Review: The Sabbath Under Crossfire
It’s out, it’s awesome, and
you need it! Dr. Samuele Bacchiocchi’s newest book, The Sabbath Under
Crossfire: A Biblical Analysis of Recent Sabbath/Sunday Developments,
addresses critical issues especially important to current and former Church of
God members. If there is any book that you read this year, don’t put if off,
read this one.
In
July, 1998, Pope John Paul II issued a lengthy Pastoral Letter, Dies Domini,
which appeals to Christians to observe Sunday as the fulfillment of the
Sabbath, and calls for civil legislation to facilitate Sunday observance. In a
break with traditional Catholic teaching, which until now, has admitted that
Sunday-keeping came from Church tradition rather than Scriptural mandate, the
Pope attempts to provide Biblical support for Sunday-keeping. The need to
respond to the Pope’s "new" theology was one reason why Bacchiocchi
decided to write his new book.
Earlier
in 1998, former SDA Dale Ratzlaff, author of the book, Sabbath in Crisis
(1990), appeared on radio station KJSL in St. Louis, Missouri. He savagely
attacked the Sabbath. His book had earlier been used by Joseph Tkach of the
Worldwide Church of God to overthrow the validity of Sabbath-keeping. My
friend, Neil Gardner of Florissant, Missouri, responded to the radio station
with letters answering Ratzlaff’s points, asking for equal time to present an
affirmation for the seventh-day Sabbath. Gardner asked me to join with him in
defense of the Sabbath. It became apparent to me that a stuttering bumpkin such
as myself would be no match for the polished rhetoric of Ratzlaff. I suggested
that we try to get Dr. Bacchiocchi to debate Ratzlaff, which he graciously
agreed to do. The one-hour debate was held on June 15, 1998, and continued for
many weeks over the Internet. Eventually, Ratzlaff backed off from further
discussion. Ratzlaff’s anti-Sabbath attacks were a second motivation for
Bacchiocchi’s new book.
Dr.
Sam had promised his wife Anna that he would take a year off from writing books
to spend more time with her and attend to household chores. Because of the
urgency of the Pope’s Letter and Ratzlaff’s frontal assault on the Sabbath, Dr.
B. felt he had to break his promise. I am sorry, Sam, for helping you to break
your promise, but I trust the result will benefit many, as indeed it has and
will. Incidentally, when I met her in 1995, in San Antonio, I asked Anna
Bacchiocchi if she has trouble getting in a word edgewise with her constantly
talking husband Sam. She assured me that in their private lives, she does
get to say her peace!
The
Pope challenges Christians to respect Sunday, not merely as a Church
institution, but as a divine command, the "full expression" of the
Sabbath. This is in stark contrast to the so-called "New Covenant,"
and related "Dispensational" teaching (adopted by Ratzlaff and Tkach)
which emphasizes the radical discontinuity between Sabbath and Sunday.
Dispensationalists hold that the Sabbath is a Mosaic, Old Covenant, institution
that terminated at the cross. Bacchiocchi shows that Sunday is not the Sabbath,
as the Pope now maintains, because the two days differ in authority, meaning,
and experience. Sunday is so lacking in authority that it needs the Pope to call
for civil legislation to foster its observance. In most European countries,
Sunday Laws have been in effect for many years, yet Sunday Church attendance is
less than 10% of the Christian population. In Italy, 95% of Catholics go to
church only three times in their lives, when they are "hatched,
matched, and dispatched." Sunday laws fail to encourage Sunday-keeping.
In
Chapter 2 of his book, Sabbath Under Crossfire, Bacchiocchi explores in
depth the question: "Is the Sabbath creational or ceremonial?" In spite
of Genesis 2 and Mark 2:27-28, many professing Christians,
includeing Ratzlaff and Tkach, believe that the Sabbath is not a creation
ordinance given to mankind, but a Mosaic ordinance given to the Israelites
together with the Ten Commandments.
Bacchiocchi
carefully reviews the Biblical evidence, and uses non-Sabbatarian commentators
in this (and other portions of his book), to lend authoritative support that
the Sabbath is a creation ordinance for all mankind.
In
Chapter 3, Bacchiocchi looks at the "Old and New Covenants,"
referring to Joseph Tkach’s view of the distinction between the two covenants
as the model for his discussion. Dr. Sam shows that salvation by grace through
faith is the central theme of both the old and new covenants. Saving faith is
never alone, because it is always accompanied by loving obedience, Galatians
5:6. The Decalogue is not merely a list of ten laws, but primarily ten
principles of love. There is no dichotomy between law and love, because one
cannot exist without the other. Bacchiocchi shows that Paul’s use of sabbatismos
in Hebrews 4:9, supports literal Sabbath-keeping, answering Ratzlaff’s
five reasons against literal Sabbath-keeping. Rather than the Levitical
priesthood and animal sacrifices which were "abolished" (Hebrews
10:9), "obsolete" and "ready to vanish away" (Hebrews
8:13), Paul explicitly teaches that "Sabbath-keeping has been left
behind for the people of God" (literal rendering of Hebrews 4:9).
Lutherans,
as well as Ratzlaff and Tkach, believe that Christ fulfilled the Sabbath
commandment by terminating its observance altogether, and replacing it with an
existential experience of salvation-rest available to believers every day. For
others, such as Catholics and Calvinists, Christ fulfilled and terminated only
the ceremonial aspect of the Sabbath commandment, the observance of the
seventh day, but the moral aspect of the Sabbath commandment, the
principle of observing one day in seven was not abrogated by Christ, but
transferred to the observance of the first day of the week, Sunday. In
exploring the topic of "the Savior and the Sabbath," Dr. B.
demonstrates the fallacy of both of these views. The healing miracles of Jesus
on the Sabbath show the expansion, not the termination, of the Sabbath, and reveal
the redemptive nature of true Sabbath-keeping. Just as God "is
working until now" (John 5:17, literal translation), we too must
work to extend the Sabbath rest and peace to others, John 9:4.
"This means that for believers today," Bacchiocchi states, "the
Sabbath is the day to celebrate not only God’s creation by resting, but also
Christ’s redemption by acting mercifully toward others," page 173.
Next,
Bacchiocchi presents a thorough discussion of "Paul and the Law," and
"Paul and the Sabbath." How can one reconcile the seemingly
contradictory statements of the Apostle Paul about the Law? Five major passages
are examined, which frequently are quoted to support the idea that the Law is
done away with by Christ, and consequently is no longer the norm of Christian conduct:
Romans 6:14, "not under the law"; II Corinthians
3:1-18, the letter and the spirit; Galatians 3:15-25, faith and law;
Colossians 2:14, what was nailed to the cross? and Romans 10:4,
"Christ is the end of the law." Bacchiocchi’s conclusion is that when
Paul speaks of the Law in the context of salvation (justification, right
standing before God), he affirms that Law-keeping is of no avail (Romans
3:20). On the other hand, when Paul speaks of the Law in the context of
Christian conduct (sanctification, right living before God), he upholds
the value and validity of God’s Law (Romans 7:12, 13:8-10; I Corinthians
7:19). This is the most valuable portion of Sabbath Under Crossfire.
In
my opinion, the teaching of the Worldwide Church of God throughout its history
has been rather weak regarding God’s Law and the New Covenant. This shortcoming
opened the door for Dr. Ernest L. Martin, former Chairman of the Department of
Theology of Ambassador College, to lead over 10,000 members out of the Church
in 1974, most of whom abandoned the Sabbath entirely. Martin paved the way for
the Systematic Theology Project in the late 1970s, which was the theological
underpinning for Joseph Tkach, Senior, and Junior. In a letter dated April,
1995, Dr. Ernest Martin (rightfully in my opinion) claims credit for many of
the doctrines the Worldwide now says are "new truths." Why, Martin
claims, he has been proclaiming many of these "new truths" for over
twenty years! Martin’s so-called "New Covenant" and anti-Sabbath
teachings are well in line with those of Ratzlaff and Tkach. Many of the senior
ministers today were taught by Martin when they went to Ambassador. Is it any
wonder why so many have rolled over and played dead, when it comes to a
Biblical understanding of God’s Law and the New Covenant? Tkach’s current
teachings are merely Martinism, Act II.
In
Sabbath Under Crossfire, Bacchiocchi states, "Contrary to what many
people believe, the Old Testament does not view the Law as a means of gaining
acceptance with God through obedience, but as a way of responding to God’s
gracious redemption and of binding Israel to God. . . . salvation has always
been a divine gift of grace and not a human achievement," pages 186-187.
There is no such thing as Old Testament legalism; this aberrant concept was
developed between the Testaments by the Pharisees. "Paul rejects the
Pharisaic understanding of the Law as a means of salvation and affirms
the Old Testament view of the Law as a revelation of God’s will for human
conduct," p. 189. Ernest Martin, and some ex-WCG ministers today, make
Paul into a law-breaking antinomian. But the Truth is that our new life in
Christ enables us to keep the Law, not as an external code (in the letter), but
as a loving response to God (in the spirit).
Prior
to reading this section of Sabbath Under Crossfire, I did not have a
well-grounded understanding of the place of Law in Christian life. The plain,
easy-to-understand terminology of Bacchiocchi, and his Biblical exegesis, is
extraordinary. If you know someone who has left the Church, maybe many years
ago, and has given up the Sabbath and most all the other distinctive teachings
we hold dear, perhaps they would consider re-examining the issue of the
Sabbath, God’s Law, and Pauline theology. Sabbath Under Crossfire could
be the best book on this subject ever written, and would make an ideal gift to
help someone regain their spiritual footing. Don’t forget yourself. Maybe you,
like me, did not really dig into the teaching of Law by Paul like Bacchiocchi
does in his excellent book.
Finally,
in Chapter 7, Sam Bacchiocchi shows that many Sunday-keepers are re-examining and
rediscovering the validity of the Sabbath. The Sabbath is not an hour in
worship services, but twenty-four hours of holy time spent with God, a divine
vacation from the turmoil and stress of daily life. While some Sunday-keepers
are more zealously keeping Sunday, the fact remains that Sunday is not the
Sabbath. You cannot keep cold water hot! As Ratzlaff and the Worldwide Church
of God are abandoning the Sabbath, the exciting news is that other Christians
are rediscovering the seventh day Sabbath, observing the literal day,
and learning more of its spiritual meaning.
Bishop
Steven Sanchez and the Wesley Synod of sixty-eight Methodist congregations in
North America have recently become Sabbath-keepers, claiming that John Wesley
originally kept the Sabbath and dietary laws. They observe the Sabbath from
Friday sunset till sunset Saturday, have Saturday Church services, and abstain
from work on the Sabbath. What great news!
Most
Messianic Jews, who accepted the Messiah through Protestant efforts and were thus
originally Sunday-keepers, have now become seventh-day Sabbatarians.
Sabbatarian Mennonites such as Daniel Leichty, are renewing the Anabaptist
heritage of Andreas Fischer and Oswald Glait by returning to the Sabbath. The
True Jesus Church, founded in 1917 in China (which may have descended from
earlier Nineteenth Century Chinese Sabbatarians) today has a million members in
China and 79,000 in the free world. Their basic tenet states, "The Sabbath
day, the seventh day of the week (Saturday), is a holy day, blessed and
sanctified by God. It is to be observed under the Lord’s grace for the
commemoration of God’s creation and redemption, and with the hope of eternal
rest."
What
is it going to be for you? Are you going to throw away the Sabbath like
Martin, Ratzlaff, and Tkach? Are you going to observe the Sabbath in a
legalistic, hard-hearted way, thinking that by so doing, you gain favor with
God and earn salvation, turning the Sabbath into a burden for your
children so that they will reject it when they become adults? Or instead, will
you, even as a Sabbath-keeper perhaps for many years, rediscover the joy of the
Sabbath, "a gift waiting to be unwrapped"? Will you allow God to
enrich your life with a larger measure of His divine presence, peace, and rest
that the Sabbath affords? And, most importantly, as Bacchiocchi concludes, will
you DO SOMETHING to spread the Sabbath delight to others? Will you share
your faith with others? Dr. Sam implores us to rid ourselves of spiritual
lethargy: "Many more can receive the gift of the Sabbath if those of us
who experience weekly the blessings of this divine gift will share with others
the benefits this day brings to our lives," page 283.
Dr.
Sam, now that you have helped me and others to become more thoroughly grounded
in New Covenant Law, take some time off with Anna and get those household
chores done!
Dr.
Samuele Bacchiocchi’s book, Sabbath Under Crossfire, retails for $20 per
copy. His other two classic Sabbath books are: From Sabbath to Sunday
and Divine Rest for Human Restlessness. It is a pity that perhaps
Bacchiocchi’s BEST book, Divine Rest for Human Restlessness, has
received so little publicity. A theological study of the philosophy and meaning
of the Sabbath, Divine Rest helps us understand the spiritual meaning of
the Sabbath, and how to keep it holy and wholly. You may order any one of these
three excellent Sabbath books for $15.00 postpaid from Giving & Sharing,
PO Box 100, Neck City, MO 64849. Or, order any two, or all three, for $12.50
each from the same.
—
written by Richard C. Nickels
Additional Articles:
Why the Sabbath
is Important, Part 1
When Does
Your Sabbath Begin?
Keeping
the Sabbath in a Non-Sabbath World
The
Sabbath and Ecology
How to
Keep the Sabbath Holy
The
Sabbath and Service
The Truth
About Sabbath and Sunday
The Good
News of the Sabbath
Sabbath
Facts
Jubilee
and the Sabbath Year
The
Sabbath: A Divisive Issue?
A
History of the Saturday Resurrection Doctrine Among Sabbath-Keepers
Chronology
of the Crucifixion and Resurrection According to Ancient Texts
A Look
at The Pope’s Pastoral Letter, "Dies Domini"
Sabbath
Quiz
Main
Holy Day Menu
Written
by: Richard C. Nickels
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