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The Everlasting Relevance of the Sabbath

Is the seventh-day Sabbath a relic, or is it an end-time call to worship the Creator?

Some consider the Sabbath a vestige of the Old Testament dispensation; others see it as a cultural practice of the Jewish people, while secular people tend to ignore it altogether. Most of those who respect the concept of a God-centered day of rest keep Sunday; only a small minority keep the biblical seventh-day Sabbath, the fourth of the Ten Commandments.

The Everlasting Relevance of the Sabbath shows from the Bible that the seventhday Sabbath has a rich and permanent meaning as a memorial of Creation and God’s gift of holy time to humanity. Moreover, as a moral imperative from God, it will play a major role in earth’s final events.

Notes

Bible Study

US$15.99

Paperback, 128 pages 9780816368938

Promo Blurb

The Everlasting Relevance of the Sabbath shows from the Bible that the seventh-day Sabbath has a rich and permanent meaning as a memorial of Creation and God’s gift of holy time to humanity. Moreover, as a moral imperative from God, it will play a major role in earth’s final events.

Bruce Wolpin is an avid student of the Bible and biblical prophecy. He was born in a secular Jewish home and became a Seventh-day Adventist at the age of 21. He served in the area of finance for almost 23 years in Hong Kong and Thailand. He is married and the father of three children.

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