k4c
Well-Known Member
You guess you should finally answer points after they've sat for a very long time.
Read this passage again, with a bit more care. Moses wanted to lead Israel out on a three-day journey, offer sacrifices, and return. This is a "rest from their labor" that entailed nearly, if not an entire week. There isn't any hint of a sabbath in this account, and the sacrifices don't fit your mold of a creation origin that you introduce later.
False.
This is one of several proofs that shows the origin of the sabbath with Moses. The account in Exodus 16 records the first instance of the sabbath, which was ordained with the manna experience as a test to determine Israel's readiness for the covenant that would be dictated about a month later at Sinai (Exodus 16:4).
Do you remember the second of the two points I introduced early in this thread, where Adventism departs from Biblical Christianity? Here it is again:
- The Genesis account doesn't record a repetitive day observed by any human.
- Exodus 20:11 clearly delineates the seventh day apart from the sabbath.
- Hebrews 4 calls the seventh day of creation God's "My rest" that remained to be attained by a people who were already observing the sabbath.
- Jesus distinguishes the sabbath apart from God's rest recorded in the Genesis account when He said it was "made for man" in Mark 2:27.
- Moses testifies that the ten commandments were unknown to the generation previous to his own in Deuteronomy 5:2-3, and lists the sabbath as a memorial of deliverance from Egyptian bondage in Deuteronomy 5:15.
- Nehemiah 9:13-14 attributes the origin of the sabbath with Moses.
Your consistency with Ellen White's alleged authority makes your claim easily predictable: "In order to support this thesis concerning the sabbath, an origin for the sabbath in contradiction to Scripture is insisted upon...". The Genesis account records God's rest, Hebrews 4:4 quotes directly from Genesis 2:2, and His rest was referred to as a promise yet to be attained and another day differentiated from the sabbath that Israel already had for 1500 years.
Yet this remains a point of contention you cannot support, for the reason that you cannot distinguish God's permanent rest at creation from the sabbath "made for man" (Mark 2:27) that repeated over and over and didn't last.
Return to your own quote from Exodus 5, above. You have contradicted the point that Moses wanted to lead Israel out for a sabbath, as his purpose was to offer a sacrifice and there is no mention of a sabbath.
Colossians 2:16-17 calls the sabbath itself a shadow:
16 ¶ So let no one judge you in food or in drink, or regarding a festival or a new moon or sabbaths,
17 which are a shadow of things to come, but the substance is of Christ.
The very reason no one has grounds to judge another in respect of the dietary laws and convocations in the annual/monthly/weekly cycles is because the law that drove those was "wiped out" as mentioned 2 verses previous.
k4c, the sabbath is spread out all over the law in places you probably aren't aware of. If you end the jurisdiction of the book of the law, the sabbath comes to an end. If you end the jurisdiction of the ten commandments engraved on tablets of stone, the sabbath comes to an end. This is the nature of Israel's "one law" (Numbers 15:16), the is not divisible into "ceremonial" and "moral" precepts. If the "ceremonial" comes to an end, the sabbath doesn't exist anymore. That extends to the ordinances that mandated burnt offerings:
Hebrews 10
8 Previously saying, "Sacrifice and offering, burnt offerings, and offerings for sin You did not desire, nor had pleasure in them" (which are offered according to the law),
9 then He said, "Behold, I have come to do Your will, O God." He takes away the first that He may establish the second.
Hebrews describes the change of covenants, from the first mediated by Moses to the second mediated by Jesus under a priesthood Moses never authorized. God has no pleasure in the burnt offerings required under the law, and that includes the sabbath. That very displeasure in the burnt offerings that God Himself ordained is linked again with His displeasure with the sabbath in Isaiah 1:
11 "To what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices to Me?" Says the LORD. "I have had enough of burnt offerings of rams And the fat of fed cattle. I do not delight in the blood of bulls, Or of lambs or goats.
12 "When you come to appear before Me, Who has required this from your hand, To trample My courts?
13 Bring no more futile sacrifices; Incense is an abomination to Me. The New Moons, the Sabbaths, and the calling of assemblies--I cannot endure iniquity and the sacred meeting.
14 Your New Moons and your appointed feasts My soul hates; They are a trouble to Me, I am weary of bearing them.
God hates the shadows He ordained Himself! They were never intended to be permanent, but shadows ordained to reveal sin to us and drive us toward our Redeemer.
The sabbath itself was an appointed feast as shown in Leviticus 23:3.
The new moon and the sabbath are both mentioned in context, and both of these share one thing in common: they both mandate burnt offerings above the daily oblations, as specified in Numbers 28.
Hebrews 10:8-9, quoted above, shows God's Hand ending the sabbath forever when it was taken away with the first covenant.
This is true, and consistent with Hebrews 7:27, but this has no relation to the burnt offerings nor the sabbath.
I had accurately predicted that you would insist on an origin of the sabbath in deference to Scripture's documentation regarding it. We can document when the sabbath began and ended, and document God's rest when it began and when we entered into His rest - but that rest hasn't ended and isn't going to.
It would be a simple matter of quoting your own posts in this thread to show that you're bearing false witness, a violation of the very law inscribed onto tables of stone that you claim to have jurisdiction over you.
What does the law prescribe for that transgression, k4c?
Leviticus 4 defines your duty under the law. If Jesus Christ isn't your sufficient atonement, you need to resurrect the Levitical priesthood and fulfill the requirement for atonement yourself. There is no "second and final phase of atonement" as SDA Fundamental Belief #24 asserts.
The shadows came as a result of sin, the Sabbath was created before sin.
My interpretation of Scripture is found clearly in the word of God and supported by God's will for mankind to have a people who love love Him and keep His commandments.
I guess we can end our discussions on this note, blessed God in all that we do.
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