
Are We Profaning the Sabbath?
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This episode of Out of the Question explores how Christians often misunderstand or mishandle the Fourth Commandment concerning the Sabbath, reducing it to a list of rules rather than seeing it as a divine gift of rest and dependence on God. Andrea Schwartz and Pastor Charles Roberts discuss how profaning God’s name or His Sabbath stems from treating what is sacred with irreverence, and how both the Old and New Testaments emphasize the Sabbath’s deeper purpose—resting in God’s provision rather than human self-sufficiency. They draw from Scripture, the catechisms, and R. J. Rushdoony’s Institutes of Biblical Law to explain that the Sabbath was not originally a day of worship but of rest, later expanded in meaning through Christ. Violating the Sabbath was a serious offense because it symbolized rebellion against God’s created order, while obedience brought blessing and life.
The hosts reflect on how earlier generations, guided by “blue laws” and a communal sense of sacred time, recognized the Sabbath’s importance in ways largely lost today. They contrast that historical reverence with modern society’s busyness and self-determination, which have eroded any sense of true rest. The conversation connects Sabbath principles to stewardship, economics, and even ecology—extending rest to families, servants, animals, and the land itself. Ultimately, they argue that rediscovering the Sabbath’s meaning is crucial for Christians today: not as legalistic restraint, but as a joyful acknowledgment of God’s sovereignty and care. Profaning the Sabbath, they conclude, is not just breaking a rule—it is severing oneself from the rhythm of creation and the blessings God intends for His people.