Sunday as the Lords day is no where in the Scriptures, it is a man-made holiday leading people to break one of God’s commandments.
You can believe what you want but, it shows otherwise. Just because you say so is not a good argument.
More logical fallacies - begging the question, ad hominem attack, etc.
The fact is you made an argument from nomenclature and you suppressed evidence, such as the words for Saturday in Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Tamil and other ancient languages, which look nothing like the word Sabbath, and in other cases tried to pass off words related to the Indo-European root word for “Seven” such as the Old Persian word meaning ‘Seventh Day” as referring to the Sabbath, and this argument is non-sustainable.
Using the same logic, I can claim that we should worship exclusively on Sunday (I don’t make this claim; I observe the Sabbath and the Lord’s Day since on these days our Lord reposed in the Tomb and rose from the dead, and believe in unceasing prayer) because only it is called The Lord’s Day in most of the languages you used as examples, including Greek, Coptic, Latin, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Russian, Polish, etc.
Regardless, what did God say on the subject as if there is any greater Authority than He.
The Sabbath is the only day God both gave a name and a number
the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God Exo 20:10 written and spoken personally by our Holy Creator. Can’t date further back than Creation Gen 2:1-3 Exo 20:11
Christ our True God, by whom all things made, created the universe on the first day, created and recreated mankind on the sixth day on the Cross, rested on the seventh, in the Tomb, and rose from the dead on the Eighth Day, the First Day of the next week, which also represents the life of the world to com. Let there be light!
Sunday as the Lords day is no where in the Scriptures, it is a man-made holiday leading people to break one of God’s commandments.
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No, because Christ our God rose from the dead on the Lord’s Day and on that same day the Disciples were worshipping at the third hour on Pentecost when the God the Holy Spirit descended upon them.
This is a scriptural fact. It is also a scriptural fact that St. Paul tells us to not allow anyone to judge us on the basis of the Sabbath or other observances from Judaism (Colossians 2:16). It is also a scriptural fact that Christ our True God and his disciples collected wheat on the Sabbath for personal use, and did other things which the Pharisees regarded as forbidden.
God’s commandment furthermore has always been kept by the Roman Catholic Church, which ironically, in contrast to SDA propaganda, has always had masses on Saturday. Indeed only the RCC has masses in nearly every parish on Saturday; they worship more on the Seventh day than any other denomination in terms of the total number of services conducted on the seventh day of each week. So we can say that the argument that the celebration of the Resurrection of Christ our True God on Sunday has caused people to violate a divine commandment is also logically unsound, a non-sequitur (does not follow).
This is my objection to this line of argumentation: you argument has verifiable factual errors, verifiable logical errors, and verifiably contradicts Scriptural tradition which we are required to adhere to according to 1 Corinthians 11:2 and 2 Thessalonians 2:15, and most disagreeably, is accompanied with threats of eschatological peril if we do not adhere to it. This is unreasonable, and Christ our True God, as the Logos, is Reason (the word Logos literally refers to reason, hence the word logic, and for this reason, logical fallacies must be excluded from theological debate.