“Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days shalt
thou labour, and do all thy work: But the seventh day is the Sabbath of the
Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy
daughter, thy manservant nor thy maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger
that is within thy gates: For in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the
sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the Lord
blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed it.” Exodus 20:8-11
This is a loaded commandment encompassing many related
aspects of our lives. This is the longest of the commandments and the only one
urging us to “remember”. The imperative to remember implies that it is possible
to forget this day. God has asked us to “Remember the Sabbath day” informing
us that there is only one. Then it goes on to describe this day so that we may
be able to successfully identify “the day”.
The narrative of the command them shifts to bring us the
description of this day. We are instructed to do all our work for six days. Then
on the seventh day we are to rest because it is our Lord’s Sabbath. If the God
of this commandment is my ruler, commander and Lord then I’ll keep His Sabbath
Holy. Then the passage goes on to list all who are not to work making it
expressly clear that as His servants we nor anyone nor anything under our power
is to work on this day.
Finally, the commandment lets us know why. God will always
tell us why. God created this earth in six days (Genesis 1). After His six days
of creation He carved out one more twenty-four-hour period in which He did no
more work. He blessed that period of time and He declared the day to be holy.
Because of who God is He wants to share this time with us. So He asked us to
remember this time, forget all our labours and cares, on that day, and spend
the time with Him.
With that breakdown of the fourth how do we remember this
day? Well on the basic front all work is to stop, if you are employed you don’t
go to work on this day, and if you are a student you put away the books on this
day. If that is where it ended this would be the easiest commandment to keep – you
just don’t do anything. But there is more, a state of mind is involved. We are
to keep the day “holy”. But as sinful beings we lack the capacity to do so.
This is where we must learn to submit ourselves to God that He will give us the
ability to keep the day Holy (1 Peter 1:16).
As a professed Sabbath-keeper, fellowshipping with other
professed Sabbath-keepers, I have found that though we have identified the
seventh-day and are committed to the seventh-day that we are notorious for
trampling on the seventh-day Sabbath. Jesus declared that it is lawful to do
good on the Sabbath day (Matthew 12:12). And with that instruction we seem to have
opted to all our good works on the Sabbath only. With that the Sabbath then
ceases to be a day of rest and by the end we are tired and the Sabbath is no
longer a blessing to us but a day burdened by “good deeds”. We ought not ignore
someone in need on this day, but we ought not plan to do every good deed, we
neglected during the week, on the Sabbath day either. We have six days to do
all our work and that is not limited to self-serving work but includes Christ
serving work as well. Every day we are to have joy in doing the things of God
and all we do should be done to His glory (Psalms 1:2; 1 Corinthians 10:31;
Romans 7:22).
Another major shortcoming we have, regarding the Sabbath, is
how we view it. Some of us have come to regard the Sabbath as a day of
amusement and selfish pleasure. In Isaiah we learn that God did not design the Sabbath
for this purpose (Isaiah 58:13, 14). We are not to turn the day into a self-gratifying
pleasure seeking day. For those of us who limit or activity on the Sabbath day
and find ourselves, as we ought, in church (Leviticus 23:3) there is another subtle
plague. We participate in the planned service then we come together in
fellowship and start talking. And our conversation may begin innocently on the
sermon we just heard and then drift to all the things that are happening at
work, in the news, and in the lives of the people around us. None of it is said
to bring glory to God. As Bible believing commandment keeping people we need to
ever vigilant about how we treat God’s holy day.
This commandment is of particular importance as we come to
the end of the world. This commandment declares who God is, the reason for His claim
of authority, and His dominion. The fact that the vast majority of the God’s creation
has been made to forget His day will be of particular importance as we proceed
to the culmination of this earth’s final struggle. Therefore, as
Sabbath-keepers it has never been more vital for us to be intentional in how we
fulfill this command.
In Love
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