Why I Am a Sabbath Keeping Christian

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Why I Am a Sabbath Keeping Christian

By Dan Jarrard

In this easy to understand book, Dan Jarrard explains his journey from Sunday keeping to honoring the Sabbath. This book will inspire and encourage you in the faith. It will serve to unfold the reasons why many have chosen to travel a path that is different from yours and their choice is worthy of your understanding. Your path does not, in and of itself, make you a better Christian than “Sunday-keeping” Christians. But, at the same time, neither does it make you less of a Christian.

Here is an excerpt from page 6:

“Shortly after becoming a “Sabbath-keeping” Christian a friend asked me, “Why?” Before I could get very far in explaining, he almost screamed at me, “You are not Jewish! Don’t you know the Sabbath was given just for the Jews?” Before I could respond he rapidly walked away. We never spoke of the subject again.

Since then I have discovered that his premise is one that is shared by many Christians. What I wanted to share with my friend was that the Sabbath was not a Jewish institution – the Sabbath pre-dated Judaism….”

 

To order this book, click the link below:

https://biblesabbath.org/shopping/pgm-more_information.php?id=110&=SID

 

The Sabbath and Professional Baseball

 

By Bill Lussenheide

 

Professional baseball historically has captured much interest in America, but also around the world. In fact baseball has become so ingrained in the American psyche that even movies that portray baseball have increasingly become “supernatural” or “spiritual” in their nature. Movies like “Angels in The Outfield,” “The Natural,” or “Field of Dreams” all try to capture the idea of either an interest by God in baseball, or providing supernatural talent, or even creating a resurrection of dead baseball players to facilitate a father/son reconciliation.

 

Baseball itself has an interesting sabbatical element within it — the “Seventh Inning Stretch,” allowing a brief rest bit during the seventh frame, along with the singing of “God Bless America” at major league stadiums. However, there also has been those that have become believers of the truth, especially in regards to the Seventh-day Sabbath truth, that have been involved in professional baseball. This article will outline several individuals who have been associated with professional baseball and who also were or became Sabbath Keepers. The fact that many professional baseball games are played on Saturdays, creates an obvious conflict with a Sabbath observer. However there have been at least two players who, while still active in their baseball careers, attempted to work around the Sabbath. Ed Correa, from Puerto Rico, is a Seventh-day Adventist. He played 3 seasons in the major leagues and was a starting pitcher…”

 

(This article is an excerpt from the March – April 2013 edition of the Sabbath Sentinel)

 

To read the rest of this article, which starts on page 17, click this link:

http://biblesabbath.org/media/TSS_2013_Mar-Apr–560.pdf

How the Sabbath Came to the Cherokee Strip Part 3 of 3

How the Sabbath Came to the Cherokee Strip Part 3 of 3

(Oklahoma Territory Land Run 1893)

by Bryan Burrell

 

The  doctrine of the seventh-day Sabbath, which had seemed so strange at first, now became very easily understood.   In 1898 the Websters united with the Church of God and took their stand with the faithful little group that had brought this new light into the wilderness of the Indian Territory.

The next year, 1899, another Sabbath keeping minister  came to the Strip.   S. S. Davison filed claims a few miles northwest of Golden Valley School.  Some Sabbathkeeping kin, the Sheffields, also filed at that time and later other sabbath keeping relatives and friends came to the Territory.

In the years that followed, the land became more settled, and the towns grew.  In 1907 the Indian Territory became the State of  Oklahoma  and the group of Sabbathkeepers was growing and continued to meet in the Golden Valley School.

World War I broke out and  the United States became involved.  Out of this tragedy came a good thing for the Sabbathkeeping church in Fairview.  The Germans in the community were discouraged from speaking their native language and  their group quit meeting in their church building and it became available to the  group of Sabbathkeepers who purchased the building in 1920 for $1,000.

Thus the Sabbath came to the Cherokee Strip.  The building purchased during World War I is the Church of God at Fairview.  It has been remodeled  several times and progress has also greatly changed the land.   Almost every section line is a road.  Telephone lines have been stretched to every part of the region and rural electricity lights  the countryside.  The wheatfields that once were prepared and harvested by horses are now tilled  and harvested by large tractors and combines.  The old soddies and dugouts soon gave way to comfortable  houses.    Every Sabbath morning around the church  where once stood horses and buggies, you will now see automobiles.  But the gospel that the congregation studies on Sabbath morning  is the word of the never changing God.   Generations of Sabbathkeepers from the families who homesteaded in the Cherokee Strip now reside all over the country;  grateful for the brave hard working and dedicated  pioneers who lived  and shared their Sabbath beliefs.

This story is part of an article printed several years ago in The Sabbath Sentinel.

Much of the early Fairview Church history was recorded by Roy Wells and Clayton Faubion around 1950.    In 1994 the church hosted a centennial celebration.

The Fairview Church was the first Church of God, Seventh Day established in Oklahoma and in September 1905 they organized the Oklahoma Conference with C.C. Wells-Pres., Frank Miller-V Pres., Leah Davison Miller-Sec., and Eber Davison-Treas.

Bryan Burrell is a Board Member and Treasurer for the BSA.

Tiger And Tom And Other Stories For Boys

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Tiger And Tom And Other Stories For Boys

By J.E. White

This book is available to order through the Bible Sabbath Association. In it, you will find character-building stories for boys.

Read one of the recommendations of this book:

“I have spent literally $1,000.00’s on educational and character building materials for our son… and none have been as encouraging, nor as influential as your old time stories.”

These stories were compiled from orphanage stories used in the United States many years ago. Fortunately, Godly character does not have a time period attached to it. These timeless stories will encourage boys to choose right from wrong. Read them to your children and even grandchildren!

 

To order this book, just click the link below:

https://biblesabbath.org/shopping/pgm-more_information.php?id=48&=SID

Did the Sacrifice of Christ nullify the Ten Commandments?

Did the Sacrifice of Christ nullify the Ten Commandments?

In Ephesians 2:11-15, Paul wrote “11 Therefore remember that you, once Gentiles in the flesh—who are called Uncircumcision by what is called the Circumcision made in the flesh by hands— 12 that at that time you were without Christ, being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel and strangers from the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world. 13 But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. 14 For He Himself is our peace, who has made both one, and has broken down the middle wall of separation, 15 having abolished in His flesh the enmity, that is, the law of commandments contained in ordinances, so as to create in Himself one new man from the two, thus making peace…” (NKJV)

In Ephesians 2:11-15, Paul explains that each of us who are Gentiles were at one time excluded from citizenship in Israel. However, through the blood of Christ we have been made one with Israel and one with the covenants of promise. For Gentiles and Israelites to be unified, Christ had to die to abolish the ‘law of commandments contained in ordinances’ that separated us from citizenship in Israel. The Greek word translated as ‘ordinances’ in this phrase is dogma, and it refers to a man-made ordinance or decree. The phrase “law of commandments contained in ordinances” refers to the laws and commandments in man-made ordinances of the Pharisees and Sadducees, which separated Gentiles from becoming members of Israel.

The man-made rules of the Pharisees and Sadducees often treated Gentiles as second-class human beings. For instance, some Jewish people had a man-made rule which stipulated that any fellowship with Gentiles would make them unclean. God never said this in the Bible. It was a man-made rule. Rules such as this separated Gentiles from coming into covenant with God and becoming citizens in Israel. As a physical representation of this, the outer court of the Temple in Paul’s time had a wall preventing Gentiles from associating and worshipping with Jews. They had a separate court in the Temple called “the court of the Gentiles”.

This is the middle wall of partition that Paul says was torn down through Christ’s death. This wall was a physical representation of the wall of regulations (man-made ordinances and commandments) that the Pharisees and Sadducees had built to create enmity between Israelites and Gentiles. According to the Law of God, Gentiles were allowed to enter into covenant with God (Leviticus 24:22). They just simply had to take the sign of the covenant, circumcision, and obey the terms of the covenant, which is the Law. When the Israelites left Egypt, they left a mixed multitude of Gentiles and native Israelites (Exodus 12:38). All of the Gentiles that left Egypt with the Israelites became naturalized citizens. They were baptized by the sea and cloud (I Cor. 10:1-4).

Through Christ’s death, everyone is allowed to enter into citizenship in Israel without having to go through man’s rules.

How the Sabbath Came to the Cherokee Strip Part 2 of 3

How the Sabbath Came to the Cherokee Strip Part 2 of 3

(Oklahoma Territory Land Run 1893)

by Bryan Burrell

 

The winter of ’93 and ’94 was pretty tough on those pioneers who decided to stay on their claims.  They threw together crude shelters of sod and poles and fashioned dugouts by digging huge holes with low walls of sod and roofs of poles and more sod.  By spring, things took on a brighter look and the settlers were there to stay.

Ed Webster, using part of his six months in which to establish a residence upon his claim, returned to Missouri for his wife, Crinner and they came to the Indian Territory to make their home.   Their neighbors on the east who had stayed through the winter and had their dugout in a fairly habitable condition was Junis Wells’ brother, Charley.  They had been right about the wagon they had seen on the day the race took place.  Junis and Charley had gone in and had staked claims.  Their father and a sister had also taken claims.    The Wells families made the Websters welcome, and until their own home was ready they camped in their covered wagon in the Wells’ yard.

Through the busy days of getting their home established and their ground in production, the Websters had little time to think about the strange doctrines of the Wells families.   Ed Webster had not had time to go to church before, and he knew little about religion.  The strange things the Wells boys believed were far different from Crinner Webster’s church.

The Wells families would go every Saturday to a little sod schoolhouse about six miles west where they would hold church services.  The Horton and Douglas families had filed near there and they,too, were of the same belief and they all met for services in the school house.

There were no towns, yet.  A man had put up a crude building, and had brought a wagon load of supplies from Enid.  That was a store.  It was not uncommon for him to sell out his entire stock of merchandise in a few hours and hitch up to his wagon and head for another supply.

Two brothers, Henry and Clifford Bower made the run and filed on tracts that were divided by what is now known as West Central Street in the town of Fairview.  Henry started a store there shortly after establishing a residence  in 1894.  That store was the start of what is now Fairview in northwestern Oklahoma.

The seventh-day people soon began planning to get a minister of their faith to come to the Indian Territory.  In 1896,  J. R. Goodenough came and filed on a claim not far from the school where they were holding services.   He began to preach the same strange belief that the Wells families had been talking, and the Websters were often invited to attend the meetings, but they declined.  Goodenough held a few night meetings in a school near  the Websters and their neighbor came back talking about that preacher.  “He says he is going to preach on prophecy.”  That got the Websters interested and they went to hear him.   The meeting didn’t last long, but the Websters began going to the weekly meetings at the Golden Valley School.

We will finish next time!

 

Nags Head Hotel to Pay $45,000 to Settle EEOC Religious Discrimination Lawsuit

Nags Head Hotel to Pay $45,000 to Settle EEOC Religious Discrimination Lawsuit

 

Hotel Fired Seventh-Day Adventist Employee Over Sabbath Issue, Agency Charged

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – A hotel group which owns and operates the Comfort Inn Oceanfront South in Nags Head, N.C., has agreed to pay $45,000 and provide substantial additional relief to settle a religious discrimination lawsuit filed by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the agency announced today.

The EEOC’s suit charged that the hotel group refused to provide Claudia Neal, a Seventh-Day Adventist, with a religious accommodation of not having to work on her Sabbath, which is from sundown on Friday until sundown on Saturday.  Neal began working at the hotel in May 2009.  Initially, Neal’s request not to work on her Sabbath was honored.  However, a change in management occurred in October 2010, and in November of that year, the hotel group refused to provide her with a religious accommodation, and fired her…

To read the rest of this article, go here:

https://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/newsroom/release/7-23-13.cfm

 

Israel of the Alps (DVD set)

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Israel of the Alps (DVD set)

The Waldenses were a group of Sabbath keepers who dwelt in the Swiss Alps for a period of just over 1,000 years. This stirring 3-part, 85 minute DVD, documents the History of these people. They were hunted down mercilessly by the Catholic Church. Despite intense sufferings they clung to the Word of God. Many lost their lives. This DVD was filmed live on location in the Alps.

To order this astounding documentary, click the link below!

https://biblesabbath.org/shopping/pgm-more_information.php?id=34&=SID