Wednesday, June 10, 2026

INVESTIGATING ADVENTISM Q&A: "Did Martin Luther Actually Prove the Saturday Sabbath?"


A POINT-BY-POINT REFUTATION OF THE “LUTHER ADMISSIONS” ARGUMENT


THE SDA CLAIM BEING EXAMINED

Adventist News has released a YouTube video titled “5 Surprising Things Martin Luther Said About the Sabbath, claiming that Luther the father of the Protestant Reformation and a Sunday worshiper left behind hidden “admissions” in his writings that supposedly validate Adventist Sabbatarianism. Their central claim is framed like this: Luther’s scattered remarks amount to reluctant testimony in favor of the Saturday Sabbath.

1) Luther’s Genesis commentary allegedly “admits” the Sabbath existed before the Fall thus before Israel, Moses, and Sinai.

2) He speculated that even in a sinless world Adam would have gathered his descendants on the seventh day for worship.

3) Because Luther was a Sunday‑keeper, these supposed admissions carry extra evidential weight.

4) Therefore, the claim that the Sabbath is merely Jewish collapses.

5) Therefore, Saturday Sabbath‑keeping is universal, eternal, and creation‑bound for all Christians.

Next step: we’ll apply historico‑grammatical exegesis and rigorous logic, using the SDA’s own presentation and Luther’s broader writings against themselves.

Q1: Is this genuine scholarship or selective cherry‑picking?

The presenter begins by boasting that this is what “honest scholarship looks like” building a case from the words of a man on “the other side.” It sounds impressive… until you finish the transcript. The presenter himself concedes:

“To be fair, and intellectual honesty demands that we are fair, Luther operated under a specific theological framework. He divided Scripture into Law and Gospel. He believed that certain Old Testament commands, including the specific observance of the seventh day, fell under a ceremonial category that Christians were free from under the New Covenant.

There it is. By his own words, he admits Luther concluded the seventh‑day observance was ceremonial something New Covenant Christians are free from. He knows it, he says it, and yet he still tries to enlist Luther as a witness for Sabbatarianism.  

That’s not intellectual honesty. That’s the textbook fallacy of Suppressed Evidence better known as Cherry‑Picking.

LOGICAL FALLACY: CHERRY-PICKING (Suppressed Evidence)

Definition: Selectively presenting evidence that supports a conclusion while deliberately suppressing evidence from the same source that contradicts it.

Applied here: The argument uses Luther’s speculative pre-Fall Sabbath comment as positive evidence while quietly burying Luther’s own conclusion that seventh-day observance is ceremonially abrogated for New Covenant Christians. That second half is the wrecking ball to their own case.

Analogy: Imagine a defense lawyer telling the jury, “The prosecutor admitted my client was at the party therefore he’s innocent!” But what if the prosecutor also added, “…and was later seen standing over the victim with a weapon”?

You can’t slice off half a witness statement and pretend the other half doesn’t exist. When the SDA argument’s own star witness, Luther, explicitly concludes in the same theological framework that seventh‑day observance is ceremonial and non‑binding under the New Covenant, the case isn’t merely weakened. It self‑destructs.

Q2: Does Genesis 2:2-3 Actually Command Anyone to Keep the Sabbath?

The entire SDA case hinges on the assumption that Genesis 2:2–3 establishes a universal Sabbath command. But let’s go straight to the Hebrew text and ask: what does it actually say?


HEBREW EXEGESIS PANEL: Genesis 2:2-3

וַיְכַל אֱלֹהִים בַּיּוֹם הַשְּבִיעִי מְלאכְתּוֹ אֲשֶׁר עָשָׂה וַיִּשְׁבֹּת בַּיּוֹם הַשְּבִיעִי

וַיְבָרֶךְ אֱלֹהִים אֶת־יוֹם הַשְּבִיעִי וַיְקַדֵּשׁ אֹתוֹ


Three critical grammatical observations:

1. wayyishbot (וַיִּשְׁבֹּת)Wayyiqtol narrative past, 3rd person masculine singular: “and He rested.” This is a description of God’s action, not a command to Adam. A wayyiqtol records narrative history; it is not a divine imperative.

2. wayevarak (וַיְבָרֶךְ) “and He blessed.” Subject: God. Object: the day. Adam is grammatically absent.

3. wayeqaddesh (וַיְקַדֵּשׁ) “and He set it apart.” Again, God acts. The text tells us what God did with the day. It says nothing about what Adam was commanded to do on the day.

CRITICAL: There is NO imperative verb form addressed to any human being. The first Sabbath command to humans zachor (זָכוֹר, “remember”) appears in Exodus 20:8, not Genesis 2. To derive a universal human obligation from narrative description of divine action is simply bad grammar.

There’s a vital difference between divine action and divine command. When God declared, “Let there be light,” He wasn’t instructing Adam to produce light. Likewise, when God rested on the seventh day, the text does not say He ordered Adam to rest every seventh day. Scripture simply records what God did not what humanity was told to do.

Here’s the unavoidable question every SDA apologist must face: If the seventh‑day Sabbath were truly a universal creation ordinance the foundational act of worship binding all humanity from Eden onward why is there not a single recorded instance of any patriarch keeping it in Genesis? Noah builds an ark. Abraham circumcises his household. Isaac digs wells. Jacob wrestles with God. Yet not one of them is ever described as resting on the seventh day. Four centuries in Egypt, and still no Sabbath. That silence isn’t trivial. It’s thunderous.


FALLACY ALERT: ARGUMENT FROM SILENCE (Used Backward by SDAs)

The SDA claim rests on the assumption that Genesis 2:2–3 imposes a Sabbath obligation on Adam, yet the text itself offers zero evidence of such a command. In fact, the silence of Genesis speaks louder in the opposite direction: not a single patriarch is ever shown keeping the Sabbath. Noah builds an ark. Abraham circumcises his household. Isaac digs wells. Jacob wrestles with God. But none are described as resting on the seventh day.

The first explicit Sabbath command to humans appears only in Exodus 16 the manna test not in Genesis 2. That’s not a later Jewish ceremonial addition. It’s the first appearance of the Sabbath command in Scripture.

Q3: Does “Pre‑Fall Institution” Mean “Eternally Binding on All Humanity”?

This is precisely where the SDA argument collapses under Reductio ad Absurdum. Their hidden hermeneutical principle is: “Whatever God established or practiced before the Fall is universally binding on all humanity for all time.” Fine let’s apply that consistently.


REDUCTIO AD ABSURDUM: The Pre-Fall Principle Applied Consistently

If “Pre-Fall = Eternally Binding on All Humanity,” then:

GENESIS 1:29The Pre-Fall Diet. God gave Adam and Eve a strictly plant-based diet before the Fall: “I give you every seed-bearing plant… every tree that has fruit.” No meat. No animal protein. If pre-Fall institution = eternally binding, every Christian must be a strict vegan and eating meat is sin. Interestingly, many SDA institutions push vegetarianism, but they do not make it a salvific test of faithfulness the way they do the Sabbath. Same logic. Same pre-Fall origin. Why the double standard?

GENESIS 2:15: Pre-Fall Vocation. Adam was placed in the Garden “to work it and keep it” before the Fall. Pre-Fall labor was garden cultivation. Does this mean every human is obligated to be a farmer? Does office work violate the creation mandate?

GENESIS 2:25: Pre-Fall Nakedness. “The man and his wife were both naked and were not ashamed.” If pre-Fall state = eternally normative, is clothing a post-Fall accommodation that sanctified people should abandon? Absurd but the logic is exactly the same.

VERDICT: The principle “Pre-Fall = Eternally Binding” is not a hermeneutical rule anyone applies consistently not even SDAs. It is invoked only for the Sabbath. That is the textbook definition of Special Pleading.

The SDA apologist will likely respond: “But Genesis 2:24, marriage is a pre-Fall institution, and Jesus reinstituted it in Matthew 19!” Exactly right. But notice what that response actually proves: a pre-Fall institution does not automatically carry forward into the New Covenant by virtue of its pre-Fall origin alone. It carries forward because Christ explicitly reinstitutes it. The pre-Fall origin is not sufficient. New Covenant ratification is what matters.

So the question becomes: Where did Jesus ever reinstitute the seventh-day Saturday Sabbath as binding on New Covenant believers? Where do the apostles command Gentile Christians to keep Saturday? We find the opposite. Colossians 2:16-17 (ESV) places Sabbath observance among “a shadow of the things to come but the substance belongs to Christ.” Romans 14:5 treats day-observance as a matter of individual conscience, not divine mandate.


LOGICAL FALLACY: SPECIAL PLEADING

Definition: Applying a principle only when it supports your conclusion, while exempting other cases from the same principle without valid justification.

Applied here: SDAs invoke the idea of “pre‑Fall institution” to make the Saturday Sabbath binding on all Christians. Yet they refuse to apply the same logic to the pre‑Fall vegan diet, the pre‑Fall vocation, or pre‑Fall nakedness. The principle isn’t really “pre‑Fall = eternally binding.” It’s “pre‑Fall = binding when we say so.”

Q4: Is Luther a Witness for or against Sabbatarianism?

This is where the SDA strategy shifts from logically weak to historically embarrassing. The entire rhetorical weight of their presentation depends on casting Luther as a reluctant witness whose “honest admissions” supposedly confirm SDA doctrine.

But let’s look at what Luther actually said. In 1538, just a few years after writing the Genesis commentary that SDAs cherry‑pick, Luther published Wider die Sabbather “Against the Sabbatarians.” This was his direct rebuttal to Christians who argued, using the same logic this video employs, that believers must observe the Jewish Saturday Sabbath.

Luther’s verdict: Sabbatarianism was a distortion of Christian freedom, and the seventh‑day command was ceremonial, not binding under the New Covenant.


Luther’s 1538 Position in Wider die Sabbather (“Against the Sabbatarians”):
  • Christians are not bound to the Jewish Saturday Sabbath.
  • The Sabbath belongs to the ceremonial law of Moses, which is abrogated under the New Covenant.
  • To insist that Gentile Christians must keep Saturday is a regression to Judaism and a distortion of the Gospel of grace.
  • The Sabbatarians of his day were simply repeating the Galatian Judaizers’ error putting believers back under the yoke of Mosaic law.
Let that sink in. The very man this video parades as a “reluctant witness” wrote an entire published treatise in 1538 dismantling the very position they claim him for. Luther was not secretly sympathetic to Sabbatarianism. He publicly and in writing opposed it.

This creates a devastating double fallacy: Cherry‑Picking (suppressing Luther’s actual conclusions) and Special Pleading (invoking him only when convenient).


DOUBLE FALLACY: Appeal to Authority + Self-Defeating Appeal

Fallacy 1: Appeal to Authority (Argumentum ad Verecundiam):  

Using Luther’s speculative comment as proof that Sabbatarianism is doctrinally true, as if Luther’s personal authority settles the matter.

Fallacy 2: Self‑Defeating Appeal:
  
The very authority being invoked explicitly published Wider die Sabbather (1538) a treatise arguing against the position being attributed to him. You cannot enlist a man as your witness when that man has, in writing, demolished your entire case.

Analogy: It’s like citing Richard Dawkins marveling at the “breathtaking complexity of biological systems” as proof he believes in intelligent design. Even if a passing remark sounds design‑friendly in isolation, his life’s work is dedicated to the opposite conclusion. You cannot use a stray comment as evidence for a conclusion his entire published career refutes.

Q5: Is Luther’s Speculation About Adam a Doctrinal Proof?

Look closely at the presenter’s own wording about Luther’s statement. The transcript says Luther found it “reasonable to conclude” that “even if man had never fallen into sin, a holy day would still have been observed.” Dissect every phrase:
  • “Reasonable to conclude”: speculation, theological imagination, not grammatico‑historical exegesis. Luther is musing, not citing Scripture.

  • “Even if man had never fallen into sin”: a counterfactual conditional. Luther is describing a hypothetical world, not making a historical claim about Adam.

  • “Would still have been observed”: subjunctive modal. A theological guess, not an exegetical finding.

  • “A holy day”: vague. Not the 24‑hour Saturday Sabbath of Mosaic law. Luther is speaking of natural worship rhythms in an unfallen creation something all Christians affirm not the Sinai ordinance.
The SDA argument takes Luther’s speculative, conditional, and vague theological musing and converts it into a binding doctrinal mandate for New Covenant believers. That’s the fallacy of Equivocation: slipping from “Luther thought some holy day of worship might be natural in Eden” to “therefore the Saturday Sabbath of Mosaic law is eternally binding on all Christians.” Two entirely different claims dressed up in the same vocabulary.

LOGICAL FALLACY: EQUIVOCATION

Definition: Using the same term in two different senses within the same argument, as if they mean the same thing.

Applied here: Luther said that “a holy day” of worship would have been natural in Eden a general principle of consecrated time. The SDA argument then equivocates “a holy day” with “the seventh‑day Saturday Sabbath commanded at Sinai” a specific Mosaic regulation with detailed civil and ceremonial content.

These are not the same. Luther was reflecting on the nature of worship rhythms in creation, not drafting SDA Fundamental Belief No. 20.


THE NEW COVENANT ANSWER: What Actually Governs Christian Worship?

Under New Covenant Theology, the Mosaic covenant is the old covenant administration “obsolete and aging… ready to disappear” (Hebrews 8:13). The Decalogue, as the covenant document of Sinai, what Paul calls “the written code engraved in stone” (2 Corinthians 3:7) functioned as the governing charter of national Israel.

But New Covenant believers are not under the Mosaic covenant as a legal code. We are under the law of Christ (Galatians 6:2; 1 Corinthians 9:21). Ethical norms that carry forward into the New Covenant do so because Christ reinstitutes them not because of their location in the Decalogue, nor because of their pre‑Fall origin.


KEY NEW COVENANT TEXTS ON THE SABBATH (ESV)

Colossians 2:16–17: “Therefore let no one pass judgment on you in questions of food and drink, or with regard to a festival or a new moon or a Sabbath. These are a shadow of the things to come, but the substance belongs to Christ.”

Romans 14:5: “One person esteems one day as better than another, while another esteems all days alike. Each one should be fully convinced in his own mind.”

Hebrews 4:9–11: “So then, there remains a Sabbath rest (sabbatismos — σαββατισμός) for the people of God, for whoever has entered God’s rest has also rested from his works as God did from his. Let us therefore strive to enter that rest…”

Note: The Greek sabbatismos (σαββατισμός) in Hebrews 4:9 is unique used here and nowhere else in the NT. The author is not prescribing a weekly Saturday observance. He is pointing to the eschatological rest believers enter by faith in Christ. The weekly Sabbath was typological a shadow pointing beyond itself to the Substance. Once the Reality has arrived, you don’t cling to the shadow.

The New Testament church’s first‑day worship breaking bread on the first day (Acts 20:7), collecting offerings on the first day (1 Corinthians 16:2), gathering on the Lord’s Day (Revelation 1:10) is not a pagan corruption or Constantinian invention. It is a Spirit‑led, apostolic practice rooted in the new creation inaugurated by Christ’s resurrection on the first day of the week.

We worship on Sunday because Christ rose on Sunday. Every Lord’s Day is a weekly declaration of resurrection faith, and no amount of Luther quotations can overturn that.


THREE CROSS-EXAMINATION QUESTIONS: Questions Every SDA Sabbatarian Must Answer and Cannot

QUESTION #1: The Pre-Fall Diet Test

You argue that the Saturday Sabbath is eternally binding because it was instituted before the Fall a universal creation ordinance predating Israel and Sinai. Fine. Let’s apply that principle consistently.

Genesis 1:29 reads: “I give you every seed‑bearing plant on the face of the whole earth and every tree that has fruit with seed in it they will be yours for food.” This is the pre‑Fall, God‑ordained diet: strictly plant‑based, no meat, established in an unfallen creation, before Moses, before Israel, before Sinai. Same pre‑Fall origin. Same pre‑Moses timeframe. Same Genesis context.

So, by your own hermeneutical rule, are you prepared to declare today that eating meat is sin since the pre‑Fall dietary ordinance carries the exact same logical weight as the pre‑Fall Sabbath? If not, then explain from Scripture why the pre‑Fall Sabbath binds every Christian eternally while the pre‑Fall diet does not.

QUESTION #2: The Luther Witness Reversal

Your entire presentation leans on Martin Luther as a “reluctant witness” a Sunday‑worshiper whose supposed admissions confirm SDA doctrine. But the historical record cuts the other way. In 1538, Luther published Wider die Sabbather “Against the Sabbatarians” where he explicitly argued:
  • Christians are not bound to the Saturday Sabbath.
  • Sabbatarianism is a regression to Judaism.
  • Insisting on Saturday observance for Gentile believers is a fundamental misunderstanding of the Gospel.
The Sabbatarians Luther addressed in 1538 were making the exact same argument you just made in this video.

So, here’s the unavoidable question: Is Luther a reliable witness for your position or against it? If you accept his speculative musings from the Genesis commentary as evidence for Sabbatarianism, are you equally bound to accept his explicit published conclusions in Wider die Sabbather?

You cannot have it both ways. Either Luther is your witness in which case his own treatise demolishes your case or he is not, in which case your entire rhetorical strategy collapses from the opening frame.

QUESTION #3: Show Me One Patriarch

You claim the seventh‑day Sabbath is the most foundational creation ordinance in all of Scripture instituted before sin, before Israel, before Moses, woven into the very fabric of a perfect creation by God Himself. If that’s true, here’s the challenge: show me one verse just one in Genesis where any human being actually observes the seventh‑day Sabbath.

Not Luther speculating. Not an SDA commentator inferring. A recorded instance of a human resting on the seventh day in obedience to a Sabbath command.
  • Abraham kept covenant circumcision: Genesis records it.
  • Noah built an ark in detailed obedience: Genesis records it.
  • Enoch walked with God: Genesis records it.
But where is anyone resting on the seventh day? Genesis spans over 2,000 years of human history, yet never not once records a single person observing the Sabbath.

If this were truly the cornerstone of universal, creation‑based worship, that silence is not just puzzling it’s theologically impossible to explain, unless the Sabbath was not given as a universal human command until Sinai. And that is exactly what the plain reading of Exodus 16 and 20 indicates. The burden of proof is entirely on you.


CONCLUSION

The “Luther admissions” argument may sound rhetorically clever, but it is logically and exegetically hollow. It cherry‑picks Luther’s speculative comment while suppressing his explicit theological conclusion. It rests on a grammatical misreading of Genesis 2:2–3 that ignores the absence of any imperative directed to humanity. It invokes a hermeneutical principle “pre‑Fall = eternally binding” that even its own proponents abandon whenever it becomes inconvenient. And most devastatingly, it parades as its star reluctant witness a man who, in 1538, published an entire treatise (Wider die Sabbather) dismantling the very doctrine they are trying to prove.

The Saturday Sabbath is not the seal of God for New Covenant believers. It is the shadow of something infinitely greater. Christ is the Substance. He is our true Sabbath rest. The weekly Lord’s Day worship of the church from the first century is not apostasy it is resurrection faith, celebrated in time, one Lord’s Day at a time.

“Therefore, let no one pass judgment on you… with regard to a Sabbath. These are a shadow of the things to come, but the substance belongs to Christ.” Colossians 2:16-17 (ESV)

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

INVESTIGATING ADVENTISM Q&A: The Verse That Never Says What Many Think It Says: The Hidden Assumption Behind Genesis 26:5!


 
For generations, one verse has been repeatedly cited as proof that Abraham kept the Ten Commandments long before they were given at Sinai:

"Because Abraham obeyed my voice and kept my charge, my commandments, my statutes, and my laws." (Genesis 26:5)

At first glance, the argument appears compelling. The verse contains words like "commandments," "statutes," and "laws." Since the Ten Commandments are commandments, many conclude that Abraham must have been keeping the Ten Commandments centuries before Moses.

But there is a problem. The text never says that.

And once we carefully examine the passage in its context, an astonishing reality emerges: Genesis 26:5 cannot legitimately be used as proof that Abraham kept the Ten Commandments.

The Argument Everyone Assumes

The reasoning usually goes like this:

1.   Genesis 26:5 says Abraham kept God's commandments.

2.   The Ten Commandments are God's commandments.

3.   Therefore, Abraham kept the Ten Commandments.

It sounds logical. But it contains a hidden assumption. The passage never identifies which commandments Abraham kept. To assume "commandments" automatically means "the Ten Commandments" is to import information into the text that the text itself never provides. This is not interpretation. It is assumption.

The Fatal Question

If Genesis 26:5 proves Abraham kept the Ten Commandments, then which of those Ten Commandments did God actually give Abraham? Where is the passage?

Where did God tell Abraham:

·     Remember the Sabbath day?

·     Do not make graven images?

·     Honor your father and mother?

No such commands are ever recorded. The biblical narrative gives us numerous commands God gave Abraham:

·     Leave your country.

·     Go to a land I will show you.

·     Walk before me.

·     Be circumcised.

·     Offer Isaac.

These commands are explicitly recorded. The Ten Commandments are not. The burden of proof belongs to the person claiming Abraham received them. Genesis 26:5 never states that he did.

What the Context Actually Points To

Look at Abraham's life. Again and again, God gave him specific instructions. Abraham obeyed. That is precisely the emphasis of Genesis. The story repeatedly highlights Abraham's faith-driven obedience to God's direct commands. The chapter itself is not discussing Sinai. It is not discussing tablets of stone. It is not discussing Israel's covenant at Mount Sinai. It is looking backward at Abraham's faithful response to God's voice. The verse explains why God's promises continue through Abraham's descendants. The focus is Abraham's obedience. Not a legal code that would not be formally revealed for centuries.

The Language Proves Too Much

There is another problem. Genesis 26:5 uses several terms:

·     Charge

·     Commandments

·     Statutes

·     Laws

If someone insists these words refer to the entire Mosaic legal system, then a massive difficulty appears. The Mosaic system included:

·     Levitical priesthood

·     Sacrifices regulated by law

·     Feast days

·     Ritual purity regulations

·     Tabernacle regulations

·     Civil legislation

Did Abraham keep all of those too? Obviously not. The priesthood did not exist. The tabernacle did not exist. The Sinai covenant had not been established. The nation of Israel did not yet exist.

Therefore, these words cannot automatically mean the complete Mosaic legal code. Instead, they function as broad descriptions of God's instructions and requirements. In other words, Abraham obeyed whatever God commanded him. That is the point.

The Surprising Parallel

Consider a simple example. Suppose a father tells his son:

"Your grandfather always obeyed my instructions, my commands, my rules, and my expectations."

Would anyone conclude that the grandfather obeyed every instruction the father would later give to future generations? Of course not. The statement simply means the grandfather faithfully obeyed what had been revealed to him. That is exactly how Genesis 26:5 functions. The verse praises Abraham's obedience. It does not define the content of every command God would reveal centuries later.

The Missing Sabbath Problem

One commandment in particular creates enormous difficulty for the claim that Abraham kept the Ten Commandments. The Sabbath command. Genesis contains extensive narratives about Abraham's life. Yet there is not a single passage describing Abraham observing a weekly Sabbath. Not one. There are descriptions of journeys, altars, sacrifices, covenant ceremonies, family events, and major acts of obedience. But no Sabbath observance.

If Sabbath observance were central to Abraham's covenant relationship, the silence is remarkable. The argument depends not on what Genesis says, but on what readers assume must have happened. Yet assumptions cannot serve as evidence.

The Sinai Factor

The Ten Commandments entered biblical history as the covenant document given to Israel at Sinai. The biblical narrative repeatedly connects them with that covenant event. The commandments were written on stone tablets and delivered to a nation that had just been redeemed from Egypt. That historical setting matters. To move the Ten Commandments back into Abraham's life requires evidence. Genesis 26:5 is often presented as that evidence. But the verse simply does not say what is needed.

  • It never mentions tablets.
  • It never mentions Sinai.
  • It never mentions the covenant code.
  • It never mentions the Sabbath.
  • It never mentions the Ten Commandments.

The entire argument rests on reading those concepts into the text.

What Genesis 26:5 Actually Teaches

The true beauty of Genesis 26:5 is often missed. The verse is not celebrating Abraham's relationship to a legal code. It is celebrating Abraham's response to God's voice. Abraham trusted God. God spoke. Abraham obeyed. That is the theme running through his entire story. His obedience flowed from faith. When God called, Abraham followed. When God promised, Abraham believed. When God commanded, Abraham obeyed. Genesis 26:5 is a summary of that faithful life. Nothing more is required. And nothing more should be inserted.

The Conclusion That Changes Everything

Genesis 26:5 certainly teaches that Abraham obeyed God. No serious reader should deny that. But the verse does not identify those commands as the Ten Commandments. It does not place Abraham under the Sinai covenant before Sinai existed.

It does not establish Sabbath observance before the command was given to Israel. It does not prove the Mosaic law was already operating in Abraham's day. What it proves is far simpler. Abraham obeyed the revelation God gave him. That is the actual point of the text.

The moment that distinction is recognized, Genesis 26:5 ceases to be a proof-text for the claim that Abraham kept the Ten Commandments. Instead, it stands as a powerful testimony to something even greater: A man who trusted God so deeply that whenever God spoke, he obeyed.

APOLOGETICS BIBLE STUDY Q&A: “Matthew 10:5–6 vs Acts 18:6: Inutos ba ni Jesus na sa Israel lang mangaral?”


APOLOGETICS BIBLE STUDY Q&A: “Matthew 10:5–6 vs Acts 18:6: Inutos ba ni Jesus na sa Israel lang mangaral?”


"Ang labingdalawang ito'y sinugo ni Jesus, at sila'y pinagbilinan, na sinasabi, Huwag kayong magsitungo sa alin mang daan ng mga Gentil, at huwag kayong magsipasok sa alin mang bayan ng mga taga Samaria: Kundi bagkus magsiparoon kayo sa mga tupang nangawaglit sa bahay ni Israel.
(Mat 10:5-6 Tagalog AB)

"At nang sila'y magsitutol at magsipamusong, ay ipinagpag niya ang kaniyang kasuotan at sa kanila'y sinabi, Ang inyong dugo'y sumainyong sariling mga ulo: ako'y malinis: buhat ngayo'y paparoon ako sa mga Gentil." (Act 18:6 Tagalog AB)

Q: Sabi sa Mateo 10:5-6, pinagbawalan ni Jesus ang mga apostol na pumunta sa mga Hentil. Pero sa Gawa 18:6, ang sabi ni Pablo, "Mula ngayo'y sa mga Hentil na ako mangangaral." Contradiction ba ito o pagbabago ng utos?

A: Napakagandang tanong! Ang maikling sagot: Hindi ito contradiction. Ito ay tinatawag nating Progressive Revelation at Dispensation of the Gospel (yung pag-unlad ng plano ng kaligtasan).

Upang malinaw ito, kailangan nating tingnan ang konteksto:

The "To the Jew First" Principle:

Noong panahong iyon sa Mateo 10, ang Earthly Ministry pa lang ni Jesus. Ang mensahe ng Kaharian ng Diyos ay kailangang ihatid muna sa Israel (the lost sheep). Bakit? Dahil sila ang may tipan (covenant) sa Diyos. Sila ang "panganay" sa pananampalataya. Ayon sa New Covenant Theology, kailangan munang matupad ang mga propesiya sa Israel bago ito tuluyang sumabog sa buong mundo.

The Great Commission (The Shift):

Pagkatapos ng resurrection ni Jesus (Mateo 28:19-20), binago na Niya ang utos. Hindi na lang Israel; "Gawin ninyong alagad ang lahat ng bansa."

"Dahil dito magsiyaon nga kayo, at gawin ninyong mga alagad ang lahat ng mga bansa, na sila'y inyong bautismuhan sa pangalan ng Ama at ng Anak at ng Espiritu Santo: Na ituro ninyo sa kanila na kanilang ganapin ang lahat ng mga bagay na iniutos ko sa inyo: at narito, ako'y sumasa inyong palagi, hanggang sa katapusan ng sanglibutan." (Mat 28:19-20 Tagalog AB)

Ang utos sa Mateo 10 ay limitado sa panahon at misyon na iyon, pero ang utos sa dulo ng Mateo ay para sa susunod na panahon (ang panahon ng Simbahan).

Paul’s Specific Calling (The Apostle to the Gentiles):

Si Pablo ay tinawag ng Diyos para maging Apostle to the Gentiles (Mga Taga-Roma 11:13).

"Datapuwa't nagsasalita ako sa inyong mga Gentil. Palibasa'y ako nga'y apostol ng mga Gentil, ay niluluwalhati ko ang aking ministerio." (Rom 11:13 Tagalog AB)

Nang sabihin niya sa Gawa 18:6 na "sa mga Hentil na ako mangangaral," hindi niya kinokontra si Jesus. Sa katunayan, sinusunod niya ang Great Commission na inutos ni Jesus na dalhin ang Ebanghelyo sa "dulo ng daigdig."

Summary: Ang utos sa Mateo 10 ay seasonal (para sa partikular na oras ng ministeryo ni Jesus). Ang utos sa Gawa 18 ay ang fulfillment ng misyon ni Jesus para sa buong mundo. Hindi nagbago ang utos ng Diyos; nag-unfold lang ang Kanyang plano. Ang Gospel ay para sa lahat, pero ang pagdating nito ay may pagkakasunod-sunod "una sa mga Judio, at gayundin sa mga Hentil."

"At ipangaral sa kaniyang pangalan ang pagsisisi at pagpapatawad ng mga kasalanan sa lahat ng mga bansa, magbuhat sa Jerusalem."(Luk 24:47 Tagalog AB)

"Datapuwa't tatanggapin ninyo ang kapangyarihan, pagdating sa inyo ng Espiritu Santo: at kayo'y magiging mga saksi ko sa Jerusalem, at sa buong Judea at Samaria, at hanggang sa kahulihulihang hangganan ng lupa." (Act 1:8 Tagalog AB)

Samakatuwid, hindi ito contradiction. Ito ay tinatawag nating Progressive Revelation. Progressive: Hindi ibig sabihin na mali ang nauna, kundi partial; at ang bago ay fuller and clearer. Sa Biblia, ang Diyos ay hindi agad ibinuhos ang lahat ng katotohanan sa isang bagsak. Sa halip, Siya ay nagbigay ng kaalaman unti‑unti, hakbang‑hakbang, ayon sa panahon at pangangailangan ng Kanyang bayan.

Kaya kung may tila “contradiction” sa mga pahayag ng Diyos sa iba’t ibang panahon, hindi talaga ito contradiction. Ito ay development ng revelation mula sa shadow patungo sa substance, mula sa pangako patungo sa katuparan, mula sa partial patungo sa complete.

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