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The "Sola Scriptura way" is to base one's decision upon the Bible. 95% of all Christians have done that and worship on the Lord's Day. You and a few other Christians have done that and decided everyone else is wrong. But it has nothing to do with being either for or against Sola Scriptura.
Your response appeals to what others have done in practice - not to an actual Bible text. An appeal to what the majority is doing as being the standard for righ/wrong would have been fatal to the fledgling NT Christian church at the start.
I agree with you that we can find a great many Bible topics where the majority take one path and various minorities take another. I think that is also the Catholic argument on some of those same topics.
I also maintain that a "sola scriptura" solution cross-denominations is the one we see in Acts 17:11 and that no other solution works. Catholic and Orthodox response to that is often that the Acts 17:11 solution is not effective enough to get 100% agreement in cross-denomination differences - while they themselves have no solution for that same situation.
Except that it's not Tradition that drives the Sunday position. Tens of thousands of Protestant denominations--almost all Protestant denominations--follow Sola Scriptura and have decided for Sunday precisely because the guidance is to be found in Scripture.
If you look in my signature line you will find a lot of non-Catholic groups arguing for the continuation of the Sabbath Commandment "bent" or "Changed" to point to week-day-1 after the cross. And when you look at what their proof is - (Such as with R. C. Sproul) the proof is the practice and tradition of the church not a bible text.
This is why Catholic apologists have been bringing it up for many decades.
48 minutes ago #829
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