Let us pray… Heavenly Father, we thank You for giving us rules to live by so that we can be seen as righteous in Your eye. And thank You for showing us that we need to take a break every now and then, that we need to rest on a schedule. It’s for our own health and well-being, both physical and mental. And we know that we should spend that day of rest to stop long enough in our daily pursuits to worship and praise You. But, Father, we don’t always take that time, make that time for worship. We get too caught up in fun things to do while we’re not having to work. We might only worship You for one hour out of the 24. And then, with everything going on each day and all the hate and uncertainty in the world, we too often hesitate to share our faith with others, trying to lead them to Jesus. Please forgive us our failures, Father. Help us be more obedient to Your will, respecting the Sabbath and showing Your love to others so that they too might find salvation through Jesus.
Speak to us now, Father, that we might hear Your voice through Your Spirit within us and better grasp the message You have for us this day. Please keep us strong in our faith, of one mind and one purpose in our love, our worship, and our service. And please keep us healthy and safe through these trying times. This we pray in the precious name of Your Son, Christ Jesus our Lord. Amen.
J. Vernon McGee tells this story about a man who wanted to argue about the Sabbath. The man said, “I’ll give you $100 if you will show me where the Sabbath day has been changed.” McGee answered, “I don't think it has been changed. Saturday is Saturday, it is the seventh say of the week, and it is the Sabbath day. I realize our calendar has been adjusted, and can be off a few days, but we won't even consider that point. The seventh day is still Saturday, and it is still the Sabbath day.” The man got a gleam in his eye and said, “Then why don't you keep the Sabbath day if it hasn't been changed?” McGee answered, “The DAY hasn't changed, but I have been changed. I've been given a new nature now, I am joined to Christ; I am a part of the new creation. We celebrate the first day because that is the day He rose from the grave.”
Yes, the Sabbath is indeed Saturdays - always has been, always will be. But Christians have celebrated and observed Sundays as our day of worship since the early days of the church. Of course, not everyone looks fondly on Sundays, not even those who consider themselves Christians.
Author and co-director of Mainstay Ministries, Karen Burton Mains, steps on a few toes when she asks, “Do you rush, push, shout and become generally unpleasant on Sunday mornings? Do you complain about church? Are you irregular in your attendance? Are you over-conscientious about matters that are not really important? Do you always criticize the pastor, the choir, the length of services and the usher crew? Then don't be surprised if your children grow up to look at Sundays as the worst day of the week.”
In a sense, Sunday can be looked at as the Christian Sabbath. It is our day to worship God and celebrate His Son’s day of resurrection. But in our modern culture, Sunday has become anything but a day of rest and worship.
In my youth, not that long ago in the grand scheme of things, we had Blue Laws that prevented most stores and businesses from being open and kept some items from being sold on Sundays, at least until after normal church hours. There wasn’t as much going on so folks could spend more time together at church and church gatherings. All that has changed over the years, and now many people have to work on Sundays, and you can buy anything on a Sunday that you can buy any other day of the week.
But the greater sadness in all this is that fewer and fewer people attend any kind of church service, on Sunday or any other day. For those who do, worship is only an hour, maybe two, before going about other activities. And those other activities have increased in quantity and variety, becoming more attractive than spending time in worship. Many of our kids’ events, especially sports games and tournaments, now are held on weekends, taking up all of Saturdays and Sundays. It seems we’ve either forgotten what God meant by giving us a day of rest, or we simply choose to ignore it.
The Sabbath was one of the first gifts God gave us, right from the very beginning, and it has endured throughout the history of man. It holds high honor in both Old and New Testaments. Let me give another example of respecting the Sabbath, as the great prophet Isaiah tells us how we should live and behave every day, beginning with the Sabbath. Please hear the words of Isaiah from verse 9 through the first part of verse 14 of chapter 58 of the book bearing his name…