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- The Life Of Jesus Christ In Its Historical Connexion
- Section 144. The Pharisees Accuse Christ Of Sabbath Breaking And Blasphemy.--His Justification. (John, V., 10, 17-19.)
Section 144. The Pharisees accuse Christ of Sabbath-breaking and Blasphemy.--His Justification. (John, v., 10, 17-19.)
In his justification, Christ struck at the root of the first error, viz., the carnal notion that the sanctity of the Sabbath was founded solely upon God's resting after the work of creation, as if his creative labours were then commenced and ended; and points out, on the other hand, the ever-continuing activity of God as the ground of all being -- my Father worketh hitherto, and I work. [380] ("As He never ceases to work, so do I work unceasingly for the salvation of men.") He rejects the narrow limits which their contracted view of the law of the Sabbath would assign to his healing labours, which were to go on uninterruptedly. Nor did he lower his tone in regard to the relations which he sustained to his Heavenly Father because his opponents charged him with claiming, by his words, Divine dignity and authority. On the contrary, he strengthened his assertions, taking care only to guard against their being perverted into a depreciation of the Father's dignity, by declaring that he laboured in unity with the Father, and in dependence upon him. "The Son," said he, "can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father do." (He would have to deny himself as the Son of God, before he could act contrary to the will and example of the Father.)