Sabbath 7th Day (2)

In “Sabbath 7th Day (1)”, we examined the 7th day sábbath, beginning at Creation.  This Part 2 is a continuation and supplement to Part 1.  Part 1 contains the primary verses; so it should be read first.  Also, steps in the change from Saturday to Sunday observance are outlined in “Sabbath Day Became Sunday in Rome”.  That topic includes early church background and meeting custom.  Regarding the change to Sunday, here’s a few statements by theologians from the Roman Catholic Church (RCC):

Irish RCC Father Stephen Keenan, A Doctrinal Catechism, 1851, p.174 “She [RCC] substituted the observance of Sunday the 1st day of the week, for the observance of Saturday the 7th day, a change for which there is no Scriptural authority.”

Father Peter R. Kramer, Catholic Church Extension Society (1975), Chicago “Regarding the change…to the Christian Sunday, I wish to draw your attention to the facts: That Protestants, who accept the Bible as the only rule of faith and religion, should by all means go back to the observance of the Sabbath. We Catholics do not accept the Bible as the only rule of faith. Besides the Bible we have the authority of the Church, as a rule to guide us. We accept her change of the Sabbath to Sunday. We frankly say, yes, the Church made this change, made this law, as she made many other laws; for instance, the Friday abstinence, the unmarried priesthood…and a thousand other laws. It is always somewhat laughable to see the Protestant churches, in pulpit and legislation, demand the observance of Sunday, of which there is nothing in their Bible.”  The RCC admits the RCC instituted the change.

Jesuit Father Martin J. Scott, Things Catholics Are Asked About, 1927, p.136 Nowhere in the Bible is it stated that worship should be changed from Saturday to Sunday. The Church…instituted, by God’s authority, Sunday as the day of worship.”

Notwithstanding the RCC change of the 7th day to the 1st day for worship, God made holy at Creation the 7th day…before there was any Israel/Jews or RCC.  Ge.2:3 Septúagint/LXX “God blessed the 7th day and sanctified [hagiázo Strongs g37, Greek verb] it.”  God sanctified/made holy the 7th day.  cf. Mt.6:9 where Jesus prayed, “Our Father who is in heaven, holy [g37 hagiazo] be Your Name”.  God made the 7th day holy, even as the Father’s great Name is holy!

In scripture, the 7th day is the first thing God made holy!  The 7th day (not the 1st day) is holy time which God Himself ordained.  If there was no sabbath, there would exist no holiness of time in the world.

Sabbathis a holy day/period of cessation from certain activities.  Greek Bible scholar Spiros Zódiates, “Hagiazo means to separate or withdraw from fellowship with the world”.  As holy time, the sabbath isn’t just time spent in leisure pursuits or entertainment away from work.  The Lord said in Is.58:13, “Turn your foot from the sabbath, from doing your pleasure on My holy day. Call the sabbath a delight.”  The sabbath is God’s time.  Our life consists of only so much time, and resting on the 7th day reflects our commitment & obedience to God, and where our heart is.  It’s a time for praise, prayer, Bible reading/study, meditation, church preaching/teaching, doing good and mercy to others.

The Lord said in Ex.20:8, “Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy”.  Le.23:3 “On the 7th day is a sabbath, a holy convocation. You shall not do any work. It is a sabbath of the Lord in all your dwellings.”  The sabbath is a holy assembly, it takes place during holy timeJFB Commentary Le.23:3 “It was to be ‘a holy convocation’, observed by families ‘in their dwellings’; where practicable, by the people repairing to the door of the tabernacle; at later periods, by meeting in the schools of the prophets, and in synagogues.”  Pulpit Commentary Le.23:3 “Elsewhere it was observed only by the holy convocation and rest from all labor. It commenced at sunset on Friday evening, and continued till sunset on Saturday evening.”  Poole Commentary Le.23:3 “The sabbath was to be kept in all places, where they were, both in synagogues, which were erected for that end, and in their private houses.”

{Sidelight: The 7th day sabbath (shabáwth h7676, Hebrew) differs from the pilgrim feasts of ancient Israel, which were to be kept solely near the tabernacle/temple.  The sabbath day is an appointed time (móed h4150).  But the sabbath isn’t a feast (chag h2282) in scripture.  God’s pilgrim feasts were shabathón (h7677), or sabbatoids, but weren’t sabbaths (h7676).  There’s a difference.  Benson Commentary Le.23:3 “In all your dwellings. Other feasts were to be kept before the Lord in Jerusalem only, where all the males were to come for that end; but the sabbath was to be kept in all places, in synagogues, and in their private houses.”  Ellicott Commentary Le.23:4 “The feasts of the Lord’. Because the following are the festivals proper as distinguished from the Sabbath.”  Pilgrim feasts weren’t made holy time at Creation; they’re appointed later for the Holy Land.  see “Feasts of the Lord and the Jews”.}

The 7th day sabbath, and the Decalogue/Ten Commandments for that matter, isn’t about ‘works’.  It takes no ‘work’ to refrain from murder, theft, adultery, making images of pagan gods!  No work is required to rest on the sabbath!  Attempting to blend the concepts of work and rest here is nonsense.

Evangelist Dwight L. Moody Weighed and Wanting, p.47 “The Sabbath was binding in Eden, and it has been in force ever since. This fourth commandment begins with the word ‘remember’, showing that the Sabbath already existed when God wrote the law on the tables of stone at Sinai. How can men claim that this one commandment has been done away when they will admit the other nine are still binding?”  Re.11:19 the ark containing the Decalogue (Ex.25:21) is in heaven…the 7th day sabbath is part of the Decalogue!  However, Jewish rabbinism added many burdensome rules to God’s sabbath guidelines.

Keep the sabbath rightly and a man will “take delight in the Lord” (Is.58:13-14).  Barnes Notes Is.58:14 “There is no intimation that the Sabbath was to be abolished. We are to refrain from ordinary traveling and employments; we are not to engage in doing our own pleasure; we are to regard it with delight, and to esteem it a day worthy to be honored; and we are to show respect to it by not performing our own ordinary works, or pursuing pleasures, or engaging in the common topics of conversation. Under the gospel, assuredly, it is as proper to celebrate the Sabbath in this way, as it was in the times of Isaiah, and God doubtless intended it should be perpetually observed in this manner.”  JFB Commentary Is.58:14 “As we ‘delight’ in keeping God’s Sabbath, so God will give us ‘delight’ in Himself.”  Pulpit Commentary Is.58:14 “A right use of the sabbath will help to form in men habits of devotion, which will make religion a joy.”

In the LXX & New Testament (NT) Greek, the word for sabbath is sábbaton g4521.  It occurs 60 times in the NT.  There’s no NT example of any Christian working on the sabbath.  Although Israel & the Jews were to keep the sabbath, in scripture it’s never called theJewish sabbath’, thesabbath of the Jews’, or thesabbath of Israel’.  Rather, God says it’s His sabbath, e.g. Ex.31:13 & Ne.9:14.  It’s the “sabbath of the Lord” (Ex.20:10).  Mk.2:27-28 Christ the Lord said the sabbath was made for humanity (not just for the Jew or Israel).  God made His sabbath for man at Creation…the Jews didn’t, not the RCC, nor any man.  Physical circumcision was required for men to fully be of ancient Israel.  But it wasn’t required for the sabbath day!  This is unlike a pilgrim “feast of the Jews” (Jn.7:2); the feasts weren’t authorized for physically uncircumcised men (Ex.12:48).  The 7th day sabbath is for everyone.

Ac.17:1-2 & 18:4, Paul went to synagogue on the sabbath.  Ac.16:12-15 in Phílippi, there were few Jews and no synagogue; yet Paul and Luke still worshiped by the riverside with a few people on the sabbath!  Lk.4:16 Jesus attended synagogue on the sabbath.  Christ as the primordial Word of God (Jn.1:1-3, 14) had also ceased (shabáth h7673 verb) on the 7th day of Creation (Ge.2:1-3).

The 7th day sabbath is time dedicated to God, a temporary rest (anápausis g372, e.g. LXX Ex.31:15) from our work.  It’s from sunset Friday until sunset Saturday generally.  Days were reckoned beginning at sunset, when the fowls come home to roost, the first stars appear.  Le.23:32 “From evening until evening.”  Evening began the new date.  In the NT, Luke uses similar reckoning of the night preceding the day in Ac.27:27, 33, 39…where the 14th night preceded the 14th day.

Prior to when Christ gave Israel the Decalogue (Ex.20:1-17), He miraculously confirmed which day is the sabbath in Ex.16:4-5, 15-31.  Only on the 7th day did He not provide them manna food to gather.  And only on the 6th day did He provide them a double portion.  It wasn’t just any one day in seven!  And Ne.13:15-19 reaffirms that buying & selling food/merchandise, business, isn’t to be done on the sabbath rest.  Nehemiah ordered the city gates be shut as it grew dark to begin the sabbath.  Faith is needed to believe our needs will be provided as we cease from work on the 7th day.  (I’m not 7th Day Adventist.)

Jesus, Paul, and others in the NT kept the sabbath (e.g. Lk.23:54-56).  Since Creation, there’s no verse indicating Christ changed the 7th day holy time.  Christ the Lord viewed willful sabbath-breaking as a very serious sin (Nu.15:29-36)!  Judaism devised many man-made directives for the sabbath day.  In the NT, neither Jesus nor Paul prescribed do’s and don’ts for the sabbath.  That’s caused some to not view the sabbath as holy time which comes & goes every week since Creation.  But the NT also didn’t address acts like beastiality, cannibalism, fathers marrying their own daughters.  Just because the NT is silent on those wrongs doesn’t mean they’re okay for Christians after the cross!  Christ forbad them in the Old Testament (OT).  It is written!  He.13:8 “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, today, and forever.”

Yet there are a few NT passages referring to the first day of theweek” (mía ton sábbaton g4521) that some use in claiming the 7th day sabbath is abolished.  (Although no man, not Paul or anyone, has the authority to change God’s holy time.  We’re mere mortals, unable to alter night and day.)

The Greek LXX term for “week” is hebdomás (g1439.1 Vanderpool).  ref LXX: Ex.34:22, Le.23:15-16, Nu.28:26, De.16:9, 10, 16, 2Ch.8:13, Da.9:24-27, 10:2-3.  The Greek hebdomas/week corresponds to the Hebrew shabuwá/week (h7620, occurring 20 times in the OT).  Yet no NT writer used the term hebdomas to indicate “week”!  In the 1st century Roman Empire, the 8-day market week (among nones, ides, kálends) was still being used.  Concurrently, use of the heathen 7-day planetary week was starting to spread.  At the time, most converts were Jewish Christians and gentile Godfearers who’d learned about the true God in synagogues.  There they’d gained knowledge of the Decalogue and 7th day sabbath (ref Ac.15:21).  Sabbath observance was known in all nations, as per Philo and Josephus (see Part 1).

So the NT writers identified a day of the week by its proximity to the 7th day sabbath…ton sabbaton.  Even though “sabbath” doesn’t specifically mean “week” in either the Greek LXX or OT Hebrew!  Thus the NT writers avoided parlance of the 8-day market week and the 7-day planetary god week.  The 7th day sabbath provided a holy day NT reference point amid the coexistent 7-day and 8-day weeks.  (Use of the 8-day market/núndinal week gradually faded.  The 7-day week was made official in 321 AD.)

It is meaningful, the NT writers used the term sabbath (sabbaton g4521) to denote “week”.  A Pharisee declared in Lk.18:12, “I fast twice in the week [sabbaton]”.  To mean, I fast twice on the sabbath, wouldn’t make sense.  The 1st day of the week (Sunday) was called the 1st (day) of/to the sabbath.  The practice of observing the 7th day sabbath is apparent…and there’s no reference to heathen planetary gods!

We see a glimpse of this mode of expression using sabbaton g4521 in the LXX: Ps.23:1 “A psalm of David on the 1st of/to the sabbath [sabbaton].”  Ps.47:1 “A psalm of praise for the sons of Core on the 2nd of/to the sabbath.”  Ps.93:1 “A psalm of David to/of the 4th of the sabbath.  Ps.92:1 “For the day before the sabbath.” (prosábbaton g4315, cf. Mk.15:42)  Israelites, unlike Rome, had known the 7-day week from much older times (so had Babylonians).  Their days of the week were called: 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th or preparation, 7th or sabbath.  Each week, Israelites looked forward to the 7th day sabbath.  Following are sources which attest to this Jewish & NT writers’ manner of denoting days in a week.

Johann Jahn Biblical Antiquities, p.51 “The Jews, in designating the successive days of the week, were accustomed to say, The first day of the Sabbath (that is, of the week), the second day of the Sabbath; that is, Sunday, Monday, etc.”  From soc.culture.jewish FAQ Observance “Judaism doesn’t make much distinction between the days of the week, except for Shabbát. In fact, the days of the week are called Yom Ríshon, Yom Shéni…(i.e., 1st day, 2nd day,….), and then Shabbat. The philosophical oddity is that not only is day 7 called ‘Shabbat’, but each day is ‘of the Shabbat’. In other words, ‘the first day’ (Sunday) is liturgically called ‘yom ríshon beshabbát’ when introducing the day’s psalm.”

R.C.H. Lenski The Interpretation of St. Matthew’s Gospel, p.1148 “The Jews had no names for the weekdays. They ‘designated them with reference to their Sabbath’. Thus, mia ton sabbaton means ‘the first (day) with reference to the Sabbath’, or ‘the first day of the week.”  John Lightfoot A Commentary on the New Testament from the Talmud and Hebraica “The Jews reckon the days of the week thus; One day (or the first day) of the sabbath: two (or the second day) of the sabbath.”

The Didaché (‘Teaching’) dates ca 100 AD.  Didache 8:1 “Let not your fasts be with the hypocrites, for they fast on the 2nd and 5th day of the week.”  The Greek Didache says disbelieving Jews fasted on the deuterá (2nd) and the pémpte (5th) day of the sabbaton (week).  The 7th day sabbath was still evident!

The KJV expression “first (day) of the week” occurs 8 times: Mt.28:1, Mk.16:2, 9, Lk.24:1, Jn.20:1, 19, Ac.20:7, 1Co.16:2.  The term used there by Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Paul…is sabbaton/sabbath.  It is significant they used sabbaton (and not hebdomas) for “week”!  God-fearing gentiles knew the sabbath.  Ac.13:42-44 the whole city of Pisídian Antioch in Galatia (!) came to hear Paul on the sabbath.

Ac.20:6-11 Christians at Troás met to break bread with Paul on the night of the 1st (day) of the week (mia ton sabbaton g4521) until daybreak, before Paul left town.  Many think it was a Saturday night meeting to begin the 1st day; that Luke reckoned time starting with evening, as he did in Ac.27:27, 33 and Lk.23:54-56.  Ellicott Commentary Ac.20:7 “The Jewish mode of reckoning would still be kept…Saturday evening.”  It is said the early Christians’ meetings were Saturday night following the Jews’ synagogue service, at the end of the sabbath.  Thus Jewish Christians became distinct from disbelieving Jews.

1Co.16:1-3 circa 55 AD Paul told the Corinthians to lay up funds which he would collect for the needy saints on the 1st (day) of the week/sabbaton.  Jewish Christians wouldn’t have done financial exchanges on the sabbath day.  Pulpit Commentary 1Co.16:2This verse can hardly be said to imply any religious observance of the Sunday.”  Meyer’s NT Commentary “It does not follow from this passage in itself that the Sunday was already observed at that time by assemblies for the worship of God.”  Not yet.

Methodist theologian Harris F. Rall Christian Advocate, 1942, p.26 “Take the matter of Sunday. There are indications in the NT how the church came to keep the first day of the week as its day of worship, but there is no passage telling Christians to keep that day, or transfer the Jewish Sabbath to that day.”

However, in the decades to follow, Sunday would become the church‘s common meeting day.  (see “Sabbath Day Became Sunday in Rome” for the transition from the 7th day to the 1st day.)  But meeting days don’t alter God’s holy sabbath time!

This series is continued and concluded in “Sabbath 7th Day (3)”.

Sabbath 7th Day (1)

There’s been much controversy in the church about whether or not Christians should observe the 7th day sábbath of scripture, or the Roman Catholic Church (RCC) & Protestant tradition of Sunday, or no specific day.  RCC Archbishop James Gibbons wrote in The Faith of Our Fathers, 1876, p.89, “You may read the Bible from Genesis to Revelation, and you will not find a single line authorizing the sanctification of Sunday. The Scriptures enforce the religious observance of Saturday, a day which we never sanctify.”  A surprising admission!?  Let’s see what the scriptures say about the 7th day.

The 7th day sabbath has its beginnings at Creation.  The Holy Spirit and Christ, the Spirit and the Word, are the Creators (being the divine agents of Father God).  ref Job.33:4, Ps.104:30, 33:6, Jn.1:3, Col.1:16.  They are God, the God-kind, the “Us” of Ge.1:26. “Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness.”  God declared as “good” each of the first six days of Creation: Ge.1:4, 8 (LXX), 10, 12, 18, 21, 25.  Then Ge.1:31, “God saw all that He had made, and behold, it was very good.”  Creation ends.

When Creation was finished, Christ ceased (shabáth Strongs h7673, verb).  Ge.2:1-4 “By the 7th day God finished His work which He had done, and He ceased on the 7th day. Then God blessed the 7th day and sanctified it, because in it He ceased from all His work which He had created and made.”  Although the first six days were all good, only the 7th Day did Christ bless and sanctify or make holy!  This is the great prototype of the weekly 7th day sabbath; a temporary cessation/rest dedicated to God.

The 7th day sabbath is a sign which identifies God as the Creator of everything.  No other day of the week so reflects God as Creator.  By ceasing or resting on the 7th day, the sabbathkeeper witnesses that his God is the Creator God.  We may choose to rest or worship God on other days too.  But as Lord of the 7th day sabbath, at creation Christ ordained the 7th day as holy or sanctified/set apart, and no other day of the week.  And throughout the Bible, Christ nowhere rescinded His 7th day as holy time!

Sabbathis a holy day/period of cessation from certain activitiesJFB Commentary Ge.2:3 “The institution of the Sabbath is as old as creation.”  Benson Commentary Ge.2:3 “God blessed the seventh day’. He conferred on it peculiar honor, and annexed to it special privileges above those granted to any other day; ‘and sanctified it’. That is, separated it from common use, and dedicated it to his own sacred service, that it should be accounted holy, and spent in his worship, and in other religious and holy duties. It appears evidently by this, that the observation of the sabbath was not first enjoined when the law [Mosaic] was given, but it was an ordinance of God from the creation of the world.”  The 7th day sabbath long antedated Moses/Israel and giving the Decalogue.

An eternal law of God existed in the heavens.  In 2Pe.2:4, Peter wrote of the “angels who sinned”.  (cf. Jb.4:18)  Where no law is, there is no transgression or sin (Ro.4:15).  So a law existed which angels violated.  1Eno.99:2 spoke of those who transgress the “eternal law”.  (Jude 1:14 refers to 1Enoch.)  1Eno.106:13-14 “Some angels sin and transgress the law.”  Law & order exists in the heavenly realm.

The Book of Jubilees is dated 150 BC.  Jub.2:30We [the angels of the presence and sanctification] kept Sabbath in the heavens before it was made known to any flesh to keep Sabbath on earth.”  That indicates the sabbath day was observed in the heavenlies prior to Eden?  Pulpit Commentary Ge.2:3 “We conclude that a 7th day sabbath must have been prescribed to man in Eden. Here was the 7th day sanctified, or instituted in the interests of holiness, proclaimed to be a holy day.”

After the Flood, in Ge.8:8-12 Noah sent out a dove from the ark at 7-day intervalsBarnes Notes Ge.8:10 “This points to the sacredness associated with the number arising from the hallowed character of the 7th day.”  Matthew Henry Commentary Ge.8:12Having kept the sabbath with his little church, he expected special blessings from Heaven.”  JFB Commentary “Seven days – a strong presumptive proof that Noah observed the Sabbath during his residence in the ark.”  Pulpit Commentary “The frequent repetition of the number seven clearly points to the hebdómadal division of the week, and the institution of Sabbatic rest.”  Ge.8:9 initially the dove Noah sent out could find no place of rest, so she returned to the ark for rest.  Noah didn’t send out the dove arbitrarily; he inquired of the Holy Spirit.  (Noah wasn’t Jewish.  Ge.7:1-2 God also gave the gentile Noah knowledge of clean & unclean animals, long before Moses.)

The Hebrew term for “seven” (sheba/shibah h7651) occurs 370 times in the Old Testament (OT).  It is “as the sacred full one; seven times”.  Seven signifies completeness or divine perfection.  For example: the seven days of Creation; the 7th day sabbath; Re.1:4 the sevenfold Spirit (or seven spirits) at God’s throne; Zec.4:1-2 the golden lampstand has seven lamps & seven pipes; Job.42:8 friends of the patriarch Job were to offer seven bulls & seven rams to the Lord; etc.  Seven is God’s number, so to speak.

God said in Ge.26:5, “Abraham obeyed Me and kept My charge, My commandments, My statutes, My laws”. (cf. De.11:1)  The patriarch Abraham, a gentile/non-Jew, obeyed God’s (eternal) law centuries before there was a codified Mosaic law!  (see the topic “Abraham Obeyed Which Commandments?”.)  Henry Commentary Ge.2:1Sabbaths are as ancient as the world; and I see no reason to doubt that the Sabbath…was religiously observed by the people of God throughout the patriarchal age.”  Chief Rabbi of the British Empire, Joseph H. Hertz, Authorized Daily Prayer Book, p.579 “Abraham, Isaac, Jacob. The Patriarchs are often represented as having observed the Sabbath.”  Abraham was very obedient.  The Lord even visited him in Ge.18!  Ge.18:17 Christ didn’t hide what He was doing from Abraham.  It’s unlikely that Christ left Abraham in ignorance of His holy time that had come and gone every 7th day since Creation!  Ellicott Commentary Ex.16:23: “Much can be said in favor of the primeval institution of the Sabbath, and of its having been known to the family of Abraham.”

God promised Abraham, Ge.22:16, “By Myself I have sworn,’ declares the Lord. ‘Indeed I will greatly bless you and multiply your seed.”  The term for “sworn/oath” is shabá h7650, occurring 180 times in the OT.  It means “to swear, to seven oneself or bind oneself by seven things.”  It’s the root of the term for seven h7651.  When God (or anyone) made a solemn oath, He ‘sevened Himself’.  (He.6:13 “When God made His promise to Abraham, since He could swear by no one greater, He swore by Himself.”)  Is.45:23 “I have sworn [h7650] by Myself, the word has gone forth from My mouth. That to Me every knee will bow, every tongue will swear [h7650] allegiance.”  The Lord and all humanity ‘seven themselves or bind themselves by seven things’.  It’s total.  Another example is Ps.89:49. “Thy lovingkindness O Lord, which You did swear [h7650] to David in Thy faithfulness.”  We can see the concept of seven and to seven oneself by an oath goes beyond which day we should attend church.

Christ the Lord is the God/Rock of ancient Israel (cf. De.32:4, 18 & 1Co.10:4; Is.6:1-5 & Jn.12:41-44).  Unlike the earlier patriarchs, the Israelites became slaves in Egypt (e.g. Ex.6:5-7, De.5:15); not resting on the 7th day.  According to the supposed Book of Jasher (ref Josh.10:13, 2Sm.1:18), the Pharaoh of Moses’ youth did decree sabbath rest for the Israelites.  Jash.70:47 “Thus says the king, ‘For six days you shall do all your work and labor, but on the 7th day you shall rest…as the king and Moses the son of Bathia have commanded.”  But the Pharaoh/king of 60 years later said to Moses regarding the Israelites, Ex.5:5, 9 “You would have them cease [shabath h7673] from their labors….Let the labor be heavier”.  So any sabbath rest allowed the Israelites was rescinded, no longer observed there by that generation.

Christ freed them and showed them clearly which day was the 7th, His sabbath.  In Ex.16 the Israelites are no longer slaves, and Christ provides them manna in the wilderness based on His 7th day cessation.  Ex.16:22-30 “This is what the Lord meant, tomorrow is a holy sabbath [shabáwth h7676] to the Lord.”  The Hebrew noun shabawth appears over 100 times in the OT; Ex.16:23 is the first time.  It’s from the root verb shabath h7673 to cease, seen in Ge.2:2 at Creation.  “That’s what the Lord meant” back in Ge.2:2 (which Moses also wrote), though as slaves the Israelites were denied (sabbath) rest.  Ex.16:4, 28 the 7th day sabbath had been a law of God!  God gave them daily manna Sunday–Thursday and a double portion on Friday, so they wouldn’t need to gather any manna on the 7th day Saturday.  Ex.16:30 so the people ceased [h7673] gathering food on the 7th day.  This went on week after week for 40 years.  A total of 12,000 miracle feedings proved to them conclusively which day was the 7th!  And it wasn’t any one day out of seven!  Christ was specific.

Adam Clarke Commentary Ex.16:23 “There is nothing either in the text or context that seems to intimate that the Sabbath was now first given to the Israelites.”  Ellicott Commentary “During the Egyptian oppression the continued observance would have been impossible.”  Catholic Encyclopedia XIII “The Sabbath is first met within connexion [sic] with the fall of the manna; but it there appears to be an institution already well-known to the Israelites.”  Benson Commentary “Here is a plain intimation of the observing a 7th day sabbath, not only before the giving of the law upon mount Sinai, but before the bringing of Israel out of Egypt, and therefore from the beginning.”  Significantly, Ex.16 predates the giving of the Law.

Christ gave to Israel the Decalogue, the Ten Commandments so-called.  Ex.20:8-11Remember the sabbath [h7676] day to keep it holy. For in six days the Lord made the heavens and the earth and all that is in them, and rested [h5117 núwach] on the 7th day; therefore the Lord blessed the sabbath day and made it holy.”  The 7th day is God’s holy time, unlike any other day ordained by men.  Poole Commentary Ge.2:3 “If we compare this place with Ex.20:8-11 we shall find that Moses there speaks of God’s blessing and sanctifying of the sabbath, not as an action then first done, but as that which God had done formerly at the creation of the world.”  The sabbath wasn’t created in 1500 BC at Mt. Sinai; ancient Israel was to “remember” it.  The 7th day sabbath was codified in the law of Ex.20:8-11, but had existed previously, as commentaries indicate.  Poole Commentary Ex.20:8 “The word ‘remember’ here is very emphatical; it reminds us of a formal delivery of the substance of this command, Ge.2:3.”  The 7th day sabbath is a creation ordinance.  The 7th day was the first thing God made holy!  (I’m not 7th Day Adventist.)

The 7th day sabbath is Saturday, both traditionally and presently.  Over 100 languages use a form of the word sabbath for Saturday!  e.g: in Arabic Saturday is Shabet, in Bulgarian Sabota, Croatian Subota, Czech Sobota, Indonesian Sabtu, Italian Sabato, Polish Sobota, Portuguese Sabado, Romanian Sambata, Russian Subbota, Serbian Subota, Spanish Sabado (literally, “the sabbath”), Greek Savvato.  And the modern Greek word for Friday is Paraskevi, meaning literally “to prepare”.  The Bible preparation day preceded the sabbath rest (Ex.16:23).  cf. Mk.15:42 “It was the preparation day, that is, the day before the sabbath.”  In the Bible koiné Greek, the term for “preparation” was paraskeué g3904…which is their word for Friday in today’s Greek!  Circa 200 AD the Roman historian “Dio Cassio speaks of the Jews having dedicated to their God the day called the day of Saturn”, heathen reckoning.  So it is clear…when Jesus walked the earth the sabbath day was Saturday!  (see the topic “Sabbath Day Became Sunday in Rome”, for man’s steps in the transition from Saturday to the traditional Sunday.)

Jesus never sinned.  Therefore, He kept the 7th day sabbath (cf. Lk.4:16).  Christ said in Ex.31:16-17, “Celebrate the sabbath as a perpetual covenant. It is a sign between Me and the sons of Israel forever; for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, on the 7th day He ceased [h7673] and was refreshed.”  Christ was refreshed.  For man, the 7th day is a time of refreshing from the physical/mental demands and concerns of the workweek…perpetually week after week.  The 7th day is sanctified time devoted to God.

Christ’s new covenant is with Israel.  Je.31:31 “Behold’, says the Lord, ‘I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and Judah.”  Gentiles may share in it, according to Paul (Ro.11:13-19).

Josephus Against Apion 2:40 “There is not any city of the Grecians, nor any of the barbarians, nor any nation whatsoever, where our custom of resting on the 7th day has not come!”  Philo On The Creation (89) “The 7ththat day is a festival of all the earth; a day which alone it is the right to call the day of festival for all people, and the birthday of the world.”  The 7th day rest time is universal from Ge.2:3!  Theóphilus bishop of Antioch, 175 AD To Autólycus 2:12 “The 7th day, which all men acknowledge.”

Jesus said in Mk.2:27-28, “The sabbath [sábbaton g4521, Greek] was made for man, and not man for the sabbath”.  Man was made on the 6th day, prior to the sabbath being instituted for man on the 7thChrist Himself as God & Creator made the sabbath day (and He was refreshed), and thereby He is Lord of it.  v.28 “Therefore, the Son of Man is Lord even of the sabbath.”  The Son of Man also has dominion over what pertains to man.  Jesus said the sabbath was made for man/ánthropos/humanity.  (Though Christ was refreshed, God doesn’t grow weary, Is.40:28.)  Jesus didn’t say the sabbath was made just for Israel or the Jews!  Jonathan Edwards Sermon XIII “It is unreasonable to suppose that He hallowed it only with respect to the Jews, a nation which rose up above 2,000 years after [creation].”  After Adam the human was created on the 6th day, he rested (with Christ) on the 7th.  It wouldn’t make sense to think that Christ made the 7th day sabbath for man, but then delayed thousands of years before He gave/revealed it to man!  Family New Testament Notes Mk.2:27 “As the Sabbath was made for the whole human race, they have a right to its rest & privileges.”  The sabbath day is a universal blessing.

By the 1st century, the Jews had devised a traditional code which had 39 categories (plus itemization) of prohibitions for the sabbath day; as if man was made for the sabbath!  These were a man-made burden.  But Jesus said the sabbath was made for man, not vice versa!  Matthew Henry Commentary Mk.2:28 “The sabbath is a sacred and Divine institution; a privilege and benefit, not a task and drudgery.”

Again, the sabbath is a holy day/period of cessation from certain activities.  It’s not a ‘work’.  Le.23:3 it’s a holy assembly.  It’s not for legal striving or burdensome do’s & don’ts.  However, a level of faith is necessary to believe and know that Christ will provide our daily bread/manna/needs on the 7th day, while we rest from work.

After Israel didn’t gather any manna on the 7th day for 40 years, the younger generation knew without a doubt which day of the week is God’s sabbath!  So in De.5 when the Decalogue was repeated, there’s no admonition to “remember” it (unlike Ex.20:8 earlier).  De.5:12-15 “Keep the sabbath day. Six days shall you labor. But the 7th day is the sabbath of the Lord your God. In it you shall not do any work, you or your son or daughter or your male or female servant or your ox or donkey or your sojourner; so that your male and female servant may rest as well as you.”  They’re to recollect they’d been slaves.

De.5:12-15 is quite revealing.  Mankind is expected to work, caring for his own and for the earth (Ge.2:15).  Also this passage shows that the sabbath is a moral command, not just ceremonial!  Male & female servants, our employees, temporary sojourners…they need rest too.  There’s an equality in sabbath rest.  Allowing others to rest relates to loving our neighbor as yourself.  Work animals need rest.  It’s not just oxen & donkeys belonging to Jews that need rest!  All peoples’ work animals need rest…all-inclusive.  And work animals don’t just ‘rest in Christ’ either.  The sabbath is an enduring moral principle, to allow those under our charge to have rest.  Christ the Creator knew His creatures require rest.  It’s a physical need.

The Decalogue of Ex.20 & De.5 contains ten points of obedience; the 7th day sabbath is one.  Others are: the command to honor our father & mother, and prohibitions against idolatry, murder, theft, etc.  Christ’s 7th day cessation is seen at Creation, before other points.  It’s strange to hear people claim the sabbath day ended at Jesus’ cross, but the other points are still in effect.  No one says the cross freed us to dishonor our parents, or commit murder or theft, for example.  Yet the church says we’re ‘free’ to work on the 7th day.  Why this inconsistency?  Who gave man the prerogative to change God’s holy time (as if that’s even possible)…was it Paul, Christian gentiles, the RCC, some other man?

Again, see the topic “Sabbath Day Became Sunday in Rome”.  I’ll close for now with The Works of the Rev. John Wesley, v.1, Sermon 25. “The moral law contained in the ten commandments, and enforced by the prophets, He [Christ] did not take away. It was not the design of His coming to revoke any part of this. This is a law which never can be broken. Every part of this law must remain in force upon all mankind, and in all ages.”  The 7th day sabbath is part of it.

We’ll explore the sabbath issue further in “Sabbath 7th Day (2)”.