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| ==Endnotes== | | ==Endnotes== |
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| We believe the Lords day (Rev. 1:10) to be the first
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| day of the week. Ignatius, who sat at the feet of John
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| the Apostle, understood what the Lords day meant in
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| Johns book of Revelations. He said " “if, then, those
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| who walked in ancient customs came to a
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| new hope, no longer sabbathing, but living by the
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| Lords day, on which we came to life through
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| Him and through his death....”
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| He makes a distinction between "sabbathing" and the
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| "Lords day". This was centuries before Constantine.
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| He goes on to say “let every friend of Christ keep the
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| Lord’s Day as a festival, the
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| resurrection-day, the queen and chief of all the days
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| [of the week]. Looking forward to this, the
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| prophet declared, “To the end, for the eighth day,”
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| on which our life both sprang up again, and the
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| victory over death was obtained in Christ, whom the
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| children of perdition, the enemies of the
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| Saviour, deny, “whose god is their belly, who mind
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| earthly things,” (Phil. 3:18-19) who are “lovers
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| of pleasure, and not lovers of God, having a form of
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| godliness, but denying the power thereof,” (2
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| Tim. 3:4) These make merchandise for Christ,
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| corrupting His word, and giving up Jesus to sale; they
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| are corrupters of women, and covetous of other mens
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| possessions, swallowing up wealth insatiably;
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| from whom may ye be delivered by the mercy of God
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| through our Lord Jesus Christ! (Ante-Nicene
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| Fathers 1:63, Ignatius to the Magnesians)
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| Here he gives a little more detail on the Lords day.
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| It is the eighth day, or the first day of the week,
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| and can be understood in Justin Martyrs teachings as
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| such:
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| “The command of circumcision, again, bidding [them]
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| always circumcise the
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| children on the eighth day, was a type of the true
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| circumcision, by which we are circumcised from
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| deceit and iniquity through Him who rose from the
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| dead on the first day after the Sabbath, [namely
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| through] our Lord Jesus Christ. For the first day
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| after the Sabbath, remaining the first of all the days
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| , is called, however, the eighth, according to the
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| number of all the days of the cycle, and [yet]
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| remains the first.” (Ante-Nicene Fathers 1:215, chap
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| 41, Dialogue with Trypho)
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|
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|
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| Justin the Martyr (100-165 A.D.), also a renown
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| Christian of the day who was a disciple of
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| Polycarp, a disciple of the Apostle John. Hence he
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| lived, wrote and suffered martyrdom within a
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| generation of the apostles, writes in his first
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| apology “the day of the sun is the day on which we all
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| gather in a common meeting, because it is the first
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| day, the day on which God, changing darkness
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| and matter, created the world; and it is the day on
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| which Jesus Christ our Savior rose from the dead
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| for He was crucified on the day before that of
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| “kronos” (Greek counter part of the Roman god
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| Saturn which is where Saturday gets its name); and on
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| the day after that of “kronos”, which is the
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| day of the sun (Sunday), He appeared to His Apostles
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| and disciples, and taught them these things
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| which we have also submitted to you for your
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| consideration.”
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| He also taught “and on the day called Sunday, all who
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| live in cities or in the country
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| gather together in to one place, and the memoirs of
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| the Apostles or the writings of the Prophets
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| are read as long as time permits; then when the reader
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| has ceased, the President verbally instructs
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| and exhorts to imitation of these good things” (Justin
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| Martyr, First Apology, chap. 67, Ante-Nicene
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| Fathers 1:186)
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| Here, Justin points out that Christians worshipped on
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| Sunday.
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|
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| He also says : “But Sunday is the day on which we all
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| hold our common assembly, because it
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| is the first day on which God, having wrought a
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| change in the darkness and matter, made the world;
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| and Jesus Christ our Saviour on the same day rose
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| from the dead. For He was crucified on the day
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| before that of Saturn (Saturday); and on the day
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| after that of Saturn, which is the day of the Sun,
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| having appeared to His apostles and disciples, He
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| taught them these things, which we have
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| submitted to you also for your consideration.”
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| (Ante-Nicene Fathers 1:186, chap. 67, First Apology
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| of Justin)
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| The Epistle of Barnabas which purports to have been
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| written by Barnabas, Paul's
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| missionary companion, reads, "Lastly he says to them,
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| I cannot stand your new moons and your
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| Sabbaths. Consider what he means by it: the Sabbaths,
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| he says, that you now keep are not
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| acceptable to me, but only those which I have made,
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| when resting from all things I shall begin the
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| eighth day, that is, the beginning of the other
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| world." Wherefore, also, we keep the eighth day with
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| joyfulness, the day also on which Jesus rose
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| again from the dead. And when He had manifested
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| Himself, He ascended into the heavens. (Epistle
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| of Barnabas, chap. 15, Ante Nicene Fathers, 1:147)
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|
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| St. Augustine (354-430 A.D.) says again in his sermon
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| 251 de temp. “the Apostles
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| decreed that Sunday must be kept holy” and “every
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| lover of Christ celebrates the Lords day,
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| consecrated to the resurrection of Christ, as the
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| queen and chief of all days.”
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|
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| Dr. Adam Clark, in his Commentary treating Revelation
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| 1: 10, says: "'The Lord's day' the
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| first day of the week, observed as the Christian
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| sabbath, because on it Jesus Christ rose from the
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| dead: therefore it was called the Lords day; and has
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| taken place of the Jewish sabbath,
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| throughout the Christian world."
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| Dr. Thomas Scott, in his Commentary dealing with this
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| same verse, says: "This was 'on the
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| Lord's day' which can be meant of no other, than the
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| day on which the Lord Jesus arose from the
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| dead, even "the first day of the week": and it is
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| conclusive proof, that the first day was set apart,
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| and
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| kept holy, by the primitive Christians, in
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| commemoration of the great event: for on what
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| other account could it have been thus mentioned!"
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| In the Commentary of Jameson, Fausett, and Brown on
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| this same passage this is recorded: ".
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| . . on the Lords day--Though forcibly detained from
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| Church communion with the brethren in the
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| sanctuary on the Lord's day, the weekly commemoration
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| of the resurrection, John was holding
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| spiritual communion with them. This is the earliest
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| mention of the term 'the Lord's day!' But the
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| consecration of the day to worship, almsgiving, and
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| the Lord's supper, is implied, Acts 20:7;
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| One- Corinthians 16:2, cf. John 20:19-26. The name
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| corresponds to 'the Lord's supper,' One-
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| Corinthians 11:20. Ignatius seems to allude to 'the
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| Lord's day' (ad. Magnes, 9) and Irenaeus in the
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| Quaest. ad Orthod. 115 (in Justin Martyr). Justin
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| Martyr Apology 2:98 &c. 'On Sunday we hold
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| our joint meeting; for the first day is that on which
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| God, having removed darkness and chaos,
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| made the world, and Jesus Christ our Savior rose from
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| the dead. On the day before Saturday
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| they crucified Him, and on the day after Saturday,
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| which is Sunday, having appeared to His
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| apostles and disciples, he taught these things.' To
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| the Lord's day Pliny doubtless refers (Ex 97, B
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| 10), 'The Christians on a fixed day before dawn meet
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| and sing a hymn to Christ as God.'"
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| In the Didache which was
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| written around 140 A.D. it says “on the Lords day of
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| the Lord gather together, break bread and
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| give thanks, after confessing your transgressions so
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| that your sacrifice may be pure.” Again, on
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| the Lords day, Sunday, you want to gather together and
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| have a sacrament meeting. Now the
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| redundancy of “the Lords day of the Lord” in Greek
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| indicates that the term “Lords day” had
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| already become a common usage for Sunday, so much so
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| that it is now used as a distinct term
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| apart from its root meaning.
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|
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| The Roman historians, Suetonius and Pliny, who lived
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| and wrote in the first centuries of the
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| Christian era, during the bloody martyr ages, are
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| good witnesses in this problem. As they were
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| neither Christians nor Jews, but heathens, and not
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| concerned in the controversy in any respect,
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| their incidental historic testimony is unimpeachable.
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| They certify, in their simple accounts of the
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| Christian martyrdom, that when persons were arrested
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| on suspicion that they were Christians,
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| tried and put to death under the imperial edict
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| prescribing all the Christians and interdicting their
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| worship on penalty of death, their persecutors
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| propounded to them the question: "Dominicum
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| servaste?" — "Hast thou kept the Lord's day?" The
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| Christian responded: "Christianus sum" — "I
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| am a Christian." "Intermittere non possum" — "I can
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| not omit it." Then they proceeded with the
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| bloody work of death.
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| It is a well-known fact that the Jewish Sabbath never
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| was called "the Lord's day," but simply
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| "the Sabbath day." If the primitive Christians had
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| kept the seventh day, they would have been asked:
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| "Sabbaticum servaste?" — "Hast thou kept the Sabbath
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| day?" But this question never was asked by
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| their persecutors. It is utter folly to deny that the
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| Lord's day was kept from the Apostolic age.
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| It is a significant fact that the day
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| of Pentecost, upon which day the apostles received
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| their spiritual endowment by the outpouring of the
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| Holy Ghost, “that year fell on the first day of the
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| week.” Or Sunday. (see Smiths Bible Dictionary,
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| Hackett and Abbott’s edition, vol. 2: art. Lords day,
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| p. 1677. Also Bramhall’s work, vol. 5: p. 51, Oxford
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| ed., Discourse on the Sabbath and the Lords day) “and
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| when the day of Pentecost was fully come, they were
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| all with one accord in place.”
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| It is very possible that all the believers were in
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| "one place" was because they were worshipping
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| together.
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| While the Old Testament does refer to the Sabbath
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| many, many times, it is just that, the Old Testament.
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| Laws, worship, and teachings were considerably
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| different then. As Hebrews 7:12 says "For the
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| priesthood being changed, there is made of necessity a
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| change also of the law." We know that the Priesthood,
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| Temple worship, worship in general, and law was
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| changed when Christ came. Now the change in law, spoke
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| about in Hebrews, would include the Sabbath as well,
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| it being part of the law.
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| Also, if we did keep the sabbath spoken about in the
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| Old Testament, would also have to keep the seventh
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| month of every year, and the seventh year as sabbaths
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| also. In the seventh year, the fields which you grew,
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| was to be left to the poor, and the beasts of the
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| field. You were to release all debts in this self
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| same year. You were also to prepare all food the
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| evening before the sabbath. We would be put to death
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| for breaking the Sabbath (Ex. 31:14-17), wouldn't be
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| able to kindle a fire on the sabbath (Ex 35:3). It is
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| not the same sabbath spoken about in the Old
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| Testament.
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|
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| Acts 20:7 reads "And upon the first day of the week,
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| when the disciples came together to break bread, Paul
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| preached unto them, ready to depart on the morrow; and
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| continued his speech until midnight."
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|
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| On Sunday, a group of followers of Christ gathered
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| together in a house (where Church meetings were held
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| in those days), where bread was broken (a term used
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| for the sacrament (1 Corinthians 11:24), while a
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| Church leader teaches of Christ. This sounds like a
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| Church meeting held on the Sabbath
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