I Love Sabbath: Embracing Truth

I Love Sabbath: Embracing Truth

by Kelly Vonner

“Only fear the LORD, and serve Him in truth with all your heart; for consider what great things He has done for you”.

1 Samuel 12:24

After years of hearing my former pastor tell us that we have to know God for ourselves and that we could not make into the Kingdom of God on the coat-tail of our parents and grandparents, my husband and I made a huge leap. We embraced truth. When we realized the Sabbath was from Friday sundown to Saturday sundown, we embraced the plan of God.

We were promised rest, and we wanted it. We were promised time in the word and worship, and we yearned for it. We wanted the yoke and burden of the Lord so we came to the source.

Come to Me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and My burden is light (Matthew 11:28-30).

Our lives have been on an upward spiral ever since we embraced the truth of God. Embracing His truth has brought a new level of consistency into our lives. We are more productive during the workweek, and we are healthier because we embrace his rest. Embracing the Sabbath is what ushers in the peace that surpasses all understanding every week.  Obedience is good for your body and soul; embrace truth.

From Sabbath to Sunday

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From Sabbath to Sunday

By Dr. Samuele Bacchiocchi

In this intriguing book, Dr. Bacchiocchi explores in detail historical events that surround the Catholic Church changing the day of worship from Sabbath (Saturday) to Sunday. He explores how paganism and Anti-Semitism played a large role in luring people away from Sabbath keeping.

Here is an excerpt from pages 185-185:

“The adoption and enhancement of Sunday as the exclusive new day of worship presupposes the abandonment and belittling of the Sabbath. We would presume therefore that the Church where Sunday worship was first introduced and enforced adopted some measures to discourage Sabbath observance. While it must be admitted that we have evidence for the observance of both days, particularly in the East, this must be viewed as a compromise solution on the part of those who wished to retain the old Sabbath while at the same time accepting the new Sunday worship. Their very concern to preserve some type of Sabbath observance disqualifies them as the pioneers of Sunday-keeping, since they could hardly have championed the new day while trying to retain the old. In the church of Rome, the situation was substantially different. Not only was Sunday worship urged there, but concrete measures were also taken to wean Christians away from any veneration of the Sabbath…”

To order this book, please click the link below:

https://biblesabbath.org/shopping/pgm-more_information.php?id=9&=SID

 

 

52 Sabbath Activities for Teen Groups

 

52 Sabbath Activities

52 Sabbath Activities for Teen Groups

By Don Pate

Here are 52 proven, surefire, guaranteed ─ fun activities to make Sabbath really special for teens! Each activity section gives you step-by-step instructions for making it happen and tells you what preparation and materials you’ll need and the minimum time required for the activity. Whether you’re a youth leader, teacher, or pastor, you’ll find this book a valuable resource for creating Sabbaths that bring teens exciting fellowship with God and Christian friends.

To order this book, just click the link below:

https://biblesabbath.org/shopping/pgm-more_information.php?id=104&=SID

A Glorious Day

A Glorious Day

By Dianne D. McDonnell

Is your Sabbath joyful? Do you look forward to it all week long? When you are in the middle of hard work—do you think, “Not much longer and it will be the Sabbath!”

When I first began to keep the seventh day as a holy Sabbath, I thought I was giving up the world. It seemed impossible to me to change that much. I described keeping the Sabbath as “swimming upstream” to the worried ministers counseling me. And since I was the only one in my family being called, I wondered how I could ever do it. I finally decided, “I know this is right. I have proven it to myself. I won’t think of all the Saturdays ahead of me. I’ll just take it one Sabbath at a time. I’ll try, with God’s help, to keep one Sabbath at a time the best way I possibly can.”

That was a very long time ago! I now have been keeping the Sabbath longer than I was alive before accepting it! Now I laugh at myself for beginning with such a negative view of keeping such a glorious day! At sunset on Friday night I thank God for His Sabbath day. On Sabbath morning I wake up happy to rest up, draw closer to God, and just be joyful in the plans God has for me and for each of my brothers and sisters in Christ. He plans to give us Eternal Life! And on that Sabbath day I am one week closer to being inside God’s own Kingdom! And so I rest, as God did, finally understanding why we are told, “There remains, then, a Sabbath-rest for the people of God; for anyone who enters God’s rest also rests from his own work, just as God did from his.”  (Refer to Hebrews 3:16-4:11, NIV.) On that day I glory in the blessings He has provided and still provides, and I am grateful for all the times He has helped me through hard trials. The Sabbath stands as weekly proof that we will finally be in the Messiah’s Kingdom, in His own glorious Rest. Yes, it is a glorious day!

A note to those who use only the King James Bible: Hebrews 4:9 is not accurately translated in the KJV. The word “rest” is from the Greek sabbatismós meaning “a keeping of the Sabbath or Sabbath rest”, and is correctly translated in the NASU, NIV, ASV, and RSV Bibles, as well as most Interlinears.

Dianne McDonnell is the founder of Freedom Ministry.

http://www.freedom-ministry.com/

Conscience Taken Captive: A Short History of the Seventh Day Baptists

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Conscience Taken Captive: A Short History of the Seventh Day Baptists

By Don Sanford

This book is a tremendous piece of history showing how Sabbath keepers took a foothold and extended the Kingdom of God into America. Here is an excerpt from page 8:

“The First Seventh-day Baptist Church in America was organized in December 1671 from members of a Baptist Church who had come to the conviction of the Sabbath of the Bible. Stephen and Anne Mumford were Sabbath keeping members of the Tewksbury Baptist Church in England when they migrated to American in 1664 during a period of dissenter persecution. About the same time, according to Samuel Hubbard’s journal, his wife Tracy, “took up keeping the Lord’s holy 7th day Sabbath the 10th day of March 1665…”

“Within 20 years about 76 names were added to the covenant relationship which spread out to places such as Westerly, Rhode Island, and New London, Connecticut. The membership included American Indians as well as English colonists…”

“In 1709 it was constituted as the First Hoplinton Seventh Day Baptist Church, now located at Ashaway, Rhode Island. This is the oldest existing Seventh Day Baptist Church in America”.

To learn more from this powerful book of history, click here: https://biblesabbath.org/shopping/pgm-more_information.php?id=86

Abortion and the Sabbath

Abortion and the Sabbath

by Kenneth Westby

 

(This article is an excerpt from the Nov-Dec 2004 edition of the Sabbath Sentinel)

“Looking for a fight? Just bring up the subject of abortion in mixed company. Strongly state your opinion and soon there will be “blood.” Abortion is one of those incendiary topics that sit at the intersection of religion and politics like a lit match between two open cans of gasoline. But why has the subject of abortion become so charged with emotion, vitriol, and even, at times, violence? For most of history the right and wrong of abortion was not a polarizing issue. Most cultures regarded it as an evil. In modern, more civilized times, it was a shameful practice and against the law. People who did speak out in favor of abortion, such as the Marquis de Sade, were universally condemned as deviant reprobates.

In 1973 with the famous Roe v Wade case all that began to change in America. The U.S. Supreme Court declared “open season” on the unborn. The court had somehow conjured a “privacy” principle from the U.S. Constitution, and from that phantom constructed a “woman’s right to choose”—to choose to kill her yetto-be-born baby. From ’73 to now the death toll stands at 40 million (and counting) helpless innocents slaughtered in the name of “a right to choose.” A third of American women have had their sons and daughters snuffed out. A quarter of unborn children will die this way. Those promoting abortion (prochoice) and those abortionists making money on its thriving business are treated as noble pioneers in the emancipation of women from the drudgery of motherhood or the consequences of sexual promiscuity…”

 

To read the rest of this article, which starts on page 4, click this link:

http://biblesabbath.org/tss/510/tss_510.pdf

 

What is the meaning of Galatians 4:8-11?

What is the meaning of Galatians 4:8-11?

By Kelly McDonald, Jr.

In Galatians 4:8-11, Paul wrote: “8 Formerly, when you did not know God, you were slaves to those who by nature (by the order of things) are not gods. 9 But now that you know God – or rather are known by (under) God – how is it that you are turning back to those weak and miserable (lacking) principles? Do you wish to be enslaved by them all over again? 10 You are observing days and months and seasons and years! 11 I fear for you, that somehow I have wasted my efforts on you.”

Some have used this passage to suggest that Paul is condemning the celebration of the Sabbaths. Many people assume that Paul’s letter to the Galatians is written to a group of Jews who are ‘going back’ to law keeping. What is the truth?

First of all, Paul affirmed that he was the Apostle to the Gentiles (Galatians 1:15-16). A second detail of importance is that one of the main issues in Galatia was adult circumcision. If he was speaking solely to a group of Jews ‘going back’ to law-keeping, then the issue of circumcision would not have arisen because they would have already been circumcised.

Third, Paul begins this passage in verse 8 by saying, “Formerly, when you did not know God, you served those gods (plural) who were by nature not gods.” Paul is addressing a group of people who at one time worshiped other gods. The Sabbaths were given for us to worship the one and only True God (not more than one). This fact alone disqualifies any application to any practice in the Torah – but there is even more evidence to affirm this fact.

Lastly, the language used in the passage does not support any claim that Paul is preaching against the Sabbath. The phrase Paul uses – “days and months and seasons and years” – does not contain any of the Greek words used in the New Testament for the Sabbath (sabbaton), New Moon celebrations (neumenea), or Feast Days (heorte). The Galatian churches had a group of Gentiles going back to paganism and the worship of other gods.

What are the “days and months and seasons and years” to which Paul refers? To understand this phrase, one must understand some of the history of this region. Galatia was located in what is now called modern-day Turkey. Below, we have a map highlighting this area:

Galatia 1

For hundreds of years, the peoples of Galatia were influenced by their own traditions of pagan worship as well as Greek mythology. The region was first subdued by the Romans around 189 B.C. By the time Paul wrote to these churches in approximately 53 A.D., this region was dominated culturally and politically by the Roman Empire. The days, months, seasons, and years to which Paul refers are the Greek and Roman worship practices that permeated Galatian culture hundreds of years before Paul’s visit to Galatia (see Acts 14:8-20).

For an illustration of this, take into consideration the “days” that Paul mentions. In the first century AD, every day was dedicated to a specific god or goddess in Roman culture. The practice of naming every day of the week comes from this custom. The day we call the first day of the week (Sunday) was dedicated to the sun god (Solis or Apollo); the second day of the week (Monday) was dedicated to the moon god (Selenas or Lunas) (days).

In addition to these days, the Romans also dedicated each month to a specific god or goddess. They held ceremonies during the month to commemorate that particular deity. Here are two examples. The month we call January was dedicated to the god Janus, who was said to have two faces. The month of March derives its name from the Roman god Mars (months).

The Romans also kept certain seasons or times of celebrations to their gods that coincided with events in nature. The Saturnalia was a seasonal festival held in December to commemorate the god Saturn just before the Winter Solstice (seasons). The combination of observing all these events makes up years; sometimes years were dedicated to certain deities (years – Colson, pp 47-49). These ancient celebrations involved worship practices such as making sacrifices, prayers, vows, and/or superstitions to these gods, which are the “weak and miserable principles” Paul mentions in Galatians 4:9.

Paul links these days, months, seasons, and years to a time when the Galatians served or worshiped other gods. The Sabbaths were set apart and ordained by the one True God , which is why it is called holy. God gave everything to show mankind how to serve and worship Him. Paul kept the Sabbath with Galatian churches in Acts chapter 13:13-48 (CLICK HERE to read about his Sabbath keeping in this region). Therefore, he would never condemn observances of them.

In these verses, Paul is clearly warning Gentiles in the region of Galatia not to return to pagan practices they engaged in prior to conversion.

Kelly McDonald, Jr.
BSA President www.biblesabbath.org

Works Cited:

Colson, F. H. The Week. Cambridge, 1926. pp 47-49.

The Sabbath and Family Time

The Sabbath and Family Time

By Kelly McDonald, Jr.

Throughout the week, the kids are running around and the parents are tending to business. People are going “to and fro” in pursuit of various activities. Friday night is a great way to wind down the week by getting the family together and spend some time focusing on God. It is a time to slow everything down.

When we look at the Sabbath commandment in Exodus 20, we find that the members of our family are supposed to have this special freedom to rest as well. It is a time for us to come together and honor God as a family unit.

There is a short ceremony called an Erev Shabbat ceremony. It literally means “the evening of the Sabbath.” In this ceremony, you spend time blessing your children, spouse, and enter into God’s Sabbath rest. Too many times, we curse our children in America. The Jewish people have more Nobel peace prize winners than any other people on earth. Why is this? Could it be because they bless their children every Sabbath? They take the time to rest. They honor what they know. Here is a link to a sample Erev Shabbat Service: https://kellymcdonaldjr.com/erev-shabbat-ceremony/

This Erev Shabbat service is just one example of how to honor the Sabbath as a family. You can always create your own family tradition that brings the family together. Another way to spruce up Friday night is to make it the best meal of the week. This gives us just another reason to look forward to this day.

God gave us this day to slow down and enjoy His blessings in our lives. Some blessings are spiritual, some are material, and others are mental or emotional. A deep revelation from God is a spiritual breakthrough. A passing score on a test is material, but it also lifts mental and emotional stress off of us. The Sabbath is a time of reflection on the blessings we received from our Creator in the past week. After all, we live in HIS creation!

You could spend some time with your family reflecting on the blessings of God in your life. Think about how He came through for you this week and share it with one another. One problem in our culture is that we do not spend enough time in effective one-on-one communication. So many things are done through email, facebook, texting, and even phone calls. Use this time to sit down and talk to each other face to face.

Another idea is to get together and have a family Bible study or prayer time. Some people even bring in the Sabbath by worshiping together!  In Exodus 31:16, the Lord said, “The Israelites are to observe the Sabbath, celebrating it for the generations to come as a lasting covenant.” The Hebrew word translated as celebrate is shamar, and it means to guard, protect, or celebrate. One of the ways we guard our minds from wandering away from God on the Sabbath is to celebrate Him! Satan the devil will send all sorts of things your way to distract you from the Sabbath—anxious thoughts about situations in your life, calls from your job, and attitudes. When we celebrate, we are so focused on Him that those things are drowned out! They become less important.

Wouldn’t it be nice to spend more time with your family?  These are just some sample ways to help bring the family together on the Sabbath.  The family unit was given to us by God to teach us more about Him. Let’s bring in this special day as one while we affirm our oneness with Him!

God Bless!

Kelly McDonald, Jr.

BSA President www.biblesabbath.org

35 Reasons Why I Keep the Bible Sabbath

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35 Reasons Why I Keep the Bible Sabbath

by Robert Franklin Correia

This book will give you 35 reasons why it is important for us to keep the Sabbath. This book will build your faith and give you confidence in your walk with God. Here is Reason #8, taken from page 17:

  1. Because the Sabbath is God’s flag.

God has a flag:

  • “I [God] will set up my ensign” (Isa.49:@2, RV).
  • A flag is a sign:
  • They set up their ensigns for sins (Ps. 74:4)
  • God’s sign is His Sabbath:
    • “I have them my Sabbaths, to be a sign” (Eze. 20:12; see also verse 20).
    • “It [my Sabbath] is a sign (Ex. 31:13).
    • “It [my Sabbath] is a sign… forever” (Ex. 31:17)

Since God has a flag (Isa. 49:22, RV), and a flag is a sign (Ps. 74:4), and God’s sign is His Sabbath (Eze. 20:12, 20), therefore, God’s flag is His Sabbath, because things equal to the same things are equal to each other.

 

God took of the fabric of time and made Himself an ensign for eternity. He made a unit of time by rolling of a globe, and He called that unit day. He took a handful of days – seven-and made them a week. And of that week He took the last day, the seventh, and made it the Sabbath. That Sabbath is His sign, His emblem, His flag.

 

To learn all 35 great reasons to honor the Sabbath, order this book at the following link:

 

 

https://biblesabbath.org/shopping/pgm-more_information.php?id=94&=SID