6. He that regardeth the day, regardeth it to the Lord--the Lord
CHRIST, as before.
and he . . . not, to the Lord he doth not--each doing what he believes
to be the Lord's will.
He that earth, eateth to the Lord, for he giveth God thanks; and he
that eateth not, to the Lord he eateth not, and giveth God thanks--The
one gave thanks to God for the flesh which the other scrupled to use;
the other did the same for the herbs to which, for conscience' sake, he
restricted himself. From this passage about the observance of days,
ALFORD unhappily infers that such language could not have been used if
the sabbath law had been in force under the Gospel in any form.
Certainly it could not, if the sabbath were merely one of the Jewish
festival days; but it will not do to take this for granted merely
because it was observed under the Mosaic economy. And certainly, if
the sabbath was more ancient than Judaism; if, even under Judaism, it
was enshrined among the eternal sanctities of the Decalogue, uttered, as
no other parts of Judaism were, amidst the terrors of Sinai; and if the
Lawgiver Himself said of it when on earth, "The Son of man is
LORD EVEN OF THE SABBATH DAY"
(see
Mr 2:28)
--it will be hard to show that the apostle must have meant it to be
ranked by his readers among those vanished Jewish festival days, which
only "weakness" could imagine to be still in force--a weakness which
those who had more light ought, out of love, merely to bear with.
JFB.
Picture Study Bible