Monday, 7 December 2020

After the Sabbath, at dawn on the first day of the Week, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary went to look at the tomb. – Matthew 28:1

Today's Scripture Reading (January 7, 2021): Matthew 28

For almost the Christian Church's entire existence, we have met on the first day of the Week. The day that we worship has become less important to some contemporary Christians in recent years, yet even now, more church-going Christians attend a worship gathering on Sunday than they do on any other day. And it is here that we find a mystery; the Christian Church grew out of Judaism, which honors the Sabbath as the appropriate day for worshipping God. For some older Christians, the idea of not worshipping on Sunday is an almost unthinkable concept. Muddying the issue even further, most Christians sincerely believe that Sunday is the biblical Sabbath. It isn't. Strictly speaking, Sunday is "the Lord's Day," and Saturday is "the Sabbath." This leads us to an important question; what happened?

The answer; Jesus rose from the dead on the first day of the Week. If you wonder if there is any proof that Jesus rose from the dead, your starting place for the investigation should begin with the disciples' behavioral change, which took place almost immediately after the events of that first Easter. What could cause a group of Jewish men to begin to hold their most sacred religious celebrations on Sunday rather than on Saturday as they had for their entire lives? No, they did not stop going to synagogue on the Sabbath. Still, the act of going to the synagogue was more about trying to reach other Jews with the message of the Messiah than it was worshipping the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. The act of worship was reserved for Sunday. Because it was on Sunday that Jesus rose from the dead.

Mary and her friends waited, probably not too patiently, for the Sabbath to pass so that they could get to the work of preparing the body of Jesus for burial. It was a task that was Illegal on the Sabbath, and so they paused. Early on Sunday morning, the women gathered the species and supplies that would be needed to complete the preparation of the body for death. They walked, weighted down by these spices, to the place where Jesus's body had been left. It was the first day of the Week, Sunday; this was the first Lord's Day.

We may not recognize it, but every time we gather on a Sunday for worship, we celebrate the resurrection of Jesus. In a few weeks, we will observe Lent's six-week fast, but the fast will only be from Monday to Saturday because Sunday, the Lord's Day, is always a day of celebration, even during Lent. On Sunday, every Sunday, it is Easter, the day that changed the behavior of a group of Jewish men in Judea, and one that affects who we are today. We are, and always will be, the children of the resurrection.

Tomorrow's Scripture Reading: Mark 16

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