- The Non Sequitur (It does not follow): The SDA argument assumes that because Jesus mentioned the Sabbath as a hindrance to fleeing, He was commanding its moral observance. That is a massive leap in logic. Recognizing a barrier is not the same as validating it as a New Covenant command.
- The Anachronism: Projecting 19th-century SDA theology (such as the future "Sunday Law" eschatology) back into a 1st-century text written specifically for Jews living in Judea.
- The Equivocation: Confusing a localized, historical warning about physical safety with a universal, moral imperative for Christian worship.
- The Geography: Just four verses earlier, Jesus sets the strict geographic boundary of this prophecy: "Then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains" (Matthew 24:16). Judea was a Jewish province. This isn't a global warning; it’s a regional evacuation order.
- The Target Audience: Matthew’s Gospel was written specifically for a Jewish-Christian audience. That is why Matthew includes the detail about the Sabbath. Interestingly, in Mark’s parallel account (Mark 13:18), which was written for a Gentile audience in Rome, the word "Sabbath" is completely missing. He only mentions winter.
"Pray that this will not take place in winter," Mark 13:18(NIV)
If Sabbath observance were a universal New Covenant standard for all Christians, Mark's omission of it would be a glaring, unacceptable error.
- The Winter Clause: Is Jesus instituting a moral command against winter? Of course not. Winter in Judea brought heavy rains, flooded wadis, and impassable roads. It was a practical logistical nightmare for escaping a siege.
“For the valleys being flooded by the rains, and the wadis swollen, the roads became impassable, and those who attempted to escape were either swept away or captured.” (Josephus – The Jewish War V.1–3)
“The rains are a blessing, yet they come down in torrents, filling the wadis and hindering the traveler.” (Herbert Danby, The Mishnah (Oxford, 1933), p. 200)What these quotes show us is that Jesus’ warning about winter in Matthew 24:20 wasn't about breaking a moral law, but about facing a very real physical danger. Both Josephus and the rabbis point out that winters in Judea meant intense rainstorms, overflowing wadis, and muddy roads that you simply couldn't travel on. Because of this, trying to flee during a siege would have been nearly impossible to survive.
- The Sabbath Clause: The exact same logic applies to the Sabbath. In 1st-century Judea, the gates of walled cities were locked on the Sabbath (Nehemiah 13:19).
"When evening shadows fell on the gates of Jerusalem before the Sabbath, I ordered the doors to be shut and not opened until the Sabbath was over. I stationed some of my own men at the gates so that no load could be brought in on the Sabbath day." Nehemiah 13:19(NIV)
Furthermore, strict Rabbinic laws limited a "Sabbath day's journey" to roughly 2,000 cubits, or about 1 kilometer (Acts 1:12).
"Then the apostles returned to Jerusalem from the hill called the Mount of Olives, a Sabbath day’s walk from the city." Acts 1:12(NIV)
If you tried to flee a besieged city on a Saturday, you would face locked gates, hostile Jewish zealots enforcing travel bans, and insurmountable social obstacles. Jesus wasn't telling them to keep the Sabbath; He was warning them that the deeply ingrained Old Covenant culture of Judea would get them killed if they had to run on that day.
- The Jerusalem Council (50 AD): Roughly 20 years before the 70 AD destruction, the apostles convened in Acts 15 to settle the issue of the Law. Guided by the Holy Spirit, they ruled that Gentile believers were not bound by the yoke of the Mosaic Law (Acts 15:28-29).
"It seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us not to burden you with anything beyond the following requirements: You are to abstain from food sacrificed to idols, from blood, from the meat of strangled animals, and from sexual immorality. You will do well to avoid these things." Acts 15:28-29(NIV)
If the apostles settled this in 50 AD, it is completely illogical to claim Jesus was enforcing it for all Christians in 70 AD.
- The End of the Law: The New Testament is clear. Christ is the "end of the law for righteousness to everyone who believes" (Romans 10:4).
"For Christ is the end of the Law [the limit at which it ceases to be, for the Law leads up to Him Who is the fulfillment of its types, and in Him the purpose which it was designed to accomplish is fulfilled. That is, the purpose of the Law is fulfilled in Him] as the means of righteousness (right relationship to God) for everyone who trusts in and adheres to and relies on Him." Romans 10:4(AMP)
Paul specifically commands the church:
"Therefore let no one sit in judgment on you in matters of food and drink, or with regard to a feast day or a New Moon or a Sabbath. Such [things] are only the shadow of things that are to come, and they have only a symbolic value. But the reality (the substance, the solid fact of what is foreshadowed, the body of it) belongs to Christ." Colossians 2:16-17(AMP)
“But the people of the church in Jerusalem had been commanded by an oracle given by revelation before the war to those in the city who were worthy of it to depart and dwell in one of the cities of Perea which they called Pella. To it those who believed in Christ migrated from Jerusalem, so that when holy men had altogether deserted the royal city and the whole land of Judaea, the judgment of God at last overtook them for their crimes against Christ and his apostles, and totally destroyed that generation of impious men.” (Eusebius of Caesarea, Ecclesiastical History 3.5.3)
If a Sabbatarian tries to use Matthew 24:20 to bind your conscience, gently ask them these three questions:
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“Freed by the Gospel. Firm in the Word.”
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