The Bible Is Without Error.
In its original
autographs, or manuscripts, the Bible is the infallible Word of God. It is
completely inerrant. It has no errors of any kind whatsoever. This is so
because the original manuscripts were Godbreathed. Holy men of old spoke as
God the Holy Spirit moved them. Thus, God is the author and we may never
question what He has written.
However, we must always
remember that a translation is not the original language and, therefore, is
not as trustworthy as the original language. The translators were not
inspired. They were fallible men who performed the awesome task of
translating the original Godbreathed writings into another language. Because
they were not inspired by God and because of grammatical differences between
languages, they are not able to produce a perfect translation. However, in
spite of these difficulties, the translation identified as the “Authorized
King James Version” was produced with such accuracy that we can ordinarily
trust the translation to be the Word of God.
It is true that some
translators did their work more faithfully than others; nevertheless, of all
the translations that are available today, I have no doubt that the King
James translation is the best and the most accurate translation. If I had to
trust in any English Bible, I would trust far more quickly in the King James
Bible than in any other. This is particularly true because it can be shown
that the Greek manuscripts (TextusReceptus Text) that were used in the
translation of the King James Bible were more consistent with the original
writings than the manuscript copies used in almost all other translations of
the Bible.
We must remember that
even the King James Bible is a translation, and now and then, the
translators did not do quite as good work as they could have done. We do not
know why God has allowed it to be this way, but it is a fact. However, by
God's mercy, we are able to check the translators' work: We can go back to
the Greek manuscripts of the New Testament and the Hebrew manuscripts of the
Old Testament. That is why concordances and Interlinear Hebrew/English Old
Testaments and Greek/English Interlinear New Testaments are so important and
helpful.
The original manuscripts
of the Bible were almost entirely written in the Hebrew and Greek languages.
We do not have the original manuscripts, but we have reason to believe that
the Hebrew and the Greek manuscripts from which the King James Bible is
translated are so accurate that for all intents and purposes we must set the
presumption that they are infallible.
Occasionally a writer in
a commentary struggles to understand a verse. He looks at the original
Hebrew, and he may conclude that the scribe may have made an error in
connection with a word that is part of a verse because it is difficult to
understand. He may then suggest that if one letter of one word in the
original Hebrew is changed very slightly it will become a different letter
and, therefore, the word will be a different word. This in turn will give a
different sense to the verse, and we can understand the verse much better.
Such a suggestion must
never be countenanced. When looking at the original language manuscripts, we
never question a single letter of a word. God insists on this principle in
Galatians 3:16, where He speaks of a verse in the Bible in which the word
“seed” appears. He emphasizes that the word “seed” is singular, not the
plural word “seeds.” Thus, God is pointing out that in the original
manuscripts every word and every letter of every word is infallible.
The
Puzzle of the Word “Sabbath”
In this study we will
carefully examine one word that greatly confounded the translators.
Amazingly, this problem is found not only in the King James Bible but in
every other English translation, and not only in the English translations
but also in the German, the Dutch, the Spanish, and in virtually all
translations. It is not only found in those Bibles that were translated from
the Textus-Receptus text but also in those that used the Nestle or
WestcottHort text.
The problem has to do
with the translation of the Greek word “Sabbath.” Somehow the translators
were puzzled when they came to this New Testament word, and because of a
lack of understanding, they hid an important and beautiful teaching of the
Bible.
Most surprisingly, any
student of the Bible can use a concordance together with a Greek copy of the
New Testament and quickly discover the existence of this problem. Thus, one
wonders why the translators had not long ago made necessary corrections in
their translations. We can speculate that possibly they were tremendously
concerned that the ceremonial laws recorded in the Old Testament that looked
toward the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ were completed in Christ. Thus,
they wanted to make sure there would be no misunderstanding about the fact
that we are now in the era of the New Testament, and the Old Testament
ordinances like the Sabbath are no longer to be observed. Later we will
suggest other possible reasons for the inadequate translation of the word
“Sabbath.”
Let us examine this
problem and learn the important truth lost to a high degree to the church
because of the faulty translation of the word “Sabbath.”
Singular
and Plural Words
We must begin by examining
the usage of the word “Sabbath” in the New Testament. In the New Testament,
the word “Sabbath” in the original manuscripts is sometimes a singular word
and sometimes it is a plural word. Is it permissible to take a singular word
of the original manuscript and translate it as a plural word? The answer is
“No. Absolutely not.” If God had wanted it in the plural, He would have
written it in the plural. As we saw earlier, God insists on this principle
in Galatians 3:16 where God speaks of a verse in the Bible where the
singular word “seed” appears. He makes the emphasis that it is thsingular
word “seed,” not the plural word “seeds.”
Likewise, is it
permissible to translate a plural word to make it singular in the
translation? The answer is “No.” If God had wanted it to be a singular word,
He would have made it singular in the original. But that is precisely what
the translators frequently have done with the word “Sabbath.” We can readily
find verses in which the word “Sabbath” in the original was singular but was
translated as a plural word, and we can find verses in which the word
“Sabbath” in the original was plural but was translated as a singular word.
An example of this is
found in Matthew 12:1 where we read:
“At that time Jesus went on the Sabbath day
through the corn; and His disciples were an hungered, and began to pluck the
ears of corn, and to eat.”
The translators have
indicated that the word “Sabbath” is singular, but the Greek text uses the
word “Sabbath” in the plural. How could the translators have committed this
error?
Moreover, the Greek text
does not have the word “day.” It simply says “Sabbaths.” While the addition
of the word “day” in the English may not be as serious as the substitution
of the singular for the plural, it is still a curious and unwarranted
addition to the original text. There are instances in the Bible where the
Greek speaks of “the day of the Sabbath,” but how can it be that the
translators dared to introduce the word “day” in this verse when it is not
in the original?
When we correct these two
errors of the translators, we will find that the King James Bible should
read, “And at that time Jesus went on the Sabbaths through the corn; and His
disciples were an hungered.” Thus, we learn that it was an habitual practice
of Jesus and the disciples, on the Sabbath, the seventh day Sabbath since it
is still the Old Testament side of the cross, to go through the corn and
pluck the ears.
In
Matthew 12:2 we read: “But when the
pharisees saw it, they said unto Him, Behold, thy disciples do that which is
not lawful to do upon the Sabbath day.”
Here the translation has
the correct gender and number; the word “Sabbath” is a singular word, but
again the translators added the word “day,” which is not in the original.
The word “day” is not found in this verse. As we continue our study we will
discover many other examples of this puzzling kind of translation. However,
the first verse we wish to examine is Matthew 28:1, for this verse together
with other similar verses will help us get to the root of the problem raised
because of the faulty translation of the word “Sabbath.”
This study is not
intended to denigrate the King James Bible. The King James Bible is the
Bible, and we better listen to it. It is the Word of God. Ordinarily, it is
very trustworthy, but in this very narrow window of the word “Sabbath” there
are problems. When correction is made in the use of the word “Sabbath,” we
discover that it is a beautiful word that gives us aid, and comfort, and
security. It is designed by God to identify with the first day of the week
so that we might have maximum blessing in our lives.
“Week”
or “Sabbaths”?
Matthew 28:1 is translated: “In the end of the Sabbath, as it began to dawn
toward the first day of the week
[the translators italicized the word day to indicate it was not in the
original], came Mary Magdalene and the other Mary to see the sepulchre.”
The translators correctly
translated the Greek word “opse” as “end.” It is a word also translated as
“even” as in Mark 11:19, “And when even was come, he went out of the city.”
Since the seventh day Sabbath ended at sundown, on Saturday, when it had
become dark, the Sabbath Day was past. Therefore, the first few words in
Matthew 28:1 are correctly translated “in the end.”
The translators also
correctly translated the Greek word “mia” as “first.” The Greek word “mia”
is translated as “one” more than 50 times in the New Testament. It was also
translated as “first” eight times in the New Testament. For example “mia” is
used in Titus 3:10 to say, “A man that is an heretick after the first [Greek
“mia”] and second admonition reject.”
As we go on in our study,
we will see that both the translation “first” and the translation “one”
apply to the Greek word “mia” used in Matthew 28:1.
But it is the Greek word
“Sabbaths” that is found in Matthew 28:1 that surprises us. Amazingly, the
Greek shows that the verse really says, “In the end of Sabbaths [plural], at
the dawning on toward the first of the Sabbaths [not “week”].” The second
word “Sabbaths” in this verse is identical to the first word “Sabbaths.” Why
did the translators change the second “Sabbaths” to “week”? First of all the
word “week” is singular whereas “Sabbaths” is plural. As we have seen, the
Bible specifically prohibits a change of this kind. Moreover, God very
carefully used precisely the same word “Sabbaths” both in the phrase “the
end of the Sabbaths” and in the phrase “the first of the Sabbaths.” Why did
they change the plural word “Sabbaths” in the phrase “the end of the
Sabbaths” to a singular word “Sabbath,” and why did they change the word
“Sabbaths” in the phrase “the first of the Sabbaths” to the phrase “to the
first of the week”?
We can speculate why the
translators might have been tempted to change the second word “Sabbaths” to
week. Christ went to the cross on Friday and was in the tomb on the Old
Testament Sabbath, the seventh day of the week. But Sunday morning? How can
this Sunday be a Sabbath when the Sabbath is past? And so the translators
guessed or decided not to translate that second use of the word “Sabbaths”
as “Sabbaths.” They concluded that it must mean the word “week.” They had no
Biblical validation for this. If God had wanted to use another word to avoid
the use of the word “Sabbaths” in connection with Sunday, He would have used
another word. But God used the word “Sabbaths.” We wonder why?
The
SelfRighteous Pharisee
Before we answer that
question, we should look at Luke 18:912, where Jesus is commenting about a
selfrighteous pharisee. Verses 1112 declare: “The Pharisee stood and prayed
thus with himself, God, I thank thee, that I am not as other men are,
extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as this publican. I fast twice in
the week, I give tithes of all that I possess.”
This is not a correct
translation of what the pharisee said. The word “week” in this statement is
the word “Sabbath” (singular genitive of the second declension, in this
instance). It is indeed curious that the translators translated the plural
word “Sabbaths” found in Matthew 28:1 as “week.” Yet in Luke 18 they
translated the singular word “Sabbath” also as “week.” Thus, they are not at
all consistent in their translation. In the Luke account the word “week” is
singular as is the word “Sabbath,” but we can find no Biblical justification
for translating the Greek word “Sabbath” as “week.”
An argument is made that
the use of the plural “Sabbaths” as it is found in Matthew 28:1 somehow
means “between the Sabbaths,” which then allows a change from “Sabbaths” to
“week.” But there are only six days between the Sabbaths. Therefore, “week”
and “between the Sabbaths” could not be synonymous. There is no Biblical
warrant for this. Moreover, in Luke 18:12 the word in the original is
“Sabbath” (singular). Yet the translators dared to translate this also as
“week.” We, therefore, have additional evidence of their confusion in
dealing with the word “Sabbath.” Luke 18:12 should be translated, “I fast
twice in the Sabbath.”
With this corrected
translation, we can understand what the selfrighteous pharisee is saying.
The seventh day Sabbath was a holy day to Old Testament Israel. God did not
provide manna on the Sabbath; they had to gather a double portion the day
before. They were to do no work of any kind on the Sabbath; they were not to
cook, they were not to make a fire. Thus, it was a logical day to try and
prove “how holy I am,” as did the pharisee. While others ate the food that
was prepared the day before, he said, “I'm going to fast,” and everyone will
say of me, “Isn't he holy. He's fasting.”
Fasting was very
important to ancient Israel. For instance, we read in Isaiah 58, “Wherefore
have we fasted, say they, and thou seest not?” The pharisee skipped not one
but two meals on the Sabbath. He fasted for two meals and there is a
possibility that the Jews ate only two meals on the Sabbath. Therefore, it
appeared that he was a very holy man in that he ate neither of these meals.
He was showing how super holy he was because he observed the Sabbath day in
a super holy way. In any case, the phrase “I fast twice in the week” is not
a faithful translation of the Greek. It should be translated, “I fast twice
in the Sabbath.”
Is the
Hebrew Word for Sabbath Also the Word for Week?
An additional possible
rationale might be suggested as to why the translators of the King James
Bible substituted the word “week” for “Sabbaths.” Theologians have held that
the Hebrew word for “Sabbath” also may be translated as “seven” or as
“week.” Furthermore, because the New Testament Greek uses a transliteration
of the Hebrew word “Sabbath” to describe a Sabbath, it would seem to
logically follow that even as theHebrew word for “Sabbath” also means
“week,” then the Greek word for “Sabbath” also may be translated “week.”
This rationale can be
shown to be faulty for two major reasons. The first reason is that the
Hebrew word for “Sabbath” and the Hebrew word for “seven” or for “week” are
different words. The Hebrew word for Sabbath is ZPC (shabbawth with the
Hebrew letters Schin, Beth, He). The Hebrew word for “seven” or “week” is
DPC (shawbooah with the Hebrew letters Schin, Beth, Ain). These two words
are not interchangeable. They are different words. Therefore, in the Hebrew
language of the Old Testament the word “seven” or “week” is never used in
place of the word for “Sabbath.”
This truth is further
emphasized when we realize that the first day of the seventh month as well
as the Day of Atonement, which was the tenth day of the seventh month, were
called Sabbaths in Leviticus 23. In the same chapter, both the first day and
the eighth day of the Feast of Tabernacles are called Sabbaths. The emphasis
in these cases is not on seven.
Secondly, it must be
noted that while the Greek word for 93"Sabbath” is a transliteration of the
Hebrew word “Sabbath,” it became a Greek word when it was used in the New
Testament, and the grammatical rules for Hebrew cannot be used in trying to
understand the Greek. Even if it were true (and it is not true), that the
Hebrew word for “Sabbath” could be translated as the word “week” in the Old
Testament, it would not follow at all that the Greek word for “Sabbath”
could also be translated as the word “week” in the New Testament.
The
Old Testament Sabbaths End
Returning to Matthew 28:1,
let us carefully examine the phrase that has the first use of the word
“Sabbaths.” It says, “In the end of the Sabbaths.” How long had the seventh
day Sabbath been observed? All through the Old Testament era, and it had
been particularly articulated on Mount Sinai, and spelled out in the ten
commandments: God's command was that man should work for six days and rest
on the seventh day; it is the Sabbath.
God gave a reason why
they were to do this: It was a picture of the coming of the Lord Jesus. A
man rested from physical work on the Sabbath even as he is to rest in the
Lord Jesus and cease from trying to become saved by spiritual work. He was
to trust entirely on the saving work of the coming Messiah.
God declares in Ezekiel
20:12: “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.”
God is instructing us
that the Old Testament Sabbaths were signs pointing to the fact that
salvation is entirely of Jehovah. This explains why Deuteronomy 5:15
declares: “And remember that thou wast a servant in the land of Egypt, and
that the Lord thy God brought thee out thence through a mighty hand and by a
stretched out arm: therefore the Lord thy God commanded thee to keep the
sabbath day.”
When God brought Israel
out of Egypt, from the house of bondage, He was pointing to the spiritual
reality that salvation is of God. Egypt is used in the Bible as a figure or
type of being in bondage to sin and to Satan. Even as ancient Israel was
brought out of Egypt only by God's almighty power, so we who are saved are
freed from bondage to sin and Satan by God's power. Even as ancient Israel
could take no credit whatsoever for their escape from Egypt, so we who have
become saved can take no credit whatsoever for our salvation.
Thus, the Hebrew word
“Sabbath” is also a Hebrew word for “rest.” It ordinarily is used to focus
our attention on the spiritual rest we receive in salvation.
The law of the Sabbath
rest was to be so rigorously adhered to that, as we read in Numbers 15, when
a man picked up a few sticks, Moses went to God and asked what to do to the
man. God said he was to be stoned to death for picking up a few sticks! And
he was stoned to death. Through this God illustrates the dynamic principle
that the only way to be saved is to trust in the coming Messiah, Who was
typified by the seventh day Sabbath. We are to look only to Him, and the
moment we trust our work in the slightest degree as a basis for salvation
(even though we believe we are saved by God's grace), we are still under the
wrath of God. This is the same principle that is taught in Galatians 5 where
God instructs us that if an individual trusts in his physical circumcision
as a basis for having become right with God, he has fallen from grace; that
is, one is either saved solely by the grace of God or he is not saved at
all. Indeed, the seventh day Sabbath of the Old Testament typified Jesus
Christ as our Savior.
On the last Sabbath of
the Old Testament era, Christ, Who is our
Sabbath, had in one sense completed the work God had assigned to Him
in bearing the wrath of God on behalf of all who were to be saved. Late
Friday afternoon, He uttered the dramatic words, “It is finished.” And on
that last Sabbath His body rested in the tomb.
Amazingly, even as God
rested on the seventh day from His work of creating this universe, so Christ
in a real sense rested on the seventh day from His work of creating the
Kingdom of God through His shed blood.
In another sense His work
would not be finished until He arose from the grave on Sunday morning for He
was to be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth and three
days and three nights included that last Sabbath.
The point, however, of
Matthew 28:1 is that this Sabbath during which Christ rested in the tomb was
the last Sabbath of the Old Testament era. The phrase “In the end of the
Sabbaths” could be expanded to read, “Now that the era of the Old Testament
Sabbaths has come to an end inasmuch as Jesus Who was typified by those
Sabbaths had finished His work and was now resting from His labors.” The
last seventh day Sabbath like all the previous seventh day Sabbaths pointed
directly to the cross where Christ alone did all the work that was necessary
to save those who believe on Him.
Christ rose from the
grave on a Sunday morning and the era of the Old Testament Sabbaths came to
an end. The Old Testament ordinance commanding the keeping of seventh day
Sabbaths ended.
God is instructing us
that never again are we to observe the Sabbath on the seventh day of the
week. Never again is man to observe a Sabbath day that has the same meaning
that it had in the Old Testament. It is the end of the Sabbaths. All the
Sabbaths that had come before now have come to an end. The burnt offerings,
the blood sacrifices, the Passover, and all the other ceremonial laws were
no longer to be observed because they were completed in Christ, and the
seventh day Sabbath had been completed in Christ and was never again to be
observed. This is why we read in Colossians
2:16: “Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of
an holyday, or of the new moon, or of the sabbath days.”
The
new moons, the feast days, and the Old Testament Sabbaths, of which the
seventh day Sabbath was the most prominent, were a shadow of Christ, Who was
to come.
A
New Era of Sabbaths Begins
Notice what follows and
how beautiful the language is: “In the end of the Sabbaths, as it began to
dawn toward the first of the Sabbaths” (Matthew 28:1). What does that mean?
It means that God has a new era of Sabbaths. It is Sunday morning; it is the
dawning of a new era of Sabbaths. “As it began to dawn toward the first of
the Sabbaths.” It is not just one Sabbath that is beginning. God is teaching
that there is a whole series of Sabbaths to come. God is saying, by His own
definition, that these new Sabbaths are each and every Sunday.
As we learned earlier,
the third century church had grasped this principle fairly well. But
theological writings from three or four hundred years ago or thereabouts
showed that the church through the years had lost much of this
understanding. Occasional references to Sunday as the Sabbath day were made;
for example, the Westminster Confession refers to the Sunday Sabbath but
invalid reasons are given. They indicate that in the New Testament it is
called the Lord's Day. They also missed the point of the true nature of the
Sunday Sabbath even though they came very close to truth. As we once again
examine the original Greek manuscripts a little more carefully we can
discover the truth God has given to us. God is saying that the Saturday
during which Christ was in the tomb was the end of the Old Testament era of
Sabbaths. The next day, which was Sunday, is the first Sabbath day of a new
era of Sabbaths. From now on, each and every Sunday is the Sabbath.
The
Sunday Sabbath Thoroughly Documented
One might conclude that we
are building a very great principle on the teaching of one verse, Matthew
28:1. But when we continue to investigate this truth we find that it is
thoroughly documented in the Bible. Mark 16:12 records: “And 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 sepulchre
at the rising of the sun.”
Again we must look
carefully at the Greek and then we discover that this verse is actually
saying, “And when the Sabbath was past . . . very early in the morning the
first of the Sabbaths.” The teaching of this verse is identical to that of
Matthew 28:1. The last Old Testament Sabbath is past because it is Sunday,
the day Christ rises from the dead. This Sunday is the first of a new era of
Sabbaths. For the second time God insists on a new era: it is the first of
the Sabbaths. Now remember, this is Sunday, this is not Saturday. This is
not the seventh day of the week, this is the first day of the week, and God
insists this is the first of the Sabbaths. In Mark 16:9 we read: “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.”
In this verse the word
translated “first” is the Greek word “protos,” which more than a hundred
times is translated “first.” The word translated “week” is the Greek word
“Sabbath.” A correct translation of this verse is, “And rising early on the
first sabbath, he appeared.” God is clearly indicating that the Sunday on
which Christ arose is called the first Sabbath. Thus we have complete
assurance that in Matthew 28:1 and in Mark 16:1, where the Greek word “mia”
is translated “first,” that the word “first” is a correct translation.
Because that first Sunday Sabbath was one of the many Sunday Sabbaths that
would follow, it was one of the Sabbaths as well as being the first of the
Sabbaths.
We very clearly see,
therefore, that not only in Matthew 28:1 but also in Mark 16:1 and in Mark
16:9 God is emphasizing this new era of Sabbaths.
Furthermore, in Luke
23:56 we read: “They returned [that is, from where Christ had been buried],
and prepared spices and ointments; and rested the Sabbath [not the Sabbath
Day], according to the commandment.”
Six days they were to
work, and the seventh day they were to rest; they wanted to anoint the body
of Jesus but they had to wait until the seventh day Sabbath was past. They
had to stay in their homes and rest on this day.
Then in Luke 24:1 we read
from the Greek manuscripts: “Now upon the first of the Sabbaths [not
“week”], very early in the morning, they came unto the sepulchre.” This is
exactly the same language we found in Matthew 28 and Mark 16. For the fourth
time, God insists that the Sunday morning after the cross begins a new era
of Sabbaths. It is the first of a whole series of Sabbaths that is going to
come. It is amazing how God has locked this principle in and that we have
overlooked it for so many years.
In John 19:42, God again
speaks of the death of Christ, “There laid they Jesus therefore because of
the Jews' preparation; for the sepulchre was nigh at hand.” This was Friday,
when preparation was made for the Sabbath that was to come. Then in John
20:1, God records: “The first of the Sabbaths [not “week”] cometh Mary
Magdalene early, when it was yet dark, unto the sepulchre, and seeth the
stone taken away from the sepulchre.” Do you see that? the first of the
Sabbaths this is the way the original manuscripts were written.
What is God teaching us?
He is teaching that the Old Testament Sabbaths ended at the cross when Jesus
was in the tomb.He is teaching that a new era of Sabbath days began when
Christ rose that Sunday morning. In Colossians 2 we read that the Old
Testament Sabbath was a sign, a shadow.
Colossians 2:1617: “Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or
in respect of an holyday, or of the new moon, or of the Sabbaths: which are
a shadow of things to come.”
These verses are speaking
of the Old Testament signs or ceremonies that were conducted in anticipation
of the coming of Christ; they were a shadow of what was to come. These signs
or shadows include the seventh day Sabbath. But as we are learning, this
shadow or sign of the Sabbath continues into the New Testament until Christ,
Who was typified by that Sabbath, is placed in the tomb. With that action,
the sign the seventh day Sabbath is completely fulfilled in Christ and the
sign is no longer to be observed.
The Passover Ends / The
Lord's Supper Begins
The ending of the sign of
the seventh day Sabbath is parallel to the disposition of other signs that
were completed in Christ. For example, another important shadow of the Old
Testament that pointed to the Lord Jesus Christ and the atonement is the
Passover. When did Jesus end the era of the Passover? In the Upper Room. He
ate the Passover. At the same meal, He instituted the Lord's Supper. The
last Passover and the institution of the Lord's Supper are as close together
as language can make them. So, too, we find in all four Gospels, the
movement from the Old Testament Sabbath to the New Testament Sabbath is in
very close proximity.
The Passover and the
Lord's Supper have a lot of things in common: They both have to do with
eating; they both have to do with the atonement; and yet they are vastly
different. The Old Testament Passover was eaten by the whole family, whether
the people were saved or not, whether they were elect or nonelect. All of
the congregation were to eat of the Passover, which was a sign that
indicated that in the coming Lamb, the Lord Jesus Christ, they could find
salvation. They had to kill a lamb; its blood had to be shed. They had to
physically eat of the lamb.
In the Lord's Supper, the
whole family does not partake, only the believers do. If anyone who is not a
true believer partakes of the Lord's Supper, he brings judgment upon
himself. There is no blood shed, as they did in the Old Testament when they
killed the lamb and ate of it. In the Lord's Supper, we have bread and wine
or grape juice. It is a memorial service that looks back on the cross. We
remember the Lord's death until He comes. It looks back and it also looks
forward to the marriage feast of the bride and the Lamb when our salvation
will be completed.
Thus, we have two signs
an Old Testament sign and a New Testament sign and they are intimately
related and yet they are quite different. At the cross, the atonement was
accomplished and something dramatically changed; we have to relate to that
by a change in the character of the sign.
Circumcision
Ends / Baptism Begins
The same is true of the
sign of circumcision. In the Old Testament, in a family in which the father
believed, all the males were to be circumcised. It involved cutting off the
skin of the reproductive organ, which pointed to the seed Who would come. It
pointed to the fact that the blood of this seed Who is the Lord Jesus had to
be shed; it pointed to the fact that their sins had to be cut off. To become
saved required the circumcision of the foreskin of the believers' hearts.
In the New Testament, we
are not to use circumcision in any way as a religious sign because it
involves the shedding of blood. It would be a denial that the seed has come.
So God introduced another sign to replace the sign of circumcision. The New
Testament sign that is to be put on the family of believers is water
baptism. So when Lydia was saved, all her house was baptized.
Again we discover that
there are great similarities and great differences between the
beforethecross sign of circumcision and the afterthecross sign of water
baptism. One is an Old Testament sign that points to the coming of Christ
and the other is a New Testament sign that looks back on the fact that
Christ has come.
Saturday
Sabbath Ends / Sunday Sabbath Begins
Likewise God teaches us
and this is a huge principle there was an Old Testament Sabbath day that was
rigorously kept in a certain way as a sign or shadow pointing to the Christ
Who was to come. It was a sign that was to be observed by all believers. But
now God has introduced a New Testament sign, a New Testament Sabbath day,
that is to be observed by all New Testament believers. It is closely linked
to the Old Testament Sabbath day and yet in many ways it has different
principles.
Christ
Himself Observed the Last Saturday Sabbath
Let us try to discover the
change in the keeping of the Sunday Sabbath compared with the keeping of the
Saturday Sabbath. On the last of the Old Testament Sabbath days, Christ was
lying in the tomb. In His spirit essence, He was in heaven. We do not
understand all the implications of this, but there was nothing active going
on that day; it was the Sabbath day, it was a day of rest. God is rigorously
applying that principle as Christ was resting in the tomb.
We read in
Acts 2:2627: “Therefore did my heart
rejoice, and my tongue was glad; moreover also my flesh shall rest in hope:
Because thou wilt not leave my soul in hell, neither wilt thou suffer thine
Holy One to see corruption.”
In His work of redemption
He strictly observed the seventh day Sabbath as He rested in the grave. In
all likelihood, this sheds light on the fact that His body did not decay in
the tomb. Notice how Acts 2:26 relates to the following verse (27), which
indicates Christ's body did not become corrupt in the tomb.
If His body had decayed
in the tomb, it would have indicated that in His identification with
believers, whom He had come to save, there was still some active work going
on by Christ. But the Bible says “He rested,” His body did not become
corrupt.
The importance of the Old
Testament Sabbath is also seen dramatically as God the Creator rests from
His labors of creation on the seventh day Sabbath.
It is obvious that the
Saturday Sabbath of the Old Testament must have been tremendously important.
After all, God Himself, both in creation and in the atonement observed that
sign by resting from these activities on the seventh day. Since it was so
dramatically important to Almighty God, it certainly must be dramatically
important to all of mankind who are expressly commanded to rest on the
seventh day Sabbath.
God Observed the Sunday
Sabbath
On Sunday
morning, the first of the Sunday Sabbaths,
God observed that day as He did the work that is to be featured on that day.
It is on that day that Christ rose from the grave. God Himself did the work
of raising Christ from the grave on that Sabbath day. Thus, Christ completed
the work required for our salvation on the New Testament Sabbath day. As we
examine this work of Jesus of rising from the dead on this first Sabbath of
the new era of Sabbaths, we obtain an indication of what we are to focus
upon each Sunday. The focus should be on the work of raising people from the
dead. That is, we are to be concerned with the preaching of the Gospel so
that people might become saved.
Those who trust in Christ
will experience the resurrection, which we experience when we become saved.
How are we to experience salvation? Romans
10:1317 instructs us:
For
whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved. How then
shall they call on Him in whom they have not believed? and how shall they
believe in Him of whom they have not heard? and how shall they hear without
a preacher? And how shall they preach, except they be sent? as it is
written, How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the gospel of peace,
and bring glad tidings of good things!
But they have not all obeyed the gospel. For Esaias saith, Lord, who hath
believed our report? So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the
Word of God.
In this instructive
passage, we find that God links salvation to the preaching of the Gospel.
Where and when is this Gospel to be preached? We can find our answer as we
study the activity of the New Testament church.
The
Sunday Sabbath The Time for the Congregation to Worship
In
Acts 20:67, we read of the
church at Troas gathering together on the
first of the week to break bread. It was at that time that Paul
preached to them, and he left the city the nextday to continue his travels.
The phrase “first of the week” is the same in the Greek as that which we
have been examining in Matthew 28, Mark 16, Luke 24, and John 20:1. The
Greek word that was incorrectly translated as the word “week” is “Sabbaths.”
Thus, we could translate this phrase “first of the Sabbaths.” However, as we
learned earlier, the Greek word “mia” that translates as the word “first”
also can be correctly translated as “one.” [NOTE: “mia” is used in lieu of
the cardinal “protei.” For comparison, see Mark 16:9, “protei.” In more than
50 New Testament verses “mia” is translated “one.”] In the four Gospels, as
we have seen, the Sunday that Christ arose was one of the Sabbaths but more
importantly it was the first of the Sabbaths. This was so because that
Sunday was the first Sunday of the New Testament era of Sabbaths.
The Sunday upon which the
church of Troas was meeting was not the first of the Sabbaths; it was one of
the Sabbaths. Therefore Acts 20:7 should be translated “And upon one of the
sabbaths.”
In the New Testament, God
has organized the external body called the church. He has given us rules for
the church; the church is not appointed by man, it is not a manmade
organization. It is a divine organization, created by Christ going to the
cross. He has laid out the qualifications for elders and deacons and said
how they are to oversee the congregation. He has ordained that believers
are not to forsake “the assembling of
ourselves together, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one another: and
so much the more, as ye see the day approaching” (Hebrews 10:25),
which means the congregation is to continue all the way to the end of time.
He has given all kinds of rules concerning the New Testament church, and in
Acts 20 He tells us when that church is to come together. When? On one of
the Sabbaths. What Sabbath is this? The seventh day Sabbath? No. We read in
Matthew 28 that it was the end of the Sabbaths, so what other Sabbath is
there? The new era of Sabbaths, which calls for Sunday to be the Sabbath.
This is why the church has been meeting together, since before the Bible was
completed, on Sunday. Very correctly, they have been following the edict of
the Bible. God has given us the New Testament Sabbath day so that we can
gather together as a body of believers to break bread. We shall see that the
phrase “to break bread” has to do with preaching.
Significantly, God
instructs us that on this Sabbath Paul preached until midnight. This
strongly implies that even as the seventh day Sabbath was to be observed as
a 24hour period, so is the Sunday Sabbath to be a 24hour period.
Our first awareness of
this Sunday Sabbath is in the four Gospels. In John 20 we discover that
Jesus had risen while it was still dark. Since God's work of resurrection is
entirely involved with the new Sunday Sabbath, we can see that the Sunday
Sabbath is to begin while it is still dark, thus reinforcing the 24hour
nature of the Sunday Sabbath.
The
Work of the New Sabbath: Picking, Rubbing, and Eating Corn
Now that we have learned
this tremendously importantprinciple that God has declared Sunday to be the
New Testament Sabbath, we can begin to understand some of the seemingly
strange things that Jesus did and said in connection with the Sabbath. We
will learn that these happenings point to the Sunday Sabbath.
In
Matthew 12, we read of Jesus violating the seventh day Sabbath. God
says in verse 1, “At that time Jesus went
on the Sabbaths through the corn; and His disciples were an hungered, and
began to pluck the ears of corn, and to eat.” The same event is
recorded in Luke 6, where it adds that they plucked the ears of corn, rubbed
the corn, and then ate of the corn. Returning to Matthew 12:2, “But when the
Pharisees saw it, they said unto Him, Behold, thy disciples do that which is
not lawful to do upon the Sabbath.” Were they correct? They were absolutely
correct insofar as the Old Testament Sabbath day was concerned. According to
the Old Testament Sabbath, the disciples should have gone through the
cornfield on Friday, the day before the seventh day Sabbath, and gathered
the ears of corn. On Friday they should have rubbed them so that all they
had to do was eat the corn on the Sabbath. According to the ten
commandments, they had no business going through the cornfield and picking
that corn on the Sabbath. The pharisees were correct. God had specifically
commanded that in the wilderness, Israel was to gather twice as much manna
on Friday so that there would be no gathering on the Saturday Sabbath.
The concern of the
pharisees appears to be legitimate for another reason. If I can pick and rub
an ear of corn on the Sabbath, why not do it also for a friend, and as long
as I'm doing it, why not do it for a whole village? Why not bring a
threshing machine and thresh all the corn or grain and harvest it on the
Sabbath day? What is Jesus teaching by this strange action on the Sabbath?
We know that something
dynamic is happening here. The shadow of the cross is becoming very
brilliant. It is almost time for the new era, and Jesus is beginning to give
the rules for the new Sabbath that He will institute because He is going to
the cross. Even as Jesus introduced the Communion Supper before He went to
the cross, so Jesus is beginning to teach rules concerning the New Testament
Sabbath before He went to the cross. We know these rules relate to the new
Sabbath because they are a distinct change from the Old Testament Sabbath
rules.
We read
in Matthew 12, verse 8, “For the Son of man
is Lord even of the Sabbath day.”
Luke
6:5 And He said to them, The Son of Man is Lord of the sabbath also.
Christ has a right to
change things and these changes relate entirely to the cross. As Lord of the
Sabbath, He has the right to make changes concerning the Sabbath.
Interestingly, in the
account of this event recorded in Luke 6:1
we read: “And it came to pass on the second sabbath after the first, that he
went through the corn fields; and his disciples plucked the ears of corn,
and did eat, rubbing them in their hands.”
The phrase “the second
sabbath after the first” has greatly puzzled theologians. Nothing in the
context explains what is meant by this. But when we realize that Jesus is
beginning to give us rules concerning the Sunday Sabbath, this phrase is
easily understood. It is a warning instructing us that a Sabbath other than
the first Sabbath should be kept in mind in understanding the spiritual
meaning of Luke 6. The first Sabbath is the Old Testament seventh day
Sabbath. The second Sabbath is the New Testament Sunday Sabbath. In this
account of the picking of the corn, our Lord is teaching us concerning the
focus of the Sunday Sabbath.
We will discover that
even though Jesus had not yet gone to the cross, He was already giving
instructions for the keeping of the Sunday Sabbath, which would become the
Sabbath when Jesus arose from the grave. As we have already emphasized, that
this was Jesus' plan of teaching is seen, for example, in the fact that
Jesus instituted the Lord's Supper before He went to the cross.
We will carefully study
the accounts of this corn harvesting event so that we can understand how
they apply to the new Sabbath that is to be observed each Sunday.
Harvesting and Eating
Corn Equals Hearing and Studying God's Word
First of all, we know that
picking and eating corn has nothing to do with the Gospel. We also know that
everything in the Bible does relate to the Gospel. Therefore, the phrases
that appear to have no relationship to the Gospel must be understood as
parabolic or allegorical phrases. Simply stated, they are earthly stories
with heavenly meanings.
What does corn or bread
or anything that is eaten have to do with the Gospel? What is the spiritual
meaning? Christ is the bread of life. When we see the word “corn,” or
“wheat,” or grain or bread, it has to do with Christ or His Word, and we eat
of that. To pick and eat corn means to have one's spiritual hunger
satisfied; spiritually we should have a hunger for Christ and His Word.
Where do we find that bread? In the Word of God. How are we to work to get
that corn or that bread of life out of the Word of God? We are going to
research the Scriptures; we are going to sit under the hearing of the Word.
Wonderfully, God has
established His plan for picking, rubbing, and eating ears of corn: That is,
His plan for us to hear and study the Word of God. God established the
congregation, and we learned from Acts 20:67 that the congregation met
together on one of the Sabbaths to break bread. That is, the congregation is
to meet together on Sunday to hear the Word of God. Significantly, we find
in the language of Acts 20:67 both the coming together of the congregation
to break bread and the activity of Paul preaching. In the feeding of the
5,000 (Mark 6:3544), the bread that was broken typified the Word of God that
is given to those who spiritually hunger after righteousness. The breaking
of the bread by the church of Troas, as recorded in Acts 20:7, identifies
with the preaching of the Word by Paul. Therefore, one of the chief
activities of the believer on Sunday, the New Testament Sabbath, is to
congregate together to study and hear the Word of God explained. Thus, God
ties the picking, rubbing, and eating of corn on the Sabbath with the
breaking of bread or the preaching of the Gospel on the Sabbath.
We have learned that the
first activity identified withSunday, the New Testament Sabbath, is that of
preaching the Word so that the congregation might experience the
resurrection, even as Christ arose on the first of the Sabbaths of the New
Testament era. It is also the day that should be especially set apart for
the study of the Word of God.
The Work
of the New Sabbath: Healing the Sick
In Luke 6:610 our Lord is
establishing further principles to be observed in connection with the New
Testament Sabbath. There we read:
And it came to pass also
on another sabbath, that he entered into the synagogue and taught: and there
was a man whose right hand was withered. And the scribes and Pharisees
watched Him, whether He would heal on the sabbath day; that they might find
an accusation against Him. But He knew their thoughts, and said to the man
which had the withered hand, Rise up, and stand forth in the midst. And he
arose and stood forth. Then said Jesus unto them, I will ask you one thing;
Is it lawful on the sabbath days to do good, or to do evil? to save life, or
to destroy it? And looking round about upon them all, He said unto the man,
Stretch forth thy hand. And he did so: and his hand was restored whole as
the other.
The picking of corn by
the disciples as recorded in Matthew 12 was a distinct violation of Old
Testament Sabbath law, but Christ introduced this activity on the Sabbath
because He was introducing a new Sabbath that would become effective
immediately after the cross.
Let us recall what we saw
in connection with the picking of corn on the Sabbath. It was called the
second Sabbath after the first. We saw that this was a veiled reference to a
new era of Sabbaths. Likewise, in connection with the healing of the man
with the withered hand, God uses the phrase in Luke 6:6 “on another
sabbath.” The word “another,” too, is surely a clue that points to another
era of Sabbaths, and these new Sabbaths would have rules that are different
from the Old Testament Sabbath rules.
Furthermore, since the
record of the healing of the man with the withered hand follows the record
of the picking of corn on the Sabbath, we can be quite certain that it, too,
has to do with the new Sabbath. This will become clearer as we discover the
spiritual meaning of the healing.
Healing
the Sick Equals Sending forth the Gospel
Physical healing in itself
has nothing to do with the Gospel. But we know that God used the physical
conditions of disease, leprosy, blindness, and death to illustrate man's
spiritual condition of being spiritually dead, a leper, blind, etc. Thus,
the act of healing a man with a withered hand is a picture of or represents
the act of someone becoming saved. So,too, Jesus on the Sabbath healed the
blind man (John 9:114), the impotent man by the pool of Bethesda (John
5:116), the woman with the 18year spirit of infirmity (Luke 13:1116), and
the man with the dropsy (Luke 14:14). Who spiritually has any of these
afflictions? Anyone who is unsaved. Every unsaved person is lame, is
spiritually dead, is blind, is a leper.
Luke
6 and these other records of healing on the Sabbath teach that the work of
the believer on the New Testament Sabbath is to spread the Gospel so that
the spiritually lame might be healed. In other words, the purpose of Sunday,
the New Testament Sabbath, is first of all to make sure of our own
salvation; second, to grow in sanctification as we study the Word; and
third, to get on with the task of sharing the Gospel with others. When we
gather together in congregational worship we should be preparing to go out
and share the Gospel with others.
God Anticipated the New
Sabbath on the First Day of Creation
God anticipated the work
of the New Testament Sabbath in Genesis 1. On what day of the week did
creation begin? The first day of creation was Sunday. What did God do on the
first day of the week? What did He say? “Let there be light.” On the first
Sunday, God worked to bring light into existence. Spiritually, to what does
light refer? It can refer only to the Gospel. Jesus is the light of the
world and the sending forth of the Gospel is the sending forth of that light
into the world.
Whenever we share the
Gospel, we bring the light into the world. In Genesis 1 God had already
established this for the New Testament Sabbath when He said on the first
day, “Let there be light.”
We have already discussed
the fact that Christ arose from the grave on Sunday, the first of the New
Testament Sabbaths. Thus, God is demonstrating by His actions the activities
He expects for Sunday, the New Testament Sabbath. The activities include
both the work of becoming raised from the dead (accomplished by the hearing
of the Word), and the sending forth of the Gospel (let there be light).
Amazingly, as we learned earlier in connection with the seventh day Sabbath,
God Himself rigorously observed this day both in His work of creation as
well as in His work of redemption. He rested on the seventh day Sabbath from
His work of creation. He rested in connection with His work of redemption
when His body rested in the tomb. God established the character of the New
Testament Sabbath as He did the work of creating light on the first Sunday
of creation and as He arose from the dead on the first Sunday after the
cross.
The Bible has more to say
about God's actions on Sunday, by which He instructs the New Testament
believers concerning their conduct on Sunday.
God Pours Out the Holy
Spirit on the New Sabbath
We are all acquainted with
the pouring out of the Holy Spirit as this event is recorded in Acts 2.
While it is not the purpose of this study to show this, the fact is that the
pouringout of the Holy Spirit is entirely related to God's program of
evangelizing the world. The evidence of this is clearly seen in that 3,000
people from many different nations were saved that afternoon.
What day was this when
the Holy Spirit was poured out? It was Pentecost, and Pentecost was the
eighth Sunday after the cross. On the first Sunday, Jesus was resurrected.
On the eighth Sunday, God began His work of resurrecting (saving) the
peoples of the world. Thus, God in a third dramatic way points to the
purpose of Sunday as a day to share the Gospel so that others might become
saved.
In an interesting and
significant way, God definitely focuses on the words “first” and “one.”
Creation began not only on the first day of the week, it began on the first
of the first days. Likewise, Christ not only arose on the first day of the
week, but on the first Sunday of the New Testament era. Pentecost was not
only on Sunday, it was the eighth Sunday. Because seven connotes
completeness or perfection, the number eight becomes like the number one in
that it is the first of another seven.
We learn from God's
examples in creation and redemption that Sunday is the Sabbath, when we are
to make sure of our own salvation and to go into all the world with the
Gospel. But the Bible has more to say about the Sunday Sabbath.
The
New Sabbath: A Time for Ministering to Others in the Congregation
Jesus gives us another
illustration of New Testament Sabbath activity in
Matthew 12:11, where He records:
“And he said unto them, What man shall
there be among you, that shall have one sheep, and if it fall into a pit on
the sabbath day, will he not lay hold on it, and lift it out?”
To what could a sheep in
a pit refer? Sheep surely refer to fellow believers. To be in a pit refers
to being threatened by hell, and we are threatened by hell when we are
church members who are still unsaved. Undoubtedly Jesus is admonishing
believers to encourage and pray for others in the congregation and our own
family members who are sheep that may have fallen into the pit.
We who remain faithful
are to spiritually bring them out of the pit, so to speak, by patiently
witnessing to them and being concerned with their salvation. The program of
the Sunday Sabbath day not only concerns me and my salvation but also the
salvation of others in the congregation who might not be saved, those who
are weak Christians, and those who are troubled by their sins.
The New
Sabbath: We Bring Our Offerings
God gives us further
instruction concerning the Sunday Sabbath in
I Corinthians 16:12: “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.”
The phrase “upon the
first day of the week” must becorrected to be more faithful to the context.
The word “week” is the Greek word that can only be translated “Sabbaths.”
The Greek word “mia” that has been translated “first” must be translated
“one” rather than “first” for the same reason that it should have been
translated “one” in Acts 20:7. The Greek word that has been translated
“upon” (Greek “kata”) followed by a word of the accusative case, should be
translated as a preposition of succession (throughout). [See Greek
lexiconaboutSmith, page 232.] The phrase makes abundant sense and is
altogether faithful to the immediate context as well as to the whole Bible
if it is translated “throughout/every* one of the Sabbaths, let every one
lay by him in store, as God has prospered him.” [* See John 21:25, Acts
5:42, Acts 8:3, Acts 14:23, etc., where “kata” is translated “every”.]
Thus, God is setting
forth the principle that on each and every Sunday we are to bring our
offerings. This is why throughout New Testament history the churches have
received offerings at each Sunday worship service. Do you know of any church
services that are held on Sunday where they do not pass the offering plate?
They do it because it is commanded here. The church does that right. The
congregation meets together, an offering is collected.
To summarize, we have
learned that the purpose of meeting together on the Sabbath is to bring the
Gospel so that those in the congregation who are unsaved might become saved.
It is for the purpose of exhorting and assisting the weak Christians. It is
for the purpose of rekindling the spiritual fires so that we are ready to go
on with the task of bringing the Gospel.
The focus of the seventh
day Sabbath was on rest. No work of any kind was to be done because it was
pointing to the spiritual rest we have in Christ in that He did all the work
required to save us. But the focus of the New Testament Sabbath is not on a
cessation of physical labor; rather, the focus is on intense spiritual
activity: worship, preaching, and teaching the Word of God, Christian
fellowship, spiritual assistance to members of the congregation, and sending
the Gospel into the world.
By God's mercy, He has
given us a day with the command to use it for these spiritual activities.
What a blessing this is! In our culture, we can work three days and have
enough money to have food on the table for the week. We can work a couple
more days and begin to save for a television or a new suit of clothes or a
new pair of shoes or something else. However, throughout history, in most
cultures and certainly in many cultures today, a man had to work six days a
week from sunup to sundown to scratch out enough money to put food on the
table. But when the Sabbath day rolls around on Sunday, the Christian has a
change of activity, an entire change. He forgets about his Godgiven
responsibility to earn a living for his family, and he concentrates all day
on the spiritual, which God knows we all need so badly.
One might easily say, “In
our day we listen to Family Radio six or seven days a week. Daily we are
blessed by spiritual activity. In a real sense we are worshipping every day,
so we do not have to pay much attention to the first day as the
Sabbath.”This thinking is reasonable but it is not Biblical.
Who established the first
day as the Sabbath day? God did. He has His own purposes and reasons for it.
We must not think that because we go to a prayer meeting on a Wednesday
night, and we have something else on Friday night, and we have a Bible study
on Tuesday morning, and so on, and we listen to the “Open Forum,” that we do
not have to worship and observe Sunday as the Sabbath. Christ has ordained
it as the Sabbath. And what a blessing it is. It means that on Sunday, I do
not have to mow my lawn. I should have mowed it. It is too long, and the
neighbors are uncomfortable about the way I keep my yard, but I will wait
until tomorrow.
Sunday is a day set aside
that God wants me to use for spiritual activity. I went to church this
morning to worship and fellowship with other believers. Wasn't it wonderful
that I did not have to rush away to paint my house? I did not have to rush
away to listen to a ball game. I am comfortable. I can visit and fellowship
and look around for someone whom I may be able to assist spiritually. I can
invite a few people over whom I would like to encourage, and we can have a
cup of coffee together. Or maybe it has been a long time since I went to the
nursing home. There are many lonely people there, and this is the day that I
can go and visit them. God has given me Sunday for these activities. I
haven't written to ‘Aunt Sue' for a long time. Maybe it's been a long time
since I've written to someone who has been struggling, someone who needs a
word of encouragement. I can sit down and write to that person and also to
many others.
Can you see what God has
done for us? God has given us a tremendous day. Now the moment that I start
using that day to listen to the ball game or go on a picnic or paint my
house, am I engaging in the kind of activity that God has ordained for that
day? The answer is No. Absolutely Not.
You might say, “Wait a
minute. I can paint my house, and at the same time I can meditate on the
Scriptures.” Well, I can't. I don't know what kind of painter you are, but
when I am painting, I am concerned that there are no runs and no holidays,
no this or that. And I don't want paint all over my shirt. And that's where
my mind is. Maybe you are a better painter than I am, but the fact is that I
have no business engaging in a task or a job like that. Now it is true that
if I come out of church and I have a flat tire, well, I am going to change
my tire, of course. I have to get home. But while my wheel is off, I'm not
going to get any ideas that now I can put a new set of brakes on. Do you see
the difference?
In the measure that we
steal from the Sabbath that God has given all of us, in that measure we
deplete ourselves spiritually because we are going contrary to God's rules.
We will never have God's blessings when we go contrary to God's rules. Show
me a family where they are watching the ball game every Sunday afternoon and
you cannot show me that that family is a real spiritual family you will not
be able, this cannot be the way it is. The family that is desecrating the
Sabbath in this way will be a family that is trying to live like the world
just as much as they can and yet claim to be a Christian family. It does not
compute; it will not work. God has ordained the first day as the Sabbath
whether we like it or not. If we recognize this and observe it as the
Sabbath, as God has ordained it to be observed, there can be nothing but
spiritual blessing in our lives. Can we see how our family will be when we
make that day the whole day, from midnight to midnight the Sabbath? Can we
see that as the family and congregation plan spiritual activities in
accordance with what the Bible teaches that they will experience rich
spiritual blessings? Can we see what a powerful impact that this can have on
our families? If we cannot see it, it is still a fact, because God has so
declared it.
Sabbath
and Rest ReExamined
When we examined God's
usage of the word “Sabbath” in the Hebrew of the Old Testament, we
discovered it also could be and indeed is translated “rest.” This is very
understandable because the seventh day Sabbath focused entirely on rest. The
rest God had in view was that of trusting in the Lord Jesus to do all the
work of saving us. “Rest” and “Sabbath” were synonymous.
It is quite a different
situation when we examine the word “Sabbath” as it is used in the New
Testament. As we have indicated, the Greek words “Sabbaton” (the singular
Greek ending, “omicron nu”) and “Sabbata” (the plural Greek ending “omega
nu” or “alpha”) are transliterations of the Old Testament Hebrew word
“Sabbath.” “Sabbaton” and “Sabbata” by God's careful design are Greek words
and not Hebrew words. Therefore, while the Hebrew word for “Sabbath” is
identical to a word for “rest,” the Greek words “Sabbaton” and “Sabbata” are
never translated “rest.” The Greek words that are translated “rest” are
always different words. Therefore, the idea of rest has nothing to do with
the Sunday Sabbath. As we have seen, Sunday is a day for work to be done,
intense spiritual work.
A
Sabbath Rest
There is another Greek
word that comes from a transliteration of the Hebrew “Sabbath” that
distinctly conveys the idea of “rest.” It is the Greek word “Sabbatismos”
that is found only in Hebrews 4:9,
where we read, “There remaineth, therefore,
a rest [Greek sabbatismos] to the people of God.” The word is
entirely different from “Sabbaton” or “Sabbata” inasmuch as they are in the
neuter gender while “Sabbatismos” is in the masculine gender. “Sabbatismos”
is properly translated “rest” because of the immediate context in which it
is found.
We can easily see why in
this context God introduced the word “Sabbatismos,” a transliteration of the
Hebrew word “Sabbath” that definitely means “rest.” The Book of Hebrews,
more than any other New Testament book, shows that the Old Testament
ceremonial laws were types and figures pointing to Christ and salvation in
Him. In Hebrews 4 God is using the word “rest” as synonymous with salvation
in Christ. This was precisely what was in view in connection with the Old
Testament sign of the seventh day Sabbath.
Thus, the fourth
commandment of the decalogue still applies dynamically to us, but it does
not apply in the sense of how we are to physically observe one day a week.
That sign was completed at the cross. Rather, we are to see only the
spiritual dimension; we are to remember that we are not to trust in any work
we have done as a means of obtaining salvation. We are to trust in our
Sabbath, our Rest, Who is the Lord Jesus
Christ. He is the “Sabbatismos,” the Rest that is available to all
who trust in Him.
This “rest” is not
typified by the Sunday Sabbath. The Sunday Sabbath is a day of intense work
not physical to satisfy our material needs but spiritual as we worship, as
we feed on the Word, as we evangelize, as we engage in all manner of
spiritual activity. How wonderful it is that our Savior has given us the
Holy Day of the Sunday Sabbath.
One of the difficulties
that has plagued the church in its understanding of the Sunday Sabbath is a
continuing attempt to introduce the seventh day Sabbath idea of “rest” into
the Sunday Sabbath. This multiplies the confusion. As we have learned, the
concept of “rest” has everything to do with the seventh day Sabbath, but it
has nothing to do with the Sunday Sabbath. On the Sunday Sabbath we are
simply to substitute intense spiritual work for the secular work we had been
doing the other six days.
The
Between Sabbath
In
Acts 13 God records an interesting
experience of the Apostle Paul in Antioch
of Pisidia. Because he had been commanded to bring the Gospel first
to the Jews, he came into their synagogue on the Sabbath Day (verse 14). He
would have preached to them on the Saturday Sabbath because this was the day
on which the Jews gathered together to worship. But verse
42 reads:
“And when the Jews were gone out of the synagogue, the Gentiles besought
that these words might be preached to them the next sabbath.”
The Gentiles of the city
obviously also wanted to hear the Gospel that Paul was preaching. Why did
they ask him to preach to them the next Sabbath? The translators gave us the
phrase “next sabbath.” In the original Greek, however, the phrase is not
“next Sabbath.” Rather it is the phrase “the between sabbath.” The Greek
word that is translated “next” is the same word that is found for example in
Acts 12:6 where we read that Peter was sleeping “between” two soldiers. In
fact, it is a word that is always translated “between.”
When the translators
found this word in Acts 13:42, they were puzzled. What is a “between”
Sabbath? When they came to verse 44, they found that God did use a Greek
word that should be translated “next.” Acts 13:44: “And the next sabbath day
came almost the whole city together to hear the word of God.” Therefore,
they assumed that the “between sabbath” of verse 42 could somehow also be
translated “next sabbath.”
If the translators had
realized that God had named Sunday as the Sabbath, they would have
understood what was being declared in verse 42. The Jews were still
rigorously observing the seventh day Saturday Sabbaths. Between these
Sabbaths there was another Sabbath on which the Jews were not worshipping.
It was the Sabbath that immediately followed the Jewish Sabbath. It was the
Sunday Sabbath. And so on Saturday, Paul preached to the Jews in their
synagogue, but on the next day the Sunday Sabbath that was between the
Jewish Sabbaths Paul preached to almost the whole city. Note again how God
joins the preaching of the Word with the Sunday Sabbath. Note, too,
Act 13 verse 48: “And when the Gentiles
heard this, they were glad, and glorified the word of the Lord: and as many
as were ordained to eternal life believed.” In this verse we again
see the working of God on the Sunday Sabbath as He saved people by the
preaching of the Word.
Further
Instructions Concerning the Sunday Sabbath
When we carefully read the
Scriptures, we cannot help but be struck by the activity going on during the
first Sunday Sabbath. Surely God has recorded this for a number of reasons,
one of which is to teach us how we are to be busy on this day.
For example, in Matthew
28, we read in verse 7, Jesus' words to the women, “Go quickly, and tell His
disciples.” In verse 8, God declares, “They departed quickly . . . and did
run to bring His disciples word.” Then in verse 9 we read that Jesus met
some of the disciples and they “worshipped Him.” Verse 10 declares, “Then
said Jesus unto them, Be not afraid: go tell my brethren that they go into
Galilee, and there shall they see me.” Verse 11 completes this action as the
Bible declares, “Now when they were going.”
We must be impressed by
the language of these verses which describes the worship of Christ, His
commands to go to others with His Word, and the immediate obedience of the
women and the disciples who ran to carry out His commands.
So, too, each Sabbath we
are to worship our Lord, and we are to go forth with the precious Gospel of
salvation.
More
than a Sabbath Day's Journey
In Luke 24, God impresses
upon us the kind of activity in which the true believers are to be engaged
on the Sunday Sabbath. In His encounter with the two disciples on the road
to Emmaus, God assures us it took place on this first Sunday Sabbath.
Luke Verse 13 records: “And, behold, two of
them went that same day to a village called Emmaus, which was from Jerusalem
about threescore furlongs.”
The phrase “the same day”
leaves no doubt that this incident took place the day Jesus arose from the
grave. The threescore furlongs, which was a distance of more than seven
miles, assures us that great physical energy was being expended in walking.
It is a much longer distance than a Sabbath Day's journey, which was under
two miles (Acts 1:12). Verses 15 to 27 of Luke 24 record the preaching of
Jesus to them. Verse 33 records that they “rose up the same hour, and
returned to Jerusalem.” We are assured that on this first Sunday Sabbath,
these two disciples travelled very extensively to bring the Word of Christ
to others and that Christ was busy ministering the Word of God to His
disciples. Again our Lord has given us superb instruction concerning the
activity the believers should be engaged in on the Sunday Sabbath.
We
Are Not Under the Law We Are Under Grace
It is interesting that
many people who object to the teaching of the Sunday Sabbath attend churches
which try to be very moral. Most good, middleoftheroad, conservative
churches try to have a very high degree of morality. And so they teach that
thou shalt not commit adultery. They teach that you're not to steal. In
other words, there are certain rules that you follow. They believe that
these rules are based on the Scriptures, and indeed, these rules are the
rules that God has given us.
But the moment that the
idea is presented that there is a Sunday Sabbath that must be kept,
immediately, the thought is expressed: “Oh, I see, you're under the law. I
see, you don't realize we're under grace.” Unfortunately, these dear souls
never ask the question, “How is it that when God says: Thou shalt not commit
adultery, and I rigorously try to obey that, I'm not under the law when I
try to do that.” Why is it that when the Bible talks about a Sabbath that we
are to keep, suddenly, we're under the law.
The real problem is, I
believe, that adultery is offensive. To steal is offensive. Even unsaved man
intuitively knows that these things are offensive. Even without realizing
that the Bible commands these things, many obey the Biblical command
concerning adultery and stealing. Unfortunately, many seem to think: “But on
the other hand, Sunday is such a wonderful day for me! It is my day! It is
the day that I have for me! Oh, yes, it's nice that I can go to church on
Sunday morning, and fellowship with my friends. But then I have the rest of
the day for me! I can spend the afternoon watching a ball game or engaging
in a ball game. It's a wonderful day to catch up on the hobby that I have
been working on, to catch up on my chores that I didn't get done the rest of
the week. It is my day! And so don't you trample upon my toes insofar as
Sunday is concerned, making it the Sabbath, because you're putting us under
the law.”
These dear people have a
total misunderstanding of what it means to be under the law. To be under the
law means that we're still unsaved. Every human being that is unsaved is
under the law. The law is looking at them, and declaring: “The wages of sin
is death.” And the death that God has in view is eternal damnation. Every
time an unsaved person lifts a finger to do something that is slightly
contrary to the Word of God anything, anything at all like telling a 'white'
lie, or thinking an evil thought, or doing anything that is not entirely to
the glory of God, whatever it may be, the law says he is guilty. And the law
is going to have its due. The law is going to bring this unsaved individual
to the judgment throne on the last day, and he is going to be found guilty.
What is the penalty demanded by the law? Eternal damnation. Away with him,
into hell. That is the condition of the unsaved; they are under the law.
If
we have come under grace, the law cannot find us guilty, because to
be under grace means that every sin that I have ever committed, past,
present, future, has already been carried by the Lord Jesus on my behalf. He
was found guilty on my behalf. He fully met the demands of the law. He
endured hell for me. He, as it were, spent an eternity in hell in my place,
so that the penalty has been fully paid. The law can no longer make demands
upon me. Any true child of God automatically is never again under the law.
They are under the grace of God, which is a gift of salvation, which God has
given.
Some might think, “Well,
then, why do I say that I should not commit adultery? The Bible, the law of
God, says thou shalt not commit adultery. I'm under grace. Why don't I go
out and commit adultery? The Bible says thou shalt not steal? Why shouldn't
I go out and steal? After all, I'm saved, all of my sins are paid for, now I
can go and steal all I want. Certainly I don't have to keep any Sunday
Sabbath: that's the law of God. I don't have to keep that at all. I'm not
under the law.”
Wait a minute. When I
became saved, something happened to me. I was taken out of the dominion of
Satan and I was transferred into the Kingdom of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Because I am in the Kingdom of the Lord Jesus Christ Christ is now my King
He is my master. He is the One I want to obey. How do I know how He wants me
to live? Well, He's given us the rule book of the Kingdom. It is the law of
God, which is called the Bible. I'm going to read it very carefully. How
does Jesus want me to live as His subject in view of the fact that He is my
King? Oh, I see. I'm not to commit adultery. I'm to do everything to the
glory of God. Now if I don't, if I think for a moment adulterously or if I
do something and it's not quite to the glory of God, the law has no hold on
me to threaten me with hell. I'm not under the law, I'm under grace. On the
other hand, because I've become a child of God, I have a tremendous desire
in my life to do the will of God. I'm going to be very uncomfortable when I
start thinking wrongly. I'm going to be very unhappy when I start going my
own way. I'll find as I go along that I'm always happiest when I'm doing it
God's way.
In the Kingdom of God,
the rule book indicates that God has established a church. He has
established the external congregation over which He has put elders and
deacons to have the spiritual oversight. He has listed qualifications for
these elders and deacons, and He's instructed us that we are not to neglect
the assembling together of the saints. I want to be part of a congregation
if at all possible, because that is what God calls for in His Kingdom. Where
do we read about it? In the law of God. When is this congregation going to
meet? Does God give us any more help on this? He set one day aside, Sunday.
He set one day aside, so that I can use that as the day for worship. He has
established the congregation so that I can worship God, study the Word,
share the Gospel, encourage others, have fellowship, and engage in all the
spiritual activity or the spiritual work that God calls for on the Sunday
Sabbath. And as I obey God's laws concerning the Sunday Sabbath, I'm no more
under the law than when I try to live a holy life insofar as sexual purity
oranything else is concerned, because God has given commands concerning the
Sunday Sabbath. It is simply that because of my love for Christ I want to do
it God's way, and I find as I do it God's way, I experience blessing in my
life.
My
Holy Day
One of the most incisive
statements of the Bible concerning the observance of the Sunday Sabbath is
found in the Old Testament. Isaiah 58:13
declares: “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, honourable; and shalt honour Him, not doing thine own ways, nor
finding thine own pleasure, nor speaking thine own words.”
We know that this verse
is speaking of the Sunday Sabbath because the whole chapter in which it is
found is speaking of the New Testament activity of bringing the Gospel.
Verse 6 for example declares: “Is not this the fast that I have chosen? to
loose the bands of wickedness, to undo the heavy burdens, and to let the
oppressed go free, and that ye break every yoke.”
When we look at this
language in the light of the rest of the Bible, we realize that all the
phrases in this verse identify with bringing the Gospel so that men might be
saved. It is the Gospel that frees people from the bondage of wickedness,
that takes away from them the heavy burden of sin and guilt, that sets them
free from the oppression of sin and Satan.
Likewise verse 7 also
relates entirely to the bringing of the Gospel. It reads: “Is it not to deal
thy bread to the hungry, and that thou bring the poor that are cast out to
thy house? when thou seest the naked, that thou cover him; and that thou
hide not thyself from thine own flesh?”
The hungry with whom the
Bible is concerned are the spiritually hungry, and the bread that is to be
given to them is the bread which is Christ, the bread of life. The poor are
the spiritually impoverished who are to be brought into our house, the house
being both the body of believers and, in a real sense, into God Himself
(Psalm 91:9). To cover the naked is to bring the Gospel to them so that
their spiritual nakedness might be covered by the robe of Christ's
righteousness.
All this activity
identifies with God's plan to evangelize the world, a plan that became
operational when the Holy Spirit was poured out on the day of Pentecost
(Acts 2). It is a plan that identifies with the Sunday Sabbath because the
day of Pentecost was Sunday.
Verse 12 of Isaiah 58
speaks of the building of the old waste places, and raising up the
foundations. This is the same kind of language used
in Acts 15:16 where God declares:
“After this I will return, and will build
again the tabernacle of David, which is fallen down; and I will build again
the ruins thereof, and I will set it up.”
The setting of this verse
is that the Gospel is being preached to the Gentiles, and they are being
saved. The tabernacle that is being built is none other than the body of
believers who are the temple of God (II Corinthians 6:16).
It is in this setting
that God placed Isaiah 58:13. It is noteworthy that there is no expression
of rest in this verse. “Rest” is the great emphasis of the seventh day
Sabbath as it pointed to the salvation that would be provided by Jesus our
Savior. In Exodus 20:911, God emphasizes that we are to rest from our
physical labors as God rested from the work of creation on the seventh day
Sabbath.
In Deuteronomy 5:1215 God
says that no work is to be done on the seventh day Sabbath because we have
been brought out of Egypt by a mighty hand, which is a portrait of
salvation. Before we were saved, we were spiritually in bondage to sin and
Satan; we were brought into the blessedness of salvation, and no longer in
bondage to sin and Satan, solely by the activity of Christ. We are not to
think for a moment that any spiritual work of ours contributed one smidgen
to our salvation.
The emphasis on the work
of salvation is further made in Ezekiel
20:12 where God declares: “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.” Note that this
verse, too, emphasizes His work of salvation to which the seventh day
Sabbath pointed.
In Isaiah 58:13 God does
not at all use language that points to “rest” or the idea that God
sanctifies or saves us. Rather, the emphasis is on doing it God's way and
finding and doing His pleasure. The language is negative not doing thy own
ways but the focal point, without question, is on doing the way of the Lord,
on doing His pleasure and His will. The Sabbath is a holy day set apart for
His service. Only by doing it His way will it be a Sabbath that is a
delight.
The language of this
verse is remarkable as it relates to the problem of today's Sabbath
observance. Never in the history of the New Testament church has Sunday been
used as it is today for man's pleasure, to serve man's will, to satisfy
man's ways. Sunday is a day when the restaurants are overrun with
“Christians” who seek the pleasure of fine food (thus causing many others to
violate this day as they prepare and serve food). It is a day for paying
homage to professional sports as so many “Christians” watch their favourite
and not so favorite teams play. It is a day for hobbies and for picnics. It
is a day when very few seriously ask the question: What is God's good
pleasure for this day? It is a day that has become my day, with the emphasis
on me and mine. Unfortunately, few people regard Sunday as God's holy day,
which has been beautifully set apart so that we can earnestly, zealously,
sincerely, and faithfully serve our Savior.