H - • -**%. v % tr ^ ►' 4* * l<3»- »°^. -J "o Vi9 V a?* . A£> '> r •ate* % <& ?■* >/ :J9f& a . \/ .*«*• -^ 4**- ^ * .l^* r- *o« : 0°* .-J&>>o „«©, "The SpBB^TH OF THE IBIiE. / BY S. H. NESBIT. D. D. Printed. PITTSBURGH : MYERS, SHINKLE& CO., PRINTERS, STATIONERS, BINDERS, 523 WOOD STREET. I89O. Dedication The battle on Sabbatism began yesterday ; goes on to-day ; will continue to-morrow. Over the vast theater of history where the conflict has raged — where the strife was hot — where the forces were in hand to hand encounter — I have wandered as a spec- tator ; and, in my own day, participated some little as an actor. The survey has dissipated some former personal hesitancies as to exact and abundant proofs of the ancient divine Sabbath and of the change of day. Three things have specially risen before me as great historic verities : Sabbatism, giving birth to the week, stands as the most notable miracle of ancient history ; its divine origin is one of the widest facts lying at the very sources of history ; and its change from Seventh to First clay, by the Lord of the Sabbath himself, is a clear New Testament teaching and institution. It may be that the thoughts, so help- ful to me along these lines, will be helpful also to others. In such faith and hope I send forth this volume. I dedicate it to all who are seeking Sabbath light, and who, in their place and day, are laboring to promote Sabbath sanctity. I invoke upon the work the blessing of the Divine Sabbath-Maker. Table of Contents The Sabbath of Creation. 5 The Sabbath of the Ancient World 16 The Sabbath of the Decalogue 36 Sabbatism of Gentile Nations 50 The Sabbath of Judaism, (Old Testament Period) 60 The Sabbath of Judaism, (The Dispersion) 68 Jesus and the Sabbath 88 The Bisen Jesus and the Sabbath 96 The Ascended Jesus and the Sabbath. 115 Sabbath of the Apostles ' 126 Sabbatism and the Apostolical Fathers 144 Sabbatism and the Church Fathers, (Second Century).. 153 The Sabbath in History 1C8 The Sabbath a Natural Law 178 Sunday and the State 188 Appendix 203 THE SABBATH OF CREATION. Hail to the day, which He, who made the heavens, Earth and their armies, sanctified and "blest, Perpetual memory of the Maker's rest." Bishop Manx, The divine Worker, who planned and built the heavens and the earth, and impressed upon them hues of beauty and laws of order, was the first Sabbatarian. So the text of Creation, as given by Moses, pronounces : " And on the seventh day, God ended his work which he had made; and he rested on the seventh day from all his work which he had made. And God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it, because that in it he had rested from all his woik which God created and made." Gen. 2 : 2-3. This is a graphic view, a pictorial illustration, of God when his Creation- work was ended ; when the heavens and the earth stood complete; and when man appeared as the most finished specimen of creative skill and power. I study to know and to make known the divine portrait which the words paint. God as a Sabbath Keeper, "He rested" The Divine Worker rested. He followed at the very outset, a two-fold line of action ; was a Worker; then a Sabbatarian. The Work and the Sabbatism are alike his actings. The Mosaic narrative is distinct and emphatic ; he rested when work was done ; he Sabbatized when creation stood complete. Whatever this may mean, 6 THE SABBATH OF CREATION. yonder it stands as a most remarkable fact in this Bible portrait of God. 1 God, like man, may need rest, may need Sabbatism. Creation-work did not indeed overtax and exhaust his en- ergies. It was easy for him to create ; to roll worlds from his omnipotent fingers; to people them with forms of life and beauty. It required but his fiat. " He spake, and it was done, he commanded, and it stood fast." a And he cer- tainly did not need rest, in the sense of utter cessation from activity — in the sense of idling — in the sense of dolessness. He is a pure spirit, and activity is as essentially an attri- bute of spirit, as inertia is of matter. He is lifted far above all possible sense of fatigue and weariness. " For the Lord God, the creator of heaven and earth, fainteth not neither is weary." b God's Sabbatism then is not a cessation from activity, but a change of activity ; not a cessation from work, but a change of work. His rest is not inaction. He suspended activity in but one direction. He quit creating. He quit creating as to our earth. The Mosaic record relates to our earth alone ; or, at farthest, to our solar system ; certainly not to the universe. God is still enriching the universe with new creations; launching starry worlds and their a Ps. 33 : 9. t> Isa. 40 : 28. 1 " From work Now resting, blessed and hallowed the seventh day, As resting on that day from all his work."— Milton. " Moses says that in just six days, the world and all that is therein was made ; and that the seventh day was a rest and a release from the labor of such operations ; whence it is that we celebrate a rest from our labors on that day, and call it the Sabbath, which word denotes rest in the Hebrew tongue." — Josephus. Aniiq., 1 : 1 : 1. " After the whole world had been completed according to the perfect nature of the number six, the Father hallowed the day following, the seventh, praising it and calling it holy. For that day is the festival, not of one city, nor of one country, but of all the earth ; a day which it is alone right to call the festival for all people, and the birth-day of the world." — Philo Jud^eus. Creation of the World, ch. 30. GOD AS A SABBATH KEEPER. 7 planetary retinues into the fields of infinite space ; and peopling them with new and various forms of life. But, as to our earth, his creation-work ended when man ap- peared. He did not cease from upholding and superin- tending terrestrial affairs — from supplying life to pulsing things — but he ceased from creative acts — he paused from world making. 1 He quit creating matter ; for not since has a particle of matter been added to, or taken from, our world. He quit creating vegetable life ; for the grasses, shrubs, plants, trees, already made, and made reproductive in kind, were suffi- cient to fill and beautify the earth in its ever-revolving seasons; and new vegetable creations were unnecessary. He quit creating animal life; for the beasts, birds, fishes, reptiles, and animalculse, already planted in being with power to propagate themselves, were sufficient to filJ and throng earth's hills, valleys, rivers, and oceans through time's appointed cycles ; and new animal creations were 1 " The rest however was not an entire cessation from activity. He had done creating, but he continued to sustain and bless his creatures." —Smith's Old Test. Hist., 21. " Cessation from previous occupation is all that is implied in the figure, and is quite compatible with continuous activity in other di- rections.'' — Pulpit Com. Gen. 2 : 3. " God rested from the work that he had made, not from all work. The word Sabbath means resting from the work immediately preced- ing, because now complete. We have a very incomplete idea of God's Sabbath, unless we realize that he therein entered upon a new and higher kind of work. And this constitutes the clearest and sublimest illustration of what the Sabbath is." — Bishop Warren. Sabbath Essays. " Since the beginning of this day no new creation has taken place* God rests as the Creator of the visible universe. The forces of nature- are in that admirable equilibrium, which we now behold, and which is necessary to our existence. No more mountains or continents are formed ; no new species of plants or animals are created. Nature goes- on steadily in its wonted path. All movement, all progress, has passed into the realm of mankind, which is now accomplishing its task." — Guyot, on Creation, as quoted in Butler's Bible Work on Gen. 2: 1-6.) 8 THE SABBATH OF CREATION. unnecessary. He quit creating intelligent life; for man; made in his own image, and made to reappear along the line of countless generations, was able to subdue and rule the earth and its living forms; and other intelligent crea- tions were unnecessary. The earth was complete and fully peopled. Other living forms were not needed. The work of creation ended. God rested. " He rested and was re- freshed." a Divine Work issued in Divine Sabbatism. "He rested on the seventh day." An outline view of God in creation-work and Sabbatizing, gives a picture of six work days and of one rest day ; or of six work periods and of one rest period. This is the Divine Model for work and rest. Six days or periods, were employed in creating, beautifying, vitalizing ; then followed a rest day or period The days of creation were, presumably, not days of twenty-four hours each, but great geologic periods. That would make God's Sabbath, not a twenty-four hour day, but a geologic Eon or age. This statement could hardly have a second side, but that the word " day " in the fourth commandment, is used equally of God and of man. And it is argued that if it means a period of twenty-four hours for man, it must also mean a like period for God. But this argument has in it the fallacy of attempting to mea- sure God by man — God's day by man's day. God's day may be longer than man's day ; precisely as God's wisdom, though expressed by the same word, is higher and broader than man's wisdom ; or as God's power, though expressed by the same word, is mightier and vaster than man's power. We blunder when we attempt to measure God by man ; God's day by man's day ; God's creation day by man's twenty -four hour day. U A thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday when it is past." b fi One day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day." c God's time periods are evidently different a Ex. 31 : 17. b Ps. 90:4, °IL Pet. 3: 8. GOD AS A SABBATH KEEPER. 9 from man's. The work done in each creation day bespeaks more than a twenty-four hour day—bespeaks a great geo- logic Eon. So too must be God's rest day — his Sabbath. It is a vast period. It began when world-making stood complete, and will only end with time. It embraces the whole human period. It is already six thousand years old ; and the divine Sabbatarian has not yet resumed crea- tion work upon our earth. He still rests. His seventh day bus not yet reached its evening. His Sabbath goes on. Time's Great clock is still ticking off its revolving hours. 1 But God's creation days and Sabbath are held by some to be literal twenty-four hour days. This theory makes him work six literal days in every weekly cycle, and rest the seventh. Man's Sabbath, in that case, cannot be an exact copy of God's, as to its place in the weekly cycle. For man was made on God's sixth creation day. God's seventh day — his Sabbath — would be man's second day of life and history. Now if man's Sabbath is on the same twenty-four hour day as God's, then it is on the second not lu The morning of the seventh clay is not followed by any evening. The day is still open. When the evening shall come the last hour of humanity will strike." — Guyot, as quoted in Butler's Bible Work on Gen. 2 : 1-6. " He has put forth no creative energy since he brought man into be- ing ; but at the end of the world, in the changes that shall produce a new heaven and a new earth, God will resume that creation activity, which is now in suspense. Till then he rests." — Dr. J. P. Thompson, Ditto. "When the last man has been born, and has arrived at the crisis of his destiny, then may we expect a new creation, another putting forth of the divine energy, to prepare the skies above and the earth beneath for a new stage of man's history, in which he will appear as a race no longer in process of development, but completed in number, confirmed in moral character, transformed in physical constitution, and so adapted to a new scene of existence." — Dr. J. G. Murphy, Ditto. " The six periods of creative and formation work were followed, ac- cording to the narrative, by a period of rest, which, it is implied, still continues." — Alden's Man. Cyc., Art. Cosmogony. 10 THE SABBATH OF CREATION. the seventh day in the weekly cycle of historic time. Or, if man's Sabbath is on the seventh day of his own weekly period, then it does not agree, as to the day of the week, with God's. The two Sabbaths — God's and man's — do not synchronize. They run parallel but do not unite in history. I avow my belief — it cannot in any case amount to knowledge — that the day originally given to man for Sabbatism was the seventh in the human weekly period — the seventh in historic time. What God does, and does, as an example for man, must be something in the very nature of God and of man. The divine life, as a revealed basis of human duty, is a supreme law. There is, there can be, no higher law. God's example is permanently authoritative. It reports something in the very constitution of God — of man — of the universe. It expresses a natural, necessary, universal law. " Be ye holy, for I am holy;" "Be ye therefore perfect, even as your father in heaven is perfect; " are en- actments of the highest and changeless law. It makes the good in God the basis of required good in man. This is the revealed law for world Sabbatism. Sabbatism in God is the basis of the Sabbatic law for man. What God appoints , as to the time of Sabbath-keeping, is also a revealed basis of human obligation, but has the character of mutability. Appointment, like example, is authoritative. But example has permanence; appoint- ment may change. Essences are eternal ; forms mutable. The appointment of any particular twenty-four hour day, in the human weekly period, belongs to mere forms, and is changeable at the will of the Law-Maker. Now on the theory that makes God's creation and rest days great geologic Eons, no known unit of time, as a day, a month, a year, is in the Divine Model. All that is fairly in it is : the septenary period ; with work in its first six- sevenths ; and rest in its last seventh. The unit of time GOD AS A SABBATH KEEPER. 11 for mau must be a divine selection and appointment. If a day be chosen as the unit, then the particular day is not of the very substance of Sabbatism — is not in the Divine Model — is of the nature of mere forms— is alterable at the will of the Sabbath Maker. On the theory that God's creation and rest days are literal twenty-four hour days, the divine example is an exact Model for human Sabbatism as to the time period. But, as seen, it leaves the particular day for Sabbath, in man's weekly period, open to doubt — clouded with uncer- tainty. The day must still be a divine selection and ap- pointment ; a changing form, if God will ; a shrining husk that, at His fiat, may disappear in a successor. On both theories, the Divine Model puts a seventh-of- days for holy time into the World's Constitution. But the particular day is an alterable By-Law. Its change would be only a change as to forms. He " blessed the seventh day." The creations of the six work clays were pronounced " good " and when mau appeared " very good ;" but the seventh day, God's rest day, was enriched with the divine blessing. 1 Sabbatism is thus crowned and sceptered with celestial benedictions. God's blessing distinguishes its day among days; differen- tiates it from secular or work days ; makes it a day select and privileged. It bestows a real good, invests the day with divine favor, and imparts a happifying endowment. What God blesses is blest indeed. He has put his bles- sing upon the Sabbath ; has spoken well of the day ; has lifted it above its fellows. The day of the Sabbath, be- cause of the divine blessing, is given a celestial elevation, where it crowns and overlooks the whole vale of time; its 1 Inanimate things are blessed of God. " He blesseth the habita- tion of the just," Prov. 3 : 33. *' Re shall bless thy bread and thy water," Ex. 23:25. "Thou blessest the springing thereof/' Ps. 65 : 10. 12 THE SABBATH OF CREATION. summit bathed in transfiguring light and glory ; its slopes peopled and picturesque with all the Beatitudes and Graces. He "sanctified" the seventh day. The six creation days were freighted with work — with formative words and deeds. The seventh was made sacred. It was appointed to be the holy of holies in the Temple of days. God sep- arated it from common and set it apart to holy uses. He hallowed it in himself. He ceased from creation work. He rested — is resting. And he fills his Sabbath cycle, not with idling, but with well-doing ; not with inactivity, but with works of necessity and mercy. He fills it with works of necessity ; upholding and governing all terrestrial things; keeping the currents of life, vegetable, animal, and intelli- gent, moving in ceaseless appearings and disappearings. He fills it with works of mercy; loving and redeeming sinful man ; and forever sending to him the all-helping Holy Spirit. Throughout all his Sabbath cycle, on our Sabbaths as on our secular days, he is the God of Provi- dence. "My Father worketh hitherto," says Jesus; and it is of the all-pitying and all-loving Father, in his divine Sabbath cycle, that he thus speaks. The Model Sabbata* rian makes works of necessity and mercy essential belong- ings of holy time. His Sabbath sanctity is as old as creation and as fresh and new as the last smile on the dimpled cheek of the little babe. This pen sketch of God as a Sabbatarian is now com- plete. Divine Sabbatism, as traced in the Mosaic record, has four, and but four, essential elements : rest ; a holy rest ; a blessed rest ; and a septenary rest, in the last seventh of the period. This is Sabbatism — its very sub- stance — its Alpha and Omega. It is a photograph of God as a Sabbath keeper. The day to be kept in man's weekly period is a subject of divine appointment. some suggestions remain. 13 Some Suggestions Remain. Divine Sabbatism lies imbedded in the Mosaic creation- narrative; a narrative entitled to be considered old even among the most ancient historic records; coming down to us indeed from the very sources of history. The docu- ment is as old as Moses, who lived and wrote ten centuries before Herodotus, " the father of history ; " six centuries before Hesiod, who sang of " Works and Days" when the world was yet young; and five centuries before Homer, whose "Iliad" and "Odyssey" were first chanted by the blind old minstrel among very primitive peoples. It is older than Moses; for the Genesis Sabbath-record was gathered by him, under divine supervision, from a still older document. That still older document did not come from Egypt; for Egypt had then no seventh-day Sabbatism. The prehistoric elements out of which the Genesis Sabbath arose were not Egyptian, but Chaldaic. The Sabbath came from Chaldea, the early home of Abraham, the now known cra- dle of the seventh-day Sabbath. Abraham grew up among Chaldaic Sabbath records — inscribed on baked clay tablets — transcripts themselves from still older Accadian Sabbath records — and he undoubtedly preserved and transmitted them to his posterity. They thus came to Moses. They came from the banks of the Euphrates rather than from the Nile. Their aspect is Assyrian, not Egyptian — Asiatic, not African. Our ideas as to the beginnings of the Bible need revision. The world has never been without inspired documents — an inspired Bible. Tts beginning records were pre-Mosaic and pre- Abrahamic. Moses, under spe- cial divine direction, gathered and reissued them in the book now known as Genesis. Thus the Mosaic Sabbath record is traceable back to the very remotest times. There is nothing that is known to be older. The oldest of all 14 THE SABBATH OF CREATION. known writings are the Mosaic Genesis records and the inscriptions of Accad. 1 In this most ancient document there appears the weekly cycle with the last day of the cycle as a day of rest. This is simply wonderful. A finished picture of the weekly period and seventh day Sabbatism lies yonder in a divine frame at the very sources of history. God, not li( The sexagesimal division of the circle, the signs of the Zodiac, a week of seven days, named as we now name them, and the seventh as a day of rest, are all Accadian." — Lib. Univ. Knowledge. Art. Chro- nology. " It was from the Semites of Babylonia — perhaps the Chaldeans of Ur — that both the name (Sabbath) and the observance passed to the Hebrew branch of the race, the tribe of Abraham." — Ragozin. The Story of Nations. — Chaldea, 256. " It (the 7 day week) shall be considered rather as an ancient Baby- lonian institution which the Hebrews brought with them from their stay in South Babylonia, at Ur Kasdim." — Schroder. The Cuneiform Ins. and the Old Test., 18. " He (Abraham) communicated to them arithmetic, and delivered to them the science of astronomy ; for before Abraham came into Egypt, they were unacquainted with those parts of learning ; for that science came from the Chaldeans into Egypt, and from thence to the Greeks also.— Joseph us. Antiq., 1 : 8 : 2. " In Europe the system of weeks and week days is comparatively of modern origin. It was not a Greek, nor a Boman, nor a Hindoo, but a Jewish or Babylonian invention." — Max Muller. Chips from a German Workshop, 5 : 116. " The week . . . The Egyptians were without it . . . The Hebrew week therefore cannot have been adopted from Egypt ; proba- bly both it and the Sabbath were used and observed by the patriarchs." — McClintock & Strong. Cyclo., Art. Chronol. " From recent discoveries of Assyriologists, it seems certain that the Assyrians, and through them probably the other Semitic nations, de- rived their week of seven days from the Accadians or early Turanian inhabitants of Babylonia, who also observe the seventh day as a day of rest."— Th* Inter. Cyclo., Art. Week, SOME SUGGESTIONS REMAIN. 15 man, is the builder of the week and its Sabbatism, even as he is the builder of the day, the month, the year. 1 In the Mosaic record, Sabbatism appears as a memorial of creation-work. A memorial is a monument that recalls and preserves the past ; a picture that we hang up to help us keep fresh some notable event. God's Sabbatism is monumental — a remembrancer — a memento. It makes creation-work memorable forever. Sabbatism is the first monument ever built, and God the first monument builder. He is a monument builder as well as a world builder and a man builder. And the monument built was to be worthy of the Builder; was to run parallel with the world and man; to antedate and survive pyramids and pillars of brass; and to move, changeless like himself, through the wastes and vicissitudes of Time and History. 1(< He who breaks the Sabbath denies creation." — Jewish Teacher. 11 The Sabbath was instituted from the beginning, and was designed to be of universal and perpetual obligation." — Hodge. Sys. Theol, 325. " The institution of the Sabbath is thus as old as creation ; and the fact of its high antiquity, its being coeval with the human race, dem- onstrates the universality and the permanence of its obligation. — Jami- son, Faussett & Brown. Com. Gen 2 : 2-3. "The first Scriptural notice of the weekly Sabbath, though it is not mentioned by name, is in Gen. 2 : 3, at the close of the record of the six days' creation. And hence it is frequently argued that the institu- tion is as old as mankind, and is consequently of universal concern and obligation."— Smith. Diet of the Bible. Art. Sabbath. " The seventh part of time is holy for man. God blessed it and hallowed it. Such is the deduction from the language of Gen. 2: 3." Lange. Com., Gen. 2:3. SABBATH OF THE ANCIENT WORLD. " Sweet is the toil of tranquil holy day, Hallowed e'en from the birth of time to rest; To purest joys and contemplations blest: The cares of this vain world put far away." Allen. The Sabbath is coeval with man, and, like Song and Marriage, is fragrant with thoughts and memories of Eden. Its holy light and unbroken quiet rested upon Adam and Eve when they came fresh from the creative hand of God. Its original institution, on the authority of the divine ex- ample, and by express lav/ spoken in Eden but long lost to history and the world, antedates sin and the expulsion of the primal man and woman from their Edenic home. I seek to show this high antiquity for the Sabbath ; that it has existed as a divine institution from the beginning ; that it was given to man as man ; and that its boundaries are therefore Time and Man. Proofs of such a seventh-day Sabbath from the very beginning abound in the remains of antiquity. The Sabbath Ante Sinaitic. The Fourth Commandment introduces and names the Sabbath, not as a new institution, but as already well- known in the world. Its opening word — "Remember" is not merely monitory, does not merely enjoin a future recollection of the precept, but also recalls something past and known. It sets forth the institution as a pre-existent one as having come down out of the past, the Sinaitic leg- islation merely confirming and investing it anew with divine authority. Moses, by this word, distinctly declares 16 THE SABBATH ANTE SINAITIC. 17 that lie is not beginning but only renewing the Sabbath ; that his is not an original publication of the institution, but only a re-enactment of an older law. Sinai then did not witness the first promulgation of the Sabbath law. It had a pre Sinaitic life and history. The Sabbath was known and observed among the Isra- elites before Sinai was reached. Sinai was reached in their third month out from Egypt, and was the fifth stage in their journeyings from the Red Sea. But in their second mouth out from Egypt, and in their third stage, from the sea, the camp was pitched in the Wilderness of Sin. There began the miracle of manna. The law for its coming and its gathering is Sabbatic. God, in sending it, was a Sabbatarian. He sent it six consecutive mornings ; a double portion on the sixth ; none on the seventh. Man, its gatherer, was also required to be a Sabbatarian. He was to gather it six consecutive mornings; a double por- tion on the sixth; none on the seventh. "Six days shall ye gather it/- says Moses, "but on the seventh which is the Sabbath, there shall be none." The day of no-manna is called " the rest of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord."* The Sabbatic name and institution are both here : and sab- bath-keeping too. And this is before Sinai was reached ; before the giving of the law ; before the Sabbath was made part and parcel of the Decalogue. The Sabbath, by auth- ority of Holy Scripture, is ante-Sinaitic. 1 Israel in Egypt knew such associated Sabbatic ideas as "seven days," " seventh day," " holy convocation," " feast unto the Lord," and "sacrifice unto the Lord" — phrases with which the people appeared to be familiar. And a Ex. 16 : 1 1-31. ia The celebration of the seventh day as a day consecrated to Jeho- vah is first mentioned after the Exodus from Egypt, and seems to have preceded the Sinaitic legislation, which merely confirmed and in- vested it with the highest authority." The Inter. Oyc, Art. Sabbath. 18 ' SABBATH OF THE ANCIENT WORLD. Pharoali, addressing Moses and Aai'on respecting the Israelites, said, using the Hebrew Sabbatic word: " Ye make them rest (Sabbatize) from their burdens." The Chaldaic language was at that time the Court language of Egypt, and of Western Asia — the language of diplomacy. There were in many places libraries and schools where it was taught. This explains its use by the Egyptian Pharoah — his use of the Hebrew Sabbatic word. 1 It throws a flood of light upon the scene. It shows the Israelites as Sabbatizing; Moses and Aaron restoring among them known but neglected Sabbath-keeping; and Pharoah denouncing their Sabbatizing as idling. The Sabbatic war is already on in history; an oppressed people seeking to keep the day ; greed and despotism wresting it from them. This interpretation— the very best possible — ■ establishes the Sabbath as known and observed by the Israelites in Egypt. The name was there. The Sabbath- keeping people were there. This broad Sabbatic trace antedates the Decalogue and Sinai. The Sabbath Ante Mosaic. The Septenary number is crowned above all other num- bers in the Bible. It is used over three hundred times. The oldest Bible writings — the ante-Mosaic — are specially 1 Prof. A. H. Sayce in a paper on The Tel-el-Amarno Tablets, read July 1, 1839, before the Victoria Institute, London, says: "From them we learn that in the fifteenth century before our era — a century before the Exodus — active literary intercourse was going on through- out the civilized world of Western Asia, between Babylon and Egypt and the smaller states of Palestine, of Syria, of Mesopotamia, and even of Eastern Kappadokia. And this intercourse was carried on by means of the Babylonian language. This implies that all over the civilized East there were libraries and schools where the Babylonian language and literature were taught and learned." u That the Babylonian was the language of diplomacy and society in the fifteenth century B. C, all over the civilized East, is the great- est of archaeological surprises." — Phof. Taylor. Andover Rev., Feb. 1890, p. 221. THE SABBATH ANTE MOSAIC. 19 full of the word in some of its forms. We are told of the " sevenfold " vengeance to be visited on any one slaying Cain. We are told how things were taken into the ark in classes of " sevens." We are twice told of " the seven ewe lambs" given as a token of the covenant between Abraham and Abimelech. We are twice told how Ja- cob served "seven years" for Rachel, and then "seven other years " for flocks and herds. And we are told how Pharoah dreamed, and saw "seven well-favored" then "seven ill-favored" kine ; "seven rank and full ears" then "seven thin ears" of corn ; and that each class represented " seven years." These are samples of the Bible use of the word in ante-Mosaic times and writings. Its use runs clear back through Noah to Cain and Abel. 1 Reverence for the septenary number also perpetually appears in the most ancient records of all earliest peoples. 1 Special interest belongs to certain numbers — always has — always will. They are used as symbols of important ideas. Here are samples : Three is the mystical number : Man's trinity of natures, body, mind^ soul ; God's trinity of substances, Father, Son, Holy Ghost ; and Time's trinity of parts, past, present, future, or the Was, the Is, and the Will Be. Four is the world number : Our globe's four quarters, East, West, North, South ; and the year's four seasons, Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter. Twelve, the product of three and four, seems a symbol of arrange- ments to meet world needs. Ishmael had twelve princes ; Jacob twelve sons and tribes; and Christ twelve Apostles. The New Jerusalem has twelve gates, and its temple twelve foundations. This number is written on the sky, from the earliest times, in the twelve signs of the Zodiac ; and it is incorporated in all chronologies in the twelve months of the year. Seven, the sum of three and four, is the sacred number. It ranges, as seen above, widely through the Bible and in all primitive litera- ture. Its impress is upon nature as welJ. The rainbow, God's chosen emblem of promised good, is painted on the sky in seven colors. Seven is the symbol of sufficiency. It is called the number of per- fection. The word in Hebrew expresses fullness, completion. A sacred character has attached to it from the earliest times. 20 SABBATH OF THE ANCIENT WORLD. It was among very primitive peoples that the tales began of the " Seven Sages/' the " Seven Wise Men/' the " Seven Masters/' and the " Seven Wonders of the World." No reliable astronomic histories go back so far as to tell us when men first began to speak of the " seven planets " and the " seven stars " in the Pleiades. The Indian cosmogony speaks of the "seven worlds/' the "seven continents/' and the "seven seas. Among the ear- liest Greeks "seven" Was sacred to Apollo and Dionysius. Homer sings of the "seven tripods" and the " seven maids " that Agamemnon offered to Achilles for the return of Briseis. a " With the desire to purify myself," savs one of the ancients, "I bathe in the sea, v s */ 7 7 dipping my head seven times in the waves ; for this num- ber, as the divine Pythagoras tells us, is the proper one in all matters of religion. " b These samples, outside of the Abrahamic famity/show the septenary word in wide use as far back as the lights of history and tradition take us. Now it is impossible to explain this high antiquity and wide currency of the septenary number — an associate Sab- batic idea — on any theory that does not trace it back to God's seventh day rest, when his creation work was ended. The creation " seven/' completing divine work and rest, is its only fairly known source and archetype. This accounts for its origin and prevalence, and nothing else does. The primeval origin of the Sabbath is suggested and confirmed by the early and world-wide sacredness of the number. The septenary division of time — the week — seven days — has an equally venerable antiquity and currency. It was, after day and night, the earliest known of all time- markers — indeed a primal and universal time-marker. Primitive Hebrews and Arabians found it in the world and used it. Joseph appointed " seven days of mourning " a Iliad 19:1s. 243-6. b Cunningham Geike, " Oriental Mode of Covenanting" S. S. Times, •Oct. or Nov., 1888. THE SABBATH ANTE MOSAIC. 21 for Jacob. " Fulfill ye her week," said Laban to Jacob, enjoining upon him seven years' service for Rachel. Job's three friends sat down in silence with him " seven days and seven nights." And Noah, in the ark, twice stayed " seven days" before sending forth his exploring dove. Thus in the Bible, the weekly period, always implying Sab- batism, is pre-Mosaic, pre-Abrahamic, coeval with Noah. l The week was indeed known and of world-wide use among all primitive peoples. It is seen, and in its purest form, at their very beginnings. The dwellers in the earli- est seats of mankind— -Accadians, Assyrians, Babylonians — had the week and the seventh-day Sabbath. Marvelous and convincing is the testimony of their sculptures and in- scriptions. They are as so many witnesses, risen from the 1 " The week is perhaps the mo*t ancient and incontestable monu- ment of human knowledge." — Laplace (Euvres, torn, vi, liv. i, ch. 3. '* The septenary arrangement of days was in use among the orientals from the remotest antiquity." Scaliger. Be Emend. Temp. lib. i. " The week, whether a period of seven days, or a quarter of the month, was of common use in antiquity." — McClintock & Strong, Cyclo., Art. Chronol. " The week .... has been employed from time immemorial in almost all eastern countries." — Cycl. Brit., Art. Calendar. "We have reason to believe that the institution of that short period of seven days, called a week, was the first step taken by mankind in di- viding and measuring their time. We find from time immemorial, the use of this period among all nations without any variation in the form of it. The Israelites, Assyrians, Egyptians, Indians, Arabians, and, in a word, all the nations of the East have in all ages made use of a week, consisting of seven days." — President de Goguet, The Origin of Laws, (1761,) 1 : 230. " From time whereof the memory of man, and history and mythol- ogy, run not to the contrary, the division of time into the week of seven days has been almost the universal law. It prevailed among peoples far removed from each other, and remote from as well as near to the Asiatic center whence the nations of men radiated — among Persians, Chaldeans, Egyptians, Hindoos, the ancient Chinese on the farthermost East, and the Scandinavians on the Northwest. In most of these instances it is certain that the week revolved on a day of rest." Rfv. W. W. Atterbury. Sabbath Essays. 22 SABBATH OF THE ANCIENT WORLD. dead. Their testimony, going back to the utmost borders of Historic Chaos, is final — conclusive — cannot be gainsaid — or resisted. 1 Egypt, like her own Sphinx in the Nile Valley, keeps stern watch and guard over her most distant life and cus- toms. Her very ancient eras are fabulous. Mists are everywhere ; and it is only through occasional rifts that we catch glimpses of first things. In the earliest hieroglyphs, antedating perhaps the pyramid kings, usually located by the critics in Manetho's Fourth Dynasty, appears the rev- ered number seven ; the septenary cycle or week, with its name given as uk, perhaps the original of our work week; and the seventh day as a day of rest. Thus beyond the certainly known historic dates, there appear in Egypt traces of the weekly period and of Sabbatism. 2 1 " The sacred Babylonian seven and seven-day week." — George Smith. Chaldean A cc. of Creation, 308. "The number seven was a sacred number among the Accadians, who invented the week of seven days, and kept a seventh day Sab- bath." — Geo. Smith. Assyrian Discoveries, 56-7. " They (the Chaldeans) appear to have used the month of 30 days, and the year of 12 months, from immemorial antiquity, as also the week of 7 days, the nomenclature of which from the 7 chief heavenly bodies, coincides with the seven stages of the temple- towers, and seems on other grounds also to have been invented by them." — P.Smith. Anc. Hist, of the East, 401. 2 u Rest being enjoined by the Egyptian priests on the seventh day." — Proctor. The Great Pryamid, 246. 44 That the Egyptians dedicated the seventh day of the week to Sat- urn, is certain. And it is presumable this day was a day of rest in Egypt."— The Great Pyramid, 266. " Weeks are mentioned in company with months in some of the oldest hieroglyphs; and, curiously enough, they are called uk, which may be the origin of our Anglo-Saxon word." — Trevor. Anc. Egypt, 168-9. "In Egypt, where the number seven was held in great reverence ; and it is more probable that it had prevailed there in ancient times, than that it had been introduced subsequently to the age of Herodotus." — John Kenrick. Anc. Egypt, 1 : 283. THE SABBATH ANTE MOSAIC. 23 Hindoo literary remains are abundant to very distant times. We have trustworthy knowledge of their primi- tive institutions in the Puranic, the Epic, and the Vedic periods. The still older literature has traces of the sacred seven — of the weekly period — and of Sabbatism. These traces appear only at the most distant sources of history and in the mythical period. 1 Chinese civilization has been peculiar and philosophic, and without Sabbatism, from the time of Confucius and Lao-tse. But the still older and simpler forms of religion reveal wide traces of the seven day period, ending in a day of rest and sacrificial worship. 2 1 Prof. Wilson on " Hindoo Festivals." — " Every seventh day is con- sidered sacred." — Jour, of the Royal Asiatic Soc. The god Vishnu to Satyavrata : "In seven days all creatures .... shall be destroyed by a deluge .... Together with seven holy men . . . enter the ark without fear After seven days the floods descended and drowned the world." — Sir Wm, Jones. Asiatic Researches, 2 : 116-17. Ancient Hindoo Prayers: "Mother of all creatures, Saptami, who art one with the lords of the seven courses and the seven mystic words." "Glory to thee, who delighteth in the seven chariots drawn by the seven steeds, the illuminators of the seven worlds. Glory to thee on the seven lunar days." .... "It is impossible to avoid inferring from the general character of the prayers and observance, and the sanctity evidently attached to the recurring seventh day, some con- nection with the Sabbath, or the seventh of the Hebrew Heptameron." H. H. Wilson's Works, 2 : 201. " When the great king of glory, on the Sabbath day, (uposatha,) on the day of the full moon, had purified himself, and had gone up in the upper story of his palace to keep the sacred day." Notes 3. — Uposatha, a weekly sacred day : being full-moon day, new moon day, and two equidistant intermediate days." — Sacred Books of the East, 12 : 251, 254. " In Buddhism the same word (uposatha) has come to denote a Sab- bath, observed on the full moon, on the day when there is no moon, and on the two days which are eighth from the full and new moon re- spectively." — Cycl. Brit, Art. Sabbath; Childer's Pali. Diet., 535; Kern, Buddhismus, 8, Ger. trans. ; Maharagga, 2 : 1 : 1. 2 " The Emperor offered sacrifices to the Superior Unity, Tog-y, every seven days." — Annals of Sec. Masico. Quoted from Proudhon. 24 SABBATH OF THE ANCIENT WORLD. The historic Greek had the decade, not the hebdomad. But earlier Greek writers, as Linus, Homer, Hesiod, and Pythagoras, mention and eulogize the seventh day and its sacred character. These traces of the week and of an as- sociated rest day, belong to the most distant Greece — to the golden age of the poets — when religion was simple in its forms — and when great sanctity attached to temples and festivals. 1 Thus the week — the seven day period associated with Sabbatism — stands out clearly in the most ancient and silent deserts of time. It appears as a primitive and universal institution ; as an incontestable monument of the very earliest civilization ; as at its very best in the earliest times. Now this division of time into weeks — an arbitrary not a natural arrangement like the day, the month, the year— could not have been an invention of prim- itive man. It is not a natural division of time, nor yet an accident in human affairs. It must have arisen from some remarkable event in history — and at its very beginning. It is a primitive tradition springing from some divine Genesis " All the ancient Emperors on the seventh day, called the Great Day, caused the doors of houses to be closed. No business was done that day, and the magistrates judged no case." — Chin King. Quoted from Proudhon. 1 "By the same arm my seven brave brothers fell." — Iliad 6 : 421. "Seven golden talents to perfection wrought," Ulysses in cave of Polyphemus " But now arose A well-towered city, by seven golden gates enclosed." — Hesiod. Shield of Hercules. " Early Athens had to send 7 youths and 7 maidens yearly to Crete to be devoured by the Minotaur." — Smith. Hist. Greece, 6. " It was the gods themselves who communicated the fact that the septenary, an intelligent number, existed after the ternary. Orpheus taught it as well as the Pythogoreans."— Lenormant. The Beginnings of History, 536. '• The seventh day is observed among pious persons, The seventh day is the festival of the world's nativity; The seventh day was kept by our forefathers, The seventh day is the most perfect of days." —Linus, 10 cent, B. C. Quoted by Eusebius, Evan. Prcep., 3 : 13. THE SABBATH ANTE MOSAIC. 25 narrative. It is impossible, indeed, to explain its high antiquity, its wide prevalence, its deep impression upon emerging nations, on any theory that does not trace it back to God's " seven days " of work and rest. It was this that started the weekly period on its travels among mankind. This is its only sufficient source and authority. It can have no other. 1 The Book of Job twice speaks of "a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord." That must have been an appointed day, a fixed day, an understood day, in order to the assembling of the sons of God at the same time and place. Their name is odorous of saintship; and their assembling to present themselves before the Lord is an obvious act of worship — an act of social or public worship. Worship and an appointed day for worship are suggestive of Sabbatism — are legible traces of an ancient Arabian Sabbath. Noah, on quitting the ark, built an altar and offered burnt offerings ; and the Lord smelled "a sweet savor" — 111 Seven natural days constituted a week. This division of time appears to have been observed by all nations, probably from the beginning of the world ; and it originated with God himself." — Cot- tage Bible, 1:10. 11 We find from time immemorial the knowledge of the week of seven days among all nations — Egyptians, Arabians, Indians — in a word all the nations of the east have in all ages made use of this week of seven days for which it is difficult to account without admitting that this knowledge was derived from the common ancestors of the human race." — Kittys Cycl. of Bib. Lit., Art. Sabbath. " The measuring of time by day and night is pointed out to the common sense of mankind by the diurnal course of the sun. Lunar months and solar years are equally obvious to all rational creatures ; so that the reason why time is computed by days, months, and years, is readily given. But how the division of time into weeks of seven days, and this from the beginning, came to obtain universally among mankind, no man can account for, without having respect to some im- pressions on the minds of men from the constitution and laws of nature, with the tradition of a Sabbatical rest from the foundation of the world."— Cycl Eel Knowl, 10 : 39. 26 SABBATH OF THE ANCIENT WORLD. marginal reading, "savor of rest." Sacrificial worship and rest — Sabbatic elements — here go together, and are traces of an ancient Sabbath. For this is that Noah who gathered clean animals into the ark by " sevens" and who observed " seven day " periods in sending forth his ex- ploring dove. 1 4 Worship and sacrifice are as old as man. Cain and Abel brought an offering unto the Lord " in process of time" — marginal reading, " in the end of days." In the end of what days? Man was then but newly created and placed upon the earth. Time divisions, the growth of study and experience, could not as yet have been formed. But in some way he knew creation's story ; its six work days ; its seventh day rest. He knew this for it is part of his transmitted history. To him then the end of days, as connected with offerings unto the Lord, would be the end of week days — the end of secular or work days — giving way to the altar and the sacrifice — to Sabbath rest and worship. This " offering unto the Lord " then is a large and plain tr#'ce of "an ante-diluvian Sabbath. Thus the ante-Mosaic world had in it all the Sabbatic ele- ments: rest; a sacred rest, as the sons of God appearing before the Lord; a blessed rest, as Noah's thank-offering on quitting the ark; and a septenary rest, as Cain and Abel's offering in the end of days. This establishes, by indirec- tion, a pre-Mosaic Sabbath, a pre-Abrahamic Sabbath, an ante-diluvian Sabbath. The proofs, though but circum- stantial, are wholly one-sided. There is nothing on the other side, nothing to oppose them — to weaken them — to make them doubtful. 144 Noah, with all his family, and ail the animals, were but seven days embarking; which seems to intimate the division of time into weeks, and the observance of a Sabbath." — Dr. Wm. Paiton. Cottage Bible. Com. on Gen. 7. THE ASSYRIAN, BABYLONIAN SABBATH. 27 The Assyrian, Babylonian, Accadian Sabbath. The Sabbath of the ancient world is in the Cuneiform inscriptions, as well as in the Mosaic records. This story had perished ; but one of its lost chapters has been recov- ered. The pick and shovel have broken the long silence of the undreaming dust. Oriental researches are turning up before us the fleshless faces of the first men who walked the earth after the flood ; are exhuming records and monuments of their taste and genius ; are recovering their histories, teachings, beliefs. Long buried cities are yielding their mighty secrets. At Kouyunjik, the ancient Nineveh, the pick and shovel laid bare, in the palace of Sennacherib, two " Chambers of Records/' Their floors were covered, a foot deep with tablets of baked clay, having inscribed upon them histories and legends of the earliest times— early literature of Chaldea — of Accad. Like records have been found at other places, as at Babylon, at Calneh, and at Erech, the oldest of all cities. The "historic tablets " contain very wonderful Sabbatic records. One — "A Religious Calendar of the Assyrians " — forbids work every seventh day and enjoins rest and de- votion. 1 Another — "A Babylonian Astronomic Record " ia In the year 1869 I discovered, among other things, a curious religious calendar of the Assyrians, in which every month is divided into four weeks, and the seventh days, or Sabbaths, are marked out as days in which no work should be undertaken." — Assyrian UiscoveiHes, Geo. Smith, 12. Assyrian Calendar. Translated by Kev. A. H. Sayce. The rubric of the 14th day, the 21st day, and the 28th day is the same as for the 7th day, here given : The seventh day. A feast of Merodach and Zir-Panitu— A festival. A Sabbath. The Prince of many nations The flesh of birds and cooked fruit eats not. The garments of his body he changes not. White robes he puts not on. Sacrifices he offers not. The King in his Chariot rides not. In royal fashion he legislates not. A place of garrison the General (by word ol mouth) appoints not. Medicine for his sickness of body he applies not. To make a sacred spot it is suitable. In the night in the presence of Merodach and Istar The king his offering makes. Sacrifices he offers. Raising his hand the high place of the god he worships. — Records of the Past, vol. 7, pp. 157-170. 28 SABBATH OF THE ANCIENT WORLD. — divides the month (lunar) into septenary periods, and ends each period with a day of rest. The day is, in substance, the Sabbath of Moses. It has also the Mosaic name; is called Sabatu — u a day of rest for the heart, 1 This historic Sabbath, exhumed by Assyriologists, reaches back to the earliest Assyrians, and beyond them to the Accadians, the eldest blood of earth after the flood. Sab- batic ideas, institutions, and practices are thus historic verities back fairly to Noah. The " legendary tablets " are all very old. The " Gen- esis Legends" — " the story of beginnings " — are assigned, by that eminent Oriental scholar, George Smith, to two thousand years before Christ; and as copies then, by As- syrian scribes, of still older Accadian documents. This makes them five centuries older than Moses, a century older than Abraham, and still reaching indefinitely beyond. Their " story of beginnings " is in very fair agreement with the Mosaic narrative. The Accadian Sabbath is es- sentially the same as the Mosaic Sabbath ; and the " Genesis Legends " trace the institution to the divine appointment. 1 Babylonian Astronomical Tablet, compiled for Sargon, King of Agane, in the sixteenth century before Christ. " The moon a rest — on the 7th day, the 14th day, the 21st day, the 28th day — causes." — Trans, of So. of Archce., vol. 3, p. 145. " The very word Sabatn, or Sabbath, was used by the Assyrians, and a bilingual tablet explains it as a day of rest for the heart." — The Chat. Ac. of Crea. Geo. Smith, p. 308. " The Sabbath was known to the Babylonians and Assyrians . . . Like the Hebrew Sabbath it was observed every seventh day. — Ribbert Lectures, 1887. Sayce, 82. "Its recurrence every seventh day — its character, 'a day of rest for the heart' — its very name 'Sabatu' — are given in a way which leaves but little to be desired, when taken in connection with other testi- mony, so abundant in our hands from other sources." — The Ptimitive Sabbath Restored by Christ. " The week of seven days was in use from an early period, indeed, the names which we still give to the days can be traced to ancient Babylonia ; and the seventh day was one of sulum, or rest." — EncycL Brit., Art. Babylonia. THE ASSYRIAN, BABYLONIAN SABBATH. 29 Thus the Mosaic and the Cuneiform records agree as to the origin and import of the Sabbath, and as to its high antiquity. 1 Proofs, in abridged form, of an ancient Sabbath — a patriarchal Sabbath— an ante-diluvian Sabbath — are now before the reader. The proofs, now dim and shadowy, anon plain and luminous, are gathered from the remains of the earliest peoples, as far back as the lights of begin- ning histories take us. They had the septenary number, an associate Sabbatic idea, appearing everywhere in the grey mists of antiquity. They had the weekly period, also an associate Sabbatic idea, and an incontestable monument of history at its very sources. They had wor- ship, and an appointed day for worship. They had the Sabbath itself ; Hebrews had ; Babylonians and Assyrians had ; and Accadians, their remotest known predecessors, had. They had its name. They had its very substance. They were Sabbath keepers. And the primal human Sab- bath was a fair copy of God's creation Sabbath. An ancient Sabbath, in presence of Assyrian and Accadian records supplementing the Mosaic recoi*ds, ceases to be de- batable ground. It is a verity to the uttermost line of historic vision — and of legendary vision. Exact history, : The fifth tablet is much mutilated. The first part alone remains perfect. The following is an extract: 11 He constructed dwellings for the great gods. He fixed up constellations, whose figures were like animals. He made the year. Into four quarters he divided it. Twelve months he established, with their constellations, three and three, And for the days of the year he appointed festivals. ...... • . • • • In the center he placed luminaries. The moon he appointed to rule the night, And to wander through the night until the dawn of day. Every month without tail he made holy assembly days. In the beginning of the month, at the rising of the night, It shot forth its horns to illuminate the heavens. On the seventh day he appointed a holy day, And to cease from all ivork he commanded. —Records of the Past, vol. 9, p. 117. 30 SABBATH OF THE ANCIENT WORLD. with legendary supplements, proclaims and verifies the in- stitution as existing from the beginning. Some Conclusions Follow. • Sabbatism, with its weekly period, is traced by some thinkers, to lunar changes, because found in association with such changes in Babylonia. The theory is incredible — bristles with impossibilities. New moon attracts notice; full moon also ; but not the quarters ; they are vague and inconspicuous. Moon phases might therefore suggest a dual but hardly a quaternion division of the lunar month. Then the seven-day week is not an aliquot part of the lunar month ; is not an exact fourth ; is less than a fourth. The moon's phases are not exact seven-day cycles. How could they give birth to such cycles? 1 If the week with its Sabbatism was born of lunar changes, it would not only have been universal in beginning histories, as it was; 1 The unfitness of the week as an astronomical measure of time." — Pkoctor. The Great Pyramid, 240. "The ancient Hebrews, who had the week and the Sabbath long be- fore they had any acquaintance with the planetary science of the Babylonian priests." — CycL Brit, Art. Sabbath. "The week. * * * As it forms neither an aliquot part of the year nor of the lunar month, those who reject the Mosaic recital will be at a loss, as Delambro remarks, to assign to it an origin having much semblance of probability." — CycL Brit., Art. Calendar. " That the week should be conditioned by the planets seems barely credible. It was not until after the people had got the seven days, that they began to call them after the seven planets. The number seven is the only bond of connection between them. Doubtless the week is older than the names of the days." — Weklhausen. History of Israel, 113. Edinburg, 1885. "As the Sabbath corresponds with no cycle or natural division of time, it must have been impossible for any man, or number of men, to single out one day and set it apart authoritatively. Man could neither have decided rightly the proportion of time to be set apart, nor have guarded the sanctity of the day by penalties. If the division of time into weeks were wholly unknown, it would be impossible that it should be introduced bv man." — Butler's Bible Work, Gen. 2: 1-6. SOME CONCLUSIONS FOLLOW. 31 but it would have remained in all history, as it has not; and it would not have disappeared in nundince and decades, as it widely did. The association of the week with lunar changes was the later and corrupt, not the earlier and purer record. Mosaic Sabbatisra has no society whatever with lunar. changes. The oracles of the Hebrews always ascribe the institution to God. The Accadian " legendary" Sab- bath also appears as a divine appointment. The fifth " Creation Tablet " says : u On the seventh day he appointed a holy day ; And to cease from all work he commanded." 1 Such testimonies are final. History and legendary lore alike declare, from the most distant witness box, that the week originated from religious, not from astronomical in- fluences ; that the Sabbath was born of God, not of the moon. It is really wild, unhistorical, unphilosophical to trace the institution to lunar changes. The earliest known histories and legends name the World-Maker, not the moon, as its author. They report the seventh-day used as sacred time from the very beginning, and so authenticate its divine origin. Sabbatism, with its weekly period, is regarded by other thinkers as a human contrivance. The assumption is with- out reason, even as it is in violent conflict with history and legendary lore. The Sabbath, so proverbial among the earliest peoples — a primitive and universal institution — could not be of man. It is such an institution as the best man could not make, if he would; and as the worst man would not make, if he could. The weekly period of six 1 "The last lines of the fifth tablet are intensely interesting, as con- taining probably the oldest monumental evidence of the institution of the Sabbath, and that, too, almost in the very words of Genesis. It is here affirmed, moreover, that the institution of the Sabbath was coeval with the creation. We find the same fact mentioned on other cunei- form inscriptions." — Prof. J. L. Porter. The Prince. Rev., July, 1878, p. 10. 32 SABBATH OF THE ANCIENT WORLD. work days and one rest day — without any exact archetype in nature — was not possible to human invention. To de- termine originally the due proportion that work should have to rest was above his wisdom ; and to fit holy time into the framework of society above his power. He has not the genius to frame, nor the authority to appoint, a natural, universal, and unchangeable institution, such as the Sabbath is. The institution is not of man. 1 It is of divine order and appointment. It stands in history and legend, not as a human discovery, but as a revelation from God himself. It is not possible in reason to think other- wise of the weekly day of hallowed rest, that is incorpor- ated in our very nature, and enters into the World-Maker's plan of the universe. Sabbatism is not an evolution, like written language, like science, like art. It is not an unfolding from the sim- ple to the complex, from the lower to the higher and better, 2 like a growth from seed or bulb to plant, and flower, and fruit. The world has not reached its Sabbatism by steps. The institution rises up at once — starts off immediately. It stands out in complete form at the very sources of his- tory ; appearing there at its very best; as perfect as it is to-day. It is as ful It featured in the Cosmogony as in the 1 " Many vain conjectures have been formed concerning the reasons and motives which determined all mankind to agree to this primitive division of their time. Nothing but tradition, concerning the time employed in the creation of the world could give rise to this universal, immemorial practice." — President de Goguet. The Origin of Laws (1761), vol. 1, p. 230. lt The gods, pitying the laborious race of men, have ordained for it remission from labor, the return of feast days, in honor of the gods." —Plato. De. Leg., 2:1. 2 u The alternation of working and resting days appeared, even to the ancients, as something so primeval in its origin, so indispensable, and so closely connected with religion, that they perceived in it, not an innovation of human cleverness, but a divine ordinance." — Prof. Ernst Curtius. Alterthum and Gegenwert, Berlin, 1875, p. 148. SOME CONCLUSIONS FOLLOW. 33 Legislation of the Hebrew — in the Cosmogony as in the Legislation of the Accadian. It is not an Evolution but a Revelation. It is a divine Mercury springing full- grown from the head and brain of our divine Jupiter. Its perfection in the beginning and always makes it, like the Ancient of days, " the same yesterday, to-day, and for- ever " — makes it God-born. The great temple of our world, reared, roofed, and complete, was at last peopled with its intelligent Worker and Worshiper. Sabbatism sprang from God — from his example — from his appointment — establishing a septenary rest day for all time. The Sabbath of God gave birth to the Sabbath of man. Out of the Creator's rest and appointment has sprung all the Sabbatism in the world. Thinkers, in whose creed God, the Creator, gave to newly- formed man no instruction as to how he should live, deal unnaturally with the question. They make him an un- natural father. The Bible, whose God walks in Eden, communes with the primal man and woman, instructs them, and appoints them duties, is a better teacher. The " Genesis Legends " of Accad, whose World-maker addresses 'his late-born creatures, teaches them duties and privileges, and points out the glory of their state, are a better teacher. This was fitting and natural. The high- est reason — the reason of the heart — endorses it. God was man's first teacher, and the law for holy time must have been one of his themes and appointments. His creation Sabbath would not be kept secret. It would be part of the creation narrative rehearsed by divine lips to the first man. It must have been so. There must have been some unfolding of the divine plan. Otherwise the institution of six days work and one day rest — impossible to human invention — never would have appeared in human history. But it is in history — history the most ancient — history at its very fountains. The institution 34 SABBATH OF THE ANCIENT WORLD. was therefore God-proclaimed as well as God-born. It was revealed to Adam. It was commanded to be kept. It wears upon its face in history such primal celestial credentials. A primeval revelation, announcing the truth to the first man., made it the property of all early men. 1 From Eden — from the era of primeval innocency — issued two hallowed institutions, surviving the wreckage of the Fall and all the wastes of Time. They are Sabba- tism and Marriage; unchanged and changeless divine appointments; meeting deep and abiding human needs. They rival and parallel each other in the good they do. One builds the home ; the other the church ; both society. Neither can be abrogated without involving human affairs in social and moral disorder. Near the gates of Eden — within and without — are glimpses of that divine trinity of social regenerators: the Day, the Word, and the Temple ; or the Sabbath, the Bible, and the Church. Eden had the Sabbath : its bowers heard the first Word of Promise : and, imme- diately outside its gates, appears the Tent of Meeting — Cain and Abel building its altar, and offering sacrifice. These have been steadier lights in the world than any 1U In the state of innocence, God gave the law of the Sabbath." — McClintock & Strong. Cycl, Art. Law. " The antiquity of the division of time into weeks is so great, its observance so widespread, and it occupies so important a place in sacred things, that it has been very generally dated from the creation of man, who was told from the very first to divide his time on the model of the Creator's order of working and resting. The week and the Sabbath are, if this be so, as old as man himself; and we need not seek for reasons, either in the human mind, or the facts with which :hat mind comes in contact, for the adoption of such a division cf time, since it is to be referred neither to man's thoughts, nor to man's will. A purely theological ground is thus established for the week, and for the sacredness of the seventh day." — Smith's Diet, of Bible, Art. Week. SOME CONCLUSIONS FOLLOW. 35 incandescent torches lighted from the King of Day. To the more than orphaned exiles from Eden, it was no light alleviation of their lot to have labor— an entailment of sin— suspended one day in seven ; to have the Word of Promise overarching their sky as a rainbow of hope ; and to have the Tent of Meeting, with its altar and sacrifice, as a help and means of return to God. With such divine equipments, mankind, fallen, began its mighty march along the shores of Time and History. SABBATH OF THE DECALOGUE. " The cheerful Sabbath bells, wherever heard, Strike pleasant on the sense, most like the voice Of one who trom the far off hills proclaims Tidings of good to Zion."— Charles Lamb. The Sabbath, born of the divine example and appoint- ment at creation, known and observed in the ancient world, was re-enacted by express law al Sinai. Its text, as written by the finger of God on one of the two tables of stone given to Moses, stood then and will forever stand in words of which these are a fair translation : Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labor and do all thy work ; but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God ; in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy man servant, nor thy maid servant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates ; for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day ; Wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and hallowed it."— Ex. 20 : 8-11. The Creation Sabbath is the day on its God-ward side; the Fourth Commandment Sabbath, the day on its man- ward side. The Sabbath for man is the exact counterpart of the Sabbath for God ; Godward it is appointed ; man- ward it is to be observed. The Fourth Commandment gives a graphic view — a pictorial illustration — of man in his relation to the Sabbath. I seek to know and to make known the Sabbath portrait that it paints of man. A Best Day; No Work. The Commandment forbids Sabbath worh "In it thou shalt not do any work." The work prohibited is u thy work " — not divine work — not humane work — not works of necessity and mercy. 1 It is secularities that are 1U You do not, however, consider the law of the Sabbath ; they are human works, not divine, which it prohibits.'* — Tertullian, Against Jrarcion, 21. Ante-Nicene Fathers, 3 : 313. 36 A REST DAY; NO WORK, 37 forbidden. Worldly business, worldly cares, worldly pleasures are all to be laid aside. The pulse of industry is to be stilled ; the ships and railway trains of commerce are to be anchored and stationed; the marts of trade are to be closed; and the toil life of man and beast is to cease. The Sabbath is God's antidote in breaking the curse of ceaseless labor. It is a God-given heritage to toiling man. Listen to the Sabbath bells ! They forever ring out : "No work ! no work ! no work !" They confront the traffic and travel that whirl through the day, and still ring on : " No work ! no work ! no work ! " The Commandment prescribes Sabbath rest. Man is to rest. Rest is of the very substance of Sabbatism. The word Sabbath means rest. A Sabbath day means a rest day. 1 Now the Creation- Worker, in making rest periods for man, shows his care of the human worker. Ceaseless toil — " labor in the treadmill of an eternal round, the hands and feet forever on the go, the brow forever sweat- ing, the loins forever aching "— would fill the world with weariness and sadness. A Sabbathless world ! What a world it would be of wails and moans ! What a sunless world ! But rest periods for man are God's appointment, and enforced by the divine example. Human life is not *A Sabbath-keeper, meeting a neighbor hauling a load of hay on a Sabbath day, suddenly called out : u There, there ! It's broke ! You've run right over it." " Kun over what ? " gasped the neighbor stopping his team in alarm. " The Sabbath " was the reply. "You've run over God's Fouith Commandment, and broken it all to pieces." Years ago, in a Midland County, in Old England, an orphan boy, a church goer, worked in a factory where he earned five shillings ($1.25) a week. The overseer of the factory ordered him to work on Sabbath. James went to church. Next morning the overseer said : " Where were you yesterday ? " "I went to church, sir." " Then you may go to church again to-day," said the overseer, and paid him his wages. James immediately sought work in other factories. A merchant heard of his dismissal, and its cause, and engaged him, at increased wages, in his stores where he rose to wealth by his correct and steady habits. 38 SABBATH OF THE DECALOGUE. meant to be all toil. Pauses from secularities are divinely arranged for all worn and weary ones. The Sabbath, with trailing garments of light, brings rest and refresh- ment. O, if all tired people would but let themselves know the sweetness of real Sabbath rest ; business toils and ventures put aside ; sordid cares and perplexities barred out; and fellowship with pure thoughts invited! This is divine Sabbatism. This is restful. The prohibition of work, and the Commandment to rest, in holy time, are broad and sweeping. They relate to thee, O man, to thy son, to thy daughter, to thy man- servant, to thy maid-servant, to thy guest, and to thy cattle. 1 Does God care for cattle? Yes. He mentions them with tenderness, and provides rest periods for them in his Sabbath law. In all this I am only a reporter and interpreter of divine words. If the Fourth Command- ment means anything at all, it means that all secular work is forbidden to man and beast in holy time; and that to do it then is sin. The day is not for common uses — for personal gains and ambitions. Secularities, because an invasion of the day and an assault upon the Sabbath- maker, are all placed under ban. To work is sin. To rest is duty. Six Days Wokk and One Day Rest. The Commandment prescribes six days work. " Six days shall thou labor and do all thy work." Thus six days out of seven are set apart and given to man for his own uses — for secularities — for business pursuits and pleas- ures. Man, after God's example, is required to work as well as rest. He is to work six days in seven. Work six lu It was designed to prevent the emancipated Israelites from prac- tising the hard and bitter lessons they had learned as slaves, on those who should afterwards serve them." — Bishop H. W. Warren, in Sab- bath Essays, eiX DAYS WORK AND ONE DAY REST. 39 days out of seven is the divine appointment and a human duty. This is the Commandment. All idlers, sluggards, Jo-nothings, during this work-period are breakers of the Sabbath law. 1 The Commandment also prescribes a seventh day rest. Rest, one day in seven, is the divine appointment and a human duty. A seventh of bur time is reserved by the Divine Giver of all time. "The seventh day is the Sab- bath of the Lord thy God." It is his — his day — his in- stitution — his property ; even as the altar is his, or as the Church is his, or as I am his. 2 He has set it apart for himself; to be his day, not man's; to be used for rest, not for secularities. It is to be employed, not according to our inclinations, but according to his directions. Heaven's boon to the six days' worker is this seventh day rest. Blessed day ! Divine gift to toil doomed man ! This is the patrimony of every man. He has a God-given right to a seventh day rest. Resting one day in seven meets the 1 The rich who do no work — idle time away — are breakers of the Sabbath law, even as the poor who will not work six days in seven. An employer dismissed a workman, telling him that it was because he broke the Fourth Commandment. The workman denied, and said he always rested on the Sabbath. " Kepeat the Commandment," said the employer. "Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy," said the workman, and stopped. "Go on," said the employer. He would not. " Then I must do it for you," said the employer : " Six days shalt thou labor and do all thy work." That's the part I complain of. You rest readily enough on the Sabbath ; but you don't work faithfully on the other six days." 2 "Did you ever hear of the meanest of pickpockets? A man, who had but seven dollars, gave him, in his apparent poverty, six of them ; and he, watching his opportunity, picked his benefactor's pocket of the seventh. Sabbath -breaker, thou art the man. God has given you six days for your own interests, to speak your own words, and go your own ways, and think your own thoughts; and then you have turned about and robbed him of the seventh. But not only that, you have robbed yourself, your body, and mind, and pocket, as well as your soul." — Sab. for Man, pp. 215-16. 40 SABBATH OF THE DECALOGUE. requirements of Sabbatic law, and nothing less does. All Sabbath workers are breakers of the Commandment. The divine frame is complete in six work days and one rest day ; and this divine method for working and resting is the model for human working and resting. Human life so spent is in harmony with the life of God. 1 Man, a pilgrim, moves in toilsome marches from the cradle to the grave. Six days' journeying brings him weariness, but also brings him to a divinely arranged Sabbath arbor, where he may find rest and refreshment. Freshened forces equip him for other toilsome effort. Journeying and rest- ing are both God's appointment; the journeying as much as the resting ; and the resting as much as the journeying. The Commandment enforces equally six days' work and a seventh day rest. The divine example imparts a tender- ness to the whole duty. God created and then rested. In the domain of morals, example teaching is supreme; high- er than precept ; superior to express law. "Actions speak louder than words." God's example, as a World-Maker and as a Sabbath-Keeper, appoints six days' work and a seventh day rest to man. Man, in all his generations, is 1 " Six days' work and the seventh day's rest conform the life of man to the method of his Creator. In distributing his life thus, man may look up to God as his Archetype." — Francis Garden, in Smith's Diet, of the Bible, p. 2761. " What statesman could have first discovered that in ordinary time the period of labor ought to be to the period of rest as six to one? Moses, then, having to regulate the labors and the days, the rests and the festivals, the toils of the body and the exercises of the soul, the interests of hygiene and of morals, political economy and personal subsistence, had recourse to a science of numbers, to a transcendent harmony which embraced all space, duration, movement, spirits, bodies, the sacred and the profane. The certainty of the series is demonstrated by the result. Diminish the week by a single day, the labor is insuffi- cient relative to the repose ; augment it in the same quantity, it be- comes excessive." — Proudhon, De la Celebration du Dimanche, p. 67. A HOLY DAY. 41 required to mirror forth in himself the Creator's work periods and his rest period. 1 A Holy Day. The Commandment prescribes that the rest day shall be kept holy. " Keep it holy." Every day is holy, but the Sabbath holiest of all. As Horeb was holy to the feet of Moses, because of God's presence in the burning brush ; as the inner sanctuary was holiest of all because of its in- dwelling Shekinah ; so the Sabbath is holy because it is a day of special divine manifestations by the self-revealing God. It is consecrated time, even as the Mount of Trans- figuration was to Peter consecrated ground. It soars above the mere commonplaces of everyday life, and is marked off from other days even as the Tabernacle was marked off from all the tents of Israel. 2 Man's hallowed rest, like God's, is not to be a cessation from activity, but a change of activity; not a cessation from work, but a change of work. Holy rest is not in- action — idling — loafing — sleeping away sacred time. This is the Sabbath of a brute, not of a man. The day is not only separated from common but set apart to sacred uses. It requires worship as well as rest^divine work in the way of meditation and devotion. It demands from all, 1 "We are to account the sanctification of one day in seven a duty which God's immutable law doth exact forever." — Hooker. "There is no middle ground between keeping the Sabbath holy unto God and its utter licentiousness. Compromise is treason. Surrender is cowardice. To fight for the right is heroism. " — Dr. J. O. Peck, Sabbath Essays. 2 " If the day is at all holy time, it is all holy time. Compromise to- day of half the Sabbath means the capture of the whole to-morrow. The only way we can defend the citadel is to fight for the whole of it." Dr. J. O. Peck, in Six Days Shalt Thou Labor. "The Decalogue .... is a law exclusively religious and moral, which only twines itself about the duties of man to God, and to his fellow-creatures." — Guizot, Medita. on the Essence of Christ., 21 S. 42 SABBATH OF THE DECALOGUE. not only a sacred pause from the humdrum of ordinary toil, but its employment in spiritual thoughts and holy pursuits. Sacred meditations, free from secularities, are its suitable furniture and befitting deeds. This sanctification of the day is enforced on a higher plane than that of mere expediency, or because it is a law of the land. It is a duty which God's immutable law exacts from every one. Neglected Sabbaths imperil both soul and body. He who made the world and us gave us the Sabbath and the law that should govern its use ; and he bids us keep it holy. 1 A Blessed Day. The Commandment appoints the Sabbath to be a blessed day. "The Lord blessed the Sabbath day." 2 He makes 1 '' Come on Sunday/' said an elderly gentleman to little six year old Bob ; "for I am at home all day, and want to see you." " Why," said Bob ; " do you really stay at home all day on Sunday ? " " Yes," said the elderly man ; " don't you ?" " No, indeed ; I go to church and Sunday-school ; and so does papa. It is wicked not to go to church, if you are well." It was a little word — a little seed thought. It did its work. The elderly gentleman became a steady church-goer. 2 "I feel as if God had, by the Sabbath, given fifty-two springs in the year." — Coleridge. " In the ring and circle of the week, the Sabbath is the jewel, the most excellent and precious of days." — Bishop Hezekiah Hopkins. " Sunday is the golden clasp That hinds the volume of the week."— Longfelloav. "Through the week we go down into the valley of care and shadows : our Sabbaths should be hills of light and joy in God's presence." — Henry Ward Beecher. " A blessed Sabbath ! The ladder set up on earth whose top reache g to heaven, with angels of God ascending and descending on it." — Rev. Jas. Hamilton, D. D. " O day most sweet, most calm, most bright, The bridal of the Earth and Sky."— Herbert. "This is the day which the Lord hath made ; w T e will rejoice and be glad therein."— Ps. 118 : 24. " what a blessed day is the Sabbath, which allows us a precious interval wherein to pause, to come out of the thickets of worldly con- cerns, and give ourselves up to heavenly and spiritual things."— Wil- bekforce. ARGUMENTS AND CONCLUSIONS. 43 it overtop other days, even as Saul and Jonathan over- topped by the head and shoulders the men of Israel in their times. He freights the day with special blessings, even as the Virgin Mary is blessed above women. This divine endowment makes the day satisfy deep human needs, and minister grace and help to all Sabbath keepers. Holy-day is a season not of stern privation, but of special privilege; not of restricted liberty, but of recreation and happiness. It is our best day; the jubilee of man; a cooling and refreshing spring to the traveler through the desert; the brightest page in the volume of the week. It conducts us among the wells and palm trees of sacred rest. The World-maker, O man, employs his Sabbath in bless- ing others — the living forms that he keeps pulsing in life — man whom he has redeemed and is seeking to save. So thy Sabbath should be made a blessing to thy neighbor. To do good — to give help to the needy — to do works of necessity and mercy — is of the very essence of Sabbath keeping. What can fairly be done on Saturday, or de- ferred till Monday, is indeed no work of necessity; as social visits; journeyings begun or ended to save time; or reading secular newspapers. But all well-doing, lying in the realm of essential right, or of human need, is not merely permissible but obligatory in sacred as in secular time. Even secularities, employed for divine purposes, not for personal ends, are suitable Sabbath deeds. So keeping the day never hurts, but helps and blesses, the individual — the community — the nation. Arguments and Conclusions. The travesties of genius and learning seem inscrutable. Some scholars have held that the Decalogue, others that the Fourth Commandment, including in each case the 44 (SABBATH OF THE DECALOGUE. Sabbath, is for the Jew alone. Is the Old Testament — is the Messiah — for the Jew alone? Why then the im- perishable Decalogue? Or the equally imperishable Sab- bath ? This is the pivotal point of a long contention — an extended battle — among the reformers. It is a very Gibraltar of unreasoning prejudice. Its advocates climb no Sinai, nor even camp at its base. Theirs is but the logic of doubt. It had its little hour. It created a ripple on the surface of thought. It has drawn its last gasp. Its warriors have all trooped by. The restatement of the Sabbath, as revised by accumulating evidence, has routed them " horse, foot, and dragoons." The Sabbath is not a Judaic ordinance in any sense in which it is not an ordinance for man as man. The Fourth Commandment, as already seen, forbids such an idea, by beginning with the word "remember." 1 It calls on Israel to keep in mind an old commandment which had been in the world from the beginning. It was not the first pro- mulgation of the Sabbath law. It was but a re-enactment of an older institution ; an institution coeval with man in Eden ; an institution dating back to God's Creation Sab- bath. It recognizes, republishes, and enforces the Sabbath, but did not originate it. It did not invent it. It merely discovered it in the world, and put it anew under the form of express law. The Sabbath came to the Jews from- the ages before. Septenary holy time belonged to the first man, and will be the property and privilege of his latest I " The law of the Sabbath is universal, and not peculiar to the Jews." — Watson. Institutes, 2 : 520. II The form of the Fourth Commandment — l Remember the Sabbath day' — points not to the ordaining of a new day, but the sanctioning of an old one." — Francis Brown. Pres. Rev., Oct. 1882, p. 686. " ' Remember the Sabbath day ' — implying it was already known and recognized as a season of rest." — Jamieson-Fausset-Brown. Corn Ex. 20 : 8-11. ARGUMENTS AND CONCLUSIONS. 45 descendant. It is of world-wide authority and obliga- tion. 1 The Creation Sabbath and the Decalogue Sabbath are one. They have the very same elements; a rest day ; a seventh- day rest; a holy rest ; and a blessed rest. This is the very sub- stance of the Sabbath of God and the Sabbath for man — of the Creation Sabbath and the Decalogue Sabbath. The Sabbath of the Decalogue is a unit with all preceding Sabbatism ; with the Sabbath of creation ; with the Sab- bath of the ancient world ; is a copy of it and its continu- ation ; is its re-enactment in the form of express law. It is impossible then in fairness to regard the Decalogue Sab- bath as a mere Jewish institution — as a Jewish institution in any sense in which it is not also an institution for man as man. There ain't a Judaism in it, or a Judaic form about it. It is wider, and greater, and more durable than any mere Jewish law. It has not a word peculiar to the Jewish people. It does not start from a Jewish founda- tion. It antedates Judaism and survives it. 2 If the Jew needs a seventh-day for rest and worship, so does man everywhere and in all time. The Decalogue Sabbath has this air of wideness and perpetuity. Within the plan and 1 " God gave the Sabbath, his first ordinance, to man while he stood the father and representive of the whole human race ; therefore the Sabbath is not for one nation, for one time, for one place." — Dr. Adam Cearke. "If the divine command was actually delivered at the creation, it was addressed, no doubt, to the whole human species alike, and con- tinues, unless repealed by some subsequent revelation, binding upon all who come to the knowledge of it. This opinion precludes all debate about the extent of the obligation." — Paeey's Mor. Phi. Book 4, Chap. 7. 2 "We do not owe the Sabbath to the Jew ; we received it from God. It was thundered indeed from Sinai to the Jew, but it was whispered to us from Paradise, when the heavens and the earth were finished, and God blessed the day of rest." — H. J. Brown. " Whether or not the Sinaitic Sabbath was ordained for Gentile as well as Jew, the original rest-day was made for the human race." — Prof. J. T. Tucker, in Sabbath Essays. 46 SABBATH OF THE DECALOGUE. ordering of God, it is not for a single period, or for a single people, but for time and man. These are its divine boundaries. The Fourth Commandment is part and parcel of that wonderful epitome of moral law — that complete summary of human duty — the Decalogue — that was given, not merely to the Jew, but to man as man. It was written by the finger of God on the same tables of stone on which were traced the sublime precepts, forbidding image worship, profanity, and covetous desires; commanding children to honor their parents; and making it the duty of every one to hold sacred the life, the chastity, the reputation, and the property of others. 1 The Sabbath, thus appointed, and in such society, must be as universal, as permanent, and as binding, as those other great and imperishable principles, that, interpenetrative like the air, and surviving all change, appear everywhere in the civil and religious laws of so- ciety. " Noscitur a sociis"— -it is known by its allies. It is in excellent company. As its associates are, so is it As they are binding upon all men, everywhere and for all 1 In 1858 a Sunday school worker was, on Sunday morning, on a ferry boat going from Brooklyn to New York, to his Sunday school. He noticed a bright-eyed boy on the boat with books under his arm, evidently on the way to Sunday school. He thought he would test the boy, and asked him if he would go with him to Harlem, a pleasure resort. "Sir," said the lad, "did you never read the commandments ? " "The Commandments ! what are they?" said the gentleman. " Well, sir, there is one which says, ' Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy.' " " Well, what of that, my boy, will it not be keeping it holy to go to Harlem?" "No, sir ; and I shall not go with you." After farther testing the lad, with an offer of twenty-five cents if he would go, and meeting with refusal, the gentleman made known his real character, and found means to help the lad — a son of intemper- ate parents — in life. ARGUMENTS AND CONCLUSIONS. 47 time, so is it. It, even as they, is not ceremonial, but moral. It, like they, is of universal and perpetual obli- gation — a primitive and unchangeable natural law. The Sabbath has forever and aye all the sanctions of the Decalogue. 1 The reason assigned in the Fourth Commandment for Sabbath-keeping belongs, not merely to the Jew, but to man as man. That reason is the divine example of six days' work and one day's rest. The divine example estab- lishes duty, not merely for the Jew, but for man as man — for all men in all time. God kept the weekly period of six work days and one rest day ; therefore such a period is appointed to man. God rested on the seventh day ; there- fore man should have a seventh-day rest. Now all this is in the Fourth Commandment, and makes its reason for Sabbath keeping universal and perpetual. It is the exam- ple of God that vitalizes the Sabbath ; that makes it obli- gatory upon the Gentile as upon the Jew ; that makes it binding upon all. One and all are, at their peril, under obligation to keep a seventh-day rest. 2 The Ten Commandments, as a code of morals, are adapted to man in all ages, countries, climes, and circum- 1 "There it stands with nothing to differentiate it from the other Commandments. It is as strong as they, or as weak ; as transitory, or as enduring. Have they been fulfilled by Jesus ? So has it. Has Jesus exhausted the curse following on transgressions of the nine ? So has he exhausted the curse due to Sabbath-breaking. Has the Law- fulfiller left the nine to guide the feet and rule the life of his people ? So does he leave the law of weekly sacred rest for like ends. It stands between the three which have their faces towards God, and the six which look towards man. As Jehovah's Sabbath, it binds man to God ; and as man's Rest Day, it unites him to his fellows." — Gritton. Time's Feast, Heaven's Foretaste. 2 "The Sabbath was not smuggled into the Calendar of the week by a crafty church, neither is it sustained by designing priests. God es- tablished the Sabbath ; and the hand that upholds the sun and revolves the seasons, secures the recurrence of the Holy Day." — Dr. E. B. Webb. The Sabbath. 48 SABBATH OF THE DECALOGUE. stances. They are so perfect, that, like nature itself, there has been given no second edition of them. Science, art, language, has, each, enlarged its boundaries, and i* ever modifying its forms of expression. But the Ten Com- mandments, dating back to distant times, have come across the ages without alteration or improvement; not one new duty added ; not one fallen into disuse. They are widely the laws of modern thought and civilization. Time and experience neither annul or improve them. The Ten, though engrossed for the Jews, are laws for all mankind. The Sabbath is one of the Ten ; is enshrined in the very heart of the Ten ; and has all the high sanctions and obli- gations that belong to the Ten. It is a universal and imperishable law. The very atmosphere of the Sabbath, as incorporated in the Decalogue, is suggestive of permanence and universal- ity. It was written, not on parchment, a symbol of the perishable, but on stone, a symbol of the imperishable. It was written, not among the ceremonial and civil laws of the Jews, that had national limitations, but among the moral laws that relate to all people and to all time. And it was preserved as remarkably as it was promulged; among associated moral laws ; in an ark prepared by spe- cial directions of God ; and in the Holy of holies that shrined and guarded the most sacred things. I stand in profound reverence before the Decalogue Sabbath. Its majesty overwhelms me. Its high divinity commands my fealty and obedience. It is God, the High and Holy One, who here gives express charge to all men everywhere, to work six days, and then rest one day. This Sabbath law is authoritative over individuals, corporations and communities. Sabbath keeping is duty ; Sabbath breaking sin. And the Sabbath-maker, O man, seated upon the circle of the heavens, keeps a forever watch and guard ARGUMENTS AND CONCLUSIONS. 49 over his own day — over its keeping — and over its desecra- tion. 1 1 " A father said to his con, who was a Sunday school scholar, " carry this package to place." " It is Sabbath," replied the boy. " Put it in your pocket," said the father. " God can see in my pocket," was the instant reply. A little Sunday school girl, for repeating well from memory the Twenty- third Psalm, was presented, by a visitor, with a dime. Her father was present and said : "A great many shops are open, though it is God's day. You must not go into them to spend the dime to-day ; but keep it for to-morrow. Now I won't be with you to see you, but there is One who will see you if you break the Sabbath. Who will see you ? " 11 Myself will see me," was her reply. It was expected she would say, " God will see me." Her addition to this Scriptural idea is good. We are witnesses of all our doings. SABBATISM OF GENTILE NATIONS. " The Golden Age was first, when man, yet new, No rule but uncorrupted reason knew, And ; with a native bent, did good pursue. * * # * * * 4 * Succeeding times a silver age beheld. To this came next in course the brazen age. * ■&**#* * Hard steel succeeded then, And stubborn as the metal were the men."— Ovid. From Abraham to the close of the Old Testament, seventh day Sabbatism, among Gentile nations, changed for the worse — suffered decay — fell into disuse. The ancient divine forms in which it tabernacled — the weekly cycle — the seventh of days — and which stand out clearly in the morning sky overarching post-diluvian man, were slowly but steadily obscured and mutilated. They grew corrupt ; and, at last, nothing of Sabbatism remained among Gentile peoples but multitudinous effigies. The reason for this decadence of the institution is plain. 1 Mere tradition, that opens not but shuts all the gates of progress, is insufficient to preserve and perpetuate the purer ideas, and institutions. Change comes, but not in the way of improvement, always in the direction of de- generacy — of decay. It was so with the ancient divine Sabbath ; historic with Moses and Abraham ; historic with Babylonians, Assyrians, and Accadians. It appears in 1 Pres. Seelye traces to " an inherent law of deterioration " the Sab- bath declension now going on among us. And says : " It only repre- sents a universal tendency among men. Singular as it may seem, the fact is clear that human nature is far more active in throwing away its privileges than in pressrving them." — The Princeton Review, Nov., 1880, p. 338. 50 SABBATISM OP GENTILE NATIONS. 51 later times entangled with the astronomic element; its weekly cycle merging into other periods ; its holy day into holidays; its blessed rest and devotion into sensual and corrupting rites ; and, in cases, it entirely disappears. Silent spaces in distant history, so brief and frag- mentary, are as clouds upon the scene, under which the light that we seek disappears. They are as great gaps that make the steps of Sabbath change and decay indis- tinguishable. But the fact of change for the worse remains. 1 The marchings of early nations, unguided by a special divine revelation, took everywhere routes of deterioration. When the Old Testament ended — or when the Babylonian captivity ended — Gentile nations had no weekly period, no seventh day Sabbath, no regularly recurring holy and blessed rest day. These institutions do not anywhere fairly appear among them in that far away period. All Gentile nations, indeed, by the movings of tired and restless human nature, devised some poor sub- stitutes for the week and its Sabbatism, as nundince y decades, and annual festal days. 2 But the week drop- ped out of their history. A seventh of days ceased to 1 Historic silences are stumbling blocks to ignorance, and have many misinterpretations. They abound in the oldest and fragmentary records of the Bible. The law of sacrifice must have been instituted before Cain and Abel made their offering ; and yet the Bible is silent as to its institution ; and it is not mentioned again till after the Flood. The distinction between clean and unclean animals was known to Noah; but its origin is nowhere reported. From Moses to Jeremiah there is no allusion to circumcision. And there is no mention of the Sabbath from Moses to David. Bossuet, in his universal history, does not, it is said, mention the Sabbath. Arguments from historic silences are uncertain. Silent spaces in history hide the steps of Sabbath decay ; and they can only be seen by comparing the later with the earlier records. 2 " That the heathen, nevertheless, from time immemorial, have known certain festive periods, appears from their mythological systems." — Lange's Comment, on Gen. p. 192. 52 SABBATISM OF GENTILE NATIONS. be kept for hallowed rest. Sabbatism was dead. The proofs of this are fairly complete and satisfactory. The researches of science point to the highlands of Ar- menia, breaking away into the valleys of the Tigris and the Euphrates, as the primitive seats of post-diluvian man — of Accadians, Assyrians, Babylonians. There Babel, u the temple of the Seven Spheres," arose. There human speech was confused. Thence mankind scattered, to peo- ple the earth as races and nations. Those first men were all Sabbatarians. They knew the weekly period. The historic and legendary week and Sabbath are inscribed in their resurrected clay tablets. But their primitive beliefs and customs were changed. The Sabbath and the week do not appear among later occupants of those primal seats of civilization. At the time of the Babylonian captivity, they were clearly not Sabbatarians ; they did not have the week. For they mocked at the Sabbaths of the captive Jews. They antagonized Jewish customs and laivs, chief of which was the Sabbath. And they were in the habit of selecting Sabbath days for attacking the Jews in bat- tle. 1 These historic facts report them Sabbathless. Their I " The anti-Sabbatic spirit comes out subsequently in the conduct of the Babylonian * adversaries of Jerusalem/ who not only ' mocked at her Sabbaths/ but compelled her people to labor without any rest."— Lam. 1:7; 5 : 5. Gilfilean. The Sabbath, 2. " Babylonians and Jews were almost always at variance, by reason of the contrariety of their laws."— Josephus. Antiq., 18 : 9: 8. " Mithridates (Babylonian and Parthian Commander) . . intend- ing to fight them on the day following, because it was the Sabbath, the day on which the Jews rest." — Josephus. Antiq., 18 : 9 : 6. See also 18: 9: 2. II It is practically certain that the Babylonians at the time of the He- brew exile cannot have had a Sabbath exactly corresponding in con- ception to what the Hebrew Sabbath had become." — Cycl. Brit, Art. Sabbath. " We have no evidence of the establishment of set festivals in As- syria. Apparently the monarchs decided of their own will when a feast should be held to any god." — Kawlinson. Seven Great Mon- archies, 1 : 365. SABBATISM OF GENTILE NATIONS. 53 Sabbath and week were in ruins ; entombed in buried " Record Chambers." It is fair history that, in those an- cient seats of life where Moses locates the first kingdom, and where Berosus regarded a Chaldean monarchy as ex- isting two thousand years before Christ, they had ceased from keeping the seventh-day Sabbath. Syrians were Sabbathless. Historic Persia had no Sabbath. And his- toric Media had no known Sabbath. 1 The chronology of ancient Egypt — land of myths and many gods — is much in dispute among critical scholars. The Manetho Dynasties, prior to the Eighteenth, are all uncertain. The Egyptian kingdom, antedating Abraham, a nomad chief, looks very primitive in his day. 2 The Pharoah's wealth is estimated in flocks and herds. a The Egyptians seem dwellers in shifting tents ; to become later builders along the Nile. It may yet be found that the Nile monuments, all dateless, were built since that known period ; that the extreme dates of enthusiastic Egyptologists will have to be abandoned ; and that even the more sober a Gen. 12 : 16. 1 " Neither was it lawful for a man to keep Sabbath days." — 2 Mace., 6 : 6. " Others had run together into caves near by to keep the Sabbath secretly."— 2 Mace, 6: 11. " Her feasts were turned into mourning, her Sabbaths into reproach.' — 1 Mace, 1 : 39. " Antiochus had sent letters . . . that they should profane the Sabbath."— 1 Mace, 1 : 45. " Made war against them on the Sabbath day." — 1 Mace, 2: 32. li So they rose up against them in battle on the Sabbath." — 1 Mace, 2 : 33. " Nicanor . . . resolved without any danger to set upon them on the Sabbath day."— 2 Mace, 15: 1. See also 1 Mace, 1 : 43 ; 2 : 34 ; 2 : 41 ; and 2 Mace, 5 : 25-6 ; 15 : 3-4. 2 " They found a Pharoah on the throne, at the head of an organi- zed government. The Egyptians, however, were a scattered and weak people compared with what they came to be afterwards." — Pond. Con. on the Bible, 126. 54 SABBATISM OF GENTILE NATIONS. dates of cautious authorities will need toning down. Jo- seph, it is known, converted the kingdom into a despotism ; the people into serfs ; and exacted a fifth of all their yearly earnings tor the Pharoah. .This mighty bondage, never lifted, made possible all the Nile monuments. Later the building instinct appears. Israelites were drudges as brick- makers, and built for Pharoah treasure cities, as Pithom and Eameses. But Egypt, with sensibly reduced dates, will rank, after Chaldea, as the oldest known seat of life, civilization art. The temples and palaces that, in ruins, still dot the Nile valley, evoke the ghosts of very ancient times. The pyramids, the " books of kings/' connect us with the fabu- lous past — with fabulous learning — with a mystical priest- hood. In that most ancient Egypt was veneration for the number seven — was the seven-day cycle — was the week's name uk — was the seventh-day rest. These are in the old- est hieroglyphs. Then they disappear. They do not belong to later periods ; to the golden age of art and letters ; to the Egypt reported by Grecian travelers and writers. The people outgrew their traditional religion. The Pharoah of the Exodus denounced the Hebrews for Sabbatizing. The week disappeared. The Calendar was changed. 1 The de- cade was enthroned. It is the month of thirty days, divi- ded into three decades, that appears on the monuments. 1 " The old Egyptians had a week of ten not of seven days." — Cycl. Brit, Art. Sabbath. " The Egyptians, however, were without it (the week), dividing their month of 30 days into decades/' — McClintock & Strong. CycL, Art. Chronology. "The week, consisting of seven days, was unknown to the Egyptians, . . . who had a week of ten days." — Schrader. The Cuneiform Ins., and the Old Test., 18. " The Egyptians . . . divided their solar month into . . . three parts of ten days each, . . . The decade division was a latei introduction." — Kawlinson. Hist. Herodo., 2 : 282. " Wilkenson, (Manners and Customs of Ancient Egypt), shows that th« week of seven days existed in the earliest times in Egypt, though after wards superseded by the decade." — Ihe Sab. for Man, 527. SABBATISM OF GENTILE NATIONS. 55 From Manetho's Eighteenth Dynasty to the Ptolemaic kingdom — when the Jews were colonized in Alexandria — Egypt had the decade, not the week. Hindoos and Chinese, derivative but very ancient peo- ples, possessed, in earlier histories and legends, the seven- day period and an associated Sabbatism. But these insti- tutions do not appear among their later inheritances. 1 The Hindoo literature, a noble monument of an ancient civili- zation, has had, from the beginning of the Vedic period, no recognized septenary cycle or Sabbatism. And these institutions have also disappeared from Chinese literature and customs, since the fall of the Tscheu Dynasty and the appearance of Confucianism. Somewhere the gates of progress were closed, and the gates of decay opened for the disappearance of their ancient divine institutions. Prehistoric Greece, a probably still later people, shows but diminished traces of the primal week and Sabbatism. Among the earlier writers, the number seven was widely current and venerated; and suggestions appear of the sev- enth-day as sacred. But these things cease from special currency, or entirely disappear, in later literature. It is the decade, not the hebdomad — the annual festival, not the seventh-day rest — that reigns in all the historic period — the classic Greek period. When Jews and Greeks, in the fourth century before Christ, began to commingle in his- tory, the Jewish seven-day week and Sabbath became 1 " According to the best authorities, long ag-es before our era, there existed in China a deep-seated conviction that the idolatry existing was a corruption of a purer faith." — J. L., in Nation. Repository, May 1877, p.453. "In a work ascribed to Fuh-he, who is supposed to have lived con- siderably more than four thousand years ago, the following remarkable sentence is to be found : — ' Every seven days comes the revolution'— that is, of the heavenly bodies, as generally explained by Chinese scholars ; and it is a singular fact, that in the Chinese almanacs of the present day, there are four names applicable, during the course of each lunar month, to the days which answer to our Sundays." — Gillespie's Land of Sinim, pp. 161-2. 56 SABBATISM OF GENTILE NATIONS. known to the Greeks; and Greek writers, like Polybius, Plutarch, and Strabo, speak of the Sabbath as a new and surprising arrangement. ' The ancient Romans, appearing later in history, never had the week or the Sabbath. They divided their month into Calends, Nones, and Ides. They had nundince — a nine day period closing with a fair or market day. An- nual festal days, when they abstained from business, were many, and were held to be important. Cicero commends them. Seneca applauds the wisdom of their 'institution. When Jews and Romans began to commingle in history, Roman writers, as Appian, Cicero, Ovid, Horace, and Juvenal, mention the Jewish Sabbath, to doubt its expe- diency — to oppose it — to satirize it.* This corruption of the seven-day week and of its Sab- batism is part of that mighty downward trend of Pagan nations, after the flood, that is recorded by themselves, and that appears as a descent from a primal Golden Age to an 1 " The Greeks divided the month into three decades, or periods oi ten days." — Encyc. Brit , Art. Calendar. " The ancient Greeks. . . .had no division properly answering to our weeks. . . .had their decades of days." — Anthon. Man. Class. Lit, 61. " Every month was divided into three decades of days." — A Cat. of Grecian Antiq., 79. "The week, consisting of seven days, was unknown to the Greeks who had a week of ten days." — Dr. Schradeb. The Cuneiform Ins. and the Old Test, 18. 2 "The Koman calendar knows absolutely nothing of a hallowed Beventh-day." — The Inter. Cyc, Art. Sabbath. " The Romans divided their months into three parts, viz.: Kalends, Nones, and Ides; and not as we do into weeks in imitation of the Jews." — Cat. of Rom. Antiq., 74, " The ancient Greeks and Romans had no division properly answer- ing to our weeks ; although the former had their decades of days, and the latter their nundinse, or market days, occurring every ninth day." — Anthon's Man. of Class. Lit. p. 61. " The Nundina? occupied every ninth day and market days."— Ovid. Fast, i, 54. SABBATISM OF GENTILE NATIONS. 57 age of Silver — to one of Brass — and at last to one of Iron. 1 All primitive peoples had traditions of a Golden Age and of the Fall. The confession of decadence does not come from disappointed characters — from social fail- ures — but from Persian Magi, from Hindoo Sages, from Eminent Greeks and Romans, as Hesiod, Plato, Arafus, and Ovid. It was a farther descent into the wilderness which man's sin had made out of his native Paradise. Nature tends to run wild. A plant, neglected, changes into. a worse plant; a garden into weeds; a domestic animal into wild forms. So man, self-neglected, becomes a worse man and a lower man ; disuse of functions leading to decay of faculty; unimproved talents taken away. The law is universal. Institutions and customs bow to it. Without the care of eternal vigilance, they drop into other and worse forms — reappear in new shapes- — or entirely disappear. This is a historic picture of the seven-day week, and the seventh-day Sabbath, in the ancient Gentile world. Perfect in Eden, distinct and clear among all ear- lier men, only corrupt forms appear in later times. Nothing is more certain in ancient history — among the earliest nations — in the earliest seats of mankind — than the universal prevalence, from the Nile to the Ganges, of an exact seven-day week, and the seventh-day Sabbath. This is historically true. But wider dispersions and later his- tories show steady departures from these ancient historic institutions;. Sabbatism disappearing in multitudinous fes- tal days that Plato traces to the gods; and the exact seven- day week dropping into the inexact astronomical week — into a five-day period in Mexico — into a nine-day period 1 " The Greeks thought there had been four ages— the Golden age, the Silver age, the Brazen age, and the Iron age — and that people had been getting worse in each of them." — Pictorial Hist, of the Great Nations, Vol. 1, p. 2. "On earth of yore the sons of men abode From evil free and labor's galling load." Hksiod. Creation of Pandora 58 SABBATISM OF GENTILE NATIONS. in Peru and Rome — and into a ten-day period in Egypt and Greece. At the epoch of five centuries before Christ, all Gentile nations were without the seven-day week, and without the Seventh-day Sabbath. Romans had them not — never had — had Nundinoe. Greeks and Egyptians had them not — had lost them — had the decade. Hindoos, Chinese, Babylonians, Syrians, Medes and Persians had them not — had lost them — had no reported substitutes. The seven-day week was dead. Seventh-day Sabbatism was dead. The elder glory had disappeared in a vast eclipse. Thinkers opposed to supernaturalism — rejectors of a special divine revelation — trace the ancient historic Sab- bath to human invention, suggested by lunar changes. The theory is visionary, hypothetical, unphilosophical. But it's the very best these high sceptical scholars give us. They do not name the inventor; or suggest when he lived; or where; or tell how he accomplished the mighty work — invented and gave currency to a natural and universal law. They allow themselves to be easily satisfied. But their theory has one grace. It, in a way, lets them out of an insuperable difficulty. Another equal question now con- fronts them and us. The seven-day week among Gentile nations was dead ; could it be revitalized ? Seventh-day Sabbatism was dead; could it be given a new life? If a primitive man invented, a later Gentile man could recover, the week and its Sabbath. This would hav6 to be their answer. But it is as faulty as their original theory. Self resurrections are absurdities. Spontaneous generation is an exploded scientific bubble. Living forms do not rise out. of the realm of death. Life comes only from ante- cedent life. A Savior is ever from without; redemption from beyond ; the new creature from above. The lost institutions could not grow out of the Gentile world, but must be brought to it. They could not be of human SABBATISM OF GENTILE NATIONS. 59 invention, but must be of divine Providence. The mighty gates of history, as they swing open before us, report the plan and steps of recovery. It is not human, but divine; not of man, but of God. Read yet on and see. SABBATH OF JUDAISM. (Old Testament Period.) " This transitory scene Of murmuring stillness, busily serene, This solemn pause, the breathing space of man, The halt of toil's exhausted caravan, Comes sweet with music to thy wearied ear; Rise, with its anthem, to a holier sphere." —Holmes. The Sabbath of the Hebrew people from Moses to Christ, and inclusive of their times, I call the Sabbath of Judaism. It is the ancient world-Sabbath, the Decalogue Sabbath, but with human additions and corruptions. The day was long preserved by a race which in its history and providential training has no parallel. The Hebrew — the Jew — is the most remarkable character among the nations — the most persistent, imperishable, enduring. His Sab- batism is as remarkable. 1 Judaism and the Sabbath descended together along the centuries from Moses to Isaiah, from Isaiah to Malachi, and from Malachi to Christ — ^a time period of over fifteen hundred years. The Sabbath of Judaism is proverbial in history. Compressed into a single national or race stream, it was transmitted by special divine revelation as well as £ " Israel has been the stem on which the faith of the human race has been grafted. No people has taken its destiny so seriously as Israel ; none has felt so vividly its joys and its sorrows as a nation ; none has lived more thoroughly for an idea. Israel has vanquished Time, and made use of all its oppressors I seemed to see before me the living genius of that indestructible people. Over every ruin it has clapped its hands ; persecuted by all men, on all men it has been avenged." — Etudes d'Histoire Religieuse. Quoted from Draper's Civil Policy of America, 210-11. OLD TESTAMENT PERIOD. 61 by tradition. It lies as a bright jewel on the breast of Judaism — a central fact in its history — hedged in by divine safeguards — and renewed in purity from time to time. This chapter will discuss the Judaic Sabbath of the Old Testament period. Judaism is called a theocracy — a God-government, But was it any more a God-government, except as to special divine revelations then going on, than government is to- day ? "All government is ordained of God." And He rules nations now just as He did then. His providential interpositions in these United States are the very same as hi ancient Israel — but unreported by divine penmen. Jewish Sabbatism had its civil code. It was adminis- tered by the civil arm. Its enforcement was of man, as well as of God ; had its human as well as its divine side. The Jew himself interpreted and applied it; judged of its violation; aud enforced its penalties. All additions made to the Decalogue Sabbath, and all special interpretations of it; as prohibiting fire-kindling in a warm country like Arabia; as stoning a stick-gatherer to death; as shutting the gates of Jerusalem to keep out Tyrian traders; and as refusing to march and fight on Sabbath day ; all these were purely Jewish. 1 They belong to the Jew alone, and to special times in his history. They do not affect other times and peoples. With them we have nothing to do. The Jewish civil Sabbath puts no obligations upon us. 2 Jewish, Sabbatism had also its ceremonial code, as seen in its society with priests, altars, and sacrifices, and their di- rectory rituals. The great annual festivals, some of them 1 "The violation of this law of rest, was, as a crime of high treason against Jehovah, punishable with death." — The Inter. Cyc, Art. Sab- bath. 2 " Those Commandments of the Old Testament, which were addressed to the Jews as Jews, and were founded upon this peculiar circum- stances and relations, passed away when the Mosaic economy was abol- ished." — Hodge. Systematic TheoL, 3: 321. 62 SABBATH OF JUDAISM. called Sabbaths, were part of this ceremonial code. All festival Sabbaths were belongings of ceremonial Judaism. And Judaic ceremonials — its priesthood, altars, sacrifices, circumcision, festival Sabbaths, and their directory rituals — were but shadowy, preparative, perishable ; giving way at last to abiding realities. They were manifestly not for all time, but only for the economy— the Eon — the age — to which they belonged. They resounded with the din and bustle of preparation ; and were a temporary polity that was to wax old and decay. With ceremonial Judaism we have nothing to do. It was binding only on the peo- ple to whom given, and during the economy of which it was a part. Its day has passed. Its obligations have ceased. Its priests are gone ; its altars and sacrifices have disappeared ; so too its ceremonial Sabbaths. They are binding no more. Jewish Sabbatism had also its moral code. It was God appointed and God administered. The Jew was responsi- ble to God for its proper observance. This moral Sab- bath, given to the Jew as a representative of mankind, is broader and more enduring than his civil and ceremonial Sabbath. It is always placed on a par, not with civil or ceremonial but with moral law. 1 As in the Decalogue^ so throughout the entire Old Testament, the Sabbath is asso- ciated with natural and imperishable principles. It every- where ranks high; not on the low plain of mere rites and forms ; but far up among eternal verities. It is ever kept in view as the Sabbath of the Decalogue, unabridged, un- amended, unchanged ; not an iota added ; not a tittle taken away. Its divine appointment and sacred character are never challenged. God cared for it; watched over it; 1U Though the threatened punishments for Sabbath-breakers never seem to have been carried out to the full during the times of the es- tablished commonwealth, in the scheme of Judaism it was placed on a par with the entire body of the law." — The Inter. Cycl 7 Art. Sabbath. OLD TESTAMENT PEPwIOD. 63 preserved it in purity for centuries ; frequently and argently renewed its claims ; and his ceaseless supervision .s a remarkable attestation of its value. See his care of the day in the frequency with which he enjoined its keeping and forbad its desecration. 1 Early and late he brought it to the attention of the Jew. The claims of the Sabbath were persistently and urgently restated and enjoined ; nothing else so frequently ; nothing else so urgently. God watched over the day as a chief bulwark of the state and of religion. It ranked other in- stitutions. See again his care of the day, in pronouncing so great blessings on Sabbath-keepers, and so great evils against Sabbath- breakers. His promises are great ; his threats appalling. 2 There is a renewal of the splendid but awful scene when Israel stood between Mounts Gerizimand Ebal to hear the blessing pronounced upon the law-keeper, and the curse upon the law-breaker. The Sabbath is given 1 The hallowing of sacred time is thus enjoined : " Verily my Sab- baths ye shall keep ; for it is a sign between me and you." — Ex. 31 : 13. ".Ye shall keep the Sabbath therefore, for it is holy unto you."— Ex. 31 : 14. " Keep the Sabbath day to sanctify it."— Dent, 5: 12. "Ye shall keep my Sabbath. "—Lev. 19: 30. "They shall hallow my Sabbaths."— Ez. 44 : 24. See also, Lev. 10 : 30, Ez. 44 : 24. 2 To the Sabbath-keeper God says : " Blessed is the man that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it."— Isa. 56: 2. "Thus saith the Lord unto the eunuchs that keep my Sabbath .... Even anto them will I give in my house and within my walls a place and a name better than of sons and daughters." — Isa. 56 : 4-5. "If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath, from doing thy pleasure on my holy day, and call the Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord, honor- able . . . then . . . I will cause thee to ride on the high places of the earth."— Isa. 58 : 13-4. To Sabbath-breakers God says : " Every one that defileth it shall surely be put to death. For whosoever doeth any work therein that soul shall be cut off from his people."— Ex. 3i : 14. "My Sabbaths they greatly polluted ; then I said I would pour out my fury upon them in the wilderness to consume them." — Ez. 20: 13. See also 2 Chron. 26: 21 : Lev. 31 : 31-4 ; Amos 8 : 4-6, and Neh. 13 : 15-21. 64 SABBATH OF JUDAISM. the investments that belong to the law. Words of bless- ing — divine words — are spoken over Sabbath-keepers ; and words of malediction — divine words — against Sabbath- breakers. See yet again his care of the day in the utterances that tell how Sabbath profanation is an occasion of strong and abiding grief to Him. It is his Sabbath that he pleads for. He bewails its desecration. His words have the sound of a sob — a wail. They are a divine lamentation over the profanation of something very dear to Him. The Sabbath — my Sabbath — his gift to the Jew — his gift to all toil-doomed men — seems as the very apple of his eye. 1 Now this Sabbath of the Jewish moral code is a natural and universal institution. It belongs to us even as to the Jew. The Jew was a representative man. God deals with us as he dealt with him. Behold him punished for Sabbath breaking; kept out of Canaan; returned to wil- derness wanderings; till a whole generation perished. The Mosaic record names rebellion against Jehovah as the crime that brought on this national calamity. But God in Ezekiel names Sabbath profanation as part of the crime. " But the house of Israel rebelled against me in the wil- derness," he cries, " and my Sabbaths they greatly pol- luted ; then I said I would pour out my fury upon them in the wilderness to consume them." 8. And Nehemiah ranked Sabbath desecration as one of the mighty forces of evil that wrecked Jerusalem, burned down the temple, and sent the Jews into captivity. " What evil thing is this that ye do," he cries, " and profane the Sabbath ? Did not your fathers thus, and did not our God bring all this a Ezek. 20 : 13. 1 Plaints of God against priests and people for profaning his Sab- bath : "My Sabbath have they greatly polluted."— Ez. 20: 13. "Hast profaned my Sabbath."— Ez. 22: 8. "Have hid their eyes from my Sabbath."— Ez. 22: 26. See also, Ez. 20: 16, 21, 24 and 23: 38. OLD TESTAMENT PERIOD. 65 evil upon us and upon this city ? Yet ye bring more wrath upon Israel by profaning the Sabbath." a In the removal of the Sabbath, the national fabric crumbled into dust. When the people forgot their sacred day they went into captivity. Sabbath breaking thus stands as a viola- tion of moral law — as treason against God — and as pun- ishable with the greatest calamities. Now behold the Jew as a Sabbath-keeper. The day was enclosed, as in a crypt, and committed to him for safe- keeping. He was faithful. He preserved it in history. He stood towards the Sabbath, as towards the Temple and the Law, not indeed without imperfection, but erect, steady, changeless. The Sabbatic institution was a belonging of all his Old Testament history. It remained as it came to him; perfect at Sinai; unchanged when the Old Testa- ment ended. In that time period of a thousand years, he stood in history as a keeper of the seventh-day rest, often profaning but always clinging to the day. 1 God's reward for Sabbath-keeping is not earthly prefer- ment — not mere temporal emoluments — but better and no- bler types of manhood — purer and loftier character. This was the compensation he bestowed upon the Sabbath- keeping Jew. He added cubits to his moral stature ; hal- lowed all his powers and passions; and made him the best built man of his day. The religious culture of the Jew, a Neh. 13 : 17-18. 1U The Jewish Church had been trained in an atmosphere of the most rigid exclusiveness, to preserve it from the tainted worship and foul morals of the heathen world. A unique discipline had achieved its object, and with all their faults the Jews were now the repositories of the finest theology and the best practical ethics the world had ever seen." — Eev. James Hope Moulton, M. A. Sunday School Journal, Jan., 1890, p. 4. "The peculiarity of the Hebrew civilization did not consist in the culture of the imagination and intellect, like that of the Greeks, or in the organization of government, like that of Rome — but its distin- guishing feature was religion"— Conybeare & Howson. Life and Epis. of St. Paul, 1 : 4. Also Neander. Fflanzung und Zeiiung, 91. 66 SABBATH OF JUDAISM. working on and on for centuries, appeared in himself. Sab- batism was in him as a regenerating and transforming force; touching his life with new and celestial shapings; and creating around him the noblest civilization. Sabbath- keepers, touched by secret and invisible fingers, have the reward of a nobler self-hood. The Jew had. This was his character's coronation. Writers who talk of his nar- row culture misread history. He was the Puritan of hi? day. 1 Only things that are divine remain as they came to Lis, and descend in history. The divine in the old Test- ament Jew remains. It is imperishable. His bequest to posterity is remarkable. Three great religions — Judaism- Mohammedanism, Christianity — have come from him. Our gospel is his Pentateuch and Prophets in fulfillment. His ten Commandments resound forever in all Christian churches, and are the moral rule of all Christian nations. llt The Jews, instead of being stationary like other Asiatics, were, next to the Greeks, the most progressive people of antiquity, and, jointly witli them, have been the starting point and main propel. ing agency of modern civilization. " — John Stuart Mill. Considerations on Rep. Gov., p. 43. London. " Modern civilization is in effect derived from the Jews and from the Greeks. To the latter it is indebted for its human and intellectual to the former for its divine and moral element. Of these two sources, we owe to the Jews, if not the more brilliant, at all events the more sublime and dearly acquired one." — Guizot. Med, on the Essence oj Christ, p. 245. "Take a skull of each of the different races of mankind, and, placing them at random on a table before an anatomist, ask him to se- lect that which indicates the highest mental capacity. Without know- ing anything of their history, from what graves they were obtained, or to what branches of the human family they belonged, he lays his hands at once on the skull of the Jew. This, take it for all in all, is the best on the table It is visibly superior to the skulls of those Greeks and Romans that in ancient, and also of those Teutonic races that in modern times have marched at the head of civilization, and seemed destined to rule the world. The star of Abraham is in the ascendant here.'' — Dr. Guthrie. Gems of Illus., p. 104. » OLD TESTAMENT PERIOD. 67 is ancient history is full of the noblest forecasts. Chris- tianity itself, the leader for eighteen centuries in the world's best civilizations, traces its lineage back — not to the Greek — not to Greek culture — but to the Jew — to the Judaic Sabbath, Law, Synagogue. So God rewarded him — the Sabbath- keeper. He placed him on a conspicuous pinna- cle, as a type of the superior souls that, in every age and clime, give to the world its heroes and its martyrs. He has granted him the immortality cjf conferring upon the race its richest inheritances. Ancient Judaism's bequests to posterity — the Sabbath, the Law, the Tent of Meeting — are monuments more durable than the silent pyramids. SABBATH OF JUDAISM. (The Dispersion.) " Now let us repose from our care and our sorrow, Let all that is anxious and sad pass away ; The rough cares of life lay aside till to-morrow, And let us he tranquil and happy to-day." James Edmeston. The Judaic Sabbath of the Old Testament had a royal place and history. It witnessed the coming and going of prophets, priests, kings ; the rise and the fall of empires and nations; the growth and the decay of ancient civiliza- tions. It survived the ruin of the State and Temple; was clung to in exile; and illumined the restoration. Malachi, the last of the prophets, died. The Old Testament ended. For four centuries God sent no special message to man. But the Sabbath sun remained brilliant in the Judean sky. The day was still to be mighty in history— in the era of political ruin — in the era of Dispersion. The interspace between Malachi and Christ — between the Old Testament aud the new — was filled with the great- est events of ancient history. World Empires came and went; the Medo-Persian disappearing; the Grecian sweep- ing clear across the stage; the Roman ascending to its zenith, and covering the civilized world. The greatest philosophic schools — the Platonic, Socratic, Aristotelian, and Stoic in Greece, the Zoroastrian in the East, and the Ptolemaic in Alexandria—were born and, the last alone excepted, died. The ocean of mind was widely stirred. The Greek language became the organ of civilization. The greatest events were struggling for birth. 63 THE DISPERSION. 69 It was a special epoch in Jewish literature. There was a fusion of Greek and Jewish thought. Jewish men of letters — thinkers in their own epoch — writers in the Greek language — were numerous. The Apocryphal books are nearly all of that period. 1 The Septuagint — "the Greek Bible"— "the First Apostle to the Gentiles"— then ap- peared; opened up the Old Testament to Greek-speaking peoples ; gave birth to the New Testament dialect ; and was a forerunner of the Christianity soon to shine upon the world. 2 Ezekiel,- a priest, dramatized the Exodus. Aristobulus wrote an allegory on the Pentateuch. Theo- dotus versified the story of Dinah and Shechem. One Philo wrote an Epic on Jerusalem. Another Philo re- cast Jewish theology for Greek philosophers. Josephus and Jason of Cyrene wrote histories. And Hebrew proph- ets and kings were put into Grecian garb by Eupolemus, 1 " The books termed the Apocrypha, ... were all, or nearly all, composed before the Christian Era." — Anthon. 31 an. of Class. Lit., p. 541. " Uncertain as may be the date of individual books, few, if any can be thrown further back than the commencement of the 3d century B. C. The latest ... is probably not later than 30 B. C."— Smith. New Test Hist., p. 154. 2 " The Septuagint translation threw open to the Greek world the sacred books of Israel."— Lux Mundi, 84. New York, 1890. " This version, therefore, which rendered the scriptures of the Old Testament intelligible to a vast number of people, became one of the most considerable fruits of the Grecian conquest ... In this man- ner did God prepare the way for the preaching of the gospel, which was then approaching/' — Rollings Anc. Hist., 2 : 55. Harper Bros. " In Greek strategy and Greek statesmanship, Greek learning and Greek refinement, they were ready and brilliant disciples; even their artisans and workmen were sent for by distant countries. From the number of Judeo-Greek fragments, historical, didactic, epic, etc., (by Demetrius, Malchus, Eupolemus, Artapan, Aristaeus, Jason, Ezechialos, Philo, Theodot, etc,) which have survived, we may easily conclude what an immense literature must have sprung up here within a few centuries in the midst of the Judeo-Egyptian community." — The Inter. Oyc, Art. Jew r s. 70 SABBATH OF JUDAISM. Demetrius, Aristaeus, and Cleodemus. Judaism was a notable factor in contributing to the spreading light and literature. The Dispersion. The era was distinguished for the Jewish Dispersion — a historic miracle — too little considered by historians. 1 The Dispersion — among all nations — for centuries — is a fact unique in the history of mankind. The Dispersed Jews were settlers, and yet aliens and foreigners, in all lands outside their own God-given Canaan; dwelling under all 1 " The Jews of the Dispersion . . . was the general title ap- plied to those Jews who remained settled in foreign countries after the return from the Babylonian exile, and during the period of the second temple."— Smith's New Test. Hist, p. 145. " Our nation of whom the habitable world is full." — Josephtjs. Antiq., 14 : 7 : 2. "The Jews since the Babylonian Captivity had been scattered over all the world."— Nast. Com. Intro. § 34. " In the time of our Savior there was scarcely any land of the an- cient world, in which Jewish residents were not to be met with."— McClintock & Strong. Cycl> Art. Dispersed. "Now these Jews are already gotten into all cities, and it is hard to find a place in the habitable world, that hath not admitted this tribe of men, and is not possessed by it." — Steabo. Quoted by Joseph us. Antiq., 14: 7: 2. " There is first the ubiquity of the race : testified alike by Joseph us, Strabo, and Philo, and by the witness of inscriptions. They are every- where and everywhere in force throughout the Roman world." — Lux Mundi, 152. New York, 1890. "The holy city of Jerusalem, not merely . . . because of the colonies led out ... in the neighboring countries, such as Egypt, Phoenicia, Syria, and Coelosyria ; but also into those that are remote, such as Pamphylia, Cilicia, and the chief parts of Asia as far as Bithy- nia, and the innermost parts of Pontus ; also into the regions of Europe, Thessally, Bseotia, Macedonia, JEtolia, Attica, Argos, Corinth, and the principal parts of Peloponessus. Not only the continents and prov- inces are full of Jewish colonies, but the most celebrated isles also, Eubaea, Cypress, Crete, not to mention the countries beyond the Eu- phrates. All these are inhabited by Jews." — Philonis Opera, (Mongey. Edit.) 2: 587. THE DISPERSION. 71 governments; traders and artisans in all cities. Their coming and going among the nations was remarkable. They were " scattered to the utmost parts of heaven." The Babylonian Captivity — perhaps the more remote cap- tivity of Israel — began the Dispersion. The Jew face and form were thenceforward familiar wherever men went on land or sea. They were in all the Persian Empire in Esther's day. Under Alexander the Great and his succes- sors, they wandered everywhere among the nations. All the cities of the Roman Empire swarmed with these child- ! ren of Abraham. They were everywhere in Asia, Europe, and Africa. Their cosmopolitan character was seen at Pentecost of the crucifixion year. 1 Many, like Josephus, were granted the high privilege of Roman citizenship; and others, like Paul, were born into that heritage. The Dis- persion covered four, five, six centuries before the Advent. The Babylonian or Eastern Dispersion had precedence. 2 It dated from the Captivity, and grew into great volume 1 u And there were dwelling at Jerusalem Jews, devout men, out of every nation under heaven." — Acts 2 : 5. These are described, Chap. 2: 9-11, as Parthians, Medes, Elamites, and dwellers in Mesopota- mia, Capadocia, Pontus, Asia, Phrygia, Pamphylia, Egyptians, Lybians, Romans, Cretes, and Arabians. " James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ, to the twelve tribes which are scattered abroad, greeting." — James 1 : 1. 2 " At Babylon where there were Jews in great numbers." — Jose- phus. Antiq., 15 : 2 : 2. " At the beginning of the Christian era, the Dispersion was divided into three sections, the Babylonian, the Syrian, the Egyptian. Preced- ence was given to the first." — Smith. New Test. Hist., 145. " Babylon was at that time, and for some hundreds of years after, a chief seat of Jewish culture." — Ditto, 636. " They were most strongly represented in the Eastern countries, Baby- lonia and Eastern Syria." — Uhlhokn. Confl. of Christ, with Heath., p. 83. " From Babylon the Jew had spread through every region of the East, and wherever he went he became a zealous missionary of his faith."— Cunningham Geike. The Life of Christ, 98. u Their great colonies in Babylon and Mesopotamia are another, headquarters of the race." — Zu~ Mundi, 152. New York, 1890. 72 SABBATH OF JUDAISM. and importance. Babylonian Jews had prosperity and in- fluence, were wealthy and cultured ; and they spread through all Persia, and Media, and Parthia. The Egyptian Dispersion, with headquarters at Alexan- dria, occupying two of the city's five districts — governed by a magistrate of its own — was a million strong in Philo's day. Alexandrian Jews had equal civil rights with the Greeks ; and the highest offices and dignities were open to them. They had a temple and priesthood of their own, and one of their synagogues — the Diapleuston — was so vast and magnificent, that it was said of it : " Whosoever has not seen it has not seen the glory of Israel." From Alexandria, the Jews spread to the south- ern boundary of Ethiopia, and westward to the Lybian Desert. 1 The Syrian Dispersion had its headquarters at Antioch, and spread through all Syria, through Asia Minor, through Greece and the Mediterranean Isles. Josephus thought it 1 " In Egypt they constituted more than one-eighth of the entire population In Alexandria, they occupied two of its five wards and were scattered through the others." — Uhlhorn, Confi. of Christ with Heath., p. 83. " Before the dawn of the Christian era they had increased to a mil- lion," (in Alexandria .)— Farrar. Early Days of Christ, p. 162. " They are an eighth part (one million) of the population of Alex- andria.'' — Lux Mundi, 152. New York, 1890. "Egypt and other parts of Africa had a vast Jewish population."— Cunningham Geike. The Life of Christ, 98. " For as the Jewish nation is widely dispersed over all the habita- ble earth among its inhabitants, so is it very much intermingled with Syria by reason of its neighborhood, and had the greatest multitudes in Antioch." — Josephus. Wars, 7:4: 3. "Not less numerous were they in Antioch From there they spread over all of Asia Minor and found their way into Greece."— Uhlhorn. Confi. of Christ, with Heath., p. 83. " Three centuries or more before the Christian era, Judaism was al- ready strong enough in Egypt and Syria to claim political attention as an important element in society." — Huidekoper. Judaism at Borne, 41. THE DISPERSION. 73 numerically the greatest. It was powerful and flourishing in Christ's day. The Dispersion did not, perhaps, reach Rome till about 63 B. C, when Pompey carried many Jewish captives thither, and colonized them beyond the Tiber. The num- ber grew, and in brief years was represented in the highest circles, among rich and titled bankers, and even hi the palace of the Caesars. 1 The Dispersed mingled with all races and nations, and yet kept separate from them. They were solitary in so- ciety — isolated — a distinct race — unlike the rest of the world — never amalgamating with those among whom they lived. Association brings assimilation ; but they did not assimilate. Other races under similar circumstances have disappeared, and inevitable disappearance seemed to await 1 " In Kome under Augustus, the Jews numbered perhaps 40,000, in the time of Tiberius perhaps 80,000." — Uhlhorn. Confl. of Christ, with Heathenism, 83. " The number of Jews in Eome in the post-Augustan period may be reckoned as over 20,000. ... So were the Jews also to be found in the palace of the Caesars." — Adolph Harnack. Princeton Rev., bAth year, p. 253. " Jews in Rome ; for since the campaigns of Pompey and Gabrinitis, they had been so numerous in the capital that they formed a great quarter on the other side of the river." — Geike. The Life of Christ, 203. " The West was as full of Jews as the East."— Ditto, 98. " To persecute the Jews at Rome would not have been an easy mat- ter. They were sufficiently numerous to be formidable, and had over- awed Cicero in the zenith of his fame. Besides this the Jewish re- ligion was recognized, tolerated, licensed." — Early Christianity, Farrar p. 41. " Next in order is that odium of Jewish gold You know what a band there is of them, with what concord it acts, how much it can accomplish in assemblies. I will lower my voice so that only the judges can hear. For there are not wanting some who would incite them against me, and against every prominent man." — Cicero. Pi <> Flacco, c. 28. 74 SABBATH OF JUDAISM. them; but they did not disappear. A subject race for centuries — under Babylonian, Persian, Grecian, Roman masters — their nationality was never lost; their race char- acteristics remained unaltered. They resisted the modify- ing influence of every social environment. They moved forward over changing centuries, but changed not. Yet they clad themselves, with apparent ease, in the customs, usages, civilizations of all races of men, except simply as to religion. They were among all Gentile peo- ples religious aliens. They stood as monopolists of divine truth ; clung to the customs of their fathers ; would enter into no new religious conditions; and held all forms of worship, except their own, as idolatrous. Here they were the " Shibboleth" sh outers in history — an imperium in imperio. That brought them trouble. There sprang up along all paths of the Dispersion irritation, restriction, conflict. They were at times antagonized and oppressed. They suffered from the contradictory moods of human nature. Local uprisings sometimes decimated their num- bers. Hainan plotted their total immolation. And An- tiochus Epiphanes sought to extirpate both their failh and nationality. Yet their faith survived all misfortunes; their nationality outlived its enemies; and they multiplied in number. The pre-Messianic Jews — the Dispersion proper — are not however, to be confounded with the Jews after the capture and burning of Jerusalem by the Romans ; the former everywhere influential in society, though creating religious discontents ; the latter ostracised, persecuted, op- pressed. The Dispersed, for four centuries before Christ, were, with the Greeks and Romans, the chief makers of history. Mommsen makes Judaism the third factor in forming the Roman Empire. a The Dispersed now and then made rulers their debtors, and, in consequence, were ft Hist, of Rome, 5 : 14. THE DISPERSION. 75 spared from exactions, and even granted exceptional priv- ileges. Conspicuous among rulers making them notable grants are Cyrus the Great, Darius, Artaxerxes, Alexander the Great, Antiochus the Great, Julius Caesar, Mark An- tony, and Augustus Caesar. 1 By special edicts they were granted liberty to live according to the customs of their fathers ; were exempted from tribute every seventh year ; from being taken before a magistrate on the Sabbath ; and even from military services because they would neither fight or march on Sabbath days. The very edicts that 1 *' He (Alexander the Great,) granted the Jews, not only in Judea, but also in Media and Babylonia, the free enjoyment of their laws, and exemption from tribute during the Sabbatic year." — Smith. N, T. Hist., 16. "Antiochus (the Great) granted them a great many privileges."— Bollin, 2: 135. ''Seleucus Mcator made the Jews citizens in the cities which he built in Asia and Syria." — Josephus. Antiq., 12 : 3:1. " The Jews were granted by the first Ptolemy great privileges in the new capita], (Alexandria) ; and these they retained to the time of the Roman Empire." — Raweinson. Anc. Hist., 263. "The privilege of the Jews had been secured to them under the Ro- man Empire by the generous edicts of Julius Caesar and other Emper- ors."— Farrar. Early Christ, 163. Julius Caesar granted them exemption from tribute every seventh year, and to live "according to the customs of their forefathers."— Jo- SEPHL'S. Antiq., 14 : 10 : 2:8. Marc Antony and Dolabella, Consuls, granted them " freedom from going into the army ; " and also " to use the customs of their fathers." Josephus. Antiq., 14: 10: 12. Augustus Csesar ordained, " that the Jews have liberty to make use of their own customs."— Josephus. Antiq., 16 : 6 : 2. Claudius Csesar decreed, " to permit the Jews, who are in all the world under us, to keep their own customs, without being hindered to do so." — Josephus. Antiq., 19 : 5 : 3. " To numbers and ubiquity, they add privilege in the shape of rights and immunities, begun by the policy of the successors of Alexander, but vigorously taken up and pushed by Rome as early as 139 B. C, greatly developed by Caesar, around whose pyre at Rome they wept, and maintained by the almost constant policy of the Empire." — Lux Mundi, 152. New York, 1890. 76 SABBATH OF JUDAISM. secured these immunities are reporters of the religious fric- tion that followed their steps. The relief was occasional and temporary. It deferred but did not prevent the ca- tastrophe. The Dispersed took with them everywhere the Sab- bath, the Synagogue, and the Law. They built among all Polytheists an altar to the One God ; reared his Tent of Meeting beside the fanes of heathen idolatry ; and kept the seventh-day rest among all peoples who had lost it, or had never known it. 1 Paul found this trinity of Juda- isms— the Day, the Book, the House — in nearly all the cities whither he went preaching the Gospel. And James reports them as everywhere known and used of old. " For 1 Jerusalem, according to the Rabbins, had 480 synagogues. Acts 6: 9 reports synagogues of Libertines, Cyrenians, Alexandrians, Cilicians, and Asians. " Alexandria contained several synagogues, one of which was very splendid."— Philo. App. ii. 565. " Their synagogue (at Alexandria) the famous Diapleuston, with its seventy gilded chairs, and its size so vast that the signal for the 'Amens' of ths congregation, had to be given by a flag — was the greatest in the world." — Farrar. Early Christ, 162. "The Jews had built their synagogues in all the commercial cities of the Roman Empire." — Nast. Com., Gen. Intro. ^[ 34. "The synagogue assembled the faithful on that day within its precincts, in every town and hamlet, in and out of Palestine, before and after the exile." — The Inter. Cyc, Art. Sabbath. " In Leontopolis (Egypt) they had a temple of their own The existence of seven synagogues in Rome has been definitely estab- lished, and probably there were others." — Uhlhorn. Gonfl. of Christ, with Heath., 83. " Greece. . . . and Macedonia, where in the Apostle's time, we find in all the important cities. .. .communities with synagogues or proseu- chse." — McClintock & Stro>g. Cyci, Art. Dispersion. The Sabbath, like the Synagogue, was taken everywhere — into every land — into all cities. The testimony is voluminous. A single quota- tion is given. " There is not any city of the Grecians, nor any of the barbarians, nor any nation whatsoever, whither our custom of resting on the sev- enth day has not come." — Josephus. Apion, 2 : 40. THE DISPERSION. 77 Moses of old time," he says, " bath in every city them that preach him, being read in the synagogue every Sabbath day." a The six centuries that came and went before Christ spread widely among all nations the Sabbath, the Syna- gogue, and the Law. These Judaisms were permanently in Babylon six hundred years before the Christian era; in Egypt and in Antioch three hundred years; and in Rome at least sixty-three years. From those centers they found their way into all the cities of the world. They represented the only religion that then interested itself in man's morality. And everywhere a breath of reform attended them. Jewish peculiarities, during the Dispersion, may be summed up as Monotheism, Circumcision, Temple offer- ings and Sabbatism. Monotheism brought the Dispersed no reported trouble. Circumcision invited ridicule, but not persecution. And Temple offerings, not interfering with State tribute, provoked no antagonism. It was sev- enth-day Sabbatism, their chief distinguishing trait, that made their life and history troublous. They would not, on Sabbath days, litigate, go on a journey, march or fight as soldiers, or perform any kind of labor. 1 This septen- a Acts 15: 21. x It was chiefly Sabbath- keeping that brought them trouble. They would not fight in holy time. 1. Mace. 2: 32-8. Josephus. Antiq., 14: 4: 2-3 and 12: 1: 1. Or they would repel but not attack an enemy. 1 Mace. 2: 41. Josephus. Antiq., 18: 9: 2. Wars, 1:7:3. Jerusalem was often captured on Sabbath days, because oi these Jewish customs — by Antiochus Epiphanes — by Pompey — by Titus. Kollin, 2: 194, 275. The Inter Cyc, Art. Sabbath. "Nor is it lawful for us to journey, either on the Sabbath day, or on a festival day." — Josephus. Antiq., 13: 8: 4. This Sabbatism brought perpetual conflict. Edicts of relief, by Romans, were many. Josephus quotes a number: Ordering thai "no one compel the Jews to come before a judge on the Sabbath day." Antiq., 16 : 6: 2-4.; granting free lorn "from going into the army on account of the superstition they are under," Antiq. 14: 10: 13 allowing them "tj celebrate their Sabbaths," Antiq. 14: 10: 21 78 SABBATH OF JUDAISM. ary rest that so dominated them challenged either the world's recognition, or its opposition. It was confronted and opposed ; not by a rival day of rest or worship, as first day, that nowhere appears ; but by opposition to the institution itself. Antipathy to the Sabbatism of the seven-day week is everywhere ; harmony with it, or with a competing day, nowhere. Persian masters, Greek mas- terSj Roman masters reluctantly yielded their Jew 7 vassals a seventh of days for rest — partial exemption from trib- ute — exemption from military service. The day is challenged and opposed by all Greek and Roman writers of the period who discuss the subject. Between the two Testaments, the Sabbath, throughout all the world, was an institution peculiarly Jewish. Gentile nations had no competing institution. It differentiated the Jew from all other peoples. He had it; they had not. He kept it ; they satirized it. Sabbatic differences, not to be minimized, stand in history as the chief contention be- tween the Jew and the Gentile. 1 The Sabbath of the Dispersion was not a sad but a joyous day. It did not foster a self-torturing spirit; that '• that the Jews may be allowed to observe their Sabbaths," Antiq. 14 : 10 : 20 ; " that as many men and women of the Jews, as are will- ing so to do, may celebrate their Sabbaths," Antiq. 14 ; 10 : 23 ; and "that. . . .no one of them should be. hindered from keeping the Sab- bath-day, or be fined for so doing," Antiq. 14: 10 : 25. "Eights and immunities guarding their distinctive customs, such as their observance of the Sabbath." — Lux Mundi., 152. " On this account alone (their Sabbatisiu, the Romans found them- selves compelled to exempt the Jews from all military service." — Uycl. Brit., Art. Sabbath. ia The cessation from labor every seventh day by the Jews struck foreigners as something strange, and provoked their ridicule." — Bible Com., Art. Sabbath Forgotten. "At the time of the exile the Sabbath was already an institution peculiarly Jewish, otherwise it could not have served as a mark of distinction from heathenism." — W. E. Smith, LL. D., Encyc. Brit., Art. Sabbath. THE DISPERSION. 79 came later. The corrupting traditions of the elders were indeed beginning to rob it of some of its divine sweet- ness ; but enough still remained to make it blessed among days. It wove a garment of glory in the loom of the passing years. ' To the pre-Messianic Jew, it must have had a sweetness that never flagged ; a beauty that never ceased to attract ; for at peril and sacrifice he kept up its weekly celebration through revolving centuries. 1 It was at once the romance and the tragedy of his life ; a romance that grew not old or faded; a tragedy that reddened many fields of the Orient. His Sabbath mornings and evenings were fringed with a shout and a song; The clay was made restful throughout by sacred readings and pleasing ad- dresses. It covered the Dispersed, "in bondage among the Gentiles/' with trailing garments of light. It entranced them with high and holy raptures as they chanted : " This is the day the Lord hath made; we will rejoice and be glad therein." lu The Hebrews solemnize the Sabbath with mutual feasting.'' — Plutarch. Sympos., lib. IV. qu. 5. " And she fasted all the days of her widowhood, save the eves of the Sabbaths and the Sabbaths."— Judith, 8 : 6. " She. . . .went down into the house in which she abode in the Sab- bath days, and in her feast days." — Judith, 10 : 2. Introductory — Sabbath morning benediction — " Blessed art thou O Lord our God, king of the universe, who hath sanctified us by his laws, and hath made us partakers in his grace, and hath in his love and in his mercy, given us the Sabbath, as a remembrance of creation as the first day of holy convocations, and in memory of redemption irom Egypt ; for thou hast chosen us and sanctified us from all peo- ples, and hast given us thy holy Sabbath in love and in grace. Blessed art thou, Lord, who sanctifieth the Sabbath. " Valedictory— Sabbath-evening Prayer.-.-" Blessed art thou, O Lord our God, king of the universe, who divided between holy and unholy, between light and darkness, between Israel and the peoples, between the Sabbath and the six-days of creation. Blessed art thou, O Lord, who divideth between holy and unholy ." 80 SABBATH OF JUDAISM. P-ROVIDENTTAL OUTCOME OF THE JUDAIC SABBATH. One providential mission of ancient Judaism was to preserve the Sabbath in history, and at last rekindle its fires among the nations. Six centuries before Christ, the Gentiles had no seven-day week or Sabbatism. They had dropped out of their life. They were slowly lost. They were to be slowly recovered. The order of nature changes slowly; as continents emerging from the sea; as planets to be the seat of life. So of social institutions and customs. So of the seven-day week and its Sabbatism. The Dis- persion, a seed sown for a future harvest, began their restoration. The Dispersed, to whom the institutions were divinely handed for safe keeping* and transmission, long kept them alive and renewed them in the world. They stand in history, between the two Testaments, as the restor- ers of the seven-day week and its Sabbatism. Judaism was the continuous stream into which the ancient institu- tions were gathered, and out of which the modern institu- tions h«ive flowed and are flowing. The Dispersed Jew was conspicuous as the Sabbath torch-light bearer. He marched across the nations and down the centuries with the Sabbath flag unfurled and held aloft. He began the mighty march at the Babylon- ian captivity— perhaps earlier at the captivity of Israel — began it from Jerusalem — began it in Babylon — began it in Nineveh. His moving columns occupied every city in the Persian Empire— in the Grecian Empire — in the Roman Empire. The Sabbath, always and everywhere was one of his essential belongings. He fought and won no battles of his own; planted no cities; conquered no territories; founded no Empires; but he built Syna- gogues, studied Moses, and kept the seventh-day rest, Uniting the energy of youth with the majesty of an immemorial antiquity, he kept steadily, persistently, every- where, at this work through four, five, six centuries. He PROVIDENTIAL OUTCOME. 81 was the repairer of the breach ; the restorer of the weekly cycle; the renewer of the Sabbath. Great events move as pathfinders before humanity. The Dispersion, with its Sabbath flag waving in the breeze of every city for centuries, is one of the greatest events in pre-Christian history. It was at its apogee of splendor and influence about the time of the Advent, when the first Cassars were granting all Jews special protection and privi- leges. It had made the spectacle of the seventh day Sab- bath world-wide and somewhat popular. Its providential work was done. It had accomplished three things. First. The seven-day week and the seventh- day Sab- bath were again known to the Gentiles — not recalled by them — but brought to them. 1 The far-off was brought nigh ; and the Dispersed Jew was the providential bringer. On the Nile, the Euphrates, and the Tiber, as well as on the Sacred Jordan, the seven-day week and its Sabbath were known. The people everywhere saw the Sabbath light of Judaism. Seeds of Sabbatism were scattered widely among the nations. Second. The Sabbath made converts in the way oj proselytes to Judaism. Samaritans, an alien and various 1 The Jewish Sabbath is a much reported day in pre-Christian his- tory. Two samples out of multitudes are here given. Agatharchides (a Greek writer about 300 B. C.,) as quoted by Jose- phus (Apion 1 : 22) speaks of the " Jews . , . accustomed to rest every seventh day." Diogenes (a Greek rhetorician about 15 A. D.) not only knew but kept the Jewish Sabbath. Suetonious (Tiberius, 32, Bonn's trans.) says of him: "Diogenes, the grammarian, who used to hold public dis- quisitions at Khodes every Sabbath-day, once refused him (Tiberius) admittance upon his coming to hear him out of course, and sent him a message by a servant, postponing his admission until the next seventh day." 82 SABBATH OF JUDAfSM. people, became Sabbatarians after the Jewish type. 1 And Judaism, in wide favor about the time of the Advent, was everywhere marching with the swing of conquest — was seeking expansion — was a vast and active propagandised. " Ye compass sea and land," said Jesus, " to make one proselyte." a Horace, about forty years before, had implied the same thing. " I'll force you, like the proselyting Jews, To be like us, a brother of the muse." b Proselytes were made : perhaps among them Naaman, the Syrian, Cornelius the centurion, and the eunuch of Queen Candace. 2 The keepers of Pentecost in crucifixion year, are described as " Jews and proselytes." One of the seven deacons, elected in the Apostolic church, was "Nico- las a proselyte of Antioch." And Paul and Barnabas, at Antioch in Pisidia, were at one time followed by "Jews a Matt. 22: 15. b Lib. 1, Sat. 4, lines 142-3. 1 2. Kings, chap. 17. The Samaritans, in an official document about 170 B. C, said: "Our forefathers, upon certain irequent plagues, and as following a certain ancient superstition, had a custom of observing that day which by the Jews is called the Sabbath." — Josephus. Antiq., 12: .5: 5. 2 " The propagandists of Judaism in the Koman Empire." — Juda- ism at Borne, 27. " The number of proselytes, gained over the world by this propa- ganda, was incredible.' ' — Geike. Life of Christ, 98. " Multitudes of early converts had been Jewish proselytes before they became Christian disciples." — Farrar. Life and Work of St. Paul, 2: 120. " The people of Damascus . . . Yet did they distrust their own wives, who were almost all of them addicted to the Jewish religion." —Josephus. Wars, 2 : 20 : 2. "In various degrees, multitudes (of whom women doubtless formed a a considerable majority) adopted the customs and brought themselves into connection with the religion of the Jews." — Lux Mundi, 154. New York, 1890. "The heathen also, contemptible as the Jews seemed to them, hav- ing become convinced of the profound truths of the Israel itish system, and of the emptiness and impotence of their own religion, yielded, in exceptional but by no means rare cases, to the better influences of Judaism." — Kurtz. Ch. Hist , 54. PROVIDENTIAL OUTCOME. 83 and religious proselytes." Judaism was thus becoming the inheritance, not of Jews only, but of many Gentile Converts. The conquered became, religiously, conquerors. The seventh-day Sabbath won victories. The Greek and Jew races — the one now descending from lofty pinnacles of greatness — the other representing a vast Dispersion — were widely meeting in history: and many Greeks entered the Synagogue as proselytes; accepted the seven-day week; and kept the seventh-day Sabbath. 1 The Roman and Jew 1 " Greeks knew the Jew and his Sabbath from the sixth century B. C. (Clearchus 400 B. C.) reports his master Aristotle, as telling about a Jew from Ccelosyria who communicated to him more knowl- edge than he received from him. — Josephus. Apion,l: 22. Hermip- pus testifies that Pythagoras (540 B. C.) "transferred into his own philosophy" "doctrines of the Jews."— Josephus. Apion, 1: 22. Hecateus (300 B. C.) wrote a book about the Jews. — Josephus. Apion, 1 : 22. Megasthenes (300 B. C.) testified that a all matters of natural science . . . were taught ... in Syria by those called Jews." Clement op Alexandria. Strom., 1 : 72. Josephus further reports the following Greek writers as mentioning the Jews : Theophilus, Aristophanes, Mnases, Zoperion, Euhemerus, Hermogenes, Menander, Conon, Eupolemus, and Nicolas. Onomacritus (500 B. C.) evidently knew about Moses and Sinai when he wrote : " So speaks tlie lore Of ancient wisdom : so the man, who sprang From the cradling waters, speaks ; who took The double tables of the law from God." —Quoted from Poets and Poetry of the Ancients, 88. Greek and Jew meeting in history, the Jew conquered — the Jew faith triumphed — Greek proselytes were many. " They also made proselytes of a great many of the Greeks perpetu- ally." — Josephus. Wars, 7: 3: 3. "Jews believed in a Supreme Being who took interest in human morality. Many Greeks accepted this belief." — Judaism at Borne, 384. " At length the Greeks became more acquainted with their Sacred Books, and conversions from Paganism to Judaism was not an uncom- mon occurrence. Synagogues, composed in great part of proselytes, existed in many of the Grecian cities, at the beginning of the Christian era." — Anthon. Man. Class. Lit., 541. Greek proselytes were numerous enough among early Christian con- verts to complain ''against the Hebrews because their widows were neglected in the daily ministration." — Acts 6 : 1. 84 SABBATH OF JUDAISM. races — the civilization of the sword, and the civilization oi religion — the one representing soldiers and statesmen, the other merchants and Sabbatarians — were also widely com- ing together in history : and Romans, not a few, bowed the knee to Jehovah ; appeared in the synagogue as prose- lytes; and observed the Jewish Sabbath. 1 Thus the only era of propagandist!!, ever known to Judaism, was crowned with success. Proselytes were numerous. The Sabbath won disciples and widened its area. Third. The seven-day week and its Sabbatism slowly but steadily spread among all Gentile peoples. They did not invent these divine institutions; did not even seek their return. They were paraded before them — brought to them — pressed upon their acceptance. At last — here 1 Romans had the Jews and their Sabbath at Rome from 63 B. C. ; and certainly knew them much earlier in history ; perhaps about a century earlier. Cicero, (106-43 B. C.) as quoted by Augustine, (De Civitate Dei 6 : 11) says: "The Jewish faith is now received over every land : the conquered have given laws to the conquerors." " To-day is the thirtieth Sabbath ; and would you be willing to op- press the Jews."— Horace (65—8 B. C.) Sat. 1 : 9. "The seventh-day held sacred by the Jew."— Ovid, (43 B. C— 18 A. D.) De Art. Amand, i., 76. From the time that Jew and Roman met in history, the Jew faith made converts. So Seneca has already reported. Some other reports here follow : " The seventh-day which is kept holy by the Jews is also a festival of the Roman women." — Tibullus. (About 18 B. C.) Julia a (Roman) woman of great dignity, and one that had embraced the Jewish religion." — Josephus. Antiq., 18 : 3 : 5. " They (Jews at Rome) were accorded full freedom of worship, and were even successful in making converts," — McClintock & Strong. Cycl., Art. Dispersion. " Roman ladies thronged the synagogues of the Jews, and many a Roman observed the Jewish Sabbath." — Ullhorn. Confl. of Christ, with Heath. y 63. " Their views were, before the Christian era, gaining rapid foothold at Borne." — Judaism at Rome, 1. See also Juvenal, Sat. 14: 96-106. PROVIDENTIAL OUTCOME. 85 and there — Gentile peoples began to receive them back; began to appreciate and use them. They were accepted as a more convenient arrangement of the days — by Greeks as better than the decade — by Romans as better than nundinse. The initial changes cannot be named. The steps of change, from the beginning to the culmination, cannot be traced. But enough surface facts appear to show the going on of a deep and wide social and moral revolution. The leavening process was everywhere — in all lands — among all peoples — in all cities. 1 The idea of a new epoch was in the air. Not indeed till the beginning of the third Christian century — not till Christianity had changed Sabbatism from the Seventh to the First day — was the great revolution to be complete. But honor to whom honor. It was not the Christian, it was the Jew, who brought back and restored to the world the seven day week and its Sabbatism. Out of his mighty Dispersion — world-wide — centuries long — the Sabbath issued to be once more a world institution. The world was divinely prepared for Christ and Chris- tianity. 2 A world empire — the Roman — had removed 1 "Every synagogue was, as it were, a mission station of Monothe- ism."— Dr. Nast. Com. Gen. Intro., \ 34. " The clear, strong, deep religious faith of the Jews scattered every- where, and everywhere, as we know, to an extraordinary extent leavening society." — Lux Mundi, 149. " But not a lew were attracted into the shadow of the synagogue, and the majority of those were women." — Farrar. The Life and Work of St. Paul, 2 : 120. " In Syria and portions of Asia Minor, and perhaps even to the east- ward of these countries, they had, at the Christian era, largely dis- placed the ancient religions." — Huidekoper. Judaism in Rome, 1, 2 " At the birth of Christ the striking spectacle presented itself, in a degree unknown before or since, of the world united under one scepter. From the Euphrates to the Atlantic; from the mouths of the Rhine to the slopes of the Atlas, the Roman Emperor was the sole lord." — Cunningham G-eike. The Life of Christ, 18. 86 SABBATH OF JUDAISM. impediments from the way, and made broad highways for intercourse, between the nations. A world language — the Grecian— -had everywhere promoted and made possi- ble international intercourse. Partition walls between civilized nations were broken down, and laws and customs, more or less common, united East and West, North and South. All these prepared the way of the Lord. But other providential preparations were more potent. The Dispersion was God's mightiest factor. 1 Judaism, a re- ligious oasis in the world's desert, a protest against the impiety of the period, was the cradle of the Gospel. * It built in all cities the Synagogue — the Tent of Meeting. It preached everywhere Mosaism — the Scriptures — the Book, It unfurled in every atmosphere the Sabbath flag — the Day. These were God's chief preparative forces. They gave new and divine shaping to world-history. 1 They (Jews) " had been merely chosen servants to keep the truth alive, that the world might at last know it, and be saved." — Ben Bur, 20. "Augustus got the fame in Eome of being the patron of the Jews, and in the provinces, even among the Jews themselves, of being the magnanimous protector of their religion. His tolerance, moreover, served an end which he did not contemplate. It secured the slow but certain conquest of the West, first by Judaism, the pioneer of a new and higher faith, and then by Christianity — the faith for which it had prepared the way." — Geike. The Life of Christ, 203. "Notwithstanding Cyrus allowed all the Jews in his dominions to return to their own land, many of them did not return. This hap- pened agreeable to God's purpose in permitting them to be carried away captive into Assyria and Babylonia ; for he intended to make himself known among the heathen by reason of the knowledge of his being and perfections, which the Jews in their dispersion would com- municate to them." — Dr. MacKnight. Quoted in Meth. Quar., 1885, p. 438. ' " The Dispersion of the chosen people was one of those three vast and world-wide events, in which the Christian cannot but seethe hand of God so ordering the course of history as to prepare the world for a revelation of his Son." — Farrar. The Life and Work of St. Paul, 2: 116. PROVIDENTIAL OUTCOME. 87 They heralded and brought in Christ and Christianity, They are of the Jew. Sabbatism is of the Jew. It was a boon that the world needed, and which Judaism restored fco the nations. The Jew, as God's ancient knight, walked the wide world four, five, six centuries to reorganize world Sabbatism — to usher in the new and better era. JESUS AND THE SABBATH. " Oh day ol days ! Shall hearts set free No minstrel rapture find tor thee ? Thou art the Sun of other days ; They shine by giving hack thy rays."— The Sabbath of the Gospels is the lingering Sabbath of Judaism under the interpretations of Jesus; his inter- pretations as seen in his life and teachings — as seen in what he did and what he said. The words and deeds ot Jesus give us our ideal Sabbath — the Sabbath in its latest divine statement. What then is the attitude of Jesus towards the day ? What He Did. He kept the Sabbath ; kept it inviolate; kept it first and last. He honored it in every way and at all times. His high regard for it is an underlying fact of his entire ministry. The sacred day, in the record of his life and work, is always observed, revered, sanctified. All his re- ported places of resort on the Sabbath were places of wor- ship. He began his public ministry at Nazareth by " entering into the synagogue on the Sabbath day, as his custom was, and standing up to read." He passed thence to Capernaum, "and taught them on the Sabbath day." As he began, so he continued, and so he ended. From this Sabbath-keeping custom there is no known departure. He was a Sabbatarian. As God, on the seventh day, after creation-work was ended, so Jesus in all his earthly min- istry, was a Sabbatarian. He kept the day. He reinsti- tuted it, if not by express law, by example. His acts are legislative. They are authoritative. His example is a living, walking, talking law, whose influence is potential and universal. WHAT HE DID. 89 He wrought miracles of healing on the Sabbath. At least seven of his thirty-three recorded miracles were Sab- bath work. He healed on Sabbath -days the man with an unclean spirit in the synagogue at Capernaum, Mark 1 : 23-6 ; Simon's wife's mother, Mark 1 : 29-31 ; the man with a withered hand, Matt. 12 : 9-13 ; the man born blind, John 9: 14; the impotent man at Bethesda's pool, John 5:9; the woman with a spirit of infirmity, Luke 13 : 11-4 ; and the man with dropsy, Luke 14 : 1-4. Inspect these seven Sabbatic miracles. The cases were not urgent; all, excepting Simon's wife's mother, being chronic ailments that might easily have waited for secular time. They were not pressed upon the Divine Healer — not solicited by the patients, or by friends. The people about him did not believe in Sabbath healings; and it was only in secular, never in sacred time, that they came, or brought friends, to be healed. The miracles were spon- taneous with Jesus; innovations on the usages of the epoch ; a surprise to patients and on-lookers ; and wrought with the greatest publicity. The Divine Worker, in his Sabbath miracles, seemed to invite attention — to court no- toriety — to solicit a questioning of his work. Why this publicity? What did Jesus mean? What did he mean in making Sabbatic salve out of clay to anoint blind eyes? What did he mean in sending a healed man to carry his bed through Sabbatic streets? What did he mean — to take in a related idea — in justifying Sabbath corn-gather- ing by his disciples? Let his own vords and deeds answer. He justifies Sabbath miracles out of his own epoch ; pointing the questioning Jews to themselves, on Sabbaths, pulling sheep and oxen out of ditches; and telling them, irresistibly, that a man, because better than a sheep or ox, is entitled to be healed on that day. He also justifies Sab- bath miracles, and corn-pulling to appease hunger, by Old 90 JESUS AND THE SABBATH. Testament examples, as Sabbath Temple sacrifices — Sab- bath circumcisions — and David appeasing hunger with forbidden shew-bread. This was his surface argument ; and it completely vanquished the questioning Jews. But his real meaning lies deeper and goes farther. What is it ? He meant to recall holy time from oppressive strictness: to prune it of alien growths ; to pry it out of traditional ruts. The Jews, as custodians of the Sabbath, had fast- ened upon it many human additions and corruptions. Jewish Sabbatism was all awry ; a caricature on the Sabbath of the Decalogue ; burdensome in multiplied and oppres- sive rites; destroying much of the blessedness and help- fulness of sacred rest. It would pull a sheep or an ox out of a ditch, but refuse healing to a paralyzed man ; circum- cise a child, but denounce sight-giving to a blind man ; offer Temple sacrifices, but anathematize the straightening of a crooked human arm. This Phariseeism in the Jewish Sabbath, Jesus struck down, not the day itself. He an- tagonized, not the divine original, but only the human counterfeit. He made human traditions, not the sacred seventh of time, melt, like wax, before even bodily neces- sities. He granted relief from formalism, not from obli- gation ; from misinterpretation, not from law; from burdensome rites, not from Sabbatic duty. He meant, in a word, to restate and revive the Sabbath of the Decalogue. His restatement sets forth works of necessity and mercy as suitable Sabbath -furniture, as not merely allowable, but of the very essence of the day. No real Sabbatism, according to his restatement, can exclude miracles of healing — deeds of humanity— acts of charity. Humanities are masters of the day. It admits even of such necessary secular acts, as bed-carrying by the healed, salve-making to anoint blind eyes, and corn-pulling to appease hunger pangs. Jesus, in all this, did not abrogate, but refurnished, the Sabbath. He did not strike down, WHAT HE SAID. 91 but renewed, the restful Sabbath of Eden and of Sinai. For his restated and restored duties and privileges presup- pose the continuance and perpetuity of the day. He thus recognizes its enduring character and immutable obligation. Such is New Testament Sabbatism as interpreted by the deeds of Jesus. What Hf Said. Six of his conversations, or discourses, discuss the Sab- bath. They give us by direct statement, his Sabbath views in four great watchwords. A first watchword-— " The Son of man is Lord even of the Sabbath day " — declares his own supremacy over the day. Jesus, in these words, refers to himself. He advan- ces and asserts his own dignity and authority. He declares his lordship over holy time. He is lord of the Sabbath, because he instituted it — preserves and perpetuates it — keeps it in its endless on-going. This makes it a New Testament institution ; a living, not a dying or dead insti- tution ; for Jesus "is not the God of the dead but of the living." His lordship over the day must affirm, among other things, his right to decide and order what is true Sabbath-keeping; to say what things should and what should not be done; and to make any needed readjust- ments of the day. It is thought by some that his lordship over the day was advanced to set forth that he meant to abrogate it, or at least to relax its claims and duties. It is not however of the nature of lordship to abolish — to destroy — to relax — but to continue — to improve — and to rule. His lordship over the day implies therefore that it was not to be destroyed, but to be continued and perpetu- ated in his Gospel kingdom. A second watchword — "The Sabbath was made for man, and not man for the Sabbath " — sets forth holy time in its relations to man, positively and negative!} -■ — in the 92 . JESUS AND THE SABBATH. light of what it is, and in the light of what it is not. Man was not made for the Sabbath. This is its negative side. This is what it is not. Man, as to the earth, stands at the apex of all known creatures. All things — the globe itself, its revolving seasons, its mighty forces, its living and dead forms — were made for him, and exist for him, not he for them. It is so also as to the Sabbath. Judaism made man the slave of the Sabbath. This watch- word of Christ is the proclamation of his freedom. The Sabbath, like marriage, like the atonement, was instituted for man's use and welfare. It was made for man. This is its positive side. This is what it is — what it is for. The Sabbath, in its exact self, as given at Creation, as renewed in the Decalogue, as now restated by Jesus, was made for man. It was made for man somehow as light is made for the eyes or sound for the ear. 1 It is a divine bequest to him of a septenary rest-day ; a hallowed and blessed septenary rest-day. Like the atmosphere, the sunbeam, the rain-drop, it brings benedictions to high and low, to rich and poor, to grave and gay, to young and old. It was instituted for man's welfare, and meets deep and universal human needs. As he Sabbatizes he comes into the plans and purposes of God. It enriches the soul, im- proves the mind, and affords rest and comfort to the wearied body. As the Sabbath was made for man, it was made for the Gentile as well as the Jew ; and is a world-wide, a uni- versal, institution. As it was made for man, it was made for the last even as for the first man ; and is a time-long institution. This watchword of Jesus makes the Sabbath as broad as mankind, and co-extensive with the human period. It teaches the unity of mankind. It ranks 1 "The Sabbath was made for man in the same high sense that the family was made for man — the two great and unchangeable institutions sacred to man from the ruins of Paradise.' ' — Dr. J. O. Peck. Sab- bath Essays. WHAT HE SAID. 93 Sabbatism among world ideas. It is a bell that is ever helping to ring the death-knell of prejudice, exclusiveness, bigotry. World ideas were long lost. Jesus restored them. The Sabbath is one of his restored world ideas. A third watchword — " My Father worketh hitherto, and I work " — reminds us that divine work goes on un- ceasingly with God as a Sabbatarian. His Sabbath-cycle, his seventh-day rest, the now ot all time, is occupied by him in upholding and governing all things that he created in the beginning, and in redeeming man. This divine work, sending rain on the good and the evil, sunlight on the just and the unjust, and giving a measure of the spirit to all, is ever going on ; on our Sabbath as on our work- days; in our sacred as in our secular time. The work of Jesus on Jewish Sabbaths was after this divine pattern. It was work done for others; miracles of healing, build- ing up broken human forms ; doing good to the souls and bodies of men. This example of the Father and of Jesus — the Divine Workers hitherto — justifies all work done on the Sabbath for others — for their betterment. Work not for self, but for others — for their helping and improvement — is real Sabbatism — the Sabbatism of the Father — the Sabbatism of Jesus. Self-seeking work oc- cupies us so constantly that it tires us — makes the brow sweat, the loins ache, the hands and feet weary. This is " thy work." It is the work that is forbidden on the Sab- bath. Work for others is change and recreation. It is divine work. It is restful. " Take my yoke upon you," says Jesus,- — my self-sacrificing for the good of others — "and ye shall find rest to your souls." This work is ever to go on. This Sabbatism is imperishable. A fourth watchword — " Wherefore it is lawful to do well on the Sabbath day "—justifies all well-doing in sacred time. What wonderful words ! How broad and 94 JESUS AND THE SABBATH. forceful in meaning ! " It is lawful " — not merely allow- able as an exception, but right, as of the very nature of the institution — "to do well on the Sabbath day." To do well — no limitation or restriction is placed upon the utterance — is suitable Sabbath furniture. Works of necessity and mercy are of the very essence of Sabbath- keeping. Jesus, here as in the Fourth Commandment, lifts Sabbath-keeping from the low plain of mere formalities to the lofty level of the humanities. He fits all well-doing into the institution. He prescribes this as among its high duties and privileges, and so transmits the day on into the future. For prescription of duty and of privilege is not a warrant of death, but of continuance and of perpetuity. Two Added Words. To direct discourses on the Sabbath, six in number, Jesus adds a direct allusion to future Sabbatism. He had prevision of the future. He foresaw about forty years later in history, the destruction of Jerusalem, the demoli- tion of the Temple, the slaughter and the world-wide op- pression of the Jews ; and he said to his disciples of that period, " Pray ye that your flight be not in the winter, neither on the Sabbath day." The Sabbath was thus before him as a belonging of the future. It was not to perish. It was to survive his earthly day, and still live on. To direct discourses on the Sabbath, six in number, Jesus also adds an indirect allusion to the Sabbath law. He is not the law destroyer, but the law fulfiller. He puts himself in this light in his inimitable sermon on the mount. He did not come to destroy, but to fulfill the law — the moral law — its admirable summary in the Ten Commandments. Of that code he is the fulfiller, not the destroyer. He did not abrogate or weaken it, or any part TWO ADDED WORDS. 95 of it. He did not abrogate or weaken the Fourth Com- mandment. He did not recall it, as if worn out and useless; nor secularize it, as if too binding. He fulfilled it. He obeyed it. He restated and reinstituted it by ex- ample and teaching. There is no repeal, no weakening, but re-enthronement, transmission, perpetuity. Moral elements continue to exist without re-enactment. This is now the attitude of Jesus towards the Sabbath, as seen in his life and teachings, in what he did and what he said. The sketch is full and fair. Nothing is omitted ; nothing overstated. How any thinker ever held and taught that Jesus meant either to abrogate the Sabbath or relax its claims, is among things unaccountable. He no more abrogated or weakened the Sabbath law, than he did the eternal laws of right — of truth — of purity — of love. It, even as they, belongs to imperishable and changeless verities. The Risen Jesus and the Sabbath. Change of Day. Si Hail to the day when He by whom was given New life to man— he tomb asunder riven— Arose ! that day his Church has still confessed. At once Creation's and Redemption's feasts, - Sign of a world called forth, a world forgiven." Sabbatism entered the Christian Era as an element of strife. Two practices, giving birth to two theories, started in the beginning, and ran parallel in history ; one using the first-day of the week alone ; the other using also the seventh-day. Seventh-day at last dropped out; and First- day alone remained for Sabbatism. A momentous question thus confronts us. Was the day divinely changed ? Is there a fairly authorized ending of one series of Sabbaths? Is there a fairly authorized beginning of a new series of Sabbaths ? A Change of Day Possible. Inherent sanctity belongs equally to all time, or is equally absent from all time. All days, as to intrinsic ex- cellencies, or holy uses, are essentially alike. There is nothing in. any one day, in itself, to differentiate it from others, to make it exceptionally sacred ; to invest it with Sabbatism. This is self-evident. The day itself, any particular day of twenty-four hours, is not therefore of the essence of the institution. It is an accident. It is of the nature of mere forms. History and Philosophy alike so teach. An observance of the same twenty-four hour day, by the whole world population, is, from the nature of things, unattainable. It is impossible because the world 96 A CHANGE OF DAY POSSIBLE. 97 turns over. Antipodal people can't observe the same holy time ; nor can the people of differing longitudes. The Sabbath in Chicago is an hour later, in San Francisco three hours later, than in Philadelphia. New difficulties arise from varying national calendars. For, while God builds days, months, years, and appoints the septenary period closing with Sabbatism, he commits to man the framing of calendars and the construction of chronologies. And so different nations, by difference in their methods of reckoning time, had, and have, no agreeing day. The day among the Jews was from sunset to sunset; among the Babylonians from sunrise to sunrise; and among the Ro- mans from midnight to midnight. A single unit of twenty-four hours for sacred time, to be used by all the nations throughout the world, is simply impossible. Sab- batism is therefore separable from any particular twenty- four hour day, even as worship is separable from temples and altars. The portion of the weekly period — a period coeval with man and Eden — to be kept as sacred time is settled beyond all controversy. It is a seventh of days — one day in seven. This proportion of time is of the very essence of the in- stitution. It is forever unchangeable, because it is suited to human nature as it is — meets abiding human needs. One day in seven is to be Sabbatic — is to be kept holy. But the day itself is immaterial. It is changeable and may be changed. It is of the nature of a by-law, alterable at the will of the Sabbath Maker. All that is needed to make any day in the weekly period Sabbatic, is that it be divinely appointed, and so have in it Sabbatic elements. God created the Sabbath ; and he alone can change the day. The setting apart of one day in seven for sacred uses — the selection and arrangement of the day — are of God, not of man. The original seventh-day Sabbath was not of man's choosing, but of God's ordering. It was the 98 THE RISEN JESUS AND THE SABBATH. Maker of days who made the last day of the weekly period differ from others ; equipped it with holiness and blessing; and assigned it as the day of rest and worship. The seventh-day thus set up by God can by him alone be taken down, or changed. Sabbatism is transferable from it to any other day in the week — as from the seventh to the first — only by the Lord of the Sabbath. The change requires an equal authority with that appearing in the original institution of the day. No mere man — no body of men — has the right to make such a transferrence. The next day after the Sabbath — First day — could be in no just sense a world-wide day of rest and worship till divinely set apart as such. God — Christ — alone has this authority. If the day is changed it must be by his ordering. Great emphasis is placed by many on the want of an express command authorizing a change in the day. But in this they ask for something wholly unwarranted. The Old Testament, as the book of beginnings, more usually makes known the authoritative will of God by abrupt com- mand ; but the New Testament, as the book of transition and continuance, by example and use. A direct command to substitute baptism for circumcision, the Lord's Supper for the Passover, and the church for the synagogue, will be sought for in vain. No direct command can be found for women at the Lord's table. Christianity, in a word, though turning on the pivot of our Lord's resurrection, did not displace Judaism by direct command, or even im- mediately, but by growth- — growth away from the old — grow T th towards the new\ Indeed all the institutions and customs peculiar to the New Testament were gradually formed ; they came, not by revolution, but by evolution. Example and use, without the formality of a precept, have been thus employed to declare God's will. So the change of the day for Sabbatism. All that is needed is to show that the risen Christ substituted the first for the A CHANGE OF DAY PROBABLE. 99 seventh day by example — by exclusive approval and use. If First day was by Him exclusively used and approved, as the day for religious meetings and worship, then it is to be accepted as the Sabbath of his institution. A Change of Day Probable. Our Lord rose from the grave on First day. Wide and sound scholarship so interprets the Gospel narrative; al- ways has so interpreted it ; so interprets it to-day. Of late, however, some dissent is made by Seventh-day Sabbatarians. They impeach First day as the Christ-resurrection day, and clearly because it gives a death blow to seventh -day Sabbatism. The four Evangelists, with trifling verbal differences, teach, in precise and careful statements, that Christ was crucified and buried on " preparation day," the day before the Jewish Sabbath, our Friday ; that he lay in the sepul- cher over the Jewish Sabbath, our Saturday ; and that he rose on the morning of the day following the morning of the first day of the week, our Sabbath. 1 The Gospel nar- 1 " The day of Preparation was the day preceding the Sabbath ; that is Friday.— Nast's Com. on Matt. 27 : 62. " While there was a regular * preparation ' for the Sabbath, there is no mention of any * preparation ' for the festivals. It seems to be es- sentially connected with the Sabbath itself." — Dr. Smith 1 s New Test. Hist, 343. " And thus the Redeemer was left pale, but victorious — to sleep through the Sabbath."— Geike. The Life of Christ, 791. " 'The first day of the week/ The day which is observed by Chris- tians as the Sabbath. The Jews observed the seventh day of the week, or our Saturday. During that day our Savior was in the grave. As he rose on the morning of the first day, it has always been observed in commemoration of so great an event." — Barnes 1 Notes, Matt. 28: 1. "On the day of the preparation, at the third hour, He received the sentence from Pilate, the Father permitting that to happen ; at the sixth hour He was crucified ; at the ninth hour He gave up the ghost ; and before sunset He was buried. During the Sabbath He continued under the earth At the dawn of the Lord's day he arose from the dead The day of the preparation, then, comprises the passion ; the Sabbath embraces, the burial ; the Lord's day contains the resur- rection." — Ignatius. Epistle to the Trallians, Longer Form.' Ante- Nicene Fathers, 1 : 70. 100 THE RISEN JESUS AND THE SABBATH. rative, as harmonized, lias no other fair] ^'possible interpre- tation. 1 Its testimony to the resurrection on First day — the point in contention — is very complete and quite harmon- ious. The resurrection and the visit of the women to the sepulcher are associated as occurring about the same time. Now the visit of the women, according to all four Evan- gelists, was at an early hour on the morning of First day. Matthew says, " as it began to dawn." Mark says, " Early in the morning .... at the rising of the sun." Luke says, " very early in the morning." And John says, " Early, when it was yet dark." This clearly locates the visit of the women. It was not in the evening, when the sun was setting and the stars beginning to appear ; when, in Jewish reckoning, the old day died and the new day l TIME OF BURIAL HAKMONIZED.— THE DAY. Matthew. Mark. Luke. John. "The day of the "It was the prep- "And laid it in a "There laid they preparation." — 27 : aration." — 15 : 42. sepulcher. .... And Jesus therefore, be- 62. "And laid him in a that day was the cause of the Jews' sepulcher.'* — 15:46. preparation." — 15: preparation day."— 41-2. John 19 : 42. See also 20 : 31. RELATION OF BURIAL DAY TO THE SABBATH. "Now the next " It was the prep- " That day was the " That the bodies day that followed aration, that is the preparation, and the should not remain the day of the prep- day before the Sab- Sabbath drew on." — on the cross on the aration."— 27 : 62. bath."— 15:42. 23:54. Sabbath day, for that Sabbath day was a high day."— 20 : 31. TIME OF WOMEN'S VISIT HARMONIZED— ITS RELATION TO THE SABBATH. " When the Sab- " They rested the bath was past." — 16: Sabbath day accord- 1. ing to the Script- ures."— 23: 56. ITS RELATIONS TO FIRST DAY. "Very early in the " Upon the first morning the first day of the week week When it day of the week... very early in the was yet dark." — 2 At the rising of the morning."— 24 :1. 1. sun."— 16:2. " Now when Jesus was rise a on the first day of the week." — 16:9. "In the end of the Sabbath."— 28:1. "As it began to dawn toward the first day of the week."— 28 : 1. Ho record. The first day of A CHANGE OF DAY PROBABLE. 101 was born. But it was in the morning, at the hour of dawn, at the time of day-break ; when apparent night was fleeing, and apparent day advancing. 1 All four Evangel- ists say so. There is no break anywhere in their testi- mony. Their speech is explicit, clear, plain, and cannot fairly be misunderstood. They set forth, beyond fair challenge, the time of the visit of the women — and so of the resurrection — as at an early hour on the morning of First day. All ripe scholarship so consents, and so teaches. Three of the Evangelists report the visit of the women — and so the time of the resurrection — in its relations to the Jewish -Sabbath. The fourth Evangelist, John, is si- lent. Luke says of the women, "They rested the Sabbath day, according to the commandment," and then starts their visit " on the first day of the week/' Mark begins their visit " on the first day of the week," " when the Sabbath was past," But Matthew's Greek text has an element of uncertainty. It is the only element of uncertainty in the whole Gospel narrative. It may be translated — and by some versionists is translated — " late in the Sabbath " ; and this, it is claimed by Seventh-day Sabbatarians, locates both the visit and the resurrection on the Sabbath day. This claim is violent and uncritical. It makes Matthew self-contradictory ; for, with the very next stroke of his pen, he begins the visit as "at dawn towards the first day of the week." It also makes Matthew contradict 1 "At the early dawn of the first day of the week, our Sunday, a number of women started, according to the four Evangelists, for the sepulcher of the Lord/'— Nast's Com. Matt. 28 : 2. "The true-hearted women had resolved to reach the grave by sun- rise The grey dawn had hardly shown itself when they were afoot on their errand/' — Geike. The Life of Christ, 794. "Our Lord was crucified on a Friday and rose again on a Sunday." — Encycl. Brit. Art. Irenaeus. 102 THE RISEN JESUS AND THE SABBATH. all the other Evangelists, who report the visit as be ginning after the Sabbath was past — in an early morn- ing hour of First day. The claim made is the dogma- tism of partial inquiry. It makes Scripture contradict Scripture — Evangelist battle with Evangelist. Sound criticism is obliged to translate o# in Matthew as, not " late in" but "after" the Salbath ; an allowable render- ing as shown by eminent scholars. 1 This is a sound canon of criticism. It makes the doubtful, not contradict, but harmonize with the plain. It harmonizes Matthew with himself, and with all the other Evangelists. When Matthew is so interpreted, there is entire harmony among all the Evangelists. The first three report the visit as after the Sabbath ; and then all four, without a break, The critics explain Matthew : lu The Greek expression would justify the translation after the Sab- bath."— Xast's Com., Matt. 28 : 1. "Hence by, late in the Sabbath, we are not to suppose Saturday even- ing to be intended . . . but far on in the Saturday night, after midnight, toward daybreak on Sunday." — Meyer. Com. Matt. 28 : 1. "It is not the accurate Jewish division of time, according to which the Sabbath ended at six on Saturday evening, but the ordinary reckoning of the day, which extends from sunrise to sunrise, and adds the night to the preceding day." — Langie. Com. Matt. 28: 1. "Verse 1. In the end of the Sabbath, oipe fie aapparuv. AJ'er the end of the week : this is the translation given by several eminent critics ; and in this way the word o\pe is used by the most eminent Greek writers. Thucydides, lib. iv, chap. 93, rye VfJ£?K~ o\p? ?/v — the day was ended, Plutarch, oipe rov paaleo- x^ovov — after the times of the king. Philostratus, ofe ruv Tpotnov — after the Trojan war. . . . The transaction mentioned here evidently took place early on the morning of the third day after our Lord's crucifixion ; what is called our Sunday morning, or first day of the week." — Clarke' s Com. Matt. 28 : 1 . The critics report Matthew : " Sabbath being over, and the first day of the week beginning to dawn."— Campbell. " Being, ' early,' that is, about break of day, on the first day of the week, (corresponding to our Sunday)." — Cottage Bible. "'In the end of the Sabbath, as it began to dawn. 1 — After the Sabbath, as it grew toward daylight — Howard the first day of the week.'" — Jamieson-Fausset-Brown. Com. Matt. 28 : 1. I A CHANGE OF DAY PROBABLE. 103 locate it in an early morning hour " on the first day of the week." This is decisive and final. It is all that fair reason could wish or demand. It should bind our faith and conduct. The Christ resurrection is clearly set forth in the Gospels as a First day event. So all the Evangel- ists teach. The consensus of scholarship here approaches the absolute. But the statement in Matthew/ 1 that Christ should be " three days and three nights in the heart of the earth," and that in John b u in three days I will rear it up," seem to conflict with the actual time that, in the accepted theory, he lay in the sepulcher — some thirty-six hours. The difficulty is but seeming not real. 1 Time computations em- ■Matt. 12: 40. b John 2: 19. ia One hour more is reckoned as a day, and one day more as a year." — Jerusalem Talmud.. u A day and night together make up an okkah, or vvxOyurpav, and any part of such a period is counted as a whole. " — Jerusalem Talmud. " The phrase is doubtless equivalent to the Greek wxQyueyav, a day and night of twenty-four hours. But the Hebrew form, thee days and three nights, was likewise used generally and indefinitely for three days simply ; as is obvious from I. Samuel 30 : 1, 12, and the circumstances there narrated." — Dr. Robinson. "It is of great importance to observe that the Easterns reckoned any part of the day of 24 hours for a whole day, and, say a thing was done after three or seven days, &c, if it was done on the third or seventh day from that last mentioned. ... So that to say a thing happened after three days and three nights was the same as to say, it happened in three days, or on the third day." — Doddridge. "The time of the resurrection is stated by St. Mark, as 'early on the first day of the week/ which began from the sunset of the evening before . . . The portion, however brief, of this day (according to Jewish reckoning) that Jesus remained in the Tomb is reckoned as one day, like the brief interval between his burial and Friday's sun- set, and thus he remained three days in the earth." — Dr. Smith's N.'T. Hist. p. 349. " First day. The portion however brief, of this day . . . that Jesus remained in the tomb is reckoned as one day, like the brief in- terval between his burial and the Friday's sunset; and thus he re- mained three days in the earth."— Wm. Smith, LL. D. Butler's Bible Work, N. T., 559. 104 THE RISEN JESUS AND THE SABBATH. brace as full days beginning and ending fractional days. Birthday, though the birth be in one of its latest hours, is always counted as a day in the life-period. The day that money is loaned in a bank is counted as a full day in the note, though the money change hands at a very late hour. This is a wide custom among mankind. It was, and is, the custom in the East. It prevailed in all Bible times. In the Bible a fractional beginning day, or ending day, always counts as a full day. This is what is done in the case of the crucified and risen Christ. He died about three o'clock in the afternoon on crucifixion day, and was buried before the day ended. This counts as a day. He lay in the sepulcher all the Jewish Sabbath. This is the second day. He arose about day-break on First-day morning. This counts as the third day. This is the accepted theory ; and it is the clear meaning of the Gospel narrative. It is the only true theory. Our Lord certainly did not lay in the sepulcher seventy-two hours — three full twenty-four hour days. The Gospel narrative does not permit, but forbids, this idea. And contempor- aneous history, sacred and profane, also forbids it. Paul testifies that he " rose again the third day " — sometime during the day — while it was yet going on — before its end was reached. And Josephus, a contemporary of the Apostles, and undoubtedly repeating what was current in his times, says, " he appeared to them alive again the third day " — before the day ended — they saw him alive again sometime during the third day. These are proofs that the third day was a fractional day. They refute and set aside the seventy-two hour theory. They establish the accepted theory. The time of the entombment fixes the resurrection as a first-day event. Mark calls it such. He says, " now when Jesus was risen the first day of the week." This is Gospel. When he went forth from the A CHANGE OF DAY PROBABLE* 105 sepulcher, the Sabbath was fully past, the first day was well begun. 1 It was reserved ior the vanity and scepticism of this nineteenth century to challenge the Christ-resurrection as a first-day event. The challenge rests on insubstantial foundations, and has really nothing but quibbles to support it. If Christ did not rise on the first-dav, we have to explain how that particular belief has entered into and colored all associated History, Art, Literature, and has been taught by an unbroken series of writers from the very beginning; and how the four Gospels, the Apostles, and the first Christians all asserted the fact of the resur- rection, and always as a First-day event. We have also to explain how First-clay has ever since been monumental of the event, and how First-day worship goes clear back to the event, and issued out of it. First-day, as the Christ- resurrection day, has thus, from the first, the support of continuous history, and of continuous institutional testi- mony. This proof is most unquestionable, is not liable to lu He rose again the third day, according to the Scriptures." — I. Cor. 15: 4. "And when Pilate, at the suggestion of the principal men among us, had condemned him to the cross, those that loved him at first did not forsake him; for he appeared to them alive again the third day." — JOSEPHUS. Antiq. 18: 3: 3. "Three days" and resurrection on "third day" are equally New Testament phrases in describing the event. " Build it in three days," Matt. 26 : 61. " Buildest it in three days," Matt. 27 : 40 and Mark 15 : 29. " After three days I will build it again," Matt. 27 : 63. " Within three days I will build another," Mark 14: 58. "After three days rise again." Mark 8 : 31. The event was to end sometime during the third day. " Be raised again the third day." Matt. 16: 21. "The third day he shall be raised again," Matt. 17: 23. " The third day he shall rise again," Matt. 20: 19, Mark 10: 34, Luke 18: 33. "He shall rise the third day," Mark 9: 31. "Be raised from the dead the third day," Luke 9: 22. "The third day I shall be perfected," Luke 13: 22. "The third day rise again," Luke 24 : 7. " To rise from the dead the third day," Luke 24: 46. These Scriptures, explaining the former, su~- i?est a fractional third day. 106 THE RISEN JESUS AND THE SABBATH. fraud, and is not diminished but strengthened by the lapse of time. Nothing, I apprehend > that a man does not himself see or hear, can be regarded as more certain. Seventh-day Sabbatarians discredit their scholarship when they attack the resurrection of Christ as a first-day event. 1 Nations and races of men commemorate, by monumen- tal shafts and institutions, great events in their history. Our Fourth of July is monumental of Revolutionary scenes and of American Independence, and our Decoration day, of the lives given to re-cement the Union. This in- stinct to plant monumental institutions has descended to us from our Maker. God was the first Monument builder. To commemorate Creation, a work worthy of himself, he kept and instituted the seventh-day Sabbath; and he gave it to man as a joyful token of his work as World-Builder. Creation has thus its monumental Sabbath, connecting the Sabbath-keeper with the Creator. Our Lord's resurrection was a most momentous event ; keystone in the mighty arch of Redemption ; supreme day in the history of time and man. It was reported by 1 — 1 — — i " The daivn was purpling o'er the sky ; * * * * * * * When He whom stone, and seal, and guard, Had safely to the tomb consigned, Triumphant rose, and buried Death Deep in the grave he left behind." —From the Latin. "T 1 was on the Easter Sunday morn, That from the blessed skies, Came down the holy angels To see the Lord arise." —Mrs. Howitt. "For He was crucified on the day before that of Saturn (the Jewish Sabbath) ; and on the day after Saturn, which is the day of the sun, having appeared to His Apostles and disciples, He taught them these things." — Justin Martyr. First Apology, About 139 A, D. Ante- Nicene Fathers, 1 : 186. " The time of the resurrection is stated by St Mark as ' early on the first day of the week,' which began from the sunset of the evening be- fore."— Dr. Smith's N. T. Hist, 349. "According to all the four Evangelists, the resurrection of our Lord took place on the first day of the week after his crucifixion." — Encycl. Brit., Art. Sunday. A CHANGE OF DAY PROBABLE. 107 angels ; retold by the women ; and is the loftiest Apostolic utterance. It is the closing story of the Gospels ; the central theme of the Epistles j the immovable foundation of Christianity. Redemption, complete in the risen Christ, is a greater work than Creation. " 'Twas great to speak the world from naught ; 'Twas greater to redeem. " In the divine balances, where real values are weighed and ascertained, love is greater than power ; redeeming love greater than creating power ; self-sacrificing love, giving birth to a new spiritual creation, greater than om- nipotent power, peopling space with new worlds and ten- anting them with new forms of life. Shall power have its memorial, and love not ? Creating power its weekly monument, and redeeming love not ? Omnipotent power its Sabbatism, and self-sacrificing love not ? Love, out- ranking power, is even more entitled to a monument — to a weekly remembrancer— to Sabbatism. The glory of the greater demands a New Testament Sabbath, even as the glory of the lesser had its Old Testament Sabbath. A new day for Sabbatism would make the institution a roll call for Redemption as well as for Creation. Seventh-day Sabbatarians have no weekly monument of the Christ resurrection ; no weekly monument of Redemp- tion, but only of Creation ; no weekly monument of Christ as Redeemer, but only of Jehovah as Creator. This, in Jews, who reject the divine Christ and his atonement, is consistent ; but, in receivers of his divinity and atone- ment, an anomaly and absurdity. Is not Redemption entitled to a place in the monumental Sabbath ? It could not have it in the old but only in a neio day. Seventh-day was preoccupied. And to disciples, as the day when Christ lay in the sepulcher, it was, and would be, a day of gloom and sorrow ; while First-day, when he rose, was a day of thrilling and unbounded joy. As our Lord selected and privileged First-day ; as First-day, whose morning sun 108 THE RISEN JESUS AND THE SABBATH. shone on the empty sepulcher, is the most wonderful and memorable day in the world's history ; it is entitled to be the Sabbath of Christianity. It would have been strange if that unparalleled event had not made First-day the day of days — a holy day — a joyous and blessed day to disci- ples — the Sabbath of the new era. Christianity, the greatest moral movement in history, began a new order of things. It was a new creation. It inaugurated new world ideas. It started a new epoch in history. It made a new era in time. It gave chronology a new date. Why not also the weekly calendar a new Sabbath ? Without this the transition would have been incomplete. If all old forms disappeared, and all appear- ing forms were new, then the old seventh day, because a mere form, would die in the Christ sepulcher, and the new First-day rise thence to life. Christianity, as a new religious movement, needed a stated day for worship, for instruction, and for the mutual encouragement of disciples. The day, as coming from the Lord of the seventh-day Sabbath, would certainly be a septenary day. It could not be seventh-day ; for that was already engaged, and would give the new movement a too great Judaic tinge. After seventh day, no other day in the weekly period would have equal claims with First day ; the day of our Lord's resurrection ; the day of marvels to the disciples. Its selection and use would, by its rous- ing memories, impart an inspiration to all workers in the new movement. Change of Day Beginning. It was not accident, but a divine purpose and arrange- ment, that brought Christ from the grave on First day, and that made after revelations of himself to the disciples — perhaps all of them — First day events. Ten post- CHANGE OF DAY BEGINNING. 109 resurrection appearings of Christ are recorded ; six of the ten on First day ; five on resurrection day itself ; and one on next First day. Indeed all the recorded appearings of our risen but unascended Lord, whose dates are ascertain- able, were on First day ; and not one on Seventh day. This is very remarkable. The risen Jesus selected First days, never Seventh days, in revealing himself to the disciples. Study resurrection day itself— pia tuv oapparw. 1 — The first day of the week. At its beginning, in its early morning, through its noontide hours, in its afternoon, and in its evening, Jesus was meeting with his disciples, and 1 Mia aappdruv— il one of the Sabbaths" — or "one (day) from the Sabbath " — is used eight times in the New Testament, and is always translated " the first day of the week." It is the first divine name for that day. The Jews had no names for the secular days of the week. They reckoned them numerically from the Sabbath. The ancient seven- day week was evidently created and measured by the Sabbath. Early Chaldeans designated the days of the week by ordinals. So too the Jews. Each day was counted from the Sabbath. The first Christians used this Jewish calendar. But counting the days from the Sabbath soon began to change. The secular days began to have names. First day was called by Justin Martyr Sunday ; fourth day, by Clement of Alexandria, Ermou ; and sixth day, by the same author, Aphrodites. Soon all the secular days had names — planetary names. I give here the divine name for First-day as used in the Greek Testament : Matt. 28 : 1. £ig piav aappdruv. First day of the week. Mark 16 : 2. ngol ryg piag oappdrcov. The first day of the week. Mark 16 : 9. npol irpurrj cappdroi' Early on the first day of the week. Luke 24: 1. r# de pig tuv aappdruv. On the first day of the week. John 20: 1. T7j de pig ruv aappdruv. On the first day of the week. John 20 : 10. ry pig rbv aappdruv. The first day of the week. Acts 20 : 7. t$ ptg tuv aappdruv. The first day of the week. I. Cor. 16: 2. Kara piav aappdruv. Upon the first day of the week. " Our Lord Jesus Christ who rose from the dead on the first day of week (ry pig cppdruv.)" — Justin Martyr. Dial, with Trypho the Jew. 110 THE RISEN JESUS AND THE SABBATH. filling their hearts with peace and joy. How blessed and restful to Mary — to the other women at the sepulcher — to Peter, newly forgiven — and to the two disciples on their way to Enimaus. And then its surprising and tender evening meeting! Read John's comforting statement: "Then the same day at evening, being the first day of the week, when the doors were shut where the disciples w r ere assembled for fear of the Jews, came Jesus and stood in the midst, and said, i Peace be unto you ' . . . And ... he breathed on them, and said unto them, c Receive ye the Holy Ghost.' " What a meeting ! What a time for tender memories ! It was restful — blessed — hallowing — Sabbatic ! And mark how the Evangelist particularly notes that it was " the first day of the week," as if he would intimate the divine choice of the day for Christian meetings. 1 The meeting must have extended well into the 1 lt The first Lord's day of the new creation." — Suggestive Commen- tary, Luke 24: 1. Sunday the 17th of Nisan (ipril 8th). "The first Lord's day." "Easter Day."— Dr. Smith's Neiv Test Hist, p. 348. " ' The first day of the week. 7 This. > . , means our Sunday, the Lord's day, the first day following the Jewish Sabbath. "~ KrLE. Com. John 20 : 1. "The first remarkable mention of the* Lord's day is combined with the resurrection of our Lord." — Bengel's Gnomon, on Matt. 28: 1. "Our Lord rested in the grave on the Jewish Sabbath before he in- stituted by his resurrection the new Sabbath of holy joy and active benevolence — the Lord's Day."— Smith. New Test. Hist., 315. " * In the end of the (Jewish) Sabbath.' — The Evangelist, without doubt, intended by the selection of this peculiar and significant expres- sion to bring forward the fact, that the Christian Sunday had now caused the Sabbath to cease." — Lange. Com., Matt. 28 : 1. " ' The first day of the week. 1 'All the Evangelists at the commence- ment of their narratives of the resurrection mention that it was the first day of the week." — Jacobus' Notes, John 20: 19. John 20: 19. "This verse, compared with verse 1, may help to settle the question as to the time when the Christian Sabbath com- mences. l They went early the first day/— this verse says ' evening of the same day:' this was the evening of the Christian Sabbath."— Cot- tage Bible, 2: 1183. CHANGE OF DAY BEGINNING. Ill night; for Luke brings to it the two disciples who ate their evening meal at Emmaus, six or seven miles away ; and it was after they arrived and reported how the Lord had appeared to them, that Jesus entered with his gracious and inspiring words. This evidently late evening meeting could only be called a First-day meeting by Roman not by Jewish reckoning. The day ' throughout, down well into the night, was thus an interesting opening of the new Sabbath. The Jewish Sabbath, with Christ in the sepul- cher, closed the old order of things; First day, with Christ risen and meeting the disciples, began the new. The Passover Sabbath, in Jewish reckoning, was a date for numbering both the days and the Sabbaths up to Pen- tecost. It was so given by Moses. a It is so used in the Gospels. 1 The fiftieth day thereafter w T as Pentecost. " After a Lev. 23: 15-21. 1 The phrase "eight days," in its terminal period, is equivalent to £ eighth day," which has a remarkable Old Testament use. Note these facts: Circumcision on eighth day, Lev. 17: 12; Mothers ceremon- ially clean on eighth day, Lev. 12:1; first born of cattle given to the Lord on eighth day, Ex. 22 : 3 ; high priest consecrated on eighth day, Lev. 9:1; leper cleansing complete on eighth day, Lev. 22 : 27 ; and defiled Nazarite clean on eighth day, Lev. 15 : 14, 29. Eighth day is thus signalized in the Mosaic economy as having special value. It reports the ending of trial periods ; and is a Hebraism for First-day from the date of the trial period. It seems to have been made promi- nent for some future divine purpose. Was it meant to indicate that First-day would yet become the completion of the weekly period, even the Sabbath itself? If the day on which Christ rose from the dead is made the Sabbath of a new weekly period — the beginning of a new weekly calendar — the first of a new series of Sabbaths — then the week in the new era would close with the " eighth day" — the second Sabbath be on the " eighth day." " After eight days " is so used by the fourth Evangelist. And "eighth day" appears at once, and with this meaning, in the Church Fathers — romemporaiies and immediate successors of the Apostles. "We celebrate the eighth day with joy, on which too Jesus rose from the dead." — Baknabas. C 15. " The eighth day on which our Lord sprang up."— Ignatius. Mag- nesiansy C. 15, longer form. 112 THE RISEN JESUS AND THE SABBATH. eight days," and " after forty days," would be so many days after the Passover Sabbath, including it. " After eight days/' on crucifixion year when the Passover fell on the Jewish Sabbath, would be, in Jewish reckoning, the second First day. Scholarship is a fair unit here. For the small Seventh-day Sabbatarian dissent, I have never seen even a show of reason. " Eight days after " the Sab- bath of the Passover — the Sabbath in the sepulcher — would be the second First day. The disciples lingered in Jerusalem after the Passover week was ended, and after the following Jewish Sabbath was over. They strangely lingered over the second First- day, and, not only lingered, but held a meeting some time during the day. Thomas, the doubter, was present. John is the reporter. Pie says : u And after eight days, again his disciples were within, and Thomas with them ; then came Jesus .... and ssid, ' Peace be unto you/ Then saith he unto Thomas, . . . . * be not faithless but believing/ And Thomas . . . . said, ' My Lord and my God.' " This meeting, if held elsewhere than in Je- rusalem, is then even a more remarkable Gospel testimony to this First-day meeting. The risen Christ crowned (lie meeting with his presence and blessing. How hallowed the occasion ! How restful and Sabbatic to Thomas ; doubt gone ; peace filling his heart ! The Christ resurrec- tion thus started from the very beginning a new weekly day of meeting. On two First days — not on Seventh-days — the disciples assemble, and Jesus meets with them. The old has evidently ended ; the new begins. The Sabbath of the Jew has died in the sepulcher of the Savior, that the Sabbath of Christianity might be born with his resur- rection. 1 (See notes on opposite page.) If Jesus, the Sabbath-Maker — the Lord of the Sabbath — changes the day, the change is authoritative. Study the CHANGE OF E>AY BEGINNING. 113 risen Jesus in his attitude so far towards Sabbatism. In no recorded instance did he ever meet with his disciples on any seventh day. He kept seventh-day before but in no known instance after his passion. All his recorded post-resurrection meetings with disciples, of ascertainable date, were on First-days. Ten are recorded ; six of the ten on First-days — five on resurrection day itself — and one on next First-day. Five First-days elapsed between his resurrection and his ascension ; and on tw r o of the five he is known to have met with his disciples. This now begins I "Jesus again appeared to them on the next Sunday, and Thomas was convinced." — Farrar's Early Days of Christ., p 436. " The second appearance of Christ, on the first Sunday after the resurrection day, in the midst of the disciples." — Lange. Com. John 20 : 26. II After eight days. This is the first record of Christian Sabbath observance." — Jacobus 1 Notes. John 20: 26. u After eight days. It seems likely that this was precisely on that day se'nnightj on which Christ had appeared to them before ; and from this we may learn that this was the weekly meeting of the Apostles ; and though Thomas was not found at the former meeting, he was determin- ed not to be absent from this" — Clarke's Com. John 20 : 26. " Here we have one of the incidental notices — more valuable than any formal statement, because they show how regularly the custom was established — of those meetings of the Christians on the Lord's Day for social converse and divine worship, which Pliny mentions as their only known institution." — Dr. Smith's N. T. Hist, p. 536. " Eight days later the Lord appeared to his assembled disciples again, Thomas being present, (John 20 : 26). The Passover had lasted to the preceding Friday. On Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath, the dis- ciples did not travel, and staid also the second Sunday at Jerusalem — a proof that this day had already become to them the Sabbath of the New Testament."— Nast's Com. Matt. 28 : 1. " A whole week elapsed before the next recorded appearance. On Sunday, known, henceforth, as 'the first day of the week,' in contrast to the Jewish Sabbath, the seventh ; and as especially * the Lord's day,' the Eleven having once more assembled. . . . Jesus, honoring his resurrection day, once more stood in the midst of them." — Cun- ningham Geike. The Life of Christ, 805. 114 THE RISEN JESUS AND THE SABBATH. the Scriptural proofs, that Christ fairly authorized the transference of Sabbatism from Seventh to First day. For his doings are interpreters of his mind and will. Their fair interpretation, so far, is that Seventh-day was divinely vacated, and First-day selected for meetings and worship. Christ thus changed the day, not by express law, but by example — by use — by approval. He dismissed the old ; he inaugurated the new. 1 There was that in the Judaic Sabbath, which grew old and died in the sepulcher of Je- sus — the day itself — and that which, surviving all time and change, belongs to things imperishable — the Sabbatic elements that passed over into First-day in the new era. Man, standing by the First-day Sabbath, is the exalted man of the ages ; retaining, by transfer, Old Testament Sabbatism as monumental of Creation; and using also New Testament Sabbatism as monumental of Redemption. 1 " In the interim we may suppose that he enacted by word what in his majesty he had sanctioned by act." — Pope. Comp. of Christ, TheoL, 3 : 291. The Ascended Jesus and the Sabbath. The Apostolic Age. "O day of rest! how beautiful, how fair, How welcome to the weary and the old ! Day of the Lord ! and truce to earthly care ! Day of the Lord, as all our days should be.' 1 —Longfellow. As the Gospels close in resurrection effulgence and ascension glory, Apostolic Church History opens amid a blaze of Pentecostal light and power. Jesus ceases to be visible upon the stage. The Apostles appear to guide the forming customs of the church. The planting of Chris- tianity begins. The social and religious habits of nations and races of men are not born — a new community does not grow up out of an old one — in a dav. Great social transformations require time as well as the chiseling influence of new ideas. From Judaism to Christianity stretched the chasm of a vast social and religious revolution: Judaism the bud; Christianity the flower and fruit : Judaism atmosphered in prophecy, circumcision, the passover, seventh-day rest, temple worship, and local ideas, all fleeing shadows; and Christianity atmosphered in the Gospel, baptism, the Lord's Supper, first-day rest, church worship, and world ideas, all abiding realities. The movement pivoted itself on the resurrection of our Lord ; the old remaining in his sepulcher, the new rising with him ; the old ages ending, the new beginning. So it started. It started off at once. But it was to be, and was, a growth ; advancing from germ to fruit. It reached a notable stage at the fall of Jerusa- lem. Then the Temple, with its priests and altars, its 115 116 THE ASCENDED JESUS AND THE SABBATH. clouds of ever-ascending incense, its bleating and lowing sacrificial victims, wholly disappeared. The magnificent ritual of Jewish worship ceased. Jewish nationality ended. Mosaism fell into decay. That great catastrophe was the emancipation of Christianity, that had started with the air of a Jewish sect, and was in danger of be- coming tributary to Judaism. It would not now be too Judaistic, but its simple and pure self. I am now to take my stand upon the breast of this mighty movement, and trace its divine Sabbatism. I am to discuss New Testament Sabbatism, under the Apostles: two days from the first running along together — indeed running side by side still — but First-day steadily super- seding Seventh-day ; the Old dropping out, and the New coming to the front. But back of the Apostles, the con- spicuous workers of the hour, are two recorded special interventions of our ascended Lord, that still further report his mind and will respecting the day for Sabbatism in the Christian Era. These demand attention. The Apostles are preceptors. But Christ is still the Great Teacher. We listen, not yet to them, but wait for his voice. Pentecost. Christ, ascending, appointed a future meeting for the disciples: to tarry at Jerusalem — to await the promise of the Father — to expect an enduement of divine power. 1 The Jewish Pentecost discloses this meeting — this Christ- appointed meeting — as held on that day. Now on what day was Pentecost in the Crucifixion year ? On what day of the week ? That the Jewish Passover, as given by Moses, was regu- lated by observations of the moon's phases, is open to 1 " But tarry ye in the city of Jerusalem until ye be endued with power from on high.'' — Luke 24 : 49, " Commanded that they should not depart from Jerusalem, but wait for the promise of the Father, which, saith he, ye have heard of me," —Acts 1 : 4. PENTECOST. 117 doubt The Mosaic Passover Sabbath does not seem a movable Sabbath. The Hebrew sacred year, as arranged by Moses, seems always to have begun with a Seventh-day Sabbath. That would make the Passover Sabbath and the Seventh-day Sabbath always synchronize on the fifteenth day of the first month; and then Pentecost would always fall on Jewish First day. Some scholars adopt this view. They make every Pentecost fall on First day. 1 But some historic evidences suggest that the later Pass- over Sabbath was a movable Sabbath — possibly a corrup- tion after the Egyptian Dispersion. 2 Pentecost, then, would not always fall on First day. It would only fall 1 " The Pentecost always occurred on the first day of the Jewish week." — Pond. Con. on the Bible, 474. "This (Lev. 23: 3-39,) describes Pentecost, which was to be cele- brated on the first day of the week." — Craft. Sabbath for Man, 533. " The first day of unleavened bread was always to fall upon a Sab- bath ; which I think is hinted in Lev. 23 : 11. The wave sheaf was to be waved on the morrow after a Sabbath ; but .the wave sheaf was thus offered on the second day of unleavened bread ; and consequently, if that day was the morrow after a Sabbath, then the day preceding, or first day of unleavened bread, was a Sabbath. ... In the third month the Sabbaths will fall thus ; the fourth day a Sabbath ; and the day after this Sabbath was the day of Pentecost. . . . Accordingly, from the sixteenth of the first month to the fifth day of the third month, counting inclusively, are fifty days ; and the fiftieth day falls regularly on the morrow or day after the Sabbath."— Shuckford's Connection, 2 : 7-8. Woodward, Philada., 1824. 2 "Petavius seems to think "—that the Hebrews used lunar months— "not till after the times of Alexander the Great, when they fell under the government of the Syro-Macedonian kings." — Pet. Ration. Temp., 2: 1:6. "It can never be proved that the Hebrews used lunar months before the Babylonian captivity."— Chronol Pre}, to the Reader. See also Scaliger. Emend. Temp., 151. " It is, I think, undeniable, that the Jews did admit the use of a new- form of computing their year some time after the captivity, which dif- fered in many points from this more ancient method, and which ob- liged them in time to make many rules for the translation of days and feasts." — Shuckford's Connection, 2 : 18-9. 118 THE ASCENDED JESUS AND THE SABBATH. on First day in the years when the Passover Sabbath syn- chronized with the Seventh-day Sabbath. The many scholars who adopt this theory, teach with great unanimity, that the Passover Sabbath and the Seventh day Sabbath synchronized in crucifixion year, and that Pentecost in that year fell on First day. l The New Testament records the entombment as cover- ing the Jewish Sabbath, and puts the resurrection on First day. This locates Pentecost beyond fair controversy on First day. The evidence is thus complete. Pentecost in crucifixion year was on Jewish First day. It was on the seventh First day in the new era. The Gospels so teach. The New Testament makes this statement : "And when the day of Pentecost was fully come, the disciples were all 1 " Sunday, May 24, Day of Pentecost." — Lewin. " On that day (First day) it is believed, fell the day of Pentecost." — Cot. Bible, Acts 20 : 7. i " On the day of Pentecost which in that year fell on the first day of week." — Smith's Diet, of the Bible. Art. Lord's Day. "Moreover, it was when they were so assembled on the first day of the week that the Penl ecostal outpouring of the Holy Spirit took place."— Dr. J. H. McIevaine. Pres. Rev., vol. 4, p. 263. "When the day of Pentecost had dawned. It was the first day of the week."— Farrar. The Life and Work of St. Paul, 2 : 89. " On the day of Pentecost, which in that year fell on the first day of the week." — McClintock & Strong. Cycl, Art. Lord's Day. 11 On this day (the first day of the week) the Apostles were assem- bled, when the Holy Ghost came down so visibly upon them, to quick- en them for the conversion of the world." — Buck. Theo. Diet, Art. Sab. " Seven weeks were numbered from the 16th of Nisan, and the fol- lowing day, the 6th of Sivan, was the day of Pentecost. Since in A. D. 30, the 16th of Nisan fell, as we have seen, on Saturday, the 7th of April, the day of Pentecost fell on Sunday, May 27th." — Smith. N. T. Hist., 380. Note. "It (Pentecost) consequently occurred, in the year in which Christ died, on the first day of the week, or our Sunday. . . . This statement is sustained by the very ancient tradition of the Church that the first Christian Pentecost season occurred on Sunday." — Lange. Com. Acts 2 : 1-4. PENTECOST. 119 with one accord in one place." Thus Peter, James, and John are already using First day for meetings and wor- ship. They assemble on that day "with one accord in one place;" and not these three pillar Apostles alone, nor merely the Twelve; but as many as one hundred and twenty disciples. This meeting for religious purposes on a stated day— an evidently arranged and understood day — a Christ- appointed day — has essential Sabbatic ele- ments. Christ honored the day and the assembled dis- ciples with a wonderful baptism of the Spirit, a mi- raculous gift of tongues, and the greatest one-day relig- ious revival known to history. 1 Thus First day — the day of our Lord's resurrection — was at the 1 open- ing of the Gospel, characterized, instead of the Sab- bath in the Mosaic ritual, by a Christ-appointed meeting of the disciples, and singular divine manifestations. These are remarkable First-day events. Adverse criticism can- not belittle them. The birth of the Christian Church, as well as the resurrection of Christ, crowns and honors the first day of the week. * And so far this is the only day known for meetings between the risen and now ascended Christ and his disciples ; no other day appears ; the Seventh does not. This is a farther interpretation of the mind and will of Christ. It is a farther authoritative change of the day. Seventh-day Sabbatism is dropping out of sight ; and First-day Sabbatism is appearing in New Tes- tament history. Pentecost seems thereafter an important annual in the New Testament Church. Paul, to Corinthian Christians, (Gentiles mainly,) writes about Pentecost as if the day was well-known to them. a And Luke reports Paul, at a time, •I. Cor. 16: 8. 1 " With his resurrection began his formal appointment of the First day, and, with the Pentecost, he finally ratified it." — Pope. Com. on Christ, 3 : 291. " The Pentecostal outpouring of the Spirit, seven weeks later. . . . cannot have failed to give an additional sacredness to the day (First day) in the eyes of the earliest converts." — Cycl. Brit., Art. Sunday. 120 THE ASCENDED JESUS AND THE SABBATH. as hastening to be at Jerusalem at Pentecost. b It was cer- tainly not as a Jew but as a Christian that he hasted to any Pentecost at Jerusalem. 1 Pentecost must have already become a notable Christian annual, a day for special Christian as well as Jewish gatherings ; a day of delightful Christian as well as Jewish memories. The Christians at Jerusalem must have had a Pentecost of their own. History confirms this view; An annual Pentecost appears among post-Apostolic Christians, and it evidently arose as an Apostolic institution and custom. Thus one First-day — Pentecost — was conspicuous as an annual among Apostolic men. So far, religious meetings, since Christ's resurrection, are not at all of the Seventh but wholly of First-day. "The Lord's Day." The last revelation the ascended Christ has visibly made of himself — perhaps the last to be made for all time — was made to John on the Isle of Patmos. John b Acts 20: 16. 1 Lewin, Howson, Smith — special writers about Paul — think that his five visits to Jerusalem were each at a Pentecost. — Acts 18 : 21-2 ; 20: 16. I. Cor. 16: 8. " From the latter date we can safely reckon back, through his two years' imprisonment at Cesarea, to the Pentecost of A. D. 58, as the date of his last arrival at Jerusalem." — Smith. N. T. Hist, 420. " The two most ancient feasts of the Church were in honor of the Resurrection of Christ, and of the descent of the Holy Spirit." — Wad- dington's Ch. Histo., 1 : 44. " We remember the higher and Christian meaning which he gave to the Jewish festival. It was no longer an Israelitish ceremony, but it was the Easter of the New Dispensation." — Life and Epistles of St. Paul, 2 : 203. " Nor was it only at this annual feast that they kept in memory the resurrection of their Lord; every Sunday likewise was a festival in memory of the same event ; the Church never failed to meet for com- mon prayer and praise on that day of the week ; and it very soon ac- quired the name of the Lord's day, which it has since retained." — Life and Epistles of St. Paul, 1 : 440. THE LORD'S DAY. 121 was in the Spirit— h ry Kvpcany ?)/i£pg— "on the Lord's day." This Greek phrase occurs no where else in the New Testament, and nothing in the context explains its meaning here. But the familiarity with which it is used indicates that its meaning was well and widely known — needed no interpretation — would be everywhere under- stood. The explanation must be sought, and will be found, in John's own era— in patristic usage — in the writings of the earliest Church Fathers. 1 It has passed into church history that the first day of the week is called the Lord's day. When did this usage begin ? How far back can it be traced ? It is of very ancient date. It appears, about the close of the second 1 John's v Kvpcani] r/fiipa appears in complete form in early pa- tristic writings, where it always means the first day of the week— the Christ resurrection-day. It was current in and near the Johannic period. Kvptanijv 7/jukpav. -\ Julius Africanus, ; The Lord's day. J About 220 A. D. KvpcaKTjv EKetvTjv tijv qfiepav. -y Clemens Alexandrinus This Lord's day. J fl. 180-215 A. D. ttj rqg- KvpiaK.rjs' yjuepa. "» Irenaeus. About 178 J On the Lord's day. J fl. about 160-200 A. D. ryv KvpLdK7]v ayiav rjfiepav. i Dionysius of Corinth. } The Lord's holy day. J About 170 A. D. These are very ancient uses of the Greek phrase, some of them per- haps within fifty years of John's time. Its meaning is fixed — stereo- typed — back that far. It had quite earlier currency, in defective form ; the adjective nvpianT] alone appearing ; the noun to be supplied. Scholarship with unanimity supplies ^//e/m-day. Kara KVpcaKrjv 6e nvplov. ^ " Teaching " But on the Lord's (day.) J From 100 to 140 A. D. nara KvpLanrjv^uvTEC.. \ -r . Living according to the Lord's f^bo^ 75-115 A. D. vday.) ) This takes us back to within the Johannic period, and shows the phrase, complete or defective, to have been current from his day. " Mr. Elliott, Hor. Apoc. 4 : 367, note, points out that the Peshitc renders ovk cgtlv Kvpianbv delirvov aye~iv, I. Cor. 11 : 20. ' Not a? befitting the day of the Lord ye eat and drink,' which is an interesting proof of the early use."— Alford. Greek Test, Kev. 1 : 10. 122 THE ASCENDED JESUS AND THE SABBATH. century, in Julius Africanus and Clement of Alexandria. It appears still earlier, probably within fifty years of St. John's time, in Dionysius of Corinth and in Irenseus, a friend of Polycarp, who was a disciple of St. John. These Church Fathers all use John's Greek phrase — his identical phrase — and, in their writings, it never means Easter, or Seventh day, or Judgment-day, but always First-day, The evidence here is very complete. Patristic usage back to within about fifty years of St. John's time, fixes the meaning of the Greek phrase in Kev. 1 : 10 as First-day — the Christ-resurrection day. Proofs of this go even farther back. A part of this Greek phrase — its essential part — appears still earlier ; in the " Teaching of the Twelve Apostles ; " and also in the wr-itings of Ignatius a contemporary of St. John. These very primitive Christian documents mention the Lord's in such groups of words as fairly suggest that the word " day " should fill the blank. Scholarship with unanimity so fills it. Despite a little room to quibble, historic integrity necessitates this. Thus St. John's Greek phrase is seen in use among his contemporaries and immediate successors as a name for First-day. The general consent of Christian antiquity and of modern scholarship has referred the phrase to the weekly festival of our Lord's resurrection — has identified it with the first day of the week. The Christ-resurrection day has now a second divine name. It was called at the very first fiia ruv capfiaruv— 11 the first day of the week." It is now called t t KvpcaK?; rjutpa — " the Lord's day." And the day, with this new Scriptural name, seems to bring the Lord of the Sabbath very near. The day to John on Patmos was restful, blessed, Sabbatic. The narrative of events is suggestive of tender and holy First-day experiences. Christ, as at Pentecost, honored " the Lord's day n on Patmos, with AUTHORITATIVE CHANGE OF THE DAY. 123 wonderful divine manifestations. John was u in the Spirit," was " caught up to heaven," and was gifted with wonderful celestial visions. Such was the day on Patmos. It was shrined in rapturous Sabbatic elements. 1 Authoritative Change of the Day, The whole reported attitude of our Lord, risen and ascended, towards Seventh-day, and towards First-day, is now before the reader. His attitude towards Seventh- day is, as reported, that of non-use. He is never known to have kept Seventh-day as Sabbath ; to have appointed any meeting with disciples for Seventh-day ; to have revealed himself to disciples on any Seventh-day; or to 1 "The KVfnanq r//iepa ... is the first day of the week, the Sunday, which was celebrated as the day of the resurrection of the Lord." — Meyer. Commentary, Rev. 1: 10. " On the Lord's day . . . the first day of the week ... It is the day of the 'Lord,' the risen and glorified Lord" — Shaff. On Rev., p. 33. u On the Lord's day, i. e., on the first day of the week, kept by the Christian Church as the weekly festival of the Lord's resurrection." — Alford. Greek Testament, 4 : 554. " On the Lord's day — i. e., the Christian Sabbath— the first day of the week; so called, because on that day our Lord arose from the dead." — Cot Bible, Rev. 1 : 10. " 1 he Lord's day. The first day of the week, observed as the Christian Sabbath, because on it Jesus Christ rose from the dead." — A. Clarke Com., Rev. 1: 10. "As the resurrection of Christ is the great fact, so the day of its oc- currence is the great day of Christianity. From the time of the Apostles its weekly return has been called by the name of the Lord's day."- Smith's. N. T. Hist,, 348. "The term ' Lord's day ' was used generally by the early Christians to denote the first day of the week. "—Moses Stuart on Rev. 1 : 10. "It (the Johannic vision) occurred like the Pentecost, on the first day of the week— ' the Lord's day;' thus setting a new honor on the Sabbath of the Christian dispensation "—Pond. Con. on the Bible, 609. " The Lord's day— the oldest and best designation of the Christian Sabbath ; first used by St. John, Rev. 1 : 10."— Shaff-Herzoo. Encycl. of Bel. KnowL Art. Lord's day. 124 THE ASCENDED JESUS AND THE SABBATH. have dispensed Pentecostal gifts to disciples on any Seventh-day. He was a keeper of Seventh-day as Sab- bath before but in no known instance after his passion. These are plain Scriptural facts. Seventh-day is never set forth in any way as used and approved by our risen and ascended Lord for Sabbatism. He disappoints all expectations of Seventh-day Sabbatarians. If disuse vacates, then Seventh-day is vacated by the risen and ascended Lord of the Sabbath ; is authoritatively set aside ; ceases to be Sabbatic, His attitude towards First-day is that of use and ap- proval. ^He rose from the grave on First-day. He made five recorded revelations of himself to disciples on the initial First-day in the new era ; and one of these was in a meeting held by disciples. He revealed himself in another meeting of disciples held on the second First-day. He appointed at his Ascension, a meeting to the disciples that is afterwards found to be a First-day meeting. He poured out upon disciples his own promised gift of the Spirit on that seventh First-day. ^ He, by that meeting of his own appointment, and by that outpouring of the Spirit according to his promise, began the formal planting of Christianity on that eventful First-day. And his last recorded visible showing of himself to a disciple was on a First-day. These also are plain Scriptural facts. First- day is the only day known to be used by our risen and ascended Lord for Sabbatism. This exclusive use of First- day for clear Sabbatic purposes, by the Sabbath-Maker, is its sufficient and authoritative institution. How can a day so hallowed by our risen and ascended Lord, fail of rev- erent observance by his disciples ? The Seventh-day Sabbatarian is certainly not following in the steps of the risen Christ. The First-day Sabbatarian is. Now, if anything can be vacated by disuse, and if anything can be instituted by example and use, then our risen and as- AUTHORITATIVE CHANGE OF THE DAY. 125 cended Lord has vacated Seventh-day meetings and worship, and has instituted First-day meetings and worship. What else can be made of the fact that all revelations of himself to disciples, of ascertainable date, were on First-day, and not one on Seventh-day ? Or of the fact that all meetings of disciples, appointed or attended by him, and whose date is recorded, were on First-day, and not one on Seventh - day? These are plain and reported doings of our Lord. They are an authoritative change of the day ; not by abrupt command; but by use and approval. And the change is by competent authority. It is Jesus, the risen and ascended One, who, by disuse, discontinued the Old, and, by use and approval, instituted the New day. His authority is beyond question. He is the Sabbath-Maker. He is the Lord of the Sabbath. As risen, and then as ascended, he is never known as a Seventh-day, but; always as a First-day Sabbatarian. 1 1 Christianity has retained the institution as belonging to divine worship ; but by the same authority which gave the original law has modified it. . . . The day of our Lord's resurrection, the first day of the week, became the Christian Sabbath, or the Lord's day." — Pope. Com. of Christ. 3 ; 290. SABBATH OF THE APOSTLES. "Chime on ye bells ! Again begin And ring tbe Sabbath morning in ; The laborer's week-day work is done, The rest begun, Which Christ hath for his people won." —From the German of F. Sachse. Christianity issued out of Judaism, as, later, Protestant- ism arose out of Romanism, and Methodism out of Angli- canism. Its Apostles were all graduates of the Law, the Synagogue, the Seventh-day Sabbath ; Jews in race, tem- perament, training; and some of them of a very stern Judaic character. As heirs to fifteen centuries of Judaic history and glory, they would, by prepossession, linger long and lovingly with Mosaism, the Synagogue, and the old-time Sabbath. Emerging Christian institutions were in peril of a too great Judaic tinge. 1 The fall of Jerusa- lem prevented that. The social reaction that then sent Judaism into long exhaustion and doom enured to Chris- tian separation and independence. Christianity made an invading and conquering march through Paganism ; Pagan Assyria, Pagan Egypt, Pagan Greece, Pagan Rome : each having its philosophy and tra- dition, its idolatrous sacrifices and temple worship; and each using, as human substitutes and corruptions of the ancient divine Sabbath, nundinm, or decades, with annual festivals. Over and through all it swept as a mighty and 1 "It must not be forgotten that one of the most constant difficulties to which the early church was subjected, arose from a tendency in the Jewish converts, not only to retain, but to enforce some of the rites and observances of their own law. 1 ' — Bril. Quar. 21 : 79. 12G THE APOSTLES AND TIIE FIRST DAY. 127 resistless Gulf-Stream, scattering everywhere a new spirit- ual warmth, purity, and life. The old mythology was to go down before the on-coming Christian faith. To absorb and assimilate in a new religious unity the Jewish convert and the Gentile convert — two distinct his- toric personalities — social incongruents and business rivals i — antagonists by race and religious prejudices — this was the difficult and delicate problem to be solved. 1 How this important task was accomplished— the old displaced and the new brought forward by steadily unfolding steps — history tells. I am now to study and report the divine Sabbatic stream, as it flowed, under Apostolic supervision, through the organizing Christianity. The Apostles and the First Day. The Gospels report the use of First-day meetings, by the Apostles, from the very beginning. They met on the evening of the first day in the new era ; on next First- day ; and then, with one hundred and twenty disciples, in the early morning of seventh First-day. Thus three First-day meetings are recorded as held by them in the first seven weeks after the Christ resurrection. The cus- tom continued. The Greek phrase, fila rtiv aafifiaruv — " the first day of the week" — occurs eight times in the New Testament; six times in association with our Lord's resurrection ; and twice by Apostolic use. These two uses now invite atten- tion. 1 The religions and the philosophies of the age were local. A world religion was deemed impossible. "It is not easy to find the Father and Creator of all existence ; and, when he is found, it is impossible to make him known to all." — Plato. "He must be void of understanding who can believe that Greeks and Barbarians in Asia, Europe, and Syria — all nations to the ends of the earth — can unite in one religious doctrine." — Celsus. 128 SABBATH OF THE APOSTLES. Luke used the phrase. In reporting a meeting at Troas he says : " And on the first day of the week, when the disciples were come together to break bread, Paul preached unto them." a Here are Sabbatic elements : an appointed and understood day ; a day for the ordinance of the Eu- charist ; a day for preaching and social worship. The day had been waited for. Paul abode seven days in Troas, " ready to depart on the morrow," after this First day meeting. . His tarrying extended over Seventh-day, which is not mentioned as used. This First-day meeting at Troas has the air of a usual arrangement ; of a well and widely known custom ; of a stated meeting that could be waited for, and that brought Christians together. This is in proof that Sabbatism had changed its day. First-day was in use at Troas. Luke makes sacred, not the Seventh but the First day. 1 Paul used the phrase. He thus wrote to Corinthian Christians : " Now concerning collections for the saints, as J have given orders to the churches in Galatia, so do ye. a Acts 20 : 7. 1 "The whole aim of the narrative favors the reference to what is now known as Sunday." — McClintock & Strong. QyeL, Art. Lord's Day. "The disciples in Troas met weekly on the first day of the week for exhortation and the breaking of bread. 7 ' — Encycl. Brit., Art. Sunday. "This is a passage of the utmost importance, as showing that the observance was customary." — Life and Epistles of 8t. Paul, 2 : 206. " Is it not clear to demonstration that Paul, wishing to meet the Church at Troas, waited there seven days till they met; that they did not meet until the first day of the week ; and that, having fulfilled his purpose, Paul left them immediately after the Lord's day had closed ?" -British Quar. 21 : 79. "To break bread. Evidently to celebrate the Lord's Supper. . . * 3o the Syriac understands it, ' to break the Eucharist/ i. e. the Euchar- istic bread.. It is probable that the Apostles and early Christians cel- ebrated the Lord's Supper on every Lord's day And upon ;he first day of the week. Showing thus that this day was observed ts holy time." — Barnes' Notes, in loco. THE APOSTLES AND THE FIRST DAY. 129 Upon the first day of the week, let every one of you lay by him in store, that there be no gatherings when I come." a This Apostolic prescription for contributing gifts and of- ferings is clearly not for one First-day only, but for all First days ; and not for one church only, but for many. It is established as a weekly custom in the churches of Corinth and Galatia. In those churches, therefore, First day was well-known, and was used for religious business — for sacred collection*. All this is plain. And it suggests that First day was occupied by religious meetings ; for sea- sons of worship are, in the Christian Church, the usual occasions for sacred gifts and offerings. 1 a L Cor. 16:2. 1 " A plain indication that the day was already considered as a special one, and one more than others fitted for the performance of a religious duty."— Alford. Greek N. T. 2 : 588. " Already the day of the week on which Christ had risen had be- come noted as a suitable day for distinctively Christian work, and Christian worship." — Ellicott. Commentary, 2: 353. " But no doubt it does show that to the Christian consciousness it was a holy day in whose consecration the appropriateness of such works of love was felt." — Meyer. On Corinthians, 2 : 111. "This weekly contribution was to be reserved for the 'Lord's day.' This renders it certain, by the way, that that day was already regarded by all Christians as a sacred day, and, as such, the proper day (as we find from Acts 20 : 7) for public worship."— Schaff. Paul's Epistles, 231. " This passage is important as the first in which there occurs a clear trace of a distinction put upon the first day of the week, as our Lord's resurrection day, yet we cannot find here any special observance of the day as Osiander does." — Neander. On Corinthians, 355. ." The passage certainly implies that this day of the resurrection of our Lord was for the Christians a holy day, out of which all other observ- ances of the sort naturally developed themselves." — Lange. Com. in loco. " It is reasonable to think that the first day was specified as the proper time to make collections for the poor, because it was consecrated to religious duties." — Nevin. Pres. Encyc, Art. Sabbath. "It appears from the whole that the first day of the week, which is the Christian Sabbath, was the day on which their principal religious meetings were held in Corinth and the churches of Galatia ; and con- sequently in all other places where Christianity had prevailed."— Clarke's Theology y 170. 130 SABBATH OF THE APOSTLES. Some critics, as Stanley, Meyer, and Shaflf, think the Greek text simply directs Christians to lay by of their weekly earnings, on each First-day, in their own home — not in the assembled church — and strictly translated such meaning may be made to appear. But this would have necessitated gatherings at the Apostle's coming, the very thing that he sought to prevent. The mere laying by of offerings, in many homes, does not fairly and fully meet the Apostolic requirement; and indeed nothing does short of an actual gift in the assembled church. Sacred gifts only become a reality when gathered. The Apostle desired the gathering to be done before his coming — to be done on First-days — to be done therefore in church assemblies. All this implies that the day was for Christians a special and holy day. The new day for worship, brought forward after the Christ-resurrection, now stands complete. It has two New Testament names. Its first divine name is /ila r&v aappdruv — u the first day of the week " — resurrection day — mem- orable — Sabbatic. Its second divine name is ij Kvpiany ir/iipa — " the Lord's day," — bringing celestial visions to the man of Patmos — elevating — restful. It is the only day named in which the risen Christ was accustomed to meet with his disciples; in which he appointed to them a meeting; and on which he poured upon them Pentecostal gifts. It is the only day named and particularized for meetings of the disciples; for sacred collections; and for administering distinctive Christian ordinances, as baptism and the Lord's Supper. It is the Church's birth-day. It is the most notable day in the New Testament — the joy day of all dis- ciples. If use institutes— if example teaches — then First- day stands out as the divinely appointed Sabbath of the new Christian brotherhood. The Apostles, after Christ, evidently recast Sabbatism in the mold of the new day. The institution, like a stream overleaping the bounds of an THE APOSTLES AND THE SEVENTH DAY. 131 ancient and flowing into a new channel, swept out of the seventh into the first day. 1 Sabbatism entered the emerg- ing Christian era, divinely clad in the drapery of First- day. The Apostles and the Seventh Day. The Greek capp&Tov is used seventy times in the New Testament: is sixty times translated Sabbath; nine times week ; and one time rest. It is used fifty-one times before and in connection with our Lord's resurrection ; and nine- teen times after. Of its nineteen post-resurrection uses, eight are translated week, and report the day changed. Four out of its remaining eleven uses are wholly indiffer- ent to the question of change ; as a Sabbath-day's jour- ney;* as two statements that Moses was read on the Sab- bath-day ; b and as the farther statement that a rest (or Sabbatism) remaineth for the people of God. c This leaves but seven Apostolic uses and interpretations of the word to be considered. a Acts 1:12. b Acts 13 : 27 ; 15 : 21. c Heb. 4 : 9. ia The primitive Christians were unanimous in setting apart the first day of the week, as being that on which our Savior rose from the dead, for the solemn celebration of public worship. This pions custom was derived from the example of the Church of Jerusalem on the ex- press appointment of the Apostles."-- Waddington's Cli. Hist., 1 : 44. " This change of the Sabbath from the seventh to the first day of the week was made not only for a sufficient reason, but also by competent authority. It is a simple historical fact that Christians of the apostolic age ceased to observe the seventh, and did observe the first day of the week as the day for religious worship." Hodge. Sys. Theol, 3 : 330. "It may, I think, unquestionably be taken for a fact, that the first day of the week, i. e. the day on which our blessed Savior triumphantly burst the bonds of death and arose from the grave, was expressly ap- pointed by the Apostles themselves, during their continuance at Jerus- alem, for the holding of their general solemn assemblies of the Chris- tians for the purposes of religious worship." — Mosheim's Commentaries. — Murdock's trans., 1 : 149. 132 SABBATH OF THE APOSTLES. Luke, mjive different places, tells of Paul and fellow- helpers using the seventh day. 1 They entered into syna- gogues on that day, and preached. Now if the New Tes- ment anywhere rehabilitates the old seventh day as Sab- bath, it must be here. Is there here then a fair warrant of continuance? Did Apostolic use reinstitute? Is it a sufficient authorization for a transferrence of the seventh- day Sabbath out of Judaism into Christianity ? It is not. Four important considerations require this negative reply. First : Paul and his co-laborers used the synagogue as well as the Seventh-day. But Apostolic use did not rein- stitute and continue the synagogue ; why then the Seventh day as Sabbath ? Second : They used Seven th-day, even as the synagogue, for more convenient access to the Jews ; not however as Jews, to promote Judaism ; but as Chris- tians to make Christian converts. Such use was a con- venience, but not a reinstitution. Third : The only named use they made of the day was for preaching. They are never known to have used it for baptism, for the eucharist, for any distinctive Christian ordinances. These were cel- ebrated on First never on Seventh-day. The day, as used by them, is not Christianized. Fourth : They were in- competent to reinstitute the old day, or to change to a new day. . They were themselves under marching orders. They were to do whatsoever Christ had commanded them. Christ alone is Lord of the Sabbath. He alone, not Paul, nor Peter, nor John, nor all of them, could continue the 1 ''They .... went into the synagogue on the Sabbath day and sat down."— Acts 13 : 14. " And the next Sabbath day came almost the whole city together to hear the Word of God."— Acts 13:44. ''And on the Sabbath we went out of the city by a river side . . and spoke unto the women which resorted thither." — Acts 16: 13. " And Paul . . . three Sabbath days reasoned with them out of the Scriptures."— Acts 17 : 2. "And he reasoned in the synagogue every Sabbath." — Acts 18: 4. THE APOSTLES AND THE SEVENTH DAY. 133 old or change to a new day. The risen Christ never ^in- stituted Seventh-day worship j and he did, by use, institute First-day worship. So then these five Sabbatic texts re- port Apostolic use that did not, and could not, reinstitute and continue the seventh-day as Sabbath. The New Tes- tament gives no support whatever to seventh-day Sabba- tism in the Christian system. Two post-resurrection Sabbath texts yet remain. In one of the two Paul interprets the Jewish seventh day. To Colossian Christians, he wrote: " Let no man judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of a holy day, or of the new moons, or of the Sabbath days, which are a shadow of things to come, but the body is of Christ." 8, "Sabbath days — Greek oapp&T it should not only keep the day itself, but it should make provision for its keeping throughout all its domain. The enforcement of Sunday as Sabbath — as a day for religion — is not of man but of God. But its enforcement as a natural law — as a day of rest from work — may be by man as well as by God — by society — by the State. The divine law of a seventh-day rest constrains man — society — nations. The State, in its own proper sphere, and in its own proper behoof, should unite in the constraining Act. It should frame and maintain a seventh-day rest by law. This is a 192 SUNDAY AND THE STATE. legitimate function of the State, and just so far as such rest may help to make better citizens and more stable civil institutions. 1 It has divine sanction. The Jews, under God's supervision, interpreted and enforced the law of a seventh-day rest. It has also historic supports. All Christian nations have had Sunday laws; some stricter; some looser. Departures from this divine arrangement and from these historic models would be experimental and perilous. Abuse of law would issue in wider licentious- ness. Sunday laws are both a need and a duty of the State. This is hardly debatable ground. And yet an irrepressible conflict forever rages between the friends and the foes of Sunday legislation; Seventh day Sabbatarians exceeding even sceptics and the dangerous classes in the fierceness of their assaults on Sunday laws. This contention is not for the enforcement of the Sabbath — requiring church attend- ance — prescribing and enforcing some particular form of religion — making citizens religious. It is for the enforce- ment of Sunday — stilling business — maintaining quiet — rul- ing out noisy parades — prohibiting the blare of marching bands. This Sunday is not the Sabbath — not at all a religious institution — not even based on religious grounds. It is based upon an immutable natural law — the human need of a seventh day rest. This physiological necessity justifies Sunday legislation. So far as political action can settle anything this question is settled. Man, the citizen, 1 " There is abundant justification of our Sabbath laws, regarding them as a mere civil institution, which they are ; and he is no friend to the good order and welfare of society, who would break them down, or who himself sets an example of disobedience to them. They appeal to each citizen as a patriot, as an orderly member of the community, and as a well-wisher of his fellow-men, to uphold them with his influ- ence, and to show respect for them by his conduct and example."— Justice Strong in The Eights of the People to the Sunday Rest. "The civil as based on the religious Sabbath is an institution to which society has a natural right, precisely as it has to property. ,, — Mark Hopkins in The Sab. and Free Institutions. I THE STATE AND SUNDAY LAWS. 193 has imperative need of Sunday rest; and the State should secure it to him. 1 Its own well-being also obliges the State to establish and maintain a seventh-day rest from labor. Public as well as private virtues cluster about a quiet Sunday. It is an essential need of a free Commonwealth. The State needs healthy not infirm citizens ; and sociologists call Sunday rest a Sanitarium to all six- day toilers. The hygiene of Moses, pivoted upon a seventh-day rest, has never been surpassed. The State needs intelligent not illiterate citizens; and Sunday rest is a school day of no mean moment to all six-day toilers. It needs moral not 1 " The Sabbath, as a political institution, is of inestimable value, in- dependently ot its claims to divine authority." — Adam Smith, as quoted in Memoirs of Sir John Sinclair. "The State as well as the individual is indebted to the Sabbath." — Five Problems of State and Religion, 45. "Besides the notorious indecency and scandal of permitting any sec- ular business to be publicly transacted on that day, in a country pro- fessing Christianity, and the corruption of morals that usually follows its profanation, the keeping of one day in seven holy, as a time of relaxation and refreshment, as well as for public worship, is of admir- able service to the State, considered merely as a civil institution." — Blackstock. Commentaries. B. 4, 0. 63, " I wish to testify my belief, that the individual custom of our fathers, in remembering the Sabbath day to keep it holy, as the conse- crator of their Christian religion, is the foundation of our political system, and the only hope of American freedom, progress, and glory." — John Randolph Tucker in Eights of the People to Sunday Best. " The first settlers of this country were a body of select men. They were profoundly impressed by the conviction that a weekly Sabbath was essential to the highest welfare of the communities which they established, and they therefore enacted laws to enforce a proper ob- servance of that day. It was not more upon theological considerations than it was upon secular and social that they framed those laws, and enforced strict obedience to them. The Sabbath so observed, no one can doubt, contributed largely to the formation of lhat character which has stood us in so much stead in our own history, and which has been the admiration of the world. ,) — Hon. Wm. Strong. Justice U. S. Su- preme Court. 194 SUNDAY AND THE STATE. vicious citizens ; and Sunday rest is a very Bethesda for the moral purifying of all six-day toilers. Thus Sunday rest helps the Nation as well as the church, and is there- fore entitled to National protection and support. There is also a vital connection between a weekly rest day and free institutions. The area of representative and popular government is strangely coincident with the area of the stricter Sunday laws. It is not a mere happening that all nations, having a really stable popular government, are known as Sabbatarians — as the United States, England, Scotland, Canada, and Switzerland. Here is about the whole territory of popular freedom. Liberty and safety seem everywhere directly proportioned to firm Sunday laws. 1 A weekly rest is therefore an essential need in our 1 " Every day's observation and experience confirms the opinion that the ordinances which require the observance of one day in seven, and the Christian faith which hallows it, are onr chief security for all civil and religious liberty, for temporal blessings and spiritual hopes. " — Wm. L. Seward. Letter to Sab. Conven., July 20, 1842. "I am no fanatic, I hope, as to Sunday ; but I look abroad over the map of popular freedom in the world, and it does not seem to me acci- dental that Switzerland, Scotland, England, and the United States, the countries which best observe Sunday, constitute almost the entire map of safe popular government." —Joseph Cook. "What Sabbath observing nation, it has been asked, has ever been barbarous or ignorant ? The lands of the Sabbath and of the Bible have always been the chosen abodes of knowledge and the lights of the earth. The Jews were in the possession of a literature when darkness covered all other people. Every nation that received the Gospel and the Christian Sabbath found them to be the elements of learning and civilization. "— Gilfill, an. The Sabbath, 190. " The religious character of an institution so ancient, so sacred, so lawful, and so necessary to the peace and comfort and the respectability of society, ought alone to suffice for its protection ; but, thiH failing, surely the laws of the land made for its account ought to be a^s strictly enforced as the laws for the protection of person and property. Vice and crime are always progressive and cumulative, li the Sun/lay laws be neglected, the laws of person and propert}' will soon share their fate, and be equally disregarded." — Attorney-General Bates. INVASIONS OF SUNDAY LAWS. 195 national life, The State, like the individual, is a debtor to Sunday rest, has important ends to gain from it ; and it owes it to itself to maintain and preserve the day. Invasions of Sunday Laws. Sunday laws, in our Republic, are a function of the States, not of the Federal Government; are on the statute books of every State but one ; and are political not religious measures. They have no religious intent. They but assure Sunday quiet; stilling the pulse of industry; and treating noisy demonstrations as a nuisance. This, with some ear- lier exceptions, has been, and is, our American Sunday. And it has been a potent factor in forming the American nation. The uplift and power of Sunday rest is under every Amer- ican home ; under the Sabbath-keeper's home ; under the Sabbath-breaker's home. It has helped to make the Amer- ican home what it is, and still has in its soil the seeds of a National Millennium. For Sunday rest is of value to the State even as to the church — to public morals even as to Christianity. But'this time-honored Sunday of our fathers is now in peril. Our own, like every age, is witnessing invasion of Sunday laws. Our Sunday laws are invaded and imperilled by latitud- inarian views — by low and loose Sunday notions. They are characterized and denounced as a Judaistic superstition — as blue laws — as restricting personal liberty — as un- friendly to freedom of conscience. The assailants are many and various. They would strike down all Sunday laws. Some of them kindly allow God to make laws for the day, but not man. They stigmatize existing Sunday laws as Puritanical ; or calumniate them that they may secure their repeal ; or call for legislation so loose that it would be reactionary and revolutionary. They persistently cry: "Sunday is out of date ; was made for another age and people ; abridges human happiness ; and its mission 196 SUNDAY AND THE STATE. is at an end." This outcry is made chiefly by the vicious classes ; by saloonists, libertines, Anarchists ; promoters of all licentiousness; corrupters of social life; subverters of States. Its authors are not known as builders of schools and churches; as founders of stable institutions; as crea- tors of desirable civilizations. Yet the outcry receives support — and in this is its danger — from other classes in society ;' from owners and managers of Sunday-breaking agencies ; from the foes of Christianity ; and from the small body of Seventh-day Sabbatarians. These loose and low Sunday ideas and policies are without support in reason — in history — in the field ot human needs. They are confronted and opposed, not merely by the teachings of Revelation, but by the findings of all true science. Sociologists, physiologists, humanitarians, political econo- mists, jurists, statesmen, and physicians, all unite in pro- nouncing a seventh-day rest a need of man — a need of man in society as well as of man the individual — a law of his nature — and enforced by the highest considerations, physi- cal, intellectual, and moral. The proofs, as already given, are abundant, complete, convincing. This is the true Sunday theory, as opposed to the lower and loose views of the dangerous classes. It will win the day, which meets an abiding human need. It will prevail. The universality of its empire, like that of truth over error, is only a question of time. Happy are all they who fight its battles, and help it on to victory. The looser and lower Sunday views, when weighed in the scales of time and history, are always found wanting. Sundayless communities are not happier for their destitu- tion, and never attain to empire and influence. The stricter notions and observances of the day, judged by results, are approved. They have upon their brow the verdict of success. To stricter Sunday-keeping is largely due the wonderful progress of English-speaking peoples; INVASIONS OF SUNDAY LAWS. 197 the like wonderful progress of the Protestant nations ; and the diffusion of the clearest lights of science. It is the stricter Sunday-keeping peoples that, in modern history, are inarching at the head of nations — grasping empires — wielding regal influence. Our own Republic is an example. Our stricter American Sunday is no experiment. It reaches down to us out of the past. It has stood the tests of time and history; has given tone and fiber to the people; and has been a potent factor in molding the hardy life and character of the Republic. All history, indeed, bids us have high rather than low Sunday views — strict rather than loose Sunday laws. Our Sunday laws are invaded and imperilled by social carousals; turning the day into a holiday. Working people, it is claimed, need recreation in parks and pleasure grounds — excursions to rural districts — and so coaches, steamboats, and railway trains turn the day into a carnival. These social carousals, like drink-dens, beer-gardens, thea- tres, and concerts, are relentless Sunday foes, and rob the people of needed rest. This holiday Sunday is an exotic — an immigrant from abroad — a transplant from Europe. It is German rather than American; from the banks of the Rhine rather than from the banks of the Ohio. It comes from old-world usages now widely overrunning and threat- ening our purer American customs. It is foreigners chiefly who are leaders in Sunday parades, Sunday concerts, Sun- day saloons and beer-gardens; trampling under foot our Sunday laws; defying the government that gives them protection. And, under the mantle of their lawlessness, connived at by municipal authorities, young America is engaging in Sunday picnics and base-ball games. The evil is still further multiplied by summer resorts and camp-meetings with open Sunday gates. These are not the weakest de- vices of the Devil. Idling and pleasure seeking in holy time bring no real rest. Sunday lawlessness is always a 198 SUNDAY AND THE STATE. menace to the purer civil institutions — a wide and active demoralizer — a festering sore on the body politic. It takes into insatiate maws money, health and morals. 1 Sunday, as a holiday, pulls down the State as well as the church — demoralizes the people as well as corrupts Chris- tianity. The Republic is taking from it irreparable dam- age. Its fiber, especially in city centers, is growing coarser in direct proportion as its old-time Sunday sinks to the low level of a mere holiday. As it becomes a holiday, it is more and more a work day. 2 The French Sunday is a holiday ; and it is widely a day of work. The German Sunday is a half holiday; and half the people there work seven days out of seven. It could not be otherwise. For the convenience of the pleasure seekers, the labor of other 1 " It has been found that when the Sabbath is perverted to mere pleasure and recreation, more drunkenness keeps up the orgies of hell, more foul immoralities rot into society, more revelry and carousal, and fighting debase mankind, more crime riots, and more blood red- dens the earth on that day that God commands to be kept holy, than on any other day of the week." — Dr. J. O. Peck. " The old despotic Stuarts were tolerable adepts in the art of king- craft, and knew well what they were doing when they backed with their authority the Book of Sports. The many unthinking serfs, who, early in the reign of Charles the First, danced on Sabbath around the Maypole, were afterward the ready tools of despotism, and fought that England might be enslaved. The Ironsides, who, in the cause of re- ligious liberty, bore them down, were staunch Sabbatarians." — Hugh Miller. First Impress, of Eng. and its People, 67. 2 " Operatives are perfectly right in thinking that if all worked on Sunday, seven days work would have to be given for six days' wages." — John Stuart Mill in Documents of New York Sab. Conv. u Sunday is more essential to the workers of society than to any other members. The reverent observance of it is a prerequisite to their moral and spiritual growth ; and this growth is necessary not only to industrial but to national success." — Charles Dudley Warner. " If the thousands of poor men and women who are compelled to work six days in seven for their own support, could not demand one day in seven as a legal right, they might well ask for it as a mercy ." — Judge E. L. Fancher. Address at Cooper Union, New York } Dec, 1883. INVASIONS OF SUNDAY LAWS. 199 multitudes must be drawn upon — an abridgement of their liberty and needed rest. This is already appearing among us. Hundreds of thousands of our fellow citizens are Sunday toilers — toilers seven days in seven — violating a natural law — that other multitudes may use the day for carousal. This is the necessary fact. More shops open for business, more excursions by land and water, more open theatres and concerts ; as a result more workers are deprived of Sunday rest. Will toilers never cease from devouring fellow-toilers? Have Sunday pleasure seekers no respect for the rights of others to the day of rest ? Then they need to be put under the wholesome restraints of law. Their cry of peisonal liberty simply means the oppression of fellow workers — depriving them of their needed weekly rest-day. The law should defend the oppressed from all such conscienceless people ; should protect them in their weekly day of rest; should make pleasure seeking cease to be a multiplier of Sunday work. A lawless Sunday, or a Sunday with loose laws, puts help- less workers at the mercy of all pleasure seekers. Good Sunday laws are a proclamation of their freedom. Our Sunday laws are invaded and imperilled by greed; not contented with six days work and trade ; seizing and using the seventh for secular ends. Traffic and travel whirl through the day. 1 It is invaded by the silent but steady en- 1 "The desecration of the Sabbath by railroads is an absolute loss to those companies." — Wm. E. Dodge. " If you English people do not take care, the railway system will be a battering ram to break down your Sabbaths " — Merle D'Aubigne. "Sunday is worth more than Sunday journalism. What Sunday journals displace is worth more than what they supply. They displace rest. „ They displace the mood of religious thoughtfulness and worship, without which.no civilization can be maintained at a high level. The most influential dailies of the world do not issue Sunday editions. Civilization would stand higher than it now does with us, if all Sunday journals were now stopped, as both industrial and moral nuisances." — Joseph Cook. 200 SUNDAY AND THE STATE. croachments of capital ; great corporations running railway trains ; smaller capitalists steamboats and coaches ; and shop- keepers keeping open stores. All seem to care little for Sunday, and much for dividends. They rob not God alone, but man also. They exact from the toiler seven days in the week. They deprive him of a needed weekly rest-day, that they may drive on the pursuits of business — the schemes of ambition — the clamor for political power. They are breakers of a deep-seated natural law, and are making us a nation of Sunday workers. The tainted breath of Sunday work blows around us widely and disastrously. Proofs of this are not wanting; for the thing is not done in a corner. We see everywhere confectionery and tobacco stores making Sunday sales ; saloons, beer-gardens, theaters and concerts open ; papers hawked through the streets ; steamboats and railway trains running; and all bringing the feverishness of business into the quiet of Sunday life. All this invasion of the day springs from mercenary motives. Sunday quiet, under loose Sunday laws, always goes down before conscienceless greed. Many men of sub- stance, who have the greatest interest in keeping society stable, are its mightiest corrupters. These capitalists are appealed to, not now on the higher plane of Christianity — the supreme motive and force — but on the lower plane of humanity and patriotism. They are violating a stern law of nature; robbing fellow-men of a needed rest-day; lowering the moral tone and fiber of society; making sad forecasts, even a heritage of corruption, for those coming after them. Why will they imperil our institutions of civil and religious liberty? If they will not prize the day above money considerations, the State should compel them to do so. Greed should not be allowed to rob us of a seventh-day rest Sunday quiet is a conservator of all that is best in the Republic, giving its citizens a refreshing and toning up INVASIONS OF SUNDAY LAWS. 201 weekly ; and Sunday desecration is a peril to free institutions, always sending the people down to lower physical, intel- lectual, and spiritual levels. It would be a happier time, if Sunday quiet breathed over all thoroughfares of trade and travel ; over stores and newspaper offices ; over city as well as country populations; over high and low, rich and poor, learned and illiterate. Such a Sunday is above any possible commercial value to the State even as to the church. I make this final appeal that such a Sunday may be the heritage of the Republic forever. . The appeal goes out to all law-abiding citizens — to Christians, humanitarians, and patriots — to stop violations of Sunday laws — to arrest this widespread and threatening evil — to make Sunday quiet the ruling American usage. The bitter cry of Sunday toilers is ascending against us. Institutions, when decayed from top to bottom, are ready for removal. Avert the de- cline. Restore the ancient puritv. Drive from your Sunday Temple all the trafficking sons of Adam. .Fight well this mighty battle. Don't be mere lookers on. Don't study the evil merely from the outside. Plunge into the conflict — into the seething heart of it — and be a heroic worker in the strife. Say to men of greed, "stop business and trade;" to pleasure seekers, "no more Sunday parades and picnics;" and to Government, u no more Sunday mails and delivery." Establish a Sunday quiet that will breathe restfulness all over the land. It will give stability and per- manence to our free institutions. It will be security for a noble future. To promote this should call out our utmost seeking — the utmost seeking of every Christian — the utmost seeking of every patriot — the utmost seeking of every humanitarian. APPENDIX I use an Appendix to group together a few things yet remaining to be said. The subject is complete without them. But they are added to be a help to students who may be purposing its wider examination. Seventh-Day Sabbatarians. The Jews stand in history as the oldest. Their high antiquity is known. They reject First and observe Seventh day, because they reject the whole Christian system. Sev- enth-day is still in all lands the Judaic Sabbath. Yet under the more tolerant civilization that is lifting from them the oppression of centuries, they are beginning to show some signs of yielding; and are pondering the question of conforming to existing social institutions. The Jewish Progress, as quoted in Truth, New York, Oct. 5, 1884, says: " The requirements of modern society make the abolition of the present (Jewish) Sabbath an absolute necessity." Hatred and blows have not won the Jew. The touch of kindness is having a more persuasive influence. 1 Traces of Seventh-day keepers appear in Lombardy in the twelfth century — in Germany in the fifteenth cen- tury — and in England in the sixteenth century. The German Seventh-day keepers arose by secession from the German Baptists, or Dunkers. Some of them migrated at an early day to this country, and settled in Eastern Penn- sylvania. They formed a separate community, but without monastic, vows ; and recommended but did not enforce 1 Henry Gersoni, in The Independent, New York, Jan. 8, 1885, says : a Reform Judaism, among other things, is advocating changing the Sabbath from the seventh to the first day of the week." •203 204 APPENDIX. celibacy. There have been but a few hundred of them at any time. 1 Some Seventh-day keepers from England, where the cause was having a decaying history, began to appear in Rhode Island about 1665. Several churches were soon organized in Rhode Island, New York and New Jersey. In 1818 they took the name of Seventh-day Baptists. They have now between eight and nine thousand church members. 2 They maintain the divine origin of the Sabbath ; but they deny the change that the risen Christ, by use and approval, made in the day. Their criticism here is wholly destructive. They build no Seventh-day Sabbath on the post-resurrection Christ, during that era when all things were made new. They do not even attempt this. The feat is an impossibility. Their sole mission seems to be to tear down the First-day Sabbath — by searching after tlaws — by suggesting difficulties — by raising doubts. As destructive critics they are unsurpassed. Their Sabbatism is not built on the risen Christ The Seventh-day Adventists are the youngest of all Seventh-day Sabbatarians. They were born of the great Advent craze that collapsed in 1843. They arose out of the wreck. Their date is usually given as 1844. They rapidly grew till most of the Adventists were gathered into the new fold. They now number about sixteen 1 "They are not believed to exceed a few hundreds in numbers, and their ministers may be as many as ten or twelve." — Dr. Baird. 2 "Late in the 15th century, * Seventh-day keepers' appeared in Germany. In England soon after the Reformation they organized as a separate denomination, bearing the name of ' Sabbatarians/ and eleven of their churches existed at the close of that century, of which three only remain. They appeared in this country in 1665, and about 1671 organized a church at Newport, R. I. Other churches were soon organized in that State, and in New York and New Jersey, several of which still exist . . . The name ' Seventh-day Baptists/ instead of ' Sabbatarians/ was adopted in 1818. . . . Their membership in 1885 was 8,591, with 85 ministers and 93 churches." — Alden's Man. Cycl, Art. Baptists. SABBATIC THEORIES. 205 thousand members. Activity and energy characterize them in history. And their chief distinguishing trait is seen in their persistent effort to undermine the First-day Sabbath. Seventh-day Sabbatarians — Jews, Baptists, and Advent- ists — form together about seven-tenths of one per cent, of our population. 1 They are social incongruents ; widely diverse in life and faith ; but united to break down the Sabbath of Christianity — the Sabbath that the risen Christ, by use and approval, instituted. But the day has less foes and more friends now than in any preceding age of the world. Sabbatic Theories. Their number is legion. Nearly every writer on the Sabbath has had a theory of his own, both as to the day's origin, and as to its change. All these various theories, however, may be classed with one or another of the four following views : The Utilitarian View. This is the theory of all opponents of supernaturalism. They regard the original Sabbath as a mere human contrivance — as born perhaps of lunar changes — but certainly an invention of man. They regard the day, in the Christian age, as rising from a spontaneous feeling to commemorate the resurrection of our Lord. Seventh-day keeping is obligatory because it is salutary ; binding because a useful and beneficent arrangement; immutable in its claims because required by the convenience of society. This theory rests Sabbatism wholly on expe- diency. The view is inadequate. It does not account, in any fair way, for the Sabbath in history; for its origin ; for its preservation and perpetuity. Opponents of super- naturalism allow themselves, in difficult places, to be satisfied 1 "As to Seventh-day worshipers— Jews, Seventh-day Baptists, and Seventh-day Adventists— they form together but seven-tenths of one per cent, of the population of the United States, and are still fewer in Great Britain."— The Sab. for Man, 86. 206 APPENDIX. with very irrational and visionary theories. They seem credulous beyond ordinary men. The Ecclesiastical View. This confines itself to the Christian age. It does not discuss the original Sabbath, but only the Lord's day. It regards the church as the Sabbath -Maker. The Lord of the Sabbath is dethroned — is pushed aside — is denuded of authority- — and the church steps in to occupy his place. Cardinal Tolet says : " The observance of the Lord's day is not a law of God, but an ecclesiastical precept and a custom of the faithful."* This makes the Lord's day, not of Christ's institution and approval — not even of Apostolic usb and authority — but of church arrangement. Christ will not thus be uncrowned. He asserts his own dignity and right. "The Son of Man," he says, " is Lord also of the Sabbath day." It is his. He made it. He keeps it in unending history. And he will not allow his prerogative and glory to be appropriated and worn by another. The Apostolic View. This traces the Lord's day back to the Apostles, but no higher. It was born, not of Christ, but of James and John, of Peter and Paul. It arose in Apostolic customs. Whatever was ordered by the Apostles was divinely ordered. The Lord's day was so ordered, and is hence of divine and perpetual authority. This ascription of the day to the Apostles is without warrant in the New Testament. It makes too much of them. It deifies them — puts them in God's place. For in sacred history God alone is the Sabbath-Maker and the Sabbath-Preserver. The Lord's day was not born even of inspired men. It is of higher and nobler original. The Divine View. This traces the original Sabbath to God, who founded it in the constitution of man and ap- pointed it at the beginning. And it traces the transferrence of the institution, and its change of day in the Christian a Tolet. Insti. Sacerdot., 4 : 10. SABBATIC THEORIES. 207 system, to the risen Christ. The Sabbath is thus divine. It was appointed by the Creator to the first man; re-enacted in the Decalogue; and, by Christ's authority, descended into Christian history as the Lord's day. This makes the reason for its keeping twofold ; the law in man ; the appointment of God ; and the twofold mandate is supreme. A seventh of days for rest and worship is of divine obligation and universal authority. In our treatment of the Sabbath, we have to deal with God, not with man; we are responsible to God, not to man. 1 1 " On the other hand, if the institution of the Sabbath were coeval with creation, a command given to our first parents, and based upon principles of universal obligation ; if, in the Decalogue, as a summary of moral law, it is again repeated, incorporated with Jewish institu- tions, recognized by Christ, observed by Apostles and apostolic men, honored by the primitive church, and handed down to succeeding ages, rooted deeply in every dispensation, and alien to none, spreading widely, and bearing everywhere the prints of holiness and peace, then, we think that, without hesitation, we may claim for the Sabbath the authority which alone can sanction its observance, or give to it perma- nent obligation." — Br. Qaar Rev., 1855. THE HEBREW WORD FOR SABBATH. IM2W occurs, as far as I have been able to ascertain, in twenty books of the Old Testament, and one hundred and fifty times. It is trans- lated into the Septuagint by anapausis, ebdomas, kataluse, etc., but is more usually transferred as sabbaton. Its translation into the English appears in such words as rest, to cease, etc. ; but it is more usually trans- ferred and becomes our English word Sabbath. I give here the one hundred and fifty cases of its Old Testament use. GENESIS. 2 : 2. r\3ET1 Karaizavae He rested. 2 : 3. ri3^ Kara-navaev He had rested. 8 : 22. *r\3^ na-anacovcL Shall not cease. EXODUS. 5 : 5. DrjS^ni KarairavGcjfiev Ye make them rest. 12 : 15. WY5#j? acpavielre Ye shall put away. 16 : 23. JW VnT&...ava7ravcic—odppaTa The rest of the Sabbath. 16 : 25. A3# odpfiara A Sabbath. 16 : 26. n|# oappara The Sabbath. 16 : 29. n3fn cdppara The Sabbath. 16 : 30. Vtap?! eoappartaev The people rested. 20 : 8. n|^H D'r rjuepav.Ttiv odpfiaruv The Sabbath day. 20 : 10. nagr ....ad^ara The Sabbath. 20 : 11. T\2Wr\ D*V rfiv rjiiepav rrjv e fiddly The Sabbath day. 21 : 19. ifi3$ The loss of time. 23 : 12. mtSto avaTravoig Thou sh alt rest, 31 : 13. "nhl® od^ara My Sabbath ye shall keep. 31 : 14. n^n odpfiara The Sabbath. 31 : 15. \^m niW...TV epS6n aa^ara Sabbath of rest. 31 : 15. niW odftSo-a The Sabbath. 31 : 16. n|^n Gdppa-a Keep my Sabbaths. 31 : 17. i"Dt# KaranavGE He rested. 34 : 21. Hil^n Kara-avoeic Thou shalt rest. 34 : 21. JWi? KaTairavoic... .Thou shalt rest. THE HEBREW WORD FOR SABBATH. 209 35 : 2. P J 7?^' ^2^ .^Karanavacg — adfifiara A Sabbath of rest. 35 : 3. R0T\ DV yuepa t&v oapparcov The Sabbath day. LEVITICUS. 2: 13. rP3$.n dici-aware To be lacking. 16 : 31. pn3? r\T&...od ! 3t3a~a aa^arov A Sabbath of rest, 19 : 3. 'riTW oappara .Keep my Sabbath. 19 : 30. "nh|W Gappara.... Keep my Sabbath. 23 : 3. |1il3^ r\2W... .....avairavoLg A Sabbath. 23 : 39. pn3i#.... avcnzavou; A Sabbath. 24 : 8. r\ltir\ DV3 ni^H DVZ.lyjLLepa tgjv aa^aruv Every Sabbath. 25 : 2. rt3$— 7ir\T&]...avci7Tav(jeTac — Gaj3/3ara...T\\e land keep a Sabbath. 25 : 4. pna$ r\T\2...odj3(3aTa avaTravoig A Sabbath of rest. 25 : 4. ngi? cdppara A Sabbath. 25 : 5. pnatS? A3_k^ ...evtavrog avairavcEUQ A year of rest. 25 : 6. T\W ..Mppara The Sabbath of the land. 25 : 8. r\H3^ avcnravoEig Seven Sabbaths of years. 25 : 8. jVI3$ efidouddeg Seven Sabbaths of years. 26 : 2. 'tin!® Gd(3(3ara Keep my Sabbaths. 26 : 5. DMiSn Dwell— safely. 26 : 6. 'frMr\\ None shall make afraid. 26 : 34. n^nn3^ odppara Land— her Sabbaths. 26 : 34. n2&y\ aa^artel Thus shall the land rest. 26 : 34. iTphat? od^ara And enjoy her Sabbaths. 26 : 35. n*3I^n aa^artei As long as it lieth desolate. 210 THE HEBREW WORD FOR SABBATH. 26 : 35. nn'3$ cap panel It shall rest. 26 : 35. DJiJl^a D^nniB?:? It did not rest in your Sabbaths. 26 : 43. JTRn3iSf ...... .To wfipara Her Sabbaths. NUMBERS. 15 : 32. r\3$H ty y/Ltepa rtiv capfiaTcov On the Sabbath. 28 : 9. rii^n ry fjuepa t&v Gafifiaruv On the Sabbath. 28 : 10. 'tijWI niW ...oapparov ev rotq oafipaToic Of every Sabbath. DEUTERONOMY. 5 : 12. fi2t#n rfjv rjfiepav row aa/3 j3drcov... The Sabbath day. 5: 14. nig Gdppara The Sabbath. 5 : 15. ri3Bfn T?jv r^iepav rcov oafifiaruv. ..The Sabbath day. JOSHUA. 22 : 25. -irP|tfn] u?j cefiuvrai Cease from fearing. RUTH. 4 : 14. JV3$n.., 'narelvae Left thee. SECOND KINGS. 4 : 23. H|# ovde odfipaTov Nor Sabbath* 11 : 5. rii^H to oattparov On the Sabbath. 11 : 7. D|^n to oappaTov ....On the Sabbath. 11 : 9. ni^n to oapfiaTov , On the Sabbath. 11 : 9. ngt^n to oafSparov On the Sabbath. 16 . 18. rfitsm Covert for the Sabbath. FIRST CHRONICLES. 9:32. r\3$ fi3$ odpSaTov aaTa adppaTov... Every Sabbath. 23 : 31. nin^ 1 ? ev rdig adpftaToiq In the Sabbaths. 2 8 16 23 23 23 SECOND CHRONICLES. 4. JYIfl3$7 ev Tolq oappdTotq On the Sabbaths. 13. iVira^S ev roig aappaToiq On the Sabbaths. 5. fl3tSf*1 naTaTzavae His work cease. 4. n.Wn to odppaTov On the Sabbath. 8. T\2WT\ -ov odfiPaTov In on the Sabbath. 8. n3^n tov odppaTov Out on the Sabbath. THE HEBREW WORD FOR SABBATH. 211 31 : 3. ninr&b ra adnata , For the Sabbath. 36 : 21. nrV31^— n , Jp , fri3I^...Ttt Gd(3j3ara avrrjq oa3 fiancee. .Had enjoyed her Sabbaths. ^EHEMIAH. 9 : 14. rOt? to cafifiarov Thy holy Sabbath. 10 : 31. hst^n rov adfifiarov On the Sabbath day. 10 : 31. n3t??3 ev Gafifiaru On the Sabbath day. 10 : 33. nin3^n rov capparcov Of the Sabbaths. 13 : 15. n|^3 ...ev ru oafiSaru On the Sabbath. 13 : 15. ri3E?n rov Gaj3/3drov On the Sabbath day. 13 : 16. i\3#3 .tcj ad[3[3aTGj ..Sold on the Sabbath. 13 : 17. r^n rov odpparov Profane the Sabbath days. 13 : 18. n|t?n ro wfSjSarov Profaning the Sabbath. 13 : 19. nr#n wpb rov Gd(3 s 3arov Before the Sabbath. 13 : 19. flg^n ottlgg) rov Ga(3/3arov After the Sabbath. 13 : 19. ftj&T}. ........rov udfifiarov On the Sabbath. 13: 21. niWl ev Ga(3f3arG) On the Sabbath. 13 : 22. VSWTS rov ad^arov Sanctify the Sabbath day. JOB. 32 : 1. •1^!^?! enavaaro These three men ceased. PEOYEEBS. 18 : 18. NS&l iravet Contentions to cease. 20 : 3. .H3l^ a7coG-pe6eo$ai To cease from. 22 : 10. ri3EH Gvve^eAevGerat Shall go out. PSALMS. 8 : 3. iV^nS KaraAvGai That thou mightest still. 46: 10. jT3#D G X 6loGare Be still. 92 : Title. nj^n DV 1 ?...tov 7rpoGd l 3 l 3arov..A Psalm— for the Sabbath day. 119 : 119. A3t#n 7Tapa(3aivovTac Thou puttest away. ISAIAH. 1 : 13. fi|$ ra cdSfiara And Sabbaths. 14 : 4. fiStSf avaireTravrai .The oppressor ceased. 14 : 4. ^f)3(^ ava-erravrai The golden city ceased. 16 : 10. ^I^2WT} .TTerravrai Vintage shouting to cease. 212 THE HEBREW WORD FOR SABBATH. 17 : 3. r\3$J1 ...narcMpvyelv Shall cease. 24: 8. hlW— Pi2W....7r£7TavTac — Trerravrai ...Ceaseth — ceaseth, 30 : 7. H||f To sit still. 30: 11. *JV3$n CKpe/iere To cease. 33 : 8. H3$ TTETzavrai The wayfaring man ceaseth. 56 : 2. n3t# ra adppara Keepeth the Sabbath. 56 : 4. 'AffDB? ra cap para Keep my Sabbath. 56 : 6. hlW ra adppara Keepeth the Sabbath. 58 : 13. R2WD anb rtiv odpparov From the Sabbath. 58 : 13. n?V? ra adppara ..The Sabbath a delight. 66 : 23. fo?$| r\lW.„cdpparov zKadpparov.Yvom one Sabbath to another. JEKEMIAH. 7 : 34. "Tiat^ni nara?ivao I cause to cease. 17 : 21. rt|l2?n tg)v adpparuv On the Sabbath day. 17 : 22. n|^H tg)v adpparov On the Sabbath day. 17 : 22. ni^'H tojv aapparuv Hallow ye the Sabbath day. 17 : 24. ri3I^n tg)v aapparuv Hallow the Sabbath day. 17 : 24. fl|f H r&v o&ppaTov On the Sabbath day. 17 : 27. niW73 rc)v aappdrcov Hallow the Sabbath. 17 : 27. H3^n .ruv aapparuv On the Sabbath day. 48 : 35. "TDt^ni aTrolo I will cause to cease. LAMENTATIONS. 1 : 7. nostra..". Mock at her Sabbaths. 2 : 6. nafijft adpparov And Sabbaths. 5 : 14. ^H3# Karenavoav The elders have ceased. 5 : 15. n3^..i. mrDivoe ... Joy of our hearts is ceased. EZEKIEL. 6 : 6. D^nf3Bh"D Laid waste. 6 : 6. W|f J) s Idols— ceased. 20 : 12. ,^ni"fl3# ra adppara fiov My Sabbaths. 20 : 13. , riM$ ra adppara fiov My Sabbaths. 20 : 16. W'flatf ra adppara juov My Sabbaths. 20:20. ^pna^i ra adppara fiov My Sabbaths. THE HEBREW WORD FOR SABBATH. 213 20 : 21. 'JTfrDBf rd ad^ara fiov My Sabbaths. 20 : 24. T\)Pi2W. ....... .rd oappara fiov My Sabbaths. 22 : 8. ^Jifi^ ra odpfiara jllov My Sabbaths. 22 : 26. "•rWrO^P'l clko rcbv cdfifiaruv From my Sabbaths. 23 : 38. '{YilW rd cdj3 fiara fiov My Sabbaths. 30 : 18. fl3#2] a7ro?ietrai.., Shall cease. 33 : 28. n%&2\ ano^eirai Shall cease. 34 : 10. D^BBfni airocrpvipG) Cause them to cease. 34 : 25. Ttel^ni aavia Will cause to cease. 44 : 24. r pffi|$ rd cdfifiaTa jllov My Sabbaths. 45 : 17. ''rriftat^l ev rolg aa^arog -.The Sabbaths. 46 : 1. h5Wi\ r&vG&ppaTuv On the Sabbath. 46 : 3. r\l r\3t5te„ ...... ev role oaftfiaTocg In the Sabbaths. 46 : 4. r\31^n rcbv aafSparov Sabbath day. 46: 12. fl3$n ray (jaj3[3aTG)v... The Sabbath day. HOSEA. 2:11. HM^I rd udfifiara avrrfc, Her Sabbaths. 2 : 11. *M#tt? Cause— to cease. 7 : 4. ntaBh Who ceaseth. AMOS. 8 : 4. r^^fh) The poor— to fail. 8 : 5. n3#rn The Sabbaths. The Greek Sabbaton in the New Testament. The Greek Sabbaton is used 70 times in the New Testa- ment; is translated 60 times Sabbath ; 9 times week; and 1 time rest. It always means Seventh day. Its cases of use here follow. They will be helpful for reference to students of the Sabbath question. MATTHEW. 11 times. Jesus went on the Sabbath day rotg- oappaa 12 : 1. Not lawful . .on the Sabbath day hv aa^dro. 12 : 2. On the Sabbath day rbtg- oafifiaoLv 12 : 5. Priests, .profane the Sabbath to adpparov 12 : 5. Lord even of the Sabbath day tov oafifiarov 12 : 8. Is it lawful, .on the Sabbath day ?. . .roi~ aafifiaoi 12 : 10. Into a pit on the Sabbath day rolg- Ga/3j3aGt 12 : 11. To do well on the Sabbath day ? . . . . rolg- odpfiaci, 12 : 12. On the Sabbath . . , h Ga/3j3drG) 24 : 20. In the end of the Sabbath coipE 6e oa^pdrcjv 28 : 1. First day of the week eig- juiav aaPfidruv 28 : 1. MAKK. 13 times. On the Sabbath day rolg- o&Pfiaatv 1 : 21. Corn fields on the Sabbath day ev rolg- o&ppaffiv 2 : 23. Why do they on the Sabbath day ?. .ev rotg- GafifiaoLV . . .2 : 24. The Sabbath, .for man. . . / to Gdf3/3aTov 2: 27. Not man for the Sabbath . to GafySaTov . 2 : 27. Lord also of the Sabbath day tov Ga(3f3dTov . . . 2 : 28. Heal on the Sabbath day Tolg- Gdf3j3aGi 3 : 2. To do good on the Sabbath day ? tol~ GafifiaGi 3 : 4. Sabbath being come yevo/uevov GafifiaTov 6:2. Before the Sabbath ypoGa(3j3aTov '. 15 : 42. Sabbath was past dcoyevo/uevov tov GapflaTov. . .16 : 1. First day of the week tt)~ [iia~ Ga/3j3dT(ov 16 : 2. First day of the week.. ..«,,. irp6rrj Ga/3j3aTov 16 : 9. LUKE. 20 times. On the Sabbath day tuv GafifiaTuv 4 : 16. Taught, .on the Sabbath day. ev Tolg- Gd/3/3a(n 4 : 31. On the second Sabbath ev Gaf3f3&TG) devrepoTrp&TU . . . .6 : 1. 214 THE GREEK WORD FOR SABBATH. 215 LUKE — Continued. Not lawful, .on the Sabbath day. . . .kv rolg- adfiflaoi 6 : 2. Lord also of the Sabbath day nvpio- . ,rov oafilSdtov 6 : 5. Another Sabbath kv erepo ad/3j3dTu 6 : 6. Heal on the Sabbath day kv tgj oaflfiarG) 6 : 7. Is it lawful on the Sabbath day?. . . .rolg- cdfifiaoiv 6 : 9. Teaching. . on the Sabbath kv rolg- oaj3fiaoL 13 : 10. Healed on the Sabbath rw cra/3/3drcj 13 : 14. Not on the Sabbath day ry rjjieparov aa^/3drov 13 : 14. JEach one of you on the Sabbath . . . .too Gafifidrcj 13 : 15. Be loosed, .on the Sabbath day t?j ?}juepg rov uaftfiaTov. . . .13 : 16. Eat bread on the Sabbath day. .... t Ga/3 t 3dTcj 14 : i. Heal on the Sabbath day too aafifiaTCd 14 : 3. On the Sabbath day kv ry fjfiepg tov Ga^Sdrov 14 : 5. Fast twice in the week .vtjgtevgj dig rov oafifidrov. . . 18 : 12. The Sabbath drew on odpfiarov 23 : 54. Rested the Sabbath day to. . cdflfictTov 23 : 56. First day of the week ulg tcjv cafifidrov 24 : 1 . JOHN. 13 times. The same day was the Sabbath adpftarov 5 ; 9. It is the Sabbath cdfiftarov egtiv 5 : 10. These things on the Sabbath kv odfifiaTCj 5 : 16. Broken the Sabbath * to Gdj3j3aTov 5 : 18. ITou on the Sabbath kv cafipdroj . - . 7 : 22. If a man on the Sabbath day kv adj3j3dTU) 7 : 23. Whole on the Sabbath day « . . . kv oafipaTu 7 : 23. It was the Sabbath day rjv dk adpfiarov 9 : 14. Keepeth not the Sabbath day .to ad/3/3arov 9 : 16. On the cross on the Sabbath day. . . . kv tgj aafifid-u 19 : 31. That Sabbath day was a high day. . .rov cappdrov 19 : 31. First day of the week uig tcjv aafifiaTcw 20 : 1 . First day of the week rr> pig tcjv cappdrtw 20 : 19. THE ACTS. 10 times. Sabbath day's journey cafiftaTov exov 66ov ........ 1 : 12. On the Sabbath day r\\ ?jjuepg tcjv Gaj3/3dTcov 13 ; 14. Bead every Sabbath day nav oapptnov 13 : 27. The next Sabbath to [xetci^v odfiftaTov 13 : 42. The next Sabbath t cj te epxo/uevcj oa^aTGj ... 13 : 44. Every Sabbath trav cdj33aTov 15 : 21. On the Sabbath day Ty ts r/jukpg tcjv oaf3(3&Ttdv. . 16 : 13. Three Sabbaths cdfifiaTa Tpia 17 : 2. Every Sabbath. ttclv odfiflaTov 18 : 4. First day of the week vy pig tcjv ca^dTcjv 20 : 7. 216 THE GREEK WORD FOR SABBATH. FIEST CORINTHIANS. 1 time. First day of the week Kara julav Ga^drov 16:2. COLOSSIANS. 1 time. Nor of the Sabbath days. .......... .# ca^druv 2 : 16. HEBREWS. 1 time. There remaineth therefore a rest. . . .aa^aria^ 4 : 9. These are now the 70 New Testament uses of the Greek Sabbaton. I reproduce its 8 uses, where it is translated " the first day of the week." The first day of the week elg- jiiav (jafifidruv Matt. 28 : 1. The first day of the week ryg [nag- aa/3^dro)v Mark 16 : 2- The first day of the week irpcdry cap^arov Mark 16 : 9. The first day of the week fug rtiv uaj3j3dro)v Luke 24 : 1. The first day of the week juig rov Gafifidrov John 20 : 1. The first day of the week ry jucg rtiv aa^drov. . . .John 20 : 19. The first day of the week ry fitg tov (jappdrtov Acts 20 : 7. The first day of the week nard piav (japparcjv I. Cor. 16 : 2". H 113 82 (| **„< o 0; ^ ^ • * o ' .0" °^ e » . Or y ^ .V" .0« & I |4 P «y **JSJ** W ^ * ; 1 « *? S'-S*?*/ ^™/ %-?$*>* *>% a* 4?^ ,4-^ 1 5* ^ MAR 82 J-iV^ N.MANCHESTER, ^» *r^EWI % /"^ "^> ""^^T* INDIANA 46962 J ^ ♦7^T f ^ ^ * 4