- Oct 16, 2004
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EVERY single member of my church is a sinner. The place is FULL of them.We each have our own issues. Should my church not mention that lieing is a sin just becasue it MIGHT make someone who has lied uncomfortable???? Sould we not speak against aduterly because there my be and adulter in the congregation??? Should we accept someone profaning God's name because it MIGHT offend them to point out in a sermon that profaning God's name is sin?? Should we ignore idol worship because the idol worshipper MIGHT feel disdain if we preach that idol worship is wrong?? I think not.
What you want is just surgar coat every thing so we can a feel good as we sin? Right???
You act as if we place a scarlet letter S on those who don't observe the sabbath.Nothing could be farther from the truth. I doubt anyone would say a word to your hypothetical single mom's concerning working on the Sabbath allthough the issue of Sabbath observace is GENERAL for all members would likely be mentioned in a sermon by the pastor from time to time. But all forms of sin are discussed in sermons the single mom's weakness may be Sabbath related but mine may be another issue. I certainly don't want the preacher to stop speaking on a subject that might speak to my flaws and failures, my toes should be stepped on if I'm still not following God's will. Nor do I want him to stop giving sermons on the issue of sabbath observance.
Helping a neighbor nail plastic over his roof for a few minutes for free before a rain storm before going to church in a singular emergency situtation is a lot different from working every Sabbath and not gathering with the Church body. We go to church to help strengthen our faith by whorship and fellowship. Those who don't attend church regularly and participate frequently backslide to a point of have little or no relationship with God. Satan is very good at placing obsticals in our way and God is good at over coming those obsticals.
I guess it comes down to who do you have more faith in God's ability to provide for your needs of your own ability to provide for those needs. We are told that it is our faith in God that saves us.
What bewilders me is how you can hold your perspective without seeing in it a double standard. The command states, "Ye shall do no work on the sabbath."
(1) Now the man who fixes is his roof, is he doing work? Yes. You say this is fine. (This is at odds with Moses claim that NO work shall be done on the sabbath).
(2) The woman who, as yet, has no roof, takes the Saturday job so she can GET a roof. Is she doing work? Yes. You say this is wrong.
Given your claim that #1 is okay, why do feel that #2 is wrong? You say that the woman should have faith that God will take care of her needs. But shouldn't the man in #1 have that same faith? Why doesn't he have enough faith to believe that God will take care of his roof? In fact, you seem to say that faith is the root of the issue, "I guess it comes down to who do you have more faith in God's ability to provide for your needs of your own ability to provide for those needs."
And frankly, I think you're correct that the Mosaic sabbaths - both the whole-year sabbaths and the weekly sabbaths - calls upon men to exercise faith in God to provide for their needs. Therefore your condoning the man who fixes his roof seems to me inconsistent. You should regard both #1 and #2 wrong for consistency's sake. Where the sabbath (rest) is in force, work is NOT in force.
Whereas in my view, the sabbath is in force only where and when the divine voice dictates. If early Saturday morning God tells me that the Sabbath is currently in force, I will do no work. But if two hours later He tells me it is no longer in force for me, I will feel free to begin working again. Thus, my view would allow a man to fix his roof on a Saturday. You say that we should have faith in God's willingness to provide for our needs. I say that faith cometh by hearing (as opposed to blind faith) If the voice tells me that the Sabbath is in force for me, I should have faith that He will provide for my needs. If it tells me, two hours later, that the sabbath is NOT currently in force for me, I'd better consider looking for a job!
In sum, a rule-based paradigm does not allow flexibility. To be flexible is to break the rule as proof that a book of rules cannot define morality. If a book of rules cannot define morality, you cannot justifiably PRESUME that the woman is in the wrong. I understand that you are saying that you wouldn't literally point the finger at her. But nonetheless the sabbatarian doctrine DOES point its finger at people.
Earlier you said that God gave us 1 to 6 days to do our work. Here again you are trying to incorporate flexibility into a rule-based paradigm. You cannot do this with consistency. The rule states, "Men are to follow God's example at creation". What was God's example? He worked six days and rested one. If we do not have to follow His example on the six days, then we do not have to follow His example on the seventh day.
I think the reason you try to allow some flexibility into your theology (for instance you allow a man to fix his roof on the sabbath) is that you see at least some degree of flexibility in Christ's behavior on earth. So to avoid contradicting Christ's NT example, you allow some flexibility. But a rule-based paradigm really doesn't allow for such flexibility. Flexibility is permitted only in a situational ethics such as mine which says, "Morality cannot be a bunch of rules set in stone (pun intended) because ethics depends on the current situation." This is not to say that the stone is useless (earlier I said its purpose is to help us form tentative rules when we cannot hear God loud and clear).
In my next post, I will argue that the inflexibility of a rule-based paradigm has proven very effective at breaking God's heart.
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