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Lesson 59 |
Lesson Subject: Sabbath Made for Man
Lesson Plan
Lesson Setting
Time: Probably January, A.D. 30.
Place: Perea beyond Jordan.
Christ example regarding the Sabbath.
Name the things recorded that He did on the Sabbath.
The true principles underlying Jewish Sabbath keeping.
What difficult problems do we meet keeping the Lord's Day?
Is there any difference between the Old Testament fourth commandment law, and
the principles enunciated by Jesus?
What is the best way of keeping the Lord's Day?
What blessings were the fruit of keeping the Sabbath holy?
The Example of Jesus, regarding His method of keeping the Sabbath
Two instances are given in our present lesson. In one of the synagogues, while Jesus was resting and teaching on the Sabbath, one of His hearers ...
v 11 ... "was a woman which had a spirit of infirmity eighteen years." It is called a spirit of infirmity, because it is all-pervading, with one center of disease.
v 11 ... "and she was bowed together, and could in no wise life up herself." "Her case seems to have been such an one as is not unfrequently met with in the present day, even in the streets, in which there is a gradual wasting and relaxation of the muscles and ligaments of the back by which the trunk is held erect, so that the body falls forward, without there being any disease either of the brain or spinal cord, or any mental impairment. Such cases are chiefly met with in the aged, and are progressive and permanent in character, admitting of very little relief by medical science" (Sir Risdon Bennett, M.D.).
I have seen such cases, which the modern doctor attributes to a kind of rheumatism. A member of the church where I once preached was thus afflicted, and had a kind of bed on rollers by means of which he was taken from his bed to different parts of the house. He was cheerful, suffered little pain. A doctor friend told me that what Sir Risdon Bennett said is still true, that the disease admits of very little relief by medical science. -- Joe Nisbet, great Scottish preacher
Note: Not even great bodily infirmity kept this woman from the house of God. And, like her, those who attend public worship under great difficulties receive peculiar blessings. In Jesus' day, the synagogue was the place where the suffering, heavy laden, the weary, the simple, and the restless would go to be uplifted and aided by fellow-worshippers, to receive the Word of God through the lips and heart of the teacher.
v 12 ... "And when Jesus saw her." Her infirmity was her appeal without words, and her very presence was a sign and proof of her faith, however small. She was doubtless bashful and retiring, perhaps neglected by the other worshippers. Therefore Jesus does not wait for her to come of herself but ...
v 12 ... "when Jesus saw her, he called her to him," and announced that the time of her redemption had come.
v 13 ... "And he laid his hands on her; and immediately she was made straight." Laying His hands on her showed His personal care; confirmed her faith; drew her toward Him in gratitude and love; and called attention to Himself as the source of healing, and the manifestation of all His Father's love. It seems to have been usual with Jesus to cause all His healings of disease to be an aid, a type, and a means of healing the soul from sin.
The second instance took place on another Sabbath in the home of one of the rulers who was a Pharisee (Lk. 14:1-4).
14:1 ... "They were watching him," not necessarily to find fault, but with interest to know what He would say and do. Among the onlookers at the dinner was a man afflicted with the dropsy, who had come perhaps in the hope that Jesus would heal him. The word "behold" seems to imply that his presence was unexpected (Int. Crit. Com.). His very coming, if with this hope, was a proof of his faith.
v 3 ... "And Jesus answering" the thought of their hearts, or their whispered question of what Jesus might do. The lawyers and the teachers of the Jewish law and the Pharisees asked ...
v 3 ... "Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath day" or not (R.V.)?
v 4 ... "But they held their peace." And Jesus ...
v 4 ... "took him, and healed him, and let him go." He frankly expressed His own opinion by what He did.
Seven Miracles of Mercy are recorded as wrought by Jesus on the Sabbath:
Besides these, Jesus healed many on a Sabbath evening, fulfilling Isaiah's picture of the promised Messiah (Matt. 8:16, 17; Lk. 8:38-41).
4. Jesus dined with a ruler of the Pharisees on the Sabbath (Lk. 14:1). We know of no case in which Jesus refused an invitation, no matter from whom it came. It gave Him the opportunity and possibility of influencing for good those whom He could not otherwise reach. Social gatherings are Christian opportunities.
"Sabbath banqueting was common, and became proverbial for luxury" (Int. Crit. Com.). To eat bread on the Sabbath day, as a guest, was a usual practice; such entertainments on the Sabbath day were very usual; they were often luxurious and costly. The only rule observed was that the food provided was cold, everything having been cooked on a previous day. Jesus always carried His religion with Him, for it was a part of Himself.
5. Jesus walked in the fields, and around Jerusalem, on the Sabbath (Mk. 2:23-28; Jn. 5:1-10). Through the fields He was probably on His way to church, for the very next verse states that He entered into the synagogue; and in His walk around Jerusalem He healed an unfortunate man at the pool of Bethesda, and a blind man at the pool of Siloam. In all cases He was with His disciples.
6. In all these things He disregarded the precepts and theories of the Pharisees, but in no case did He vary one iota from the plain directions in the Fourth Commandment.
In order to understand the words of Jesus regarding the Sabbath we must clearly see the circumstances in which they were spoken.
The Ten Commandments were a chief means of keeping the Jews separate from those practicing idolatries and immoralities. Of these commandments the one that made the most visible separation was the keeping of the Sabbath. In the exile, and among those who were dispersed among the nations ever after, the Sabbath was kept. "The keeping of the Sabbath became the special sign that distinguished Jew from Gentile, and the Sabbath, combined with the synagogue (an institution that grew up during the exile), played a large part in saving Israel from absorption in the ungodly world around them. After the return these two institutions, the Sabbath and the synagogue, were the main bulwarks of Judaism, and two of the leading factors that made Israel the people of the law" (Hastings Bible Dictionary). No institution was held in higher reverence. The Pharisees in their efforts to uphold and magnify this great bulwark of their nation, gradually accumulated a great body of decisions as to what could and could not be done on the Sabbath. They lost the spirit in the letter. "Any one who desires to see what a divine institution may become in the hands of spiritually unsympathetic men has only to study the rules for Sabbath observance contained in the Talmud. There are two treatises in particular which, although they belong to the century subsequent to our Lord's ministry, may fairly enough be regarded as reflecting the habits of thought and the practices of the spiritual guides of Israel with whom he came in contact" (Hastings Bible Dictionary). "As our Lord reminds his hearers (Lk. 13:15), it was allowed to loose an ox or an ass from the stall and lead it out to the water; but by a refinement of ingenuity it was forbidden to draw water and carry it in a pail to a beast, although the water might be poured into a trough for the animal to come and drink of its own accord." The teacher will find an immense number of ridiculous ways of breaking the Sabbath in Edersheim's Life of Christ, Appendix, xvii.
"It was seriously argued that to walk upon the grass with nailed shoes was a violation of the Sabbath, because it was a kind of threshing, and to catch a flea upon one's person was a violation, because it was a kind of hunting; and it was gravely debated whether one might eat a fresh egg on the first day of the week, since, in the order of nature, it had probably been prepared by the hen on the seventh." "To break the Sabbath, rather than suffer hunger for a few hours, was guilt worthy of stoning. Was it not their boast that Jews were known over the world by their readiness to die rather than break the holy day? Every one had stories of grand fidelity to it." The result was a slavery to forms and details, a loss of the very spirit of the Sabbath day. The stress was on externals. They tried to establish rules to guide conduct in every detail.
Jesus' teaching conformed to His example. While living among men, He in no degree disregarded the Fourth Commandment. On the contrary, Jesus taught the true interpretation of Sabbath law. He rescued it from false interpretations put upon it; from being a mere form to being a spirit and a life. Jesus swept away the cobwebs, but did not tear down the house, though many of the Jewish leaders thought He desired to do so. Our Lord only removed the rubbish with which the Pharisees had encumbered it. Jesus tore down the scaffolding, so the house itself might be more convenient and beautiful to live in. He kept the jewel, but washed away the dirt which had accumulated upon it, dimming and destroying its radiance. He swept away the evils that had grown upon the law from without, from man's additions. They had made the Sabbath law like the sea-god Glaucus in Plato's illustration. The god had been so long in the sea that seaweeds, barnacles and shellfish had grown all over him so thickly that they almost concealed his true nature. Does any of this bring thought and reflection regarding possible rubbish and scaffolding of men added to the church of our Lord over two thousand years?
Jesus, too, was moved with righteous indignation, and said ...
13:15 ... "Hypocrites"! As if an act of mercy which led
the woman to glorify God, had doubtless also most of theworshippers, and which expressed the very spirit of religion,
was a desecration of the synagogue! The Pharisee's objection
contradicted His own rules and conduct. "It was meanly
indirect because, while it was aimed at Jesus, the implied
notion that it was a crime to allow one's self to be healed
on the Sabbath day, springs from an abyss of Pharisaic falsity
which could hardly have been conceived. It was the underhand
ignorance and insolence, as well as the gross insincerity of
the remark, which called forth a reproof exceptionally
severe" (Farrar). The Pharisees made an exception to their
Sabbath rules.
v 15 ... "Doth not each of you on the Sabbath loose his ox or his ass from the stall, and lead him away to watering?"
v 16 ... "And ought not this woman, being a daughter of Abraham," a child of the covenant on which your whole nation is founded ...
v 16 ... "whom Satan" the great adversary of your nation, the leader of the whole kingdom of evil, your deadly enemy ...
v 16 ... " hath bound, lo, these eighteen years, be loosed from this bond on the Sabbath day"! There was no answer to this; and ...
v 17 ... "all the people rejoiced for all the glorious things that were done by him." Thus Jesus taught that deeds of mercy and kindness and love, to man or to beast, to body and to soul, are peculiarly expressive of the Sabbath spirit. "It is lawful to do good on the Sabbath days" (Mk. 3:4), and that is the best good which while it helps the body and mind, leads the soul up toward God, as was the case in the healing of the body by Jesus.
Note: For additional material refer to lesson #13, "Use of the Sabbath"
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