Should the Sabbath be on Saturday?
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Frankly Answered Questions - FAQs

Shouldn't the Sabbath be on Saturday?

Q: My husband & I have been studying the sabbath. When scripture is illuminated concerning the sabbath and compared to our traditions of church history on the sabbath, truth is lost! The scriptures that the christian church has used for acknowledging the Sunday sabbath do NOT hold up in the word of God! Please share your thoughts on this. We are desiring to know the truth. Thank you!

A: My study of the Scriptures and early church documents indicates that in regard to the Sabbath some definite change has taken place from the Old Testament. The conclusion that I have come to is that in the New Testament church there were as many attitudes to the observance of the Sabbath as there were to the keeping of the Mosaic Law. These appear to have included the following four approaches:

  1. Jewish and Gentile Christians, like those in the Pauline churches who followed the teaching of the apostle and considered themselves free from the Sabbath commandment -- e.g. Colossians 2:16.

  2. Jewish Christians like those from Jerusalem whom Paul encountered in Galatia who regarded the observance of the whole law, including the Sabbath, as necessary to salvation -- Galatians 4:8-11.

  3. Jewish Christians like the Jerusalem apostles who continued to keep the Sabbath as part of the way they fulfilled their role as the true Israel, but did not insist on Gentile converts observing the seventh day -- e.g. Acts 15.

  4. Gentile Christians who for various reasons decided to adopt Jewish Sabbath observance.

The second group is clearly wrong. Sabbath observance where it is seen as part of keeping the law as necessary to salvation, arouses strong reactions from Paul. Paul compares their adoption of Jewish Sabbaths and festivals to a return to bondage to "elemental spirits" (Colossians 2:16-17,20; Galatians 4:3,9). We are NOT saved by our observance of the Sabbath or by keeping any of the laws of the Old Testament (Galatians 3:10-11). Worshipping or not worshipping on Saturday is NOT a salvation issue (although some groups continue to act as if it is). You can argue that it is an obedience issue, but it is NOT a salvation issue.

The conflict between the other three groups (Groups #1, 3, 4) is evident in Paul's letter to the Romans. How does the apostle recommend handling the differences? Romans 14:5-6 isolates the observance of "days" as one of the issues between the strong and the weak Christians in Rome. The "weak" need to stop condemning the "strong" and the "strong" need to stop despising the "weak," and both need to welcome each other (Romans 14:1; 15:7). They need to recognize that he who observes the day and also he who does not are both intending to honor the Lord (14:6).

As you continue to study this issue . . .

The best book I know of on this subject is From the Sabbath to Lord's Day, D. A. Carson, editor, Zondervan, 1982. There are a few Greek terms, but if you don't read Greek, just skip over the Greek terms in some of the essays. You will still find it very helpful in your study.

Joy to you in Jesus,

Dennis Rupert


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