Monday, October 17, 2016

Our Common Holy Day Origin by Dr. Tom Roberts



 Our Common Holy Day Origin

 Notes by Dr Tom Roberts, PhD (Sept 2010)

The Beginnings of the Seventh Month Movement

In modern times the annual festival days have been a constant source of debate.  In the 1840’s, during the Millerite Period, the Seventh Month Movement appeared.  Studies surrounding the Day of Atonement and the controversies about how to interpret Daniel 8:14 which lead to the Great Disappointment of October 22, 1843 and October 22, 1844 lie at the foundations of this movement.  Portions grew into the Midnight Cry subcatatory but, as we shall see, the Holy Days were adopted by other related Sabbatarian groups.  The Millerite Period has been called by some “The Movement of the Great Awakening”.  L.E. Froom reports in his Movement of Destiny that over seventy denominations fed the Millerite Movement.  But just how large the Seventh Month Movement actually became and the leaders it impacted is a matter of conjecture.  Some have estimated that, at its peak, it may have had as many as 300,000 adherants.  If this is true, it would not be surprising for other groups to be impacted by its teachings.  (for more information see the Seventh Day Adventist Encyclopedia, Commentary Reference Series, Vol 10, pg 1337-1338)

Mormonism and Holy Days

During the same time period, a movement within Mormonism emerged in 1848 lead by James Strang who founded the Hebrew Mormonism Movement.  They believed in One God, the annual Holy Days, the weekly Sabbath and the teachings of the Book of Mormon.  Later, in the 1970’s, David L Roberts would lead a break away group of over 11,000 Sabbatarian and Holy Day followers. (Latter Day Saints and the Sabbath, Russell J. Thomsen, pg 24-33, Divergent Paths of the Restoration, Steven L. Shields, pp. 177-178)

The Church of God Seventh Day Connection

In 1858, Gilbert Cramer from the Marion Party, founded eight churches which would ultimately become the Church of God Seventh Day.  Out of this ministry arose the Remnant of Israel under the leadership of G. G. Rupert who definitely advocated the meaning of Holy Day observance. (“Remnant of Israel”, G. G. Rupert, Vol 10, No. 11, September, 1929)  Some today are suggesting that G. G. Rupert was a delegate at the 1888 Seventh Day Adventist Conference which began the change of direction of the SDA Church from its founders with the departure of Wagner and Jones.  This conference was very significant because its theme was “Righteousness by Faith” and was needed to free Sabbatarians from legalism.  Unfortunately, as the years passed, many of the founding voices of Adventism who once gave support to the Seventh Month Movement were no longer influential.  Ellen White even stated that the Adventist camp meetings should replicate the Feast of Tabernacles.  (see booklet Ellen White Speaks Out on the Work of the Jewish People, Sanford Howard)  Wagner and Jones argued that the Holy Days were not the subject of the “weak and beggarly elements” described in the writings of Paul but the “weak and beggarly elements” were indeed forms of fallen Judaism mixed with pagan observances.  Today, a growing number of scholars such as Troy Martin, Mark Nanas and Paul Torazi support this view.  It should be noted, that in 1870, D. T. Niles and other scholars would begin to see the meaning of the Holy Days contained in the Book of Revelation.  This would later be enlarged by Frank Holbrook and expanded further by Lewis F Were in the 1980’s.   However, in the early 1900’s, many Adventist writers such as F. C. Gilbert (The Jewish Problem and Daniel and the Sanctuary) tied Adventist prophecy to the Day of Atonement and other festival days.  He intended to establish Jewish missions in the city of New York but the $1500 in contributions to this work were never forwarded to him from the General Conference of the SDA Church. 

The Methodist Influence Upon Sabbatarianism

From the 1840’s until 1917, Methodism in the United States had three major Sabbatarian outgrowths.  Teachings from Methodism which were adopted by the founders of these groups were the doctrine of man as soul-ish being, the free agency of man, the eschatological Kingdom of God which will heal creation at the end of time and the doctrine of holiness and sanctification, vegetarianism and emphasis on healing through herbs and natural practices.   Gilbert Cramer who founded the Church of God Seventh Day in 1858 had been a Methodist.  Ellen G White grew up in the Methodist Church until she was a teenager.  Then, in 1917, a former Methodist bishop named Johnson founded with two Adventist leaders the denomination called the House of God.  He advocated the Kingdom of God on earth and the keeping of the annual festivals.   This history of his ministry reaches back into the 1890’s with missions to Africa and today, has approximately 10 million members worldwide.

Non-Adventist writers such as Larkin with his book Dispensational Truths were also very influential in bringing the Holy Day concept to Christian readers in the 1930’s.   Thus Herbert Armstrong would have had many sources from within the Church of God 7th Day tradition such as A. N. Duggar and Dodd and G. G. Rupert on which to base his Holy Day theology.

Adventism’s Attempts to Whitewash Their Beginnings

By the 1950’s, Adventism was undergoing many changes.  The church was attempting to be more evangelical in its emphasis on Christ with a grace orientation.  L. E. Froom, a fantastic historian, who problematically, downplayed the role of the Seventh Month Movement as well as Ellen White’s fallen nature of Christ, met with Walter Martin and Donald Gray Barnhouse.  These meetings resulted in the 1957 publication, Questions on Doctrine.   Not all Adventists scholars were pleased with this publication.  Even Zondervaan, the evangelical publisher, questioned Walter Martin on the lack of follow up in several areas such as Froom’s statements about 70 trinitarian denominations being in the formation of Adventist theology and the non-trinitarian leanings of Uriah Smith, Wagner and Jones in the beginning of Adventist history.  Walter Martin simply touted his credentials as proof of the excellent scholarship for his part of this publication as a defense of its legitimacy.  (The Word Was Made Flesh – One Hundred Years of Seventh-day Adventist Christology 1852-1952, Ralph Larson, pp. 292-300)

As the years progressed, Adventist scholars such N. L. Andreason, Raymond Cottrell, Ken Richards, Desmond Ford, and many others began to question the classical Adventist positions taught about the history of their beginnings and the direction the church was taking.  There were those who wanted to go back to the non-trinitarian, Holy Day, Kingdom of God on earth positions of the church.  Others such as Desmond Ford, wanted the church to move in an evangelical direction while some at La Sierra University have tried to place the church on a more progressive path.   Once again, the church is beginning to denounce all feast day keepers.  Angel Rodriguez, PhD, and others have denounced the entire feast day movement.  In spite of this, the ethos of feast day movements are still are behind the thinking of much of Seventh Day Adventist theology.  One such example is Leslie Hardinge’s  In the Shadow of His Sacrifice.  He does an absolutely brilliant job of teaching Christianity the meaning of the Holy Days and the lessons that should impact their thinking about the Messiah.

Today there is a growing but small number of small groups of Adventist Holy Day Keepers who are attempting to resurrect the Seventh Month Movement in the Adventist Church.  Dr. John Vandenberg is leading the charge along with a few other scholars and pastors by showing the Seventh Month Movement should never have been buried in Adventist history but instead modified to exclude its theological errors.  It should have retained the spirit of Holy Day keeping in the worship and the life of the church.

Let us all pray and support this movement and fellowship with them as offer our love and service.


Sermon Notes: The Acceptable Year of the Lord


Sermon Notes: The Acceptable Year of the Lord
by Ben Mauldin II

Luke, Chapter 4
The setting is the return of Jesus to Nazareth, his hometown.
He has been away for a period of time in the wilderness. During this time he fasted for 40 days and 40 nights and he was tempted by the Adversary.

When he returned to his hometown he was like a "Man on Fire" and he seem to have a keen sense of direction and understanding of this purpose. He went into the synagogue on the Sabbath, as his custom was, and he was handed and read from the book of Isaiah. He read from chapter 61 of the book of Isaiah.
The passage is somewhat of a mission statement, that now he clearly understood. That he was to preach the gospel to the poor, freedom to prisoners, give sight to the blind, freedom and liberty to the oppressed, and he ended it by saying to preach the "Acceptable Year of the Lord."

We see lots of examples in Jesus' life how he physically and spiritually restored sight to the blind, preached the gospel to the poor, set free, spiritually, those who were imprisoned, and gave hope and liberty to the  opressed, but what I would like to focus on today is the statement:

"Proclaim the Acceptable Year of the Lord!"

I believe that the "Acceptable Year of the Lord" is the Jubilee year.
You can read about the Jubilee in Leviticus 25 and other places throughout the Old Testament.
You will see that it begins on the Day of Atonement every 50th year.
I watch asked a well-known biblical scholar in the Church of God tradition if a year of Jubilee had ever, in history, actually been kept. His answer was that he thought not. It is possible that right after the nation of Israel entered into the promised land, perhaps they did keep one year of Jubilee, but it is doubtful. There is no record in the scripture of the Jubilee ever having been kept

Jubilee  is a time when all debts and all obligations are forgiven, and everyone returns to their original land. Slaves are freed, debts forgiven. (US Bankruptcy laws are based on Jubilee principles. Also notice "The Lord's Prayer" in Matthew 6, that the only provision of the prayer on which Jesus adds a comment is the willingness to forgive debt.)

 It is much like the promise that Jesus brings, forgiveness and a fresh start.
There have been people, groups of people, in our history who have tried to set up a "Biblical" government and tried to implement a Jubilee. I think that in our current society setting, it is impossible.
Can you imagine, if an entity such as the United States Congress wrote a Jubilee code? It would be a stack of books that would reach to the ceiling and every year certain exclusions would be added so that the Jubilee itself would be totally meaningless.
There would be lawyers whose sole purpose would be to create some sort of "trust" that could avoid the Jubilee.

For the Jubilee to be implemented it is going to require the return of the Righteous Judge!

Sermon Notes: Power and Purpose of Prayer



Prayer 
by Tom Hamilton

Intro.
My experience at age 7 – Christmas time.  Looking at the Sears catalog I saw what I wanted (Cape Canaveral Space Set) and asked God via bedtime prayers for it for several nites.  It was not under the tree.  The next year I asked for a “Knight in Armor and Castle” toy set.  It didn’t appear either.  My lesson learned was that God was not normally going to grant prayers for toys.

That brings up the larger questions of “Why should we pray?”  and “How do we do it more effectively?”

Old Testament
Abraham’s servant : Gen. 24:2, 10-15 his prayer (Eliezer of Damascus? Gen. 15) was that God would guide to select the right woman to be a wife for Isaac.  God granted his wish almost as soon as he asked it.
Daniel – 3 times a day Daniel 6:10-11.   This shows Daniel praying three times a day in a private place.  A law was passed forbidding prayer to anyone but the king.  Daniel shows it is more important to pray to God than obey this law.  Daniel is then put in the lion’s den.  God intervenes and saves Daniel.
Hannah, I Samuel 1:2, 6-7, “prayed to the LORD”, v10-20.  She prayed for a son and promises to dedicate him to God’s service.  God answers her prayer and childless Hannah bears a son – Samuel.  Ch. 2: 1-10 Hannah’s prayer – more like a song.  When Samuel is weaned she brings him to Eli the high priest to serve God.

New Testament
Jesus prayed : Lord’s prayer is more an outline of how to pray than a prayer itself.  Note thru-out the Gospels that Jesus introduces the idea that God is our father and addresses Him that way.
Mat 6:5 +  some highlight noted:
      v6 pray in private place
      v7 when you pray do not use vain repetitions
      v9-13 the Lord’s prayer

Disciples
Acts 11:5  Peter prays on the rooftop and has a vision from God during his prayer.
Acts 12:5  Peter is in prison, constant prayer is made for him by the church, v6-7 Peter is released from prison by an angel.
Acts 13:3 “…having fasted and prayed, and laid hands on them, they sent them away.”  Public prayer is part of the church’s dedication/anointing process.  Public prayer is ok.

Believers
Acts 10 Cornelius prays continually.

How to pointers :
            Talk to God as your father.
            Do not repeat vain phrases.  Say what you have to say.  More is not necessarily
            better.
            Private place – pray mostly in private.
            Bring your problems to God and ask Him for help or to guide your decisions.
            Pray for others, God’s will, healings, divine protection, nation, leaders, family,
            Not always just your problems.
            Repent of your sins and return to God.  Sometimes our sins hinder our prayers.      Isa. 59:2 But your iniquities have   separated you from your God; And your sins       have hidden His face from you, So that He will not hear.
            I Jn.3:22 whatsoever things we ask we receive, because we keep His           commandments and do those things that are pleasing in His sight.
            Bring a list with you if you need to.
            Ask for things that get God’s will done here on earth. 
            If you need help ask God.  Don’t be afraid to ask.  Mat. 7:7  Ask and it will be
            Given you, seek and you shall find, knock and it will be opened to you…
            Ask others to pray about certain situations. 
            Be persistent : Luke 18:  Then He spoke a parable to them, that men always ought to pray and not lose heart, saying: “There was in a certain city a judge who did not fear God nor regard man. Now there was a widow in that city; and she came to him, saying, ‘Get justice for me from my adversary.’ And he would not for a while; but afterward he said within himself, ‘Though I do not fear God nor regard man, yet because this widow troubles me I will avenge her, lest by her continual coming she weary me.  Then the Lord said, “Hear what the unjust judge said. And shall God not avenge His own elect who cry out day and night to Him, though He bears long with them? I tell you that He will avenge them speedily. Nevertheless, when the Son of Man comes, will He really find faith on the earth?”
            Understand that sometimes the answer is “Not yet” or “No”.  There was a song     several years ago where a man thanked God for “unanswered prayers”.  It may be
            that God who sees more than we, realizes we are praying for something that is
            not good for us.
            Paul’s “thorn in the flesh” is not removed - II Cor. 12:7-8.  The apostle Paul here
            Is told “no” by God.

Power of Prayer :
            Effective fervent prayer of righteous man avails much James 5:16-18
            It Strengthens faith when you see the results of prayer.
            The prayer of faith will save the sick James 5:13-15
            Strength to cast out tough demons  Mk. 9:28-29  This kind can come out by
            Nothing but prayer and fasting.
            It sets spiritual events in motion.  Daniel prays and fasts for 3 weeks before            receiving an answer to his prayer.  Gabriel was sent to Daniel on the first day but           Satan (and possibly his demons) blocked his path.  Then Michael came to help him.  Daniel 10:1-13.  Things were happening beyond the physical that Daniel could not see from the very first day he prayed.

Benefits :
            Increases patience and faith.
            Gets you closer to God.
            Help in time of need.
            Helps others.
           
Personal Proof God exists – answered prayer.
            Bayou D’Loutre story.  I was on a two day float trip down a river in north             Louisiana years ago.  Right at sunset I the river totally disappeared into a giant     swamp.  My paddle broke while I was maneuvering around in it.  Land totally
            Disappeared.  Cotton-mouth moccasins seemed to be in every other bush and
            Would drop off into the water.  Complete darkness was approaching with
            Its hordes of mosquitoes.  I envisioned my flashlite batteries running out and
            Bumping into a bush with snakes in it getting into my 10’ pirougue boat. I have
            Killed hundreds of moccasins but dreaded the prospect of being in the dark with   them.  I began to pray earnestly to God for help.  Within 5-10 minutes I drifted         into a gas pipe-line pathway and with the fading rays of light saw shore in one direction about 200 yards away.  I cut a sapling down with my hatchet and used it      to pole the boat to shore, set up tent and crawled in, zipping up the screen.
            (Other examples from others).

Summary
            Prayer to the creator of the universe brings results.  God answers our prayers.  Try 
            Praying to the ancient aliens if you believed they created mankind.  Will they
            Answer your prayers or come to your aid?   Of course not!  Elijah’s words echo     down thru the years to those who pray to someone besides God, “Is it because    there is no God in Israel that you are inquiring of Baal-Zebub, the god of Ekron?”        II Kings 1:2.
            Realize that sometimes the answer is “not yet” or “no.” 
            Talk to God as your father.
            Be persistent.
            Repent of sin and seek God with your whole heart.        
            Ask and it will be given you.  Seek and you shall find.
            Trust in the God of Israel.  In Him is help.
            Ps. 18:2  The Lord is my rock and my fortress and my deliverer; My God, my       strength, in whom I will trust; My shield and the horn of my salvation, my         stronghold.
            The same God who created the universe can help you when no one else can.           Prayer is the way to contact Him.  Use it now and use it often.  Don’t wait til
            Times of trouble.