Ellen White on the mark of the beast for those that worship on Sunday
- By Mercy Shown
- Sabbath and The Law
- 127 Replies
I agree with you on an essential point: saving faith never leads away from the authority of God’s Word. The question, however, is how God’s Word says the law functions in relation to saving faith under the new covenant.How can one separate God's saving faith from the authority of what God says, is not found in our Bibles. This is saying faith leads one away from the authority of God's Word or law, which is the opposite of faith Rom3:31. We are told it is unbelief, sin and rebellion Heb3:7-19
Jesus addressed traditions verses the commandments of God. Mark 7:7-13 Mat15:3-14. He said those who keep their traditions over the commandments of God makes the word of God no effect, worships Him in vain and those who teach and follow these teachings ends up in a ditch.
Considering Sunday is not a commandment of God, it does not come with the power of God's blessings Isa59:2 Exo20:11 and sanctification Eze20:12 Gen2:3, it is a tradition of man that leads many people away from staying faithful to what God said to Remember Exo20:8-11 I think Jesus addressed this scenario plainly.
Romans 3:31 does not teach that faith re-establishes the law as the basis of righteousness or covenant identity. In the flow of Romans, Paul has just concluded that “by works of the law no human being will be justified” (Rom 3:20) and that righteousness comes “apart from the law” through faith in Christ (Rom 3:21–28). When Paul says, “Do we then overthrow the law by this faith? By no means! On the contrary, we uphold the law,” he means that the law’s true purpose is fulfilled, not reinstated as a standard by which believers are justified. This is exactly how Paul later explains it: “Christ is the end (telos—goal/fulfillment) of the law for righteousness to everyone who believes” (Rom 10:4). Faith upholds the law by affirming its verdict—that all have sinned—and by receiving the righteousness the law itself could never provide (Rom 8:3–4).
Regarding tradition, Jesus indeed condemned elevating human traditions over God’s commands (Mark 7:7–13). But this warning cuts both ways. The Pharisees were the most rigorous Sabbath-keepers in Israel, and yet they repeatedly condemned Jesus for not keeping the Sabbath according to their interpretation (Mark 2:23–28; 3:1–6; John 5:16–18; 9:14–16). Their error was not ignoring the Sabbath, but turning it into a legal boundary marker that obscured mercy, life, and ultimately Christ Himself. Jesus’ response was not to tighten Sabbath rules, but to assert His authority over it: “The Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath” (Mark 2:28).
This shows an important reality: even Sabbath observance can become a commandment of men when its meaning, limits, and application are defined in ways Scripture itself does not require. The New Testament repeatedly warns against binding consciences where God has not (Rom 14:4–6; Gal 5:1; Col 2:16–23). Paul’s concern is not that people rest or worship, but that such observances are used to judge faithfulness or secure righteousness—something Scripture reserves for Christ alone.
Finally, the issue is not whether Sunday is a commandment, but whether any day is permitted to function as a test of saving faith. The New Testament answer is clear: “One person esteems one day as better than another, while another esteems all days alike. Each one should be fully convinced in his own mind” (Rom 14:5). This freedom does not negate obedience; it locates obedience where the gospel does—in union with Christ. The true blessing and sanctification promised by God are found not in a calendar observance, but in the One to whom the Sabbath itself points (Heb 4:9–10; Matt 11:28–30).
In short, faith does not overthrow God’s law—but neither does it place believers back under it as a covenant of righteousness. The law bears witness to Christ; Christ fulfills the law; and believers rest in Him. That is not unbelief or rebellion—it is the very heart of the gospel (Gal 2:21; Phil 3:8–9; 2 Cor 5:21).
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