's. He knows our
frame and remembers that we are only dust. God forgives and forgives,
even unto seventy times seven. This is our salvation and hope. God is
a wonderful God.
But
there are some things that try His patience, humanly speaking. It is
not our ignorance. That God can bear and even excuse. It is rather our
pretended wisdom, our "knowing so many things that are not so,"
that irks Him. Our hypocrisy and stubbornness, our disinclination and
unwillingness to be taught - these try God's patience.
It
is not often that God uses sarcasm to express His feelings. There are
only a few places in the Bible where it is used, and it seems to be
reserved for special occasions and groups. Let us consider one case.
Job
passed through experiences that tried him to the utmost. In the midst
of his trials he said certain things which he later regretted, and of
which he confessed himself to be in ignorance. "I uttered that
I understood not; things too wonderful
p.19
-- for
me, which I knew not." "Wherefore I abhor myself, and repent
in dust and ashes." Job 42:3,6.
God
had put some simple questions to Job, and it was these questions which
caused him to make the above confession. In asking these questions God
had a larger audience in mind, for the principles enunciated hold good
under like conditions.
Job
had professed to be wise above that which is written. Note the import
of the questions propounded by God. "Who is this that darkens counsel
by words without knowledge? Gird up now thy loins like a man; for I
will demand of thee, and answer thou Me. Where wast thou when I laid
the foundations of the earth? declare, if thou has understanding."
"Know thou it, because thou wast then born? or because the number
of thy days is great?" Job 38:2-4, 21.
Note
in particular verse four: "Where was thou when I laid the foundations
of the earth? declare, if thou had understanding." How small that
question must have made Job feel! He had evidently discoursed learnedly
about what took place when God made the heavens and the earth; and now
God asks him where he was at that time, since he seems to know so much
about it.
We
believe that this was recorded for the benefit of others besides Job.
It would be well if a modern disbeliever in Genesis should put himself
in Job's place when God asks the embarrassing question: "Where
wast thou when I laid
p.20
-- the foundations
of the earth?" It would make him less sure of his pretended knowledge.
The
answer which Job gave, "I uttered that I understood not; things
too wonderful for me, which I knew not," was an honest answer.
Men presume to know and discuss learnedly about what took place ages
ago, and describe events at which they were not present, while they
reject the testimony of those who not only were there, but who did the
very things upon which these wise men throw doubt. It must amuse God
to hear such a display of learning, when He knows - and they ought to
know - that their pretended wisdom is only folly.
Biblical
Sarcasm
"Knowest thou it, because thou wast then born? or because the number
of thy days is great?" The Septuagint renders this: "I know
then that thou wast born at that time, and the number of thy years is
great." An American Translation, issued by the University of Chicago
Press, reads, "You know, for you were born then, and the number
of your days is great." The Variorum Reference Bible translates
in the margin: "Thou knowest it (ironically), for thou wast then
born." Moffatt renders the verse: "Surely you know ! you,
born when it was made, you who have lived so long" With these the
Revised Version agrees when it translates: "Doubtless, thou knowest,
for thou was then born, and the number of thy days is great!"
p.
21 -- This is mild sarcasm, or irony, as the Variorum calls it.
It was doubtless intended by God to give the person addressed a truer
perspective of himself and of his own importance.
How
devastating such questions would be if addressed by God to a modern
disbeliever in Genesis! Where were you, small, puny, insignificant man,
who presumes to correct God's version of what He did and how He did
it? "Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth?"
It would seem that man should be able to learn from this the lesson
God intends to convey, and take a humbler attitude.
It
must be interesting for God to watch life unfolding, see a little one
toddle along amusing himself with a rattle, and the next moment, as
it were, see the same individual ready to assume the role of teacher,
discoursing wisely about things of which he knows nothing, unwilling
to listen to the testimony of those who were present on the occasion
of which he speaks. It would seem much wiser to accept the testimony
of eyewitnesses than, to reject it and substitute nebulous theories.
To call such procedure science is to make science ridiculous in the
eyes of thinking men.
God's
one question, "Where was thou when I laid the foundations of the
earth?" should silence forever all profane reasoning about creation
which is not founded on personal knowledge or the testimony of those
who were present on the occasion and had a part in it,
p. 22 -- The Consistent Evolutionist
The Bible knows nothing of evolution. What it has to say of how things
came to be is summed up in the words: "In six days the Lord made
heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh
day: wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed it."
Ex. 20:11.
The
consistent evolutionist cannot in any real way believe in Genesis. And
not only can he not believe in Genesis. He cannot believe in the Bible
as being in any way inspired above other great pieces of literature.
The Bible presents to man a Saviour from sin. But the consistent evolutionist
has no use for a Saviour, for he cannot accept of a "fall";
it finds no place in his program. Man did not "fall" in the
Genesis meaning of the term. Man is on the upgrade. He began very low
and is constantly climbing. So far from
"falling" is he, that some declare that if man ever "fell,"
he fell upward. No, the evolutionists cannot believe in a "fall."
They believe in the exact opposite. The very notion that man fell, that
in many respects he is growing worse and worse, is entirely inconsistent
with their doctrine. They could believe in a fall only as they give
up
their belief in evolution. The two do not harmonize. Evolution does
not provide for a "fall." Hence it does not need a Savior.
Evolution does away with Christ. In this sense It is definitely anti-Christian.
If
the creation days are long periods of time, as evolution teaches, it
becomes necessary to explain
p,
23 -- "the evening and the morning" of each day; or, as
Genesis 1:16 notes, day and night. There is no way in which we can conceive
of a night millions of years in duration, and have any life survive.
Furthermore, this alternation of light and darkness took place during
each of the six days; hence, if we try to accept both
evolution and the Bible, we must conceive of six periods of darkness
each followed by a period of light. During no period of darkness that
lasted millions of years could vegetable, animal, or human life exist.
This consideration alone would rule out any attempt to harmonize the
six days of creation with the evolutionary conception of long periods
of time.
Adam
lived to be 930 years old. The first two days of his life were two of
the original seven days; hence they were millions of years in length,
if we are to believe the "long period" theory. Consequently
Adam would be millions of years old at the time of his death, and not
930. Men may choose to believe one or the other of these accounts. There
is no way of harmonizing them.
Those
who believe that the six days of creation were long periods of time,
also believe - and of necessity must believe - that the seventh period
is also long and has not yet ended, and that we are still living in
it. This presents another dilemma for those who wish to be "modern"
and believe in evolution without giving up their faith in the Bible.
Adam, according to the Bible, did not die till long after the first
Sabbath. But if that Sabbath is not yet ended, what about Adam?
p.
24 -- No
one will claim that he is still living. We leave this problem for others
to solve.
God
blessed the seventh day "because that in it He had rested from
all His work." Gen. 2:3. How could He bless the day after He had
rested on it, if that day were millions of years in length and has not
yet ended? God could bless the day after He had rested on it only if
those days were ordinary days. If they were not, the whole record falls
to the ground.
Considerations
and objections such as these could be extended at great length. We have
presented these for the one purpose of showing that there is no way
in which the Biblical account and the theory of evolution can be harmonized.
Men must choose between one or the other. Both cannot be true.
Our
Position
It is not to be supposed that the statements here made are meant to
constitute a wholesale condemnation of the adherents of the evolution
theory. Far from it. We believe that there are thousands and even millions
of sincere, honest Christians who are tainted with this destructive
philosophy. Without thinking things through, they adhere to certain
beliefs, having faith that their leaders know even if they themselves
do not, and that surely the leaders will not lead them astray. There
are doubtless multitudes who are not
consistent evolutionists, and do not realize the implications of their
belief. All this, however, does not in the least alter the fact that
evolution
p.
25 -- as
it is being taught and believed today constitutes one of the most serious
challenges to Bible Christianity, a challenge that must be met or Christianity
is doomed. And with this the Sabbath is closely bound up. If evolution
is true, there is no Sabbath, and no need of any.
It
is clear from what has been presented that there can be no agreement
between belief in the Bible and belief in the evolutionary theory. The
one is destructive of the other. No man can believe in the Word of God
and also believe in evolution. They are mutually exclusive. It is impossible
to straddle the question as many attempt to do. It must be either, or.
It cannot be both.
In
saying all this, we do not cast reflection upon the findings of science
as such. Facts are facts by whomsoever found and propagated. Bible believers
do not deny facts. They believe the facts as much as their most stanch
evolutionary friends do. What they object to is the arrangement - and
even manipulation - of facts to bolster an anti-Christian and anti-Biblical
theory. Science has a right and a duty to find and present facts. But
when it enters the field of religion; when it arranges its facts so
that it becomes destructive of faith and religion; when it definitely
challenges revealed truth and sets itself in opposition to the Bible,
ridiculing those who still adhere to a "Thus saith the Lord,"
then it ceases to be science and becomes an anti-Christian force and
influence to whom no quarter should be given and from whom none should
be asked.
p.
26 -- Chapter 3 The
Sabbath Commandment
"Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days shall thou
labor, and do all thy work: but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the
Lord thy God: in it thou shall not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor
thy daughter, thy manservant, nor thy maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor
thy stranger that is within thy gates: for in six days the Lord made
heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh
day: wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed it."
Ex. 20:8-11.
The
first word in this commandment, "remember," sets it apart
from the other commandments and lends it distinction. When God gave
the Sabbath to man, He knew the great value of His gift, and He also
knew of the widespread disregard into which it would fall. He knew that
Satan would use this commandment as his special point of attack upon
the church, and would do everything in his power to cause men to forget
the Sabbath. He knew that in time men would lose the sense of the sacredness
of the day, and ignore its binding obligation. For these reasons God
called special attention to the Sabbath when He announced the law at
Sinai, and asked that it be particularly kept in mind. All the commandments
of God are vital, and none is to be neglected. But to one He gave distinction
above the rest, asking His people not to forget it.
p.
27 -- Because
of its unique character, this commandment has been broken - by saint
and sinner alike - more than any other commandment. Men who would never
think of being dishonest or telling a falsehood, who would never knowingly
break any of the other commandments, think nothing of breaking the Sabbath
of the Lord. They ignore entirely the fact that the Lord blessed this
day above other days, that He made it for and gave it to man, and that
He has never revoked the blessing with which He once invested it, nor
has He taken back His gift. Men forget that in rejecting the gift, they
wound the Giver.
Sabbath
keeping is vital to Christianity. Not without cause did God choose one
day of the seven and set it apart for spiritual exercises. He knew that
man needed a definite time for worship, a day when he could lay aside
the cares of this life and turn his thoughts to heaven and home.
This,
of course, would specially be the case after man fell. Driven out of
his Eden home, unable to walk in the garden and talk with God as he
had formerly done, compelled to earn his bread in the sweat of his face,
man needed one day when he might cease toiling and prepare his soul
for communion with God.
Without
the Sabbath all would be labor and sweat without respite, every day
would be alike, and there would be a continual awareness of separation
from God. But the arrival of the Sabbath brought renewed hope, joy,
and courage. It gave opportunity for communion with God, and was prophetic
of the
p.
28 -- time when heaven and earth should once more be united.
He
who takes the Sabbath away, takes worship away, closes one of the doors
to heaven, and greatly impoverishes spiritual life. The Sabbath stands
for worship, meditation, reflection, study, prayer, communion, fellowship.
If any of these are neglected or seriously interfered with, religion
ceases to be effective, and worldliness takes the ascendancy. For this
reason Satan considers the overthrow of the
Sabbath one of his best means of causing men to forget God, and of lowering
the spiritual tone of the people. As men forget the Sabbath, they forget
God. As they become careless in Sabbath keeping, they become careless
in other religious duties. Sabbath keeping is an accurate barometer
of spiritual life.
Basis
of the Fourth Commandment
The Sabbath commandment rests solely on a "Thus says the Lord,"
and is not in the unregenerate man buttressed by an approving or accusing
conscience. Such commandments as "Thou shall not kill" and
"Thou shall not steal" have conscience on their side. While
there may be tribes and individuals who have little knowledge of the
respect for these commandments, the normal individual has feelings of
ill desert as he
transgresses them. But this is not ordinarily the case with Sabbath
desecration, at least not until special revelation or light comes to
the individual. The non-Christian finds it hard to understand why
p.
29 -- work done on one day of the week is commendable, while the
same work done on another day is reprehensible; why one day a thing
is right and commendable, and on another day the same thing is sin.
He does not see that the difference is not in the thing done, but in
the time when it is done. He can find no ground for such difference
in nature or science. To him it appears illogical and arbitrary.
The
Christian likewise can find no ground for Sabbath keeping in nature.
The stars move in their appointed path regardless of the Sabbath; the
corn grows; the trees yield their meat; the animal creation is unaware
of any day of rest; the rains come and the sun shines - all with no
discernible difference in days.Nature has no Sabbath as such and does
not point to any. Why, then, should man keep the Sabbath? To the Christian
there is only one reason, and no other; but that reason is enough: God
has spoken. The Sabbath commandment rests definitely and solely on a
"Thus saith the Lord," and has no ground in nature, as such.
It is for this reason that God makes the Sabbath His sign and test.
This will be discussed later.
When
Satan attacks the Sabbath, he attacks a commandment that in a special
sense is based upon and predicates faith in God. If he can win here,
the victory indeed is great. If he can secularize the day, he has taken
away from the Christian the hour of communion and prayer, the hour of
study and peace, the hour when he can meet with
p.
30 -- others
of like precious faith for mutual encouragement and edification. He
has taken away a vital link in the chain that binds heaven and earth
together.
The
Sabbath of the fourth commandment supplies time for the consideration
of the things of the spirit. Men do not attend to religious duties unless
a specific time is set apart for that purpose. There are a multitude
of things that continuously call for attention, and every day of the
week could profitably be used for purely secular affairs; and this would
be done, were it not for the fact that God calls men to remember the
Sabbath day to keep it holy. The Sabbath is a weekly call to come back
to God, to turn away from the things of the world, and to give attention
to the spirit. Satan knows the value of the Sabbath to religion, and
he is not slow to improve every opportunity to destroy it. If he can
make the Sabbath of none effect, he has not only destroyed holy time,
but has frustrated one of the great means of grace, and deprived man
of the Sabbath blessing.
Breaking
the fourth commandment is not like breaking some of the other commandments.
One man may kill another in a fit of anger; he may rashly take the name
of God in vain; or he may suddenly be overcome by a great passion. But
not so with failure to keep the fourth commandment. Sabbath breaking
does not have the excuse of sudden passion or of inordinate desire.
It is not like a great sin or a destructive habit. It is rather a symptom
of spiritual decline, of departure
p.
31 --
from God, of estrangement from the promise, of a sickly Christian experience.
Let this be emphasized: it is a symptom indicative of disease, and reveals
an inward condition of apostasy from God. Its roots lie deeper than
the apparent transgression. It signalizes a departure from spiritual
life and holy living, and presages the separation of the soul from God.
Sabbath keeping is a spiritual barometer, a sign of sanctification,
a gauge of our friendship and fellowship with God.
While
Sabbath breaking is a symptom, it is also a disease. It fosters irreligion
and encourages disobedience in other respects. It starves the soul and
weakens it, deprives man of the means of spiritual sustenance, and makes
him susceptible to coarser temptations. It is one of Satan's shrewdest
inventions. In this he can get the support of a large portion of Christendom,
which would not be possible with any other commandment. Men do not understand
as they should, that the Sabbath is one of the chief channels of communication
with God, that breaking the Sabbath breaks the connection with heaven
and shuts of the stream of spiritual life. They do not understand that
"the Sabbath is a golden clasp that unites God and His people."
The
Place of the Sabbath
The Sabbath commandment occupies an interesting position in the law
of God. Three great commandments that deal with God precede it, and
six that deal with man follow it. The Sabbath
p.
32 -- command belongs to both tables of the law, and partakes of
the nature of both. It has a God-ward and a man-ward aspect. It is God's
Sabbath, but we, men, are to keep it. It commands worship, and also
work. It combines in a unique way the sacred and the common, outlining
our duty to God and man. It divides all time into secular and holy time,
and defines man's duty to each. It commands labor and it commands rest,
giving to each its allotted share in the plan of God.
Men
need a Sabbath. The world is too much with us. We are rushed with so
many things that we fail to take time to think. We have no leisure,
no time for spiritual exercise, no time for study, reflection, or meditation,
only as we deliberately set aside a time for it. This God wants us to
do. And He wants us to choose the time He has chosen. He wants us to
"remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy."
As
it would be quite impossible for a little girl to keep her dress clean
if she began to play in the mud and got her hands soiled, so it is quite
impossible for us to keep the day holy unless we refrain from sin and
evil and all that defiles. If her little hands were soiled, it would
not be long until her dress would be soiled. The only hope of keeping
her dress clean would be to stay away from all that is unclean. Only
as she kept herself clean, could she keep her garments clean.
The
parallel is plain. God's Sabbath day is holy. It is a sanctified day.
It is God's holy rest. We are not to regard it lightly. We are not to
p.
33 -- trample
it underfoot. We are not to do our own pleasure on it. We are not to
speak our own words. We are not to pollute it. We are to keep it holy.
Isa. 58:13, Eze. 20:13, 21. This can be done only as we ourselves are
holy and keep away from all that defiles and pollutes.
The
Six Days
"Six days shall thou labor." This statement is part of the
Sabbath commandment, and is vital. The commandment enjoins not only
rest, but also labor. just as surely as we are to rest on the Sabbath
day, we are to labor the other six. The Sabbath commandment covers all
time, all seven days of the week.
Some
people stress that part of the commandment that deals with rest, and
forget the other part that deals
with labor. But the one is as binding as the other. No man can be a
Christian and be indolent. No man can keep the Sabbath unless he is
also willing to work. The two ideas go together, and it takes both to
make the Sabbath commandment.
The
true Christian is industrious. He does not unnecessarily "live
on" his relatives or friends. He does not arrange to do all his
visiting at mealtime. He does not give broad hints in regard to his
needs, so as to arouse sympathy. He does not expect a reward for every
little service he performs. He does not fawn upon the rich or despise
the poor. He does not demand special concessions. He pays his bills,
and pays them
p.
34 -- promptly. He does not need a supervisor to make sure that
he does his work. He does not become industrious when his superior observes
him, and slacken his work immediately after he is left alone. He does
more than he is paid for. He is no shirker. He is not an expert at alibis.
He is always willing, and when a task is done, he asks for another.
He can see work to be done, and does it, or offers his services. He
can be found where help is needed, and does not always have pressing
business elsewhere. He gives liberally of his time, and is cheerful
about it. He knows his business, but is willing to learn. He is as careful
of his work as he is of his religion.
The
true Christian is such a man. He is in demand everywhere. It is hard
to find him idle. If he loses one position, he gets another. If he loses
that, he makes a place for himself. He is resourceful and energetic.
God and men are proud of him.
Recreation
Must a man work six days of every week? May he never take a vacation?
If the commandment said only, "Six days shall thou labor,"
the question might be debatable. But this is added: "and do all
thy work."
We
are to do all our work. If it takes all six days to do it, we are to
work six days. But if we can do our work in five days, or four, or three,
we need not work six. The point is, we are to get our work done. We
are not to shirk or leave our task unfinished while we go pleasure seeking.
"Six days shall thou labor,
p.
35 -- and do all thy work." We may not work on the Sabbath.
That day we are to rest. But we are to plan our work in such a way that
we will get it done in six days. This God demands.
Some
people do not like the sound of the word "labor." Work is
distasteful to them, and labor is even worse. It smacks of the soil,
or toil, or pain. Even so. Labor may be hard. Labor may be wearisome.
Labor may be monotonous. But it is God given, and is for our good. In
a sinful world we can thank God for labor. In certain respects, it is
our salvation. Only he who has labored can appreciate rest.
A great
deal is said in the Bible about work. This is as it should be. We all
need to have impressed upon our minds not only that we have a work to
do, but that we have work to do. Paul did a wonderful work. And
while he did this work, he worked at his daily task. He neglected neither.
This is an example for such as think themselves too good or too important
to do ordinary work. Many' a young girl who thinks it would be romantic
to work for the heathen in Africa, would frown at the suggestion that
in the meantime she might help her mother with the dishes. It does not
occur to her that the one thing may be a preparation for the other.
Sabbath
Rest
"Six days shall thou labor, and do all thy work: but - " Note
that "but." It is well to work, but. Some are so interested
in work that they cannot
p.
36 -- stop. Work is their life. From early morning till late at
night they are working. They hardly take time to eat or sleep. With
them it is work, work, and only work. They have little patience with
anyone who does not follow their example. They have no time to go to
church, no time for worship, no time for study or recreation; they only
work, work, work.
To
such God says: "It is well that you work, but you must not forget
that I have other claims upon you. Work is not all. I have appointed
a day upon which you are not to do your own work. On that day you are
to rest and refresh yourself. You are to turn away from secular things
and commune with Heaven. You are to remember the Sabbath day to keep
it holy. It is My day, and I want you to share My rest."
With
some, even with so-called Christians, Sabbath keeping has fallen into
disrepute. Sabbath keeping is in their minds associated with the "old
Jewish Sabbath," or perhaps with the "Puritan Sabbath,"
or with some unfortunate experience which they had as children, when
they were not permitted so much as to stir upon the Sabbath. Let such
remember that when the evil one cannot hinder, he sometimes pushes too
far, and that true Sabbath keeping is one of the greatest blessings
which God has given to mankind. As stated before, this is one reason
Satan is anxious to destroy both the Sabbath and Sabbath keeping; and
he has succeeded to an astonishing extent.
The
reason given in the commandment for observing
p.
37 -- the Sabbath is not merely our physical wellbeing, as is popularly
supposed. It is indeed true that man requires physical rest to refresh
his body. But needful as such rest may be, that is not the reason given
in the commandment. The reason there given is the example of God. He
rested, and so we are to rest. Note the wording: "Six days shall
thou labor, and do all thy work: but the seventh day is the Sabbath
of the Lord thy God: ... for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth,
.. and rested the seventh day." That is: God worked, and therefore
we are to work; God rested, and therefore we are to rest. It is a matter
of example; only later did it become a matter of command. Example is
enough; that is what Adam had in the Garden of Eden. Later, because
of laxity, it became necessary to add the command.
The
Sabbath command is the only commandment in the observance of which God
could join man. It would be highly improper to speak of God as keeping
the first commandment, "Thou shall have no other gods before Me."
So it is with the second and the third. Again, it would be highly irreverent
to speak of God as keeping the last six commandments. A moment's reflection
will make this clear. Stealing, lying, adultery, all these have no place
with reference to God. But there is one commandment in the observance
of which God could join man: the Sabbath commandment. Man can keep it.
God can keep it. Thus the Sabbath is the meeting place of
p.
38 -- God and man. In the Garden of Eden divinity and humanity
joined in its observance. It was the golden clasp that united heaven
and earth then; it will again serve that purpose in the earth made new.
When God deigned to come to this earth and meet with Adam and Eve, He
instituted the Sabbath, blessed and sanctified it, and gave it as a
gift to man. The Sabbath is a bit of heaven, God's own gift. Let us
take heed, lest we refuse this blessed gift of God.
"The
Sabbath was made for man," and was "to be a sign between Me
and them, that they might know that I am the Lord that sanctify them."
Ex. 20:10; Mark 2:27; Eze. 20:12. On that basis He invites us to join
Him in His regard for the Sabbath, and promises that those "that
keep My Sabbaths, and choose the things that please Me, and take hold
of My covenant: even unto them will I give in Mine house and within
My walls a place and a name better than of sons and daughters: I will
give them an everlasting name, that shall not be cut off" Isa.
56:4, 5. No promise could be of wider import or of greater significance.
It indicates strongly what has been mentioned before, that true Sabbath
keeping is indicative of holiness of life, of sanctification, of communion
with God, and that the Lord considers it a sign of union with Him.
The
Observance of the Sabbath
In regard to the outward observance of the Sabbath, what does the Lord
require? First,
p.
39 -- "In it thou shall not do any work." This is defined
to refer to our own work and pleasure. "If thou turn away thy foot
from the Sabbath, from doing thy pleasure on My holy day; and call the
Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord, honorable; and shall honor
Him, not doing thine own ways, nor finding thine own pleasure, nor speaking
thine own words: then shall thou delight thyself in the Lord; and I
will cause thee to ride upon the high places of the earth, and feed
thee with the heritage of Jacob thy father: for the mouth of the Lord
hath spoken it." Isa. 58:13, 14. Note the words: "Not doing
thine own ways, nor finding thine own pleasure, nor speaking thine own
words." This, then, forbids selfish observance of the day: it forbids
using it as a day to please ourselves. This is the negative side of
the commandment.
For
the positive observance of the day, we must go to the example of our
Lord and Saviour when He was here on earth. Christ is "Lord also
of the Sabbath." Mark 2:28. "All things were made by Him;
and without Him was not anything made that was made." John 1:3
If "all things" were made by Christ, if the Sabbath "was
made" (Mark 2:27), then Christ made it. Being thus closely connected
with it, He knows how it should be observed, and we may safely follow
His example. He will not lead us astray.
How
did Christ observe the day? "As His custom was, He went into the
synagogue on the Sabbath day." Luke 4:16. Christ went to
p.
40 -- church on the Sabbath. This was no spasmodic or occasional
attendance. It was "His custom" to do so. He had a part in
the service. He "stood up for to read." It was the custom
in those days to invite those who were capable of reading or speaking
to lead out in the service. Christ did not draw back when He was so
invited. He stood up to read.
But
Christ did more than go to church on the Sabbath. He went about doing
good. He healed and helped wherever He could. Often, upon coming out
of the synagogue, He would accept an invitation to go to a home, as
in the instance recorded in Luke 4:38, 39. On that occasion "He
arose out of the synagogue, and entered into Simon's house." Here
He found one sick, "taken with a great fever." "And He
stood over her, and rebuked the fever; and it left her."
At
times this healing was done in the synagogue itself. On one occasion
there was a man with a withered hand, and His enemies "watched
... whether He would heal him on the Sabbath day." Mark 3:1-5.
They did not have long to wait. To the man He said: "Stretch forth
thine hand. And he stretched it out: and his hand was restored whole
as the other."
The
Pharisees
It was at this time that Christ asked a question which throws light
on the meaning of true Sabbath keeping. The Pharisees were watching
Him. He knew that they were ready to take "counsel
p.
41 -- with
the Herodians against Him, how they might destroy Him." Mark 3:6.
But He had a work to do. He must be true to Himself and to His God,
though it might mean losing His life. So "He saith unto them, Is
it lawful to do good on the Sabbath days, or to do evil? to save life,
or to kill? But they held their peace."
The
Sabbath keeping of the Pharisees was mostly negative. They had numerous
rules in regard to what must not be done. With them it was always, You
must not do this; you must not do that. Christ was positive. His conclusion
was, It is lawful to do good on the Sabbath day.
Christ
walked in the fields on the Sabbath. On one of these occasions He was
accosted by the Pharisees with the charge that He was permitting His
disciples to do that which was not lawful. Mark 2:23-28. We may rightly
draw the conclusion from this and other incidents that Christ did not
keep the Sabbath in the approved Pharisaical manner. He went about doing
good; He healed and helped. He made the Sabbath a day of joy and happiness,
rather than a day of gloom and repression.
That
Christ was a profound student both of Scripture and of nature is evident
from the respect which His knowledge commanded even at an early age.
Luke 2:41-52. In His sermons and teachings He made frequent reference
to nature and to the things of nature. Such knowledge could have come
to Him only through constant study, reflection, and observation. Is
it too much to
p.
42 -- believe that when His week's work as a carpenter was done,
He went out to commune with nature and nature's God, to reflect, meditate,
study, and pray? Is it too much to believe that here is where He received
His intimate acquaintance with the scroll of the prophets as well as
with nature?
It
is significant that "He found the place" for which He was
looking in the book of Isaiah. Luke 4:17. He was using the synagogue
copy of the Scriptures, but He was sufficiently familiar with the writings
to be able to find what He wanted. Not all can do this, and some ministers
might even have difficulty. While we would not draw unwarranted conclusions
from this incident, we know that Christ was acquainted with the Scriptures
in a definite way. As He worked at His trade from day to day, the Sabbath
was ordinarily the only day in which He could uninterruptedly do such
study. We are safe in assuming that part of the Sabbath was used by
the Lord in making Himself better acquainted with the writings of old,
and that He did such thorough work that He was more than ordinarily
well read.
Christ's
Sabbath Keeping
When we sum up what we know concerning the manner in which Christ spent
the Sabbath, we find that He went to church, that He preached and healed,
that He took walks in the fields, that He studied, prayed, and meditated.
If we were to venture an opinion regarding how this
p.
43 -- time was divided, we would not be on sure ground. Evidently
a change came with His entrance upon His public ministry. After that,
much prominence is given to His going about doing good and healing.
In any event, Christ was not a recluse, keeping to Himself and withholding
from the world His presence and His service. He loved to mingle with
the people. He even accepted invitations on the Sabbath to dine with
Pharisees where others were present, and He used these occasions to
bring out some of His most pertinent lessons for them and for all.
We
need to be careful lest we go to extremes. We must carefully guard the
Sabbath, so that it does not degenerate into a day of recreation and
relaxation only. The Sabbath is not a day for excursions and travel.
It is not a day for sight-seeing and merrymaking. It is a day of solemn
convocation and worship, a day of prayer and of seeking God. No one
should needlessly absent himself from worship on that day. It may be
that there is some distance to travel in order to meet with church members,
it may be inconvenient and tiresome to get to the place where God's
people assemble for worship, but we believe that every reasonable effort
should be made to be there, and that God not only permits us to make
such efforts, but is pleased to have us do so. The Sabbath is first
of all a day of worship, a day on which God's people assemble to hear
the Word and to tell of their own experiences and be encouraged by the
report of others, As far as possible, all should
p.
44 -- be in their appointed place when the hour of worship comes.
After
the service, it is not necessary, in order to observe the Sabbath according
to the commandment, to stay indoors. Christ accepted invitations on
the Sabbath, and spent at least a part of the time in conversation and
teaching. But He did more than that. He spent much time in going about
doing good. So may we. There is no reason why the Sabbath should not
be a day of visiting the sick and the shut-ins, of bringing cheer to
those on beds of sickness, of visiting homes for crippled children,
for the aged, for the unprivileged and unfortunate, of sending messages
and flowers to the lonely, and in general of doing that which Christ
Himself would delight to do were He here. A Sabbath spent in this way
would not only be a blessing to the person who does the work, but would
react in a thousand ways to further the cause of Christianity, in making
practical that which is preached from the pulpit, but which too often
is not translated into acts. To follow Christ's way of Sabbath keeping
would make the Sabbath a day of blessing and delight to a large number
of people who might not have the gospel preached to them in any other
way.
Viewed
from the angle of Christ's manner of Sabbath keeping, the day should
be one of the preaching of the gospel both by word of mouth and by way
of practice. The Sabbath should be a demonstration of the gospel in
operation.
p.
45 -- When God commands us to remember the Sabbath day to keep it
holy, He is in that command providing not only for the observance of
a day for our benefit, but also for giving the world an object lesson
in applied Christianity. The Sabbath was given not only to man, but
for man. Rightly observed and used, it should be a mighty means for
the proclamation of the true gospel in a way which all can understand.
As Christ was the Word made flesh, so the Sabbath is heaven transplanted,
a day given to man as a reminder of that which once was and which again
shall be. It came from God, and it is to be given back to Him again
in service.
Practical
Applications
The command to observe the Sabbath extends to children, servants, and
strangers that are within our jurisdiction. The reading of the command
is, "The seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it
thou shall not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy
manservant, nor thy maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that
is within thy gates." Ex. 20: 10.
A vital
principle is here involved. We are responsible for ourselves, and also
for those who are within our gates. We are not only to rest ourselves,
but the same privilege is to be extended to the children and to the
servants; and even the strangers are to be included. If they are within
our gates, they come under the ruling of the commandment. They are to
be made acquainted
p.
46 -- with the custom of the household and the command of God, and
invited to join in Sabbath observance. Out of courtesy and respect they
will join, or else absent themselves so as to avoid any possible embarrassment.
God wishes all in the home to have enough respect for the Word of God
to abstain from outward Sabbath profanation. The chief point, however,
as we see it, is that God wants to make sure that no one comes to our
home who is not made acquainted with His requirements and given an opportunity
to join in our worship.
The
Sabbath command includes even the cattle. To such as are not in the
habit of being kind to animals, this may seem strange. God
wants His people to be considerate of the brute creation. He notices
the suffering of all; not even a sparrow falls to the ground without
His notice. Matt. 10:29. This shows innate kindness, and is a mighty
commentary on the essential character of God. He is kind by nature.
He is considerate, and He wants us to be the same.
As
we review the Sabbath commandment, we notice that its chief demand is
that of holiness."Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy."
While cessation of labor is commanded, this is by no means all. He who
abstains from work does not by that fact become a Sabbath keeper and
an heir of the promise. He may not do any work on God's day, but this
is merely and at best a negative virtue. He is to keep the day holy.
This means positive goodness. To the writer of
p.
47 -- Hebrews it means that man is to cease "from his own works,
as God did from His." Heb. 4:10. The man who ceases from his own
works, ceases from sin. Only such a man can keep the Sabbath as God
wants it kept. Only he who is holy can keep the Sabbath holy.
This
raises the Sabbath question from being merely the observance of a day
to the living of a life. Out of the turmoil and struggle of the world,
away from the battle for daily bread, God takes His people, gives them
His Sabbath, and says: "Keep this day for Me. Cease from sin. Do
righteousness. Meet with those of like faith for worship. Follow the
example of your Master. Go about doing good. This day is a memorial
of Eden, a memorial of creation. It is a foretaste of the Sabbath to
come, a foretaste of heaven. It is My sign of sanctification. I have
blessed the day. I will bless you and meet with you. Cease from your
own works. Enter into My rest." Thus kept, the Sabbath becomes
a blessed day indeed.
p.
48 -- Chapter 4 The
First Sabbath
The first sunset Adam ever saw was a Sabbath sunset. Thousands of years
have passed since then, and tens of thousands of sunsets have testified
to the fact that our God is a lover of glory and beauty. Men have again
and again witnessed the miracle of night turning into day, and day into
night, and have marveled at the exquisite beauty of the scene. They
have, in the sunsets, seen the wonder, the terror, the majesty, of Sinai;
they have seen a replica of Golgotha as heavy clouds gathered about
one space of clear, settled glory; they have seen the heavens bathed
in the seraphic, wondrous beauty of Paradise as the color harmonies
slowly changed from glory into glory, recording in the heavens a picture
of unsurpassed loveliness and harmony, and in the soul a token of that
peace which passes understanding. Yet with all this it is doubtful that
there has ever been a sunset comparable to that first sunset, when God
and man together witnessed the ushering in of the first Sabbath on earth.
God
could have done many things in creation differently from the way He
did, had His nature and purpose been merely utilitarian. When men want
light or darkness, they turn a switch on or off, and the desired effect
is immediately accomplished. God could have done the same. But He chose
another way, the slower way, the way of beauty and wonder. Slowly He
caused the light
p.
49 -- to fade, and the heavenly Artist shows what can be done with
the dust of the earth, the mists of heaven, and the light from His appointed
luminaries, as He mixes these ingredients in the laboratory of heaven
and displays the result to man in the sunset. The God who causes a million
flowers to bloom unseen, who places the pearl in the ocean and the amethyst
among. the rocks, must be a lover of beauty. Whatever God does, He accomplishes
in the most exquisite and beautiful way. No wonder that man is asked
to worship Him not only in holiness, but in the beauty of holiness.
Men
have sinned and defaced the image of God. The earth itself is gradually
being transformed, by the wickedness of men, from its original beauty
into a shambles of horror and ugliness. But still "the heavens
declare the glory of God; and the firmament shows His handiwork. Day
unto day uttereth speech, and night unto night shows knowledge. There
is no speech nor language, where their voice is not heard. Their line
is gone out through all the earth, and their words to the end of the
world. In them hath He set a tabernacle for the sun." Ps. 19:1-4.
The
Gift of the Sabbath
Desolation may reign in the earth, death may stalk the highways, but
God still speaks in and through nature, the heavens still declare the
glory of God, and the sunsets still call men to worship the God of beauty,
of peace, of love.
p.
50 -- God had finished His work. Six days He had labored, and now
evening was approaching, the evening that would usher in the Sabbath.
God was not weary; yet "on the seventh day He rested, and was refreshed."
Isa. 40:28; Ex. 31:17. He had finished creation, and had given to man
everything that a loving Father could devise. As a crowning act He had
given Adam a helpmeet, and in their new-found love Adam and Eve walked
through the garden, drinking in its beauty and rejoicing in their mutual
love for their heavenly Father, who had provided so bountifully for
them, but who, above all, had given them life, beauteous, glorious,
abundant life.
Now
evening was coming on, and God Himself was walking in the cool of the
day, surveying His work and pronouncing it good. He had provided all
that heart could wish; and yet there was one more thing He wanted to
do, one more gift He wished to bestow. Wonderful as was the earth, surpassingly
lovely as was the garden, there was still something more glorious, more
wonderful, and God wanted to give them a foretaste of it. And so God
decided to give them in the Sabbath a bit of heaven, a day upon which
they might in a special way commune with Him, a day of fellowship and
special blessing.
"The
Sabbath was made for man." Mark 2:27. It was made differently,
however, from the way in which other things were made. Of the rest of
creation it is stated, "He spake, and it was done; He commanded,
and it stood fast."
p.
51 -- By divine fiat the world and the things that are therein were
called into existence. But not so with the Sabbath. God did not say,
"Let there be a Sabbath," and there was a Sabbath. The Sabbath
was not made in a minute, nor by divine fiat only. Three distinct acts
of God are recorded as being requisite to the making of the Sabbath.
The
First Step
"On the seventh day God ended His work which He had made; and He
rested on the seventh day from all His work which He had made. And God
blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it: because that in it He had
rested from all His work which God created and made." Gen. 2:2,
3.
First,
God rested. This rest was a matter of example, for, as already noted,
God was not weary. Yet resting was a necessary part in the making of
the Sabbath. As God's rest was an example for man to follow, it was
necessary that He rest as long as He expected man to rest; that is,
not merely part of the day, but the whole day. Hence the statement is
made that God rested not merely on or in the seventh day, but that He
rested the seventh day." Ex. 20:11.
If
God rested the seventh day, how are we to understand the statement that
"on the seventh day God ended His work which He had made"?
Gen. 2:2, 3. Some have thought that there must be a mistake in the record,
as it does not seem consistent to say that the heavens and the earth
were finished in six days, and yet that God ended
p.
52 -- His work on the seventh day. Should not the record read that
God ended His work on the sixth day rather than on the seventh? We think
not. The statement that the heavens and the earth were finished in six
days is true; and so is the statement that God ended His work on the
seventh day. The heavens and the earth were indeed finished, but God's
work was not ended. He had yet to make the Sabbath, and this He could
do only on the Sabbath. And so God made the Sabbath on the Sabbath,
and He made it by resting. That ended His work. The Sabbath was the
finishing touch. Only when He had made the Sabbath was His work done.
It
is eminently fitting that God should end His work on the seventh day,
thus making the Sabbath a definite part of creation, a part which cannot
be detached or separated from the rest. Had God ended His work on the
sixth day, some might think that the Sabbath was not part of God's original
plan, and that hence it might safely be ignored. Whoever believes in
a finished creation must of necessity believe in the Sabbath; and conversely,
whoever does not believe in the Sabbath does not believe in a finished
creation of God. To this the writer of Hebrews has reference when he
speaks of the seventh day, and notes that "the works were finished
from the foundation of the world." Heb. 4:3 . God completed His
work on the seventh day by making the Sabbath on that day. The record
reads, "God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it." Gen
2:3.
p.
53 -- There are those who think that it would be better if God had
said that He blessed the Sabbath day instead of the seventh day. But
the reading is doubtless as God wants it. Had it merely said that God
blessed the Sabbath day, some might think that it referred to any day
on which the Sabbath might come, and that if the first day of the week
should be chosen as the Sabbath, the blessing would apply to that day.
To forestall any such interpretation, God states that He blessed the
seventh day, not the first, or the third, or any other day, but the
seventh day. Hence the seventh day is a blessed day.
If
some should protest that this interpretation confines the blessing to
the seventh day, but does not call this day the Sabbath day, we would
answer that God in the Sabbath commandment unites the seventh day and
the Sabbath by stating that God "rested the seventh day: wherefore
the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed it." Ex. 20:11.
Here the seventh day and the Sabbath are united, and the seventh day
is identified as the Sabbath which God blessed. This seals and completes
the evidence. God blessed the seventh day, and that day is the Sabbath.
God
did not bless the Sabbath in general, nor did He bless a Sabbath, nor
even the Sabbath, but the Sabbath day, and this Sabbath day is the seventh
day. Doubtless these statements are so very precise and definite for
a reason. God wanted no misunderstanding or dispute in regard to what
He said or meant. He has done all that
p.
54 -- could be done to make the matter clear. He could not have
been more specific.
When
God blessed the Sabbath day, He had already blessed man. Gen. 1:28.
This blessing included fruitfulness and the promise of dominion over
the beasts of the field and over every living thing. As God blessed
Abraham, that he might be a blessing, so He blessed Adam and Eve. They
were to be fruitful and multiply, and be a blessing to their offspring
as well as to the beasts of the field, over which they were to bear
gentle rule.
The
Second Step
We can understand how God can bless human beings. We can even understand
how He can bless animals and give them their work to do in carrying
out God's purpose; but how can God bless a day, a division of time,
neither animate nor inanimate, not alive nor dead, a thing without substance,
a conception rather than a reality; time, which defies definition, though
all mankind is aware of its existence and reality? How can time be blessed
so as to be a blessing to man?
The
answer is that time does not have any virtue or power in itself to be
a blessing or a help to others. Time is as impersonal as space, and
equally inconceivable. One difference between the two is noticeable:
space extends in all directions, while time might be compared to a one-way
road, permitting traffic in one direction only. Man has no power over
time, to hasten or retard it. Whether He will or not, he is carried
along with
p.
55 -- it, and despite all protests is one day older tomorrow than
he is today. He cannot reverse the process, however much he may wish
to do so. Time is superior to him, and he obeys its mandates.
There
are those who believe that God did not create time, but that in some
way He found it already existing. But this cannot be. Time and space
are not self-existent entities, operating apart from God and independent
of Him. If that were true, they would be equal with God, or even His
superior; for that which is coeval with God or exists prior to God must
at least be equal with Him; and that which is not created by God is
self-existent and is God. The Christian believes that "without
Him was not anything made that was made," and that time and space
are created by God as verily as anything else He has made. John 1:3.
Though
the two conceptions of time and space are beyond human comprehension,
each is helpful in understanding the other. Our conception of space,
for example, helps us to understand time better, and how it is possible
for God to bless time. We go to church to worship God, and enter the
edifice dedicated to Him. The church building is merely four walls enclosing
a part of space. The space within the walls does not appear to be different
from the space outside. And yet there is a difference. Something has
happened to it. It is holy space, space dedicated to the service of
p.
56 -- God. God is present in the building in a sense in which He
is not present outside the building. God has divided space from space
- one is holy; the other is not. Explain it we cannot. But we may believe
that it is so.
As
God can set aside space where He chooses to reveal Himself, so God can
set aside time. Out of the vast ocean of time - as out of space - He
chooses a portion, blesses it, and turns it over as blessed time for
man to use. It appears to be the same kind of time as other time, and
yet it is different. It is blessed time, and is not to be used for common
purposes which in themselves might be lawful. As we would not use a
dedicated cathedral for business purposes - perfectly lawful in themselves
- so we are not to use God's holy time for common pursuits, however
legitimate they might be in themselves. When God's people meet in the
appointed place on the Sabbath to worship, they are thrice blessed:
they themselves are a blessed people: the place in which they worship
is blessed; the very time of worship is blessed. A holy people worship
a holy God at a holy time in a holy place. Surely, under such conditions
God's richest blessing may be expected.
The
Third Step
"God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it." The sanctification
of the seventh day is the third step in the making of the Sabbath, which
we shall now consider.
Genesis
2:3 states that God "blessed the
p.
57 -- seventh day, and sanctified it: because that in it He had
rested from all His works which God created and made." We notice
first that the reason given for God's blessing and sanctifying the seventh
day is "because that in it He had rested." Man is not here
mentioned. Man had not worked; he had been brought into existence on
the sixth day, and had had no opportunity to work. But God had worked.
He had worked six days, and had rested the seventh. Having finished
both His labor and His rest, He blessed and sanctified the Sabbath.
The reading is that God blessed the day "because that in it He
had rested."
There
can be no reason for God's blessing a day for His own use. His blessing
and sanctification must of necessity be for someone else's sake. God
is holy; He is always holy; He is no more holy at one time than at another.
His holiness does not admit of degrees. But this is not so with men
and places. They are holy in proportion to their nearness. to God.
It
was to impress this upon the people that a curtain was stretched about
the sanctuary of old, enclosing the court. As man was approaching the
God of holiness, there. was a gradual elimination of the common and
the profane. In the first court all worshipers were permitted, Israelites
and strangers. In the second court only Israelites could come - they
were God's chosen people. In the next court only the Levites and priests
were permitted, such as had work to do about the tabernacle. Inside
the sanctuary itself,
p.
58 -- in the first apartment, only priests could officiate, such
as had been chosen by lot for this work. The priests could not enter
the sanctuary merely because they were priests. That, as has been noted,
was reserved for only a chosen few. And these could not enter the second
apartment, the most holy. That was reserved for one man only, the high
priest; and even he could enter it only at specified times, and after
long physical and spiritual preparation. God is most holy, and could
be approached only after prolonged heart preparation and deep humiliation
of soul.
All
this was to teach man God's holiness. Wherever God reveals Himself,
the place becomes holy, whether it be a burning bush in the wilderness
or the most holy place in the sanctuary. Also, if God removes His presence,
as He did when the veil was rent in Herod's temple, the place immediately
becomes common. It is God's presence that makes a thing or a place or
a person holy. This has a definite bearing on the Sabbath. God sanctified
it. He made it holy. And it was made holy by His presence.
To
sanctify, according to Webster, means "to make sacred or holy;
to set apart to a sacred office or to religious use; ... to hallow."
As it is impossible to impart moral qualities to insensate things, sanctification,
as applied to the seventh day, must mean the same as sanctification
in the case of the tabernacle and its furniture. Moses was commanded
concerning the altar, "Seven days thou shall make an atonement
for
p.
59 -- the altar, and sanctify it; and it shall be an altar most
holy: whatsoever touches the altar shall be holy." Ex. 29:37. In
like manner the whole sanctuary, the ark, the vessels, the candlestick,
and all that pertained thereto, was sanctified, and could henceforth
be used only in the sacred service of the sanctuary ritual. Ex. 30:26-29.
As
a religious edifice is dedicated and set apart for religious purposes,
so the Sabbath was dedicated, sanctified, and set apart for holy use.
The sanctification, of course, had reference to the future, and not
to the past. The dedication of a church edifice takes place at a definite
time, but its effect is pointed toward the future. As the ordination
of a minister to the sacred work of God is a definite act looking to
his future usefulness in God's cause, so the sanctification of the Sabbath
was a forward-looking act, having the good of mankind in view.
We
emphasize this matter, which indeed is self evident, for a reason that
there are those who insist that the blessing and sanctification of the
seventh day had reference to the original Sabbath, and to that Sabbath
only, and not to succeeding ones. Such a statement seems altogether
unwarranted, and even absurd. As well claim that the dedication of a
church, the sanctification of holy utensils, the setting apart of a
man to the holy work of the ministry, are acts that refer to that particular
moment only, and immediately thereafter become of none effect.
p.
60 -- The Sabbath Made for Man
"The Sabbath was made for man." Mark 2:27. It was not made
for God or for the angels, good or bad; it was not made for the lower
creatures or for nature; it was not made for any particular class or
race, not made for Jew or Gentile; it was made for man, mankind, the
whole human race. As a kind, thoughtful parent presents a gift to his
child for its use and enjoyment, so God made the Sabbath for man. Adam
and Eve constituted the whole of mankind in the beginning; hence the
Sabbath was made for them, for their children, and for their children's
children. Only in this way could the Sabbath be said to be made for
man.
If
it was the original creation Sabbath only that was blessed and sanctified,
we see little point to the statement that the Sabbath was made for man;
nor do we see how it in any way could be a blessing to man. It would
merely be a historical occurrence, a constantly receding point in time,
ever growing smaller, a point to which man would be unable ever to return,
an incident that had little meaning or importance as far as any present
blessing to mankind is concerned.
One
time Christ and the disciples were walking through the fields on the
Sabbath day. The disciples were hungry and plucked some of the corn,
an act which was considered lawful on other days, but which the Pharisees
did not permit on the Sabbath. Always on the alert to find some cause
for complaint against Christ, the Pharisees
p.
61 -- immediately went to Him, saying, "Behold, why do they
on the Sabbath day that which is not lawful?" Mark 2:24.
Christ
was not slow in defending what they had done. He told the Pharisees
that the Sabbath was intended to be a blessing to mankind, not a burden
or a yoke. It was lawful to do well on the Sabbath; it was lawful to
minister to the needs of mankind; and, citing David, He tells them that
it was lawful to do what the disciples had done. Then He announces the
true principle of Sabbath keeping: "The Sabbath was made for man,
and not man for the Sabbath." To this He adds the significant words,
"Therefore the Son of man is Lord also of the Sabbath." Mark
2:27, 28.
We
believe that Christ had a particular reason for declaring Himself Lord
of the Sabbath. This we discuss in another place, and shall not dwell
on it here. We would like, however, to call attention to the fact that
Christ considered the Sabbath a vital factor in religion, directed its
proper observance, and proclaimed Himself Lord of it. This does not
give the impression that Christ believed the Sabbath to be merely of
historical importance. He considered it a living reality, an institution
to be defended from Pharisaical intrusion, an institution of which He
was Lord.
The
Hebrew word for "sanctify" is generally so translated throughout
the Old Testament. There are a few exceptions, however. To two of these
we call attention as we close this study.
When
the cities of refuge were selected as
p.
62 -- places to which a manslayer might flee to escape the wrath
of the avenger of blood, "they appointed Kedesh in GaIilee."
Joshua 20:7. The word here translated "appointed" is the same
word that is elsewhere used for "sanctify," as the marginal
reading confirms.
The
other translation of the word is found in 2 Kings 10:20, where "proclaim"
is found. "Jehu said, Proclaim a solemn assembly for Baal."
From
these Biblical uses of the word we are warranted in affirming that when
God sanctified the seventh day, He set it apart for a holy use, He appointed
it as the Sabbath, He proclaimed it a holy day. As Lord of the Sabbath
Christ announces that He made it for man, to be a blessing and a help
to him, to serve as a reminder of creation and His love to man. It is
His special gift to mankind, who need it even more than the holy pair
in the garden.
p.
63 -- Chapter 5 The
Sabbath At Saini
Genesis, the first book of the Bible, is a condensed account that covers
the first twenty-five hundred years of earth's history, nearly one half
of all recorded time. It embraces such epoch-making subjects as creation,
Paradise, Adam and Eve, Satan, the fall, the Flood, Noah, Abraham, Isaac,
Jacob, Joseph, the seven-year famine, and the descent of Israel into
Egypt. Genesis is not a book of law, or a compendium of theology, or
a scientific treatise, but a simple record of what took place in the
early history of the race.
Opponents
of the Sabbath point with apparent satisfaction to the fact that the
Sabbath is not mentioned in Genesis after its first institution by God.
If the Sabbath is as important as its advocates seem to think, they
reason, it should have been given a prominent place in the account of
those centuries. This reasoning, however, is neither sound nor safe.
We noted above that Genesis is not a book of law or a code of ethics.
It has another purpose entirely. There is in it no Sabbath commandment,
but neither is any of the other commandments found there. Genesis is
not a book of commands. as is the following book, Exodus. On
this line of reasoning Cain could have successfully challenged God to
show him the commandment that says, "Thou shall not kill."
There is no such commandment recorded in Genesis; but it would be
p.
64 -- precarious on this ground to argue its nonexistence. It would
be as reasonable to contend that as there is no record that God ever
forbade Adam and Eve to worship other gods, they were at liberty to
make images and bow down to them; or, seeing there is no recorded commandment
in Genesis that forbids adultery, that Joseph would not have sinned
had he yielded to the temptress. Genesis is a condensed account of a
long period of time, and it cannot be expected that it should contain
all that modern scholars demand. It should be noted, however, that the
Sabbath holds a very prominent place in this book. Genesis records the
institution and observance of the Sabbath by the Creator Himself. In
this it holds the pre-eminence over all the other commandments. It could
hardly have been given more prominence.
Moses
and Aaron
The book of Exodus opens with the account of Israel in hard bondage
m Egypt. When they first went down to Egypt, Israel had been favored
by the king. But soon a new king arose, who did not know Joseph, and
when the children of Israel multiplied to the point where they threatened
to become a potential political problem, they were put under restriction
and hard bondage. In their trouble they called upon the Lord, and Moses
was sent to deliver them.
As
a babe Moses had been rescued by the daughter of Pharaoh, and had been
brought up at the royal court. Here he became learned in all
p.
65 -- the wisdom of the Egyptians, but withal remained true to
the faith of his fathers. When on a certain occasion he saw injustice
done to one of the Israelites, he promptly killed the Egyptian at fault.
Because of this he was compelled to flee from Egypt, and spent forty
years in the wilderness herding sheep.
It
was in the wilderness that the call came to him to go back to Egypt
and deliver the people. He felt himself unprepared for the task, but
God gave him a helper in Aaron, his brother. Together they proceeded
to Pharaoh, demanding that he let Israel go. Pharaoh was astonished
at their audacity, and demanded, "Who is the Lord, that I should
obey His voice to let Israel go? I know not the Lord, neither will I
let Israel go." Ex. 5:2.
During
their sojourn in Egypt Israel had neglected the ordinances of the Lord,
and His worship had fallen in decay. Moses and Aaron were concerned
about this, and prayed Pharaoh, "Thus saith the Lord.... Let My
people go, that they may hold a feast unto Me in the wilderness....
Let us go, we pray thee, three days' journey into the desert, and sacrifice
unto the Lord our God." Verses 1-3.
This
was before the law was given on Sinai, and before any feasts had been
appointed by God to be observed as part of the ceremonial sanctuary
service. The Passover had not been instituted, nor any other sacred
festival, with the exception of the seventh-day Sabbath. We are not
p.
66 -- informed which festival Moses had in mind when he demanded
that the. people be given permission to go three days into the desert
to "hold a feast... in the wilderness,... and sacrifice unto the
Lord our God." Was it the seventh-day Sabbath which Israel had
neglected, and which Moses was attempting to restore? We are not told,
but there are certain significant allusions which make this not only
possible, but probable.
Pharaoh's
complaint to Moses, "You make them rest from their burdens,"
may be considered a correct translation, but it does not give the peculiar
phrasing of the Hebrew, which might better be translated, "You
cause them to Sabbatize." The Hebrew word used is shabbathon, a
definite allusion to the Sabbath. The writer of Exodus could have used
another word for resting had he so desired, a word that would not have
raised the question of Sabbath keeping. That he chose this particular
word is significant.
At
the time when Israel was in Egypt, the only Sabbath in existence was
the seventh-day Sabbath, instituted at creation. No other feast, not
even the Passover, had come into being. When Pharaoh, therefore, complains
that Moses and Aaron made the people "Sabbatize," the preponderance
of evidence favors the weekly Sabbath. In line with this is the other
complaint that "Moses and Aaron let the people from their works."
"Let" means to hinder, to cause to cease. This indicates that
Pharaoh held Moses and Aaron responsible for the people's not working;
p.
67 -- that is, for the people's "Sabbatizing." "You
are idle, you are idle," said Pharaoh; "therefore you say,
Let us go and do sacrifice to the Lord." EX. 5:17. While we would
not contend that the evidence here presented is final, we believe that
the fact that no other Sabbaths or feasts were in existence at this
time, favors the view that it was the seventh-day Sabbath that was in
question.
The
Sabbath Before Sinai
Though Pharaoh at first declined to let Israel go, he consented to do
so as the plagues became increasingly more severe. With a mighty hand
and a stretched-out arm God delivered His people from Egypt and brought
them into the wilderness. In honor of their deliverance, they sang the
song of glorious victory recorded in the fifteenth chapter of Exodus.
It was only through the mercy of God that they had been saved from Pharaoh's
relentlessly pursuing army. To Him they gave praise.
Having
brought them out of Egypt, God now told them upon what conditions they
might expect His continued protection. Said God: "If thou wilt
diligently hearken to the voice of the Lord thy God, and wilt do that
which is right in His sight, and wilt give ear to His commandments,
and keep all His statutes, I will put none of these diseases upon thee,
which I have brought upon the Egyptians: for I am the Lord that healeth
thee." Ex. 15:26. This is a most beautiful promise given to them
on the condition that they "give
p.
68 -- ear to His commandments, and keep all His statutes."
The
bread which the people had brought with them from Egypt did not last
many days, and they soon became hungry and began to murmur. "Would
to God," they said, "that we had died by the hand of the Lord
in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the flesh pots, and when we did
eat bread to the full; for ye have brought us forth into this wilderness,
to kill this whole assembly with hunger." Ex. 16:3. The Lord quickly
answered, "I will rain bread from heaven for you; and the people
shall go out and gather a certain rate every day, that I may prove them,
whether they will walk in My law or no." Verse 4.
This
was before the law had been proclaimed from Sinai. God was about to
make Israel His peculiar people, but before He did so He wished to "prove
them, whether they will walk in My law, or no."
Moses
now called the people together and instructed them. "This is that
which the Lord hath said, Tomorrow is the rest of the holy Sabbath unto
the Lord: bake that which you will bake today, and seethe that you will
seethe; and that which remaineth over lay up for you to be kept until
the morning." Verse 23. This instruction concerned the preparation
for the Sabbath. On the sixth day they were to do their baking and cooking,
both for that day and for the Sabbath. They were each day to gather
manna for one day, but on the sixth day they were to gather a double
p.
69 -- portion, for Moses had announced to them that no manna would
fall on the Sabbath. Friday they were to do all their cooking, and on
the Sabbath they were to eat that which they had prepared.
On
the Sabbath Moses said to them, "Eat that today; for today is a
Sabbath unto the Lord: today ye shall not find it in the field. Six
days ye shall gather it; but on the seventh day, which is the Sabbath,
in it there shall be none."
Despite
all that God had said, "there went out some of the people on the
seventh day for to gather." Verse 27. They had had definite instruction.
There could be no misunderstanding. They knew just what they should
do and what was expected of them; yet they "went out... on the
seventh day for to gather." "And the Lord said unto Moses,
How long refuse ye to keep My commandments and My laws? See, for that
the Lord hath given you the Sabbath, therefore He giveth you on the
sixth day the bread of the two days; abide ye every man in his place,
let no man go out of his place on the seventh day. So the people rested
on the seventh day." Verse 28-30.
This
account is illuminating. The people had just come out of Egypt, and
many of the Egyptian customs and traditions were still clinging to them.
At the least provocation they were ready to murmur against God and turn
to their idols. They were far from being what God desired His people
to be. Before He could accept them and make of them a great nation,
He must teach them His statutes and test them, that He
p.
70 -- might know whether they would walk in His law or no.
The
Sabbath Not a New Institution
The Sabbath is not here presented as a new institution that is now being
introduced for the first time. Rather, it appears to be well known.
Nor is the law new to them. God speaks familiarly to them of the law,
and promises them freedom from sickness if they will "give ear
to His commandments, and keep all His statutes." Ex. 15:26. This
phraseology is practically the same as that used of Abraham many years
previously, "Abraham obeyed My voice, and kept My charge, My commandments,
My statutes, and My laws." Gen. 26:5.
From
this we know that God's commandments, statutes, and laws were known
to Abraham, that he kept them, and that he taught his children to keep
them. Gen. 18:19. Isaac and Jacob were his son and his grandson, being
respectively seventy-five and fifteen years old at the death of Abraham.
It was Jacob who later went to Egypt. We are therefore assured that
the children of Israel in Egypt knew of God's law and His statutes,
and that when God spoke to them familiarly of keeping His commandments,
they knew exactly what He meant.
Those
who hold that the law of God and the Sabbath were not known before Moses
and Sinai, are not well informed. Abraham knew of God's commandments,
statutes, and laws, and he taught his children after him. God Himself
observed the
p.
71 -- seventh-day Sabbath in the Garden of Eden; so Adam and Eve
were acquainted with the Sabbath. Of Cain and Abel it is stated that
"at the end of days" they went up to worship before the Lord,
bringing their offering. Gen. 4:3, margin.
The
phrase, "at the end of days," which is the correct Hebrew
rendering, is an interesting one, and naturally raises the question,
The end of which days? There can be an "end of days" only
as a series of days is involved, having a beginning and an end.
When
God worked six days and rested the seventh, when He told man to work
the next six days and rest the seventh, He measured off a week of seven
days, and the end of the week saw "the end of days." Without
the Sabbath there would be no division point; but when the Sabbath was
instituted, there was made an "end of days," and when men
came to seven, they would begin counting over again. God Himself made
this division.
When
Cain and Abel, therefore, came to bring their offerings to God "at
the end of days," they came to worship on the Sabbath. It may be
presumed that Abel desired to worship, for he was a follower of God;
but the same cannot be said of Cain. Yet he worshiped also, and at the
same time that Abel worshiped. This leads us to believe that there was
a stated time for worship, and that it was not merely a coincidence
that they happened to come there at the same time. In any event they
went up to worship together, and
p.
72 -- this was "at the end of days." Commentators are
generally agreed that this can refer to nothing but the Sabbath. We
believe they are right.
Adam
and Eve had God's example of Sabbath keeping. Cain and Abel worshiped
"at the end of days." Abraham knew of God's commandments,
statutes, and laws, kept them, and taught his children to keep them.
And now God decided to prove whether Israel would keep His law, or no.
Israel
was in the wilderness, where there was no opportunity to till the land
or have large flocks of cattle as they had had in Egypt. Unless food
was provided for them in some supernatural way, they would starve. God
therefore proposed to feed them with bread from heaven, while at the
same time He gave them an object lesson in Sabbath keeping.
God
caused the manna to fall six days of each week. There is no reason why
God could not have let the manna rain down from heaven every other day,
had He so desired, or every third day, or one day a week only, or seven
days a week. But God chose to let the manna fall six days, and to let
none fall on the seventh day. To make up for this loss, He let twice
as much fall on the sixth day as fell on the other days, so there would
be sufficient for all needs on the seventh day. This would be an effective
way to teach Israel two important things: to work six days and to rest
on the seventh.
But
God did more than this. He so arranged
p.
73 -- matters that the manna would keep only one day, and after
that it would spoil. That made it doubly necessary for the people to
gather every day; that is, to work six days. God could just as well
have arranged it so that the manna would keep two days, or seven, or
any other number of days. When He made it keep only one day, He did
it for a purpose, as already noted.
But
what about the Sabbath, when no manna fell? That in itself would make
the Sabbath stand out above the other days. Could He do anything else
to impress upon the minds of the people the sacredness of the Sabbath?
Yes, if God should miraculously preserve the manna from spoiling on
the Sabbath, that would be an added lesson to them in Sabbath keeping.
And so God decided to have the manna keep only one day during the week,
but on the Sabbath He kept it so that it did not breed worms. The first
was a lesson in working six days; the second, a lesson in keeping holy
the Sabbath.
The
falling of the manna thus had another and a greater purpose than merely
feeding the people. That could have been done in other ways. It was
rather a national lesson in Sabbath keeping as related to the seventh
day. Had this lesson been given once, it would have been of tremendous
significance in regard to God's estimate of the Sabbath. Had it been
repeated twice, there could have been no doubt regarding God's intent.
Had it been repeated week after week for a year, all would know that
God wanted to impress the lesson
p.
74 -- of the Sabbath upon Israel so deeply and thoroughly that
they would never forget it. What shall we say, then, when this lesson
was repeated not once or twice or ten times, but more than two thousand
times; that is, fifty-two times a year for forty years! If Israel had
not learned the lesson by that time, there could be no reason for continuing
the lesson.
That
the lesson of the manna might ever be kept in mind, God commanded that
a pot of manna be placed in the ark where the ten commandments were
kept, to be a perpetual reminder of the Sabbath as well as of God's
sustaining power. Ex. 16:32-36. This manna did not spoil. It was to
be kept for "generations." It was a reminder of God's care
and pointed directly to the Sabbath commandment. The real intent of
the miracle of the manna was not the feeding of the people. That was
only incidental. God's chief purpose was to teach Israel Sabbath keeping.
He was proving them. He was preparing them to enter into covenant relation
with Him.
The
Sabbath at Sinai
In the third month after Israel departed out of Egypt, they came into
the Wilderness of Sinai. Never had a people seen the power of God manifested
in such a striking way as had Israel during those two months. Now they
were to witness the climax. God had marvelously helped them in Egypt.
While thousands of the Egyptians had been stricken down at their side
in the plagues,
p.
75 -- and ten thousand at their right hand, the plagues had not
come nigh them. Wonderful had been their deliverance at the Red Sea
from the pursuing armies of Pharaoh, and still more wonderful their
deliverance from hunger by having bread rain down from heaven. When
they were thirsty, God made sweet the bitter water at Marah; and when
Amalek attacked them, God discomfited the enemy, and Israel won a glorious
victory. They had lacked nothing, and their experience would lead them
to believe that whatever the future might hold for them, they would
be safe if they only followed the Lord. God had told them the conditions
upon which they might expect His help; He had admonished them to "give
ear to His commandments, and keep all His statutes," and He promised
that if they did so, He would lead and protect them. In particular had
He called their attention to the Sabbath; and to help them keep this
ever in mind, He had weekly, before their very eyes, performed miracles,
so that only the most willful would dare transgress the holy commandment.
By
this time Israel understood well what was required of them. The question
that remained was Israel's willingness to abide by the conditions !aid
down for God's continued presence and blessing. God intended to make
them His own people. He would continue to work mightily for them if
they were willing to co-operate with Him. But He would not forcibly
compel them to do His will. He had a work to do in the earth, and He
invited
p.
76 -- Israel to share with Him the task of filling the earth with
the knowledge and glory of God.
In
pursuance of this object God called Moses to Him in the mount and asked
him to communicate to Israel His desire. "Thus shall thou say to
the house of Jacob, and tell the children of Israel: Ye have seen what
I did unto the Egyptians, and how I bare you on eagle's wings, and brought
you unto Myself. Now therefore, if ye will obey My voice indeed, and
keep my covenant, then ye shall be a peculiar treasure unto Me above
all people: for all the earth is Mine: and ye shall be unto Me a kingdom
of priests, and a holy nation. These are the words which thou shall
speak unto the children of Israel." Ex. 19:3-6.
Accordingly
Moses called the elders of the people "and laid before their faces
all these words which the Lord commanded him. And all the people answered
together, and said, All that the Lord hath spoken we will do. And Moses
returned the words of the people unto the Lord. And the Lord said unto
Moses, Lo, I come unto thee in a thick cloud, that the people may hear
when I speak with thee, and believe thee forever. And Moses told the
words of the people unto the Lord." Ex. 19:7-9.
God
now asked Moses to get the people ready to enter into covenant with
Him, "for the third day the Lord will come down in the sight of
all the people upon Mt. Sinai." Moses communicated the words of
God to the people, and on the third day they all assembled before the
mount to
p.
77 -- hear the conditions of the covenant announced.
It
is to be remembered that Israel had already witnessed the mighty power
of the Lord in various ways. But despite all this they did not have
a full understanding of the holiness and majesty of God, or of their
relation to Him. True, God had helped them defeat Amalek, He had destroyed
Pharaoh and his army, and He had smitten the Egyptians with the plagues.
And He had protected His own. The plagues had not come nigh them; they
had murmured when there was no water, but no punishment had come because
of their murmuring. When they had complained about the lack of food,
God had provided them with manna; and again there had been no rebuke.
They might easily come to the conclusion that while other peoples would
be punished, Israel would not; other peoples might get sick, but not
they. They were the Lord's own;
they could do as they pleased, and nothing would ever harm them.
Israel
had misunderstood the goodness of the Lord, and it was necessary to
set them right. While they were or would be the people of God, it was
only on condition of obedience. They needed to learn that if they disobeyed,
they would be no better off than other nations which the Lord had destroyed
because of their wickedness. God must give Israel a demonstration of
His holiness, a demonstration they would never forget. They had seen
what God did to other nations. They must now be shown that God is no
respecter of
p.
78 -- persons; they must be Impressed with the majesty of the law
which they were about to hear proclaimed; and the demonstration must
be such that they would get it wholesome fear of ever transgressing
the commandments of God. They needed just such a lesson.
At the appointed time Israel was gathered about the mount, which was
fenced off, so that neither man nor animal might unwittingly trespass
on holy ground. "Sinai was altogether on a smoke, because the Lord
descended upon it in fire: and the smoke thereof ascended as the smoke
of a furnace, and the whole mount quaked greatly. And when the voice
of the trumpet sounded long, and waxed louder and louder, Moses spake,
and God answered him by a voice." Verses 18, 19.
God
then came down upon Mt. Sinai and spoke to them the ten commandments,
as recorded in Exodus 20. Even Moses was not unaffected by the display
of glory. The writer of Hebrews remarks that "so terrible was the
sight that Moses said, I exceedingly fear and quake." Heb. 12:21.
The
demonstration of sternness and power which God gave on Mt. Sinai is
not His ordinary way of working. God is not usually stern, nor does
He make a show of His power. Rather, He delights in doing His work quietly,
unnoticed almost, as is evident in the mighty but silent forces of the
universe. But there are times when a demonstration is needed. Certain
people and certain circumstances demand it. As there are children and
grown persons whose respect is gained
p.
79 -- only by a demonstration of physical force, so there are nations
and peoples who will learn no other way. And Israel needed this lesson.
And so God gave it to them.
The same lesson is needed by many today.
God
would gladly guide His people with His eye. A hint regarding God's will
should be enough - and is enough - for the informed and willing Christian.
God does not like to use bridle and bit, but at times they are necessary.
God would much rather speak with the small, still voice; He would much
rather whisper to us than thunder at us. But in any event He wants us
to learn the lesson. "See that you refuse not Him that speaketh.
For if they escaped not who refused Him that spake on earth, much more
shall not we escape, if we turn away from Him that speaketh from heaven:
whose voice then shook the earth: but now He hath promised, saying,
Yet once more I shake not the earth only, but also heaven." Heb.
12:25, 26.
The
Sabbath Commandment
In the law proclaimed on Sinai, the Sabbath commandment looms large.
Before this God had given Israel a visual demonstration of His high
regard for the Sabbath. In fact, the very week the commandment was announced
from Mt. Sinai, the manna fell copiously on the sixth day, and on the
Sabbath none fell, a reminder of God's desire in regard to the day of
rest. Of all the commandments, this was the one that was emphasized;
for
p.
80 -- the Sabbath was the day in which Israel would have time to
instruct their children in the ways of God. If this day were disregarded,
all the commandments would be neglected. The keeping of this commandment
would affect the keeping of all the others. It was the one and only
commandment that provided time for the contemplation of God and His
works.
There
is nothing in the proclamation of the law on Sinai that would make one
feel that the keeping of the commandments, or any one of them, is an
optional matter. The world has never witnessed such a demonstration
as was there given, and never will witness another like it till men
shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven. God Himself
could not make more emphatic that inclusion in the covenant and the
favor of God were dependent upon the faithful performance of the terms
announced.
A question
now arises that deserves consideration: Is the ten-commandment law meant
to apply to the whole world, or is it applicable to Israel only, and
of no concern to Christians? This is an important question. There is
little dispute about the nine commandments; so the question really concerns
the fourth only. Are Christians to keep the fourth commandment?
While
this question will be discussed more fully as we consider the New Testament
aspects of the Sabbath, it may be well at this time to make some general
observations on the law. The ten commandments have all the earmarks
p.
81 -- of a universal law. In fact, we doubt that the question of
its universality would ever be raised were it not for the fourth commandment.
All agree that the commandments that deal with stealing, swearing, killing,
coveting, and worshiping God are applicable not to a few only, but to
all classes and nations of men. Their universal application is admitted,
and we would feel under no obligation to convince a man who thought
otherwise. We consider that point settled. We therefore come back to
the question of the Sabbath commandment. Does this commandment belong
to the moral law?
We
would not know how to account for the existence of a non moral commandment
in the midst of the moral law. This would seem to call for an explanation
on the part of those who hold such a view. The preponderance of evidence
is in favor of the Sabbath commandment's being of the same nature as
the other commandments. The burden of proof rests upon those who think
differently.
However,
we do not wish to dispose of the matter in this negative fashion. We
believe that the Sabbath commandment is a moral commandment on a level
with the others; in fact, it underlies them all. It would be easier
to dispose of some of the other commandments than to dispose of the
Sabbath commandment.
The
first three commandments deal with God and His worship. We are to have
no other gods before Him. We are not to make any image or
p.
82 -- any likeness of anything in heaven and earth, and worship
it. We are to be reverent and respectful and not take the name of the
Lord in vain. Then comes the Sabbath commandment, which defines the
time of rest when we are to worship and attend to the things of the
spirit.
Had this commandment been left out, there would have been no stated
time commanded in which to worship. In that case it would have been
necessary for men to come to some agreement among themselves in regard
to the best time when this might be done. That is, had God not appointed
a day, men would of necessity have had to supply the omission, for without
such a day there could be no corporate worship. If God is to be worshiped
by His people; if there is to be any united adoration of the most high
God; if there is to be any order and system in religion, time must definitely
be planned for and given to it. This makes the Sabbath a necessity.
Its omission from the decalogue would be fatal to religion. Let us repeat,
If God had not appointed a day, men would have had to do so. A day of
worship belongs to religion.
We
have noted above and wish to emphasize it, that the Sabbath underlies
all the commandments, providing as it does the time needed for the contemplation
of man's duty to his Maker and his fellow men. God considered this of
so much importance that He deigned to give the example for man to follow.
In view of this, how can anyone think that the Sabbath commandment does
p.
83 -- not belong to the moral law? If there were no other reason
than the fact that God has commanded the Sabbath day to be kept holy,
this would be reason enough to put it on a moral basis. But when we
consider the plan of God with regard to the Sabbath, that it is this
day upon which He depends for the instruction of His children in the
ways of God; that this is the time which He Himself has set apart for
this most important work; and that without this time jealously guarded,
God would be deprived of the worship due Him - when we take all this
into consideration, we are clear that not only does the Sabbath have
a place in the moral law, not only is it a moral commandment in itself,
but that in a certain sense it is that which binds all the commandments
together, that which binds earth and heaven together, provides unity
among the people of God, and places the spiritual stamp upon all. Let
no one despise or reject the Sabbath of God. Let no one neglect it.
In the keeping of it there is great
blessing.
p. 84 -- Chapter 6. The
Sabbath in the Old Testament
Some have objected to the Sabbath as being a Jewish institution. They
maintain that the Sabbath was given to the Jews, and that hence it is
not for Christians. We admit that it was given to the Jews on Mt. Sinai.
But so was the commandment, "Thou shall not steal." The one
is as much Jewish as the other. In fact, all the commandments were given
to the Jews. The Jews were told not to kill, commit adultery, swear
falsely, or covet. All these commandments are Jewish, if the Sabbath
is Jewish. Christ also was given to the Jews; He was born of a Jewish
mother and was reared in a Jewish home. The prophets were all Jews,
the apostles were all Jews, the gospel was first preached to the Jews,
every one of the books of the New Testament was written by a Jew. Even
when we get to heaven, we shall see the names of the twelve disciples
of Christ, Jews, on the foundation stones of the New Jerusalem; on the
gates of the city will be the names of the twelve other Jews, the twelve
sons of Israel. Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, all Jews, will be prominent
in the kingdom, and Christ will sit upon the throne of His father David,
a Jew. Under these circumstances it is better for Christians not to
speak sneeringly of the Sabbath of the Lord as being Jewish, as though
that were a term of reproach. "He is not a Jew, which is one outwardly;
p.
85 -- neither is that circumcision, which is outward in the flesh:
but he is a Jew, which is one inwardly." Rom. 2:28, 29.
It
might be remarked, however, that the Sabbath is less "Jewish,"
if that were possible, than some of the other commandments; for the
Sabbath shares the honor with marriage of stemming from Eden, before
there were any Jews or Gentiles in existence. Marriage was regiven to
the Jews, as was the Sabbath, but they are both the possession of mankind,
not of any particular race or color.
"The
Sabbath was made for man." These words are ever appropriate when
the universality of the Sabbath is under consideration. They should
forever settle the question of the Sabbath's being a Jewish institution.
Christ made the Sabbath. He says that He made it for man. He knows.
Jews are men, and so the Sabbath was made for them. Christians are men;
so the Sabbath was made for them. Whoever claims the title and right
to the name "man," may know that God made the Sabbath for
him. The Sabbath is no more Jewish than are the other commandments.
Stoning
for Sabbath Breaking
Each nation has its own peculiar way of dealing with offenders against
its laws. Under certain conditions a nation may feel that horse stealing
deserves capital punishment - as was the case in the newer section of
the United States some years ago. Israel may erect cities of refuge
as
p.
86 -- asylums to which a manslayer may flee under certain conditions
and be safe until he has stood trial. Sexual crime may become rampant
to the degree that capital punishment may be meted out for transgression.
Israel may exact the death penalty for the violation of the Sabbath
under certain peculiarly aggravating conditions; but this is not part
of the commandment and does not affect the law itself. The Jews under
theocratic rule had rules not of universal application or obligation.
No one should confuse local regulations with universal principles.
Was
there not a regulation among the Israelites in the wilderness that whoever
transgressed the Sabbath willfully and "with a high hand"
should be stoned? To this a qualified affirmative answer should be given;
for it was not only to the Sabbath that this law applied, but to the
transgression of any of the other commandments. The general law is found
in Numbers 15:30, 31, and reads, "The soul that doeth aught presumptuously,
whether he be born in the land, or a stranger, the same reproacheth
the Lord; and that soul shall be cut off from among his people. Because
he hath despised the word of the Lord, and hath broken His commandment,
that soul shall utterly be cut off; his iniquity shall be upon him."
"Presumptuously"
means, as the margin reads, with a "high hand," that is, knowingly,
obstinately, defiantly. This law applied to all the commandments. Whenever
a man transgressed presumptuously,
p.
87 -- there was only one penalty, death. Hence we read in Exodus
21:14 ff., that if a man killed another "presumptuously,"
they were to "take him from Mine altar, that he may die."
Again, if a man smite his father or curse him, he "shall surely
be put to death." If a man "stealeth a man, and selleth him,"
he "shall surely be put to death." These punishments were
all for sins done "with a high hand," and applied to all the
commandments alike.
The
question whether this ruling applied to the Sabbath commandment arose
early in Israel's history. To commit murder was always considered a
serious offense. Was it as serious to transgress the Sabbath, or would
such a transgression be winked at?
The
issue arose when a man went out on the Sabbath to gather sticks. For
some time manna had rained down from heaven. Israel had gathered their
portion each day, but had been warned not to go out on the seventh day.
At first, nevertheless, some had gone out on the Sabbath, but no special
punishment had been meted out for their transgression.
Now,
however, a long time had gone by. All knew God's requirements. Ignorance
could no longer be pleaded as an excuse. Whoever should now profane
the Sabbath would know what he was doing. His act would be one of defiance,
and his punishment would not be primarily for his transgression, but
for his defiance. The law had been announced from Sinai; God had also
announced
p.
88 -- that any who presumptuously transgressed any of the commandments
would be cut off. He that "hath despised the word of the Lord,
and hath broken His commandment, that soul shall utterly be cut off."
Num. 15:31. Should any man transgress the Sabbath, he would despise
"the word of the Lord," and in that act would challenge and
defy God.
It
was under these conditions that the man violated the Sabbath. He knew
the law and what God had said. Despite this he went out. What now should
be done? Did the Sabbath rank with the other commandments, or should
a difference be made? Surely it was worse to kill a man than to gather
sticks on the Sabbath.
However,
as already noted, it was not the thing done that alone counted; it was
rather the attitude. It was not for gathering up sticks that he was
punished; it was "because he hath despised the word of the Lord."
His gathering of sticks was only a means of showing contempt for God.
Moses,
however, wanted to make doubly sure of what he should do in this particular
case. He therefore put the man in confinement until God should make
His will known. On this decision much would hang, for it would be known
for a certainty whether the Sabbath commandment should take its place
with the other commandments and its transgression be counted equally
serious. God Himself gave the decision of this case. Had Moses done
so, it might have been considered his own judgment only.
p.
89 -- The
decision came quickly, "The man shall be surely put to death."
Num. 15:35. That settled the question. The Sabbath commandment took
its place with the other commandments. Its transgression was as serious
as that of the others. Men might not so consider it. But God had spoken.
The lesson is for us as well as for them. Let no one speak lightly of
the Sabbath or defiantly transgress its precept.
Ezekiel's
Story of the Exodus
When Moses wrote the story of the Exodus, he did not say all that might
be said. Many years later, God, through the prophet Ezekiel, supplemented
the account with some detailed information that is of value for our
present study. Ezekiel lived at the time of the beginning of the Babylonian
captivity. Some of the people of Israel had already been carried into
captivity, and others would soon follow. This was because of their sins
- the same sins of which they had been guilty in Egypt and in the wilderness.
Certain
elders came to Ezekiel to inquire of the Lord. This was a common custom
in Israel. When there were matters in which they needed special guidance
and instruction from God, the elders would appear before the prophet,
asking him if he had any light from the Lord on the subject. In this
case there was no hesitation in the answer. "As I live, saith the
Lord, I will not be inquired of by you." Eze. 20:3.
The
Lord now proceeds to tell them why He
p.
90 -- will not be inquired of by them. This leads Him to go into
detail about what their fathers had done, and why He could not help
them. The inference was that He could not help Israel now for the same
reason that He could not help Israel then.
God
begins the story by telling of the time when Israel was in cruel bondage
in Egypt and prayed for deliverance. As a condition for helping them,
God, through Moses, called to them, "Cast you away every man the
abominations of his eyes, and defile not yourselves with the idols of
Egypt." Eze. 20:7.
But
Israel would not hear. They wanted to be delivered, but not at such
a cost. They rebelled against God and did not cast away their idols.
God therefore decided not only that He would not help them, but that
He would punish them in the land of Egypt and leave them there. But
God, in His mercy and for His name's sake, took pity on them and brought
them out of the land of Egypt, that His name "should not be polluted
before the heathen." Verses 8, 9.
Through
the interposition of God, Israel experienced wonderful deliverance at
the Red Sea and came into the wilderness of Sinai. It might be thought
that they would now be ready to cast away their idols and serve the
Lord with all their heart. But they were still rebellious. God bore
long with them and patiently instructed them. "I caused them to
go forth out of the land of Egypt," He says, "and brought
them into the
p.
91 -- wilderness. And I gave them My statutes, and showed them
My judgments, which if a man do, he shall even live in them. Moreover
also I gave them My Sabbaths, to be a sign between Me and them, that
they might know that I am the Lord that sanctify them." Verses
10-12. This was at Sinai.
The
Sabbath in its essential nature is a sign of sanctification. A man may
be disrespectful of his parent without being guilty of adultery. He
may covet his neighbor's goods and yet not make any graven image. He
may have great temptation along one line and very little along another
line. But not so with Sabbath breaking.
Violation
of the Sabbath commandment is not so much sin, as such, as it is a symptom
that reveals an attitude that touches all the commandments. Sabbath
breaking in its essential nature is a rejection of God, a species of
rebellion. It is not like killing or stealing or committing adultery.
It reveals an inner state of disobedience; and disobedience is the essence
of all sin.
Contrariwise,
obedience to the Sabbath command shows a willingness of spirit that
reaches far beyond the specific commandment into the very heart of religion,
which in its essence is obedience. The man, therefore, who keeps the
Sabbath holy does more than keep one of the commandments of God. He
arrays himself on the side of obedience and law, regardless of any ulterior
motive, and thus measures up to God's standard of what a man should
be.
p
92 -- Israel neither understood nor appreciated the gift which God
gave them in the Sabbath. As they had rebelled against God in Egypt,
so they rebelled against Him in the wilderness. They did not walk in
His statutes, and did not keep His law and His Sabbath. "They despised
My judgments, which if a man do, he shall even live in them; and My
Sabbaths they greatly polluted." Eze. 20:13.
We
have no record either here or in the books of Moses of the way in which
Israel polluted the Sabbath. They doubtless refrained from work on that
day, especially after punishment had been meted out to the transgressor
who gathered sticks on the Sabbath. But Sabbath keeping is more than
abstinence from work. A man may abstain from work on the seventh day
and yet not enter into the rest of God.
A man
who rests on the seventh day, but whose hands are not clean and whose
heart is not pure, defiles the Sabbath of the Lord, and makes the same
mistake as did Israel in thinking that entering literal Canaan exhausted
God's promise. Too many of them took Egypt along when they entered Canaan,
and thus frustrated the plan of God. God meant for them to leave Egypt
behind, and as they entered Canaan enter into a new experience in God.
All Israel did was to enter the land; but in doing so they neither received
the promise nor entered the rest of God.
Israel
kept the day, but the spiritual experience which should have been theirs,
they entirely
p.
93 -- missed. They abstained from labor, but they did not enter
into God's rest; they did not cease from their own works as God did
from His. Their hearts were not changed.
This
emphasizes the statement that the Sabbath is a sign of sanctification,
and that no one who is not sanctified can keep the Sabbath as God would
have it kept. It must ever be had in mind that true Sabbath keeping
includes a pure heart and a holy life. Whoever does not have those pollutes
the Sabbath, however careful he may be in abstaining from work on the
day.
Rebellion
of Israel
Twice already Israel had rebelled, first in Egypt, and then in the wilderness.
God remonstrated with them, but they would not hear; nor would they
cast away their idols. He therefore proposed to destroy Israel and pour
out His "fury upon them in the wilderness, to consume them."
But again God did not carry out His plan, lest His name "be polluted
before the heathen, in whose sight I brought them out." Eze. 20:14.
So God spared them once more.
However,
Israel came so far short of God's ideal and purpose, that He determined
not to bring them "into the land which I had given them,... because
they despised My judgments, and walked not in My statutes, but polluted
My Sabbaths." Verses 15, 16. As a result of this decision, Israel
was left to wander in the wilderness until the generation died which
had come out of Egypt.
p.
94 -- Having thus dealt with the fathers whom He had brought out
of Egypt, He now addressed the younger generation, the children. They
had seen what had happened to their elders, and should have been warned
by their example. God "said unto their children in the wilderness,
Walk ye not in the statutes of your fathers, neither observe their judgments,
nor defile yourselves with their idols. I am the Lord your God; walk
in My statutes, and keep My judgments, and do them; and hallow My Sabbaths;
and they shall be a sign between Me and you, that ye may know that I
am the Lord your God." Verses 18-20.
But
the children had learned nothing from the experience of their fathers.
"They walked not in My statutes, neither kept My judgments to do
them, which if a man do, he shall even live in them; they polluted My
Sabbaths: then I said, I would pour out My fury upon them, to accomplish
My anger against them in the wilderness." Verse 21.
God's
patience is now at an end, and He proclaims that He will scatter Israel
"among the heathen, and disperse them through the countries; because
they had not executed My judgments, but had despised My statutes, and
had polluted My Sabbaths, and their eyes were after their fathers' idols."
Verses 23, 24.
A
Lesson for Israel in Captivity
As noted above, when the elders came to inquire of Ezekiel, many had
already been carried
p.
95 -- captive to Babylon, and the rest would soon follow. They
were eager to know God's mind, and for this reason they had sent a deputation
to the prophet to hear what God had to say. This gave the Lord an opportunity
to rehearse to them the story of the deliverance of their fathers from
Egyptian bondage, and their experiences in entering the Promised Land.
Israel was now in a parallel situation. As their fathers were in slavery
in Egypt, so Israel was now about to go into captivity in Babylon. As
God formerly had delivered Israel out of Egypt, so Israel now asked
to be delivered out of Babylon. The sins that afflicted Israel in Egypt
were the same sins that afflicted Israel now, and the conditions of
salvation and delivery were also the same. What God asked of Israel
of old, He asked of the present Israel. For this reason God carefully
rehearsed Israel's history for the benefit of the elders that came to
inquire of the Lord, and told them in detail where the fathers had come
short and wherein they had sinned.
The
charges which God placed against Israel may be listed as follows:
1. They had failed to cast away the abomination of their eyes, and had
defiled themselves with the idols of Egypt. This doubtless had reference
to the filthy and obscene rites of the impure phallic worship which
was at that time prominent in Egypt.
2. They had not walked in God's statutes, but had despised His judgments.
This is what is
p.
96 -- referred to as rebellion, general state of disinclination
to do the will of God as well as of active opposition.
3. They had greatly polluted God's Sabbaths. This is emphasized four
times, in Ezekiel 20:13, 16, 21, 24. In addition, the Sabbath is mentioned
two times as a sign of sanctification and of the knowledge of God. Verses
12, 20.
After
God has thus informed the elders of the transgressions of Israel of
old, He now tells them that they are no better than their fathers, and
that He will not be inquired of by them, but will bring them into "the
wilderness of the people," and "purge out from among"
them "the rebels," and not permit them to enter the land of
Israel. Verses 35, 38. On the other hand, those who turn to the Lord,
He will accept, "and I will be sanctified in you before the heathen."
Verse 41. The failure of present Israel He lays directly on the leaders,
the prophets and priests. "Her priests have violated My law, and
have profaned Mine holy things: they have put no difference between
the holy and profane, neither have they showed difference between the
unclean and the clean, and have hid their eyes from My Sabbaths, and
I am profaned among them. Her princes in the midst thereof are like
wolves ravening the prey, to shed blood, and to destroy souls, to get
dishonest gain. And her prophets have daubed them with untempered mortar,
seeing vanity, and divining lies unto them, saying, Thus saith the Lord
God, when the Lord hath not spoken." Eze. 22:26-28.
p.
97 -- From Ezekiel we thus get a clear account of the reasons why
Israel of old did not please God, why they died in the wilderness, and
why the children also failed. They had forsaken the Lord for Egyptian
idols, had refused to walk in God's statutes, had despised His judgments,
and above all had polluted the Sabbath, which from the very beginning
had been God's sign of sanctification.
Jeremiah's
Message
Israel failed miserably in coming up to God's expectation at the time
of the exodus from Egypt. They had now come to the time of another test
in their imminent Babylonian bondage. Nebuchadnezzar's army had already
carried many into captivity, and their beautiful city had been laid
waste.
Again
and again God had, through the prophets, sent word to them that if they
would turn to the Lord with their whole heart and repent of their evil
the Lord would be gracious to them. He had called their attention to
the Sabbath and to the great and wonderful promises given them on condition
of obedience.
Hear
these words from Jeremiah, one of the last messages that came to them
before they were finally carried away into captivity: "Thus saith
the Lord: Take heed to yourselves, and bear no burden on the Sabbath
day, nor bring it in by the gates of Jerusalem; neither carry forth
a burden out of your houses on the Sabbath day, neither do ye any work,
but hallow ye the Sabbath day, as I commanded your
p.
98 -- fathers. But they obeyed not, neither inclined their ear,
but made their neck stiff, that they might not hear, nor receive instruction.
And it shall come to pass, if ye diligently hearken unto Me, saith the
Lord, to bring in no burden through the gates of this city on the Sabbath
day, but hallow the Sabbath day, to do no work therein; then shall there
enter into the gates of this city kings and princes sitting upon the
throne of David, riding in chariots and on horses, they, and their princes,
the men of Judah, and the inhabitants of Jerusalem: and this city shall
remain forever. And they shall come from the cities of Judah, and from
the places about Jerusalem, and from the land of Benjamin, and from
the plain, and from the mountains, and from the south, bringing burnt
offerings, and sacrifices, and meat offerings, and incense, and bringing
sacrifices of praise, unto the house of the Lord. But if ye will not
hearken unto Me to hallow the Sabbath day, and not to bear a burden,
even entering in at the gates of Jerusalem on the Sabbath day; then
will I kindle a fire in the gates thereof, and it shall devour the palaces
of Jerusalem, and it shall not be quenched." Jer. 17:21-27.
This,
as stated, was one of the last messages sent to Israel before Nebuchadnezzar
finally laid waste the city, destroyed the temple, and carried the remnant
of Israel captive into a strange country, there to become servants of
a heathen people until they should have learned not to profane God's
holy Sabbath.
p
99 -- Nehemiah's Message
It would seem that by this time Israel should have known what the Lord
required of them, and learned to follow His counsel. Their fathers had
wandered forty years in the wilderness and at last died without entering
the Promised Land. Now Israel was carried into Babylon for the same
transgressions of which their fathers had been guilty. Ezekiel had faithfully
rehearsed the history of Israel's failure; Jeremiah had added his warning;
but all to no avail. And now they were in captivity.
Seventy
years was the allotted time for this captivity - time for all the old
men to die who were grown when the captivity began. The time had come
to bring Israel back, and God kept His promise. Israel was permitted
to leave Babylon and return to their land. Great was the rejoicing of
the people as they once more set foot on their own soil and could resume
the interrupted temple worship. Surely by this time they should have
learned their lesson.
But
they had not. In Babylon they had inter-married with the Babylonians,
and had learned their heathen customs. In particular had they become
careless with reference to the Sabbath, the very point on which they
had been warned again and again. Nehemiah, who had been specially selected
of God to lead the people, records the situation in these words: "In
those days saw I in Judah some treading wine presses on the Sabbath,
and bringing in
p
100 -- sheaves, and lading asses; as also wine, grapes, and figs,
and all manner of burdens, which they brought into Jerusalem on the
Sabbath day: and I testified against them in the day wherein they sold
victuals. There dwelt men of Tyre also therein, which brought fish,
and all manner of ware, and sold on the Sabbath unto the children of
Judah, and in Jerusalem. Then I contended with the nobles of Judah,
and said unto them, What evil thing is this that you do, and profane
the Sabbath day? Did not your fathers thus, and did not our God bring
all this evil upon us, and upon this city? yet ye bring more wrath upon
Israel by profaning the Sabbath. And it came to pass, that when the
gates of Jerusalem began to be dark before the Sabbath, I commanded
that the gates should be shut, and charged that they should not be opened
till after the Sabbath: and some of my servants set I at the gates,
that there should no burden be brought in on the Sabbath day. So the
merchants and sellers of all kind of ware lodged without Jerusalem once
or twice. Then I testified against them, and said unto them, Why lodge
ye about the wall? if ye do so again, I will lay hands on you. From
that time forth came they no more on the Sabbath. And I commanded the
Levites that they should cleanse themselves, and that they should come
and keep the gates, to sanctify the Sabbath day. Remember me, O my God,
concerning this also, and spare me according to the greatness of Thy
mercy." Neh. 13:15-22.
Some
of the children of Israel were "treading
p
101 -- the wine press on the Sabbath, and bringing in sheaves,
and lading asses"; others brought their burdens "into Jerusalem
on the Sabbath," and "sold victuals."
Nehemiah remonstrated with them that these were the things that had
brought God's wrath upon them. "Did not your fathers thus,"
he reasons, "and did not our God bring all this evil upon us, and
upon this city? Yet ye bring more wrath upon Israel by profaning the
Sabbath." He thereupon ordered the gates of the city closed on
the Sabbath, and even threatened to "lay hands on" those who
persisted in transgression. At last the buyers and sellers came "no
more on the Sabbath," and the Levites were invited to "come
and keep the gates, to sanctify the Sabbath."
It
is evident, of course, that this kind of forced Sabbath keeping was
not after God's order. To Him the Sabbath was a sign of sanctification,
and without a life of holiness, the Sabbath became an empty ceremony
that could never substitute for true sanctification.
Subsequent
History
From the subsequent history of the Jews it appears that the Babylonian
captivity and the remonstrances of the prophets at last made some impression
on the people. They appear finally to have understood that their failure
to keep the Sabbath had been the cause of their calamities from earliest
times. They read the history of God's proving Israel in the wilderness,
of how He rained
p
102 -- manna from heaven for forty years, and taught them concerning
the Sabbath. They read Ezekiel's account as he repeated to them the
history of Israel's later failure. They read of Jeremiah's appeal to
them to keep the Sabbath and the blessing that would come to them if
they should do so. They learned from this that national greatness would
never be theirs unless they kept the Sabbath; but that if they did,
kings and princes should come to them, and Jerusalem should stand forever.
They knew that God would do just as He said; for had they not been carried
into captivity? Had not their city and their temple been burned, and
had not God released them from their captivity at the end of the seventy
years, as He had promised? Now Nehemiah had once more warned them, and
at last they woke up. From now on they would do all that God required
of them, and especially would they be careful of the Sabbath.
And
careful they were. The Babylonian captivity marks a definite change
in Israel. Nevermore did they turn to idols; nevermore did they make
of the Sabbath a common working day. If it was as important as they
were told, they would hedge it about with all kinds of restrictions.
If their national existence and the blessing of God depended upon their
faithfulness in observing the Sabbath, they would certainly keep it.
The
mistake they now made was as fatal as the mistake they had formerly
made. They began to consider the Sabbath a means of salvation, both
personal and national, instead of a sign of sanctification.
p
103 -- God wanted a holy people, and the Sabbath was to be the sign
of this. Now they stressed the sign which could only be of little value
without the accompanying reality of holiness.
Christ
did His best to restore to Israel the Sabbath as God originally had
given it to them, to be a blessing rather than a burden. He did not
need to stress strictness in the minutiae of Sabbath keeping, for Israel
had already gone too far in that direction. With their new viewpoint,
the people, and especially the Pharisees, believed Christ to be slack
in the observance of the Sabbath. They did not understand that He was
attempting to show them its real purpose; that doing good, healing the
sick, and committing acts of mercy on the Sabbath were pleasing in the
sight of God, rather than merely mechanically observing the day.
Thus
did Israel in the time of Christ fail as completely as had ancient Israel
in understanding the true meaning of the Sabbath. They failed in a different
way, it is true, but they failed as definitely. It is this to which
the writer of Hebrews refers when he warns his fellow believers not
to fall after the same manner of unbelief.
The
Message of Hebrews
The writer of Hebrews follows the same method that Ezekiel had previously
followed; namely, calling attention to the history of Israel when they
came out of Egypt. He mentions the
p
104 -- fact that God was provoked and grieved with them, though
they "saw My works forty years." Because of their unbelief,
their "carcasses fell in the wilderness," and God sware "that
they should not enter into His rest." Heb. 3:9-18.
Having
called attention to the failure of the fathers and the reason for it,
he issues a warning to His own generation. "Let us therefore fear,"
he says, "lest, a promise being left us of entering into His rest,
any of you should seem to come short of it." Heb. 4:1. Israel failed;
now see to it that you do not fail, is his argument. "They could
not enter in because of unbelief." Heb. 3:19.
The
writer now attempts to make clear that entering into the earthly Canaan
and entering into God's rest are not the same thing. There were many
who entered Canaan who did not enter into rest. Joshua, indeed, brought
them into the Promised Land, but he did not bring them into the promised
rest of God.
When
Israel entered Canaan, they felt that they had attained their goal.
But this was not God's idea.The rest of which He spoke, and into which
He would conduct them, was the rest from sin, rest from their own works.
Of this Canaan was a symbol, as was also the Sabbath. To rest on the
seventh day from their labor was good, and to enter Canaan was according
to God's command; but good as these were, they were only symbolic of
something higher - of rest from sin, rest from one's own labor, rest
in God, of which the Sabbath was symbolic.
p
105 -- "We which have believed do enter into rest;" that
is, we who are converted have the true rest, rest in God. Heb. 4:3.
This rest in God, this freedom from and victory over sin, the writer
closely connects with the works "finished from the foundation of
the world. For He spake in a certain place of the seventh day on this
wise, And God rested the seventh day from all His work." Heb. 4:3,
4.
In
a most beautiful and effective way the writer thus connects the seventh-day
Sabbath with the true rest of God. Joshua had brought Israel into the
Promised Land, but he had not given them rest, for he only has truly
entered into rest who "hath ceased from his own works as God did
from His." This rest is a spiritual rest, a rest from our "own
works," a ceasing from sin. It is to this rest that God calls His
people, and it is of this rest that both the Sabbath and Canaan are
symbols.
The
mere entering of the land of Canaan did not exhaust God's promise of
rest. Nor does the mere keeping of the Sabbath do this. The Sabbath
is indeed, a sign of sanctification. But the sign must never be substituted
for the reality, nor, on the other hand, must it be ignored. The writer
of Hebrews is anxious that his hearers shall not make the same mistake
that Israel of old made. He wants them to enter in, and not "fall
after the same manner of unbelief."
"There
remains therefore a rest to the people of God." Heb. 4:9. The original
Greek as
p
106 -- well
as the margin and the Revised Version has, "There remaineth therefore
a keeping of a Sabbath to the people of God." Verse 9.
There can be no mistaking the intent of the argument of the writer of
Hebrews. Israel of old failed; they disregarded God's statutes and laws,
and especially they polluted the Sabbath. When Israel rejected the Sabbath,
they rejected that for which it stands, holiness of life. They entered
into Canaan, but they did not enter into God's rest, nor into life.
Hence God's purpose had not been fulfilled. So God issued other calls,
and even after Israel had entered Canaan, He called upon them to enter
into His rest, "saying in David, Today, after so long a time, as
it is said, Today if you will hear His voice, harden not your hearts."
Verse 7. That same call has sounded to every generation since then,
and the writer of the Hebrews was now sounding the last call that would
ever go to Israel as a nation. A very short time after this book was
written, the temple was finally destroyed, and no more calls were issued.
Israel as a nation had had its last call.
In
this argument in Hebrews the reader will not fail to note the introduction
of the seventh day Sabbath. "God did rest the seventh day from
all His works." Heb. 4:4 "The works were finished from the
foundation of the world." Verse 3. "There remaineth therefore
a keeping of a Sabbath to the people of God." Verse
9, margin. "He that is entered into His rest, he also hath ceased
from his own works, as God did from
p
107 -- His."
Verse 10. All this sums up into a telling and effective argument for
the seventh-day Sabbath in the New Testament. It should be remembered,
however, that telling as this argument is for the seventh day, there
is as definite danger now as then that the sign be substituted for that
for which it is a sign. God demands holiness of life. Of this the Sabbath
is a sign. We must not reject the sign, much less reject that for which
it stands. Let all consider this. It is vital.
p.
108 -- Chapter 7.Christ
and the Law
The most precious document in the possession of mankind is the law of
God contained in the ten commandments. It was spoken by God Himself
in majesty upon Mt. Sinai, confirmed by Christ while on earth, and given
to the church and the world as a guide of life and standard of conduct.
Its clear, crisp, decisive commands comprehend the whole duty of man.
In its original form it is the constitution of the universe; as adapted
to man it defines his every duty. It is the foundation of all human
law, the bulwark of society and civilization, the protector of liberty,
the guardian of morality, the preserver of the home, the security of
the state. Obeyed, it brings happiness, prosperity, and peace; disobeyed
or ignored, it brings sorrow, disaster, and chaos. Men and nations have
disregarded it; pew and pulpit have attempted to
disannul it; evil men and seducers have violated it; society has flouted
it; yet it remains the one accepted standard of conduct; and mankind,
whether they approve of it or not, pay it lip service. It is a builder
of character, a reprover of sin, a guide of life.
The
Law of God
'God spoke all these words, saying,
"I
am the Lord thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt,
out of the house of bondage."
p
109 -- 1. "Thou shall have no other gods before Me."
2. "Thou shall not make unto thee any graven image, or any
likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth
beneath, or that is in the water under the earth: thou shalt not bow
down thyself to them, nor serve them: for I the Lord thy God am a jealous
God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the
third and fourth generation of them that hate me; and showing mercy
unto thousands of them that love Me, and keep My commandments."
3. "Thou shall not take the name of the Lord thy God in
vain; for the Lord will not hold him guiltless that taketh His name
in vain."
4. "Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days
shalt thou labor, and do all thy work: but the seventh day is the Sabbath
of the Lord thy God: in it thou shall not do any work, thou, nor thy
son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant, nor thy maidservant, nor thy
cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates: for in six days the
Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested
the seventh day: wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed
it."
5. "Honor thy father and thy mother: that thy days may be
long upon the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee."
6. "Thou shalt not kill."
7. "Thou shalt not commit adultery."
8. "Thou shalt not steal."
p 110 -- 9.
"Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor."
10. "Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's house, thou shalt
not covet thy neighbor's wife, nor his manservant, nor his maidservant,
nor his ox, nor his ass, nor anything that is thy neighbor's."
Ex. 20:1-17.
Thus
read the "ten words" spoken by God Himself amid the thunder
and lightnings of Sinai.
Christ
and the Law
By many of His contemporaries Christ was considered a radical; especially
was this true of the Pharisees, who continually dogged His foot-steps,
ready to catch any phrase from His lips that might be construed against
Him.
The
Pharisees were accustomed to have great deference paid to them and their
opinions by the people. Christ, however, did not seem impressed by them,
and did not show them the respect which they thought was their due.
They had tried repeatedly to entrap Him in words, but each time they
were worsted and lost prestige in the eyes of the people. He had a disconcerting
way of turning the question back at them. They
were not "able to answer Him a word, neither durst any man from
that day forth ask Him any more questions." Matt. 22:46. They did
not enjoy being humiliated, especially before the people. At last they
decided to ask no more questions.
This
situation did not make the scribes and the Pharisees love Jesus. They
hated Him, and
p 111 -- were
willing to do almost anything to destroy His influence with the people,
for "the people gladly received Him: for they were all waiting
for Him." Luke 8:40. However, they had hopes that in the matter
of the law they might find the occasion they sought. As the conspirators
of old said of Daniel, "We shall not find any occasion against
this Daniel, except we find it against him concerning the law of his
God" (Dan. 6:5), so these hoped that when Christ declared Himself
on the law, He would furnish the occasion that would lay Him open to
the charges they were anxious to place against Him.
Christ
was never neutral or negative. His statements were unequivocal. They
not only could be understood, but they could not be misunderstood. He
was straightforward, clear cut, positive, dynamic. People
always knew where He stood. He did not attempt to gain popular favor
by flattery or by lowering standards. Sin was sin to Him, and He called
it by that name. It was these traits in Christ which the Pharisees hoped
would make it easier for them to find some accusation against Him that
would count with the people.
The
Jews were great sticklers for the law. Especially were the Pharisees
observant of the letter of the law and intolerant of such as did not
or could not measure up to their requirements of observance. They had
added many ordinances since God first gave the law, and it was a Iife
study to know what was required. It was impossible for
p
112 -- the common people to have this exact and comprehensive knowledge;
hence they were unable to reach the standard set. The Pharisees held
that the "people who knoweth not the law are cursed." John
7:49.
Under
these circumstances it was of great interest to the Jews and especially
to the Pharisees, to know Jesus' attitude toward the law. As a teacher
it was incumbent upon Him to make His position known and tell the people
plainly where He stood. It was in this announcement that the Pharisees
hoped to entrap Him, for they knew He was outspoken and would not leave
them in doubt regarding His position.
Jesus
did not disappoint them. In His first recorded sermon He dealt exhaustively
with the law, and made His position known. Nine blessings He pronounced
upon the poor, the mourners, the meek, the hungry and thirsty, the merciful,
the pure, the peacemakers, the persecuted, the reviled; then He said:
"Ye are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savor,
wherewith shall it be salted? it is thenceforth good for nothing, but
to be cast out, and to be trodden under foot of men. Ye are the light
of the world. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hid. Neither do
men light a candle, and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick;
and it gives light unto all that are in the house. Let your light so
shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your
Father which is in heaven.
p 113 -- "Think
not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come
to destroy, but to fulfill. For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and
earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law,
till all be fulfilled. Whosoever therefore shall break one of these
least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called least
in the kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach them, the
same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven." Matt. 5:13-19.
Jesus
knew what was in men's hearts and what they were thinking. Answering
their unspoken thoughts, He said, "Think not that I am come to
destroy the law, or the prophets." This was the very thing the
Pharisees were thinking. Had they not seen Him do the unprecedented
thing of driving out the buyers and sellers from the temple? Had they
not seen Him make a scourge of small cords, overthrow the tables, and
scatter the money of the changers? Had He not spoken of the temple as
His Father's house? John 2:13-17. If
He began His work that way, what might the end be? Evidently He was
a radical that would bear watching. He seemed to have little respect
for the temple appointments. Was He attempting to destroy the law and
the prophets? With great interest all had been awaiting His pronouncement
on the law. And now they had it. He was not abolishing the law. He was
standing by it. Not even a tittle or a jot should fail. He was not destroying
it, as some had feared. He was fulfilling it.
p 114 -- "Think
not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets. I am not come
to destroy, but to fulfill." The
law here mentioned is, broadly speaking, the writings of Moses, but
specifically the moral law, the ten commandments, from which the writings
of Moses primarily derived their name. By "the prophets" are
meant the writings of the prophets such as are in the Old Testament.
Some
hold that the law here mentioned is only the Old Testament and does
not specifically refer to the ten commandments. But that it means more
than merely the writings of Moses in general is evident from the illustrations
which Jesus proceeds to give.
"Ye
have heard that it was said to them of old time, Thou shall not kill;
and whosoever shall kill shall be in danger of the judgment: but I say
unto you, that everyone who is angry with his brother shall be in danger
of the judgment; and whosoever shall say to his brother, Raca, shall
be in danger of the council; and whosoever shall say, Thou fool, shall
be in danger of the hell of fire. If therefore thou art offering thy
gift at the altar, and there rememberest that thy brother hath aught
against thee, leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way,
first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy gift.
Agree with thine adversary quickly, while thou art with him in the way;
lest haply the adversary deliver thee to the judge, and the judge deliver
thee to the officer, and thou be cast into prison. Verily I say
p
115 -- unto thee, Thou shall by no means come out thence, till thou
have paid the last farthing.
"Ye
have heard that it was said, Thou shall not commit adultery: but I say
unto you, that everyone that looketh on a woman to lust after her hath
committed adultery with her already in his heart. And if thy right eye
causes thee to stumble, pluck it out, and cast it from thee: for it
is profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish, and not
thy whole body be cast into hell. And if thy right hand causeth thee
to stumble, cut it off, and cast it from thee: for it is profitable
for thee that one of thy members should perish, and not thy whole body
go into hell. It was said also, Whosoever shall put away his wife, let
him give her a writing of divorcement: but I say unto you, that everyone
that putteth away his wife, saving for the cause of fornication, makes
her an adulteress: and whosoever shall marry her when she is put away
committeth adultery." Matt. 5:21-32, R.V.
Jesus
here selects two of the ten commandments to show how He fulfills the
law. The commandment, "Thou shalt not kill," He explains,
has a deeper meaning than that of merely taking the life of a man. Whoever
hates his brother has taken the first step in transgression. In saying
this, Christ corrects the conception which some had that the keeping
of the commandments was merely an outward compliance which did not touch
the inward state of the heart. He interprets the law as being definitely
spiritual, as having
p
116 -- application to the mind and heart, rather than being a mere
rule of outward conduct.
This
He emphasizes again in His interpretation of the seventh commandment,
"Thou shalt not commit adultery." Men may transgress this
commandment in their minds as well as by an overt act; and the one is
as surely a transgression as the other.
From
these interpretations we are on sure ground when we hold that the law
here mentioned in a specific and definite way refers to the ten commandments.
So far from Christ's destroying this law, He magnifies it, shows its
far-reaching character, and announces that he who transgresses it even
in thought "shall be in danger of the hell of fire." Matt.
5:22, R.V. Christ left no doubt in the mind of any regarding where He
stood on the law. He took His stand squarely on the ten commandments,
saying that "one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the
law, till all be fulfilled." Whoever should break one of the least
of the commandments, and teach men so, should be called the least in
the kingdom of heaven; while he who should do and teach them should
be called great.
It
is incumbent upon every teacher of religion to declare himself on the
law. Men have a right to know whether the religion he teaches has a
background of law and order, or if it is one of those irresponsible
movements that demand privileges but shun responsibilities. Especially
in these days, when lawlessness prevails, should the
p
117 -- position of every religious movement on the question of law
be made clear. Christ defined His position at the outset of His career.
Every religious teacher should do the sahrist
and the Pharisees
When Christ took the two commandments, "Thou shall not kill"
and "Thou shall not commit adultery," and showed their spiritual
application, He was fulfilling that which had been prophesied of Him:
"The Lord is well pleased for His righteousness' sake; He will
magnify the law, and make it honorable." Isa. 42:21. The context
shows this to be a definite Messianic prophecy. Christ thus fulfilled
this prophecy. He lifted the law out of the mass of petty restrictions
with which the scribes and Pharisees had encumbered it, and restored
it to its rightful place. No one need be fearful that Christ came to
destroy the law. On the contrary, He came to magnify it, to make it
honorable. The Pharisees, by their multitudinous rules, belittled it
and made it ridiculous.
The
Two Commandments
Consider the two commandments which Christ used by way of illustration,
doubtless for a purpose.
"Thou
shall not kill." There were those among the Pharisees who habitually
carried a broom with which to sweep a path before them, lest haply they
should step on some insect or worm
p
118 -- and kill it. Their hearts might be filled with hatred of
Christ, they might even at this very time be planning to take the life
of One who had come from heaven to show them the way of salvation, but
this did not hinder them from ostentatiously carrying their broom and
exhibiting their righteousness before men. In doing this they were giving
people an altogether wrong conception of the meaning of the law. They,
as well as the people, needed someone to show them its real meaning,
to fulfill its demands. This Christ did. All who heard Christ's explanation
of the sixth commandment knew ever after that if they were to keep the
law, they would have to watch their thinking; that it was not enough
to carry a broom; that it was the heart that counted; and that hatred
was a transgression of the law. In their heart of hearts they knew that
Christ was right and the Pharisees were wrong.
"Thou
shall not commit adultery." This was the other commandment to which
Christ called attention and which He used as an illustration. The Pharisees
were not unaware of the spiritual values of the law - and this knowledge
was their condemnation. They well knew that God required "truth
in the inward parts," and that the "sacrifices of God are
a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart, O God, Thou wilt not
despise." Ps. 51:6, 17.But
they chose to ignore these counsels and to confine their religious activities
to that which could
be seen and appreciated by men, from whom they might receive praise.
Lest
p
119 -- they
be tempted to lust after a woman, some would blindfold themselves, and
thus think themselves safe - as willful a perversion of the intent of
the law as could be imagined. Christ unmasked all this hypocrisy when
He stated that "within, out of the heart of men, proceed evil thoughts,
adulteries, fornications, murders, thefts, covetousness, wickedness,
deceit, lasciviousness, an evil eye, blasphemy, pride, foolishness:
all these things come from within, and defile the man." Mark 7:21-23.
When
Christ interpreted these two commandments, He was in effect saying,
"God looks on the heart. The law is holy and just and good. Be
careful of even the smallest infractions. Every jot and tittle counts.
But do not get the idea that outward obedience is all that the law requires.
It demands purity of thought as well as of life. It is spiritual in
its inntent. I am come to magnify the law and make it honorable."
"Except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the
scribes and Pharisees, you shall in no case enter into the kingdom of
heaven.
Christ's
words must have cut the Pharisees to the quick. They were proud of their
reputation for legal exactitude. They paid tithe of mint, anise, and
cummin. Some of them fasted twice in the week. They thanked God that
they were not like other sinners. They made broad the phylacteries,
made long prayers, and compassed sea and land to make a proselyte. And
now
p
120 -- Christ said in the hearing of the multitude, that unless
their righteousness exceeded that of the Pharisees, they would in no
case enter into the kingdom. Later on in His ministry He told the chief
priests and the elders "'that the publicans and the harlots go
into the kingdom of God before you." Matt. 21:31. No wonder the
leaders of Israel looked askance at the young Galilean whom the people
believed and followed, but who did not recognize the officials of the
temple and the religious leaders, or give them the honor which they
demanded.
If
the Pharisees had hoped to find some cause of complaint against Christ
in the matter of the law, they were disappointed. If they thought that
He had come to destroy it - as seems evident from the form of Christ's
pronouncement - or to change or abrogate it, they had entirely miscalculated
His purpose. Their evil intent was frustrated, and they themselves stood
exposed. Christ believed in the law. As the Pharisees were careful of
the smallest matters, so Christ omitted no jot or tittle. If they stood
by the law and the prophets, so did He. But in the conception of the
nature of the law, Christ and the Pharisees were as widely separated
as the east is from the west. To the Pharisees the law was a set of
rules to direct the outward conduct of man, and by which they might
judge others. To Christ the law was a spiritual counselor and friend,
a guide, an aid to conscience, a mirror of the soul, a revealer of the
will of God, a close ally of the
p
121 -- Holy
Spirit in convincing men of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment.
The
Moral Law Spiritual
"We know that the law is spiritual," says Paul. Rom. 7:14.
To this he adds by way of contrast, "But I am carnal, sold under
sin." Paul had not always thought of himself as carnal, nor perhaps
the law as spiritual. He gave this testimony concerning himself before
his conversion, "As touching the law, a Pharisee; concerning zeal,
persecuting the church; touching the righteousness which is in the law,
blameless." Phil. 3:5, 6. This was Paul's self-estimation. He was
blameless as far as the law was concerned, as indeed all the Pharisees
considered themselves. Their conduct was doubtless correct as regarded
outward behavior, and with that they were satisfied. Paul was an exemplary
young man, a good Pharisee. With the young man he could say, "All
these things have I kept from my youth up." Matt. 19:20.
Paul's
Experience
Paul, born in Tarsus, had been brought up at the feet of the great teacher,
Gamaliel, in Jerusalem. Here, according to his own statement, he had
been "taught according. to the perfect manner of the law of the
fathers." Acts 22:3. Nevertheless he considered it his duty to
persecute the saints of God. "I imprisoned and beat in every synagogue
them that believed on Thee," he recalls. Acts 22:19. "Many
of the saints
p
122 -- did
I shut up in prison, having received authority from the chief priests,
and when they were put to death, I gave my voice against them. And I
punished them oft in every synagogue, and compelled them to blaspheme;
and being exceedingly mad against them, I persecuted them even unto
strange cities." Acts 26:10, 11. From this it is easy to see that
though Paul had been "taught according to the perfect manner of
the law," his understanding of the law was not perfect. It was
necessary for him to get an entirely different opinion of himself as
well as of the law.
This
change in his experience came as he was on the way to Damascus to persecute
the saints of God. At noon one day a great light suddenly shone from
heaven, and Paul fell blind to the ground. He heard a voice which he
recognized as that of Jesus of Nazareth, and this voice commanded him
to proceed. into the city, where he would be told what to do.
Three
days of darkness followed, but then light broke upon his darkened soul,
and the former persecutor became a follower of the lowly Nazarene. He
thought he had been a good man. But now he saw himself in a different
light. No longer was he the proud Pharisee who boasted of the law. He
saw himself as a sinner who needed help and pardon. He fell on the Rock
and was broken. Paul was a new man.
Up
till this time Paul had considered himself blameless; he believed that
he had kept the law and done all that it commanded. Now he saw
p
123 -- himself
in a new light, and not a very flattering one. He saw the spiritual
aspects of the law as he had never seen them before, and he also saw
himself as carnal - a view that he had not had previously. This change
was brought about by the Spirit of God, who used as a means the tenth
commandment. Paul expresses it thus: "I had not known sin, but
by the law: for I had not known lust, except the law had said, Thou
shall not covet." Rom. 7:7.
The
full force of this commandment had not occurred to him before. He had
been careful of his conduct; he had been "blameless" in the
law. But now the command, "Thou shall not covet," struck him
full force. It dawned on him that the commandments take cognizance not
only of the outward and overt acts, but of the thoughts and intents
of the heart. He had been able to control his outward behavior, but
his thinking revealed to him a state of heart for which he knew no remedy.
The Jewish sacrificial law provided a sacrifice for whoever had transgressed
the law unwittingly. But there was no remedy provided for any whose
thinking was wrong. A man might be forgiven for stealing if he was willing
to restore what he had taken, and add a fifth part to the ill gotten
gain, and bring the requisite offering. Lev. 6:1-7. But there was no
provision for the man who coveted. He might be forgiven as we are now
forgiven, but there was no provision in the law of Moses for this. For
sins of this nature he must go to the Lord direct.
p
124 -- A
Spiritual Law
It was the commandment, "Thou shall not covet," which made
Paul appreciate the spiritual nature of the law. He now understood that
the law dealt not merely with outward conduct, but also with the heart.
He now saw that there was no remedy for the sins of the mind but in
Christ. He could now announce to the world his great discovery which
had meant so much to him: "Be it known unto you therefore, men
and brethren, that through this Man is preached unto you the forgiveness
of sins: and by Him all that believe are justified from all things,
from which you could not be justified by the law of Moses." Acts
13:38, 39.
To
covet is not an overt act of sin. It is not doing something wrong; it
is thinking wrong.
Covetousness is a state of mind; it is not committing the sin, but wanting
to do it. The mind is the last thing that will be brought fully under
control. Many people can control their outward behavior; they can even
control their speech; but their minds run wild. In the midst of the
most solemn meeting they are suddenly made aware of the deep-seated
nature of sin. Thoughts which they would be ashamed to let their best
friends know flit through the mind, and in anguish of spirit they cry
out for help. While they know that they are not responsible for these
wicked suggestions of Satan, they are horrified at the possibilities
which they suggest. With a humble heart and a humble spirit they send
a petition to
p
125 -- the
only One who can help them. They cry for a clean heart; they want the
fountain cleansed. They get a new view of their need of help from on
high, and they understand as never before that if the tree is corrupt,
there is no way in which it may bear good fruit.
It
was some such experience that came to Paul as he was considering the
commandment, "Thou shall not covet." He saw the abysmal depth
of iniquity in his own heart. He thought that he had been blameless
in the law; he thought that he had kept it; but when the commandment
came, sin revived. He knew then that the law was spiritual, but that
he was carnal. He had always considered the commandment to be holy,
just, and good, and he also thought that he was holy, just, and good.
"But when the commandment came, sin revived, and I died. And the
commandment, which was ordained to life, I found to be unto death."
Rom. 7:9, 10.
Those
who today think lightly of the law have never thought very deeply about
it, nor have they seen themselves in its light as Paul did. Two things
Paul learned in his conversion: that the law is spiritual, and that
he was carnal. Men as verily need that lesson today. Too many agree
with Paul's estimate of himself, "touching the righteousness which
is in the law, blameless." That was Paul's estimate, and that is
their estimate, "blameless." They, and all of us, need a deeper
look into their own hearts as well as into the abounding grace of God.
p
126 -- Let
it be settled as once and for all that the law is spiritual. We must
never conceive of God being satisfied with outward righteousness only.
God looks to the heart. He is interested in the inward man even more
than in the outward. Hence His rule of conduct includes the whole man,
body, soul, and spirit.
It
was this conception of the law which Christ was eager that His hearers
should receive as He made His first important address touching upon
the law. Christ had been present when the law was announced in grandeur
upon Mt. Sinai. He knew the deeply spiritual import of every statement
in that law. He knew how completely inadequate in the sight of God is
mere outward compliance with the requirements of the law, and He was
deeply grieved that the teachers of His people should have such a low
conception of the expressed will of God. He knew that all this must
be changed. He therefore lost no time in declaring His position on the
law.
The
Place of the Law in the Teaching of Christ
Christ did
not treat the law as a formal, cold, legal enactment. To Him it was
the way of life, and not a series of prohibitions. He believed, as did
Paul, that "the commandment . . . was ordained to life." Rom.
7:10. Of a full heart He could say: "I delight to do Thy will,
O My God; yea, Thy law is within My heart." Ps.40:8. He had inspired
the psalmist to say: "I love Thy commandments above gold; yea,
above
p
127 -- fine
gold," "and Thy law is my delight." "O how love
I Thy law! it is my meditation all the day." "Thy testimonies
are wonderful." "I will keep the commandments of my God."
Ps. 119:127, 174, 97, 129, 115. That this conception was not mere sentiment
with Christ, but a living reality, is evident from the way He applied
the law to specific cases. Let us consider two of these.
The
Young Man and the Lawyer
On a certain occasion a young man came to Jesus "and said unto
Him, Good Master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal
life? And He said unto him, Why callest thou Me good? There is none
good but one, that is, God: but if thou wilt enter into life, keep the
commandments. He said unto Him, Which? Jesus said, Thou shall do no
murder, Thou shall not commit adultery, Thou shall not steal, Thou shall
not bear false witness, Honor thy father and thy mother: and, Thou shall
love thy neighbor as thyself. The young man said unto Him, All these
things have I kept from my youth up: what lack I yet? Jesus said unto
him, If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that thou has, and give to
the poor, and thou shall have treasure in heaven: and come and follow
Me. But when the young man heard that saying, he went away sorrowful:
for he had great possessions." Matt. 19:16-22.
Some
may be a little perplexed at the answer which Jesus gave this young
man when he asked
p
128 -- what
he should do to have eternal life. "Keep the commandments,"
Jesus said. When the man asked what commandments were meant, Jesus referred
him to the law of God as contained in the ten precepts. Why did Jesus
tell him this, when He might have told him to have faith, or to give
his heart to God, or any one of the many things that are appropriate
for such an occasion?
That
this was not the only time Jesus answered in this way is evident from
the record. On another occasion a lawyer stood up and asked: "Master,
what shall I do to inherit eternal life?" Luke 10:25. To this Jesus
answered: "What is written in the law? how readest thou? And he
answering said, Thou shall love the Lord thy God with all thy heart,
and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind;
and thy neighbor as thyself. And He said unto him, "Thou has answered
right: this do, and thou shalt live." Luke 10:26-28.
It
can hardly be supposed that Jesus treated their questions lightly and
gave them answers not in harmony with the facts. But if this is really
the answer to the question of how eternal life may be gained, how can
we explain or justify the answer? It seems so at variance with the answer
that most ministers of today would give, that some amplification or
explanation is in order. If Jesus were here today, and a member of some
ministerial association should ask Him how He would answer the question
of how eternal life might be attained, and Jesus should answer now
p
129 -- as He did then, would He be considered evangelical?
It is highly probable that He would be asked to explain His answer.
We
take it for granted that Jesus did not trifle with these men when so
vital a matter as eternal life was concerned. We must believe that He
gave them an honest answer, for certainly nothing less would be expected
of Him. What, then, is implied in the answer? On this hangs much.
The
lawyer, in reply to Jesus' question of how he read the law, had answered:
"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with
all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind; and
thy neighbor as thyself." Verse 27. The lawyer understood that
the law demanded love to God and love to man. Christ said, "Thou
hast answered right: this do, and thou shalt live."
If
we take Jesus' interpretation of the law as the law of love, may we
not see light in the answer that Jesus gave? "Love is the fulfilling
of the law." Rom. 13:10. God Himself is love. His law is love.
Christ says: "If ye keep My commandments, ye shall abide in My
love; even as I have kept My Father's commandments, and abide in His
love." "Jesus answered and said unto him, If a man love Me,
he will keep My words: and My Father will love him, and we will come
unto him, and make our abode with him." "If ye love Me, keep
My commandments." John I5:10; 14:23, 15.
p 130 -- Need
of a New View
Apparently we need a new view of the law of God. It is not, as some
call it, a yoke of bondage; it is not a hard taskmaster; it is not a
bond of restraint. It is a glorious law of liberty, of love, of friendly
guidance. It is God ordained, a transcript of His own character, the
most precious thing in the sanctuary above, the foundation of the mercy
seat and the glorious plan of salvation. It is kept in the heart of
Christ, free from any possible harm that might come to it. Ps. 40:8.
It is the perfect embodiment of the will of God, the supreme rule of
life. Why should any think lightly of it? It reflects the very heart
and mind of the Almighty.
The
law of love is the law of life. No man who does not love God can be
saved. But "this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments."
1 John 5:3. No man can be saved who does not know God. But "he
that saith, I know Him, and keepeth not His commandments, is a liar,
and the truth is not in him." 1 John 2:4. No man can be saved who
continues in sin. And "sin is the transgression of the law."
1 John 3:4. if, therefore, we are to be saved, we must love God and
keep His commandments. If we say we love God, we must prove that love
in the way God demands. We must stop transgressing the law; for "sin
is the transgression of the law." At the conclusion of His work
on earth, Christ could say: "I have kept My Father's commandments,
and abide in His love." John 15:10. If we
p
131 -- follow
His example, we shall not go far astray.
With
Christ's definition in mind that the law of God is the law of love,
and that on this hang all the law and the prophets, we accept His statement
of the law as the way of life. There is no other way. "He that
loveth not knoweth not God; for God is love." 1 John 4:8. But to
know God is life eternal. John 17:3. If, therefore, we do not know God
unless we love, and the knowledge of God is eternal life, and the only
way that "we do know that we know Him [is] if we keep His commandments,"
and this keeping of the commandments "is the love of God,"
we are again shut up to the proposition that the law of God plays a
prominent part in our relationship to God. 1 John 2:3; 5:3. Only at
the peril of our souls can we neglect it. Such was the teaching of Jesus,
and, being the teaching of Jesus, it is also the teaching of all who
follow Him.
p
132 -- Chapter 8.
Jesus
and Tradition
Jesus had continual difficulty with the Jews over the subject of tradition.
During the centuries of their existence, there had grown up among them
many customs that with the passage of years had taken on the nature
of law. The fathers had done certain things in a certain way, and succeeding
generations followed the custom set. After a while it became a matter
of disrespect to vary from the custom, which by that time had practically
become law. The fathers were considered good men who followed God, and
hence to follow them was in reality to follow God. The custom might
be good or bad, but once it had become a settled practice, it came to
be considered sin to vary in any way from the custom. It was only a
tradition, but it was given all the force of a command of God.
Against
this Jesus protested, and with good reason. For often the customs of
the Jews contradicted the will of God as expressed in the law. Men accepted
tradition and neglected the law. To Jesus it was immaterial whether
the traditions in themselves were comparatively innocent or out-right
evil. If they in any way interfered with or made of none effect the
law of God, He promptly set them aside.
The
Washing of Hands
A case in point was the custom of washing the hands before eating. As
practiced by the Jews,
p
133 -- it
was not an ordinance of cleanliness merely, but rather a ceremonial
performance. The person would dip his hands in water, cupping them;
he would then raise his hands and let the water run down to the elbow.
This he would repeat several times, and the rite was over. Such an ordinance
in itself cannot be considered very dangerous or subversive of the faith.
It was one of the "added" precepts which the Jews considered
very important. The Pharisees decided to make it a test case regarding
Jesus' stand on tradition, and Jesus was perfectly willing to have it
so.
The
scribes and Pharisees had come down from Jerusalem to Galilee with a
complaint about the disciples. They had omitted the ordinance of hand
washing, and the Pharisees felt that the matter was of importance enough
to call it to the attention of the Master. It was not merely zeal for
the law which prompted them in this, though the complaint would have
the effect of emphasizing their carefulness in adherence to tradition;
their complaint would in itself constitute an in direct rebuke to Jesus
for permitting His disciples to transgress tradition, and would compel
Him to take His stand for or against the ordinance. Should He reject
their complaint, they could report Him to the people as a violator of
tradition. Should He admit the justice of the charge, they could boast
of having set Him and His disciples right. This, of course, would prove
that they knew more than He did about the law, and that they were stricter
in its observance. In either case
p
134 -- they
would win out, and their reputation would be enhanced.
Jesus
had just fed the five thousand, had miraculously crossed the sea by
walking on the water, and was now engaged in healing the people. The
sick lay by the hundreds in the streets, and as He passed they prayed
that "they might touch if it were but the border of His garment:
and as many as touched Him were made whole." Mark 6:56. Thousands
pressed to get near the Master.
Jesus
knew why the Pharisees had chosen this occasion to bring this question
before Him. He knew that they wanted to expose Him before the people
and make Him out to be a transgressor of their tradition. But not for
a moment did He hesitate. He accepted their challenge, and was ready
to declare Himself on tradition.
Jesus
and the Pharisees
It was probably in the open square of the town that Jesus met the Pharisees.
The people must have been deeply impressed with the fact that only a
very important matter could have brought the Pharisees to undertake
the long journey from Jerusalem. They thronged about Christ and the
visitors, to learn the important message which these high officials
had brought. It was with astonishment and some perplexity that they
heard the Pharisees ask the apparently trivial question: "Why walk
not Thy disciples according to the tradition of the elders, but eat
bread with unwashen hands?" Mark 7:5.
p
135 -- Was
this the question that had brought them on this long journey? Perhaps
the matter was of greater importance than the people thought. Christ
was doing a wonderful work in healing their sick. Whether or not the
disciples washed their hands before eating did not seem to the simple
fisherfolk of great importance. But perhaps they were mistaken. The
learned scribes doubtless knew, and they seemed to think that washing
the hands was most important. The question now was, what would be Jesus'
attitude toward and reply to the accusation?
If
the people had been astonished and perplexed at the accusation, they
were dumfounded when they heard Jesus' answer: "Well hath Esaias
prophesied of you hypocrites, as it is written, This people honoreth
Me with their lips, but their heart is far from Me." Verse 6. They
could hardly believe their ears.
Picture
the scene. A dignified, solemn group of men, delegates from the highest
authority among the Jews; a young teacher accused by them of permitting
His disciples to transgress the traditions of the elders; thousands
of people milling about to witness the scene; hundreds of sick awaiting
the healing touch of the Master, and the work delayed until the question
of hand washing was settled! And now in answer to the accusation come
Christ's biting words: "You hypocrites !" What irreverence,
what indignity, what boldness, of this young Galilean! Would the Pharisees
immediately demand that He be apprehended and punished
p
136 -- for
thus humiliating them, who were leaders, in the sight of the people?
But not a word did they say. Jesus completely commanded the situation.
"You
hypocrites." What a terrific indictment. Ordinarily when a delegation
of such men appeared from Jerusalem to call to account some false teacher,
the miscreant would appear with trembling before the august inquisitors.
Never had anyone dared so to address the leaders. The people could not
understand why the Pharisees did not take prompt action against Jesus.
Were they afraid of Him? Did He, after all, have a message from heaven,
such as they had heard Him say, and was God really with Him? With absorbing
interest they watched the outcome of the encounter.
"Esaias
prophesied of you hypocrites." Never after this would either the
people or the Pharisees read Isaiah but they would recall the words
of Jesus. The Pharisees had intended to humiliate Jesus. He had turned
the tables on them. They said nothing. There was nothing to say.
But
Jesus was not done. He had been challenged on the matter of tradition,
and He would use the occasion to make known His stand. Addressing the
people, He said, "In vain do they worship Me, teaching for doctrines
the commandments of men." Verse 7.
"In
vain do they worship." We can think of nothing worse for a Christian
than vain worship, useless worship, worship that does not count. A
p
137 -- man
may bow down before God; he may pray to Him and call upon His name;
he may count himself as one who enjoys the favor of God; but it is all
in vain, if he is "teaching for doctrines the commandments of men."
Jesus
continued, "For laying aside the commandment of God, ye hold the
tradition of men, as the washing of pots and cups: and many other such
like things do ye. And He said unto them, Full well ye reject the commandment
of God, that ye may keep your own tradition." Mark 7:8, 9.
In
these words Jesus touched the crux of the question. Men reject the commandments
of God, that they may keep the tradition of men. This is what constitutes
vain worship. They were making the word of God of none effect through
their tradition.
Jesus
never answered the question why His disciples ate with unwashed hands.
He could have done so, had He wished, but He considered the matter of
washing of little importance in itself. What He did consider important
was the larger question, that of tradition. This issue He connects with
the commandments of God, and for this He strikes a hard blow - a hard
blow against tradition, a hard blow for the commandments of God.
The
fact that Jesus took a relatively unimportant question and made it the
occasion of stating a principle, makes the issue and question a most
important one. It was not to the washing as such that He objected; that
was an innocent ceremony.
p
138 -- But
when a matter, however small, touched the commandments of God and made
them of none effect, then Christ was interested. It was the commandments
about which He was concerned.
Corban
To illustrate the point of setting aside the commandments of God In
favor of tradition, Jesus chose the fifth commandment. The Jews had
a reprehensible custom which served them as an excuse for not supporting
their aged parents. It was the duty of children to provide for them,
but many would let the parents shift for themselves or be supported
by public charity.
This
latter, however, could be done only in case the children were unable
to support their parents. If the children had property or income, the
duty of support devolved upon them, which was a just and equitable arrangement.
There was a way, however, by which they could escape doing that which
should have been to them not merely a duty but a privilege. A man could
dedicate his property to the temple. He would not need to give the dedicated
property to the temple immediately; he could retain it for his own use
as long as he lived, and at his death it would revert to the temple.
This custom was called "corban."
A man
might never have thought of giving anything to the Lord, but if the
authorities demanded that he support his parents, he could suddenly
declare his property corban. Now the government could not take it away
from him -
p
139 -- it was dedicated to the Lord. Since he did not have
to deliver it to the temple immediately, he could use it as long as
he lived. By the time of his death it might be used up or worn out,
so that it was useless, and, also, his parents would probably be dead
by that time.
Thus
corban accomplished the following: It excused a man from supporting
his parents; it gave him a reputation for liberality in giving to the
Lord, since all his substance was dedicated to God; and it did this
without depriving him of anything. He had really given nothing, and
yet he received credit for having given all.
Against
this hypocrisy Jesus protested.
"He
said unto them, Full well you reject the commandment of God, that you
may keep your own tradition. For Moses said, Honor thy father and thy
mother; and, Whoso curseth father or mother, let him die the death:
but ye say, If a man shall say to his father or mother, It is Corban,
that is to say, a gift, by whatsoever thou mightest be profited by me;
he shall be free. And ye suffer him no more to do aught for his father
or his mother; making the word of God of none effect through your tradition,
which ye have delivered: and many such like things do ye." Mark
7:9-13.
With
Jesus, human considerations and the law of God outweighed tradition.
While Jesus in this instance used the fifth commandment as an illustration,
we are not to think that it was only in regard to this commandment that
the Pharisees were making the word of God of no effect. Christ adds
p
140 -- significantly, "and many such like things do ye."
Verse 13. A study of the history of the Jews reveals that it was not
one or two commandments only which they made of none effect through
their tradition. Every one of the ten suffered. Christ's saying, "Many
such like things do ye," is significant and revealing.
From
a mere human viewpoint we can see little reason for Christ's making
an issue of the matter of washing the hands. If ever there was an innocent
tradition, this certainly was one. Christ might just as well have told
His disciples, "The Pharisees are much concerned about washing
the hands before eating. I have no faith in any mere ceremony as such,
but I see nothing wrong about washing the hands. If it will please them
and avoid offense, perhaps we had better all wash after this. At least
no harm can come from it."
We
repeat, Christ could have said this, and we would have agreed with Him.
But Christ did not say this. There was more involved than appeared on
the surface, and Christ used this opportunity to inculcate the lesson
He had in mind. Let the careful reader note that Christ could easily
have avoided clashing with the Pharisees on this point. That He chose
to bring the matter to an issue over this seemingly insignificant point
shows that He had something in mind to teach that generation and succeeding
generations. Christ was definitely attacking tradition. He was not evading
the issue. He was seeking it. He had something to say in regard to tradition,
and He said it.
p
141 -- "Many such like things do ye." That was true of
them, and it is true of us. We do many things as a mere matter of tradition
- innocent things, many of them, and some of them not so innocent. For
as truly now as then, men lay aside the commandments of God to hold
to their tradition.
Pharisees
and the Sabbath
Perhaps the regulations of the Pharisees in regard to Sabbath keeping
will serve as well as any to illustrate how the law of God was hedged
about with restrictions that did not have God's sanction. They were
simply traditions venerable with age which the people believed to be
part of the law of Moses, and of binding force on the conscience. The
Pharisees knew better, but were willing that the people should believe
as they did.
The
Sabbath keeping of the Pharisees was mostly negative, as indeed was
much of their religion. They had many rules regarding what was forbidden
on the Sabbath - regulations which made the Sabbath a day of gloom and
depression. Few Jews in the time of Christ would ever think of giving
a patient a drink of water on the Sabbath to relieve fever, or in fact
of giving anyone in need a drink of cold water. If one took sick on
the Sabbath, he would have to wait till the sun went down before he
could expect any help. Their hypocrisy in this is shown in the fact
that if an ox fell into a pit on the Sabbath, they would work all day
to rescue the ox; on the other hand, they would not lift a finger to
relieve a suffering human
p
142 -- being. No wonder Christ called them hypocrites. Luke 13:15;
14:5.
Some
of the sheep which the Jews kept had very heavy tails, tails so heavy
that they weighed as much as the sheep themselves. Being heavy, the
tail would drag on the ground, the wool would be worn off, the skin
torn, and blood would flow. To relieve the sheep, light wooden boards
were fastened to the tail. These boards would drag on the ground and
preserve the tail from damage and bring relief to the sheep.
However,
on the Sabbath the boards would be removed; for it could not be permitted,
of course, to let the sheep carry this burden on the Sabbath. It is
doubtful that the sheep enjoyed the Sabbath very much. Of a piece with
this legislation was the prohibition against carrying so much as a thin
rug to use for a bed. One story of this kind is recorded in John 5:5-16.
A man was not permitted to use a crutch on the Sabbath, and if he had
a wooden leg, it had to be removed.
While
there was a rule in regard to how far a man might walk on the Sabbath,
the Pharisees taught that if he should partake of food at the end of
the prescribed journey, then that particular place where he ate could
be considered his home, and he could travel another Sabbath day's journey
from that place. This he could repeat when he again came to the end
of the prescribed distance, and thus he could continue as far as he
cared. There was one difficulty, however. To carry the food with him
would in itself he a breach of the
p
143 -- Sabbath; so that could not be done. Hence he must either
on the previous day deposit food where it would be wanted, or arrange
with some one who lived near the designated place to give him something
to eat; then the letter of the law would be fulfilled, and he could
travel on. With all such rules Christ had scant patience. With emphasis
He declared that the Sabbath was made for man, and not man for the Sabbath.
The Pharisees, however, were sure that if these safeguards of the Sabbath
were broken down, the Sabbath itself would also go. When Christ brushed
away the multitudinous rules with which the Sabbath had been encumbered,
some thought that He was attacking the Sabbath institution itself. Nothing
was farther from the mind of Christ. He revered, He kept, the Sabbath.
But the many restrictions which the people thought Moses had commanded,
Christ ignored or deliberately transgressed. He would free the Sabbath
from all extraneous regulations which God had never commanded, and give
His people the Sabbath as God originally intended it, a blessing to
mankind and to all creation.
p
144 -- Chapter 9. Has
the Sabbath Been Changed?
THE
Old Testament declares that the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord.
In regard to this there is no difference of opinion among Bible students.
God rested the seventh day, blessed and hallowed it, and commanded men
to keep it holy. There is no repeal of the Sabbath or of any of the
other commandments in the Old Testament. As far as we are aware, there
is no dissent anywhere to the statement that the seventh day is the
Sabbath of the Old Testament.
When
we come to the New Testament there is a difference of opinion in regard
to what it teaches with reference to the law and the Sabbath. A large
number of church members observe the first day of the week instead of
the seventh, and believe that they have grounds for this observance
in the teaching and example of Christ and the apostles. It therefore
becomes our duty to inquire what the New Testament teaches in regard
to Sabbath observance.
As
Christians we are vitally concerned with the teaching of Christ and
the apostles. In the final analysis Christ is our example and guide
in all Christian duties. Christ is the Savior of all men, Jew and Gentile
alike. There is no other name in heaven or in earth by which we are
to be saved. While Christ lived in Judea, His message is not a Judean
message. His love and salvation are all-embracing. To follow Him is
life; to reject
p
145 -- Him is death. He came to this world that we might have an
object lesson in applied Christianity. He came to be the way, the truth,
and the life. If we follow Him, we will not go astray. We agree with
all Christians that there is no higher authority than Christ's. His
word is final on all matters of life and doctrine.
The
Law in the New Testament
When we speak of the law in this chapter, we mean the ten commandments
as proclaimed by God on Mt. Sinai. There were other laws in existence
at the time of Christ, such as the Mosaic sacrificial law, which had
to do with the temple and the sacrifices connected with it. These ceremonial
and temple laws terminated when the temple service ceased to be of value
at the death of Christ. All Christians believe that they were abolished
and annulled in the great sacrifice on Calvary. Col. 2:14. It is not
of these laws that we speak, but of the law of God contained in the
ten precepts. This law we believe to be of as much force as ever, and
binding upon Christians and upon all men in all ages. Matt. 5:17-19;
Luke 16:17; Rom. 3:31. It is to this law that we are addressing ourselves.
We
have already discussed Christ's attitude toward the law. He made it
very plain that He had not come to destroy the law, but to fulfill and
magnify it. Isa. 42:21; Matt. 5:17-19. The Jews and the Pharisees tried
repeatedly to catch Him in word or deed about the law, but they were
p
146 -- unable to do so. Early in His ministry He made His position
clear. He taught that not one jot or one tittle of the law should pass.
He stood stiffly for the law, and made that known to all. "Which
of you convinces Me of sin?" He challenged. John 8:46. There was
no answer. Christ believed in and kept the law. "I have kept My
Father's commandments," Christ says, "and abide in His love."
John 15:10. There can be no dispute concerning this.
The
apostles took the same stand on the law as did Christ. That, of course,
would be expected. Those who hold that Paul spoke or wrote against the
law put Paul against Christ. Paul indeed ignored the ceremonial law
and taught that circumcision was without value, but when it came to
the law of God, he stood exactly where Christ stood. Note how indignantly
Paul repels the charge that faith makes void the law. "Do we then
make void the law through faith?" he exclaims. "God forbid:
yea, we establish the law." Rom. 3:31. There were no stronger words
of protest that Paul could find than those he used, "God forbid."
The charge was so preposterous, so out of harmony with all that he taught
and believed, that he bursts out in vehement protest at the very thought
of it. "Am I accused of teaching that the law is made void through
faith? God forbid that I should teach any such thing. It is the farthest
from my thought. No, I do not believe that the law is void. Just the
contrary is the case. I establish it." He was of the same
p
147 -- opinion as was Christ when He said, "It is easier for
heaven and earth to pass, than one tittle of the law to fail."
Luke 16:17.
The
idea that either Christ or the apostles would attempt to annul the law
of God is so strange and amazing that we cannot believe that men who
speak thus are aware of the implication of their words. Abolish the
law! Abolish the ten commandments! We can conceive that the evil one
might desire to have this done, but we cannot believe that either Christ
or the apostles would have anything to do with such an undertaking;
nor do we believe that those who advocate such doctrine have considered
what it means to abolish the law.
Let us list the substance of each of the ten commandments, and consider
the result were they to be abolished.
The Ten Commandments as Abolished
1. "Thou shall have no other gods before Me." Abolished.
2. "Thou shall not make unto thee any graven image." Abolished.
3. "Thou shall not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain."
Abolished.
4. "Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy." Abolished.
5. "Honor thy father and thy mother." Abolished.
6. "Thou shall not kill." Abolished.
7. "Thou shall not commit adultery." Abolished.
p
148 -- 8. "Thou shall not steal." Abolished.
9. "Thou shall not bear false witness." Abolished.
10. "Thou shall not covet." Abolished.
We
confess that we are perplexed that anyone can think that Christ or the
disciples ever attempted to abolish these commandments. With Paul we
say, "God forbid."
Consider
these commandments. Can a Christian look at them and say that they are,
or ought to be, abolished? Is the commandment, "Thou shall not
steal," abolished? Or the commandment, "Thou shall not commit
adultery"? or, "Thou shall have no other gods before Me"?
God forbid! Such teaching is from beneath and not from above. Let all
Christians forever banish any such idea from the mind. God did not proclaim
the law from heaven and announce severe penalties for its transgression,
merely to abolish it later. God did not lay down rules for man's conduct,
then send His Son to die because men transgressed those rules, and immediately
afterward annul the very law that demanded the death of Christ. If the
law were to be annulled, it should have been annulled before Christ
died. This would have saved Him the agony and terror of the cross. To
keep the law in force just long enough to exact the penalty of death,
and then annul it, is making the cross of none effect and Christ's death
a miscarriage of justice. Look once more at the law. Must we not agree
with Paul that "the law is holy, and the
p
149 -- commandment holy, and just, and good"? Rom. 7:12. Why
should that which is holy and just and good be abolished? It is folly
to charge Paul with making void that of which he thinks so highly. Must
not all also agree with Paul that "the law is spiritual,"
and that the trouble is with us who are "carnal, sold under sin"?
Rom. 7:14. We are sure that no Christian can point to these commandments
and believe that they are abolished, or wish or hope to have them so.
Rather, he will "consent unto the law that it is good." Verse
16. And that which is good should not be abolished.
We
again express our amazement that religious teachers can believe in the
abolition of the law. What do they mean by it? Surely not that men are
now at liberty to disregard the commandments of God, that men may steal,
kill, and commit adultery with impunity. That cannot be their idea.
But if not, what do they mean when they say that the law is abolished?
They do not believe that any one commandment is annulled as such, and
yet they believe that the whole law is abolished. In some perplexity
we again ask, Just what do they mean?
We
believe we know what some of them mean. They hold that the day of the
Sabbath has been changed from Saturday to Sunday. This, of course, cannot
be done without changing the law. It seems inconsistent to them to abolish
one of the ten commandments and only one, and so they abolish all, and
re-enact such as they think should
p
150 -- remain, which in this case means all but the fourth. This
they rewrite as they think it should read. They do not ever believe
that all of the fourth commandment is annulled. They contend that only
that part of the commandment is annulled which deals with a specific
day. They hold that the Sabbath has not been abolished, but that the
seventh day has.
This
position brings the controversy out into the open. It is a question
between the seventh and the first day of the week. The claim is that
the Sabbath has been transferred from the seventh to the first day of
the week; that Christ did this in virtue of His being Lord of the Sabbath,
or that the disciples made the change.
The
Apostles and the Sabbath
Let us first consider the possibility of the apostles' changing the
Sabbath from one day to another. We would, of course, question the right
of any man, however great, to change the law of Jehovah. We would question
that God ever commissioned any man to do it. We would want a very definite
declaration to that effect before believing it. God Himself, upon Mt.
Sinai, proclaimed the law, prescribed severe penalties for its transgression,
and enforced the law throughout the subsequent history of the Jews.
It was this same law which He made the basis of His covenant with Israel,
promising them great reward upon condition of obedience. We do not believe
that any man, however great, has any right or
p
151 -- mandate to change God's commandments.
A law
publicly announced cannot be secretly annulled. If a change in the law
is desired, the change should be made by as great authority as the one
who first enacted it, and the nature of the change should be made plain.
If, as in this case, the observance of one day is to be discontinued
and the observance of another day ordered, this change must be made
plain beyond the possibility of misunderstanding. Also, if the new day
is to be honored with the same reverence as the old, then its institution
should be accompanied with the same or greater manifestation of respect
and honor.
God
Himself led the way in the observance of the seventh-day Sabbath. He
Himself proclaimed it in flaming fire from the mount. He Himself wrote
it in enduring stone. Millions of God's people were witnesses and heard
the proclamation, and myriads of angels were there.
None of these conditions was present at the time when the first day
of the week was supposed to have been instituted. Sunday came in unannounced,
unheralded, unnoticed, in every way an anticlimax to the original institution
and inauguration of the Sabbath of the Lord. If God had anything to
do with the first day of the week, we must draw the conclusion that
He wanted the change made in the most secret and inconspicuous way possible;
for on that first Sunday nobody knew that any change had been made,
not even the disciples, who some say are supposed to have
p
152 -- made it I They were in as complete ignorance as the rest,
having locked themselves in a room for fear of the Jews. John 20:19.
We
can see no consistency in God's announcing a law from heaven in the
presence of millions of beings from this world and the worlds beyond,
a law that is to judge the living and the dead, announcing it with all
the glory and majesty at His command, so that the very earth quakes
and the mountains tremble, and then abolishing that same law in the
most inconspicuous manner, letting men find out years later what He
has done. One would almost come to the conclusion that God was ashamed
of what He had done. At least we are clear that the disciples had nothing
to do with it. They did not even know that Christ had risen. If it be
objected that it is not the Sabbath that is abolished, but only the
day of the Sabbath, we again call attention to the fact that when God
instituted the Sabbath it was the seventh day He blessed. In the Garden
of Eden all the morning stars sang together and all the sons of God
shouted for joy. On Mt. Sinai, all Israel were witnesses to its proclamation.
If all God's people were assembled when the seventh day was announced,
should not God call all His people together when He decides to honor
another day above the one He Himself called "the holy of the Lord?"
Should God do less for the first day of the week than He did for the
seventh ?
God
did everything that He could do to magnify the seventh-day Sabbath.
He honored it by
p
153 -- keeping it Himself. He rested upon it, He blessed it, He
sanctified it, He proclaimed it in glory from the mount. He did none
of these things for the first day of the week.
If
God had determined to show the difference between the first and the
seventh day of the week, if He had decided to show that the seventh
day is the Sabbath and that the first day is not, He could do no better
than point to the institution of the blessed, sanctified seventh day
in splendor and glory in the Garden of Eden and at Mt. Sinai, and by
way of contrast,. unhallowed, unblessed Sunday, instituted in obscurity,
arriving unannounced, unnoticed, unknown, even to the most intimate
followers of Christ, who at the time were hiding behind bolted doors
for fear of the Jews. This contrast alone is sufficient to show God's
estimation of the two days.
Did
God or Christ Change the Sabbath?
Christ had nothing to do with any change of the Sabbath day from the
seventh to the first day of the week. If He had, He would never have
done it in the way its advocates say it was done. According to their
view, instead of heralding to the world the inauguration of a new rule
of conduct, telling all that the old Sabbath had been abolished and
that a new day had dawned, a glorious day, far surpassing in splendor
the seventh-day Sabbath, its own advocates admit that Christ said nothing
to anybody concerning it, and that His own disciples were completely
in
p
154 -- the dark. We submit that this is altogether unlike Christ.
We know what God did in announcing the seventh-day Sabbath. Ought He
not at least to have notified the disciples most concerned, so that
they would not be in ignorance years after the event took place?
The whole conception seems entirely unlike God. If we are to have a
new Sabbath, let the old one be abolished by divine fiat, and let the
new one be honorably installed with at least as much respect paid to
it as was paid the old. Let this be done as openly and publicly as when
the Sabbath was first commanded and announced. Anything less than this
would be to the detriment of the new day, would, in fact, place it under
suspicion, and would reflect on God Himself.
In view of the fact that God has announced to the world and to angels
that "the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord," that is,
that it is God's own Sabbath; in view of the further fact that God has
announced Himself as "the Lord, I change not"; in view of
the still further fact that He is "the Father of lights, with whom
is no variableness, neither shadow of turning," would it not be
embarrassing to Him to announce that a change had been made in the day
of the Sabbath; that the seventh day which He had pronounced holy was
no longer holy; that henceforth it was not to be known as "My holy
day," "the holy of the Lord, honorable"; that another
day had been chosen in its stead; that He had removed the blessing and
sanctification with which He had
p
155 -- once invested the Sabbath; that it was now demoted to a common
working day; and that while men had formerly been punished for profaning
the Sabbath, they could now work all they wanted to on the seventh day,
and be guiltless? Mal. 3:6; James 1:17; Isa. 58:13. How could God after
such an announcement ever claim to be the One who changes not, the "Father
of lights, with whom there is no variableness" or "shadow
of turning" ? God and Angels
But if it would be embarrassing for God to make such an announcement
to men, would it not be equally or even more embarrassing to make it
to angels? They were present at the time of the giving of the law on
Sinai. They were present in the Garden of Eden when God rested on that
first beautiful Sabbath. They were present when the man in the wilderness
went out to gather sticks on the Sabbath, and they saw what happened
to him. But now for some reason God has changed. The angels are in perplexity.
They have associated and worked with men since the days of creation.
They have patiently helped and instructed them; they have warned them
not to profane the Sabbath; they have assisted conscience in bringing
men back to a realization of their errors; they have been used by the
Spirit in convincing men of sin; and again and again they have instructed
men in the sacredness of God's holy day. Even the week before the supposed
change of the Sabbath took place, they were engaged in teaching
p 156 -- men
the sacredness of God's holy Sabbath. But now the following week a change
has come. The Sabbath is no longer the Sabbath. They will now have to
educate men's conscience over again; and they wonder how they will justify
God in the sight of men, how they will justify the law. To them this
is no small matter. They are perplexed, and do not feel free to go to
God for help. Something has happened to God. He has changed, though
He claims that He never changes.
Angels, of course,
did not reason thus, for God would never put Himself in a position that
would call for such reasoning. Whatever God does, He does openly and
above board. If He had thought best to introduce another day than the
Sabbath, He would have been as open about it as He was in the introduction
of the seventh-day Sabbath. He would not secretly, surreptitiously,
almost ashamedly, institute a new, and as its defenders say, a far more
glorious day than the first Sabbath. No, a thousand times no! Such a
day would deserve a better introduction, as much greater and more glorious
as the first day of the week is supposed to be greater and more glorious
than the seventh! As God once spoke from heaven telling men their duty,
so He would again speak if He changed His requirements. This would seem
the only fair way, and would meet the approbation of mankind.
If there was any
justification for God's coming down on Mt. Sinai to announce to men
the ten commandments, there is the same justification for
p 157 -- God's
coming down the second time should He wish to change His law. God with
His own voice spoke the law and commanded men to keep it. God actually
wrote the ten commandments on two tables of stone and gave them to men,
that they might know exactly what He said. Men have a right to expect
God to stand by His word. In all fairness, if God wants to change the
rules of life, He should ask for the return of the two tables of stone;
He should clearly and definitely state the new commandments which men
were henceforth to observe; and, if a change of the Sabbath day was
in contemplation, He should give the reasons for such a change as He
originally gave reasons for keeping the seventh-day Sabbath. He should,
for His own sake, make some explanation why He once asked men to "remember
the Sabbath day, to keep it holy," and now asks them to forget
it. In justice to Himself He should make this clear, that men might
not err. The only pronouncement which men have so far is God's words
from Sinai. Men have a right to expect God to stand by this pronouncement
until such time as He openly repudiates the old and announces the new
conditions of life. Men's sense of fairness demands this; God's demands
much more.
Christ Lord of
the Sabbath
When Christ proclaimed Himself Lord of the Sabbath, did this mean
that He had a right to change the Sabbath day, and that He did so? Let
us consider this.
p 158 -- The
Pharisees presumed to make rules for the observance of the Sabbath -
rules which God did not countenance - and complained to Christ that
His disciples did not observe them. This was the occasion for Christ's
saying that He is Lord of the Sabbath. Just what did f Ic mean by this?
When Christ claimed
Lordship over the Sabbath, He in effect said, "I am the One to
make the rules, not you. I am Lord of the Sabbath." This statement,
made under such circumstances, would forever debar the Pharlsees, the
disciples, or any others from making any claim that they had any right
over the Sabbath. Christ alone has that. He is Lord of the Sabbath.
This would, of course, have direct application to such as felt themselves
capable of changing or abrogating the Sabbath commandment. In just so
many words Christ tells them that the Sabbath is under His jurisdiction,
and that they have no control over it whatsoever. He has given the Sabbath
to man, but He wants man to know that He is Lord of it.
We have noted elsewhere
that it was Christ who in the beginning made the Sabbath. This is clear
from such passages as John 1:3: "All things were made by Him; and
without Him was not anything made t hat was made." Among the things
that were made, "the Sabbath was made." Mark 2:27. It is therefore
clear that Christ made the Sabbath.
In view of this,
Christ's statement that He is Lord of the Sabbath takes on new meaning.
p 159 -- Christ
is Lord of all, and He is Lord also of the Sabbath. The word
"also" in this connection is significant. There are those
who are willing to accept Christ as Lord of many things, but not as
Lord of the Sabbath. But to deny His Lordship in one thing is to deny
it in all. Christians who accept Christ as their Lord should also accept
Him as Lord of the Sabbath. If they do this, they will accept Him as
Lord of the seventh-day Sabbath, for that was the day observed when
Christ proclaimed Himself Lord of it. The Sabbath was then a "going
concern." Christ would not be eager to proclaim Himself Lord of
that which was about to be abolished.
If Christ was and
is Lord of the Sabbath, we understand better His attitude toward it
while He was among men. We can but believe that Christ even on earth
was fully aware of the prominence given to the Sabbath in the Old Testament;
how it was a test and a sign, and how men had been punished for willfully
profaning it. He could not be fully aware of the fact that for centuries
God had tried to teach Israel the importance of the Sabbath, but that
they had ignored His prophets and teachers. Now at last they had had
their eyes opened to its importance, and had begun to esteem it highly
as one of God's choicest gifts. But, alas, the evil one had pushed them
to the other extreme, and the Pharisees had completely destroyed the
beauty and meaning of the Sabbath by imposing un-Biblical regulations
upon its observance.
p 160 -- We
believe that Christ knew all this, and also about the future; He was
acquainted with the fact that Sunday would be introduced into the church
as the successor of the Sabbath, and that He and His disciples would
be accused of having changed the day.
In view of this
foreknowledge, it would seem to us that when Christ spoke of the law
or the Sabbath, He would be very careful to so weigh and measure His
words and His acts that there could remain no doubt in the mind of any
regarding what He meant. Knowing that Christ knew the future and the
controversy that would rage about the Sabbath, we would reverently ask
Him a few questions and acquaint Him with some things that we wish might
be done. Here are some things we would like to know.
Some Questions
1.
We would like to have Christ make very clear whether the
law proclaimed on Mt. Sinai is still in force, or whether it has been
abrogated or changed in any manner whatsoever. We are anxious about
this, and would like an unequivocal statement about the law. It is clear,
of course, that if the law from Sinai is still in force, if it has not
been annulled or changed, then "the seventh day is the Sabbath
of the Lord thy God." We would like to have a statement from Christ's
own mouth in regard to whether He considers this law still in effect.
Has the law been changed in any way? Has so much as a jot or tittle
been
p 161 -- changed?
We reverently ask this question of the Master, and hope that He will
answer it; for some great men say that the law has been changed, while
others say that it has not. Christ is the only one who can settle the
question. We sincerely hope and pray that He will do so.
2. We
would like to know whether any man has a right to change the law or
the Sabbath. We would like to know whether a great man has a
right to do this. In view of the fact that the Papacy claims the right
to make such a change, we would like to know whether this claim was
known to God beforehand; and if it were, and if God knew of all the
confusion that such a claim would make - that millions would believe
it - we would humbly inquire if it would not have been a good thing
for God to expose such a diabolical plan beforehand and unmask the deceiver,
so that all men might know that God had nothing to do with such a dastardly
undertaking. We would not presume to dictate to God, but if God knew
all this, we would think it fitting for God to reveal the plot, so that
all men might know the truth. So we reverently ask, first, whether God
knew of this, and, second, what precautions He took, if any. We are
simple-minded enough to believe that the answer would be helpful to
mankind.
3. We
would like to know whether God knew beforehand of the millions who would
desert the Sabbath of the Lord and keep the first day of the week instead;
and if He did, what steps, if any, He took to inform the world that
Sunday is not
p 162 -- the
Sabbath of the Lord, but just an ordinary working day. We would like
not merely to know that the seventh day is the Sabbath of the
Lord; we would also like to have Him say that the first day is not
the Sabbath. We would like to have God place the two days side by side,
and say, This day is the Sabbath, and this day is not
the Sabbath. We would not dictate to God - we repeat this - but in our
heart of hearts we wish that God would make the matter very plain.
4. We
wish that God would do one more thing. The Bible says that the Sabbath
is a sign of sanctification, but it seems to us that the world has not
had a very convincing demonstration of that. True, the Jews observed
the seventh day, but they have not always been a good example of the
sanctifying power of God. We wish that God would make another demonstration.
We wish that He would select a people, just a common, ordinary people,
and make them an object lesson to the world of what He can do with lowly
clay; we wish that He would give them the Sabbath as of old, that He
would sanctify them wholly, and then make some such demonstration as
was made on Mt. Carmel when Elijah stood alone against the false prophets
of Baal and Astarte. We wish that He would send another Elijah before
the great and terrible day of the Lord, and give men a chance to choose
whom they will serve, having all the facts before them. It seems to
us that the claims of Sabbath and Sunday should be made clear to all,
and that the knowledge of
p 163 -- God
and His Sabbath should be spread like leaves of autumn. We would like
to see the earth be lighted with the knowledge of God, that all men
might know what their duty is. In other words, we would like to see
the question of Sabbath and Sunday come to the front among the questions
of the day, the merits of the two days be freely discussed, and all
the world know that there is a controversy going on. We would like to
see the work of God finished in a blaze of glory and not be confined
to a small and humble sect. We wish God would do something of the kind.
To our minds He owes it to Himself to do this.
We have here asked
a good many things of God. We hope that we have not been presumptuous
in doing so. We might indeed confide to the reader that the questions
here asked, God has already anticipated and answered, and many more.
We would never have dared ask them, had we not known that God had the
answer ready. He knew that such questions would come up in the mind,
and He graciously provided the solution. Of this we shall now study.
p 164 -- Sunday
in the New Testament
In the preceding
chapter we expressed the wish that God would make the question of Sabbath
and Sunday clear beyond possibility of misunderstanding. We expressed
the hope that God would place the two days side by side in the New Testament,
and say, This day is the Sabbath, and this day is not
the Sabbath. Then all doubts would be forever resolved, and all uncertainties
cleared away.
We are glad to know
that God has done this very thing. Sabbath and Sunday are both mentioned
in the New Testament; they are placed side by side in just the way we
should like to see it done, and the two days are contrasted. That gives
a fair opportunity for evaluating each of them, and to draw such conclusions
as seem warranted from the evidence adduced.
Some have thought
that it would have been better if only Sunday had been mentioned in
the New Testament, and nothing said of the Sabbath. Others think that
it would have been better if the Sabbath only had been made prominent
and nothing whatever said of Sunday. Tuesday is not mentioned; why should
Sunday be? If God did not want men to keep the first day of the week,
why are there eight distinct references made to it in the New Testament?
Does not that lend color to the contention that Sunday has some definite
place in New Testament religion?
p 165 -- This
argument will carry weight unless it can be shown that God placed Sunday
in the New Testament for the specific purpose of telling men that Sunday
is not the Sabbath. This, we believe, is the very thing God has done.
As stated above,
the first day of the week is mentioned eight times in the New Testament,
but at no time is it called the Sabbath. The eight texts are found in
the following places: Matthew 28: 1; Mark 16:1, 2; Mark 16:9; Luke 24:1;
John 20:1; John 20:19; Acts 20:7; 1 Corinthians 16:2.
The First Text
Acts 20:7 records the only religious meeting in the New Testament that
was held on the first day of the week; so we shall consider it first.
This is the reading of the text:
"Upon the first
day of the week, when the disciples came together to break bread, Paul
preached unto them, ready to depart on the morrow; and continued his
speech until midnight."
Here a definitely religious meeting is recorded. It was held upon "the
first day of the week, when the disciples came together to break bread."
Paul was leaving "on the morrow" on a long journey. We are
informed that he "continued his speech until midnight." A
young man was sitting in a window, and "as Paul was long preaching,
he sunk down with sleep, and fell down from the third loft, and was
taken up dead." Verse 9. Paul, however, restored him to life, bread
was broken, and Paul continued to speak "even till break of
p 166 -- day."
Then he took his departure, and went on foot a distance of about eighteen
miles to meet the ship which was to take him on his way.
There are several
questions that confront us in this account. First, When was the meeting
held? The record shows that it was held in the evening, for there "
were many lights in the upper chamber," and Paul spoke till midnight,
and then continued "till break of day." The question is wethether
the meeting was held on Saturday or Sunday evening. As is known, the
Bible reckons the day from sunset till sunset, while the common present
reckoning is from midnight to midnight. When the Bible speaks of the
first day of the week, the time from sunset Saturday till sunset Sunday
is meant. Ordinarily a
meeting held in the evening of the first day of the week would mean
that it was held Saturday night; but there are indications that it was
not always so reckoned, and hence it may be that this particular meeting
was held on what we call Sunday night.
In the particular
case under consideration, commentators are nearly evenly divided, some
holding that the meeting occurred Saturday night, others, Sunday night.
We have no special light on the question. We are willling to accept
either view, as for our purpose it makes little difference. We leave
this question for the reader to decide for himself according as he sees
best. In any event a a meeting was held, either Saturday or Sunday night.
At that meeting Paul preached and bread was broken.
p 167 --
Was this a special meeting called because Paul was about to leave on
a long journey, and this was the last opportunity he would have to meet
with them before the boat sailed? The evidence seems to be in favor
of this. It was unusual in those days to hold meetings at night, except
in times of persecution, for it was dangerous to be abroad in the dark.
Then, too, the gates of the city were closed at sunset, and no one who
lived outside the city could conveniently attend such a meeting. We
are therefore inclined to believe that this was an unusual meeting.
This is the only
record in the New Testament of the disciples meeting the first day of
the week to break bread. Acts 2:46 states that they continued "daily
with one accord in the temple, and breaking bread from house to house."
This states that they broke bread daily, which would, of course, include
the first day of the week; but there is no record that bread was broken
only on that day, to the exclusion of other days.
The question in
which we are interested is that of whether this meeting on the
first day of the week proves that this day was the Sabbath; that is,
whether the disciples were observing the first day of the week as the
Sabbath at this time, and whether Paul was observing the first day with
them, meetiing with them, speaking to them, and breaking bread with
them. This is an important question that deserves study.
It is to
be noted that the account of the meeting says nothing about the Sabbath.
It would
p168 -- have
been easy for Luke to insert a word, stating that this meeting was held
on the Sabbath. That he does not do this is significant. It seems clear
that the reason for the meeting's being recorded in the Bible is the
fact that a miracle was performed. A dead man was brought back to life
again, and Luke notes this unusual happening. It was not often that
such an event took place, and Luke recorded it.
The other events
of the meeting are mentioned incidentally, and apparently were not of
chief concern. We are not for instance, told the subject of Paul's talk.
We know, therefore, that it was not the sermon that impelled Luke to
report the meeting. If the meeting had anything to do with the observance
of the first day of the week, we may be sure that Luke would have reported
this most important fact. Also the fact that nothing is said of Paul's
speech, is proof that it did not deal with the subject of a new Sabbath.
All that Luke says about the speech is that Paul "continued his
speech until midnight," "was long preaching," "talked
a long while, even till break of day." Luke was not greatly impressed
with the content of the sermon.
There are other
questions that call for consideration. If the meeting was held Saturday
night - which to many seems most likely - then Paul had a long journey
ahead of him for Sunday. Would Paul have undertaken such a journey on
the new Sabbath? Luke, who is the author of the book of Acts, as well
as of the third Gospel, in
p. 169 -- reporting
the events of the crucifixion and resurrection of Christ, makes note
of the fact that the women did not attempt to embalm the body on the
Sabbath, but "rested the Sabbath day," and that this resting
was "according to the commandment." The time of the writing
of the book of Luke and that of Acts are not far apart. Is it conceivable
that he would not faithfully make a record of such a drastic change
as that from Saturday to Sunday, had such a change occurred? If this
particular meeting took place on Saturday night, Paul started his journey
of eighteen miles at daybreak to get to his boat. This would hardly
be an auspicious introduction of the first-day Sabbath, either to the
church there or to New Testament readers.
If, on the other
hand, this meeting was held Sunday night, then it was not held on the
first day of the week at all, for the first day ended at sunset Sunday
evening, and this meeting was held later than sunset. Should we even
admit of midnight as the beginning of the new day according to our present
reckoning, we would still be in difficulty, for the meeting lasted till
Monday morning, and the bread was broken after midnight. We confess
that the record seems to us quite unsatisfactory if it is to be used
as a prop for Sundaykeeping.
From the record
of the meeting we learn the following:
The meeting was
a special meeting, held because Paul was about to leave on a journey
and
p. 170 -- wanted
to break bread with the church once more before they parted.
The meeting was
reported by Luke because of the restoration of the young man who fell
and was killed.
There was no great
theological or other issue at stake, and Paul's sermon has not been
preserved for us, which it would have been had it been of unusual importance.
This last consideration
would rule out that the meeting or sermon had anything to do with the
Sabbath question. Luke, who had a "perfect understanding of all
things from the very first," would be quick to detect any variation
from the usual procedure. Luke 1:3.
While the first
day is mentioned in this account, nothing is said of its being the Sabbath.
This night meeting, if it had any relation whatever to the Sabbath question,
would have presented an excellent opportunity for the historian, Luke,
to record any new development in the teaching since the days of Christ.
The fact that he records a meeting held on the first day of the week,
coupled with the fact that he conspicuously omits any mention of it
as a Sabbath meeting held in honor of Sunday, is conclusive proof that
he did not consider it to have any relation to the Sabbath whatsoever.
We believe that inspiration purposely recorded a meeting as being held
on the first day of the week to give opportunity for the observant reader
to note that God does not recognize the first day as the Sabbath.
p. 171 --
If the holding of a meeting on the first day of the week is proof of
that day's being the Sabbath, or that it has any bearing on the Sabbath
question, what shall we say of the meeting which Paul held in Antioch
on the seventh-day Sabbath? Acts 13:14. That would balance the argument,
for now we have the record of one meeting held on the Sabbath and one
on Sunday. But Paul held a meeting the next Sabbath also! Verse 44.
That would make the arugment twice as strong for the Sabbath as for
Sunday! But that is not all. In Thessalonica he held meetings on three
Sabbaths. Acts 17:2. That makes the argument five to one in favor of
the Sabbath. But even that is not all. At Corinth he stayed "a
year and six months," and "he reasoned in the synagogue every
Sabbath, and pursuaded the Jews and the Greeks.'' Acts 18:11, 4. A year
and six months are seventy-eight weeks and the same number of Sabbaths.
Added to the previously recorded five Sabbaths, this makes a total of
eighty-three recorded meetings that Paul held on the Sabbath, and the
ratio is now eighty-three to one in favor of the Sabbath as against
Sunday.
We, however, reject
any such reasoning. The number of times meetings are held on a certain
day has no bearing whatever on the question of that dav's being the
Sabbath. But
to any who believe that the fact that Acts records a meeting as being
held on Sunday has any bearing on the question of that day's being the
Sabbath, we submit the above computation.
p
172 -- We
have now examined the only text in the New Testament that records any
religious ' meeting held on the first day of the week. We have found
nothing that even remotely connects it with the Sabbath. There is no
mention of it as a holy day or of any observance of it. We now turn
to the consideration of the second text.
The
Second Text
This text is recorded in 1 Corinthians 16:1,2. "Now concerning
the collection for the saints, as I have given order to the churches
of Galatia, even so do ye. Upon the first day of the week let every
one of you lay by him in store, as God hath prospered him, that there
be no gatherings when I come."
Paul
here exhorts the saints to lay by on the first day of the week a sum
proportionate to the prospering hand of God. He had ordered the same
to be done in the other churches in Galatia.
Some
have thought that this refers to a collection to be taken in the churches
on Sunday, and that Paul was giving directions in regard to how it should
be done. It is to be noted, however, that neither church nor meeting
is mentioned. Each man was to lay "by him in store." "By
him" means "by himself," or "at home," as it
is also translated. "In store" means that he should keep it
until it was called for.
Paul
knew the value of systematic giving. He was making a collection for
the poor saints, and he knew that unless the people laid by a little
p
173 -- every week, there would not be much for him to collect when
the time came.
How
much was each to give? Paul did not say; but he suggested that he give
"as God hath prospered" him, which was a reasonable way of
giving. This is the same principle that governs tithe paying. The man
who earned much would give correspondingly, while he who earned little
would give according to his income.
This
God-ordained plan is most equitable. It of course necessitates some
system of keeping a record of the income, especially in the case of
businessmen; for if they are to give weekly, they must look over their
accounts weekly, or they would be unable to know how God had prospered
them. Paul recommended that this work be done on Sunday.
These
people were doubtless familiar with the principle already; so all they
needed was a reminder. The suggestion that the examination of accounts
be done on the first day of the week might have been new to them, but
the principle of proportionate giving was not new. Paul might have thought
that some of them would be tempted to do this examining of accounts
on the Sabbath, and so he suggests that it be done on the first day
of the week. At that time they were to go over the record, and as God
had prospered them they were to lay by in store.
Those
who use this advice of Paul's as an argument for Sunday sacredness -
a most curious use indeed - make several mistakes.
p.
174 -- They fail to note that this is not a public collection.
They
fail to note that this is not speaking of a church service.
They
fail to note that this money is not to be given in a collection to be
taken then and there, but is to be kept "in store" until such
time as it is called for.
They
fail to note that this setting aside of funds is to be done "by
him," that is, by each person, at home, not in church, not in company,
but by himself.
They
fail to note that the gift of each is to be proportionate to the prosperity
with which God has blessed him, and that this calls for a weekly accounting,
to determine the income, and a weekly laying aside according to the
amount of income. This might in some cases involve considerable bookkeeping,
which would be altogether inappropriate to do on the Sabbath, but which
Paul considers to be good work on Sunday.
A
careful reading of Paul's advice in the text before us results in the
conviction that the text constitutes a sound argument for the sacredness
of the seventh-day Sabbath, and a strong argument against Sunday sacredness.
The
Third Text
We now turn to a consideration of the six remaining texts, all of which
deal with the day of the resurrection.
This
text is found in Matthew 28:1: "In the
p
175 -- end of the Sabbath, as it began to dawn toward the first
day of the week, came Mary Magdalene and the other Mary to see the sepulcher."
The Revised Version reads, "Now late on the Sabbath day, as it
began to dawn toward the first day of the week, came Mary Magdalene
and the other Mary to see the sepulcher."
There
are differences of opinion among translators in regard to the correct
rendering of this text, but for our present purpose we are willing to
accept either of the translations given above. The text mentions two
days. The one is called the Sabbath; the other is called the first day
of the week. The Sabbath comes before the first day, and is definitely
distinguished from it. There is no intermingling or confusion of days,
and no change of the Sabbath day is suggested. We are simply informed
that in the end of the Sabbath, as it began to dawn toward the first
day of the week, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary came to the sepulcher.
It
is interesting to note what this text says, and also what it does not
say. The Gospel of Matthew was written about thirty years after the
death of Christ. In that time the Holy Spirit had ample time to impress
upon the hearts of the leading disciples that a new Sabbath had come
into existence, if that indeed were the case. It would be most fitting
if some reference to this supposed fact had been made when Matthew mentions
the resurrection. It would have been easy to make some remark that would
indicate
p
176 -- that the old Sabbath was superseded by the new. It seems
passing strange that thirty years after the resurrection, Matthew still
calls the seventh day the Sabbath, and fails to improve the opportunity
of putting in a word for Sunday.
Inspiration,
of course, foresaw that there would be a controversy about the two days.
That controversy could have been settled in the text before us, if Matthew
had only stated that the new Sabbath had taken the place of the old.
As he did not do this, may we not believe that he settled the controversy
by calling the seventh day the Sabbath and completely neglecting to
recognize or make any claim for Sunday as the Sabbath?
The
Fourth and Fifth Texts
The fourth text reads as follows: "When the Sabbath was past, Mary
Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James, and Salome, had brought sweet
spices, that they might come and anoint Him. And very early in the morning
the first day of the week, they came unto the sepulcher at the rising
of the sun." Mark 16:1, 2. To this we would add the fifth text,
found in the same chapter. "Now when Jesus was risen early the
first day of the week, He appeared first to Mary Magdalene, out of whom
He had cast seven devils." Mark 16:9.
Verse
9 refers to the same first day mentioned in verse two. It states that
Jesus first appeared to Mary Magdalene when He arose early the first
day of the week. It does not state that the first
p
177 -- day of the week is the Sabbath; it merely affirms that on
that day Christ met Mary Magdalene.
Verse
2 states that the women mentioned in verse 1 came to the sepulcher on
the first day of the week as the sun was rising. We are told that they
came to anoint the Saviour, and brought sweet spices with them for that
purpose. The statement is also made that "the Sabbath was past"
when they started on their errand.
Here
again we have the two days placed side by side, the Sabbath and the
first day of the week. We are told that the Sabbath is the day that
precedes the first day of the week, and that when the first day comes,
the Sabbath is past. We again note that inspiration, speaking through
Mark as it had through Matthew, thirty years after the resurrection,
calls the seventh day the Sabbath, and that the only name given Sunday
is the first day of the week.
We
would again suggest that it would have been easy for the inspired writer
to put in a word for Sunday in this particular place. That he failed
to do so is significant. We would further suggest that, if the inspired
writer did not wish to exalt Sunday, he might have remained neutral
or silent on the question. But he does not. He tells us that the day
before Sunday, that is, the seventh day, is Sabbath. That is putting
in a good word for the Sabbath. But he does more than that. He tells
us that the women did work on Sunday which they would not do on the
Sabbath, important as that work was. This is more
p
178 -- than neutrality. It is definite bias in favor of the Sabbath
as against Sunday. Note carefully the situation.
Christ
died on Friday. On that day the women bought spices and prepared them,
ready to embalm the body. Luke 23:56. When the Sabbath was past, they
came to the sepulcher early at the rising of the sun to begin their
work. That is, they worked Friday and Sunday, but not on the Sabbath.
These were the women who were nearest Christ, His closest followers.
Of them inspiration reports, thirty years after the death of Christ,
that they did not work on the Sabbath, but that they did work on Sunday.
The text does not enlarge on this; it merely refers to it as a matter
of fact.
It
was necessary to embalm bodies as soon as possible in a climate such
as that of Palestine. Of Lazarus it is stated that his body on the fourth
day "stinketh," in the expressive though somewhat inelegant
language of the time of King James. John 11:39. Sunday was the third
day since Christ's death, as then reckoned. If there ever was any excuse
for working on the Sabbath, it would seem that this would be the time.
But the women had been with Christ. They had learned of Him. They knew
how He kept the Sabbath. It never occurred to them to embalm His body
on that day, and this despite the fact that the climate almost demanded
it. Inspiration records that they waited till Sunday to do this work.
p
179 -- This text definitely contrasts Sabbath and Sunday. It says
in effect: "Do not work on the Sabbath. Keep that day holy. Do
your work on the other days. However necessary it may seem to work on
the Sabbath, do not do it. The God who preserved the manna, so that
it did not spoil, can easily preserve a body from corruption. Remember
the Sabbath day, to keep it holy."
The
Sixth Text
The sixth text is found in Luke 24:1, "Now upon the first day of
the week, very early in the morning, they came unto the sepulcher, bringing
the spices which they had prepared, and certain others with them."
This is the same event which the other evangelists record, with some
added information. The preceding verses read: "That day was the
preparation, and the Sabbath drew on. And the women also, which came
with Him from Galilee, followed after, and beheld the sepulcher, and
how His body was laid. And they returned, and prepared spices and ointments;
and rested the Sabbath day according to the commandment." Luke
23:54-56.
We
learn from this that on the day of preparation, that is, Friday, Christ
was crucified, and that He died as the Sabbath was drawing on. We learn
also that the women that same Friday prepared spices for His anointing,
and that on the following day, Saturday, they rested "according
to the commandment." If we take these verses
p
180 -- in connection with Luke 24:1, we find that three days are
under review, the day of preparation, the Sabbath, and the first day
of the week. We are told that the women worked two of these days, but
that on the Sabbath they rested.
There
is nothing in these texts that says or suggests that Sunday is the Sabbath.
On the contrary, the difference between Sunday and the Sabbath is made
very distinct and clear. The women worked on the day of preparation,
Friday. On Saturday they did not work; they rested, and this was "according
to the commandment." On Sunday they brought their material to anoint
their Lord. This makes a definite contrast between the two days, and
makes emphatic that the day which comes between Friday and Sunday is
"the Sabbath day according to the commandment." This, then,
makes Saturday the Sabbath of the Lord. Nothing is said of Sunday sacredness.
The only mention is that on Sunday the women came carrying the material,
ready to go to work.
We
would call special attention to one word that takes on some importance,
the word "now," the first word in the statement, "Now
upon the first day of the week." Luke 24:1. The word in the original
is "but," not "now." The Revised Version correctly
reads, "But on the first day of the week." If we read the
context, we are made aware of the contrast which the word "but"
is meant to convey. The women "rested the Sabbath day according
to the commandment,
p
181 -- But upon the first day of the week. . . ." The
contrast here is between the Sabbath and the first day of the week.
On the Sabbath they rested, but. The statement is clear, and
so is the meaning; they rested on the Sabbath, but on the first
day they worked. The "but" should be given all the weight
which inspiration has put in it.
The
text states definitely which day is the Sabbath in the New Testament,
and also which day is not the Sabbath. It states which day is "the
Sabbath day according to the commandment," states that the women
who followed Christ rested on that day but that on the next day they
did not rest. We have, therefore, here an inspired statement that the
day before Sunday is "the Sabbath day according to the commandment,"
and that hence Sunday cannot be the Sabbath; and we have an inspired
"but" to show the contrast between the two days. It is the
same "but" that is in the commandment itself with the same
contrast, though reversed. "Six days shall thou labor, and do all
thy work: but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God."
Ex. 20:9,10.
The
Seventh and Eighth Texts
These two texts are found in John 20:1,19. "The first day of the
week cometh Mary Magdalene early, when it was yet dark, unto the sepulcher,
and seeth the stone taken away from the sepulcher." "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
p
182 -- of the Jews, came Jesus and stood in the midst and saith
unto them, Peace be unto you."
The
first of these texts repeats what the other evangelists have said, and
appears to add nothing new or different. The first day is mentioned,
but nothing is said of its being the Sabbath. It merely records that
Mary Magdalene came early the first day of the week to the grave, which
same statement is made by the other evangelists.
The
second text mentions that the disciples were assembled that "same
day at evening, being the first day of the week," that is, Sunday
evening. We are not told the purpose of their assembly. The doors were
shut, bolted, "for fear of the Jews."
At
this time the disciples were in ignorance of the resurrection of Jesus.
Because of this ignorance we know that they were not assembled to celebrate
the resurrection. Though they knew that Christ was not in the tomb,
they simply could not believe that He was risen from the dead. We also
know that they were not assembled to celebrate a new Sabbath in commemoration
of the resurrection, for the reason just stated, that they did not believe
that Christ had risen. All we know is that they were together, and that
they were afraid of the Jews and had bolted the doors.
It
is not easy to understand how any can see in this account an argument
for Sunday sacredness. But inspiration knew that the time would come
when men would grasp at any straw to support them in their contention
for a first-day Sabbath.
p
183 -- As a matter of historical accuracy, it was necessary to make
a report of the meeting, for it was an important one, and inspiration
must report the truth. But in this case inspiration took special precaution
that there be no misunderstanding. God knew that the statement that
the disciples were assembled Sunday night would be interpreted by some
to mean that it was a religious meeting to celebrate the resurrection,
or Sunday, or something. So inspiration makes it plain that the disciples
were not meeting to celebrate the resurrection, or to celebrate Sunday.
They were gathered for fear of the Jews, and not for the celebration
of anything.
It
might in passing be noted that while this meeting was held Sunday night,
it was in reality not held on the first, but on the second, day of the
week, for the first day, according to Biblical reckoning, closed with
sunset Sunday evening. The first day of the week is not entirely synchronous
with Sunday, for the civil day begins and ends at midnight, while the
Biblical day begins and ends at sunset. The disciples were gathered
on what we call Sunday night; but when Sunday night comes, the first
day of the week is already ended, and the second day of the week is
begun. According to the Biblical method of counting time, the meeting
was held on the second day of the week and not on the first. However,
as all are agreed that it was held on Sunday evening, we are not stressing
this technical point. Either way, inspiration wants us to know that
the disciples
p
184 -- were not gathered to celebrate the first day of the week
as Sabbath. But it is interesting to know that, technically speaking,
there was no meeting at all held on the first day of the week.
Summary
We have now considered every text in the New Testament that mentions
the first day of the week. Instead of finding them favorable to the
first day of the week as the Sabbath, we find in them strong proof for
the sacredness of the seventh-day Sabbath. We sum up the teaching of
inspiration as follows:
When inspiration
finds it necessary to mention the first day, it takes pains to contrast
that day with the Sabbath. Inspiration could have used these opportunities
to tell us that the first day henceforth was to be the Sabbath. It does
not do so.
Inspiration
could have mentioned the first day of the week without bringing it into
contrast with the Sabbath. But it purposely makes the contrast prominent.
Inspiration
could have referred to the seventh day without calling it the Sabbath.
It might have called it the day preceding the first day of the week,
thus avoiding calling it the Sabbath and at the same time making Sunday
prominent. But it does nothing of the kind.
Inspiration
could have avoided stating that the day that comes between Friday and
Sunday is the Sabbath according to the commandment, but it
p
185 -- does not try to avoid it. It makes that point prominent.
Inspiration
could have avoided making as sharp a contrast as it does between Sabbath
and Sunday by omitting the "but" in Luke 24:1. But inspiration
seems determined to emphasize that point.
Inspiration
could have recorded the meeting Sunday night without mentioning that
the disciples had bolted the doors for fear of the Jews. Had that been
omitted, the impression might have been left that it was some kind of
celebration meeting. As it is now, we are told that they did not have
any faith in the resurrection, and that, of course, spoils any idea
of using this text in favor of Sunday sacredness.
We
hold, therefore, that the references to the first day of the week in
the New Testament have been put there by God Himself for the specific
purpose of affirming that the seventh day is the Sabbath of the new
dispensation, and that the first day is not.
There
is one more text that perhaps could be considered in this connection,
though it does not speak of the first day. It is the statement found
in Revelation 1:10, "I was in the Spirit on the Lord's day."
Some believe that this has reference to Sunday.
It
may be confidently stated that nowhere in the Bible, in either the Old
or the New Testament, is the first day of the week ever called the Lord's
p
186 -- day; nor is it in any way connected with it. There is only
one Lord's day, and that is the day which God calls "My holy day,"
or the Sabbath of the fourth commandment. Isa. 58:13; Ex. 20:8-11.
John
was "in the isle ... called Patmos, for the word of God, and for
the testimony of Jesus Christ." Rev. 1:9. As a prisoner he might
have been put to work in the copper mines of the island, of which there
were many and which were worked by slave and prison labor. Probably,
though, because of his age, he was not required to work at all. In any
event, on the Lord's day, the blessed day that he so often had enjoyed
with the Master, the seventh day of the week, God revealed Himself to
John, and gave him those visions that have been the study of God's children
ever since.
As
stated, there is no Biblical ground whatever for calling Sunday the
Lord's day. This contention rests on extra-Biblical grounds which no
true Protestant can accept. We rest the case there.
p
187 -- Chapter 11 --Some
Questions Answered
We
propose
in this chapter to consider some of the questions asked in a previous
chapter that deal with the law and the Sabbath. The first of these concerns
the abrogation of the law.
Has the Law Been Abrogated?
This question need not take a long time in answering, for we have already
partially answered it elsewhere. Is there any statement from the mouth
of Christ Himself that answers the question whether the law, or any
part of it, has been abolished? This question is important, for it must
be clear to all that if the law has been abrogated or changed, then
we are entirely out of order in making any argument based on an annulled
law. If, on the other hand, the law has not been changed, not even in
the smallest particular, then we have all reason to emphasize the ten
commandments and consider them binding. We therefore ask Christ: Has
the law of ten commandments been abrogated or changed?
The
answer comes right back: "Think not that I am come to destroy the
law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill. For
verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle
shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled. Whosoever
therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach
men so, he shall be called
p
188 -- the least in the kingdom of heaven; but whosoever shall do
and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven."
Matt. 5:17-19.
These
are familiar words. They are understandable. Christ here tells us that
not one jot or tittle, not the least word or letter, has been changed.
Words could not make this plainer.
To
this the apostles agree. We quote from Paul, John, and James:
"Do
we then make void the law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish
the law." Rom. 3:31.
"He
is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for
the sins of the whole world. And hereby we do know that we know Him,
if we keep His commandments." 1 John 2:2, 3.
"By
this we know that we love the children of God, when we love God, and
keep His commandments. For this is the love of God, that we keep His
commandments: and His commandments are not grievous." 1 John 5:2,
3.
"But
who looks into the perfect law of liberty, and continues therein, he
being not a forgetful hearer, but a doer of the work, this man shall
be blessed in his deed." James 1:25.
"If
ye fulfill the royal law according to the scripture, Thou shalt love
thy neighbor as thyself, ye do well: but if ye have respect to persons,
ye commit sin, and are convinced of the law as transgressors. For whosoever
shall keep the
p
189 -- whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all.
For He that said, Do not commit adultery, said also, Do not kill. Now
if thou commit no adultery, yet if thou kill, thou art become a transgressor
of the law. So speak ye, and so do, as they that shall be judged by
the law of liberty." James 2:8-12.
From
this it is clear that the apostles had no idea of any change of the
law; they stand just where Christ stood.
The
Right to Change the Sabbath
Here is the second question we are to consider: Did God know that a
power should arise that would claim the right to change the commandments
of God? If so, should not God have forewarned His people; should not
God have said something about it in the Bible, so that we might know
that He was not taken by surprise, but knew what was coming and provided
for it?
To
this the answer is that God knows the future, and that hence He knew
about the claims which the Papacy would make to change the law of God.
A further answer is that God revealed this audacious plan in the Bible
long before Christ came to this world.
First,
perhaps, we should settle the question of whether the Roman Catholic
Church makes the claim that it has power to change the law of God, and
in particular, the right to change the Sabbath day. This, of course,
is a tremendous claim, even a blasphemous claim. We have noted before
p
190 -- that Christ says He is Lord of the Sabbath, indicating clearly
thereby that He denies the right of anyone to tamper with the Sabbath.
He evidently knew that there would arise men who would claim the power
to change the ordinances of God. In saying that He is Lord of the Sabbath,
He deprives any man of the right to touch it in any way.
The
question has arisen in many minds how men have come to observe the first
day of the week as the Sabbath, in plain contradiction to the statement
of Scripture that "the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord."
Our present study will help clear this mystery.
There
is probably no more convincing testimony regarding the guilt of a person
than the confession of the person involved. In obtaining such a confession,
there must of course be no compulsion; it must be a free act, not brought
about through or under duress. If a person who has the use of his faculties
is accused of a crime, and of his own free will confesses his part in
the transgression, there is every reason to accept the testimony as
true.
If
we apply this principle to the question under discussion, if we ask
the accused point-blank if he is guilty or not guilty as charged, if
he should answer that he is guilty and should not only willingly furnish
the information, but be proud of what he has done and publish his confession
far and near, we would be inclined to accept such confession, especially
as and if it agreed with known facts. We are therefore going to ask
p
191 -- the accused, the Roman Catholic Church, some very definite
questions, or rather and better, we are going to let the church ask
its own questions and answer them.
The
Claims of the Papacy
"Question . - Which is the Sabbath day?
"Answer. - Saturday is the Sabbath day.
"Qes. - Why do we observe Sunday instead of Saturday?
"Answer. - We observe Sunday instead of Saturday because
the Catholic Church, in the Council of Laodicea (A. D. 336), transferred
the solemnity from Saturday to Sunday." - Rev. Peter Geiermann,
C.S.S.R., The Convert's Catechism of Catholic Doctrine, p. 50,
2d edition, 1910.
"Question. - Has the [Catholic] church power to make any
alterations in the commandments of God?
"Answer. - ...Instead of the seventh day, and other festivals
appointed by the old law, the church has prescribed the Sundays and
holy days to be set apart for God's worship; and these we are now obliged
to keep in consequence of God's commandment, instead of the ancient
Sabbath." - Rt. Rev. Dr. Challoner, Catholic Christian Instructed,
p. 211.
"We
Catholics, then, have precisely the same authority for keeping Sunday
holy, instead of Saturday, as we have for every other article of our
creed; namely, the authority of 'the church of the living God, the pillar
and ground of the
p
192 -- truth' ( 1 Tim. 3:15); whereas, you who are Protestants have
really no authority for it whatever; for there is no authority for it
in the Bible, and you will not allow that there can be authority for
it anywhere else. Both you and we do, in fact, follow tradition, in
this matter; but we follow it, believing it to be a part of God's word,
and the church to be its divinely appointed guardian and interpreter;
you follow it, denouncing it all the time as a fallible and treacherous
guide, which often 'makes the commandment of God of none effect.' "
-Clifton Tracts, vol. 4, article, "A Question for All Bible
Christians," p. 15.
"Question.
- Have you any other way of proving that the church has power to institute
festivals or precepts?
"Answer. - Had she not such power, she could not have done
that in which all modern religionists agree with her, - she could not
have substituted the observance of Sunday the first day of the week,
for the observance of Saturday the seventh day, a change for which there
is no Scriptural authority." - Rev. Stephen Keenan, A Doctrinal
Catechism, p. 174. New York: Edward Dunigan and Brothers, 1851.
"Question.
- By whom was it [the Sabbath] changed?
"Answer. - By the governors of the church, the apostles,
who also kept it; for St. John was in the Spirit on the Lord's day (which
was Sunday). Apoc. 1:10.
"Ques. - How prove you that the church hath
p
193 -- power to command feasts and holy days?
"Ans. - By the very act of changing the Sabbath into Sunday,
which Protestants allow of; and therefore they fondly contradict themselves,
by keeping Sunday strictly, and breaking most other feasts commanded
by the same church.
"Ques. - How prove you that?
"Ans. - Because by keeping Sunday, they acknowledge the
church's power to ordain feasts, and to command them under sin; and
by not keeping the rest [of the feasts] by her commanded, they again
deny, in fact, the same power. "Rev. Henery Tuberville, D.D.R.C.,
An Abridgment of the Christian Doctrine, p. 58. New York: Edward
Dunigan and Brothers, approved 1833.
How
will a Protestant answer this challenge?
"You
will tell me that Saturday was the Jewish Sabbath, but that the Christian
Sabbath has been changed to Sunday! But by whom? Who has authority to
change an express commandment of Almighty God? When God has spoken and
said, Thou shalt keep holy the seventh day, who shall dare to say, Nay,
thou mayest work and do all manner of worldly business on the seventh
day; but thou shalt keep holy the first day in its stead? This is a
most important question, which I know not how you can answer.
"You
are a Protestant, and you profess to go by the Bible and the Bible only;
and yet in so important a matter as the observance of one day in seven
as a holy day, you go against the plain
p
194 -- letter of the Bible, and put another day in the place of
that day which the Bible has commanded. The command to keep holy the
seventh day is one of the ten commandments; you believe that the other
nine are still binding; who gave you authority to tamper with the fourth?
If you are consistent with your own principles, if you really follow
the Bible and the Bible only, you ought to be able to produce some portion
of the New Testament in which this fourth commandment is expressly altered."
- Library of Christian Doctrine: Why Don't You Keep Holy the Sabbath
Day? pp. 3, 4. London: Burns and Oats (R. C.).
And
here is another challenge:
"The
Catholic Church for over one thousand years before the existence of
a Protestant, by virtue of her divine mission, changed the day from
Saturday to Sunday. We say by virtue of her divine mission, because
He who called Himself the 'Lord of the Sabbath,' endowed her with His
own power to teach, 'he that heareth you, heareth Me'; commanded all
who believe in Him to hear her, under penalty of being placed with the
'heathen and publican'; and promised to be with her to the end of the
world. She holds her charter as teacher from Him - a charter as infallible
as perpetual. The Protestant world at its birth [in the Reformation
of the sixteenth century] found the Christian Sabbath too strongly entrenched
to run counter to its existence; it was therefore placed under the necessity
of acquiescing in the arrangement, thus implying the church's right
p
195 -- to change the day, for over three hundred years. The Christian
Sabbath is therefore to this day the acknowledged offspring of the Catholic
Church as spouse of the Holy Ghost, without a word of remonstrance from
the Protestant world." - The Catholic Mirror (Baltimore),
Sept. 23, 1893.
We
believe that these statements from recognized Catholic sources are sufficient
to prove the point made, that the Roman Catholic Church not only claims
to have changed the law of God as regards the Sabbath commandment, but
is proud of the fact, and claims that it has done so by divine authority.
The church chides Protestants for keeping the first day of the week,
for which there is no Scriptural authority, but only the edict of the
Catholic Church, when the Protestants claim to accept the Bible and
the Bible only.
It
appears to us that the Catholic Church is more consistent than the Protestant
in this matter. For how can Protestants stand on the Bible and the Bible
only and yet accept and obey the voice of the Catholic Church instead
of that of Christ? In doing so, Protestants certainly "fondly contradict
themselves, by keeping Sunday strictly, and breaking most other feast
days commanded by the same church."
Having
heard the claims of the Catholic Church that it has a right to change
the law of God, and the challenge that is thus made to Protestants to
give a reason for their keeping any other day than the seventh day of
the week,
p
196 -- we would consider the next part of this question; namely,
whether God knew beforehand of this apostasy, and what He has to say
on the question.
God's
Foreknowledge
It is no light thing to attempt to change the constitution of the universe.
Such an attempt is the height of rebellion. It strikes at the very heart
of the government of heaven. Any treason higher than that could hardly
be conceived of. It is undermining the foundations. It is destroying
the ground of the atonement, and making of none effect the blood of
Christ. A movement such as this, that would eventually gain as many
followers as it has, should surely be a subject of prophecy. While it
would be presumptuous for man to say what God ought to do, it does seem
reasonable to suppose that God would not leave men in darkness to battle
alone and ignorantly against such forces and such apostasy.
In
this belief we are not mistaken. For God has spoken. We are not left
in darkness, nor are we left alone. The whole conspiracy is clearly
revealed in Holy Writ. Its inception, progress, and end are faithfully
delineated. We need not be misled. All is open to the One with whom
we have to do. He has revealed His secrets unto His servants the prophets.
To
the prophet Daniel the future was revealed. In visions of the night
he saw the struggles of the saints, the course of world history, the
judgment, and the end of all things. He was
p
197 -- given a view of a power which was to think itself able to
change times and laws, and he saw that this power would have success
in its undertakings for a season, until God Himself should intervene.
This vision troubled Daniel much. He said, "My countenance changed
in me: but I kept the matter in my heart." Dan. 7:28.
As
it is not the purpose of these studies to go exhaustively into the prophecies
of the book of Daniel, we shall content ourselves with a very brief
outline of the chapter under consideration.
Daniel's
Prophecy
Daniel, in the vision recorded in the seventh chapter of his book, sees
four great beasts, which are explained by the angel to be four kings,
or kingdoms, which should arise out of the earth. Dan. 7:17. The fourth
beast which Daniel saw was different from the rest, in that it was exceeding
dreadful, and had teeth of iron and nails of brass. It also had ten
horns, of which three were plucked up. The most remarkable thing, however,
was a little horn which came up in place of the three. This horn had
eyes like the eyes of a man and a mouth that spoke great things. This
horn "made war with the saints, and prevailed against them."
Verse 21. Daniel was especially interested in this horn, for of it the
angel said that "he shall speak great words against the Most High,
and shall wear out the saints of the Most High, and think to change
times and laws." Verse 25. In this he would succeed for a while,
but
p
198 -- then the judgment would sit and the saints would take the
kingdom.
There
is general agreement among commentators that these four kingdoms are
the four world empires - Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece, and Rome. "The
fourth beast shall be the fourth kingdom upon earth. . . . And the ten
horns out of this kingdom are ten kings that shall arise: and another
shall rise after them; and he shall be diverse from the first, and he
shall subdue three kings." Verses 23-25. Rome, the fourth kingdom,
was divided into ten parts, in harmony with God's prediction. It was
after this division that another power should arise, diverse from the
first, which should subdue three kings. This prophecy found its fulfillment
in the Papacy, which was different from the first kingdoms, and which
did in actuality subdue three kingdoms in its rise to power.
We
are, in this study, especially interested in the statement that this
power should "think to change times and laws: and they shall be
given into his hand until a time and times and the dividing of time."
Verse 25. The American Translation of the Old Testament published
by the University of Chicago reads: "He shall plan to change the
sacred seasons and the law." The Septuagint reads: "Shall
think to change times and law." Young's says: "It hopes
to change season and law." The American Revised: "He
shall think to change the times and the law."
Other translations say the same. The word
p
199 -- "law" in the Hebrew is in the singular, and doubtless
has reference to the law of God, as there would be no point in saying
that a certain power should change a human law - a thing that is done
continually.
If
we are correct in this interpretation, we are face to face with a power
that should attempt to change the law of God, written and engraved on
stones. This is a most presumptuous undertaking, and could be attempted
only by a power that should presume to speak for and act in the stead
of Christ. That it must be a religious power is clear from the fact
that only such a power would be interested in the law of God.
We
have already given the testimony of the Roman church that it claims
the very power to do what the Bible says it shall attempt to do. It
is interesting to note that while the church claims to have changed
the law and the Sabbath, the Bible does not recognize any such claim,
but merely says, "He shall plan to
change," or, "He shall think to change," or, "It
hopeth to change." The Bible thus affirms Christ's statement
that He is Lord of the Sabbath. Men may claim the right to change,
or that they have changed, the Sabbath. God quietly observes that men
may "plan" or "think" or "hope" to change
the Sabbath, but they have no power to do so. The wording of this statement
in Daniel 7:25 is in itself a weighty testimony to the fact that the
Sabbath has not been changed. Men may hope or plan to change it, but
God says it cannot be done.
p
200 -- What Protestants Say
It might at this point be interesting to hear what Protestant denominations
have to say on this question. Do they recognize the situation as presented
by the Roman Catholic Church? Do they know of the claims made, and do
they acknowledge them? As long ago as the Protestant Reformation, this
was incorporated in the. Augsburg Confession:
"They
[the Catholics] allege the Sabbath changed into Sunday, the Lord's day,
contrary to the decalogue, as it appears; neither is there any example
more boasted of than the changing of the Sabbath day. Great, say they,
is, the power and authority of the church, since it dispensed with one
of the ten commandments. "- Augsburg Confession, Art. XXVIII.
We
shall now append quotations from writers who belong to different denominations.
They all present the same testimony.
"It
is quite clear that, however rigidly or devoutly we may spend Sunday,
we are not keeping the Sabbath. . . . The Sabbath was founded on a specific,
divine command. We can plead no such command for the obligation to observe
Sunday. . . . There is not a single sentence in the New Testament to
suggest that we incur any penalty by violating the supposed sanctity
of Sunday." R. W. Dale, M.A. (Congregationalist), The Ten Commandments,
pp. 106, 107. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1871.
"There
is no word, no hint, in the New Testament
p
201 -- about abstaining from work on Sunday . . . . Into the rest
of Sunday no divine law enters . . . . The observance of Ash Wednesday
or Lent stands upon exactly the same footing as the observance of Sunday."
- Canon Eyton (Church of England), The Ten Commandments, pp.
62, 63, 65. London: Trubner & Co., 1894.
"And
where are we told in Scripture that we are, to keep the first day at
all? We are commanded to keep the seventh; but we are nowhere commanded.
to keep the first day. . . . The reason why we keep the first day of
the week holy instead of the seventh is for the same reason that we
observe many other things, not because the Bible, but because the church,
has enjoined it." Rev. Isaac Williams, B.D. (Church of England),
Plain Sermons on the Catechism, Vol. 1, pp. 334-336. London:
Rivingtons, 1882.
"It
is impossible to extort such a sense from the words of the commandment;
seeing that the reason for which the commandment itself was originally
given, namely, as a memorial of God's having rested from the creation
of the world, cannot be transferred from the seventh day to the first;
nor can any new motive be substituted in its place, whether the resurrection
of our Lord or any other, without the sanction of a divine commandment."
- The Christian Doctrine, book 2, chap. 7, in Prose Works
of John Milton, vol. 5, p. 70. London: Henry G. Bohn, 1853.
"For
if we under the gospel are to regulate the time of our public worship
by the prescriptions of
p
202 -- the decalogue, it will surely be far safer to observe the
seventh day, according, to the express commandment of God, than on the
authority of mere human conjecture to adopt the first." - "A
Treatise on Christian Doctrine," John Milton; cited in The Literature
of the Sabbath Question, Robert Cox, vol. 2, p. 54. Edinburgh: Maclachlan
and Stewart, 1865.
"I
conceive the celebration of this feast [Easter] was instituted by the
same authority which changed the Jewish Sabbath into the Lord's day
or Sunday, for it will not be found in Scripture where Saturday is discharged
to be kept, or turned into the Sunday; wherefore it must be the church's
authority that changed the one and instituted the other; therefore my
opinion is, that those who will not keep this feast [Easter] may as
well return to the observation of Saturday, and refuse the weekly Sunday."
- Extract from the Query to the Parliament Commissioners by King Charles
II, April 23, 1647; cited in Sabbath Laws and Sabbath Duties,
Robert Cox, p. 333. Edinburgh: Maclachlan and Stewart, 1853.
"The
Sabbath was appointed at the creation of the world, and sanctified,
or set apart for holy purposes, 'for man,' for all men, and therefore
for Christians; since there was never any repeal of the original institution.
To this we add, that if the moral law be the law of Christians, then
is the Sabbath as explicitly
enjoined upon them as upon the Jews." - Richard Watson, A Biblical
and Theological Dictionary, art. "Sabbath,"
p
203 -- pp. 829, 813. New York: B. Waugh and T. Mason, 1833.
"The
Great Teacher never intimated that the Sabbath was a ceremonial ordinance
to cease with the Mosaic ritual. It was instituted when our first parents
were in Paradise; and the precept enjoining its remembrance, being a
portion of the decalogue, is of perpetual obligation. Hence, instead
of regarding it as
a merely Jewish institution, Christ declares that it 'was made for man,'
or, in other words, that it was designed for the benefit of the whole
human family. Instead of anticipating its extinction along with the
ceremonial law, He speaks of its existence after the downfall of Jerusalem.
[See Matt. 24:20.] When He
announces the calamities connected with the ruin of the Holy City, He
instructs His followers to pray that the urgency of the catastrophe
may not deprive them of the comfort of the ordinances of the sacred
rest. 'Pray ye,' said He, 'that your flight be not in the winter, neither
on the Sabbath day.' " - William D. Killen, D.D., The Ancient
Church, pp. 188, 189. New York: Anson D. F. Randolph & Co.,
1883.
These
testimonies all agree that there is no Scriptural authority for any
change of the Sabbath. They agree also with the Bible on this point;
so we accept their testimony as conclusive.
It
may now be well to inquire just how the change came about. Some would
have us believe that the change came about suddenly. This, however,
is not the case. The change was gradual
p
204 -- and took some centuries for its accomplishment. Farrar says
on this: "The Christian church made no formal, but a gradual and
almost unconscious, transference of the one day to the other."
Archdeacon F. W. Farrar, The Voice From Sinai, p. 167. Doctor
Killen adds this information: "In the interval between the days
of the apostles and the conversion of Constantine, the Christian commonwealth
changed its aspect. . . . Rites and ceremonies
of which neither Paul nor Peter ever heard, crept silently into use,
and then claimed the rank of divine institutions. "-W. D. Killen
(Presbyterian), The Ancient Church, Preface to original edition,
pp. XV, XVI. London: James Nesbet & Co., 1883.
The
truth is that for many centuries the observance of the seventh day continued.
On this, Mr. Morer, a learned clergyman of the Church of England, says:
"The primitive Christians had a great veneration for the Sabbath,
and spent the day in devotion and sermons. And it is not to be doubted
that they derived this practice from the apostles themselves."
- Dialogues on the Lord's Day, p. 189.
Professor
Edward Brerewood, of Gresham College, London (Episcopal), says: "The
ancient Sabbath did remain and was observed . . . by the Christians
of the East Church, above three hundred years after our Savior's death."
- A Learned Treatise of the Sabbath, p. 77.
Lyman
Coleman, a careful and candid historian,
p
205 -- says: "Down even to the fifth century the observance
of the Jewish Sabbath was continued in the Christian church, but with
a rigor and solemnity gradually diminishing until it was wholly discontinued."
- Ancient Christianity Exemplified, chap. 26, sec. 2, p. 527.
The historian Socrates, who wrote about the middle of the fifth century,
says: "Almost all the churches throughout the world celebrate the
sacred mysteries on the Sabbath of every week, yet the Christians of
Alexandria and at Rome, on account of some ancient tradition, refuse
to do this." - Ecclesiastical History, book 5, chap. 22,
p. 404.
Sozomen,
another historian of the same period, writes: "The people of Constantinople,
and of several other cities, assemble together on the Sabbath as well
as on the next day; which custom is never observed at Rome, or at Alexandria."
- Ibid., book 7, chap. 19, p. 355.
The
first legal enactment concerning Sunday took place in the fourth century
after Christ, and is known as Constantine's Sunday law.
"The
earliest recognition of the observance of Sunday as a legal duty is
a constitution of Constantine in AD. 321, enacting that all courts of
justice, inhabitants of towns, and workshops were to be at rest on Sunday
(venerabili die Solis), with an exception in favor of those engaged
in agricultural labor." - Encyclopaedia Britannica, ninth
edition, article "Sunday."
"Constantine
the Great made a law for the
p
206 -- whole empire (321 A. D.) that Sunday should be kept as a
day of rest in all cities and towns; but he allowed the country people
to follow their work." Encyclopedia Americana, art. "Sabbath."
"Unquestionably
the first law, either ecclesiastical or civil, by which the Sabbatical
observance of that day is known to have been ordained, is the edict
of Constantine, 321 AD." Chamber's Encyclopedia, art. "Sabbath."
The
law reads as follows:
"On
the venerable day of the sun let the magistrates and people residing
in cities rest, and let all workshops be closed. In the country, however,
persons engaged in agriculture may freely and lawfully continue their
pursuits; because it often happens that another day is not so suitable
for grain sowing or for
vine planting; lest by neglecting the proper moment for such operations,
the bounty of heaven should be lost. (Given the seventh day of March,
Crispus and Constantine being consuls each of them for the second time.)"
- "Codex Justinianus," lib. 3, tit. 12, 3; translated in History
of the Christian Church, Philip Schaff, D. D. (7 vol. ed.) vol.
3, p. 380. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1893.
Of
this the Reverend George Elliott says:
"To
fully understand the provisions of this legislation, the peculiar position
of Constantine must be taken into consideration. He was not himself
free from all remains of heathen superstition. It seems certain that
before his conversion
p
207 -- he had been particularly devoted to the worship of Apollo,
the sun-god. . . . The problem before him was to legislate for the new
faith in such a manner as not to seem entirely inconsistent with his
old practices, and not to come in conflict with the prejudices of his
pagan subjects. These facts serve
to explain the peculiarities of this decree. He names the holy day,
not the Lord's day, but the 'day of the sun,' the heathen designation,
and thus at once seems to identify it with his former Apollo worship."
- Rev. George Elliott, The Abiding Sabbath (prize essay), p.
229. American Tract Society, 1884.
However,
the church did not want to be left out, and Eusebius, a bishop of the
church in the time of Constantine, jubilantly records:
"All
things whatsoever that it was duty to do on the Sabbath, these we have
transferred to the Lord's day." - "Commentary on the Psalms,"
cited in The Literature of the Sabbath Question, Robert Cox,
vo1. 1, p. 361. Edinburgh: Maclachlan and Stewart, 1865.
It
was not until later, however, that the church on its own account took
legal steps to abolish the Sabbath and institute Sunday in its place.
"The
seventh-day Sabbath was . . . solemnized by Christ, the apostles, and
primitive Christians, till the Laodicean Council did, in a manner, quite
abolish the observation of it . . . . The Council of Laodicea [364 A.
D.] . . . first settled the observation of the Lord's day." - Pyrnne's
Dissertation on the Lord's Day, pp. 33, 34, 44.
p
208 -- The text, as quoted by Hefele, is as follows:
"Christians
shall not Judaize and be idle on Saturday [Sabbath, original], but shall
work on that day. . . . If, however, they are found Judaizing, they
shall be shut out from Christ." - A History of the Church Councils,
vol. 2, p. 316.
Ringgold
enumerates these later enactments:
"In
386, under Gratian, Valentinian, and Theodosius, it was decreed that
all litigation and business should cease [on Sunday]. . . .
"Among
the doctrines laid down in a letter of Pope Innocent I, written in the
last year of his papacy (416), is that Saturday should be observed as
a fast day. . . .
"In 425, under Theodosius the Younger, abstinence from theatricals
and the circus [on Sunday] was enjoined . . . .
"In
538, at a council at Orleans, it was ordained that everything previously
permitted on Sunday should still be lawful; but that work at the plow,
or in the vineyard, and cutting, reaping, threshing, tilling, and hedging
should be abstained from, that people might more conveniently attend
church. . . .
"About
590 Pope Gregory, in a letter to the Roman people, denounced as the
prophets of antichrist those who maintained that work ought not to be
done on the seventh day." - James T. Ringgold, Law of Sunday,
pp. 265-267.
In
view of all these testimonies, the following statement can hardly be
challenged:
"It
was the Catholic Church which, by the
p
209 -- authority of Jesus Christ, has transferred this rest to the
Sunday in remembrance of the resurrection of our Lord. Thus the observance
of Sunday by the Protestants is an homage they pay, in spite of themselves,
to the authority of the [Catholic] church." - Mgr. Segur, Plain Talk
About the Protestantism of Today, p. 213.
The
subject here presented is really a most astonishing one. We are face
to face with the fact that the Bible presents one day as the Sabbath,
and only one, the seventh day. Catholic and Protestant testimony has
been adduced to show that both recognize this fact. Then we have found
that the Bible says that a power would arise that should think itself
able to change the law. We search for this power and find it, and to
our astonishment the power not only admits that it is guilty, but is
proud thereof, and points to the Protestant body as endorsing what has
been done. We then turn to the Protestants, and find that they admit
that they have no Bible ground on which to stand, but are following
custom in this matter. We are perplexed, and wonder how Protestants
can stand on the Bible and the Bible only, and yet keep a day not hallowed
by God. And no answer to this riddle is forthcoming.
We
have already noted that the change from Sabbath to Sunday was not brought
about suddenly, but slowly and gradually. It would indeed be true to
state that the observance of the seventh day was never wholly obliterated
from the church. We can trace the Sabbath through the centuries,
p
210 -- and find that here and there companies of Christians observed
it even under persecution and trials.
"Down
even to the fifth century the observance of the Jewish Sabbath was continued
in the Christian church, but with a rigor and solemnity gradually diminishing
until it was wholly discontinued." - Lyman Coleman, Ancient
Christianity Exemplified, chap. 26, sec. 2, p. 527. Philaphia: Lippincott,
Grambo & Co., 1852.
Grotius
adds this bit of information:
"He
[Grotius] refers to Eusebius for proof that Constantine, besides issuing
his well-known edict that labor should be suspended on Sunday, enacted
that the people should not be brought before the law courts on the seventh
day of the week, which also, he adds, was long observed by the primitive
Christians as a day for religious meetings. And this, says he, 'refutes
those who think that the Lord's day was substituted for the Sabbath
- a thing nowhere mentioned either by Christ or His apostles.' "
- Hugo Grotius (d. 1645), Opera Omnia Theologica, London, 1679;
cited in The Literature of the Sabbath Question, by Robert Cox,
Vol. 1, p. 223. Edinburgh: Maclachlan and Stewart, 1865.
The
following two quotations show that the Sabbath was observed by the Celtic
Church in Scotland in the eleventh century:
"They
worked on Sunday, but kept Saturday in a Sabbatical manner." -
Andrew Lang , A History of Scotland, vol. 1, p. 96. Edinburgh:
William Blackwood and Sons, 1900.
p
211 --
"They seem to have followed a custom of which we find traces in
the early monastic church of Ireland, by which they held Saturday to
be the Sabbath, on which they rested from all their labors."-William
F. Skene, Celtic Scotland, book 2, chap. 8 (vol. 2, p. 349).
Edinburgh: David Douglas, 1877.
The
Abyssinians received Christianity in the fourth century through missionaries
from the Eastern Church. At that time the Christians had not as yet
given up the Sabbath; so the Abyssinians were taught the seventh-day
Sabbath and began to observe it. This they continued to do for more
than a thousand years, at which time Jesuit priests tried to persuade
them to give up the Sabbath and substitute Sunday. A hearing was held
at the court at Lisbon, where the Abyssinian legate offered the following
explanation:
"Because
God, after He had finished the creation of the world, rested thereon;
which day, as God would have it called the holy of holies; so the not
celebrating thereof with great honor and devotion seems to be plainly
contrary to God's will and precept, who will suffer heaven and earth
to pass away sooner than His word; and that, especially, since Christ
came not to dissolve the law, but to fulfill it. It is not, therefore,
in imitation of the Jews, but in obedience to Christ and His holy apostles,
that we observe that day. . . . We do observe the Lord's day after the
manner of all other Christians in memory of Christ's resurrection."
- "Reason for keeping Sabbath, given by
p
212 -- the Abyssianian legate at the court of Lisbon (1534); in
Church History of Ethiopia,.by Michael Geddes, pp. 87, 88. London:
R. Chiswell, 1696.
In
Norway Christians kept the Sabbath in pre-Reformation days, as the following
shows:
"The clergy from Nidaros, Oslo, Stavanger, Bergen, and Hamar, assembled
with us in Bergen at this provincial council, are fully united in deciding
in harmony with the laws of the holy church that Saturday keeping must
under no circumstances be permitted hereafter further than the church
canon commands. Therefore, we counsel all the friends of God throughout
Norway who want to be obedient toward the holy church, to let this evil
of Saturday keeping alone; and the rest we forbid under penalty of severe
church punishment to keep Saturday holy." - From minutes of the
Catholic Provincial Council, Bergen, A.D., 1435, in "Dipl. Norveg.,"
7, 397; cited in History of the Sabbath, by Andrews and Conradi,
pp. 673, ed. 1912.
The
work just quoted, History of the Sabbath, also gives examples
of Sabbath keeping in Sweden, Germany, England, and other European countries
in the centuries both before and after the Reformation. With the hundreds
of thousands now observing the Sabbath in practically every nation in
the world, we believe we are safe in saying that the Sabbath truth has
never been entirely obscured, but that every generation has had witnesses
for the truth once delivered to the saints.
p 213
-- Chapter 12 --Under
Grace
The
Jews had many feast days and Sabbaths which Christians are not to observe.
Seven of these feasts are mentioned in Leviticus 23. They include the
Jewish Passover, Pentecost, the Day of Atonement, and the Feast of Tabernacles.
These feasts were holy days for the Jews, and were called Sabbaths,
but they are definitely distinguished from the seventh-day Sabbath of
the Lord, which is not in any way connected with the ceremonial observances.
"In
the seventh month, in the first day of the month, shall ye have a sabbath,
a memorial of blowing of trumpets, a holy convocation." Lev. 23:24.
The first day of the seventh month might come on any day of the week,
the same as the first day of any month does now. Yet it was to be a
sabbath. Again, "On the tenth day of this seventh month there shall
be a Day of Atonement.... It shall be unto you a sabbath of rest."
Verses27, 32. The first day of the seventh month and the tenth day of
any month would always come on different days of the week; yet they
are both called sabbaths. Throughout the year there were seven feasts
coming on different days of the week, and in different months; yet all
were sabbaths. But it is distinctly noted, however, that "these
are the feasts of the Lord, which ye shall proclaim to be holy convocations,
to offer an offering made by fire unto the Lord, a burnt offering,
p
214 -- and a meat offering, a sacrifice, and drink offerings, everything
upon His day: beside the Sabbaths of the Lord." Verses 37,
38. A distinction is here made between the seven yearly feasts and the
Sabbaths of the Lord. God does not confuse them.
It
is to these yearly sabbaths that Paul had reference when he said that
they are not to be observed any more.
"Let
no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of an
holy day, or of the new moon, or of the sabbath
days: which are a shadow of things to come; but the body is of Christ."
Col. 2:16, 17.
Compare
this text with the one quoted above, and it will be seen that they speak
of the same things, of meats and drinks and feast days. These feasts
are "beside the Sabbaths of the Lord," and are distinguished
from them. We should not confuse the Lord's seventh-day Sabbaths with
the yearly sabbaths
of the Jews. They should carefully be distinguished. The seventh-day
Sabbath was included in the ten commandments written on stone. The feast
days were part of the ceremonial law abolished by Christ.
An
Interesting Question
Does not Paul say that Christ blotted out "the handwriting of ordinances
that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it out of the
way, nailing it to His cross" ? Yes, Paul says this in Colossians
2:14.
p
215 -- On this text the Reverend Thomas Hamilton, in his book, Our
Rest Day, which won first prize among the many essays submitted
on the Sunday question in a contest held in Scotland, speaks as follows:
"To
only one other argument on this part of the subject do we deem it necessary
to allude. It is said that Christ, having by His atoning work satisfied
the law of God-that law is gone, for us, forever. The text is quoted
- 'Having blotted out the handwriting of ordinances that was against
us.' Now this argument is simply based on a confusion of thought. Suffering
the penalty of a law does not abolish that law. Nor does perfect obedience
to a law abrogate it. But these two things constitute what Christ did.
He rendered a perfect obedience to the law, and He bore for His people
its utmost penalty. Neither of these two works of His, nor both of them
together, amount to anything like the abolition of the law. When a criminal
suffers on the scaffold, that means something very different from the
abolition of the law against which he has offended. It means the exact
contrary. It manifests the strength of the law. His death magnifies
the law. No doubt Christ has 'blotted out the handwriting of ordinances
that was against us and, has taken it out of the way, nailing it to
His cross.' The reference in this fine passage is to the practice in
Palestine, of a creditor, when his debt was discharged, driving a nail
through the bond, to signify that it was canceled. Christ has done that.
The ransom has
p
216 -- been paid for us, and is not to be paid over again by us.
But that act of His only 'magnifies the law, and makes it honorable;
' and just in proportion as we appreciate the greatness of the Redeemer's
work and enter into its spirit, will we continually honor the law of
God in our hearts and lives, not saying that we will have nothing to
do with it, but following in His footsteps in this as in all things,
and striving to uphold it to the best of our ability." - Page 63.
This
is excellent testimony, especially in view of the fact that the Reverend
Mr. Hamilton's essay was considered by the learned examining committee
as being the best of all essays submitted in favor of Sunday, and won
first prize.
Another
Question
There is another text which we shall now consider. We quote the entire
passage, that we may get the setting.
"Him
that is weak in the faith receive you, but not to doubtful disputations.
For one believeth that he may eat all things: another, who is weak,
eateth herbs. Let not him that eateth despise him that eateth not: and
let not him which eateth not judge him that eateth: for God hath received
him. Who art thou that judgest another man's servant? to his own master
he standeth or falleth. Yea, he shall be holden up: for God is able
to make him stand. One man esteemeth one day above another: another
esteemeth every day alike. Let every man be fully persuaded in his
p
217 -- own mind. He that regardeth the day, regardeth it unto the
Lord; and he that regardeth not the day, to the Lord he doth not regard
it. He that eateth, eateth to the Lord, for he giveth God thanks; and
he that eateth not, to the Lord he eateth not, and giveth God thanks."
Rom. 14:1-6.
This
text, the same as the one quoted above from Colossians 2:16, 17, deals
with eating - what may or may not be eaten - and also with days. It
has no reference to the seventh-day Sabbath of the Lord; in fact, the
Sabbath is not mentioned at all. The argument, as will be seen from
reading the whole chapter, deals with judging the brethren, concerning
which Paul recommends, "Let us not therefore judge one another
any more." Rom. 14:13. It was simply a phase of the old question
of "meats and drinks, and divers washings, and carnal ordinances,
imposed on them until the time of reformation." Heb. 9:10. It had
nothing to do with the Sabbath of the Lord, but concerned such questions
as the observance of the day of unleavened bread, the day of the blowing
of trumpets, the Day of Atonement, etc. Paul says in effect: "If
you wish to observe these days, do so, but do not judge others."
The
Two Ministrations
Another passage demands consideration. It is Paul's famous passage in
2 Corinthians 3: 1-11.
"Do
we begin again to commend ourselves? or need we, as some others, epistles
of commendation to you, or letters of commendation from you?
p
218 -- Ye are our epistle written in our hearts, known and read
of all men, forasmuch as ye are manifestly declared to be the epistle
of Christ ministered by us, written not with ink, but with the Spirit
of the living God; not in tables of stone, but in fleshy tables of the
heart. And such trust have we through Christ to Godward: not that we
are sufficient of ourselves to think anything as of ourselves; but our
sufficiency is of God; who also hath made us able ministers of the new
testament; not of the letter, but of the Spirit: for the letter killeth,
but the Spirit giveth life. But if the ministration of death, written
and graven in stones, was glorious, so that the children of Israel could
not steadfastly behold the face of Moses for the glory of his countenance;
which glory was to be done away: how shall not the ministration of the
Spirit be rather glorious? For if the ministration of condemnation be
glory, much more doth the ministration of righteousness exceed in glory.
For even that which was made glorious had no glory in this respect,
by reason of the glory that exceleth. For if that which is done away
was glorious, much more that which remaineth is glorious."
The
four expressions which especially concern us are the "ministration
of death, written and engraved in stones," in verse 7, which is
contrasted' with "the ministration of the Spirit" in verse
8; and the other two expressions in verse 9, "the ministration
of condemnation," of which it is said that it was "glorious,"
and the "ministration
p
219 -- of the Spirit," which is said to be "rather glorious,"
and to "exceed in glory."
First,
let us agree that that which was written and engraven in stones was
the ten-commandment law. Verse 7. Paul says in another place that "the
commandment which was ordained unto life, I found to be unto death.
For sin, taking occasion by the commandment, deceived me, and by it
slew me." Rom. 7: 10, 11. The
commandments were given unto life. However, if any transgress them,
they will be found unto death. Let all take note of this. To the transgressor,
the law of life becomes a law of death.
However,
it is not the commandments as such that Paul discusses in Corinthians,
but their ministration. It is the ministration of death
that is under consideration. What is meant by this?
To
teach Israel that it meant death to violate the commandments, the whole
sacrificial service was instituted. When a man had sinned, he was to
bring his offering, lay his hands upon it, and kill it. (See
Lev. 4:4, 15, 24, 29.) Note the repetition in these verses, "kill
the bullock," "the bullock shall be killed," "kill
it," "slay the sin offering." This was all to imprint
the seriousness of sin upon Israel. They learned from this that sin
meant death.
It
is this ministration of death which Paul calls "glorious."
How could he call it such? Because all the offerings pointed to Christ
and to His death, and in that sense were glorious. But more than this.
Through these offerings
p
220 -- forgiveness was had. When an Israelite brought his offering
and confessed his sins, the promise was, "It shall be forgiven
them," "it shall be forgiven him," "it shall be
forgiven him," "it shall be forgiven him." Lev. 4:20,
26, 31, 35. To be assured of the forgiveness of sin was a glorious experience
for the children of Israel. While it was a ministration of death, for
the bullock or the lamb was killed, yet the man went away forgiven -
a clear and impressive type-lesson of Christ, who should die, and through
whose death forgiveness might be had. This is the ministration which
Paul calls glorious.
Ministration
of the Spirit
But this glorious ministration was to be done away; that is, the whole
sacrificial system should be abolished, and another ministration was
to take its place. This new ministration is called the ministration
of the Spirit and the ministration of righteousness. It is wonderful
to be forgiven; but there is something still more glorious. It was wonderful
in olden days for a person who had sinned to be able to bring an offering,
kill it, and go away with the assurance of sins forgiven. But that,
after all, was only typical. The blood of bulls and goats can never
take away sin. But the blood of Christ can. We, in this dispensation,
need not bring a lamb to be killed. Christ has died for us. He is the
Lamb of God. "If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to
forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness."
p
221 -- 1 John 1:9. He is the reality, of which the other was a type.
That was glorious for them; this exceeds in glory.
But
there is more involved than this. The ministration of death functioned
only when sin had been committed. The ministration of the Spirit is
more glorious, in that it functions to prevent sin. As noted above,
it is glorious to be forgiven, but still more glorious to be kept from
sinning. And this is what the ministration of the Spirit means. "Walk
in the Spirit, and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh."
Gal. 5:16. This promise is as definite as Paul's other statement, "Sin
shall not have dominion over you." Rom. 6:14. Through the agency
of the Spirit "the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled
in us, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit."
Rom. 8:4. The "ministration of righteousness" is "rather
glorious" in that through it the law is fulfilled in us
rather than broken as of old. And so "the Spirit is life
because of righteousness."
We
have therefore in Corinthians contrasted two ministrations, one of death
- occasioned by the breaking of the law - and one of the Spirit because
of the keeping of the law. The one is a ministry of forgiveness, glorious
in itself, but not to be compared to the ministration of the Spirit,
which is life because of
righteousness, right doing.
These
are the two ministrations which Paul contrasts. It is not the law,
but the ministrations of the law, that are the subject. One was
of death, because of its transgression; the other was
p
222 -- of life, because through the Spirit the righteousness of
the law was fulfilled. This passage has nothing to do with the abolition
of law, or its change. It discusses only the ministrations.
Nature
of Sin
"Sin shall not have dominion over you; for yeare not under the
law, but under grace." Rom. 6:14.
There
are few more comforting words in the Bible than these, and also few
that are more misunderstood. To get the full force of these words in
their right setting, let us consider the context.
"Let
not sin therefore reign in your mortal body, that ye should obey it
in the lusts thereof. Neither yield ye your members as instruments of
unrighteousness unto sin: but yield yourselves unto God, as those that
are alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness
unto God. For sin shall not have dominion over you: for ye are not under
the law, but under grace. What then? shall we sin, because we are not
under the law, but under grace? God forbid. Know ye not, that to whom
ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye
obey; whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness?
But God be thanked, that ye were the servants of sin, but ye have obeyed
from the heart that form of doctrine which was delivered you. Being
then made free from sin, ye became the servants of righteousness."
Rom. 6:12-18.
p
223 -- "Sin shall not have dominion over you." Blessed
promise! Let every Christian thank God for these words, and may their
full significance sink deep into the consciousness of all.
In
the whole English language there is no uglier word than "sin."
Its mention brings up memories that are painful, saddening, and often
heartbreaking. Sin is the cause of all the suffering that is, or has
been, or ever will be. There is not a sorrow or a tear, not a heartache
or an anguish, but that sin is lurking near as its cause. It is no respecter
of persons. It attacks and ruins all alike. No one is exempt from it.
It affects not only the one it attacks. Through him it brings sorrow
and shame to all his loved ones. It has no redeeming virtue. It is evil
and only evil.
God
Suffers
One of the strange effects of sin is that the innocent suffer with the
guilty. How many mothers there are who have suffered because of their
wayward sons! How many wives and children there are who have suffered
because of the dereliction of a husband and father! Only eternity will
reveal the havoc sin has
wrought, and the injustice it has caused.
No
one has suffered more than God because of sin, and no one has paid a
greater price because of it. A look at the cross of Calvary convinces
anyone that the innocent suffer with the guilty, and that none has suffered
more than God Himself.
p
224 -- But such is the nature of sin. If it were otherwise, it would
not be sin.
How
could it be imagined that sin could affect the saints in heaven? Or
that it could affect God? Yet that is what it has done. Sin caused the
Son of God to come down from heaven, to live and die among men. It hanged
Him on a cross, pierced His hands and feet with cruel nails, and broke
His heart. The agony of those dreadful hours is symbolic of the agony
that has ever been in the heart of God because of sin. On Calvary a
fleeting glimpse was given of this supreme sorrow, and then the veil
was drawn. But enough was revealed. We know what sin will do; we know
what sin has done. If sin had its way, it would again tear Christ from
the throne, lacerate His back with stripes, put a crown of thorns on
His brow, spit in His face, and then nail Him to the tree. It did this
once to God's Son, and it has not changed its nature. Sin is ever the
same. What a wonderful thing it will be when sin shall be no more.
It
might be supposed that such a monster as sin would always appear repulsive
and forbidding. This is not the case, however. Sin is often attractive,
even beautiful and alluring. At times it keeps good company, is well
dressed, intelligent, vivacious, and highly artistic. Often it is cultured,
exhibits good taste, is a lover of music, and delights in the social
hour. It hobnobs with bishops and statesmen and the great of the earth,
but is, at the same time, at home in the hovel and the
p
225 -- brothel. It is generally greeted with pleasure, and is seldom
repulsed. It is a universal favorite.
This,
however, is true only in the beginning of its acquaintance. It soon
changes its attitude. Where it once was ingratiating and agreeable,
it becomes repugnant. Where once prevailed beauty, pleasure, and culture,
are hideousness, pain, and coarse vulgarity. Gone
are its attractiveness and its physical charm. Repulsiveness and coarseness
have taken their place.
Go
with me to the dance hall: Lithe, swaying bodies in rhythmic motion.
Beautiful lighting effect; enchanting music; lively conversation. Athletic
young men and charming girls, perfect appointments - little more that
heart could wish. Time passes rapidly. It is a wonderful evening. All
is like a dream.
Who
can imagine that this is the beginning of that which follows? Who can
imagine that this is the beginning of sorrow, shame, degradation, suffering?
All looks so innocent, so charming. But go with me to another place.
We
are in a hospital. There is the girl who, a few years ago, was young,
gay, brilliant. Now she is a raving maniac. There is that young man
of promise, once so strong, able, ambitious. Now he is wasting away
with a loathsome disease. As we look about us we see men and women who
once thought that just one drink would do no harm, one fling at unlawful
indulgence would have no unpleasant results. They learned too late that
the wages of sin is death, often a lingering, horrible
p
226 -- death, and that it does not pay to play with fire. They have
found, as all will find, that the end of sin is altogether different
from its beginning,
and that the consequences of transgression are sure and certain. They
have learned that the only surety of not having to take the last step
is in not taking the first.
What
can be done about sin? Is there no hope, no help? Must all who are subjected
to it go down to destruction? Must sin reign forever both in the world
and in our mortal bodies? Are we all doomed to hopeless misery and eternal
extinction? No, thank the Lord. Sin is no longer to have dominion over
us. For we are not under the law, but under grace. Apart from Christ
there is no hope for the human race. Men have battled sin in their own
strength for millenniums, but sin has come out victorious. There is
no help for sin from any human source. There is help and hope only in
God. Thank God that sin shall at last be rooted out, that sin shall
not reign in our mortal bodies. Victory over evil, full and complete,
shall be ours.
Not
Under the Law
"Ye are not under the law, but under grace." The promise that
sin shall not have dominion over us is comforting, but the statement
that we are not under the law but under grace, is misunderstood by many.
By some strange working of the mind, there are those who believe that
this statement releases them from fulfilling the moral duties
p
227 -- which the law imposes. They believe that the text permits
them to observe the part of the law which they approve, and to disregard
the part they do not approve. In view of this situation we may rightly
ask, What is the meaning of the phrase, "under the law"? Let
us illustrate.
A
man has committed a serious offense. He flees from the scene of the
crime and attempts to hide from the law which lie has broken. He is
under its condemnation, trembles at the approach of an officer of the
law, fearful lest he be recognized, shuns daylight, and feels unsafe
even in the dark; in general he leads an unhappy existence. These conditions
at last become unbearable, and he surrenders voluntarily; or, as is
more often the case, the law catches up with him, and he is placed in
prison. He is now not only under the condemnation of the law, but in
its custody. His freedom is at an end; he cannot move about any more
at will; he is in a cell awaiting the verdict. He is under the law.
This is the first primary meaning of being under the law. It has two
aspects, as may be noted. The first is that of being under the condemnation
of the law because of transgression. The second is that of being actually
in the custody of the law and deprived of freedom. The experience emphasizes
the point that
freedom is closely allied to obedience, and that the inscription seen
on many courthouses, "Obedience to the Law Is Liberty," is
more than a catchy phrase. It is a most solemn and important truth.
p
228 -- A
man who is thus under the law can be legally freed in one of two ways:
He can serve his sentence, at the expiration of which he will again
be a free man; or he can receive an official or executive pardon. To
be freed on bail, or to be paroled, is only a temporary and conditional
freedom and does not
come into our present discussion.
If
we apply these two ways of gaining freedom to a sinner before God who
has broken His law, we immediately recognize that there is no way in
which a sinner can serve his sentence and survive, for the wages of
sin is death. The only other way, therefore, in which he can ever be
freed, is to be pardoned. This pardon God freely extends to those who
ask Him in faith, and who fulfill the conditions upon which pardon is
granted.
These
conditions may briefly be summarized as: (1) sorrow for sin; (2) confession,
including restitution where possible and necessary; (3) sincere repentance,
including a determination to "go, sin no more"; (4) public
acknowledgment of Christ. The fulfillment of these conditions in no
way "earns" a man a pardon. They only make it possible for
God to extend mercy to him. "If we confess our sins, He is faithful
and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness."
1 John 1:9.
This text records God's promise of forgiveness and cleansing, and also
announces the condition upon which it is done.
These
considerations bring us to the conclusion that being "under the
law" means to be under its condemnation and in its custody, that
this
p
229 -- condition is brought about by transgression, and that the
only way in which a sinner can be freed is by the grace of God. This
grace is bestowed freely upon all who will conform to the conditions
laid down for full and free pardon.
Pardon
and Law
The criminal is under the condemnation of the law of God; the
good citizen is not. But both, bad and good, are under the jurisdiction
of the law. The criminal chafes under such jurisdiction and feels
under continual restraint; the good citizen does not feel any constraint.
He is hardly aware that there is a law, for he has no urge to trangress
it. The one hates the law; the other loves it, for he knows that it
is his protector and friend, and that he may appeal to it in case of
need. The one looks upon the law as an enemy that threatens to take
away his liberty; the other looks upon it as a friend that will protect
and guide, and without which neither life nor property is safe.
A
man who has transgressed the civil law, been placed in jail, and then
graciously pardoned, should not only be deeply thankful to those who
pardoned him, but should show his thankfulness by being scrupulously
careful of his conduct, so that he never again will come under the condemnation
of the law. He should consider that the law that condemned him also
pardoned him, and that the law in reality is his friend. This may need
elucidation.
p
230 -- A governor has the right to pardon only as the law makes
specific provision for it. He may not pardon indiscriminately, but only
as the law prescribes. He cannot liberate certain prisoners merely because
he is so inclined. He may free them only if the law permits him to do
so.
The
law, however, does not make pardon compulsory. It does not say that
the governor shall pardon, but that he may. This removes
all possibility of a man's ever earning his pardon. True, pardon
is ordinarily based on good behavior, but good behavior does not
earn the pardon. All it does is to create conditions that make pardon
possible. This distinction is vital, and makes God's pardon, and the
ground for it, more understandable.
A
Christian is a pardoned sinner. It is the height of folly as well as
of ingratitude for such a one to speak "evil of the law" (James
4:11), or hold it in contempt. Such conduct reacts on the Christian,
if such he can be called, and raises a doubt in regard to his eligibility
to pardon
Strange
to say, there are so-called Christians who do this very thing. All we
can do for such is to pray with Christ, "Father, forgive them;
for they know not what they do," and hope that their eyes may be
opened to the wonderful goodness of God in pardoning their sins. We
can think of no baser ingratitude than that of a man who has been "under
the law" and been forgiven, who feels at liberty to violate again
the very law for the transgression of which he has just
p
231 -- been pardoned. That makes God's grace to him of no effect.
It is this very thing Paul feared, when, in the verse immediately following
the one that speaks about not being under the law but under grace, he
exclaims, "When then? shall we sin, because we are not under the
law, but under grace?" This seems so utterly unreasonable to him,
that in horror and protest he uses the same emphatic expression that
he does in Romans 3:3 1, "God forbid." Rom. 6:15.
Some
were evidently reasoning that if sin gave God an opportunity to manifest
His grace, then they had better sin, so that God could have an opportunity
to administer His grace. Paul protests this also: "What shall we
say then? Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? God forbid.
How shall we, that are dead to sin, live any longer therein?" Rom.
6:1,2.
The
pardoned criminal is under double obligation to keep the law: first,
the ordinary obligation of any citizen to place his influence on the
side of law and order; and second, the added obligation because of the
mercy extended to him through his pardon. If for no other reason, out
of sheer gratitude he is under the most solemn obligation to offend
no more.
The
pardoned sinner is under like obligation. If, after having been pardoned,
he still persists in transgression, he sins not only against the law,
but against love, mercy, grace. He was pardoned on the condition, "Go,
sin no more." Interpreted, this statement says, "transgress
the law no
p
232 -- more," for "sin is the transgression of the law."
1 John 3:4. A
man may indeed come short and sin even after his conversion. But he
must make sure that his transgression is not willful, done with a "high
hand," and he must immediately make his plea for mercy. A pardoned
sinner who boasts that he is not under the law, meaning by this that
he is not under obligation to keep it, comes near to blaspheming. To
him the grace of God has been bestowed in vain.
The
true Christian is not under the condemnation of the law, though he is
under its jurisdiction. Being pardoned his transgression through the
abundant grace of God, he does not go about belittling the law, calling
it a yoke of bondage. He loves it. To him it is holy, just, and good.
He takes the same position which Christ did toward the law. He does
not destroy or break it. He keeps it. "
I
have kept My Father's commandments, and abide in His love." John
15: 10.
p
233 -- Chapter 13 God's Sign and Seal God's
Sign and Seal
When God delivered Israel out of the Egyptian bondage to make of them
a peculiar people, He stated definitely the conditions upon which He
would be their God. They were to "do that which is right in His
sight, and . . . give ear to His commandments, and keep all His statutes."
Ex. 15:26. The commandments here mentioned are the ten commandments,
recorded in Exodus 20, and the statutes are the accompanying laws recorded
in Exodus 21 to 23.
To
test the people, to "prove them, whether they will walk in My law,
or no," God proposed to rain manna from heaven for six days each
week, but "on the seventh day, which is the Sabbath, in it there
shall be none." Ex. 16:4, 26. God commanded them to go out each
day to gather the manna, but on the seventh
day they were not to go out. By this means He intended to "prove
them."
The
test was a simple one, as simple as the one given Adam in the Garden
of Eden. It was clearly a matter of obedience. But there was no hardship
about it. The order could easily be obeyed; and yet it constituted a
definite test of man's attitude toward God and His law.
Despite
the command given, "there went out some of the people on the seventh
day for to gather, and they found none." Verse 27. God now challenged
the people: "How long refuse ye
p
234 -- to keep My commandments and My laws?" As far as the
record reveals, the people had broken only one command. Yet God accused
them of having broken His commandments and laws. When they broke the
Sabbath, there was evidently more involved than the command in question.
It was true then as it is true now, that "whoever shall keep the
whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all." James
2:10. When Israel broke the
Sabbath law, God considered them guilty of disobeying all His commandments
and laws.
Because
of its peculiar nature, the Sabbath commandment has been God's test
throughout the ages. In fact, this seems to have been God's intention
from the beginning. He is still proving men, "whether they will
walk in My law, or no," by testing them on the Sabbath question.
Hear these words of Isaiah:
"Blessed is the man that doeth this, and the son of man that layeth
hold on it; that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it, and keepeth
his hand from doing any evil." Isa. 56:2.
Here
the Sabbath commandment is emphasized, and a blessing is pronounced
upon those who keep it. This blessing is extended to "the eunuchs
that keep My Sabbaths," and also to "the sons of the stranger,
that join themselves to the Lord, to serve Him, and to love the name
of the Lord, to be His servants,
everyone that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it, and taketh hold
of My covenant; even them will I bring
p
235 -- to My holy mountain, and make them joyful in My house of
prayer: their burnt offerings and their sacrifices shall be accepted
upon Mine altar; for My house shall be called a house of prayer for
all people." Isa. 56:4, 6, 7.
The
eunuchs were not all Jews, and the strangers were not Jews at all, but
foreigners, Gentiles. But to them the promise of the blessing of God
was extended on condition of keeping the Sabbath: "Everyone that
keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it, and taketh hold of My covenant;
even them will I bring to My holy mountain, and make them joyful in
My house of prayer."
It
cannot be supposed that God would offer these blessings to such as merely
kept the Sabbath commandment, but broke the other nine. Rather, God
was following His custom of making the Sabbath a test, "that I
may prove them, whether they will walk in My law, or no." Ex. 16:4.
As Adam and Eve in the
garden were told not to eat of the forbidden fruit, and as that was
made a test to them of general obedience, so God now makes a test of
the keeping of the Sabbath.
Charles
Hodge, in his "Systematic Theology," volume 2, page
119, says this of the temptation in the garden:
"The
specific command to Adam not to eat of a certain tree, was therefore
not the only command he was required to obey. It was given simply to
be the outward and visible test to determine whether he was willing
to obey God in all things. Created holy, with all his affections pure,
p
236 -- there was the more reason that the test of his obedience
should be an outward and positive command, something wrong simply because
it was
forbidden, and not evil in its own nature. It would thus be seen that
Adam obeyed for the sake of obeying. His obedience was more directly
to God, and not to his own reason."
These
are true words. The command to Adam not to eat of the fruit of that
certain tree was not the only command he was required to obey. It was
simply "the outward and visible test to determine whether he was
willing to obey God in all things." So the Sabbath is not the only
commandment God wants His people to keep; but it constitutes a test.
When men observe the Sabbath, they obey "for the sake of obeying."
Their obedience is more directly to God, and not to their own reason.
The
Sabbath and Creation
The Sabbath is closely associated with the fact of creation. The majestic
words: "In the beginning God created," are fit introduction
to Him who "spake, and it was done," who "commanded,
and it stood fast." As a memorial of creation God instituted the
Sabbath and asked men to observe it.
In
neglecting the memorial of creation, the Sabbath, men are liable to
forget both the God of creation and creation itself. Modern higher criticism
has almost succeeded in obliterating the God of Genesis, which is the
God both of creation
p
237 -- and of redemption. The god which the critics worship is not
the God of Genesis who in six days made the heavens and the earth, and
all that in them is. In so far as their god created anything, he did
it millions of years ago, when He made a little spark of life which
barely had the power of survival. Through slime, ooze, filth, fight,
and chance, this little spark finally became dominant, until it now
considers itself able to teach its Maker, contradicting the statements
of Him who in the beginning made all things. Critics have no use or
room for any "fall" in the Bible sense of the word; consequently
there is no
need of a Saviour, or Christ. Consistently, there is little need of
any "cross," or sacrifice, and men do not need to be "saved."
Such, to the critics, are primitive conceptions, which they have long
ago outgrown. Evolution is largely non-Christian, if not definitely
anti-Christian.
To
prevent, if possible, any such godless theory from gaining foothold,
God instituted the Sabbath as a memorial of creation. Had men kept the
Sabbath, there never would have been any higher critic, evolutionist,
or atheist, for the Sabbath would have been to him a continual reminder
of God and creation, and it would each week have provided the needed
time for contemplation and worship. This commandment underlies all the
others, in that it furnishes the occasion and time for prayer and study,
for communion with God and one's own soul, and is thus an incentive
to holy living. As Mary, in
p
238 -- sitting at the feet of Jesus, chose that good part which
should not be taken away from her, so men on the Sabbath have the opportunity
as on
no other day to sit at the feet of the Master. But this "good part"
Satan has attempted to take away, and he has nearly succeeded.
The
Sabbath a Sign of Sanctification
The Sabbath is not merely a memorial that points back to creation. It
is also a sign of the vital power of present accomplishment - a sign
of God's power in the transformation of lives, a sign of holiness, of
sanctification.
Says
God: "Moreover also I gave them My Sabbaths, to be a sign between
Me and them, that they might know that I am the Lord that sanctify them."
"Hallow My Sabbaths; and they shall be a sign between Me and you,
that ye may know that I am the Lord your God." "Verily My
Sabbaths ye shall keep: for it is a sign between Me and you throughout
your generations; that ye may know that I am the Lord that doth sanctify
you." Eze. 20:12, 20; Ex. 31: 13. These texts definitely connect
the Sabbath and sanctification. The one is a sign of the other.
Some
may wonder what connection there can be between the Sabbath and the
Holy Spirit; between sanctification and the keeping of a day. How can
the Sabbath be a sign that the Lord "doth sanctify you"? Let
us consider this.
Sanctification
is the power of God in the individual life so applied that the entire
being
p
239 -- becomes dedicated to God and His service. It is a Spirit-directed
life under the absolute control of God, perfectly yielded and consecrated.
It embraces an intense desire for communion with God, a thirsting after
the courts of the Lord, a hungering after the divine word that is all-consuming.
Christ expressed it in these words: "The zeal of Thine house hath
eaten Me up." John 2:17.
Such
a life is not an accident, nor is it brought about by the effort or
desire of man. It is all of God, who works in us both to will and to
do according to His good pleasure. When God has finished His work in
us, when He has reproduced His own image in the soul, He puts His seal
of approval upon the consecrated life. "He which stablisheth us
with you in Christ, and hath anointed us, is God; who hath also sealed
us, and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts." 2 Cor.
1:21, 22. Those who are thus sealed, are "sealed with that Holy
Spirit of promise," "sealed unto the day of redemption."
Eph. 1:13; 4:30. The Sabbath is the sign of this sanctification. "It
is a sign between Me and you throughout your generations; that ye may
know that I am the Lord that doth sanctify you." Ex. 31:13. It
is God's stamp of approval, impressed upon the heart by the Spirit of
God.
For
the Sabbath to be a sign of sanctification, it must of course include
more than the mere abstinence from labor on a certain day. It is in
a very vital sense true, that no unregenerate man
p
240 -- can keep the Sabbath holy. He may cease from his common duties,
he may even attend divine service, but this does not ensure his entering
into the rest of God. Only a Christian can do this. Only "we which
have believed do enter into rest." Heb. 4:3. Hence only he who
is himself holy can keep the Sabbath holy. True Sabbath keeping is a
spiritual service which can be rendered only by a Spirit-filled person.
God
takes cognizance of the thoughts and intents of the heart as well as
the outward appearance. As baptism presupposes a spiritual preparation
and condition, lest it become merely the washing away of the filth of
the flesh, so true Sabbath keeping presupposes a spiritual preparation
and condition, lest the Sabbath become merely a day of indolence and
useless inactivity. Let it ever be kept clearly in mind that Sabbath
observance is not primarily bodily rest. On the contrary, in many cases
it demands greater physical exertion than is required on other days.
To
keep the Sabbath day holy means to enter into rest, God's rest. "He
that is entered into His rest, he also hath ceased from his own works,
as God did from His." Heb.4:10. God did not rest because He was
weary. "The everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends
of the earth, fainteth not, neither is weary." Isa. 40:28. "God
did rest the seventh day from all His works," but the rest was
first of all a spiritual rest. Heb. 4:4. Even when Adam rested with
God that first Sabbath, his rest was not demanded
p
241 -- by physical exhaustion. It was primarily a rest with God,
a spiritual experience, a day of communion and instruction. These considerations
make it clear that true Sabbath keeping involves complete dedication
to God. The Sabbath is a bit of heaven transferred to this earth. It
is a small sample of what heaven will be. The man who keeps it as God
would have it kept, must be at peace with God. Not only or merely must
his body rest. Rather, his whole soul, body, and spirit must for that
day be used in God's service, and everything worldly be shut out.
The
mind is probably the last thing of which we will gain complete control.
Most Christians can control - some to a greater, some to a lesser, degree
- their body and its lusts. Some can control their tongue and their
temper, though many fall in this. Few there are, if any, who have reached
the standard set by the apostle Paul, who considers the power of God
sufficient "to the pulling down of strongholds; casting down imaginations,
and every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God,
and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ."
2 Cor. 10:4, 5.
It
is no light thing to bring our thoughts into captivity. Who has not
caught himself in church thinking of things utterly unconnected with
worship? It is possible for a person to attend divine service on the
Sabbath, but his real self, his heart, his mind, his thoughts, be far
away. It takes
p
242 -- tremendous control, greater than is possible for a human
being in any strength he may have of himself, to control his mind. Yet
Sabbath
keeping that does not include heart and mind is not Sabbath keeping
in the highest sense.
In
perplexity we may all ask, How can this form of Sabbath keeping be brought
about? Is this not an impossible standard? To this it may be answered
that we have probably been satisfied with too low a standard of Sabbath
observance. Some think that it is sufficient for them to go to church
Sabbath morning, and when they have done this, they feel free to do
as they please the rest of the day. Others are more conscientious. They
would not desecrate the day either by unnecessary traveling and sight-seeing,
or by sleeping the precious hours away. Despite this, they find that
their minds wander, and that there is little Sabbath in the soul. At
times their minds run wild and must be called back again, but even with
the best of intentions, they are unable to bring their thoughts into
captivity to Christ. Let Sabbath keeping in its highest sense include
a mind stayed upon God, a mind that keeps Sabbath as well
as the body.
To
exercise the mind so that it will be stayed upon God is one purpose
of the Sabbath. It is a day that should be used in the exercise of godliness,
in communion with God, in practicing the presence of God.The man who
succeeds in this, who really keeps the Sabbath with all there is of
him, has reached the goal God has set for him.
p
243 -- He is sanctified, he has reached God's standard. God can
put His seal of approval upon him, place His name in his forehead, and
exhibit him to the world as a finished product of what Christianity
can do for a man. Such a man has used the Sabbath for its intended purpose;
it has accomplished for him what God had in mind;. it has become the
sign and seal of sanctification, and God owns him as His.
"I
gave them My Sabbaths, to be a sign between Me and them, that they
might know that I am the Lord that sanctify them." Eze. 20:12.
As men on the Sabbath are instructed in righteousness as they attend
worship; as God graciously comes near on that day as on no other; as
sins are revealed to them, that they might renounce them; as holiness
is held up before them as possible of accomplishment; as the conviction
comes to them that Sabbath keeping must include heart, mind, and soul
as well as body; as it suddenly dawns on them that every thought must
be brought into captivity to Christ; as the standard is constantly lifted
and they cry out unto God for help, men begin to realize the tremendous
influence that Sabbath keeping has upon Christianity. Soon they realize
how closely sanctification is bound up with the Sabbath, and how the
Sabbath can be a sign that they might know that the Lord is their
sanctifier. To them Sabbath keeping and sanctification become synonymous,
for they realize that only the man who is completely sanctified can
keep the Sabbath as God would have it kept.
p
244 -- While we have stressed the spiritual aspect of the Sabbath,
and that it is a sign between God and His people, in another way the
Sabbath is a sign to the world. Between God and His people the Sabbath
is a sign of sanctification; between God's people and the world the
Sabbath is a sign of separation, a mark of distinction between those
who obey God, who have come out of the world to enter the heavenly rest,
and those who are careless and disobedient. As verily as God in olden
times used the Sabbath to "prove them, whether they will walk in
My law, or no," so God uses the Sabbath now. Ex. 16:4. This becomes
evident from a study of the last church as it is characterized in the
book of Revelation.
The
Last Church
The fourteenth chapter of this book brings to view a people who stand
with the Lamb upon Mount Zion. They are without guile, they are without
fault, they are wholly dedicated to God, they follow the Lamb whither
so ever He goeth. Verses 1-4. These same people are mentioned in chapter
seven as having been sealed with the seal of the living God in their
foreheads, and in chapter fourteen they are seen with the Father's name
written there. Rev. 7:1-4. Evidently there is a close connection between
the Father's name and the seal.
The
Holy Spirit is closely connected with the seal of God. "Ye were
sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise." "Grieve not the
Holy Spirit
p
245 -- of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption."
Eph. 1:13; 4:30.
It
should be noted that while these passages do not state that the Holy
Spirit Himself is the seal, they do assert that the Spirit is the means
which God uses to impress the seal. We are sealed with and by the Spirit
of God.
The
Greek noun translated "seal" and its verb have in their root
meaning the idea of "fencing in," "enclosing," with
the purpose of protecting from misappropriation, to keep secure, to
preserve. Thus, when a seal is attached to any document, it serves to
protect that document from falsification, it fences it in, as it were,
attests to its genuineness, and makes fraud hazardous if not impossible.
A seal is also a sign of approval, an attestation of truth and genuineness,
a mark of authority and ownership, a proof of quality.
"Him
hath God the Father sealed." John 6:27. Christ is here speaking
of Himself. He declares that He has been sealed by the Father. We understand
this to mean that Christ had the approval of the Father, that whatever
the Son did satisfied the Father and pleased Him, and that He endorsed
Christ's work.
In
like manner we understand that the 144,000 mentioned in Revelation have
the endorsement of the Father. They are sealed with the seal of the
living God; they have the Father's name in their foreheads; they are
approved of Him. They are without fault; they keep the commandments
of God. Rev. 14:12.
p
246 -- The Commandments of God
This latter is important. We believe that we are living in the latter
days, and that the church mentioned in Revelation 14 is the last church
of God on earth. This is evident from the statements that immediately
follow. A white cloud is seen, "and upon the cloud One sat like
unto the Son of man," after which
follows an account of the end of the world. Rev. 14:14-16. The church
that keeps the commandments of God is the last church of God on earth.
The
distinguishing characteristic of this church is that it keeps "the
commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus." Verse 12. This is
a most remarkable. statement in view of present conditions. Few churches
at this time have much regard for the commandments of God. They are
rather inclined to make light of them as well as of those who keep them
and teach men so. The chief distinction between those who keep the commandments
and those who make light of them, is in regard to the Sabbath. This
distinction is as clear now as when God first made the Sabbath a sign,
"that ye may know that I am the Lord your God." Eze. 20:20.
The Sabbath is still a sign, a mark of distinction, that marks the difference
between those who serve and obey the Lord, and those who obey a human
enactment sponsored by the man of sin. The Sabbath is a sign "that
I am the Lord your God." It is God's sign, His distinguishing mark.
It
is interesting to note that the Sabbath
p
247 -- commandment is the one commandment in the law which contains
the name of the God we serve, and defines Him as the Creator. Other
commandments mention God, but the fourth is the only one that distinguishes
Him from other so-called gods, and points Him out as the one who in
six days made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is.
"The
Lord is the true God, He is the living God, and an everlasting King....
He hath made the earth by His power, He hath established the world by
His wisdom, and hath stretched out the heavens by His discretion."
Jer. 10:10-12. On the other hand, "the gods that have not made
the heavens and the earth, even they shall perish from the earth."
Verse 11. But "I am the Lord that maketh all things, that stretcheth
forth the heavens alone; that spreadeth abroad the earth by Myself."
Isa. 44:24.
Here
God makes a distinction between Himself and other gods, so called. And
the distinction He makes is that He is the Creator, He made the heavens
and the earth, and He did this "alone." The other gods who
did not make the heavens or the earth shall perish.
It
is this distinction which the fourth commandment sets forth. And it
is the only one of the commandments that does. It points out the true
and living God by giving His name, by giving the extent of His kingdom,
and by telling us that the God of the Sabbath is the God who created
all things, and is therefore the rightful
p
248 -- ruler of all. The God "that formed thee" is the
same God that "redeemed thee." Isa. 43:1. That is, God is
both Creator and Redeemer. "There is no god else beside Me; a just
God and a Saviour; there is none beside Me. Look unto Me, and be ye
saved, all the ends of the earth: for I am God, and there is none else."
Isa. 45:21, 22.
In
these texts, as well as in others, creation and redemption are placed
together. They are both accomplished by the same God. As a memorial
of creation He instituted the Sabbath, and He made this same Sabbath
a sign of redemption, "a sign between Me and them, that they might
know that I am the Lord
that sanctify them." Eze. 20:12. The Sabbath thus becomes a sign
of God's total activity, His creative power in the universe, and His
re-creative power in the soul. Beside these there are no other powers.
The
Sabbath commandment contains all the constituents of a seal: God's name
is there; His territory and its extent are mentioned - heaven and earth;
His twofold work is recorded: He is Creator, and He is also "thy
God" - that is, He is Creator and also Redeemer. These three specifications,
the name, the territory, and the work or position of the one whom the
inscription concerns, constitute the essential of a seal. They are all
found in the Sabbath commandment.
In
discussing the seal of God there is another statement which we should
take into consideration. This is found in 2 Timothy 2:19, and reads:
p
249 -- "Nevertheless the foundation of God standeth sure, having
this seal, The Lord knoweth them that are His. And, Let everyone that
nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity."
The
seal, as here described, has two aspects: first, "The Lord knoweth
them that are His" second, "Let everyone that nameth the name
of Christ depart from iniquity."
The
first inscription informs us that even as the Sabbath is a sign "that
ye may know that I am the Lord" (Ex. 31:13), so likewise
"the Lord knoweth them that are His." God's people
know that it is not of themselves that they have attained unto sanctification.
They know it is the Lord who sanctifies them. And
God knows who they are.
The
second inscription informs us that all who name the name of the Lord
must depart from iniquity; that is, that all who bear God's name, who
have it written in their foreheads, have ceased from sin. They are holy,
they are without fault even before the throne of God. Rev. 14:5.
When
we now sum up what we have learned concerning the sign and seal of God,
we find this: Just before the coming of the Lord in the clouds of heaven,
God will have a people, a church, that will reflect His image fully.
They will bear His stamp of approval, they will be sealed with the seal
of the living God, they will have the Father's name in their foreheads,
they will keep the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus. The chief
distinguishing mark between them and
p
250 -- nominal Christians will be the matter of the Sabbath. This,
however, will be more than the matter of a day, for to the church of
God the Sabbath is not merely a memorial of creation; it is also a sign
of sanctification. They will be a holy people, without spot or blemish,
without even a fault. They will know God, and they will be known of
Him. They will abstain from iniquity, from sin, and God will approve
of them to the extent that He will place His name in their foreheads,
and thus they will be sealed unto the day of redemption, sealed with
the Holy Spirit of promise, and will bear the sign or seal of sanctification,
all of which is included in their keeping the commandments of God and
the faith of Jesus. The Sabbath will be the outward sign, the
mark, the seal, which distinguishes them from those who do not obey
or recognize the commandments of God. But to the church the Sabbath
will have a deeper
significance than that of a distinguishing mark. To them it will mean
sanctification, and it will be the sign between them and God
that marks them as His own.d
p
251 -- Chapter 14 -- Sabbath
Reformation
"The seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God." These
words are a part of the fourth commandment as recorded in the twentieth
chapter of Exodus. Whatever men may think or do concerning the Sabbath,
these words will ever stand as a testimony to the truth of God. The
seventh day is the Sabbath.
In the face of this statement, it is not easy for a Christian to say
that the seventh day is not the Sabbath. It is too much like
contradicting God.
If
the question of the Sabbath is as important as our study of it seems
to indicate, it might be expected that God in some way will call it
to the attention of the world, that all may know and act according to
knowledge. It cannot be supposed that God will proclaim the Sabbath
to His people as an integral part of the moral law, and then permit
this truth to be buried beneath a mass of tradition while an opposing
power erects another memorial and palms it off as God's. It is incumbent
upon God to see to it that the rubbish is cleared away and the precious
jewels of His truth are revealed. We cannot conceive that God reveals
truth to the world and then cares nothing about what becomes of it.
The same God who gave the seed must see to it that it is watered and
bears fruit.
In
saying this we are not commanding God or telling Him what ought to be
done, but merely
p
252 -- reasoning from a human viewpoint. When we then understand
that what we are here proposing should be done is exactly what God is
going to do, we take courage that it is possible for men to think God's
thoughts after Him.
God
does not permit His truth to be buried forever. Long before an event
takes place - if it is a fit subject for prophecy - God sends word to
man concerning it. "He reveals His secret unto His servants the
prophets." Amos 3:7. What is thus revealed may be forgotten, misinterpreted,
and rejected, but God, who gave the word, sees to it that in due time
proper proclamation is made to the world. When the time draws near,
men arise who give the warning, and to the ends of the earth resounds
the call of God. God's work is not done, and will not be finished, in
a corner. The earth will be lighted with the glory and the knowledge
of God, "as the waters cover the sea." Thus it has been, and
thus it will be.
The
World's Need
The times in which we live indicate the need of calling attention to
the law of God. Lawlessness prevails to an extent unprecedented. It
is not sufficient to say that there has always been crime. That, of
course, is true. But in the light of modern education and general intelligence,
crime has taken on new
strength, till it challenges organized government. If to this is added
the fact that governments themselves are giving way to forces inimical
to the best interests
p
253 -- of the state, we see that we are today face to face with
a situation that demands a return to law and order, and presages it.
Unless we take the view that God has left the world to shift for itself,
we must believe that God gauges His messages to the needs of the hour.
There are times when messages of consolation are needed, and God in
His graciousness tells the prophet to comfort His people. There are
times when reproof is needed, and God speaks sharply to cry aloud and
spare not. There are times when disaster is about to overtake a city
or a nation, and God sends a message to warn and instruct.
If
we were to judge from conditions in the earth today, with lawlessness
rampant everywhere, faith disappearing from the hearts of men, and skepticism,
cynicism, and agnosticism taking its place, we would say that what the
world needs today is the gospel of Jesus, the gospel of faith, hope,
and courage for
despondent and disheartened humanity, and that the law once more needs
to be thundered from Sinai, in all its awful majesty, to impress men
that God is in earnest, that the law cannot be flouted with impunity,
and that men must return to respect for God's law, or perish. We would
say that men need the law preached to them, to awaken in them a sense
of sin and condemnation, and also the gospel, in its primitive purity,
as a healing balm for bruised souls. The two things, the law and the
gospel, are God's appointed means for healing sin's ravages,
p
254 -- and, rightly applied, they will cure not only the ills of
the individual sinner, but also those of the world.
But,
says one, there is nothing new in this. This we admit. There is no other
name under heaven given among men whereby we can be saved. There is
no new or other remedy than the gospel. As of old, there must be conviction
of sin, the individual must be brought face to face with himself in
the mirror of the law, he must be made to cry out in agony of soul,
"O wretched man that I am ' and then he must receive the precious
word of forgiveness and peace.
This
simple presentation of the law of God and the faith of Jesus is needed
in the world today as much as ever. Men are forgetting the law. It is
not preached from the pulpit; it is not practiced in the pew. There
was a time when the ministry had an abiding faith in the ten commandments
as the standard of righteousness. As a result of this belief and its
preaching, men had respect, not only for the law of God, but for human
law as well. When ministers stopped preaching the law, when they began
teaching that it was abolished, men drew the only conclusion that can
be drawn from such teaching; namely, that the law is not important,
and that it can be broken with impunity.
From
this they took another logical step. If the law of God is not important,
if the ten commandments are not any longer in force, need the laws of
men be respected? We do not believe
p
255 -- that in the final reckoning the ministry of today can escape
responsibility for the prevailing lawlessness. We have no intention
of putting all the blame on them, but we do believe that in a crisis,
when the whole world is given over to lawlessness and crime, we have
a right to expect the ministry of God to stand for law and order, to
lift a mighty voice of protest against sin and transgression, and we
do not see how they can consistently do this
while repudiating the law of God. We believe that the teaching of the
abrogation of the law of God is bearing fruit in general lawlessness,
and we would counsel every servant of God who stands in a responsible
position to weigh carefully his duty in this respect. If the law of
God is spoken of disrespectfully from the pulpit, if the keeping of
the ten commandments is considered old-fashioned and incompatible with
faith in the gospel, how can anything but disrespect for law be the
result of such teaching? How can the teacher escape responsibility?
From our viewpoint a grave responsibility rests upon the ministry of
today to undo as far as possible the harm that has been done, and to
let the voice of God be heard from every pulpit in the land, that
God may spare His people and not give His heritage to reproach.
Law
and Gospel
But preaching the law - important as that is - is not enough. True,
where there has been slackness, there needs to be increased diligence;
and where the law has been neglected, there needs
p
256 -- to be special emphasis given to it. But nevertheless, the
preaching of the law is not enough. The ten commandments need to be
thundered in the ears of sinners, to awaken them to a sense of their
condition and to a need of a Savior; but to preach the law only, and
no gospel, will result in despair. The law and the gospel are the two
necessary elements in salvation. They are as the two wings of a bird
- bo th needed for flight, one as necessary as the other. They are as
the two oars of a boat - both necessary for progress.
The
world needs the gospel today more than ever. Where sin abounds, grace
needs to abound the more. And sin abounds today. It is not hiding its
head and slinking about as in former generations. It is rampant, impudent,
aggressive, flaunting its wares, so that all may see. It has entered
polite society, it is
invited to kings' palaces, it is an honored guest at many banquets,
it is an intimate friend in many homes, a popular teacher in many a
college. Condemned in the pulpit, it walks arm in arm with the parishioner
out of the church; deplored in the legislative hall, it attends the
official ball at night by special invitation; outlawed by international
agreement, it presides at the armament council; preached against by
a thousand bishops, it is pleased to unite with them in repudiating
and abolishing the law. Altogether, sin occupies an important place
in life today, and in many ways it has succeeded in making itself respectable.
This makes its influence all the more insidious.
p
257 -- There is no other help for such conditions than the gospel
in its purity and power. Men have tried remedies of all kinds, but have
found no help in them. There was a time when it was thought that ignorance
was a prime cause of sin, and that education was the remedy. But this
has proved a vain hope. Education without the balance of religion may
do more harm than good. It may make a good man better, but it tends
to make a bad man worse. Where before men were limited in their evil
by lack of knowledge, they are now enabled to do much more harm and
perpetrate more refined cruelty because of the advantages which modern
education affords. An ignorant criminal is a menace; an educated one
is a greater menace in proportion to his knowledge.
When
we state that the only remedy for the conditions in the world today
is the gospel, we do not mean a water-and-milk gospel, an emasculated
gospel of sickly sentimentality and spineless platitudes, or an erratic
- and sometimes erotic - appeal to unreasoned faith in the supernatural.
What we mean is a gospel with some backbone to it, a sturdy faith in
a personal God, an implicit trust in a divine Savior, a humble acknowledgment
of personal guilt and an acceptance of pardon, a recognition of duty
as well as of privilege, and an aggressive endeavor to help spread the
glad news of salvation to the ends of the earth.
As
sin takes on new forms, the weapons of the Christian must not conform
to the pattern of
p
258 -- the warfare engaged in. A protective armor is not enough.
Weapons for attack are needed also. Christianity is not neutral or negative.
It is not phlegmatic or dormant. It is positive, virile, strong, aggressive.
As is often the case in real warfare, so in Christian warfare, the best
defense is offense. There may have been a time when a kind of negative,
yielding goodness was called for. We would not depreciate this. But
the time now demands that offensive campaigns be inaugurated, that Satan's
stronghold be invaded and his defenses broken down, and that the warfare
come out into the open.
Long
enough have the forces of Christ taken an apologetic attitude. God now
calls for action. We still need the gentle virtues that are always associated
with the gospel - perhaps now more than ever. But to this must be added
the aggressive "faith that will not shrink," that will do
and dare for Christ, the faith of loyalty and optimism, the persistent
faith, the victorious faith. The defeatist attitude must be conquered,
the apologetic mein discarded, and God's church must go forward in the
strength of a sure purpose, bearing aloft the banner:. THE COMMANDMENTS
OF GOD AND THE FAITH OF JESUS.
The
Commandments of God
This last expression is taken from the book of Revelation, and describes
exactly what is needed today. The whole text reads: "Here is the
patience of the saints: here are they that keep
p
259 -- the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus." Rev.
14:12. In this the complete gospel is revealed, the gospel for such
a time as this. Let us examine the statement. "Here is the patience
of the saints." The word "saints" is the same word that
is in other places translated "holy," the Greek hagios. It
is used in such expressions as "holy Father," "holy child
Jesus," "temple of God is holy," "holy and without
blemish," "present you holy and unblamable," "He
which hath called you is holy ," "holy men of God spake,"
"holy is His name." John 17:11; Acts 4:27; 1 Cor. 3:17; Eph.
5:27; Col. 1:22; 1 Peter 1:15; 2 Peter 1:21; Luke 1:49. We are therefore
safe in believing that the ones here spoken of are saints in the truest
sense, that they are sanctified and holy, without spot, and blameless.
The
saints that are thus spoken of keep the commandments of God and the
faith of Jesus. To some this may seem like a strange statement, because
popular theology does not combine the keeping of the commandments with
holiness. Rather, many who claim holiness repudiate, utterly the commandments
of God, and seem to hold themselves aloof from anything that savors
of law. But not so God. When He wishes to define those who are truly
holy, when He wishes to point out those who are really holy in the sight
of heaven, He says that they keep the commandments of God. True sanctification
and the commandments belong together.
p
260 -- The chapter from which we quote the text under consideration
begins by giving a description of the Lamb of God standing on Mount
Zion, "and with Him a hundred forty and four thousand, having His
Father's name written in their foreheads." Rev. 14: 1. They are
spoken of as "they which were not defiled with women; for they
are virgins. These are they which follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth.
These were redeemed from among men, being the first fruits unto God
and to the Lamb. And in their mouth was found no guile: for they are
without fault before the throne of God." Verses 4, 5. They are
the same as those "that keep the commandments of God, and the faith
of Jesus." Verse 12. They are doubtless also the same as those
that are mentioned in Revelation 12:17 as "the remnant of her seed,
which keep the commandments of God, and have the testimony of Jesus."
This
remnant is generally considered to be the last of God's people on earth,
those who live just before the appearing of the Son of God in the clouds
of heaven. The word "remnant" would seem to indicate this,
though we are not dependent upon that expression alone for this view.
The whole context gives the same impression. The messages of three angels
mentioned in Revelation 14 are the last messages sent to the earth before
the coming of the Lord. Immediately following their proclamation, John
says: "I looked, and behold a white cloud, and upon the cloud one
sat like unto the Son of man, having on His head a golden
p
261 -- crown, and in His hand a sharp sickle.... And He that sat
on the cloud thrust in His sickle on the earth; and the earth was reaped."
Verses 14-16. It therefore seems clear that the remnant of God's people,
those who live just before the coming of the Son of man, the last generation
on earth, will have attained unto holiness of life, and they will keep
God's commandments.
We
believe that we are living near the time when we may expect to see the
Son of man come in the clouds of heaven. It is at such a time that the
distinguishing mark of those who are sanctified is that they keep the
commandments. It is therefore evident that the law must have come into
its own again. Before a people can be produced who keep the commandments,
there must be a preaching of the commandments, there must be an awakening
on the part of the people to the binding claims of God's law. We may
therefore rightly look for a revival of the study of the law before
the coming of the Lord, and this revival will be so widespread as to
take in all nations and peoples, out of which the remnant will be taken.
We
might expect more than this. As the people study the law, they will
naturally have their attention called to the fact that they are not
keeping holy the day which the commandment demands. This will lead them
to a thorough search for truth, and this search will lead them to other
truths which have been hidden for ages and generations. As the truth
of the seventh-day Sabbath dawns upon them, they will naturally be led
to
p
262 -- consider
the question of creation, which is closely bound up with it. Being believers
in the Bible, they will take their stand upon the account given in Genesis
in regard to creation, and will be diametrically opposed to any doctrine
that is evolutionary in origin or in tendency.
Thus
a people will be developed who are Bible Christians, Fundamentalists,
who keep the commandments of God and observe the seventh day as the
Sabbath. These people will be sealed with the seal of God; they will
have the Father's name in their foreheads, and will be without spot
or wrinkle or any such thing. They will be faultless before the throne
of God.
The
Patience of the Saints
Read again the description of the people who meet with God's approval:
"Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep the
commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus." Note: They are saints,
that is, they are sanctified, they are holy. They have patience, or,
as the word denotes, endurance,
strength, tenacity. They keep the commandments. They have faith.
The
first characteristic here mentioned is that of patience. This word has
been misunderstood in that it is generally thought to mean the opposite
of impatience. It is not denied that it has this meaning, but only in
a secondary or minor sense. The word ordinarily has a larger significance,
which perhaps is best translated "endurance." Young translates
it thus, and also Rotherham.
p
263 -- The American Revised Version has in the margin "steadfastness."
In the text: "Let us run with patience the race that is set before
us" (Heb. 12:1), the meaning is not that we must not be impatient
in running, but that we must run with endurance, with courage, with
steadfastness, that we must not give up, but keep on, whatever the obstacles
may be.
The
word has the same meaning in Hebrews 10:36: "Ye have need of patience,
that, after ye have done the will of God, ye might receive the promise."
The meaning here is not that we must not become impatient - though that
is true - but rather that if we are to receive the promise, we must
have endurance, we must not give up, we must steadfastly continue. In
all but two cases in the New Testament the word has the same meaning.
When
our text, therefore, speaks of the patience of the saints, it refers
to their steadfastness, their perseverance, their "undiscourageableness,"
their optimism, their endurance. Thus the word is a whole history in
itself of what the saints have passed through. They have been tried
to the utmost. They have been tempted to give up. They have stood face
to face with obstacles which seemed insurmountable. But they would not
be discouraged. They would not give up or give in. When hope faded,
and it seemed that they could not hold out any longer, they did not
falter. With Christ, they decided that they would neither fail nor be
discouraged.
p
264 -- The verses that precede Revelation 14:12 give some clue to
the struggle through which the saints have passed. They have been faced
with the alternative of receiving the mark of the beast in their forehead
or in their hand, or being killed. Rev. 14:9; 12:15-17. They have had
to face the question of worshiping the beast and receiving his mark,
of being unable to buy or sell. Rev. 12:17. If they did not worship
the beast, the decree of the beast was that they should be killed. If
they did worship the beast, God decreed that they should drink
of the wrath of God. Rev. 14:15, 10. This placed them in a serious dilemma.
But they did not falter. When the struggle was over, they had in their
forehead, not the mark of the beast, but the Father's name. Rev. 14:1.
They had gained complete victory. They had not given up. They had persevered.
They had shown that they could stand any test placed upon them. They
had the patience, the steadfastness, the endurance, of the saints.
We
have already discussed the second statement in our texts, that these
people are saints, sanctified, holy. They have been in Babylon, but
have come out of it. Rev. 14:8; 18:4, 5. In times when men and nations
drank "of the wine of the wrath of her fornication," they
"were not defiled with women; for they
are virgins." Rev. 14:8, 4. Under great stress and temptation they
remained pure, physically and spiritually. They were saints, but not
because they had been shielded from temptations, for they had been exposed
to
p
265 -- every form of it, and had been threatened unless they yielded.
But nothing could move them. They knew in whom they believed, and they
remained firm.
These
saints keep the commandments. There must be something of special significance
in this statement. In view of the times in which they live, there can
be only one commandment to which reference could be intended. No Christian
would think of stealing or swearing and not be ashamed of it. It is
unthinkable that a Christian would consider it praiseworthy to break
the seventh commandment. But when it comes to the seventh day, the case
is different. That day some break and yet consider themselves good Christians.
How can this be? Why break one commandment and not the others? The saints
"keep the commandments." One of these commandments is the
fourth. They keep that with the rest. They keep all.
The
Sabbath Restored
An interesting text is found in the fifty-eighth chapter of Isaiah,
to which we would at this time call attention. The whole chapter is
addressed to God's people who are showing a commendable interest in
many things, but who come short in some vital matters.
The
prophet is told to show God's people "their transgression, and
the house of Jacob their sins." They seek the Lord daily, and delight
to know His ways and to approach God. Verses 1, 2. But they are perplexed
that God does not
p
266 -- seem to recognize them. "Wherefore have we fasted, say
they, and Thou sees not? wherefore have we afflicted our soul, and Thou
takest no knowledge?" Verse 3. They are what could be called good
people; they delight in God and in His service; they afflict their souls.
But there is something wrong, for God does not see or take knowledge
of them.
The
Lord now calls attention to their short-comings. If they really want
to know why God keeps aloof, He will let them know. They have enjoyed
themselves while others have suffered. They have fasted, indeed, but
it has not been the kind of fast that is pleasing to God. The real fast,
God says, consists in doing good, in helping the, poor, in relieving
the oppressed, in sharing our bread with the hungry, and in clothing
the naked. If the people will do this, great blessing will come to them.
Their health shall return, light from God shall come to them, righteousness
and glory shall be their rearward, and God will again hear their prayers
and draw near to them. Their souls shall be satisfied in drouth, and
the Lord shall guide them continually. Verses 6-11.
Now
comes the text to which we would call special attention. "They
that shall be of thee shall build the old waste places: thou shalt raise
up the foundations of many generations; and thou shalt be called, The
repairer of the breach, The restorer of paths to dwell in. If thou turn
away thy foot from the Sabbath, from doing thy pleasure on My holy day;
and call the Sabbath a
p
267 -- delight, the holy of the Lord, honorable; and shalt
honor Him, not doing thine own ways, nor finding thine own pleasure,
nor speaking thine own words; then shalt thou delight thyself in the
Lord; and I will cause thee to ride upon the high places of the earth,
and feed thee with the heritage of Jacob thy father: for the mouth of
the Lord hath spoken it." Verses 12-14.
This
brings us to the Sabbath question again. The people mentioned in this
chapter have not made a practical application of their Christianity.
They have not been as interested in the poor and unfortunate as they
should be. The counsel given them is that they are to take a personal
interest in the poor and needy. They are not only to give a dime or
a dollar to the hungry; they are to divide their own loaf with them.
They are not to send the homeless to some institution. They are to take
them to their own house. They are to take personal interest in those
for whom they work. They are to make their Christianity practical, and
take a part in the work themselves, and not do it all by proxy.
Also,
they are not to forget the Sabbath. This counsel comes as a parting
admonition, so that they will remember it. Doing so they will "raise
up the foundations of many generations." They will be called, "The
repairer of the breach, The restorer of paths to dwell in." This
is to be "if thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath " -
that is, cease to trample the Sabbath underfoot, "from doing thy
pleasure on My holy day; and
p
268 -- call
the Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord, honorable."
Note
what God here calls the Sabbath. It is called "My holy day,"
"a delight." It is called "the holy of the Lord, honorable."
The word "holy" here used is the Hebrew qadosh, the
same word which the angels use when they say: "Holy, holy, holy,
is the Lord of hosts." Isa. 6:3. The word "honorable,"
Hebrew, kabed, means to make heavy or weighty, to place stress
upon, and thus to honor. No other interpretation can be placed upon
these expressions than that God highly honors the Sabbath day and wants
His people to honor it.
"And
shalt honor Him," rather, "it." This is the way the American
Revised, Young's, American Translation, Variorum, and others have it.
"And shalt honor it," the Sabbath. Both translations may be
correct, for whoever honors the Sabbath also honors the Lord of the
Sabbath. All who thus honor the Sabbath shall delight themselves in
the Lord and ride upon the high places of the earth. "The mouth
of the Lord hath spoken it."
We
now ask in all seriousness: Is it reasonable to suppose that God would
thus speak of the Sabbath, lauding it in the highest terms, calling
it "My holy day," warning us not to trample it underfoot,
and then not mean it? Can we believe that He would call it "honorable,"
put weight upon it, ask us to delight in it; can we believe that He
would give it the distinctive title, "the
p
269 -- holy of the Lord," and promise great blessings to those
who will honor it, and then throw it into discard? We do not see how
this can be.
The
Breach
But note again. Those who thus honor the Lord in restoring the Sabbath
to its proper place will be called "The repairer of the breach,
The restorer of paths to dwell in." Isa. 58:12. This calls for
some consideration.
"The
repairer of the breach." In ancient times the cities were surrounded
by walls. In besieging a town the enemy would seek to make a breach
in the walls through which an attack could be made. Battering rams would
be placed so that they would tear down part of the wall and make a gap
through which the
soldiers could enter and take the town. Whenever such a breach was made,
the battle would rage around that particular spot. The rest of the wall
would be practically deserted, and both sides would concentrate on the
breach. Those who tried to repair the breach would expose themselves
to danger, but should they be successful, great would be their reward.
This
is the picture presented to us in the phrase, "repairer of the
breach." The statement is closely associated with the Sabbath and
with the law of God; so it might be well to connect it with what the
prophet Ezekiel has to say on the same subject.
"Her
priests have violated My law, and have
p
270 -- profaned Mine holy things: they have put no difference between
the holy and profane, neither have they showed difference between the
unclean and the clean, and have hid their eyes from My Sabbaths, and
I am profaned among them." Eze. 22:26. This is a serious charge
against the priests of God. They have not been faithful. They have violated
the law. They have hid their eyes from the Sabbath, and God is profaned
among them.
They
have done more. They have "daubed them with untempered mortar,
seeing vanity, and divining lies unto them, saying, Thus sayeth the
Lord God, when the Lord hath not spoken." Verse 28. It is a very
serious charge against the ministry which God makes. He charges them
with saying, "Thus sayeth the Lord God, when the Lord hath not
spoken." This charge must have something to do with the Sabbath,
for that is one of the matters under consideration.
"I
sought for a man among them, that should make up the hedge, and stand
in the gap before Me for the land, that I should not destroy it: but
I found none." Verse 30. God says that He looked for a man among
them to "stand in the gap." But He found none. The word "gap"
is the same word, perets in Hebrew, that is translated "breach"
in Isaiah. In Isaiah God calls those who are faithful, "repairer
of the breach." In Ezekiel He looks for a man among the priests
who will stand in the breach. But He finds none. Both statements are
made in connection
p
271 -- with the Sabbath question. The connection and the illustration
are very apt. The law of God is a protection to His people. It is as
a wall about the saints. It is the dividing line between the world and
the church. Inside is the church; outside is the world. As long as the
keeping of the commandments is a requisite for entrance into the church,
all is well. But if a breach should be made in the wall, the enemy would
find easy access, and would stream into the church. This is in reality
what has happened. The law has been broken down, a breach has been made,
and now there is very little difference between those who are outside
and those who are inside.
God
is looking for men who will stand in the gap and make up the hedge.
As He looks among the priests, He finds that they are violating the
law and are hiding their eyes from the Sabbath. Instead of helping repair
the breach, they are attempting to build another wall of their own.
Of them God says: "They have seduced My people, saying, Peace;
and there was no peace; and one built up a wall, and, lo, others daubed
it with untempered mortar." Eze. 13:10.
We
have proceeded far enough to make the necessary application. The wall
is the law of God, the ten commandments. This wall men have broken down,
and the breach has been made in it. The place where the attack has been
made and the breach attempted, is the fourth commandment, the seventh-day
Sabbath. For ages and
p
272 -- generations this breach has existed, and God has sought for
men to repair it, but He has found none. Because of the breach in the
law men have surged into the church, unconverted men, till there is
now practically no difference between the church and the world.
But
this condition will not continue forever. God will find some at last
who will stand in the breach and make up the hedge. They will be called
"The repairer of the breach, The restorer of paths to dwell in."
They will "keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus."
They will call the Sabbath "a delight, the holy of the Lord, honorable."
And the gap will be made up, the breach will be stopped. God's people
will again be inside the protecting walls of His holy law, and the transgressors
outside. There is only one way to get in. That is through the door,
Christ Jesus. None but converted people can get in. Only those called
to be saints are admitted. The others must stay outside.
What
do these others do? They build another wall, a "slight wall,"
as the correct marginal reading is in Ezekiel 13:10. This wall they
daub with untempered mortar, to make it look better. Untempered mortar
is mortar that has not been properly prepared, and that hence will not
stand the tests when the storm comes. So these priests who violate the
law and hide their eyes from the Sabbath build up another wall - really
a partition only - but they daub it with untempered mortar, so that
the unwary will be deceived and will think
p
273 -- that it is substantial. It does not need much imagination
to understand what this wall is. It is the spurious law which men try
to substitute for God's law, commanding men to keep, not the Sabbath
of the Lord, the seventh day, but Sunday, the counterfeit Sabbath of
men's devising. The untempered mortar is the fallacious argument for
Sunday sacredness that will not stand the test to which it will be put.
What
will happen to this wall that is thus built up? Let God speak: "Say
unto them which daub it with untempered mortar, that it shall fall:
there shall be an overflowing shower; and ye, O great hailstones, shall
fall; and a stormy wind shall rend it. Lo, when the, wall is fallen,
shall it not be said unto you, Where is the daubing wherewith you have
daubed it? Therefore thus saith the Lord God: I will even rend it with
a stormy wind in My fury; and there shall be an overflowing shower in
Mine anger, and great hailstones in My fury to consume it. So will I
break down the wall that ye have daubed with untempered mortar, and
bring it down to the ground, so that the foundation thereof shall be
discovered, and it shall fall, and ye
shall
be consumed in the midst thereof: and ye shall know that I am the Lord.
Thus will I accomplish My wrath upon the wall, and upon them that have
daubed it with untempered mortar, and will say unto you, The wall is
no more, neither they that daubed it; to wit, the prophets of Israel
which prophesy concerning Jerusalem, and which see visions of peace
for her,
p
274 -- and there is no peace, saith, the Lord God." Eze. 13:11-16.
This
is what God will do with the wall that men build: I "will break
down the wall"; "I will ... rend it with a stormy wind in
My fury; ... it shall fall, and ye shall be consumed in the midst thereof";
I will "accomplish My wrath upon the wall, and upon them that have
daubed it with untempered mortar." At last "the wall is no
more, neither they that daubed it."
These
verses portray God's feeling toward those who try to make a substitution
for God's law. God is jealous for His Sabbath. He wants men to honor
it. He tries to get men to make up the hedge and stand in the gap, but
among the priests He finds none. Instead of helping to repair the breach,
they attempt to build another wall. This arouses God's wrath. The storm
comes, and the wall goes down. It looked beautiful; it was daubed all
over with untempered mortar; but it could not stand the storm. The end
was complete destruction.
Two
Groups
How true to fact is this prophetic picture of what is going on in the
world today. Men have rejected the Sabbath of the Lord and have substituted
a spurious Sabbath. This they daub with all kinds of specious arguments
to make it look substantial and good, but to no avail. At last it will
go down, and they that daub it will go down with it.
p
275 -- On the other side are the people of God. They are restoring
the old paths, they are repairing the breach, they are standing in the
gap. They delight in the Sabbath, they keep the commandments, they endure
unto the end. They are the true saints of God.
Men
are now deciding which group to join. On the one hand is a small group
who are repairing the breach in the rugged old wall and restoring the
inscription on it. On the other hand is a much larger group who are
trusting to a flimsy partition that sways in the wind, hoping that it
will protect them from the storm that is coming. From the vantage point
of God's Word we know the outcome. The little group shall "ride
upon the high places of the earth"; the larger group will go down
to destruction when the overflowing scourge shall come. Isa. 58:14;
Eze. 13:13, 14.
Our
consideration thus far has led us to the belief that there will be a
very definite and widespread Sabbath reformation before the Lord appears
in the clouds of heaven. This is as it should be, and is in harmony
with God's general plan of working. Very seldom does God interfere immediately
with the plans of men. They are given time to develop their ideas, that
the results may become apparent. We believe, however, that the time
has now come for God to interfere. "It is time for Thee, Lord,
to work; for they have made void Thy law." Ps. 119:126.
As
we look about us in the world today, we find definite indications that
God is doing the work
p
276 -- foretold by prophecy. All over the earth men and women are
calling attention to the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus.
In spite of opposition and hardships, thousands and tens of thousands
are every year joining the ranks of those who in all humility follow
the footsteps of the Master. They have no special wisdom or influence,
but through them God has done and is doing a work that is a marvel among
men. In every land they are found. Their mission stations are found
in the frozen North and on the burning sands. Drouth, depression, and
hardship are not obstacles. Their work goes on. A hundred thousand youth
are found in their schools, getting ready to step into the places made
vacant by older workers, and to carry on the work to even greater victory.
Nothing can stop this movement. It has the stamp of God's approval.
It will triumph.
The
Faith of Jesus
The saints mentioned in Revelation 14:12 not only keep the commandments
of God, but also have the faith of Jesus. A few words concerning this
might not be amiss at this juncture.
The
statement that the saints keep the faith of Jesus might perhaps better
read "faith in Jesus," as the Greek denotes, or it might even
mean the faith taught by Jesus. For our present purpose we might keep
the reading "faith of Jesus," having in mind that it includes
both faith in Jesus and also the faith taught by Him. The fact that
the statement says that the
p
277 -- saints keep the commandments of God and also the faith of
Jesus shows that it does not refer to the old dispensation. The saints
are New Testament Christians. They keep the faith of Jesus; they follow
the Lamb whithersoever He goeth.
In
a time of doubt and unbelief it is well to keep the faith. Some people
have lost faith in almost everything. And not without reason. They had
faith in banks. These failed. Some had faith in governments. These failed.
Some had faith in the church. It has failed. Some had faith in their
own power to pull them through. That failed. On every hand there is
failure. Men have lost faith in mankind, in the orderly processes of
nature, in themselves, in God. "When the Son of man cometh, shall
He find faith on the earth?" Luke 18:8. To this the answer is that
He will find faith. There are some who keep their faith in Jesus.
Do
not all Christians have faith in Jesus? No, they do not, if by Christians
are meant such as are members of the church. What does it mean to have
faith in Jesus? It means the same as when we say that we have faith
in certain people; that is, we trust them and believe in their word.
We rely on their promise; we accept their statements as true. Do not
all so-called Christians have such faith in Christ? No, they do not.
Hear the complaint of Jesus: "Why call ye Me, Lord, Lord, and do
not the things which I say?" Luke 6:46. It is of no use to claim
great faith in God, and not do the things which
p
278 -- He commands. Faith and obedience are closely related, so
closely that they cannot be separated.
Christ's
statement, as quoted by Luke, strikes at the very root of an important
principle in the Christian religion. Christ says, in effect: Of what
use is it to take My name, to call yourself a Christian, if you
do not do what I say? There are many today who say, Lord, Lord, but,
do not do. Christ raises the question of the value of a profession without
corresponding works.
We
do not suppose that this "doing" has reference to any one
thing. Rather, it has reference to all our Christian duties. It strikes
particularly at such as deny that there is any virtue. in doing anything;
who hold up their hands in horror when it is suggested that the commandments
of God are a guide to life's duties, and should be kept. This attitude
is common among some apparently devoted, but misguided people. The last
chapter of the last book of the Bible contains this parting admonition:
"Blessed are they that do His commandments, that they may have
right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the
city." Rev. 22:14.
Faith
is not inconsistent with works. Rather, doing is a part of faith, for
it is by doing that we show our faith. It is to this that Christ refers
when He questions the faith of those who call Him, "Lord, Lord,"
but will not do. "Faith without works is dead," says James.
The
saints have "the faith of Jesus"; that is the kind of faith
He had, the kind He taught.
p
279 -- There could not be a better faith than that. If we were asked
to give a sure and certain rule of faith and practice, we could not
give a better answer than this: "Follow the footsteps of the Master;
accept and hold the kind of faith He had."
If
we look once more at the four things mentioned in Revelation 14:12,
we see clearly what God expects of His people in these last days, and
also the possibility of attaining that which God demands. The text reads:
"Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep the
commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus." The four things which
characterize God's true people are: first, they have patience, they
endure, they are steadfast; second, they are holy, sanctified, consecrated
saints; third, they keep the commandments, which means that they keep
all ten, including the fourth, the Sabbath commandment; fourth, they
have the faith of Jesus; that is, they believe in Him, they follow Him,
they not only say, "Lord, Lord," but they do what
He says.
This
describes the saints of God who will constitute the last people on earth,
the remnant, those who live just before the coming of the Son of man
in the clouds of heaven. The wording of the text answers the question
in the minds of some in regard to whether it is really possible to keep
the law of God.
Some
confidently assert that it cannot be done. One can almost hear the challenging
objections: It is impossible to keep the law of God. Show
p
280 --me a man who has ever done it or who can do it. You claim
that it can be done. Where are they who do it? The answer comes ringing
back: Here they are. "Here are they that keep the commandments
of God, and the faith of Jesus."
God
knows those who are His. They have the Father's name in their foreheads;
they are sealed with the seal of God. They follow the Lamb; they keep
the commandments. It would be well for all to check their lives against
the requirements of God, and make sure that they measure up to the demands
of God for this time.
p
281 -- Chapter 15 -- The
Final Controversey
There has always been warfare between good and evil. In the very nature
of the case this must be so. The first promise in the Bible contains
these words of God: "I will put enmity between thee and the woman."
Gen. 3:15. This enmity is God ordained. As long as sin exists, this
enmity will endure. It cannot be otherwise.
We
do not know when the original controversy between good and evil began
in heaven, but it must have been before Adam and Eve were created. In
any event, after Satan had sinned, "there was war in heaven: Michael
and His angels fought against the dragon; and the dragon fought and
his angels." Rev. 12:7. This warfare, after being transferred to
the earth, has continued until the present time, and will culminate
in the last great conflict, when Satan will "make war with the
remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of God, and have the
testimony of Jesus." Verse 17.
Lucifer
As for the cause of the beginning of the conflict, we have a few hints
in the Bible. Satan, or Lucifer, as he was then called, had a very high
position in the heavenly courts, perhaps the highest of all created
beings. He was one of the two anointed cherubs that covered. The statement
reads: "Thou art the anointed cherub that covereth." Eze.
28:14. In the most holy place in the
p
282 -- sanctuary on earth there were two angels made of gold that
stood with outspread wings covering the mercy seat, beneath which was
the law of ten commandments. Ex. 25:20; 37:9; 1Chron. 28:18. These two
angels represent the angelic host who surround the throne of God, and
who stand in His immediate presence. The word "covereth" here
means to hedge in, to protect. The Douay Version translates: "Thou,
a cherub stretched out and protecting." Eze.28:14. Lucifer was
one of these cherubs in the real sanctuary above. His work was to hover
over, to protect, the oracles of God.
We
would call attention to another statement which throws some light on
the career of Lucifer. This is the statement: "Thou sealest up
the sum, full of wisdom, and perfect in beauty." Eze. 28:12. "Thou
sealest up the sum." The reading here is admittedly difficult.
It may mean, as some think, that Lucifer in himself sealed up all that
is perfect, that he was complete, without fault. If so, the statement
would be in harmony with that which immediately follows: "Full
of wisdom and perfect in beauty."
There
is another rendering which seems more nearly correct. The Hebrew word
toknith, translated "some," is used in only one other
place, Eze.42:10, and there it is translated "pattern." It's
real meaning is measure, standard, whatever is of an exact or perfect
nature. The Hebrew word for "seal," chatam, means to
cut in, to impress with a seal; that is, to attest, to confirm,
p
283 -- to verify. The phrase "thou sealest" is a participial
phrase in the Hebrew, and is to be translated, "thou art the sealer
of," though some ancient versions and manuscripts have "seal
ring" or "signet ring" instead of sealer. In any case,
the translation might properly be, "Thou art the sealer of the
measure." Lange suggests accordingly, "Thou confirmedst the
measure"; Young, "Thou art sealing up a measurement";
American Revised Version, margin, "Thou sealest up the sum [margin,
"measure or pattern"]"; the Danish has it, "Thou
impresseth the seal upon the completed measure."
These
different translations give the same general idea, that Lucifer had
something to do with the seal, that he had the signet ring, and that
that which was sealed was something perfect, a pattern, a measure. We,
therefore, with the support of the original, translate: "Thou art
the sealer of the measure." We take the word "measure"
to denote law, a common use, as: "The legislature has just passed
a new measure."
God's
government is an organized government. Order exists everywhere. Nothing
is left at loose ends. Each individual has his part to perform. The
stars in their appointed courses, the orderly processes of nature, the
uniformity of law - all testify to the existence of a Creator who is
systematic, impartial, perfect.
Even
as God has given each man his work to do in the evangelization of the
world, so all created intelligences in the universe have their
p
284 -- work to do. In his dream Jacob saw a ladder extending from
heaven to earth, and angels ascending and descending upon it. Gen. 28:12.
Zechariah saw companies of angels patrolling the earth and reporting
their findings. Zech. 1: 8-11. Angels were set with a sword to guard
the way to the tree of life. Gen. 3:24. One angel has charge of the
waters, another the fire. Rev. 16:5; 14:8. We believe that we are correct
in thinking that every angel and every created being has been given
a work to do, and that in the world to come the same will be true.
The
Keeper of the Seal
The highest functionary in government is the keeper of the seal. Some
such position Lucifer occupied. He was one of the covering angels, one
of those who had been given charge of the law, to protect it. He was
the sealer, or the keeper of the seal ring that was used in confirming
or attesting any ordinance or measure as it was passed. His was the
highest position that any created being could occupy.
This
throws light on some of Lucifer's subsequent activities. Being deprived
of his office as keeper of the seal, he would naturally, as he set up
his throne, be especially interested in all that concerns the seal.
That he would acquire another seal would seem most reasonable, and that
this seal would be his distinguishing mark, as the seal of God has been
heretofore, is also patent. Naturally, he would attempt to substitute
one for
p
285 -- the other, and each seal would respectively stand for the
authority of the government concerned. Satan "was a murderer from the
beginning, and abode not in the truth." John 8:44. This text bears on
the original controversy in heaven. Satan was a murderer, as well as
a liar. Murder finds its origin in hatred. This hatred came to it's
fruition in Calvary, where Satan had an opportunity to show whom he
hated. We are therefore justified in our conclusion that Satan hated
Christ from the beginning, and had murder in his heart even in heaven.
What
caused this hatred? The Bible gives some light on this also. Lucifer
was not satisfied with the position he had. He wanted to be like God.
It was this very honor which Christ was willing to relinquish. Christ
was like God; He was God. He "thought it not robbery to be equal
with God: but . . . humbled Himself." Phil. 2:6-8. The phrase "thought
it not robbery" might be translated: "thought it not a thing to be grasped";
that is, thought it not a thing to be selfishly sought. Lucifer said
in his heart: "I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above
the stars of God:. I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation,
in the sides of the north: I will ascend above the heights of the clouds;
I will be like the Most High." Isa. 14:13, 14.
These
things Lucifer "said in his heart"; that is, he thought them. But he
went farther. He not only thought that he would like to be
p
286 -- "like the Most High," but he attempted to carry
this thought into effect. How far he went in this attempt we do not
know, but that he tried to establish an independent government in heaven,
with himself at the head, is evident. He not only planned to exalt his
"throne above the stars of God,"but the time came when he
dared to say: 'I am a God. I sit in the seat of God." Eze. 28:2.
This indicates very strongly that Lucifer actually rallied around him
his followers in heaven, declared himself chief, and set up his throne
with the intent of ruling. He set his "heart as the heart of God."
'This is nothing short of rebellion. And rebellion means war.
"There
was war in heaven." Rev. 12:7. With what weapons this warfare was
carried on we do not presume to know. We do know that as a result "the
great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the devil, and Satan,
which deceiveth the whole world: he was cast out into the earth, and
his angels were cast out with him." Rev. 12:9. We know further
that "the dragon was wroth with the woman, and went to make war
with the remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of God, and
have the testimony of Jesus Christ." Verse 17.
The
"woman" here mentioned is the church, and the "remnant
of her seed" refers to the righteous who are living just before
the end. Jer. 6:2; 2 Cor. 11:2. With them Satan is wroth; that is, he
hates them. This hatred is doubtless closely connected with the fact
that they "keep
p
287 -- the commandments of God, and have the testimony of Jesus."
This
text is a close parallel to the statement in the fourteenth chapter
of Revelation which mentions those who "keep the commandments of
God, and the faith of Jesus." Verse 12. In the one text they are
said to keep the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus; in the
other, to keep the commandments of God and have the testimony of Jesus.
The difference in the two statements is that in one they keep
the faith of Jesus, and in the other they have the testimony
of Jesus Christ. The "testimony of Jesus is the Spirit of prophecy,."
Rev. 19:10.
The
Dragon and the Woman
The dragon which makes war with the woman is "that old serpent,
called the devil, and Satan." Rev. 12:9. Those against whom he
makes war are the "remnant of her seed." As mentioned before,
the remnant is the last church on earth, the last generation of Christians
who live just before the Son of man appears in the clouds of heaven.
Between them and Satan there will be war. Satan is wroth against them,
and seeks to destroy them. If God did not intervene, there would be
no help for them. But Christ comes to save them. He translates them
to heaven, while a great angel "laid hold on the dragon, that old
serpent, which is the devil, and Satan, and bound him a thousand years."
Rev. 20:2. The history of this conflict is an interesting one.
p
288 -- In the story of the Garden of Eden Satan and the first woman
stood face to face. In her innocence she was overcome, and Satan gained
the victory. In the last conflict, Satan again makes war with the woman.
But this time the outcome is different. Satan will be defeated, and
the woman will be victorious.
It
has been noted already that the woman signifies the church in the vision
recorded in the twelfth chapter of Revelation. While it is not the purpose
to write an exhaustive explanation of this chapter, it might be well
to note the main outline.
A
great wonder appeared in heaven: a woman clothed with the sun, the moon
under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars. Verse 1. The
woman was about to give birth to a child, "who was to rule all
nations with a rod of iron." Verse 5. The dragon stood before her
"to devour her child as soon as it was born." Verse 4. The
child, however, "was caught up unto God, and to His throne."
Verse 5.
The
account is so plain that it needs little interpretation. The child is
Christ. Evil men, led by Satan, stood ready to harm the child as soon
as it was born. It became necessary for the parents to flee to Egypt,
and when at last Christ's work had been accomplished, He was caught
up to God and to His throne.
At
first sight it would seem that according to this interpretation the
woman mentioned should be the mother of Jesus, Mary. This, however,
appears not to be the case. For after the child
p
289 -- was caught up, "the woman fled into the wilderness,
where she hath a place prepared of God, that they should feed her there
a thousand two hundred and threescore days." Verse 6. It is generally
agreed that the 1260 days here mentioned are prophetic days, each standing
for a year. This of course could not be the case if Mary were meant.
But
this is not the only reason for believing that the woman here mentioned
is the church rather than an individual. Verse 13 states that Satan
"persecuted the woman," and verse fourteen adds that to "the
woman were given two wings of a great eagle, that she might fly into
the wilderness, into her place, where she is nourished for a time, and
times, and half a time, from the face of the serpent." The last
statement in the chapter is that the dragon makes war "with the
remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of God, and have the
testimony of Jesus Christ." Verse 17. This remnant, as we have
noted before, is composed of the righteous in the last generation. We
therefore draw the conclusion that the woman is the church of God, symbolically
spoken of in this way.
In
the warfare between the dragon and the woman, between evil and good,
Satan can use means which give him a seeming advantage. He can use falsehoods,
deception, chicanery, half truths, intimidations - none of which God's
people can admit for a moment. And Satan is an expert in the use of
all these. With cunning strategy
p
290 -- his
emissaries accuse God's people of their shortcomings; and these, unwilling
to tell anything but the truth, confess their failings, which are immediately
magnified to undue proportions by the enemy. Thus it has always been.
Righteousness is made to appear sin, and sin, righteousness.
Satan
never fights fairly, nor does he ever engage in open combat if he can
avoid it. Hardly ever does he engage in a man-to-man encounter with
equal weapons, but nearly always he attacks when his opponent is weak,
sick, despondent. Nor is it a frontal attack. Generally it is a stab
in the back, a poisoned arrow shot from ambush, a cowardly assassination
in the dark. No sooner is the Christ-child born than Satan attempts
to murder Him, and mother and Child must flee to Egypt. In the wilderness,
when hunger has emaciated Christ, then - and not until then - does Satan
attack Him with his temptations. And so it is with everyone who tries
to resist him. The one who did not hesitate to attempt to murder the
helpless little Christchild, will stoop to any vile and contemptible
deed. Nothing is beneath him.
The
Final Controversy
The final controversy will doubtless be the crowning struggle of the
ages. Satan knows that it will be his last opportunity, and that if
this battle is lost, all is lost. The cunning and the wisdom he has
gained through the centuries of
the past will be marshalled for one supreme effort. He stakes all on
the outcome.
p
291 -- Just what is at stake in this controversy? For Satan, everything;
for God's people, everything; for God, very much. Let us study this.
God's
decision not to destroy Satan after he had sinned can be defended only
upon the ground that there was more at stake than merely the life of
Satan. If Satan alone were to be taken into consideration, it would
have been expedient to put him out of the way, the sooner the better.
But there was a multitude of angels whose welfare was in jeopardy. Also,
God was about to create man, and man must be taken into account. If
God were to make heaven safe for all time to come, it was necessary
that Satan be given permission to develop his theory of government which
he claimed to be superior to God's, and demonstrate what he would do
if he had the opportunity. The angels did not know Lucifer as God knew
him. To avoid any possible misunderstanding in the future, God must
permit Satan to establish himself and to operate a government for such
as should voluntarily place themselves under his supervision. If he
were permitted to do this, time would demonstrate the nature of his
rule. Angels and men would have a visual demonstration of the results
of following Satan, and would have ample opportunity for comparison
or contrast with God's government. The experiment would give solid ground
for choice, whatever the choice might be.
It
has often been said, and needs to be repeated only for emphasis, that
it would have been
p
292 -- unwise
for God to dispose of Satan as soon as he sinned. The other angels would
henceforth have served God with a certain apprehension and fear, for
they would have known that as soon as they displeased Him, they would
be destroyed. Also, it might occur to them that God was afraid of Satan,
of his plans and purposes, or He would have given him opportunity to
demonstrate them. In any event, they would know what awaited them should
they presume to deviate from God's announced will. Had Satan been killed
immediately, Heaven would never have been the same thereafter. The love
of the angels for God would have been mixed with apprehension, and in
many minds would have remained a question in regard to why Satan was
not permitted to demonstrate what he had in mind.
We
would not give the impression, however, that God was forced to do what
He did. Rather, what He did was exactly what He wanted to do, regardless
of the wishes of Satan. After sin had come, unwelcome though it was,
God wanted to have its true nature revealed. He was not only willing,
but anxious, that it be given full opportunity to show itself. Angels
and men must have a free field of choice, and the choice, to be final
and irrevocable, must be based upon a full knowledge of all the factors
involved. God is not responsible for sin; but since sin has appeared,
God is anxious that Satan be given a chance to show what he can do.
The deceitfulness of sin is never apparent at
p
293 -- its inception. Sin often looks beautiful and enticing as
well as innocent. Eve saw nothing wrong with the tree, or with the fruit
which she had been forbidden to eat. In fact, to her it "was good,"
"it was pleasant," it was "to be desired." Gen.
3:6.
The
end of sin is altogether different from the beginning. Eve could not
understand that death was wrapped up in the eating of that fruit which
looked so inviting. She did not know that as a result of sin's coming
into the world through her and Adam's transgression, one of her sons
would kill the other. She did not know that in seven generations man
would become so corrupt that "every imagination of the thoughts
of his heart" would be "only evil continually." Gen.
6:5. The fruit looked so "good"; it was "pleasant,"
"to be desired." Why not try it? There could certainly not
be much harm in that.
Lucifer
was one of the highest angels, bright, perfect in beauty, so full of
wisdom that nothing could be hid from him. Eze. 28:17, 12, 3. Surely
no evil could come from him. Were not even his "ways" perfect?
Verse 15. Had God told the angels what Lucifer was capable of doing
after he departed from the right way, it might have been hard for them
to believe that God really knew. Had not Lucifer joined with them as
the angelic anthems ascended in praise of their Creator? Had he not
joined with them in worship and in singing, "Holy, holy, holy"?
Had he not stood in the very audience chamber of God as custodian of
the seal and guardian of the law?
p
294 -- Could it be possible that such a being would rebel against
God without just cause? But even if he should rebel, he would certainly
never stoop to anything that in any way might be questionable, but ever
would uphold the high and holy principles which he himself had helped
instill in their very being.
How
could the angels ever believe that Lucifer, whom they had highly revered,
would harm or torture even the least of God's creatures? How could they
ever believe that he would cause pain, sorrow, sickness, agony, or death?
How could they ever believe that if he once got Christ in his power,
he would scourge Him till the blood would run down His back, press a
crown of thorns upon His brow, and drive cruel nails through His hands
as he hung Him on a cross to suffer a lingering death? How could they
ever believe that Lucifer would cause millions upon millions to suffer
pain and excruciating agony, and many to be tortured to death by being
roasted over a slow fire?
No,
it would be hard for the angels to believe this. But it would be hard
only because they did not know the insidious nature of sin. When at
last they saw Satan do the very things here mentioned, they were overcome
with the hideous, awful, revolting power of evil, and through Satan's
demonstration and their reaction to it, heaven was made safe for both
angels and saints. It is doubtful that it could be made safe any other
way.
The
controversy, as far as human records go,
p
295 -- has been continuing for nearly six thousand years. We are
nearing the final stages. Soon will come the decisive moment upon which
so much hangs. Satan has had abundant time to demonstrate what he will
do if he has the opportunity. God also has been making a demonstration.
The final climax is just before us.
When
the end of the world is mentioned, some - and among them Christians
- react unfavorably, believing that if there is such a thing as the
end of the world, it is a long way off, and will not concern either
them or their children. We think and believe that in many cases this
is due to a misunderstanding or perhaps to lack of information. A few
observations may not be amiss in regard to this important subject.
It
is not our intention to enter into a full discussion of the subject
of the second coming of Christ and the end of the world. We would, however,
consider it a privilege to present that phase of it which concerns us
in our present discussion.
God's
Suffering
However much we would like to exonerate God from any responsibility
for the present world order, there are some things for which He cannot
escape responsibility, and from which He does not wish to be excused.
We have already discussed the matter of the imprudence of destroying
Lucifer as soon as he sinned. We believe that any person who thinks
the matter through will agree with this. In any event, God chose not
to destroy
p
296 -- Satan. But in choosing not to destroy him, God in reality
chose to permit the present world order. While we say that God is not
responsible for sin, we must at the same time admit that God permits
sin. The truth is that God had power to destroy Satan, and chose not
to do so. If He did not destroy him, but permitted him to continue his
nefarious work, God must take the responsibility for His action. This
He does.
We
need not here enter into the question of how God more than nullifies
the intrigues of Satan. Where sin abounds, grace does much more abound.
No one needs to be deceived or lost. God "lighteth every man that
cometh into the world." John 1:9. No one need be in darkness. Not
only does God enlighten every man, but He makes provision for those
who have been caught in the snare, so that they can escape if they wish.
And this He does not only once. If a man sin a hundred times, God will
forgive him. If he sin a thousand times, the door of mercy is still
open. If he sin every day of his life, and live a thousand years, he
may find pardon if he thoroughly repents. If he is nailed to a cross
as a malefactor and deservedly is about to forfeit his life because
of his crimes, there is still hope. God can do no more than He has done
and is doing. If anyone is lost, it is only after God has done all in
His power to avert such a tragedy, even to the offering of Himself to
die in the place of the sinner. More than this no one can do.
When
we speak of the sorrow and tragedy
p
297 -- which sin has caused, and the suffering attendant upon it,
we are likely to think of it only in terms of human suffering. Yet,
much as mankind has suffered, God has suffered immeasurably more. It
was at infinite cost to Himself that God permitted Satan to live instead
of immediately destroying him. There must be a reason for this, and
this reason is found only in the unfathomable love of God. God could
have saved Himself untold agony; He could have saved His Son from the
cruel nails and the taunts of the wicked; He could have destroyed Satan
and refused to create man; He could have done a thousand things other
than what He did do, and have saved Himself from the terrific cost,
to Himself, of salvation. But God did not save Himself. He so loved
the world that He gave His only-begotten Son; and the Son so loved the
world that He gave Himself. Much as sin has cost mankind, it has cost
God a thousand fold more.
This
suffering of God must be taken into account when we compute the cost
both of sin and of salvation. When we hear men thoughtlessly speak of
all the suffering sin has caused mankind., without taking into account
the greater cost which God has paid, it is well to remember this. Some
seem to think that God is far above the common experience of mankind,
that He sits on a throne high and lifted up, in everlasting joy and
bliss, while men are suffering the pangs of hunger and distress. Let
such remember that God is touched with the feeling of our infirmities,
that He "hath
p
298 -- borne our grief's, and carried our sorrows"; that "the
chastisement of our peace was upon Him; and with His stripes we are
healed"; that "He was wounded for our transgressions, He was
bruised for our iniquities"; that "in all their affliction
He was afflicted"; and that "in His love and in His pity He
redeemed them"; and that because "He Himself hath suffered
being tempted, He is able to succor them that are tempted"; and
that "though He were a Son, yet learned He obedience by the things
which He suffered." Isa. 53:4, 5; 63:9; Heb. 2:18; 5:8. In view
of these statements, how can any say that God let man suffer while He
Himself was unwilling to share this suffering?
The
Lord Is Coming
While it
is true that God suffers more than we, as He is higher than we are,
it is nevertheless true that man suffers and has suffered long because
of sin. It ought not thus ever to continue. It ought, indeed, not to
continue one moment longer than is necessary. Satan's reign must be
continued until he has had ample time, to demonstrate what he will do
and that his government is better than God's, but when the demonstration
is completed, the final reckoning and assize must come. There must be
a balancing of accounts, and in this angels and men are especially concerned.
Satan's government and plans must be evaluated, and so must God's. In
this, men and angels must have an important part. Hardly anything more
dreadful can be
p
299 -- imagined than having sin and iniquity flourish forever. Some
seem to think that the world is getting better, but the evidence does
not support their contention. Even at this present moment men's hearts
are failing them for fear of what is coming on the earth. Unless all
signs earthly fail, and God's Word also, we are standing on the threshold
of solemn events. The end of all things is at hand. The Lord is coming,
and coming soon.
A
message such as this should cheer the weary heart. The coming of the
Lord means the end of sin. It means the end of the great controversy.
It means that God believes that Satan has at last reached the end of
his demonstration, and that men and angels are ready to give their verdict.
It means that the kingdoms of this world are to become the kingdoms
of the Lord and of His Christ. It means that Edenic conditions will
be restored, that the resurrection will take place, and that sin and
sorrow will forever be of the past.
How
can any Christian fail to be thrilled by such a message and by such
an event? Satan has been allowed to carry on his work long enough. He
must be stopped. There must be an end to sorrow and suffering. As far
as we can see, if men carry on much longer, there will be no man left.
Each nation - in intent at least - is getting ready to withstand every
other nation. And if one nation should at last be left on the face of
the earth, there is every indication that that nation would not long
survive. For men with uncurbed ambition would arise in that nation,
and
p
300 -- battle to the death would be on again. No, the only solution
to earth's vexing problems is the coming of the Son of man. With reverence
we say that the time is near when God must intervene.
However,
the Lord will not come till there has been one final demonstration both
of the power of God and of the power of Satan. This is as it should
be. Both God and Satan should present their finished product, that men
may see and judge of the relative merits of the two antagonists. Only
such a demonstration will satisfy the on-looking universe.
In
Satan's first attack on the human race in the Garden of Eden, he used
a serpent as the medium. In the last attack he will have recourse to
a power which in the language of Revelation is called a "beast."
Rev. 13:1. . An "image to the beast" is also mentioned. Verse
14. This beast "had power to give life unto the image of the beast,
that the image of the beast should both speak, and cause that as many
as would not worship the image of the beast should be killed."
Rev. 13:15. From this it can be seen that the war is one unto death.
"As many as would not worship the image of the beast should be
killed."
This
beast "causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and
bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads:
and that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the
name of the beast, or the number of his name." Verses 16, 17.
It
is significant that in this last struggle there
p
301 -- should be reference made to a mark, and that if a man does
not receive the mark, he will be able neither to buy nor to sell. We
know that God's people will have a seal in their foreheads. Rev. 7:3.
This seal is called "the seal of the living God." Verse 2.
The 144,000 are said in the fourteenth chapter to have the Father's
name written in their foreheads. Verse 1. A seal must naturally have
the name of the owner of the seal engraved on it, and as this seal is
the seal of the living God, we accept the view that the seal and the
name of God are the same; or, rather, that the seal contains the name.
In another chapter we have already discussed the seal of God, and have
found that it is closely connected with the Sabbath of the Lord, that,
indeed, the Sabbath is the distinguishing mark of God, that it is God's
sign or seal, and that it and sanctification are inseparably connected.
The reader will do well to refresh his mind by referring to the chapter
"The Seal of the Law."
Sunday
and Sabbath
In another chapter, "Who Changed the Sabbath?" we called attention
to a power which claims not only to have changed the Sabbath from Saturday
to Sunday, but also to have divine authority for doing so. And the very
fact that this power has changed the Sabbath, and that the change is
accepted by the Protestant church, is cited as proof of its right to
change the commands of God. Can it be that this man-made sabbath
p
302 -- is the mark of the beast, as opposed to the Sabbath of the
Lord, which is the seal of God?
When
Satan makes his last stand to oppose the people of God, he goes to "make
war with the remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of God,
and have the testimony of Jesus Christ." Rev.
12:17. Those who thus keep the commandments have the seal of the living
God in their foreheads; they have the Father's name written there. The
others also have a mark in their foreheads. It does not require great
insight to believe that these two marks are connected with the law of
God, one as the seal of God, and the other as the mark of the apostate
power.
The
one great difference among Christians in regard to the law of God is
in regard to the Sabbath. Some Christians keep the seventh day of the
week according to the commandment. Others keep the first day. These
latter are in the large majority. In order to justify their action with
reference to keeping the first day, they make the claim that the law
of God is abrogated and hence not binding upon Christians. They are
driven to the position that the whole law is nullified rather than just
one commandment - though one commandment is all they really wish to
see made void - because it would seem strange to take one commandment
out of the law and retain all the rest. What they do, however, is to
do away with the whole law, and then re-enact the nine commandments,
leaving out the offending one.
If
this seems an unwarranted assertion, one
p
303 -- need but ask a few questions. If one who observes the first
day of the week were asked what he means by the statement that the law
is not binding upon Christians, he would answer that as far as the Sabbath
commandment is concerned, it means that he need not observe the seventh
day. The commandment is no longer in force, and need not be observed.
If he were asked if this applies to the whole law, he would answer that
the whole law has been done away, and that we need not keep it. If he
were asked to make this more specific, and apply it to a particular
commandment, for example, "Thou shall not steal," he would
hardly dare take the position that a Christian need not keep that. Rather,
he would say that a Christian does not and must not steal. He would
take the same position with all the other commandments except the fourth.
The Christian who claims that the law is abrogated, generally recedes
from that position when asked to apply it to particular commandments.
All he really wants and needs is to have the fourth commandment abolished,
and he is willing to keep the rest.
Those
who keep the seventh-day Sabbath claim to observe the law. The others
indignantly repudiate the idea that they have anything to do with the
law. Sabbath observance, therefore, becomes a test of a man's attitude
toward the law, and toward law in general. Thus the Christian world
is divided between those who keep the commandments and those who do
not. The
p
304 -- observance of the Sabbath constitutes the dividing line.
It
is on this battle front that the last struggle will be fought. Satan
goes to "make war with the remnant of her seed, which keep the
commandments of God, and have the testimony of Jesus Christ." This
means that they keep all the commandments, and that this is what makes
Satan angry.
It
should not be thought, however, that the struggle is confined to the
mere matter of a day; that is, whether the seventh day or the first
day is the one to be kept. There is more involved than that. The roots
of the controversy lie much deeper. They touch the question of evolution,
of inspiration, of the integrity of the Word of God, of Modernism or
Fundamentalism, of the plan of salvation, of the sacrifice of the cross,
of the government of God itself. The final choice made in view of these
considerations decides the destiny of man and of mankind.
Martin
Luther
Four hundred years ago a young monk decided to take his stand by the
Word of God, whatever the cost. Tradition had been his guide, but henceforth
the Word of God, and the Word of God only, would be his lodestar. Whether
he ever said the words attributed to him or not, the sentiment is surely
his, and that of a large body of Christians today: "Here I stand,
I can do no other; may God help me." "Here I stand,"
he
p
305 -- said, placing his hand on the Bible. And "the Bible,
and the Bible only," has from that time been the rallying cry of
true Protestants. When that ceases to be the truth, Protestantism ceases
to be.
We
are today witnessing the disintegration of the movement that began so
nobly in Germany four hundred years ago. Many of these who have stood
for the faith once delivered to the saints, who raised the cry, "Back
to the Bible!" have deserted the cause and are among the foremost
in dissecting the precious volume of God. It is not the atheists, it
is not the infidels, it is not the Mohammedans, it is not the Catholics,
who bear major responsibility for destroying reverence for the Bible
and making it of none effect. It is the Protestant clergy.
It
is in the theological seminaries in which the clergy are educated that
the chief work is being done. One after another of these former strongholds
is deserting its original position and breaking down that which it formerly
built up. There are not many colleges of first rank that remain true
to the faith of the fathers. Most of them are honeycombed with Modernism,
not to say skepticism; and the sturdy faith of the teachers who once
taught in their halls is largely nonexistent. Protestantism was built
on the Bible as its foundation. It is not possible to remove the foundation
and expect the superstructure to stand.
If
the sixteenth century needed a voice to call men to the Bible, the twentieth
century needs a
p
306 -- still tronger voice. The Protestant movement as such seems
doomed. There is hardly a church that bears the name "Protestant"
which does not have ministers and teachers who openly proclaim the fallibility
of revelation, the errancy of Scripture, and the inadequacy of blood
atonement. If the church continues for a few more years in the direction
it is now going, common honesty will demand that the name "Protestant"
be dropped, and a name more in harmony with facts be substituted. What
form the new movement will take we are not prepared to say, but it will
be Protestant no more.
Does
this mean, then, that the work so nobly begun a few hundred years ago
shall come to nought? We believe not. God was in that movement. Its
fault was that it was not continued beyond the lifetime of its founders.
No man knows all truth. God's revelation is not communicated all at
once. It is here a little, there a little, line upon line, precept upon
precept. A steady walking in the light would have brought newer and
greater revelations, and saved some from the pitfalls into which they
fell.
There
is no way in which a movement founded upon the Bible, and upon the Bible
only, can accept the traditions of men in preference to the Word of
God. As soon as it does so, it ceases to be a Bible movement, and fails
to the extent to which it departs from Bible truth. When this happens,
God gives time for repentance; but if there is no repentance, God will
raise up another people to finish the work begun, and to carry it
p
307 -- on to greater success. The Protestant church may cease to
be, but Protestantism will continue.
God
has not left this world, nor is He satisfied with half measures. If
the church fails in an hour such as this, God has means at hand that
will restore the old faith. There are those who will build the old waste
places, raise up the foundations of many generations, repair the breach,
and restore the paths to dwell in. God does not leave Himself without
a witness. Men may depart from the law, they may hew themselves cisterns
which will hold no water, they may consider themselves wise above what
is written, but God's arm is not shortened. He has in reserve instruments
whom men may despise, but who nevertheless will cause God's name to
be known to the ends of the earth. God knows what He is doing. And He
knows them that are His.
We
believe that the time has come for a new Protestant movement, one that
will rally Bible believers in all churches and societies, and unite
them in one body for the defense of the faith. Men have made void the
law of God. It is time for Him to work. From one end of the earth to
the other the call must sound. Protestantism has deserted its standards.
A new Protestantism must arise.
One
Fold, One Shepherd
Christ's word, "There shall be one fold, and one Shepherd,"
will yet be fulfilled before the end. John 10:16. There are now many
folds, and honest believers in all of them. This shall not
p
308 -- always thus continue. The call will sound: "Come out
of her, My people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye
receive not of her plagues." Rev. 18:4. God will gather His own
into one fold, and when the final struggle comes, there will be no doubt
in regard to where each stands. The people thus called out will keep
the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus. Rev. 14:12.
The
question may be asked if it is possible to unite all the true saints
of God in one body. Which creed will be accepted? What unifying factor
is there to be to bind them together? With the many different denominations
now in existence, is it not too much to believe that there could ever
be a call sounded that would be strong enough to draw these diverse
elements into one body?
Says
Christ: "Other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also
I must bring, and they shall hear My voice; and there shall be one fold,
and one Shepherd." John 10:16. Note: "They shall hear My voice."
As the Good Shepherd, Christ goes before the sheep. They follow Him.
In these few words Christianity is summed up. "He goes before them,
and the sheep follow Him: for they know His voice." Verse 4. Christianity
is just that simple. To follow Christ is all the theology anyone needs
for salvation. On that platform all Christians can unite. And as one
follows Christ, and another follows Him, the two will walk together.
And as all follow Him, there will be one fold and one Shepherd.
Will
this ever come to fruition in this earth?
p
309 -- We believe so. As the nominal churches depart more and more
from the faith of the living God, there will be those in every communion
who are longing for a consolation in Israel. They will see hundreds
of churches with thousands of believers, each church different in faith
from the others, and yet with people in it who are truly trying to serve
God. They will be perplexed, and will wonder what they are to do and
what they are to believe. One great man of the church will say one thing,
and another equally great will say something different. In his perplexity
the true child of God will turn to the Word, and it will suddenly dawn
upon him, as though it were a new revelation, that Christ is the way,
the truth, and the light, and that all he needs to do is to follow Him,
and every religious problem will be solved. Breaking with every earthly
tie, men will set out to follow the Lamb whithersoever He leadeth, and
to their astonishment will find that others are pursuing the same course.
On the simple program and creed of following the Lamb, they will unite
in divine fellowship, and God will set His seal of approval upon them.
They follow the Lamb; they have the Father's name written upon their
foreheads; the Lord owns them as His; they are sealed for eternity.
When
men follow this simple program, there will be developed a people who
will keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus. Jesus states
definitely: "I have kept My Father's commandments." John 15:10.
Those who follow
p
310 -- Jesus will keep the commandments. If any do not keep the
commandments, it simply shows that they do not follow Him.
We
are therefore safe in believing that there will be a return to primitive
faith and godliness before the coming of the Son of man. Men will begin
to follow the Master again, trustfully doing what He did. With apostolic
faith will come apostolic power. The whole world will be arraigned in
two camps: those who keep the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus,
and those who do not. There will be no mistaking the saints. They will
have the seal of the living God in their foreheads.
Of
all the experiences through which the saints go, the Sabbath is a sign.
Believing in the simple story of creation as recorded in the first chapters
of Genesis, they will naturally accept the account of the Sabbath. The
two go together. Believing in Christ, they will follow Him and accept
Him as the way, the truth, and the life. Accepting Christ as their Lord,
they accept Him also as the Lord of the Sabbath. As He rested, so do
they rest. They follow Him whithersoever He goeth.
It
is against this company that the wrath of Satan will be directed. It
is against them that he will make war. And the struggle will be fierce
in its intensity. The decree will at last be issued that whoever will
not worship according to the command of the "beast" shall
be killed. Rev. 13:15. Then comes the time of Jacob's trouble. Satan
is determined to test the people of God to
p
311 -- the utmost, and if possible, to make them sin. If he succeeds,
he has gained an important point, for God has determined to show His
power in this very people. In and through them He intends to give a
demonstration to the world of what the gospel can do for humanity.
The
last generation of men carry all the sins and the weaknesses of their
forefathers. If any are weak, they are. If any have inherited or cultivated
tendencies to evil, they have. If it is possible for them to live through
the struggles of the last days without sinning, it has always been possible
to live sinlessly. And this is the very thing which God intends to demonstrate
through them. This demonstration will also settle the question whether
it is possible for men to keep the law. If these people can do so, it
is conclusively proved that man can keep the law, and that God is not
unjust in requiring obedience.
The
last generation of God's people, therefore, constitutes a special company.
Satan is given permission to try them to the utmost. He makes war against
them. He threatens them. They are under death sentence. But all these
things do not move them. "Here is the patience of the saints."
They endure, they continue steadfast, they are immovable. Threats and
flatteries fall on deaf ears. All that Satan can do is without effect.
They, as did Christ, go through Gethsemane. And as He came out victorious,
so do these. When the struggle is over, they are seen standing on Mount
Zion, with the Father's name
p
312 -- written
in their foreheads. They are without fault before the throne of God.
In
these 144,000 God stands justified. He has proved by them that the law
can be kept under the most adverse circumstances. He has disproved Satan's
assertion that God is unjust in demanding that men keep the law. God
is vindicated. Satan is defeated. The controversy is ended. All that
remains is the balancing of accounts. And then - after the judgment
is ended - comes the reign of God, unending, glorious. God speed that
day!
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