Appendix B
Ellen White’s Comments on Friday:
On Friday let
the preparation for the Sabbath be
completed. See that all the clothing is in
readiness, and that all the cooking is done.
Let the boots be blacked, and the baths be
taken. It is possible to do this. If you
make it a rule, you can do it. The Sabbath
is not to be given to the repairing of
garments, to the cooking of food, to
pleasure seeking, or to any other worldly
employment. Before the setting of the sun,
let all secular work be laid aside, and all
secular papers be put out of sight. Parents,
explain your work and its purpose to your
children, and let them share in your
preparation to keep the Sabbath according to
the commandment. {CG 528.2}
In many
families [on Sabbath] boots and shoes are
blacked and brushed, and stitches are taken,
all because these little odds and ends were
not done on Friday. They did not "remember
the Sabbath day to keep it holy." . . . {CG
528.3}
On Friday the
clothing of the children is to be looked
after. During the week they should be all
laid out by their own hands under the
direction of the mother, so that they can
dress quietly, without any confusion or
rushing about and hasty speeches. {CG
528.4}
There is
another work that should receive attention
on the preparation day. On this day all
differences between brethren, whether in the
family or in the church, should be put
away. {CG 528.5}
When the
Sabbath commences, we should place a guard
upon ourselves, upon our acts and our words,
lest we rob God by appropriating to our own
use that time which is strictly the Lord's.
We should not do ourselves, nor suffer our
children to do, any manner of our own work
for a livelihood or anything which could
have been done on the six working days.
Friday is the day of preparation. Time can
then be devoted to making the necessary
preparation for the Sabbath and to thinking
and conversing about it. Nothing which will
in the sight of Heaven be regarded as a
violation of the holy Sabbath should be left
unsaid or undone, to be said or done upon
the Sabbath. God requires not only that we
refrain from physical labor upon the
Sabbath, but that the mind be disciplined to
dwell upon sacred themes. The Fourth
Commandment is virtually transgressed by
conversing upon worldly things or by
engaging in light and trifling conversation.
Talking upon anything or everything which
may come into the mind is speaking our own
words. Every deviation from right brings us
into bondage and condemnation. {CG 529.3}
But still the
disciples seemed unbelieving. Their hopes
had died with Christ. And when the news of
His resurrection was brought to them, it was
so different from what they had anticipated
that they could not believe it. . . . From
eyewitnesses some of the disciples had
obtained quite a full account of the events
of Friday. Others beheld the scenes of the
crucifixion with their own eyes. In the
afternoon of the first day of the week, two
of the disciples, restless and unhappy,
decided to return to their home in Emmaus, a
village about eight miles from Jerusalem. .
. . {CTr 295.3}
When the
Sabbath is thus remembered, the temporal
will not be allowed to encroach upon the
spiritual. No duty pertaining to the six
working days will be left for the Sabbath.
During the week our energies will not be so
exhausted in temporal labor that on the day
when the Lord rested and was refreshed we
shall be too weary to engage in His service.
{CCh 262.5}
While preparation
for the Sabbath is to be made all through
the week, Friday is to be the special
preparation day. Through Moses the Lord said
to the children of Israel: "Tomorrow is the
rest of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord: bake
that which ye will bake today, and seethe
that ye will seethe; and that which
remaineth over lay up for you to be kept
until the morning." "And the people went
about, and gathered it [the manna], and
ground it in mills, or beat it in a mortar,
and baked it in pans, and made cakes of it."
Exodus 16:23; Numbers 11:8. There was
something to be done in preparing the
heaven-sent bread for the children of
Israel. The Lord told them that this work
must be done on Friday, the preparation day.
{CCh 263.1}
On Friday let the
preparation for the Sabbath be completed.
See that all the clothing is in readiness
and that all the cooking is done. Let the
boots be blacked and the baths be taken. It
is possible to do this. If you make it a
rule you can do it. The Sabbath is not to be
given to the repairing of garments, to the
cooking of food, to pleasure seeking, or to
any other worldly employment. Before the
setting of the sun let all secular work be
laid aside and all secular papers be put out
of sight. Parents, explain your work and its
purpose to your children, and let them share
in your preparation to keep the Sabbath
according to the commandment. {CCh 263.2}
We should
jealously guard the edges of the Sabbath.
Remember that every moment is consecrated,
holy time. Whenever it is possible,
employers should give their workers the
hours from Friday noon until the beginning
of the Sabbath. Give them time for
preparation, that they may welcome the
Lord's day with quietness of mind. By such a
course you will suffer no loss even in
temporal things. {CCh 263.3}
A scene
passed before me. I was in our restaurant in
San Francisco. It was Friday. Several of the
workers were busily engaged in putting up
packages of such foods as could be easily
carried by the people to their homes, and a
number were waiting to receive these
packages. I asked the meaning of this, and
the workers told me that some among their
patrons were troubled because, on account of
the closing of the restaurant, they could
not on the Sabbath obtain food of the same
kind as that which they used during the
week. Realizing the value of the wholesome
foods obtained at the restaurant, they
protested against being denied them on the
seventh day and pleaded with those in charge
of the restaurant to keep it open every day
in the week, pointing out what they would
suffer if this were not done. "What you see
today," said the workers, "is our answer to
this demand for the health foods upon the
Sabbath. These people take on Friday food
that lasts over the Sabbath, and in this way
we avoid condemnation for refusing to open
the restaurant on the Sabbath." {CH 489.4}
In the
circumstances connected with the giving of
the manna, we have conclusive evidence that
the Sabbath was not instituted, as many
claim, when the law was given at Sinai.
Before the Israelites came to Sinai they
understood the Sabbath to be obligatory upon
them. In being obliged to gather every
Friday a double portion of manna in
preparation for the Sabbath, when none would
fall, the sacred nature of the day of rest
was continually impressed upon them. And
when some of the people went out on the
Sabbath to gather manna, the Lord asked,
"How long refuse ye to keep My commandments
and My laws?" PP 297
Amid the
gloom that settled upon the earth during the
long period of papal supremacy, the light of
truth could not be wholly extinguished. In
every age there were witnesses for God--men
who cherished faith in Christ as the only
mediator between God and man, who held the
Bible as the only rule of life, and who
hallowed the true Sabbath. How much the
world owes to these men, posterity will
never know. They were branded as heretics,
their motives impugned, their characters
maligned, their writings suppressed,
misrepresented, or mutilated. Yet they stood
firm, and from age to age maintained their
faith in its purity, as a sacred heritage
for the generations to come. {GC 61.1}
Like the
Sabbath, the week originated at creation,
and it has been preserved and brought down
to us through Bible history. God himself
measured off the first week as a sample for
successive weeks to the close of time. Like
every other, it consisted of seven literal
days. Six days were employed in the work of
creation; upon the seventh, God rested, and
he then blessed this day, and set it apart
as a day of rest for man. {CE 190.1}
In the law
given from Sinai, God recognized the week,
and the facts upon which it is based. After
giving the command, "Remember the Sabbath
day to keep it holy," and specifying what
shall be done on the six days, and what
shall not be done on the seventh, he states
the reason for thus observing the week, by
pointing back to his own example: "For in
six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the
sea, and all that in them is, and rested the
seventh day; wherefore the Lord blessed the
Sabbath day, and hallowed it." [Exodus
20:8-11.] This reason appears beautiful and
forcible when we understand the days of
creation to be literal. The first six days
of each week are given to man for labor,
because God employed the same period of the
first week in the work of creation. On the
seventh day man is to refrain from labor, in
commemoration of the Creator's rest. {CE
190.2}
The spirit of
concession to paganism opened the way for a
still further disregard of Heaven's
authority. Satan tampered with the fourth
commandment also, and essayed to set aside
the ancient Sabbath, the day which God had
blessed and sanctified, [Genesis 2:2, 3.]
and in its stead to exalt the festival
observed by the heathen as “the venerable
day of the sun.” This change was not at
first attempted openly. In the first
centuries the true Sabbath had been kept by
all Christians. They were jealous for the
honor of God, and, believing that his law is
immutable, they zealously guarded the
sacredness of its precepts. But with great
subtlety, Satan worked through his agents to
bring about his object. That the attention
of the people might be called to the Sunday,
it was made a festival in honor of the
resurrection of Christ. Religious services
were held upon it; yet it was regarded as a
day of recreation, the Sabbath being still
sacredly observed. {GC88 52.1}
To prepare
the way for the work which he designed to
accomplish, Satan had led the Jews, before
the advent of Christ, to load down the
Sabbath with the most rigorous exactions,
making its observance a burden. Now, taking
advantage of the false light in which he had
thus caused it to be regarded, he cast
contempt upon it as a Jewish institution.
While Christians continued to observe the
Sunday as a joyous festival, he led them, in
order to show their hatred of Judaism, to
make the Sabbath a fast, a day of sadness
and gloom. {GC88 52.2}
In the early
part of the fourth century, the emperor
Constantine issued a decree making Sunday a
public festival throughout the Roman Empire.
[SEE APPENDIX, NOTE 1.] The day of the sun
was reverenced by his pagan subjects, and
was honored by Christians; it was the
emperor's policy to unite the conflicting
interests of heathenism and Christianity. He
was urged to do this by the bishops of the
church, who, inspired by ambition, and
thirst for power, perceived that if the same
day was observed by both Christians and the
heathen, it would promote the nominal
acceptance of Christianity by pagans, and
thus advance the power and glory of the
church. But while Christians were gradually
led to regard Sunday as possessing a degree
of sacredness, they still held the true
Sabbath as the holy of the Lord, and
observed it in obedience to the fourth
commandment. {GC88 53.1}
A striking
illustration of Rome's policy toward those
who disagree with her was given in the long
and bloody persecution of the Waldenses,
some of whom were observers of the Sabbath.
Others suffered in a similar manner for
their fidelity to the fourth commandment.
The history of the churches of Ethiopia and
Abyssinia is especially significant. Amid
the gloom of the Dark Ages, the Christians
of Central Africa were lost sight of and
forgotten by the world, and for many
centuries they enjoyed freedom in the
exercise of their faith. But at last Rome
learned of their existence, and the emperor
of Abyssinia was soon beguiled into an
acknowledgment of the pope as the vicar of
Christ. Other concessions followed. An edict
was issued forbidding the observance of the
Sabbath under the severest penalties. But
papal tyranny soon became a yoke so galling
that the Abyssinians determined to break it
from their necks. After a terrible struggle,
the Romanists were banished from their
dominions, and the ancient faith was
restored. The churches rejoiced in their
freedom, and they never forgot the lesson
they had learned concerning the deception,
the fanaticism, and the despotic power of
Rome. Within their solitary realm they were
content to remain, unknown to the rest of
Christendom. {GC88 577.3}
The churches
of Africa held the Sabbath as it was held by
the papal church before her complete
apostasy. While they kept the seventh day in
obedience to the commandment of God, they
abstained from labor on the Sunday in
conformity to the custom of the church. Upon
obtaining supreme power, Rome had trampled
upon the Sabbath of God to exalt her own;
but the churches of Africa, hidden for
nearly a thousand years, did not share in
this apostasy. When brought under the sway
of Rome, they were forced to set aside the
true and exalt the false Sabbath; but no
sooner had they regained their independence
than they returned to obedience to the
fourth commandment. [SEE APPENDIX, NOTE
12.] {GC88 578.1}
These records
of the past clearly reveal the enmity of
Rome toward the true Sabbath and its
defenders, and the means which she employs
to honor the institution of her creating.
The Word of God teaches that these scenes
are to be repeated as papists and
Protestants shall unite for the exaltation
of the Sunday.
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