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GIVE AN ANSWER, Gen. 2:3
Victor M.
Eskew
When the Lord gave the Ten Commandments to
There are some religious groups that acknowledge Jesus as the Son of God
that still keep the sabbath. Some
refer to these groups as sabbatarians.
One group is better known as the Seventh-Day Adventists. The Adventists teach that sabbath
worship dates back far beyond the Law of Moses. They believe that is was instituted by
God at the Creation. They use
Genesis 2:3 as their proof-text.
“And God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it: because that in it he had rested from
all his work which God created and made.”
They emphasize the words “blessed” and “sanctified.” They assert that God made the sabbath a
day of worship from the beginning.
If Genesis 2:3 were the only verse we had that speaks of the sabbath, we
might come to the same conclusions the sabbatarians have made, but it is
not. Let’s look at what three other
scriptures say about the sabbath.
In Exodus 31:16, God commands
The next text is Nehemiah 9:13-14.
This text clearly reveals that the sabbath was given at mount Sinai. “Thou camest down also upon mount Sinai,
and spakest with them from heaven, and gavest them right judgments, and true
laws, good statutes and commandments:
and madest known unto them thy holy sabbath…” Had the sabbath been a practice of God’s
people since the Creation, God would have had to make it known at mount
Sinai.
The last verse is Deuteronomy 5:15.
This verse reveals to
There is no evidence that any of the patriarchs ever kept the sabbath. It was a day of rest and worship given to the Jews at mount Sinai to remind them of their release from Egyptian bondage. When the Old Covenant was done away, the sabbath also ended. Our Lord Jesus Christ was raise upon the first day of the week. On that day, Christians gather to worship God and celebrate His resurrection from the grave.