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Intro:
AG:
TS: So far in the series:
The first commandment tells us we are to worship God and God alone.
In other words, we are not to have any divided loyalty in our hearts but we’re to be committed to God; body, soul and spirit.
The second commandment deals with how we’re to worship God and our worship is to come from our hearts and not just from our heads.
So, we don’t need a liturgy to follow or any religious objects to focus on and we don’t even have to be in any kind of religious building.
The third commandment deals with the goal of our worship and our goal is to glorify God, and that means; we will not take His name in vain.
Then the fourth commandment is probably the most difficult of the ten because the issue of the Sabbath was a point of controversy in Jesus’ day and to some degree it still continues today.
There’s the issue of whether or not Christians need to keep the Sabbath since it was associated with Israel and not the church and then there’s also the whole matter of the Lord’s Day in the New Testament and whether or not it was to be observed as a Christian Sabbath.
Tonight, I hope to give you some background information on the origin and purpose of both the Sabbath and the Lord’s Day and to show how both have been corrupted by Jews and Christians alike and then hopefully give some scriptural principles that we can apply when it comes to the Lord’s Day.
History of the Sabbath
The keeping of the Sabbath wasn’t just given by God as a commandment but He communicated the need for us to observe the Sabbath by His example, when He created the world.
When we study the creation account in Genesis it says God created for six days and then He rested or He stopped creating on the seventh.
Why did He do that?
Was He tired?
No, of course not, Psalm 121 tells us God never slumbers nor sleeps.
God didn’t need to take a rest but He gave Himself as an example for us to follow because He knows that we all need a break, once a week.
In Exodus 16 when God provided Israel with the manna; they were told to gather enough on the sixth day so they wouldn’t have to go out and gather any on the Sabbath.
So, even prior to the giving of the Ten Commandments God was saying that the purpose of the Sabbath was to give everyone a day for rest and worship.
So, before the law was given as well as after, the Old Testament believers had several reasons to keep the Sabbath
The main one was; it was to be an act of obedience because this would be a test of whether or not they were willing to be obedient to God.
And if they were, God promised them certain blessings and if they refused, He warned them He would afflict them with specific punishments.
We also understand that the Sabbath was given for man’s benefit because as Jesus said in the gospels, “The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath.”
So, God created us with a need to take a break from our routine and even the sociologists tell us that reasonably spaced work breaks increase productivity; after forty hours of work concentration drops, mistakes increase and morale suffers.
The Sabbath was also to be a time of individual and corporate worship.
It was a time for everyone to get their eyes off the physical world and to get themselves focused on the eternal.
The Sabbath was a covenant symbol for the Jewish people.
They were to be different from the world around them and keeping the Sabbath was the evidence that they were.
And basically, by doing this; they were saying, their devotion to God was more important than their business or anything else because this day was set aside for Him.
So, does the idea of a Sabbath sound good?
Well, there were plenty of benefits but there were also a few verses that told them what they couldn’t do on the Sabbath.
Sabbath Prohibitions
Everyone was to stay home!
No cooking
no working
No making fire
No carrying
no business of any kind to be done on the Sabbath.
So you couldn’t
leave the house, cook anything, do any work, build a fire, carry anything anywhere, you couldn’t buy or sell anything and you couldn’t go out to eat because if you did, you’d be making someone else work.
The penalty for breaking Sabbath was DEATH!
The Jews carried it to extremes:
Ill.
The Jews took this Commandment very seriously.
Dr. Ken Trivette shares the following insights concerning the Jewish mindset – "The observance of the Sabbath was strictly observed and strictly enforced.
Whereas, they took God's command to rest on the Sabbath seriously, as the years passed they added their own rules and regulations about the Sabbath.
.There were approximately 1,521 things that were not permissible on the Sabbath.
For example: you could not rescue a drowning person on the Sabbath.
Untying knots that needed only one hand was permissible, but if two hands were required, it was forbidden.
If a man's ox fell into the ditch, he could pull it out, but if the man fell in, he had to stay there.
One could take a sup of vinegar for food, but if he took a sup in order to help his aching toothache, he had broken the Sabbath.
If a man was bitten by a flea on the Sabbath, he had to allow the flea to keep on biting.
If he tried to stop the flea from biting or killed it, he was guilty of hunting on the Sabbath."
Through the years, there have been those who observed the Sabbath (or Sunday) in a very strict manner.
Some people would not sweep or dust the house, make the beds, or allow any food to be cooked on the Lord's Day.
Some of the restrictions that have been observed and enforced concerning the Lord's Day, are somewhat humorous.
In Scotland in the 17th century, one poor fellow was hailed into court for smiling on the Sabbath.)
In 1 Maccabees which is a record of Jewish history; there’s a story about Antiochus Epiphanes who had attacked Jerusalem on the Sabbath and because it was the Sabbath all the Jews died without fighting; because they didn’t want to offend God.
And then when Pompey was trying to take Jerusalem, his people built a siege mound on the Sabbath and there was no interference from any of the Jews because they said God was more important than their own lives.
Josephus the Jewish historian said, “The gentiles couldn’t believe the stupid beliefs of the Jews.”
You see; a law that was meant to set them aside as people who worshipped God made them look like they were totally insane when they perverted the law.
Sabbath Observance
You would: "Remember the Sabbath day; to keep it holy."
First, you avoided any kind of sin or causing anyone else to sin.
we covered this in the prohibitions
Second, you were to rest and Exodus 31 tells them to "completely rest."
No work
exception: Ox in the ditch
Save life
Third, you were to celebrate the fact that God has made a covenant with you; which meant you were to spend the day thanking God He has given you a holy and righteous standard to live by.
Observing was a sign of the covenant
Observing was a memorial to God and demonstrated
submission
obedience
4th when observing the Sabbath they were to delight in the Lord
They were so pre-occupied with the concept of the Sabbath that they forgot to do the one thing the day was set aside for; and that was to worship God.
The Sabbath wasn’t just the absence of work but there had to be the presence of worship.
It was a holy day, a day set apart from the rest
Christians and Sabbath
We worship on Sunday, the 1st day of the week, The Lord’s Day
Based on the fact that Jesus rose again on Sunday
He first appeared to the Disciples on Sunday
The Holy Spirit came on a Sunday
It is a pattern we see develop in the new testament:
they began worshipping on Sunday
Acts 15- no mention of Sabbath in the great debate
Acts 20, Christians of Troas met on the first day of the week.
1 Cor.
16 believers were to gather offering for the famine relief on Sunday
So the NT pattern made a shift to keep 1 day set apart for rest and worship and that day changed to the Lord’s Day, the 1st day of the week.
There wasn’t universal acceptance of Sunday worship until 321 A.D. when Emperor Constantine passed an act forbidding any work to be done in the cities on the Lord’s Day.
The only exception he made was for the farmer’s, so their crops wouldn’t be spoiled.
It was never clear why he established this law; some thought it was religious conviction while others assumed he did it out of economic necessity.
We have had times been just as legalistic as the Pharisees:
It used to be understood that there were certain things you couldn’t do on a Sunday.
For instance, you didn’t play any kind of sports.
You couldn’t go shopping because there was nothing opened and not only were the stores closed on Sunday but some even covered their windows so you couldn’t shop in your mind on Sunday.
As a matter of fact, there weren’t even any gas stations opened and if you wanted to drive anywhere you either got gas on Saturday or you stayed home.
When it came to bizarre rules about the Lord’s Day some Christians managed to come up with some really strange things though out history.
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