©2007 Larry Huntsperger

 4/15/07 Back To The Sabbath

 

Several weeks ago

      I attempted to use the Sabbath day

            as an illustration of some other point I was trying to make.

 

After that talk

      I received some feedback

            that made me realize two things.

 

First of all

      at least a few of you completely misunderstood what I was trying to say,

and second,

      and far more important,

            the deep religious nature within all of us

                  makes it extremely unwise

                        to ever attempt to rush through any concepts

                              that have the potential of triggering religious responses within any us.

 

By now many of you who listen to me

      have come to understand that I deeply hate religion.

 

I hate what it does to people.

 

I hate what it does to the truth about Jesus Christ

      and the redemption and freedom He offers us through His death for us

            and His life through us.

 

I hate the way it turns freedom into bondage

      and life into deadly routine.

 

I hate the way it provides people with such a powerful place

      to hide from God

            and from themselves.

 

I hate the way it so effectively clothes a person

      in an external facade of piety

            while allowing the worst forms of inner sewage to remain untouched within.

 

Jesus Christ came to offer us true, eternal life in Him,

      a life that allows us to be absolutely free

            to be exactly the people our God designed us to be.

 

There are two great deceptions used by Satan

      to rob the people of God of that freedom

            and keep us in bondage.

 


One of them is his convincing us

      that our needs can only be met through our stepping outside

            of the protective moral framework given to us by our God,

                  and thus pulling us into immorality.

 

The other is through his seeking to replace

      the true life of Christ within us

            with some religious system.

 

Of those two

      I believe that religion is by far the more deadly and the more deceptive

            because it is far harder to recognize it

                  as the satanic evil it is,

                        and because it has the ability

                              to exert such tremendous fear, guilt, and shame-based responses within us,

responses that simply paralyze our thinking processes,

      making it impossible for us to hear the truth.

 

I think it was that kind of religious response

      that caused some of you to misunderstand my comments about the Sabbath a few weeks ago.

 

So, one of the reasons I’m going back into that Sabbath thing this morning

      is with the hope that I can correct whatever confusion

            my comments several weeks ago may have created.

 

The second reason

      is that the topic itself provides me with an opportunity

            to give a concise overview

                  of what are some of the most critical foundation principles of the Christian life.

 

And we all need such reminders on a regular basis.

 

So, with that as background,

      let’s take a look at what happened to the Sabbath.

 

You see, it’s not just the issue of the Sabbath Day that concerns me.

 

What really concerns me is that the concepts that govern

      our relationship to the Sabbath

            are the same concepts

                  that will ultimately determine

                        how we relate to our God

                              in every other area of life.

 

In other words,

      if we are confused about the Sabbath

            and how we relate to it,

we will very likely also be confused

      about what it really means

            to live with God

                  on the basis of the Person and work of Jesus Christ.

 

I hope that will make more sense

      by the time we finish.

 

And of course,

      before we can look directly at this Sabbath issue,

            we are going to need some background.

 

I’m going to be giving you some key statements along the way this morning,

      and I’ll do my best to alert you to them

            when we come to them.

 

And here’s the first one.

 

The Old Testament Law

      and the New Testament moral structure

            were given by God

                  for completely different reasons,

                        to serve completely different purposes.

 

If we understand that one principle

      it will clear up a multitude of confusion

            and foggy thinking for us as God’s people.

 

And we’ll begin by looking at the purpose for the Old Testament Law,

      and especially the 10 Commandments.

 

I know that most of the world

      throughout most of human history

            has believed that God gave the 10 Commandments

      to help people to be good,

            and to show them a better way of life.

 

But nothing could be farther from the truth.

 

Two statements in the New Testament

      explain exactly why the Commandments were given,

            and what God was seeking to accomplish through them.

 

Rom. 5:20 And the Law came in that the transgression might increase;...

 

Gal. 3:24 Therefore the Law has become our tutor to lead us to Christ, that we may be justified by faith.

 

The Old Testament law was never given

      for the purpose of making the world more moral,

            or helping people to live better lives.

 

It was given for exactly the opposite reason.

 

It was given to INCREASE our transgressions -

      it was given to force us to sin MORE.

 

Those of you who have been around here for a while have heard repeatedly

      one of my favorite illustrations.

 

I have some extremely important instructions for you right now.

 

Under NO circumstances

      do I want you to touch the chair in front of you.

 

I don’t want you to touch it with your hand,

      I don’t want you to touch it with your foot,

            I don’t want you to even THINK about touching it!!!

 

THOU SHALT NOT TOUCH THE CHAIR!

 

That is exactly what God was doing

      with the 10 Commandments.

 

He worded them in such a way

      as to make it crystal clear that these were absolute,

            nonnegotiable demands from God Himself that MUST be obeyed.

 

THOU SHALT NOT!!!!!!!

 

And the result - it caused us to sin.

 

Paul says in Rom. 7

      that the law aroused our sinful passions

            and drove us into sin.

 

God gave the law to draw out our sin

      and to force us to face our own inner rebellious heart.

 

Why?

 

Why would God want to make us sin more?

 

Because God wanted the Law

      to become our tutor

            to lead us to Christ.

 

Through the Law

      we are forced to face our own rebellious nature,

and to see our inability

      ever to please God

            through our performance.

 

If we allow the Law to accomplish its work in us

      it will ultimately bring us to God

            and cause us to cry out, ‟Please, God! There must be some other way.”

 

And God then responds,

‟Yes, as a matter of fact, there is...let me introduce you to My Son.

 

Through His death

      the debt for your disobedience

            can be removed forever,

and through His life in you

      you will find Him changing you

            from the inside out.”

 

So the Old Testament Law served two purposes.

 

1. It causes us to sin more.

 

2. It points us to Christ.

 

The New Testament moral structure,

      on the other hand,

            is given for a very different purpose.

 

It is shared exclusively with Christians,

      and it is God’s way of saying to us,

‟Now that the battle is over between you and Me,

      and now that My Son has made you secure forever in My love,

            I can share some things with you

                  that I could not share before.

 

You do not earn My acceptance

      be observing these things

            because you already have My eternal acceptance and love in Christ.

 

Nor do you need to fear My wrath and rejection when you fail,

      because My wrath

            and My rejection for your sins

                  has already been poured out on My own Son -

      and your debt is paid,

            and your sins - all of your sins -

                  are already forgiven.

 

But I share these things with you because I love you,

      and I know that anytime you choose to live outside of this moral framework


            it will be destructive for you,

                  and it will cause you pain.

My child,

I love you far too much

      not to share with you how this life you’re living

            was really designed to operate.”

 

Listen to the difference.

 

In the Old Testament

      God takes the stance of a righteous God demanding performance

            from His rebellious creation and says,

THOU SHALT NOT BEAR FALSE WITNESS...

 

In the New Testament He speaks to us

      as a loving Father addressing His child.

 

Col. 3:9-10 Do not lie to one another, since you laid aside the old self with its evil practices, and have put on the new self who is being renewed to a true knowledge according to the image of the One who created him...

 

He is not two different Gods,

      He is the same God seeking to accomplish two different purposes.

 

In the Old Testament He is seeking to goad us into sin

      so that we will see our need for Christ.

 

In the New Testament He is seeking to help us face

      some areas of behavior within us

            that are completely out of character

                  with who we have already become at the heart level through Christ.

 

OK, now I’ve gone into all of this

      because it is the 1st step in understanding what happened

      to the Sabbath Day in the New Testament.

 

The question about the Sabbath

      is impossible to answer

            until we recognize that the purpose of the Old Testament law was to LEAD US TO CHRIST.

 

And that includes the Old Testament Commandment

      concerning the Sabbath.

 

Its purpose, just like all the rest of the law,

      was to serve as our tutor

            to lead us to Christ.

 

The human race has gotten itself into trouble and confusion over this one Commandment so often

      because, to our intensely religious minds,

            it appears to be different than the rest.

 

The other commandments

      all seem to be rooted in practical reasoning.

 

We can see the logic in,

‟Thou shalt not lie!

      Thou shalt not steal!

            Thou shalt not commit adultery!

                  Thou shalt not murder!”

 

But when we come to ‟Remember the Sabbath Day to keep it holy”

      all of the sudden little religious bells

            go off within us,

and we think, ‟Aha! Here is something

      God wants us to do

            just to please Him.

 

This is the one day each week

      that he wants us to set aside

            to worship Him, to go to church,

                  to do reverent and religious things.”

 

You see,

      we look at this commandment

            and tend to assume

                  that God included it

not so much for logical reasons,

      as for RELIGIOUS or DEVOTIONAL reasons.

 

Its probably included as a sort of weekly test

      of our commitment to Him -

all the truly committed will spend one day a week with Him,

      and, of course, the reason He’s so big

            on this “not working” thing

is so that we can free up the time

      to get together with Him.

 

WRONG!!!!!

 

Now, to begin clearing up all this confusion I want us to begin with the commandment itself.

 

It is found in Ex. 20:8-11, right in the center of the Big 10.

 

Ex. 20:8-11 "Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days you shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is a Sabbath of the Lord your God; in it you shall not do any work, you or your son or your daughter, your male or your female servant or your cattle or your sojourner who stays with you. For in six days the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea and all that is in them, and rested on the seventh day; therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy.

 

OK, three things to note...

First look how long it is.

      How would you like to etch that onto a stone tablet?

 

There is more space given to this one commandment

      than there is to the last 5 commandments put together.

 

Second, look at what we are commanded to do- HOW do we keep the day holy?

 

By ceasing our work,

      by not working.

 

Now look - there is not a word in there

      about God’s people gathering together,

            or worshiping Him,

or using the freed-up time to study His Word together,

      or for prayer,

            or for sacrifices,

or for any other worship or religious activity.

 

The whole central issue of the commandment

      has nothing to do with worshiping God.

 

It has everything to do with our

      ceasing our work.

 

WORK is the big issue...the ONLY issue.

 

In fact,

      its not just us,

            its our families,

and our servants,

      and our visitors,

            and even our COWS.

 

Throughout history we have assumed

      that God wanted us to stop working

            so that we could then do the church thing.

 

But remarkably there is not one word about that in the commandment itself.

 

Maybe God forgot...or ran out of stone.

 

And the third thing I want to point out about the commandment itself

      is that the thing that made the day holy

            was our ceasing from our labors,

                  our efforts, our work.

 

All the commandment tells us

      is that for some, as yet unknown reason,

            it was very, very important to God

that once a week

      everyone in their world STOP WORKING.

 

The why of the commandment

      was a complete mystery,

but the what was very, very clear.

 

Once a week, every week,

       everyone and everything was to stop working.

 

Now, let’s move on to the New Testament

      and see if we can make some sense out of all of this.

 

And incase you dozed off for just a few minutes, let me catch you up by telling you

      we’ve seen 2 things so far:

 

1. The purpose of the Old Testament Commandments

      was to serve as our tutor to lead us to Christ.

 

2. The 4th commandment tells us that

      once a week, every week the entire nation of Israel was to stop working.

 

Now, there are just two references to the Sabbath

      in all of the New Testament Epistles,

            from Romans through Revelation.

 

But these two are all we need,

      because together they perfectly clear up

            the mystery of what the Sabbath was for

      and how it relates to us in Christ.

 

The first is found in Col. 2:16-17

Therefore let no one act as your judge in regard to food or drink or in respect to a festival or a new moon or a Sabbath day-- things which are a mere shadow of what is to come; but the substance belongs to Christ.

 

We’ve seen in our past studies of Colossians

      that this church was under attack

            from some men who were attempting to cram a list of religious duties

                  down the throats of God’s people,

                        telling them that, if they followed this list,

                              it would prove they were good Christians.

 

Paul wrote this letter


      to say basically, ‟What in the world do you think you’re doing? You have Christ Himself living in you,

      expressing Himself through you.

 

Are you going to attempt to exchange Him, and His life within you,

      for some list of religious duties?”

 

And in the context of that discussion

      he brings up this Sabbath thing.

 

And specifically he says,

      don’t let anyone act as your judge in regard to the Sabbath,

            because the Sabbath was a mere shadow of Christ Himself.

 

This day of rest from our work once a week

      was simply a shadow of the REAL

            eternal rest from our frantic works

                  to try to please God

that we now have in Christ.

 

The Sabbath was given simply to serve as a shadow of the Person of Christ Himself.

 

Ever been out in the hot sun gardening,

      down on your hands and knees,

            and suddenly had a shadow fall across you?

 

What do you do?

 

You turn around and look at the source of the shadow.

 

Paul says that is exactly what the Sabbath was designed to do,

      and he wants us to know that for us to sit and continue to stare at the shadow

            once the substance has come on the scene is crazy.

 

And the second reference

      that completes the picture for us

            is found in Hebrews 4:9-10:

There remains therefore a Sabbath rest for the people of God. For the one who has entered His rest has himself also rested from his works, as God did from His.

 

Here we have the author telling us clearly

      that the TRUE Sabbath rest

            is the rest from our works,

                  from our striving to please God,

                        that rest that we now have in Christ.

 

Colossians tells us that the Sabbath was a shadow of Christ,

      Hebrews tells us the true Sabbath rest

            is the rest the people of God know in their spirits

                  when they enter Christ.

 

So, this is what we end up with:

1. Galatians tells us that the real purpose of the 10 commandments was to act as our tutor to lead us to Christ.

 

2. Then, when we look at the big 10

      we find 9 commandments we cannot keep apart from the life of Christ within us,

            and a 10th commandment

                  that pictures the rest from our efforts to keep those 9

                        that we would one day know in Christ.

 

3. Without that Sabbath Commandment

      pointing us to our rest in Christ

            the picture would have been incomplete.

 

4. But taken as a whole

      the 10 commandments are the perfect tutor

      because they present the whole picture.

 

They show us our need for Christ,

      and then beautifully picture our rest in Christ.

 

So why was the Sabbath discontinued by the early church?

 

Because once the shadow has caused us

      to turn around and look at the living reality,

            the shadow has served its purpose

                  and is no longer needed.

 

Once we have entered

      the true, eternal rest in Christ Himself

            we do not need to continue to cling

                  to the picture

because we literally fulfill the 4th commandment when we rest in Christ.

 

Picture a G.I. on the battlefield

      who carries with him a picture of his wife.

 

Each night before he falls asleep he takes out that picture and holds it.

 

Then, finally he returns home from the war,

      back to the arms of his love.

 

But the first night home,

      when the two of them climb into bed,

            rather than turning to the arms of his wife,


                  he turns to his wallet and takes out and holds that picture of her.

 

The Sabbath commandment was removed

      from the New Testament Moral Structure

            because it was only a picture of Christ and we now have the living reality.

 

And let me close with just one more observation.

 

The Sabbath, with its powerful emphasis on rest

      was a superb picture of our life in Christ,

but one that I fear we sometimes fail to understand.

 

You see, we really can REST in Christ.

 

Too often I have seen God’s people

      still so fearful,

            still working so hard to try to please God.

 

Our God requires only one thing from us -

      that we rest in His Son.

 

If you have placed your life into His hands,

      and trusted His Son’s death

            as payment for your sins,

I want you to know that the battle is over

      and you now have peace with God forever.

 

He is not now standing

      with arms folded,

            a scowl on His face, demanding a little more

      or a little better.

 

You have entered the true, eternal Sabbath rest,

      and you need not be afraid of Him ever again.