The Sabbath and its Lord
Mark 2:27-28
And he said to them, The sabbath was made for man, and not man for the sabbath:…


"The Sabbath was made for man" — not for the Jews only — not a mere ceremonial observance for the time; but of universal obligation; made for man when man was made.

I. "The Sabbath was made for man" as a WORKING man. It is a simple fact in medical science, that the human frame is not made so as to bear up under constant labour without rest. He can no more do it than he can live under water; it is contrary to nature; and the consequence will be premature decay; the frame will break down and wear out before its time. This is a simple fact in science. Besides, labour is God's appointment, His wholesome and needful law. But did He mean us to bear the drudgery of ceaseless toil? How wretched, how degrading, how brutalizing! And God has not appointed it: "Six days shalt thou labour." But on this head I need say no more; those admirable Essays by Working Men, which ought to be in everybody's hands, and which so vividly portray the experience of those who have kept the Sabbath, exhaust this part of the subject.

II. "The Sabbath was made for man," as a social being. What is God's great instrument for promoting the temporal good of His creatures? It is the family tie. What is the great stimulant to exertion? What the great safeguard, what the great cordial of life — speaking of mere human things, I mean? It is to be found in the word "home." My experience as a gaol chaplain convinces me that the great cause of crime arises from the breach of the fourth and fifth commandments. Let but the family tie be rent asunder, and society falls to pieces. And how can this be maintained without a Sabbath? The observation of an omnibus conductor the other day sets this in a striking light: "Sir, I am at work every Sunday, all the day, as well as on week days, and I hardly know the face of my own children." Then what must become of those children? And why should they be deprived of a father's care, and he of his children's love? And how has God provided against such a danger? "The Sabbath was made for man." Then the various members of the family, scattered through the week, are once more united; the mutual feelings of affection are elicited; they are excited to seek each other's welfare, and to value each other's good opinion and esteem; and, short of the power of God's grace, there is no bond half so strong, no security half so certain, that they will fill up their places as good members of society. I constantly meet with those who are lost to every other feeling of shame but this.

III. "The Sabbath was made for man," as a SPIRITUAL being. Earthly things must not engross all the time and thought of man. God interposes, "The seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God."

IV. But it is not enough to offer man the blessing — it is made imperative; it is confirmed by the sanction which is added, "The Son of Man is Lord also of the Sabbath." Jesus is the Lord of the Sabbath, the Proprietor of it, the Owner of it, the Master of it. It is His. It was made for man, but never given to man. The six days were given to man — the seventh never was. He is "the Lord" of it. It is at His disposal, not at yours, nor any man's, nor any body of men, however great or powerful. "Will a man rob God?" Yes. If he apply to his own purposes that which does not belong to him, what is it? Robbery. You have no right over another's Sabbaths; you have no right over your own. It is the Lord's day. It is for Him to say how the day shall be spent; and man has no more the right to alienate that day from the service of God to his own service than he has to appropriate his neighbour's property or despoil him of his honour for his own behoof. The Sabbath is not man's, but the Lord's, and you can't repeal that law, no more than you can change the laws of motion or reverse the force of gravity. You may arrest it for a time, but it will prevail at last; the laws of God execute themselves, you cannot make them inoperative and null.

V. "The Son of Man is the Lord of the Sabbath" — the JUDGE to punish the breach of it. Nothing is more certain than that this is one of the sins which He especially requires at the hands of men. We know it from His dealings with Israel; Jeremiah is full of such declarations; so are many of the other prophets; to refer only to one, Ezekiel 20:13, 16, 21, 24. He is the Lord — the Judge — to vindicate His own law. And why? First, Sabbath breaking is a deliberate sin. And then Sabbath breaking is (if I may coin such an expression) a fundamental sin. It goes to the root of all godliness; an habitual Sabbath breaker cannot have any true religion. It opens the door of his heart wide to Satan.

VI. "The Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath" — TO DIRECT THE MODE of its observance. It is the Lord's day — the Lord who died for us. He claims it, to be devoted to His service and consecrated to His honour.

VII. And is it not the Lord's day? — the day on which He specially MANIFESTS HIMSELF to His people; when He invites them to draw water with joy out of the wells of salvation.

(J. Cohen, M. A.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: And he said unto them, The sabbath was made for man, and not man for the sabbath:

WEB: He said to them, "The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.




The Sabbath a Service to the State
Top of Page
Top of Page