THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR
"Why Is the Sabbath Day Profaned?”
Rev. Carl Haak
(e-mail: Rev. Carl Haak) October 1, 2006; No. 3326
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Dear radio friends,
I read the Word of
God at Nehemiah 13:15-17: “In those days
saw I in Judah some treading wine presses on the Sabbath, and … I contended
with the[m] … and said unto them, What evil thing is this that ye do, and
profane the Sabbath day?” Why is the
Sabbath Day profaned? That is the
question from God to you and me today to His church.
Nehemiah asked this
question when he returned to
We saw in the last
message that one of the great abuses was that the house of God was
forsaken. The tithe (or offering) was
not brought into the chambers of God’s house.
The Levites, the priests, and the singers were not being supported. The people had put their business first, had
put their money and property above God.
Now we come to an
even more serious and widespread evil that Nehemiah sees in
This is very
applicable to us, God’s church today.
The enemy of our spiritual life is to lose the Sabbath. And the enemy of the Sabbath is materialism –
making an end of earthly things – thinking that life consists in what you
have. The pursuit of the earthly, then,
so readily goes beyond the bounds that God has established. And the result is that not only are we ill
prepared for the Sabbath Day, having spent ourselves six days only on the
things of this life, but the things of this life and our own business and
pursuits readily crowd out the Sabbath, crowd out the heavenly. The Sabbath is profaned.
This is the
question that we have to place before ourselves today: Why is the Sabbath Day profaned?
Once again, we see
that Nehemiah’s question is cutting through the layers of excuses and going to
the heart of the matter. Nehemiah has
the ability to do that. He is very
direct. He asks in verse 17 of the 13th chapter, “What evil thing is that that ye do,
and profane the Sabbath day?” We do not
like it to be put that way. The people
of
Nehemiah says, “Why
do ye profane the Sabbath?” To profane
is to corrupt by sin a holy thing, a special, holy thing of God. The Sabbath is a holy thing. We read in the commandment: “Remember the Sabbath Day to keep it holy,”
that is, it is intended for a special use.
It is set apart as a day for the service of God. To use Sunday for the purposes that God has
not given, to use Sunday for the service of mammon, for our own earthly things
and pleasures, to treat Sunday as a quasi business day is to profane the
Sabbath Day, the holy day of God.
That is not my
interpretation. That is God’s, who gave
the Sabbath!
In verses 15 and 16
of Nehemiah 13 we see that there were three ways in which
First of all, some
were treading winepresses on the Sabbath and bringing in sheaves. That alerts us to the fact that it was the
time of harvest. Every farmer and
orchard grower knows that when the crop is ripe you have to harvest it. This was a sore temptation. The crops were in the field and the Sabbath
Day has arrived. The berries are
ripe. But the law was specific. Exodus 34:21, “Six days shalt
thou work; but on the seventh day thou shalt rest. In earing time and
in harvest thou shalt rest.” God had promised that He would supply their
needs, that He would give them strength for the harvest. He said that your busy season did not suspend
the holy day.
The second evil was
this, that they were lading asses, and bringing wine, grapes, and figs, and all
manner of burdens into
The third thing was
that the peddlers and the hawkers were selling.
They were buying and selling on the Sabbath Day. There was dried fish, perhaps, for sale – a
food that the Israelites certainly could eat.
There were household wares – pots and blankets and spoons. They had opened up farmers’ market throughout
the land on the Sabbath Day. And they
were treating the Sabbath Day as a normal day of buying and selling.
Nehemiah comes to
them and says, “What evil thing is this that ye do and profane the
Sabbath?” It was an evil thing. All of that was evil in God’s sight. It was evil, first of all, because the people
were ignoring the history of God’s people.
This was Nehemiah’s word to them in verse 18: “Did not your fathers thus, and did not your
God bring all this evil upon us, and upon this city? yet ye bring more
wrath upon
When we do not pay
attention to history, we forget what has happened in the past. The history of God’s church is filled with
hundreds of examples of what happens when the Sabbath Day is lost.
Positively, it was
evil because the Sabbath had positive, crucial functions, the same functions
that it has today. It was, first of all,
the testimony to the world that the people of Judah (you and I today) are the
people of God, devoted to Him – a people who live for Him and out of God. Exodus 31:13:
“It is a sign (that is, the Sabbath) between you and me throughout your
generations that ye may know that I am the Lord, that
doth sanctify you.” What is the sign
that God has a people and that you are a part of that people, that God has a
people who long for communion with Him?
What is the sign of that? What is
the sign to the world that we find in God the fullness of life? What is the sign that we are pressing, as
Christians, to eternal glory to be with Him and His Son Jesus in heaven? What is the sign that we love God and we
esteem Him as our chief treasure? What
is the sign of that to the world? It is
the Sabbath Day and the way we keep the Sabbath. By making the Sabbath like any other day, the
sign of the covenant, the sign of commitment unto God, was not shown to the
world. Instead, the god of materialism
had taken place over the people of God.
And the people of God were saying to the world, “We are, basically, just
like you.”
Ask yourself this
question: Does my Sabbath-keeping
reflect to the world around me my commitment, my seeking my life with God, my
loving devotion to Him?
The second positive
reason that it was so evil was that the Sabbath is the source of spiritual
life. The Sabbath is that source given
of God to keep us on the pathway through the maize of the world, to remind us
that we are pilgrims and strangers. The
Sabbath means rest, rest with God. It is
the pilgrim’s ordinance. It was given by
God to refresh us, to keep us upon the path of life eternal. Without the Sabbath, if you do not keep the
Sabbath holy to the Lord, you will be sucked into the stream of the world. What then is life? Is it to buy and sell, and to enjoy pleasures
and possessions and things, and for earthly cares and worries? Is it to crowd into the Sabbath Day as
well? God has made the Sabbath in order
that you, who must go for six days in this world, might stop and be refreshed
and draw near to God and drink waters of life eternal. If you walk with God for six days, you will
feel the need for the Sabbath. You will
say with the psalmist: “When shall I
come and appear before God?”
Nehemiah knew that
the loss of the Sabbath was due to the inroads of materialism and to the giving
of the Sabbath over to the pursuits of the week. And he knew that this would destroy God’s
people spiritually. Do you know
that?
Why is the Sabbath
Day profaned in Christianity today? Do
we profane the day by allowing materialism, pleasures, and possessions to flow
into this day? Does the pursuit of the earthly
choke the Word of God so that we have no time to come apart to rest
awhile? We cannot stop from the things
of this world?
Let us be reminded
today of the sacred purpose of the Sabbath Day given by the risen Savior
Himself. It is to reflect longingly on
the eternal pleasure of God’s presence that awaits us. It is a day of anticipation. It is a day that puts all of our trials in
spiritual perspective. It is a day in
which we see that the difficulties of the week and the burdens of this week
were all used of God for His purpose.
All things are made plain in God’s house. It is a day that jars us awake. It brings us out of the stupor of the world’s
pursuits. It fixes our eyes upon heaven and
upon the light of heaven. It is a day
that we may set aside our own activities and obligations and be with our families
and pray and read the Scriptures and be devoted in good works unto God. It is a day to take as much pleasure in God
and in His people as we possibly can.
Do not traffic in
the earthly but be busy in the spiritual.
Reap a harvest of spiritual things on the Sabbath.
Nehemiah took
resolute action to correct this abuse of the Lord’s Day. He did not bemoan. He did not say, “Boy, things aren’t like they
used to be. Too bad!” He took action.
First, he had the
gates shut on the evening before the Sabbath, verse 19. “And it came to pass, that when the gates of
Secondly. He threatened to jail those who loitered
around the gates with their goods and produce waiting till the Sabbath was
ended. Verse 20 tells us that the
merchants did not get the point. And,
for a few weeks, they came to locked gates.
So they simply waited for the Sabbath to be over. Outside the gates they would sit with all
their wares. We read in verse 21, “Then
I testified against them, and said unto them, Why
lodge ye about the wall? if ye do so again, I will lay hands on you. From that time forth came they no more on the
sabbath.”
You see how
practical the Bible is? Nehemiah knew
that it was not enough simply to have the gates closed and to command that
buying and selling cease. He knew that
the people’s minds would still be on it.
We think of a little boy who is told, “You may not ride your bike on
Sunday.” He goes to the garage and looks
all Sunday afternoon at his bike. Nehemiah
says, “Now, listen. You have to put away
those things that distract you. If you
are tempted to resume your daily work, you have to close up shop, you have to
put those things away, you have to put away the weekly
worries and the weekly concerns. It is
not enough that you simply do not do them.”
But God is saying, “Don’t, with your mind and your heart, be thinking
about all of those things. Put them
away. If there are things that tempt
you, put them away.”
Then he charged the
Levites to sanctify the day, verse 22.
“And I commanded the Levites that they should cleanse themselves, and
that they should come and keep the gates, to sanctify the sabbath day.”
Again we see that Nehemiah understood that if you leave a vacuum, evil
will fill it. If the Sabbath is not kept
with positive, spiritual things, then the world will fill the Sabbath. If you do not do positive, spiritual things
on the Lord’s day— going to God’s house twice,
organizing the day for your family around spiritual activities, visiting the
sick and the afflicted, teaching and reading and praying with your children—if
you do not do those things, you will soon be found out on the golf course. If you leave a vacuum, evil will fill it.
The fourth
commandment envisions that on the Sabbath Day families will be
together—talking, and reading, and teaching Scripture, and doing good, and
visiting the needy, and memorizing the Bible, and resting on the Lord’s Day,
and attending the Sabbath twice with the
whole family. Sanctify the Lord’s Day!
The Word of God
calls us to resolute action, lest our Sabbath Day be profaned, lest we find
ourselves weak and listless Christians throughout the week, lest we find that
we have a lack of purpose because the Sabbath has been lost.
Let us prepare for
the Sabbath ahead of time because it is a special day. Let us use wise preparation. If you have young children, this is
especially important. Perhaps you can
select their clothes for them or find their shoes and their Bibles so that on
Sunday morning you do not need to be in a rush or yelling, “Where’s this,
where’s that?” Prepare. Finish up your work on Saturday
afternoon. Open up the refrigerator and
find out if you have some food for Sunday.
Do not stay up past your normal bedtime on Saturday night. If you go to sleep at ten so that you can be
alert for work, go to sleep at ten so that you can be alert for the worship
of God and not be groggy.
Let us begin each
Lord’s Day by reading the Scriptures personally and praying together as
families before church. It may mean that
you have to get up fifteen minutes earlier.
It may mean that you have to schedule the showers and the hair-drying
and all the rest in your home so that you can be at the table, at an agreed
upon time, with the whole family on Sunday morning, before you go to church, so
that you can be prepared for the Lord’s Day.
Let us sit together as families in the
Let us return home
from the service and talk about what took place in the service. Let us talk about the content of the
sermon. Let us talk about what it means
to you and how you will be trying to practice or remember what God has said to
you in His Word throughout the week. Ask
your children some good questions, geared to their understanding. Explain the things that they did not get in
the sermon.
And let us spend
the day with our family and with God’s people—especially the lonely and sick
and aged. The Sabbath should not
be: Everybody off to his own room. It is not a day to be off by yourself. But let us
be together. The fourth commandment
pictures (as I said) the family together on the Lord’s Day. Christian families need this day after a busy
week. There have been many worries
throughout the week. We have been
bruised and beaten spiritually. We have
trials and hurts. We need time to be
alone with Jesus as a family. Invest in
the Lord’s Day. As a young family, as
young people, invest in this day. Put
stock into it. Throw yourself into the
wholesome spiritual activity of the day.
Nehemiah concludes
with this prayer in verse 22: “Remember
me, O my God, concerning this also, and spare me according to the greatness of
thy mercy.” Remember me, O Lord, and spare
me. Now that is striking, is it
not? Let us not miss that today. Nehemiah has just performed one of the most
courageous acts of faith. Here is a man
who is doing what is right. He
faithfully performed his calling. He
called attention to an evil and he saw to it that the evil was addressed. He said, “This is where I stand. We’re going to put our stake down here. We are going to keep the Sabbath Day holy to
the Lord.”
Now if ever we
would say, “There is something that God must be pleased with. God will take note of that!” We would say, “Nehemiah, you have done right
and good.” Yet Nehemiah asks God to
spare him. Nehemiah sees that in his
best works he has not earned. But he
believes that God must forgive him in his best works. Do you understand? The best saint in his best works needs the
sparing mercy of God because his sins are involved in his best work. The closer we come to the doing of God’s
will, the more we realize just how sinful we are, just how much sin cleaves to
our own works. Nehemiah did not go home
to congratulate himself and to say, “Well, now!
I did something.” Nehemiah went
home to confess his sins and to plead for God’s mercy.
Let us conclude our
time together in God’s Word today the same way.
Let us conclude this way: by
praying.
Lord, we love Thy
day. And we do understand its
importance. We see what the materialism
of our own nature and of this world will do to us. We see how readily we get sucked up only in
the earthly. And we see how crucial it
is to come apart and rest on the Sabbath Day with our Savior. But we cannot do this, we cannot attain to
this, in our strength. Lord, give us to
observe, love, and honor the Sabbath Day.
And may our keeping of the Sabbath Day, to the measure that we are able
to do so, increase our faith. Let it not
become something for us to boast of. Let
us not think of it as a feather in our cap.
But, O Lord, as we go about obedience to Thee, may we remember our sins
and know the need of Thy sparing mercy for even our best earthly Sabbath. After that we must go to our knees and ask
Thee to forgive us because now we feel our sins and imperfections. Until, O Lord, the gates of heaven shall be
opened and we shall enter into the eternal rest where there shall be no more
sin and we shall rejoice. So give us to
keep the Sabbath that is the emblem of eternal rest. Amen.