Citation, please?Nate (post: 1453119) wrote:Remember Paul said that the Sabbath doesn't have to be observed if you don't want to.
Yamamaya (post: 1453125) wrote:The Sabbath is on the 7th day, aka Saturday. There is no verse in the Bible that even remotely suggests that it was ever Sunday or that it was ever changed to Sunday. The Sunday is referred to as "The Lord's Day" once in the context of Jesus' ressurection but it is never proclaimed as a replacement.
As to whether we should still keep it or not, that depends on how one keeps it and your interpretation of various parts of the New Covenant.
TheSubtleDoctor wrote:Citation, please?
So in the original context, what do they actually mean by "seventh day"?
Except he doesn't say that. He says that some consider one day (not necessarily the Sabbath here) more holy and others do not. Your interpretation is that the passage is about the Sabbath, but there is nothing in the passage that says this is so. You might have always thought it was about the Sabbath day, but, again, we are not forced to this conclusion by the passage itself. As I previously stated, I find it much likelier that Paul was referring to religious holidays and festivals, rather than effectively saying, "Screw what Moses [remember the Sabbath day and keep it holy] and Jesus [ I did not come to abolish the law but to fulfill it] said."Nate (post: 1453152) wrote:If you don't think that the Sabbath day is any more sacred or holy than any other day, Paul says whatever...don't worry about it
TheSubtleDoctor (post: 1453154) wrote:Except he doesn't say that. He says that some consider one day (not necessarily the Sabbath here) more holy and others do not. Your interpretation is that the passage is about the Sabbath, but there is nothing in the passage that says this is so. You might have always thought it was about the Sabbath day, but, again, we are not forced to this conclusion by the passage itself. As I previously stated, I find it much likelier that Paul was referring to religious holidays and festivals, rather than effectively saying, "Screw what Moses [remember the Sabbath day and keep it holy] and Jesus [ I did not come to abolish the law but to fulfill it] said."
Here I am simply employing it to illustrate that I believe Christ's teachings do not contradict the Torah. However, I am aware that this is a rich passage, and there exist many layers of interpretation of it.mechana2015 (post: 1453159) wrote:You keep mentioning the "I came not to abolish the law" verse. What is your full interpretation of what it means? So far all you've used it for is to cancel out another interpretation without explaining why it's capable of doing that.
That's a very fair point. I am a bit too focused on one verse rather than big-picture stuff. Hmm. I will think about this a bit more. Thanks, Nate.Nate (post: 1453160) wrote:Sigh. Paul was talking to Gentiles, remember? He was writing to new churches, not to Jews. Gentiles didn't have a Sabbath day. Jews did.
Does Hebrews 4:9-11 count here as well =)?Cognitive Gear (post: 1453162) wrote:It would give me a Biblical justification for my insistence on having one non-work/school day a week.
Hebrews 4:9-11 wrote:So there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God. For the one who has entered His rest has himself also rested from his works, as God did from His. Therefore let us be diligent to enter that rest, so that no one will fall, through following the same example of disobedience.
Darn, and I was trying to be original!Nate (post: 1453165) wrote:Hey that's how I do it!
TheSubtleDoctor (post: 1453164) wrote:Here I am simply employing it to illustrate that I believe Christ's teachings do not contradict the Torah. However, I am aware that this is a rich passage, and there exist many layers of interpretation of it.That's a very fair point.
Yikes. That was a bit aggressive.mechana2015 (post: 1453167) wrote:I'd suggest you come up with an explanation then,
I would be interested to hear your views.since I have been given an explanation for that fragment of a verse and it does NOT support what you are attempting to use it for.
Again, ouch. You're being kinda harsh, eh? We'd be here all day though if everyone comprehensively defended and argued each bit of their views. No one should take my words to heart]I'm requesting clarity and well thought out answers here, especially when bible text is being thrown around.[/QUOTE]I don't think my interpretation violates any of your criteria, though you may disagree with it or think it is shallow...which is fine. But, I don't think you can accuse my interpretation of being dumb or vague. Again, I'd like to hear your own views on the subject.Please, back it up or stop using a fragment of a verse like it contains a commonly known truth.
I'm not ignoring the rest of the Sermon on the Mount at all. I just didn't feel it had much to do with the issue at hand. I'm sorry you feel like just b/c I didn't mention the rest that I ignored it. I don't think I said anything earlier that contradicted the rest of the sermon?mechana2015 (post: 1453180) wrote:My opinion is that the verse is related to the laws that are espoused in the remainder of chapter 5, 6 and most of 7. The piece you were throwing around is but half of a sentence in the middle of a 3 chapter sermon, the contents of which you are clearly ignoring since you are applying it to as far as I can see, one of the few topics that isn't even addressed in the entire sermon.
TheSubtleDoctor (post: 1453193) wrote:I'm not ignoring the rest of the Sermon on the Mount at all. I just didn't feel it had much to do with the issue at hand. I'm sorry you feel like just b/c I didn't mention the rest that I ignored it. I don't think I said anything earlier that contradicted the rest of the sermon?
TheSubtleDoctor (post: 1453193) wrote:(1) Christ says He didn't come to abolish the Law (capital L) and the Prophets but the fulfill them. Why should we limit the application of the word Law to the topics He covers in the Sermon on the Mount? As far as I have been told, typically, the term "the Law" refers to the entirety of the Pentateuch, which of course includes laws about the Sabbath.
TheSubtleDoctor (post: 1453193) wrote:(2) Doesn't Christ discuss things other than the Torah (the Law) in the Sermon on the Mount such as rabbinic traditions and commentaries that had become widely observed? All the "You have heard that it was said X" business is what I'm referring to. If that is so, then shouldn't we question whether or not the scope of the application of the verse in question (fulfill/abolish the Law) is even meant to refer exclusively to the specific instances the rest of the sermon addresses? Could it not be just a general principle, like much of what Christ says before it? I don't think that's such an egregious claim.
ChristianKitsune wrote:IN FACT, I think EVERYday should belong to God. But we as humans are super selfish and so that's a huge struggle in and of itself.
I dunno, I just think too many times we try to put all these "rules" and "Stipulations" on following Christ, and we look past the part where God is like "I Just really want your heart here...."
Nate (post: 1453326) wrote:Well...it's more like, we have jobs. I mean I'm not saying our jobs should be or are more important than God is, but what I'm saying is if you work a job, you don't have as much time in the day to do stuff as you do when there's a day where you don't have obligations.
I've actually seen some churches that tell their members to go help out at shelters, visit hospitals, and do various other charity and selfless deeds on the Sabbath. It's the kind of thing that if you're going to work at 8 and coming home at 5, you can't really do. Or even if you work nights ('cuz hey gotta sleep sometime right?).
So it's kind of a matter of while it'd be nice to have every day belong to God, you probably can't unless you're independently wealthy.
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