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Relaxation Commanded Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 6, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: The guy who says the devil never takes a vacation and so why should I, is not being super spiritual, for that is the angelic fallacy. Satan doesn't need a vacation, but we do, for we have the limitations of flesh.
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A young boy was visiting his uncle on a Sunday when a
new neighbor knocked at the door. When he answered it,
and learned that he wanted to borrow the lawn mower, he
conveyed the message to his uncle. The uncle said, "If he
mows his lawn on the Sabbath he'll be breaking the Ten
Commandments. So go and tell him that we have no lawn
mower." When a man will lie and break the Ten Commandments
in order to keep someone else from breaking them, one
suspects the compelling motivation is not a humanitarian
heart, but a selfish one. Besides breaking the law of God
himself, the uncle did not prevent his neighbor from doing
so, for one does not keep the Sabbath by the mere negative
fact of lacking a lawn mower. Obedience to the fourth
commandment is a matter of one's attitude and relationship
to God. No amount of legislation and coercion can give to
men the essence of the value of the fourth commandment.
Law and force can retrain a man from doing many things,
but it cannot compel him to keep the Sabbath holy as a day
of rest and worship.
One of the perpetual problems of our nation is the
problem of the church and state in relation to the law. This
was no problem in Israel, for the church and state were one.
A crime against God, which we would call a sin, was a crime
against the state. It was an act of treason against the ruler of
the land, and, therefore, punishable as a crime.
In America a sin is not necessarily a crime. Over half of
the Ten Commandments can be broken, and it is of no
concern to the state as far as the law goes. We feel it is not
within the jurisdiction of the state to legislate on matters of
religion. The New Testament makes it clear the Pharisees
legislated the blessings of the Sabbath right out of existence,
and made it a burden. Jesus refused to be bound by man
made laws for this day. He said the Sabbath was made for
man, not man for the Sabbath. It was a gift of God for man's
benefit, and so He threw overboard the legalistic
legislation, and used the Sabbath for teaching, healing, and
doing good. They, of course, hated and despised Him for His
lawlessness. They sought to kill Him as a Sabbath breaker,
but Jesus refused to be bound by legalism.
The Puritans were also infected with this germ of
legalism, and in some ways, in spite of their greatness, and
powerful influence for good in our nation, were just like the
Pharisees in their strictness for details. Richard Brathwaite
wrote,
To Brandbury came I, O profane one!
Where I saw a Puritane one
Hanging of his cat on Monday,
For killing of a mouse on Sunday.
Whether this is fact or fiction, we have many actual laws
on record that show they meant business when it came to
keeping the Sabbath. One of the Pilgrim fathers drew up a
code of laws for the state of Massachusetts, and this was one
of them. "Whosoever shall profane the Lord's Day by doing
any unnecessary work,
by unnecessary traveling or by sports and recreation, he or
they who so transgress shall forfeit forty shillings, or be
publicly whipped; but if it shall appear to have been done
presumptuously, such person or persons shall be put to
death, or otherwise severely punished at the discretion of the
court."
If such laws were in force today, America would be a different
nation, especially on Sunday. But Christians would
be the first to protest such legislation, and they should be,
for this is not the purpose of government to legislate religious
conviction. The state has no right to impose the conviction of
any group on the rest of the citizens. We would not want the
Seventh Day Adventist conviction imposed on us, forcing us
to worship on Saturday. Nor do they want ours imposed on
them. It is true that forcing people to take a day off for rest
and worship would be good for them, but so would it be
good if they got to bed early, drank a lot of juice, and ate
lettuce, but who would want these to be matters of
legislation? To get the full value of what God intended by
this fourth commandment one must chose to obey it with a
free and committed will.
This is one of the two commandments that is stated
positively, but it also has a negative aspect which we want to
look at briefly before looking at the positive. The negative
aspect-
I. PROHIBITS PERPETUAL LABOR.
It is important that we see the limitation of what is