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NO SABBATH (Col 2:16 &
Rom 14:5)
WHAT DO YOU
DO WITH COLOSSIANS 2:16?
Whenever the
question of the Sabbath is discussed, those who
do not keep it holy will inevitably appeal to Colossians 2:16 as
their authority for disobeying the fourth commandment of God.
What exactly did Paul mean when he wrote:
"Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or
in respect of a holyday, or of the new moon, or of the Sabbath
days:" Colossians 2:16
Yes,
when Paul said "Sabbath" he meant the seventh day
Sabbath - but that does not mean that Paul was canceling the
requirement for obedience to a commandment of God. What God
has commanded only God can set aside. One may search the New
Testament for a thousand years and he will not find a single
verse that says God has abrogated one "jot or tittle" of His
fourth commandment.
What then
was Paul talking about when he said to let no man judge you in respect
of Sabbaths? When we look at this verse in its context it soon becomes
apparent that Paul was warning about the "Colossian Heresy" which was
another gospel based on asceticism and the worship of angels in order
to gain assistance from cosmic powers. The essence of this heresy
was that Christ alone was not sufficient to deliver us from our slavery
to sin.
As you will
see from the following verses, Paul was warning
against three things that were being added to the gospel.
1. Traditions of men.
2. The worship of angels.
3. Submitting to doctrines of men.
COL 2:8 Beware
lest any man spoil you through philosophy and
vain deceit, after the TRADITION OF MEN of men, after the
rudiments of the world, and not after Christ.
COL 2:16 Let
no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink,
or in respect of an holyday, or of the new moon, or of the
Sabbath days:
COL 2:18 Let
no man beguile you of your reward in a voluntary
humility and WORSHIPING OF ANGELS, intruding into those
things which he hath not seen, vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind,
COL 2:20 Wherefore
if ye be dead with Christ from the rudiments
of the world, why, as though living in the world, are ye
subject to ordinances, (Touch not; taste not; handle not;
Which all are to perish with the using;) AFTER THE
COMMANDMENTS AND DOCTRINES OF MEN?
I should be obvious
that KEEPING THE SABBATH DAY HOLY
IS NOT A DOCTRINE OF MEN!
Paul was not
doing away with God's commandment; he was warning against the false
teachers who were saying that if believers did not eat and drink the right
food and keep the festivals, new moons and Sabbaths ACCORDING TO CERTAIN
HUMAN
REGULATIONS they would lose their reward.
According to verse
:23 below, they were teaching that without
these ascetic regulations one could not overcome the flesh:
COL 2:23 These
[DOCTRINES OF MEN] have indeed an
appearance of wisdom in promoting rigor of devotion and self-
abasement and severity to the body, but they are of no value in
checking the indulgence of the flesh. (RSV)
One commentator
summed up these verses by saying:
"We conclude
then that in verse :16, the warning is not
against the Sabbath, festivals and dietary laws as such, but
rather against those who promote these practices as
indispensable aids to Christian perfection and as needed
protection from the "elements [evil spiritual forces] of the
world" thus denying the all sufficiency of Christ.
(Samuele Bacchiocchi, From Sabbath To Sunday)
Now really, doesn't
that explanation make a lot more sense than
the notion that Christians are no longer required to obey the
fourth commandment? It is a true saying that: "The commandment
is not nullified by the condemnation of its abuse.".
The question
we need to ask is this: "Was Paul condemning the Sabbath day, or
was he CONDEMNING THE DOCTRINES OF MEN who added ritualistic and
ascetic restrictions to faith in Christ?" In order to answer
that dispute, one must look at the broad picture.
There is not a single verse in the New Testament which states that Paul
taught a new doctrine that canceled the Sabbath commandment; nor is there
any record of a controversy between the
Jews and Gentile Christians over Sabbath-keeping. If Paul had been
teaching that the Sabbath commandment had been repealed, it would have
split the church wide open and he would
have had to answer the objections continuously in his epistles.
Think about it - if the Jewish believers made such a fuss about circumcision
being optional, imagine what they would have said about the Sabbath day
being revoked.
At some
point we must use common sense and reason to interpret what has been written.
For example, does "Let no man judge you in meat and drink..." mean that
Christians can be
drunkards? Of course not, because you know that God's word
forbids drunkenness. Well, it also forbids Sabbath-breaking!
It is only
logical to assume that if God was going to cancel one of His commandments,
he would make that fact very clear. Surely, if someone said to you:
"Let no man judge you in
respect of murder or adultery" you would not assume that God had
changed His mind about those sins without solid proof. Certainly, you
would demand more evidence than one lonely verse in the book of Colossians?
Or would you?
THE CHURCHMEN vs THE SABBATH (Romans 14)
Many churchmen use
Romans 14:5-6 as proof that New Testament
believers no longer have an obligation to keep the Sabbath day
holy. So let us examine those two verses, just as a Judge
would consider evidence in his courtroom, and then decide
whether or not they testify against Sabbath keeping. Paul
wrote:
"One man esteemeth one day above another: another
esteemeth every day alike. Let very
man be fully
persuaded in his own mind.
He that regardeth [observeth] the day regardeth it unto
the Lord; and he that regardeth not the
day, to the Lord
he doth not regard it. He that eateth,
eateth to the
Lord, for he giveth God thanks; and he
that eateth not,
to the Lord he eateth not, and giveth God
thanks." Romans
14:5,6
The
Judge would ask: "Where is the Sabbath mentioned in
those verses?". The Sabbath is not mentioned there, nor in the
entire book of Romans! No court in the land would allow verses
that do not mention the Sabbath to be used as evidence in an
argument against the Sabbath - so why should we?
You
see, Paul could not have been talking about keeping the
Sabbath day holy because obedience to God's law is not
optional. It is ludicrous to suggest that any of the Ten
Commandments can be disobeyed "unto the Lord". Think of the
absurdity of saying "He that stealeth, to the Lord he stealeth;
and he that stealeth not, to the Lord he stealeth not."
What
then was Paul talking about? He was talking about fast
days. The whole 14th chapter of Romans is about food and how
people's beliefs about eating should not be interfered with.
The fast days could be observed according to each believer's
conscience. A man could eat -or not eat, keep the day - or not
keep it. It is as simple as this: Each man could observe FAST
DAYS, or not observe them, according to his own convictions.
He
that does not eat, regards the day.
He
that eats, does not regard the day.
The
"days" that Paul was referring to were the traditional
fast days mentioned in Zechariah 7:5-6. The Gentile Christians
in Rome did not keep them because they had no cultural interest
in the anniversary fasts that were observed during the Jew's
captivity in Babylon. 1
Even
the Jews themselves had different convictions about the
observance of those days - because those fasts were never
commanded by God.
After
the captivity (when the temple was being rebuilt) the
men of Bethel also wondered if they should observe these fasts
unto the Lord. For example, they asked Zechariah: "Shall I
weep in the fifth month and abstain, as I have done these many
years?" (Zech 7:2-3.)
When
you read Zechariah's answer, notice the striking
similarity of his words with those of Paul to the church at
Rome ...
COMPARE
Zechariah 7:5-6 "...When ye FASTED and mourned in
the fifth and seventh month, even those seventy years,
DID YE AT ALL FAST UNTO ME, even to me [The Lord]?
And when ye did
EAT, and when ye did drink, did ye
not EAT FOR YOURSELVES,
and drink for yourselves?"
WITH
Romans 14:6-7 "He that regardeth the [fast] day
regardeth it UNTO
THE LORD; and he that regardeth not
the day, to the
Lord he doth not regard it. He that
EATETH, eateth
to the Lord, for he giveth God thanks;
and he that EATETH
NOT, to the Lord he eateth not,
and giveth God
thanks.
For none of us LIVETH TO HIMSELF, and no man dieth to
himself."
If you
were the Judge in the case of the CHURCHMEN VERSUS
THE SABBATH, would you be willing to say that Paul had cancelled
one of the commandments of God based on the evidence you find in
the 14th chapter of Romans?
In our
opinion, the evidence from Romans and Zechariah
demands a verdict for Sabbath observance. The church must obey
the Fourth Commandment and that is the only decision that will
uphold the Law of God.
CASE CLOSED!
Footnote:
These
are the four traditional fasts that were mentioned
in the book of Zechariah:
1. (The fast of the fourth month) In remembrance of the
breaking of the wall
of Jerusalem.
2. (The fast of the fifth month) In remembrance
of the
burning of the temple.
3. (The fast of the seventh month) In remembrance of
the
killing of Gedaliah,
which completed the dispersion.
4. (The fast of the tenth month) In remembrance of
the
beginning of the siege of Jerusalem.
See - Jer 52:6, Jer 52:12-13, 2 Kings 25:25, 2 Kings 25:1
It is of interest to note that those dates commemorate the
judgments of God upon a people who refused to keep the
Sabbath Day holy. (See Jer 17:19-27)
Author:
hkupp@Harborside.com
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