Bard of Angels
Member
- Sep 12, 2014
- 26
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both are accurate as GOD said the sun and the stars were for seasons and times.
So does that mean that I may keep the Sabbath on Saturday as I know it?
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both are accurate as GOD said the sun and the stars were for seasons and times.
duetermony I believe has more to say and also TOG would know since he recently debated the command of what work was.The commandment in Exodus doesn't say anything about the Sabbath being a designated day of worship. What it says is that it is a day of rest...and maybe more importantly, a day to let other people rest.
I seem to recall having read somewhere that the ancient Israelites didn't actually start the practice of gathering to worship on that day till after the return from Babylon.
If anyone knows anything more about this, I'd be glad to hear it.
I just looked up the Hebrew Calendar on Wikipedia, and I discovered something interesting. While the original (in Biblical times) calendar was based on the sighting of the first sliver of the new moon, and the beginning of the year was based on the ripeness of the barley crop, today's Hebrew calendar is based on mathematical calculations, as is our Gregorian solar calendar. To keep the months in the same season, leap months are inserted based on a 19 year series of leap years vs. normal years. According to Wikipedia, the average 19 year cycle is 6939d 16h 33m 031⁄3s, whereas 19 average solar years are 6939d 14h 26m 15s. Over a period of 19 years, the difference is only 2h 6m 112⁄3 s.
The TOG
There is no wrong day to worship God, but there is a right day - the day He told us to worship. Nothing in the Bible says we can't worship on Sunday or any other day of the week. If people want to worship on Sundays, Wednesdays or any other day of the week, then that's fine. But the Bible does tell us that we are supposed to rest and worship on the Sabbath.
The TOG
The commandment in Exodus doesn't say anything about the Sabbath being a designated day of worship. What it says is that it is a day of rest...and maybe more importantly, a day to let other people rest.
I seem to recall having read somewhere that the ancient Israelites didn't actually start the practice of gathering to worship on that day till after the return from Babylon.
If anyone knows anything more about this, I'd be glad to hear it.
Exodus isn't the only place that mentions that Sabbath.
Six days shall work be done, but on the seventh day is a Sabbath of solemn rest, a holy convocation. (Lev. 23:3 ESV)
A convocation is a meeting. A holy convocation is a meeting for worship.
The Babylonian captivity started in the late 7th century BC. The kings mentioned in Isaiah put his ministry from the middle to the late 8th century, well before the exile.
Bring no more vain offerings;
incense is an abomination to me.
New moon and Sabbath and the calling of convocations—
I cannot endure iniquity and solemn assembly. (Isaiah 1:13 ESV)
Convocations, or meetings, were being held on the Sabbath in Isaiah's day, well before the exile to Babylon. The verse above is often used to show that we should not keep the Sabbath, but that's not what it says. It says we shouldn't mix the holy things of God, including the Sabbath, with iniquity.
The TOG
So, a "holy convocation"...couldn't that be a meeting in my house?
If I start worrying about keeping every holy convocation mentioned, does that mean I have to take my boys to Jerusalem three times a year?
Just wondering...
It doesn't say where the holy convocation was to be held. The first Christians met in homes, as can be seen by the fact that Paul ends many of his epistles by greeting sending greetings to certain people "and the church in their house". The Bible doesn't specify a minimum number of people that are required to attend the convocation. Jesus said that wherever 2 or 3 are gathered together in his name, there he would be with them. So If you gather with others in your family for worship in your home on the Sabbath, then you are fulfilling the commandment to hold a holy convocation.
Would you be able to go to Jerusalem 3 times a year? I don't know where you live, but chances are it's somewhere outside of Israel. Most people living outside of Israel are not able to travel regularly to Israel, simply because it would cost too much. The commandment to come up to Jerusalem 3 times a year has always been interpreted as applying to everyone who is able to come. Even at a time when all Israelites lived in the land of Israel, allowances were made for the sick and elderly who couldn't travel. If you are unable to travel to Jerusalem 3 times a year, then don't worry about it. God will not hold it against you if you don't do something that you are unable to do. But if you can afford it and are able to go, then I would encourage you to do so. Everyone I know who has gone to Israel at any time of year has said that God blessed them there. If you go at the time God tells us to go, I'm sure He would bless you in a very special way.
The TOG
Doesn't Jeremiah tell us that the new covenant will not be according to the old one?
In what ways do you suppose it is different?
Doesn't Jeremiah tell us that the new covenant will not be according to the old one?
In what ways do you suppose it is different?
I am a widow living in the USA, in the deep south. Yes, going to Jerusalem would be prohibitively expensive for me.
Anyway, aren't we under a new covenant, now? Do all those laws apply to Gentiles...or is it just the ten commandments...or what.