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God’s Unchangeable Law, Part 5
The Mark of Allegiance
After the warning against the worship of the beast and his image
the prophecy declares: “Here are those who keep the commandments of God and the
faith of Jesus.” Since those who keep God’s commandments are thus placed in
contrast with those that worship the beast and his image and receive his mark,
it follows that the keeping of God’s law, on the one hand, and its violation,
on the other, will make the distinction between the worshipers of God and the
worshipers of the beast.
The special characteristic of the beast, and therefore of his
image, is the breaking of God’s commandments. Says Daniel, of the little horn,
the papacy: “He shall think to change times and the law.” Daniel 7:25, R.V. And
Paul styled the same power the “man of sin,” who was to exalt himself above
God. One prophecy is a complement of the other. Only by changing God’s law
could the papacy exalt itself above God; whoever should understandingly keep
the law as thus changed would be giving supreme honor to that power by which
the change was made. Such an act of obedience to papal laws would be a mark of
allegiance to the pope in the place of God.
The papacy has attempted to change the law of God. The second commandment,
forbidding image worship, has been dropped from the law, and the fourth
commandment has been so changed as to authorize the observance of the first
instead of the seventh day as the Sabbath. But papists urge, as a reason for
omitting the second commandment, that it is unnecessary, being included in the
first, and that they are giving the law exactly as God designed it to be
understood. This cannot be the change foretold by the prophet. An intentional,
deliberate change is presented: “He shall think to change the times and
the law.” The change in the fourth commandment exactly fulfills the prophecy.
For this the only authority claimed is that of the church. Here the papal power
openly sets itself above God.
While the worshipers of God will be especially distinguished by
their regard for the fourth commandment,—since this is the sign of His creative
power and the witness to His claim upon man’s reverence and homage,—the
worshipers of the beast will be distinguished by their efforts to tear down the
Creator’s memorial, to exalt the institution of Rome. It was in behalf of the
Sunday that popery first asserted its arrogant claims; and its first resort to
the power of the state was to compel the observance of Sunday as “the Lord’s
day.” But the Bible points to the seventh day, and not to the first, as the
Lord’s day. Said Christ: “The Son of Man is also Lord of the Sabbath.” The fourth commandment declares: “The seventh day is the Sabbath
of the Lord.” And by the prophet Isaiah the Lord designates it: “My holy day.” Mark 2:28; Isaiah 58:13.
The claim so often put forth that Christ changed the Sabbath is
disproved by His own words. In His Sermon on the Mount He said: “Do not think
that I came to destroy the Law or the Prophets. I did not come to destroy but
to fulfill. For assuredly, I say to you, till heaven and earth pass away, one
jot or one tittle will by no means pass from the law till all is fulfilled.
Whoever therefore breaks one of the least of these commandments, and teaches
men so, shall be called least in the kingdom of heaven; but whoever does and
teaches them, he shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven.” Matthew 5:17-19.
It is a fact generally admitted by Protestants
that the Scriptures give no authority for the change of the Sabbath. This is
plainly stated in publications issued by the American Tract Society and the
American Sunday School Union. One of these works acknowledges “the complete
silence of the New Testament so far as any explicit command for the Sabbath
[Sunday, the first day of the week] or definite rules for its observance are
concerned.”—George Elliott, The Abiding Sabbath, page 184.
Another says: “Up to the time of Christ’s death, no change had
been made in the day;” and, “so far as the record shows, they [the apostles]
did not . . . give any explicit command enjoining the abandonment of the
seventh-day Sabbath, and its observance on the first day of the week.”—A. E.
Waffle, The Lord’s Day, pages 186-188.
Roman Catholics acknowledge that the change of the Sabbath was
made by their church, and declare that Protestants by observing the Sunday are
recognizing her power. In the Catholic Catechism of Christian Religion,
in answer to a question as to the day to be observed in obedience to the fourth
commandment, this statement is made: “During the old law, Saturday was the day
sanctified; but the church, instructed by Jesus Christ, and directed by
the Spirit of God, has substituted Sunday for Saturday; so now we sanctify the
first, not the seventh day. Sunday means, and now is, the day of the Lord.”
As the sign of the authority of the Catholic Church, papist
writers cite “the very act of changing the Sabbath into Sunday, which
Protestants allow of; . . . because by keeping Sunday, they acknowledge the
church’s power to ordain feasts, and to command them under sin.”—Henry
Tuberville, An Abridgment of the Christian Doctrine, page 58. What then
is the change of the Sabbath, but the sign, or mark, of the authority of the
Roman Church—”the mark of the beast”?
The Roman Church has not relinquished her claim to supremacy;
and when the world and the Protestant churches accept a sabbath of her
creating, while they reject the Bible Sabbath, they virtually admit this
assumption. They may claim the authority of tradition and of the Fathers for
the change; but in so doing they ignore the very principle which separates them
from Rome—that “the Bible, and the Bible only, is the religion of Protestants.”
The papist can see that they are deceiving themselves, willingly closing their
eyes to the facts in the case. As the movement for Sunday enforcement gains
favor, he rejoices, feeling assured that it will eventually bring the whole
Protestant world under the banner of Rome.
The Great Controversy, pp. 445-448
Next part: God’s Unchangeable Law, Part 6:
The Mark of the Beast Enforced
All Scriptures are quoted from the New King James Version,
including those originally quoted by Ellen White from the King James
Version.—Editors
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