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We believe
the Old Testament regulations governing Sabbath observances are ceremonial,
not moral, aspects of the law. As such, they are no longer in force, but have
passed away along with the sacrificial system, the Levitical priesthood, and
all other aspects of Moses’ law that prefigured Christ.
Here are
the reasons we hold this view:
In Colossians 2:16-17, Paul explicitly refers to the Sabbath as
a shadow of Christ, which is no longer binding since the substance (Christ)
has come. It is quite clear in those verses that the weekly Sabbath is
included, with the phrase “a festival or a new moon or a Sabbath day”
refering to the annual, monthly, and weekly holy days of the Jewish calendar
(cf. 1 Chronicles 23:31; 2 Chronicles 2:4; 31:3; Ezekiel 45:17;
Hosea 2:11).
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The Sabbath was
the sign to Israel of the Mosaic Covenant (Exodus 31:16-17; Ezekiel 20:12;
Nehemiah 9:14). Since we are now under the New Covenant (Hebrews 8:7-13), we
are no longer required to observe the sign of the Mosaic Covenant.
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The New Testament
never commands Christians to observe the Sabbath. On the other hand, each of
the other nine commandments are reiterated in the New Testament.
·
In our only
glimpse of an early church worship service in the New Testament, the church
met on the first day of the week (Acts 20:7).
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Nowhere in the
Old Testament are the Gentile nations commanded to observe the Sabbath or
condemned for failing to do so. That is strange if Sabbath observance were
meant to be an eternal moral principle.
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There is no
evidence in the Bible of anyone keeping the Sabbath before the time of Moses,
nor are there any commands in the Bible to keep the Sabbath before the giving
of the law at Mt. Sinai.
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When the Apostles
met at the Jerusalem council (Acts 15), they did not impose Sabbath keeping
on the Gentile believers.
·
The apostle Paul
warned the Gentiles about many different sins in his epistles, but breaking
the Sabbath was never one of them.
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In Galatians
4:10-11, Paul rebukes the Galatians for thinking God expected them to observe
special days (including the Sabbath).
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In Romans 14:5,
Paul forbids those who observe the Sabbath (these were no doubt Jewish
believers) to condemn those who do not (Gentile believers).
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The early church
fathers, from Ignatius to Augustine, taught that the Old Testament Sabbath
had been abolished and that the first day of the week (Sunday) was the day
when Christians should meet for worship (contrary to the claim of many
seventh-day sabbatarians who claim that Sunday worship was not instituted
until the fourth century).
Sunday has
not replaced Saturday as the Sabbath. Rather the Lord’s Day is a time when
believers gather to commemorate His resurrection, which occurred on the first
day of the week. Every day to the believer is one of Sabbath rest, since we
have ceased from our spiritual labor and are resting in the salvation of the
Lord (Hebrews 4:9-11).
So while
we still follow the pattern of designating one day of the week a day for the
Lord’s people to gather in worship, we do not refer to this as “the Sabbath.”
John
Calvin took a similar position. He wrote,
There were three reasons for giving
this [fourth] commandment: First, with the seventh day of rest the Lord
wished to give to the people of Israel an image of spiritual rest, whereby
believers must cease from their own works in order to let the Lord work in
them. Secondly, he wished that there be an established day in which believers
might assemble in order to hear his Law and worship him. Thirdly, he willed
that one day of rest be granted to servants and to those who live under the
power of others so that they might have a relaxation from their labor. The
latter, however, is rather an inferred than a principal reason.
As to the first reason, there is no
doubt that it ceased in Christ; because he is the truth by the presence of
which all images vanish. He is the reality at whose advent all shadows are
abandoned. Hence St. Paul (Col. 2:17) that the sabbath has been a shadow of a
reality yet to be. And he declares elsewhere its truth when in the letter to
the Romans, ch. 6:8, he teaches us that we are buried with Christ in order
that by his death we may die to the corruption of our flesh. And this is not
done in one day, but during all the course of our life, until altogether dead
in our own selves, we may be filled with the life of God. Hence, superstitious
observance of days must remain far from Christians.
The two last reasons, however, must
not be numbered among the shadows of old. Rather, they are equally valid for
all ages. Hence, though the sabbath is abrogated, it so happens among us that
we still convene on certain days in order to hear the word of God, to break
the [mystic] bread of the Supper, and to offer public prayers; and, moreover,
in order that some relaxation from their toil be given to servants and
workingmen. As our human weakness does not allow such assemblies to meet
every day, the day observed by the Jews has been taken away (as a good device
for eliminating superstition) and another day has been destined to this use.
This was necessary for securing and maintaining order and peace in the
Church.
As the truth therefore was given to
the Jews under a figure, so to us on the contrary truth is shown without
shadows in order, first of all, that we meditate all our life on a perpetual sabbath
from our works so that the Lord may operate in us by his spirit; secondly, in
order that we observe the legitimate order of the Church for listening to the
word of God, for admin-istering the sacraments, and for public prayers;
thirdly, in order that we do not oppress inhumanly with work those who are
subject to us. [From Instruction in Faith, Calvin’s own 1537 digest
of the Institutes, sec. 8, “The Law of the Lord”].
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