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Chapter 7: Important Practical Lessons

It is not merely as a beautiful theory, a mere dogma, that we should consider Christ as God and Creator.  Every doctrine of the Bible is for our practical benefit and should be studied for that purpose.  Let us first see what relation this doctrine sustains to the central commandment of the law of God.  In Genesis 2:1-3 we find these words closing the record of creation, "Thus the heavens and the earth were finished and all the host of them.  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 work which God created and made."  The Jewish translation renders the text more literally thus, "Thus were finished the heavens and the earth and all their host.  And God had finished on the seventh day His work which He had made," etc.  This is the same that we find in the fourth commandment, Exodus 20:8-11.

In this we find, what is most natural, that the same Being who created, rested.  He who worked six days in creating the earth, rested on the seventh and blessed and sanctified it.  But we have already learned that God the Father created the worlds by his son Jesus Christ and that Christ created everything that has an existence.  Therefore the conclusion is inevitable that Christ rested on that first seventh day at the close of the six days of creation and that he blessed and sanctified it.  Thus the seventh day--the Sabbath--is most emphatically the Lord's Day.  When Jesus said to the carping Pharisees, "For the Son of man is Lord even of the Sabbath day" (Matthew 12:8), He declared His lordship of the identical day which they had so scrupulously observed in form, and He did this in words which show that He regarded it as His badge of authority, as demonstrating the fact that He was greater than the temple.  Thus the seventh day is the Divinely appointed memorial of creation.  It is the most honored of all days, since its especial mission is to bring to mind the creative power of God, which is the one proof to man of His Divinity.  And so when Christ said that the Son of Man is Lord even of the Sabbath day, He claimed a high distinction--nothing less than being the Creator, of whose Divinity that day stands as a memorial.

What shall we say, then, to the suggestion often made, that Christ changed the day of the Sabbath from a day, which commemorates completed creation to one, which has no such significance?  Simply this: that for Christ to change or abolish the Sabbath would be to destroy that which calls to mind His Divinity.  If Christ had abolished the Sabbath, He would have undone the work of His own hands and thus have worked against Himself, and a kingdom divided against itself cannot stand.  But Christ "cannot deny Himself," and therefore He did not change one jot of that which He Himself appointed and which, by testifying to His Divinity, shows Him to be worthy of honor above all the gods of the heathen. It would have been as impossible for Christ to change the Sabbath as it would have been to change the fact that He created all things in six days and rested on the seventh.

Again, the oft-repeated declarations that the Lord is Creator are intended as a source of strength.  Notice how creation and redemption are connected in the first chapter of Colossians.  To get the point fully before us, we will read verses 9-19: