Recently I received a letter from a
reader who agrees with our perspective on Righteousness by faith but
feels that it is incompatible with several doctrines taught by the
Seventh-day Adventist faith, especially those which involve the law and
observance of the Sabbath. I attempted to answer the objections of this
person and as I believe that the answers given to these questions may be
helpful to others I have published the questions as well as the answers
given.
I am not always in harmony with how most Adventists
EXPLAIN their doctrines. When I go to the pioneers I find that in many
cases their understanding and explanations make far more sense, but even
then I cannot say that I always agree with them 100% in everything.
Nevertheless I have found consistency and good Scriptural sense in the
teachings of Adventism when properly understood and explained. I cannot
think for others or see things from their perspective, but that is the
truth where I am concerned.
The questions and answers follow.
Q. If resting in Christ is such a simple matter once we grasp the
concept, why is it that Adventist and other groups insist that they are
the remnant because they are the only ones who understand doctrine? And
they are the only ones who are keeping the correct day of worship? They
are the only ones who are keeping the commandments? And the only
ones following a “true” prophet? etc…
A. I am in agreement with you on this
point to some extent. I do believe that the remnant will have certain
characteristics which are not true of any group of people on the earth
at this moment. I believe that the perception held by the SDA church and
other groups that they are the remnant is based on a misconception of
what is really involved in salvation and a misunderstanding of what is
the true definition of God’s church. However, I do believe that there is
a certain standard by which genuine Christian experience may be
measured and that this involves the keeping of God’s commandments.
Therefore as the Bible says so clearly in Revelation, those who are the
remnant (when they are finally revealed) will keep the commandments of
God (Rev. 12:17; Rev. 14:12) not as the ground of salvation, but as the
fruit of a life which is truly lived in Christ.
There are many
who claim to have faith who have no faith at all. Those who have true
faith know that they have faith, but the only way a third party may be
able to see that faith is by the works which appear in the life. These
works, according to the Bible include the keeping of the commandments of
God. One sure sign of a false profession is that there is no fruit
borne in the life including the fact that such a person does not walk in
harmony with the commandments of God.
Of course, it is
possible for a sincere Christian to genuinely think that he is pleasing
God while he ignorantly breaks the commandments of God. But obedience to
revealed light is certainly the fruit of a converted life and is a
yardstick by which the genuineness of a person’s faith may be assessed.
Q. As Adventists we are taught that in the end times the Sabbath will
be an issue. It will be such a huge issue that those who reject it will
receive the mark of the beast and be lost.
Forgive my mental
block here but isn’t that salvation by keeping a day? What does resting
in Jesus who is our Sabbath rest have to do with that kind of thinking?
A. The question as to whether or not the Sabbath will be the issue in
the mark of the beast crisis is, admittedly not plainly stated in the
Bible. It is difficult to prove it conclusively and simply from the
Bible alone. If it were unmistakably identified would there be confusion
and controversy about it? However, the idea that God would use a single
issue involving a certain action to demonstrate the spiritual condition
of people is not difficult for me to accept because it is consistent
with the way He has acted in the past, as well as with Scriptural
principles.
Many profess to have faith, and agree that faith
and faith alone is the basis on which we are saved. However, they use
that concept as the ground for condoning sin and for choosing to
disregard the expressly revealed will of God and in this way,
demonstrate that they have no true faith at all. It seems reasonable to
me that God would choose one single commandment expressing His will for
mankind, focus the attention of the world on that commandment and then
allow men to demonstrate their relationship to Him on the basis of how
they respond to His revealed will. This would bring the world to the
place where there is a public and clear separation between those who
have true faith (faith which works) and those who only profess to have
faith (dead faith which does not work). So while faith and faith alone
is the basis of our salvation, yet that faith is revealed and
demonstrated by the works which we do. It is not salvation by
commandment keeping, but salvation which results in, and is demonstrated
by, commandment keeping.
Q. The Sabbath was given 430 years
after Abraham to teach the plan of salvation and how that in Jesus we
would have total and complete rest that Adam and Eve enjoyed at creation
before sin. It was not a 24 hour rest that God had with Adam and Eve on
one day of the week. It was from the 7th day of creation onward, the
first day of Adam and Eve’s existence and everyday thence, until sin
entered the picture.
And this is why Paul said in Col 2:16-17
that we are not to act as judge regarding food or a Sabbath day which
were all shadows of Christ.
Paul clearly says in Hebrews
4:6-10 that there remains a Sabbatismos — a sabbath-like rest. That
Sabbath rest is Christ and that sabbath-like rest is Everyday,
“Today”. Why would it say “there remains” if the Apostles did not
understand that the Old Covenant laws were shadows of spiritual
things fulfilled and no longer observed by Christians as
salvational once they understood the meanings. Why would he remind them
not to forget the assembling of themselves together if Sabbath was still
required. Even the clean and unclean meats had spiritual meaning and
fulfilled in Christ’s day. All the pitifully nit picking laws of the OT
had meaning of a spiritual matter and fulfilled in Christ.
A. I believe your concept of the Sabbath is wrong and is not supported by Scripture. Consider the following facts.
God blessed the Sabbath (placed a special benefit on it. What else
could the word blessed imply?). God sanctified the Sabbath (set it apart
for a holy purpose). All this was done from the seventh day of
creation. (Genesis 2:2,3).
This day was set apart for a holy
purpose from the first week of this earth’s existence. This was God’s
purpose in including it in the week. Apart from this purpose there would
have been no seventh day. The week would have had only six days.
Notice also that God blessed this day only BECAUSE He had rested on it.
Read Genesis 2:2,3 carefully. He established the day as a set apart day
because of the experience which He had enjoyed (with Adam and Eve?) on
that day. The idea that it was the start of a rest which has continued
up until now (or until the introduction of sin) is contradicted by
Scripture. It was a single day’s rest as the following verse proves.
It is a sign between me and the children of Israel for ever: for in six
days the LORD made heaven and earth, and on the seventh day he rested,
and was refreshed. (Exo 31:17)
Notice what it says. God
rested (finished action) and was refreshed (also a finished action).
Some say the word rested signifies that He began to rest and that there
is no evidence that He ever went back to work. But notice the second
part of the phrase, and was refreshed. It does not say He is being
refreshed, but that He WAS refreshed by His experience of rest. Both the
rest and the refreshing were concluded experiences. Of course there is a
great truth embedded in this passage because we know that God cannot be
tired, yet He was refreshed. But the point is, the verse shows that the
rest of God was a finished action which took place on a single 24 hour
day.
In fact, Exodus 20:8-11 also shows clearly that God’s rest was a single 24 hour day. It says,
“Six days shalt thou labour, and do all thy work: But the seventh day
is the sabbath of the LORD thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work,
thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant, nor thy
maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates:
For in six days the LORD made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in
them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the LORD blessed the
sabbath day, and hallowed it.” (Exo 20:9-11)
Here we see that
the seventh day is GOD’S Sabbath. Therefore man is commanded to keep it
holy. Why is it God’s Sabbath? Because God rested on that day. It is
God’s rest. Which day must man keep holy? The same day on which God
rested. God blessed it and hallowed it (made it holy). When did God do
this? Back there during the first week of Creation. It was the same day
on which God had rested and which he had blessed which God commanded man
to keep holy.
Notice also that this means that from the time
of the first seventh day, every subsequent seventh day was also blessed
and hallowed. It matters not whether or not anybody had ever kept it
holy before the Israelites. It was blessed and hallowed from creation
week and all the world should have treated it as a hallowed and blessed
day. God gave it to the Israelites when they became His people, but it
had already been blessed and hallowed long before, from the time when
God had rested on it and been refreshed. Therefore God tells the
Israelites to keep it holy BECAUSE it had been blessed 2000 years
before.
The truth is, we cannot of ourselves determine what is
morally right or wrong. We must modify our understanding on the basis
of what God’s word reveals. This will lead us to a true and balanced
understanding of salvation and of the will of God. If my understanding
of righteousness by faith leads me to contradict something which is
clearly taught in the word of God, then I know that my concept must be
faulty, because it cannot be that it is the word of God which is wrong.
It is true that the Sabbath was later given a typical meaning. It
became a type of the rest which we enter in Christ and a type of the
millennial rest. However, this does not mean that it has no intrinsic
value in itself. The types and shadows were only instituted AFTER sin
came into the world. Before that they would have had no value or
meaning. However, the Sabbath was blessed and set apart before sin came
into the world and this demonstrates that it is a part of God’s perfect
plan for mankind and which has value above and beyond the typical
meaning.
Q. Paul said in Romans 14:5-6 that we are not to
judge our brother if he regards a day above another or regards all days
alike. If a day was a matter of salvation for end times, he certainly
missed his mark here and did not make mention of the importance of
keeping Sabbath.
A. The Sabbath was included in the ten
commandments. These were deliberately separated by God Himself from all
the other laws. This Sabbath commandment was included with others which,
reason can only define as being moral laws. These laws are limited
expressions of greater truths, but they are eternal expressions
nevertheless. It is true that the law of God is deeper and more
comprehensive than those ten rules describe, but the fact is, that the
greater understanding of the law does not overthrow the requirement of
the limited understanding. It includes and goes beyond the limitations
of what was written on stone. For example, the command, “thou shalt not
kill,” means far more than that we should not remove the life of another
person. Jesus said if we even hate our brother we are guilty. Does this
mean that we are free to take his life as long as we do not hate him?
Of course not. The command includes what it states in the ten laws, but
it goes deeper than that. Likewise, the fact that true Sabbath keeping
embraces more than just abstinence from work on the Seventh day, does
not mean that it does not include the observance of that day as a day
set apart for the purpose of worship.
God gave the law,
according to Paul, so that sin by the commandment could become
exceedingly sinful (Romans 7:13). It was so that the offence might
abound (Romans 6:20). It was to be our schoolmaster to lead us to Christ
(Galatians 3:24). The law was not made for a righteous person but for
those who commit sin (1 Tim. 1:9). The question is, did God present an
artificial standard of righteousness to convict man of his sinfulness?
Did He create and hold up before man a standard which did not describe
genuine righteousness? Did He deceive us into thinking that this was
what was required when it was not really so? Does this make sense? If
the law is made for sinners, but not for the righteous, then is the
standard of righteousness something to be desired when we are sinners,
but to be cast aside when we become Christians? Does God have two
different concepts of right and wrong, one for the sinner and one for
the saint? Can you see my point?
The sinner’s concept of the
law is necessarily limited. He is incapable of understanding the deeper
implications of the law. However, God gives him enough to see that he is
utterly at fault and helpless to help himself. His desire to keep that
law is not a desire to attain to a false standard. It is a desire to
attain to a standard presented by God Himself. When he becomes a
Christian, he sees more fully what is implied by that law, but he does
not now set out to live contrary to any part of that law.
Do we then make void the law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish the law. (Rom 3:31)
To do this would be to become a stumbling block to sinners who still have only that law as their concept of right and wrong.
Here is the critical question: Now that we are in Christ, our instinct
is to do good. Our natures have changed. We do good without even trying
to do so. But, do we still need education as to what is the will of God
in terms of what is morally right and wrong? Do we immediately come to a
perfect understanding of what is morally right or does God still need
to teach us by His word? Does the indwelling presence of the holy spirit
mean that we automatically know what God requires or does that spirit
still need to teach us God’s will through the word of God? I think the
word of God makes it plain that the born again Christian still needs to
be guided by the word of God.
“Howbeit when he, the Spirit of
truth, is come, he will guide you into all truth: for he shall not speak
of himself; but whatsoever he shall hear, that shall he speak: and he
will show you things to come.” (John 16:13)
This is why even
Paul gives so many commands in his letters. People are transformed and
led by the spirit, but they still need to be guided into an
understanding of God’s will through the word.
There is no
consistent way to preach righteousness by faith unless we understand the
eternal relevance of the law of God in all its facets, even though it
is no longer our governor.