“The Son of Man is Lord even of the Sabbath day” (Mt. 12:8).
The Sabbath (and every other thing in the Old Covenant) points to a spiritual fulfillment in Christ. Jesus is not bound by any rule, or regulation, or tradition, that says thou shalt, or thou shalt not. He is Lord over the Sabbath; the Sabbath is not lord over Him.
We who are in Christ do keep the Sabbath, but the Sabbath for us is not a day of the week. It is certainly not a day for attending religious services. It has nothing to do with the calendar. If we want to keep the Sabbath we need only abide, continue, and dwell in Christ, as the branch abides, continues, and dwells in the Vine. For the branch is resting in the Vine. The branch does not struggle or worry or force itself through sheer effort to produce fruit. Instead, it simply lives in union with the Vine, and in that sense, it rests. It trusts in the Life of the Vine to produce the fruit. And this is the principle of the Sabbath rest.
Now we see this rest in Christ. You would suppose that, as the Son of God, He had the liberty and freedom to say and do whatever He pleased. But He frankly stated, “I do nothing of Myself. It is the Father that dwells in Me, and He does the works.” This, my friend, is rest. He is the Lord of the Sabbath. Jesus mastered the art of observing the Sabbath day. What does it mean? It means I do nothing of Myself. My teaching is not My own, but it belongs to the One Who sent Me. And I do nothing except what I see my Father do, and I speak nothing except what I hear my Father speak. That is extraordinary. But that is what it means to rest in the Lord.
Now our relationship to Christ is to be exactly the same as Christ’s relationship to the Father. I do nothing apart from Christ. I speak nothing apart from Christ. And I do nothing and speak nothing in my own strength, but I trust in the life of the Lord Jesus to do in me and through me what I cannot do.
Or, if you like, it is the place Paul describes in Galatians 2:20: “It is no longer I who lives, but Christ who lives in me.” Not I, but Christ. This is the secret to the Christian life. And may I say that this: “not I, but Christ” is the normal Christian life. It is the way it is supposed to be, from the very beginning.
Remember that Adam’s first day of life, after he was created, was a day of rest. Now the Christian life begins the same way. If any one is in Christ, the Bible says that he or she is a new creation. You are born-again; you are born from above. And the first lesson you learn in this spiritual life in Christ is not doing, but being; it is not working, but resting.
How disappointing that the harlot church – the religious system – does not teach you how to enter into rest. It wants to immediately put you to work. And so you wear yourself out, trying to be holy, trying to be more like Christ, trying to please people – the pastor, the elders, your fellow church members. And you sometimes feel as if you can never do enough. You can never give enough, you can never volunteer enough, you can never attend enough. And my, the guilt you feel whenever you say no, or whenever you feel as if you aren’t doing enough!
Your first day in Christ is a day of rest. Now let’s not get tied down to a calendar. That first “day” in Christ may take weeks or years. We are after the spiritual principle of the Sabbath day, and we are not talking about a twenty-four hour period. This is something you learn and you walk in the rest of your life. How unfortunate that people do not begin with resting in Christ. They get saved, and they go to work for religion, and they are like a slave living in Egypt instead of a Hebrew living in the land of milk and honey. Then after so many years of slavery they become institutionalized, and think this is the way the Christian life is supposed to be.
Well, it is that way for many people, but it does not have to be that way. Your first day in Christ is a day of rest. Works will come. But your first day as a new creature in Christ is a day of rest. It will be a day of rest until you learn what it means to abide in Christ, to dwell in Him, to rest in His finished work. That is the basis of everything else. If the word “season” helps you to understand this better than a “day” then think of it as a Sabbath season. But the first lesson is how to rest. That is the principle of the Sabbath.
I hope you are beginning to see how far and beyond this goes. From this perspective you see how silly it is to get all worked up into a lather over Sunday or Saturday, Sabbath day or Lord’s day, what you can do and what you can’t do. Those are arguments for little children. Let us go on to maturity. Let us put away childish things and become men and women of spiritual wisdom and discernment. God is after a spiritual condition, a spiritual result, and to get it He goes to work deep within your heart. That is the basis of the New Covenant.
– If you liked this message, check out the complete audio series:
The Lord of the Sabbath






Sharon
10 months ago
Hello,
I want to thank you for your explanation about the Sabbath. I am coming out of organized religion and though I didn’t realize it while in it, I can see how ingrained religiosity became in my life(30 + years of knowledge and little heart change). This article was a big help. I have been thinking (Satan’s arena)that I should be doing more and feeling sort of guilty that I don’t attend church or take my 7 year old child anymore either. God has me in a season of rest (about 16 months now) and I will abide and enjoy this part of the process! Thanks again for sharing God’s truth from your heart.
Phil
6 months ago
I wish my friend would read and understand this article, but he’s shut me out because I don’t agree with his insistence that we should all be Sabbatarians. I didn’t realize the Hebraic/Jewish Roots Movement had become such a big deal for Christians until I did some web searches. Anyway, he’s one of those unreasonable intellectuals who once they get something in their mind, all proof to the contrary is either marginalized or dismissed outright. I’m afraid he’s going to have to come to the end of himself before he realizes the folly of going back to slavery in Egypt.
Chris
4 months ago
Could someone explain to me how even an earthly keeping of a literal Sabbath day of rest to the Lord is a burden or a bad thing?
Chris
4 months ago
Until 5 years ago, I believe what I believed, in large part because… well that’s just I had been taught. Until this past year I considered observing the Sabbath as being accomplished by going to church on Sundays. This of course is ridiculous. For if indeed there remained a command to keep the Sabbath day holy it would indeed be the seventh day.
Before I proceed, I will say that the LORD is forming within me, a heart of passion for our great Himself and a compassion for His beloved people… you; my brothers and sisters. Keeping the Sabbath as a means of obtaining our salvation is as futile as honoring our mothers and fathers as a means of obtaining our salvation or not stealing or not coveting etc. Keeping the commandments of God is not going to save us. This, of course, has nothing to do with the commandments of God being bad, for indeed they are good. (Romans 7:12 ESV So the law is holy, and the commandment is holy and righteous and good.)
The Sabbath was never to be a burden. It was a gift. (Mark 2:27 ESV And he said to them, “The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.) We, as Christians should not be viewing the Sabbath as a burden to be released from, but a gift to be unwrapped and enjoyed.
Consider which of the commandments are burdensome… (John 14:15 ESV John 14:21 ESV John 15:9-12 ESV 1 John 5:2-3 ESV “If you love me, you will keep My commandments… Whoever has My commandments and keeps them, he it is who loves Me. And he who loves Me will be loved by My Father, and I will love him and manifest Myself to him… As the Father has loved Me, so have I loved you. Abide in My love. (10) If you keep My commandments, you will abide in My love, just as I have kept My Father’s commandments and abide in His love. (11) These things I have spoken to you, that My joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full. (12) “This is My commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you… By this we know that we love the children of God, when we love God and obey His commandments. (3) For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments. And His commandments are not burdensome.)
There is much to say, but I trust that those here, on Chips site, are Godly men and women with as much to offer me, as I have to offer them. And what do we have to offer but Jesus Christ? Nothing. Please keep in mind that all the Law and Prophets are summed up in… Love the LORD your God with all your heart, mind, soul and strength and love your neighbor as yourself. Does keeping the Sabbath as a special day seek the love of God and or neighbor? It should.