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STUDY VIII
THE REST, OR SABBATH OF
THE NEW CREATION
Change of Divine Dealing Dates from the Cross--The Apostles Preaching
in Synagogues on Sabbath Day no Indorsement of Jewish Sabbath or
System as Binding on the New Creation--The Building in which One
Preaches the Gospel does not Affect His Message--Neither does the
Day--Origin of First Day of the Week as Christian Sabbath--Its Observance
Began Long Before the Time of Constantine--Nearly All the
Manifestations of the Risen Lord were Made on the First Day--The
General Observance of the First Day as a Sabbath a Matter for Gratitude
--It is not, however, of Divine Appointment--France and the Number
Seven--Israel's Sabbath Typical--When the Sabbath of the New
Creation Began, and How it Continues.
OUR studies in the preceding chapter proved to us conclusively
that there is no law to them that are in Christ Jesus
outside the all-comprehensive Law of Love. We saw clearly
and distinctly that the New Creation, Spiritual Israel, is in
no sense of the word under the Law Covenant, "added because
of transgression" four hundred and thirty years after
the Covenant under which the New Creation is accepted in
the Beloved. True, our Lord Jesus in the days of his flesh
kept the seventh day of the week strictly in accordance with
the Mosaic Law, though not in accordance with some of the
perverted conceptions of the Scribes and Pharisees. This
was because, according to the flesh, he was a Jew, born under
the Mosaic Law, and, therefore, subject to its every requirement,
which he fulfilled, as the Apostle declares,
"nailing it to his cross"--thus making a full end of it as respected
himself and as respected all Jews coming unto the
Father through him. All Jews who have not accepted Christ
are still bound by every provision and regulation of their
Law Covenant, and, as the Apostle explains, they can get
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freed from it only by accepting Christ as the end of the
Law--by believing. Rom. 10:4
As respects the Gentiles, we have already seen that they
were never under the Mosaic Law, and, hence, could not be
made free from it; and we have already seen that our Lord
Jesus--the New Creature, begotten at his baptism, and
born of the Spirit in his resurrection--was the antitypical
Seed of Abraham, and heir of all the promises made to him;
and that both Jews and Gentiles coming unto him by faith,
and unto the Father through him, when begotten of the
holy Spirit, are likewise counted as of the New Creation,
and joint-heirs with Jesus in the Abrahamic Covenant, no
member of which is under the added Mosaic, or Law Covenant.
Hence, although the man Christ Jesus was under the
Law, and under obligations to keep the seventh day as a
part of the Law, such obligations to the Law ceased as respected
his followers, as well as himself, as soon as he had
died, making an end of the Law righteously, justly, to all
Jews who accepted him, and who through him became
with him dead to the Law Covenant, and alive to the Abrahamic
Covenant.
It is not astonishing, however, that we find that even the
apostles required some little time to grasp thoroughly the
meaning of the change from the dispensation of the Law to
the dispensation of Grace--the Gospel age. Likewise, we see
that it required a number of years for them to realize fully
that in the death of Christ the middle wall of partition was
broken down as between Jews and Gentiles, and that
henceforth Gentiles were not to be counted unclean, any
more than Jews--because Jesus Christ, by the grace of God,
had tasted death for every man, and thenceforth whosoever
would approach the Father, Jew or Gentile, might be accepted
through him--accepted in the Beloved. Even years
after the conference of the apostles, in which Peter and Paul
testified of the grace of God bestowed upon the Gentiles,
and gifts of the holy Spirit, miraculous tongues, etc., similar
to those which witnessed the begetting of the Spirit upon
the Jews, at Pentecost, we find Peter still hesitating, and
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yielding to the prejudices of the Jewish believers, to the extent
that he withdrew from Gentile converts, still treating
them as unclean. He thus brought upon himself a rebuke
from the Apostle Paul, who evidently grasped the whole situation
of the new dispensation with a much clearer vision
than the other apostles. If an apostle thus needed a rebuke
to help him over his racial prejudices, we may readily assume
that the masses of believers (nearly all Jews) were for
several years considerably confused respecting the completeness
of the change of divine dealings which dated from
the cross.
The custom of the Jews, not only in Palestine, but scattered
throughout the world, included a Sabbath observance
which, although not originally appointed to be anything
else than a day of rest, or cessation from toil, very
properly came to be used as a day for the reading of the
Law and the prophets and for exhortation in the synagogues.
It was a day in which business was suspended
throughout Palestine; and, hence, Jewish converts coming
into Christianity would very naturally gather themselves
on the Sabbath for the study of the Law and the prophets,
from the new standpoint of their fulfilment begun in
Christ, and for exhorting one another to steadfastness, so
much the more as they saw the day drawing on--the great
day of the Lord, the Millennial day, "the times of restitution,
spoken by the mouth of all the holy prophets since the world
began." The apostles and evangelists who traveled outside
of Palestine found the most hearing ears for the Gospel
amongst the Jews who were already looking for the Messiah;
and they found their best opportunity for reaching
these at their usual seventh-day gatherings. Nor was there
anything in the divine revelation to hinder them from
preaching the Gospel message on the seventh day any more
than on the first day, or on any other day of the week. We
may be sure, indeed, that these early evangelists preached
the Word incessantly, wherever they went and on all occasions,
to whomsoever had an ear to hear.
The Apostle who declared that Christ made an end of the
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Law Covenant, nailing it to his cross, said not one word to
the early Church, so far as the record shows, respecting any
law or obligation to observe specially the seventh day of the
week--or any other day of the week. On the contrary, they
followed strictly the thought that the Church is a New Creation,
under the original Covenant; and that as such a
house of sons the New Creation is not under the Law but
under Grace. These inspired teachers distinctly pointed out
in so many words the liberty of the New Creature; saying,
"Let no man, therefore, judge you in meat or in drink, or in
respect of an holy day, or of the new moon, or of the Sabbath,
which are a shadow of things to come, but the body
[substance] is of Christ." Col. 2:16,17
They would have the Church understand that all the
various ordinances respecting feasts and fasts and times
and seasons and days were a part of the general typical system
which God instituted with typical Israel, which were
only shadows of better things coming after--applicable to
spiritual Israel. To the Jews these things were realities, fixed
upon them and bound to them by divine decrees; to the
New Creation they are shadows merely--lessons pointing us
to the grand fulfilment, and nothing more. The fact that
the apostles were willing to use the Sabbath day and the
Jewish synagogues in connection with the promulgation of
the Gospel of Christ, was in no sense an indorsement of the
Jewish system and the Jewish Law as a rule or bondage
upon the New Creation. We today, if granted the opportunity,
would preach Christ in the Jewish synagogues not
only on the first day of the week, but would gladly preach
on the Jewish Sabbath, the seventh. Yea, we would be quite
willing to preach Christ in a heathen temple and on a heathen
holy day, but would not consider that in so doing we
were indorsing either the heathen doctrines or the heathen
holy day.
As respects the first day of the week, generally observed
amongst Christians as a Sabbath or rest day, it is quite an
error to claim that this day was sanctioned and made a
Christian Sabbath by decrees of the Roman Catholic
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Church. It is true, indeed, that in Constantine's time, more
than two centuries after the apostles fell asleep, formalism
had crept into the Church to a wonderful degree; that false
teachers had gradually sought to bring the followers of the
Lord into bondage to clericism; and that priest-craft and
superstition were beginning to exercise a considerable influence.
It is true that at this time a rule was promulgated
amongst nominal Christians to the effect that they should
observe the first day of the week for religious work, etc., and
prohibiting manual labor, except in country districts,
where the gathering of the crops might be considered a
work of necessity. It is true that this small beginning of
bondage and intimation that the first day of the week had,
with the Christians, superseded the seventh day of the week
of the Jews, gradually led more and more to the thought
that every command of God to the Jews respecting the seventh
day applied to the followers of Christ respecting the
first day of the week.
But a proper observance of the first day of the week had
its beginning long before Constantine's time--not as a
bondage, but as a liberty, a privilege. The one fact that our
Lord arose from the dead on the first day of the week would
alone have made it a day to be celebrated amongst his followers
as marking the revival of their hopes; but to this was
added the fact that on the day of his resurrection he met
with and expounded the Scriptures to his faithful, some of
whom recalled the blessing afterward, saying: "Did not our
hearts burn within us while he talked with us by the way
and opened unto us the Scriptures?" (Luke 24:32) It was all
on the same first day of the week in which the two disciples
met with him on their way to Emmaus that he was seen
near the sepulchre by the two Marys, appeared to Mary
Magdalene as the gardener, and made himself known at
the general gathering of the apostles, etc. They waited an
entire week for further manifestations from the risen Master,
but none came until the following first day of the week,
when again he appeared to the eleven. And thus, so far as
we are aware, nearly all of our Lord's appearances to the
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brethren were on the first day of the week. It is not surprising,
therefore, that without any command from the Lord or
from any of the apostles, the early Church fell into the custom
of meeting together on the first day of the week, as a
commemoration of the joys begotten in them by our Lord's
resurrection, and as a reminder, also, of how their hearts
burned within them as he on that day of the week had
opened unto them the Scriptures.
They even continued to commemorate the "breaking of
the bread" together on this day--not as the Passover Supper,
or Lord's Supper, but as a reminder of how they were
blessed at Emmaus, when he broke the bread to them and
their eyes were opened and they knew him; and of how
again they were blessed as he broke bread with them in the
upper room, and gave them satisfactory proofs that he was
indeed their risen Lord, though changed. (Luke 24:30,35,41-43)
This breaking of bread, we read, was done with
gladness and with joy--not as a remembrancer of his death,
but of his resurrection. It represented, not his broken body
and shed blood, but the refreshing truth which he broke to
them, and by which their hearts were fed on the joyful
hopes of the future, guaranteed to them by his resurrection
from the dead. (The "cup" is never mentioned in connection
with these references to the "breaking of bread.")
These gatherings of the first day of the week were occasions
of joy--rejoicing that the new order of things had been
introduced by the resurrection of Jesus from the dead.
As gradually the Church became free from close association
with Judaism, and particularly after the destruction
of Jerusalem and the general disruption of the Jewish system,
the influence of the seventh-day Sabbath waned, and
more or less became attached to the first day of the week
and the spiritual rest and refreshment of the New Creation,
dating from our Lord's resurrection in glory, honor and
immortality.
As for the heathen world in general, God has given them
no special laws or commands; they have merely what remains
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of the original law written in their nature and greatly
blurred, almost obliterated by sin and death. To this has
been added only one other command--Repent! because a
new opportunity for life has been provided (attainable
now, or during the Millennium) and every wilful act and
thought will have a bearing on the final issue of each case.
But to those out of Christ no more than this message, Repent,
is given. Only to the repentant does God speak further,
as they have ears to hear and hearts to obey his will.
As for the nominal Christian millions of our day, they
have failed not only to apprehend the real character of the
grace of God and the present call of the New Creation, but
have very generally failed, also, to understand the law of
the New Creation, and have misinterpreted its liberties, its
symbols, etc. Churchianity has gained and is teaching to
the world false conceptions of baptism, of the Lord's Supper,
etc., as well as false conceptions of the Sabbath and of
the divine Law and Covenant with the New Creation. Evidently
it was never intended of the Lord that nominal
"Christendom" should understand or appreciate the truth
on these subjects during the present time. As the Apostle
has declared: "Eye hath not seen, neither hath ear heard,
neither have entered into the heart of man [the natural
man] the things which God hath in reservation for them
that love him"--neither have they apprehended his will
and plan respecting his "little flock." "But God hath revealed
them [these things] unto us by his Spirit, for the
Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God [his
good and acceptable and perfect will concerning us, now
and hereafter]." Not appreciating the spirit of the High
Calling, nor the perfect Law of Liberty appertaining to the
elect--not being able to appreciate these, because lacking
the Spirit of the Lord, it is not surprising to us that forms
and ceremonies, fast days, penances, restrictions of one kind
and another, holy days and sabbath days, became manacles
and chains upon nominal Christendom. Nor is it surprising
that some of the Lord's true people, the "elect," the
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"little flock," subsequently became so entangled with this
bondage as to be deprived of a large measure of the true
liberty of the sons of God.
We are not making an argument against the observance
of the first day of the week. On the contrary, we rejoice that
under divine providence the day is so generally observed
throughout the civilized world. By reason of its general observance
the Lord's consecrated few have special advantages
and privileges of which they might to a large extent be
deprived were the observance of the day less general. The
New Creation everywhere may surely rejoice greatly that
they have the opportunity of setting apart one day in seven
specially for worship, spiritual fellowship, etc. It would be a
serious loss to all of God's faithful were the day to be
dropped from general usage. For this reason, if for no other,
it behooves all who are the Lord's, not only to use the day
reverently, soberly and in spiritual exercise and pleasure,
but, additionally, to cast their influence in favor of its observance
--to seek that by no word or act of theirs its observance
be slacked amongst people in general.
But as some are deluded into thinking that the seventh
day of the Jewish Covenant extended to all men as a bondage,
so others have come under a similar bondage to the first
day--laboring under the delusion that by divine appointment
it became clothed with the outward sanctity accorded
the seventh day among the Jews under their Law Covenant
as a "house of servants"--"under the Law" and not under
Grace. Indeed many, not too religious themselves--professing
no consecration--set great store by such observances,
and would lose respect for professed children of God who
neglected in any measure to utilize the first day of the week
for worship and praise, or used it, on the contrary, for secular
business. We advise, for all these reasons, that those who
most clearly discern the liberty wherewith Christ makes
free shall not misuse their liberty so as to stumble others;
but use it rather as unto God and each other, for opportunities
to grow in grace, knowledge, and all the fruits of the
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Spirit. We advise that within all reasonable bounds the
Lord's consecrated people, and, so far as their influence extends,
their families--not only the minor children, but the
adult members also--should keep Sunday faithfully. All
should be instructed respecting the appropriateness of such
a day of worship and praise, and respecting also the necessity
of a day of rest from physical toil, not only for the
Church, but for the world.
While entirely free from the Jewish Law, we may, nevertheless,
realize that since its provisions came from the Lord
there is every probability that in addition to the typical significance
of Israel's ordinances there was also a practical
good connected with them. For instance, we may see a typical
significance in the designation of certain animal foods
as clean and fit for food, and of others as unclean and unfit
for food; and although we may not understand just how or
why some of these foods are unsanitary, unhealthful, we
have every reason to believe that this is the case--for instance,
swine, rabbits, eels, etc. We violate no law in eating
these things, because we are not Jews; nevertheless, we
should be rather suspicious of them, and rather on the alert
to notice to what degree they are healthful or unhealthful;
because we are bound to observe all laws of health, so far as
we are able to discern them.
Similarly, we may see in the rest of one day in seven, provided
for Israel, not only a typical teaching, but also a necessary
provision for present human conditions. It is
generally admitted, even by those who ignore the divine
Word entirely, that a rest every seven days is advantageous,
not only to the humankind, but also to the beasts of burden.
Additionally, it is claimed by some that this law of the necessity
for rest from continued work applies to some inanimate
things. For instance, the rolling stock of railways,
etc. We quote the following from the London Express, as illustrating
this point. It says:
"It may sound strange to hear persons talk about a 'tired steel
axle,' or a 'fatigued iron rail,' but that sort of talk is heard along
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railways and in machine shops, and is considered correct. 'The idea of
inanimate metal becoming weary!' may be your thought; but experts
connected with the ways of machinery say that the work makes it
tired, and that it needs rest, as you do. 'What caused the axle to
break?' asked the traffic manager. 'Fatigue of metal,' answers the inspector.
That answer is frequent, and often in accordance with the
facts. At times an axle breaks or a wheel spreads, under much less
than the usual strain, and the most careful examination possible will
show no defect or weakness. This leads engineers to charge 'fatigue
of metal' with the result. Sinews of steel can tire as well as muscles of
brawn, and metal that does not have its rest will cease to do its work,
and may cause great danger. At least, so the engineers say; and they
assert that without rest the affinity of the molecules of metal for each
other would become weakened, until the breaking point is reached.
Then comes trouble."
In France, following the Commune and its period of infidelity,
it was determined to obliterate the Sabbath period
of the Bible--one day in seven--and instead to have one day
in ten as a rest day; but this was found to work unsatisfactorily,
and however much the French desired to count on the
metrical system they soon discovered that Nature had a
way of its own, and that Nature stamps the number 7 with
its approval in some unaccountable manner. For instance,
they found that the crisis of a fever would occur on the seventh
day or the fourteenth day or the twenty-first day or the
twenty-eighth day, and that if no favorable turn were had
on or before the thirty-fifth day death usually resulted.
They were unable to change this and to have the fevers
reach a crisis on the decimal system.
So far, then, from advocating an abandonment of the
Christian Sunday, we urge that it be retained as an advantage
to the natural man as well as of spiritual advantage to
the New Creation. We urge that nothing be done that
would in any sense or degree break down or cast aside this
great blessing which has come to us indirectly through the
Jewish Law. True, we would be glad if all could recognize
the day as one of voluntary devotion to the Lord; but since
the majority cannot so discern it, we may as well as not permit
them to rest under a harmless delusion on this subject--
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a delusion which may really be to their advantage.
The New Creation needs no special advice respecting the
proper use of the day, realizing that their lives as a whole
have been consecrated, devoted to the Lord and to his service.
Walking not after the flesh but after the Spirit, they will
be seeking specially to use such a favorable opportunity to
glorify God in their bodies and spirits, which are his. Praise,
thanksgiving, meditations, and exhortations in accord with
the divine Word and plan, will be in order. Nor do we urge
that the Lord's Day, or Sunday, must be used exclusively
for religious worship. God has not so commanded, and no
one else has the right to do so. However, where our heart is,
where our sympathies and love are, there we will delight to
be, and we may safely conclude that every member of the
New Creation will find his chiefest joy, his chiefest pleasure,
in fellowship and communion with the Lord and with the
brethren, and that, consequently, he will very rarely forget
to assemble himself with them, as the Scriptures exhort, but
do not command. Heb. 10:25
What we do voluntarily as unto the Lord, without being
commanded, is all the more an evidence of our love and
loyalty to him and his, and, undoubtedly, will be appreciated
by him accordingly. Many of the members of the
New Creation have children or wards under their care, and
these should be rightly instructed respecting the proprieties
of the day and its advantages, and the reasonable liberties
they may enjoy. Nothing in the Word of God supports the
tyrannical bondage which has found its way into Christian
homes, under the name of the Puritanical Sabbath, according
to which law a smile on this day would be a sin, and to
kiss one's own child would be a crime, and to take a quiet
walk, or to sit under the trees and consider Nature would be
a desecration--even whilst looking up from Nature to Nature's
God. It is well that in getting far away from this false
conception we do not get to the other extreme, as do many,
sanctioning hilarious conduct, playing of games, secular
music, or labor of any sort which might be done on another
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day. The children of the New Creation should in every reasonable
way reflect the spirit of a sound mind, which God
has promised to their parents through the holy Spirit and
by the Word of Truth. A rational, dignified keeping of the
first day of the week as a day of rest, mental and moral improvement
and social fellowship in the family and amongst
members of the Lord's family--the New Creation--will
surely bring blessing to all concerned.
Another potent consideration in regard to the keeping of
Sunday is--the laws of the powers that be. In many states
certain laws and regulations prevail respecting Sunday.
The Lord's people are to be law-abiding--not less, but more
than others, in all matters which do not conflict with their
consciences. If, therefore, two or three Sabbaths per week
were commanded by civil law, the New Creation should
observe them, and consider the arrangement a blessing, as
increasing their opportunities for spiritual development.
But since they would be of the world's appointment, and
not of divine injunction, they need not feel bound to observe
them beyond the world's estimate of the fulfilment of
its laws, as indicated by their enforcement.
Israel's Sabbath Typical
We have already noticed that the Sabbath obligation of
the Jewish Law announced at Sinai was given to no other
nation than Israel, and consequently was obligatory upon
no other people than the Jews. Its first observance recorded
in the Scriptures was after the first feature of the Jewish
Law--the Passover--had been instituted. After Israel had
passed out of Egypt and had come into the wilderness, they
got their first lesson in the observance of a day of rest in connection
with the gathering of the manna, before they came
to Mount Sinai, when the Decalogue was given. Nothing
was said to Adam or Enoch or Noah or Abraham or Isaac
or Jacob respecting the keeping of a Sabbath. Neither directly
or indirectly is it mentioned. The only previous mention
of the word "sabbath" at all is in connection with the
account of the creation, where we are told that God rested
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on the seventh day, which, we have already seen, was not a
24-hour day but a seven-thousand-year day.
In giving the command of a seventh-day rest to Israel,
God identified their keeping of a 24-hour period with his
own rest on a larger and higher scale; and this leads us to
infer that, aside from whatever blessing Israel obtained from
a weekly rest, there was, additionally, a typical lesson in it for
the New Creation; as indeed we find typical lessons in connection
with every feature of that people and their Law.
The seventh day, the seventh month, and the seventh
year were all prominent under the Law. The seventh day,
as a period of cessation from toil, a period of physical rest;
the seventh month as the one in which the atonement for
sin was effected, that they might have rest from sin; and the
seventh year, the one in which came release from bondage,
servitude. In addition, as we have already seen,* the seventh
year multiplied by itself (7 x 7 equals 49) led up to the
fiftieth or Jubilee Year, in which all mortgages, liens and
judgments against persons and lands were canceled, and
every family was permitted to return to its own estate--
relieved from all the burdens of the previous errors,
wrongdoings, etc. We have already seen that the antitype of
Israel's Jubilee year will be the Millennial Kingdom, and
its general "times of restitution of all things which God
hath spoken by the mouth of all the holy prophets," the antitype
being immensely larger than the type, and applicable
to mankind in general.
*Vol. II, Chap. vi.
Let us now notice particularly the typical seventh day.
Like the seventh year it leads (7 x 7 equals 49) to a fiftieth or
Jubilee Day, which expresses the same thought as the seventh
day; viz., rest, but emphasizes it.
What blessing to spiritual Israel, the New Creation, was
typified by natural Israel's seventh day Sabbath, or rest?
The Apostle answers this question (Heb. 4:1-11), when he
says, "Let us, therefore, fear lest a promise having been left
us of entering into his rest [Sabbath] any of you should
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seem to come short of it....For we which have believed do
enter into rest [the keeping of the Sabbath]....Seeing,
therefore, it remaineth that some must enter therein, and
that they to whom it was first preached entered not in because
of unbelief...there remaineth, therefore, a rest to the
people of God; for he that is entered into his rest, he also
hath ceased from his own works, as God did from his. Let us
labor, therefore, to enter into that rest, lest any man fall after
the same example of unbelief." Here the Apostle sets before
us a double lesson: (1) That it is our privilege now to
enter into rest; and, as a matter of fact, all who have truly
accepted the Lord, and are properly resting and trusting in
him, are thus enjoying the antitypical Sabbath, or rest, at
the present time--the rest of faith. (2) He also points us to
the fact that in order to maintain this present rest, and to
insure entrance into the eternal Sabbath "rest that remains
for the people of God," the heavenly Kingdom, it will be
necessary for us to abide in the Lord's favor--continually to
exercise toward him faith and obedience.
It is not necessary to point out to the members of the New
Creation when and how they entered into the rest of faith--
when and how the peace of God, which passeth all understanding,
began to rule in their hearts, and full confidence
in him began to drive out fear and discontent. It started
with our full acceptance of the Lord Jesus as the High
Priest who made the sacrifice, by which our sins were covered
by the imputed merit of the Redeemer, the Messiah; it
increased as we recognized him as the Head of the New
Creation, and heir of the Abrahamic promise, and ourselves
as being called of God to be his joint-heirs in that
Kingdom of blessing. The perfect rest, or Sabbath enjoyment,
came when we submitted our all to the Lord, accepting
joyfully his promised guidance through a "narrow
way" to the Kingdom. There we rested from our own works,
from all effort to justify ourselves; we confessed ourselves
imperfect and unworthy of divine grace, and unable to
make ourselves worthy. There we gratefully accepted divine
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mercy extended toward us in the redemption which is
in Christ Jesus our Lord and the promised "grace to help in
every time of need," and undertook to be disciples of Jesus--
followers in his steps, "even unto death."
The Apostle declares that we entered into rest as God rested
from his works. We have already seen that God rested from
the creative work when he had finished it by making man
in his own likeness. He has since permitted sin and death to
mar his fair creation; yet has not raised his arm of power to
prevent that work from going forward, nor to bind or restrain
Satan, the great deceiver. God is resting, waiting--
leaving the entire matter for Messiah to accomplish. We enter
by faith into God's rest when we discern Christ to be
God's Anointed One, fully empowered to do this entire
work, not for us (the New Creation, the members of his
body) only, but a work of blessing and restitution for the
world of mankind--for whomsoever will accept divine
mercy through him.
We see clearly where our rest began, as individual members
of the New Creation; but it will be profitable also if we
glance backward and note the beginning of this rest as respects
the New Creation as a whole. We see that the apostles
enjoyed a measure of rest and trust while the Lord was with
them in the flesh, but not the full rest. They rejoiced because
the Bridegroom was in their midst--rejoiced in him,
though they understood not the lengths and breadths of his
love and service. When the Master died, their rest and joy
and peace were broken; and, in their own language, the
cause for all their disappointment was, "We had trusted
that it had been he which should have redeemed [delivered]
Israel"--but they were disappointed. When he had risen
from the dead, and appeared to them and proved his resurrection,
their doubts and fears began to give way to
hopes; but their joy and peace did not come back in full.
They were in perplexity. They heard, however, and heeded
his admonition to tarry at Jerusalem until they should be
endued with power.
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They waited in expectancy--how long? We answer that
they waited for seven times seven days--forty-nine days,
and the day following, the fiftieth day, the Jubilee Sabbath
day, God fulfilled to them his gracious promise, and
granted that those who had accepted Jesus should enter
into his rest--the keeping of the higher Sabbath of the New
Creation. They entered into his rest by receiving the Pentecostal
blessing which spoke "peace through Jesus Christ"--
which informed them that although Jesus had died for sinners,
and although ascended up on high and absent from
their sight, yet he was approved of Jehovah, his sacrifice
made acceptable for sin, and that they might thus rest in the
merit of the work which he had accomplished--rest assured that
all God's promises would be yea and amen in and through
him, rest assured of the forgiveness of their own sins and of
their own acceptance with the Father. This assured them
also that the exceeding great and precious promises centered
in Jesus will all be accomplished, and that they shall
share a glorious part when grace hath well refined their
hearts--if they prove faithful to their part of the contract,
and "make their calling and election sure" by abiding in
Christ, by obedience to the divine will.
All of the New Creation, then, who have received the
holy Spirit, have entered into the antitypical rest, and instead
of keeping any longer a seventh day of physical rest,
they now keep a perpetual rest of heart, of mind, of faith in
the Son of God. Nevertheless, this rest of faith is not the
end--not the full antitype. The grand "rest that remaineth
for the people of God" will come at the end--to all those
who shall finish their course with joy. Meantime the rest of
faith must continue, for it is our earnest, or assurance, of the
rest beyond. Its maintenance will require not only obedience
to the extent of ability in thought, word and deed,
but also trust in the Lord's grace. Thus we may be strong in
the Lord and in the power of his might, to walk in his footsteps.
Our rest and trust must be that he is both able and
willing to bring us off "more than conquerors," and grant
us a share in the great work of the Antitypical Jubilee.
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