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IX.
Sabbath
Chapter 101
:
The Sabbath in History
1. WHEN and by what
acts was the Sabbath made?
"And on the seventh day God
ended His work which He had made; and He
rested on the seventh day from all His work
which He had made. 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." Gen. 2:2,3.
2. What division of
time is marked off by the Sabbath?
The week.
NOTES.-"One of the most striking collateral
confirmations of the Mosaic history of the
creation is the general adoption of the
division of time into weeks, which
extends from the Christian states of Europe
to the remote shores of Hindustan, and has
equally prevailed among the Hebrews. the
Egyptians, Chinese, Greeks, Romans, and
northern barbarians,- nations some of whom
had little or no intercourse with others,
and were not even known by name to the
Hebrews."- Home's "Introduction to the
Critical Study and Knowledge of the Holy
Scriptures," Vol. I, page 69, edition 1841.
"Seven has been the ancient and honored
number among the nations of the earth. They
have measured their time by weeks from the
beginning. The original of this was the
Sabbath of God, as Moses has given the
reasons for it in his writings."- "Brief
Dissertation on the First Three Chapters of
Genesis," by Dr. Lyman Coleman, page 26.
Gen. 7:4,10; 8:10,12, show that the week was
known at the time of the flood.
3. How widely
recognized is the seventh-day Sabbath
in the different languages of the world today?
It is very generally so recognized.
NOTE.-Some years ago the late Dr. William
Mead Jones, of London, published a "Chart of
the Week," showing the style of the weekly
cycle and the designations of the different
days of the week in one hundred and sixty
different languages. This chart shows very
vividly that the seven-day period, or week,
was known from the most ancient times, and
that in no fewer than one hundred and eight
of these languages the seventh day is
designated as the Sabbath, or holy day. The
following is from this chart:-
|
English |
The seventh day |
The Sabbath |
|
Hebrew |
Shabbath |
Sabbath |
|
Greek |
Sabbaton |
Sabbath |
|
Latin |
Sabbatum |
Sabbath |
|
Arabic |
Assabt |
The
Sabbath |
|
Persian |
Shambin |
Sabbath |
|
Armenian |
Shapat |
Sabbath |
|
Turkish |
Yomessabt |
Day
the Sabbath |
|
Abyssinian |
Sanbat |
Sabbath |
|
Russian |
Subbota |
Sabbath |
|
Polish |
Sobota |
Sabbath |
|
Hindustani |
Shamba |
Sabbath |
|
Malay |
Ari-Sabtu |
Day
Sabbath |
|
Afghan |
Shamba |
Sabbath |
|
German |
Samstag |
Sabbath |
|
Prussian |
Sabatico |
Sabbath |
|
French |
Samedi |
Sabbath day |
|
Italian |
Sabbato |
Sabbath |
|
Spanish |
Sabado |
Sabbath |
|
Portuguese |
Sabbado |
Sabbath |
4. What reason did God
assign at Sinai for having blessed and set apart
the seventh day as a day of holy rest?
"For in six days the Lord made heaven
and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and
rested the seventh day." Ex. 20:11.
5. What promise did God
make to Israel, through Jeremiah, if they would
keep the Sabbath?
"And it shall come to pass, if ye
diligently harken unto Me, saith the Lord, to
bring in no burden through the gates of this
city on the Sabbath day, but hallow the Sabbath
day, to do no work therein; then shall there
enter into the gates of this city kings and
princes sitting upon the throne of David,
riding in chariots and on horses, they, and
their princes, the men of Judah, and the
inhabitants of Jerusalem: and this city shall
remain forever." Jer. 17:24,25.
6. What did He say
would happen if they did not hallow the, Sabbath
day?
"But if ye will not harken unto Me
to hallow the Sabbath day, and not to bear a
burden, even entering in at the gates of
Jerusalem on the Sabbath day; then will I
kindle a fire in the gates thereof, and it shall
devour the palaces of Jerusalem, and it shall
not be quenched." Verse 27.
7. What befell the city
of Jerusalem when it was captured by
Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, in 588 B.C.?
"And all the vessels of the house of
God. . . he brought to Babylon. And they
burnt the house of God, and brake down the wall
of Jerusalem, and burnt all the palaces thereof
with fire." 2 Chron. 36:18,19.
8. Why was this done?
"To fulfil the word of the Lord by
the mouth of Jeremiah, until the land had
enjoyed her sabbaths: for as long as she lay
desolate she kept sabbath." Verse 21.
NOTE.-Sabbath Israel's Babylonish captivity,
under Nebuchadnezzar and his sons, was
seventy years long because that for 420
years, or for six times seventy years,- from
the days of Solomon to Nebuchadnezzar's
time,- they had largely neglected to keep
the Sabbath. See Eze. 22:8,26; Jer. 25:8-11;
17:24, 27; 2 Chron. 36:15-21. The seventy
years' desolation made up for the 420 years
of Sabbath desecration. So during the
millennium, or the one thousand years after
Christ's second advent, the whole earth will
lie desolate, or keep sabbath, for one
thousand years, because that for six
thousand years the world's inhabitants have
disregarded the Sabbath. See this period and
condition pointed out in Rev. 20:1-4; Isa.
24:1-6; Jer. 4:23-27. The periods of rest
and desolation of the land are divinely
appointed sabbatical compensations for man's
irreligion, as manifested in Sabbath
desecration. They are impressive lessons on
the importance of keeping the seventh-day
Sabbath, and the results of breaking and
disregarding it.
9. After Israel's
restoration from the Babylonian captivity, what
did Nehemiah say was the reason for their
punishment?
"Then I contended with the nobles of
Judah, and said unto them, What evil thing is
this that ye do, and profane the Sabbath day?
Did not your fathers thus, and did not our God
bring all this evil upon us, and upon this city?
yet ye bring more wrath upon Israel by
profaning the Sabbath." Neh. 13:17,18.
10. How does he speak
of God's giving the Sabbath to Israel?
"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." Neh. 9:13,14.
NOTE.-Let it be noted that this text does
not say that God made the Sabbath
then, but simply that He made it known
to Israel then. They had largely forgotten
it while in Egypt. See readings in Chapters
92. and 93. of this book.
11. How did Christ,
while on earth, regard the Sabbath?
"And He came to Nazareth, where He
had been brought up: and, as His custom was,
He went into the synagogue on the Sabbath day,
and stood up for to read." Luke 4:16.
12. By what did Christ
recognize the Sabbath law?
"And He said unto them, . . . It is
lawful to do well on the Sabbath days."
Matt. 12:11,12.
NOTES.-William Prynne says: "It is certain
that Christ Himself, His apostles, and the
primitive Christians for some good space of
time, did constantly observe the seventh-day
Sabbath."- "Dissertation on the Lord's
Day Sabbath," page 33.
Morer, a learned clergyman of the Church of
England, says: "The primitive Christians had
a great veneration for the Sabbath, and
spent the day in devotion and sermons. And
it is not to be doubted that they derived
this practice from the apostles themselves,
as appears by several scriptures to that
purpose."- Morer's "Dialogues on the
Lord's Day," page 189.
The historian Neander says: "Opposition to
Judaism introduced the particular festival
of Sunday very early, indeed, into the place
of the Sabbath. . . . The festival of
Sunday, like all other festivals, was always
only a human ordinance, and it was far from
the intentions of the apostles to establish
a divine command in this respect,- far from
them, and from the early apostolic church,
to transfer the laws of the Sabbath to
Sunday. Perhaps at the end of the second
century a false application of this kind had
begun to take place; for men appear by that
time to have considered laboring on Sunday
as a sin."- Neander's "Church History,"
Rose's translation, page 186.
Dr. Lyman Abbott says: "The current notion
that Christ and His apostles authoritatively
substituted the first day of the week for
the seventh, is absolutely without. any
authority in the New Testament."-
Christian Union, June 26,1890.
Archdeacon Farrar says: "The Christian
church made no formal, but a gradual and
almost unconscious transference of the one
day to the other."-
"The Voice From
Sinai," page 167.
13. What was the first
effort of the Roman Church in behalf of the
recognition of Sunday?
In 196 A. D., Victor, bishop of Rome,
attempted to impose on all the churches the
Roman custom of having the Passover, or Easter,
as it is commonly called, celebrated every year
on Sunday. See Bower's "History of the Popes,"
Vol. I, pages 18,19.
NOTE.-This, Dr. Bower, in his "History of
the Popes," Vol. I, page 18, styles "the
first essay of papal usurpation."
14. What was one of the
principal reasons for convoking the Council of
Nice?
"The question relating to the
observance of Easter, which was agitated in
the time of Anicetus and Polycarp, and afterward
in that of Victor, was still undecided. It was
one of the principal reasons for convoking the
Council of Nice, being the most important
subject to be considered after the Arian
controversy."-
Boyle's "Historical View of the Council of
Nice," page 23, edition 1836.
15. How was the matter
finally decided?
"Easter day was fixed on the Sunday
immediately following the full moon which was
nearest after the vernal equinox."-
Id., page 24.
16. In urging the
observance of this decree on the churches, what
reason did Constantine assign for it?
"Let us have nothing in common with
the most hostile rabble of the Jews."-
Id., page 52.
17. What had
Constantine already done, in 321 A.D., to help
forward Sunday to a place of prominence?
He issued an edict requiring "the
judges and town people, and the occupation of
all trades" to rest on "the venerable day of the
sun." See Encyclopedia Britannica, article
"Sunday;" and this work, page 443.
18. Who did Eusebius,
bishop of Caesarea, and one of Constantine's
most ardent supporters, say had transferred the
obligations of the Sabbath to Sunday?
"All things whatsoever that it was
duty to do on the Sabbath, these WE have
transferred to the Lord's day."-
Eusebius's "Commentary on the Psalms," quoted in
Cox's "Sabbath Literature," Vol. I, page 361.
19. What did Sylvester,
bishop of Rome, 314 A.D. to 337 A.D., do for the
Sunday institution by his "apostolic authority"?
He officially changed the title of
the first day, calling it the LORD's DAY. See "Historia
Ecclesiastica," by M. Ludovicum Lucium, cent. 4,
cap. 10, pages 739,740, edition Basilea, 1624.
20. What did the
Council of Laodicea decree in 364 A.D.?
Canon 29. "Christians shall not
Judaize and be idle on Saturday [Sabbath], but
shall work on that day; but the Lord's day they
shall especially honor."-
"A History of the Councils of the Church,"
Charles Joseph Hefele, Vol. II, page 316.
21. How late did
Christians keep the Sabbath?
"Down even to the fifth century, the
observance of the Jewish Sabbath was continued
in the Christian church."-
Lyman Coleman's "Ancient Christianity
Exemplified," chap. 26, sec. 2.
22. How generally does
the historian Socrates, who wrote about the
middle of the fifth century, say the Sabbath was
observed by the Christian churches of his time?
"Although almost all churches
throughout the world celebrate the sacred
mysteries on the Sabbath of every week, yet the
Christians of Alexandria and at Rome, on account
of some ancient tradition, refuse to do this."-
Socrates's "Ecclesiastical History," book 5,
chap. 22.
23. What day was
observed in the dark ages by some of the
Waldenses?
"They kept the Sabbath day, observed
the ordinance of baptism according to the
primitive church, instructed their children in
the articles of the Christian faith and the
commandments of God."-
Jones's "Church History," Vol. II, chap. 5,
sec.4.
24. Who among the early
Reformers raised this question of Sabbath
observance?
"Carlstadt held to the divine
authority of the Sabbath from the Old
Testament."-
"Life of Luther," by Dr. Barnes Sears, page 402.
25. What did Luther say
of Carlstadt's Sabbath views?
"Indeed, if Carlstadt were to write
further about the Sabbath, Sunday would have to
give way, and the Sabbath-
that
is to say, Saturday-
must be kept holy."-
Luther, Against the Celestial Prophets, quoted
in "Life of Martin Luther in Pictures," page
147.
26. What claim is now
made by the Roman Church concerning the change
of the Sabbath to Sunday?
"Question.-
Have you any other way of proving that the
church has power to institute festivals of
precept?
"Answer.-
Had
she not such power, she could not have done that
in which all modem religionists agree with her,-
she
could i not have substituted the observance of
Sunday, the first day of the week, for the
observance of Saturday, the seventh day, a
change for which there is no Scriptural
authority."-
"Doctrinal Catechism," by Rev. Stephen Keenan,
page 174.
NOTE.-Through want of sufficient light and
investigation, and because of the efforts of
some who opposed the Sabbath during the
Reformation, Sunday was brought from
Catholicism into the Protestant church, and
is now cherished as an institution of the
Lord. It is clear, however, that it is none
of His planting, but rather the work and
result of apostasy. But a message is now
going forth to revive the truth on this
point, and calling for a genuine reformation
upon it. See reading in Chapters 56. thru
58. in this book and the next reading.
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