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The term the Lord's Day has several meanings. When used in reference to Sunday, it in no way is refering to Sunday becoming a day of rest as far as the Bible is concerned, even tho some churches use it that way. Historically, the church came to an early consensus that Jesus was resurrected early on a Sunday morning. To commemorate that, the early church met at sunrise on Sunday, before the slaves went out into the fields to work. It was not a substitute sabbath, but a memorial service, the Lord's resurrection day, not the Lord's rest day. There is no more sabbath day that is commanded in the NT, though any OT command is a good principle for the church. However, neither Saturday nor Sunday are commanded for the Church in the NT. Romans 14 and Gal 3-4 clearly show that days are a matter of personal choice. Sunday became a sabbath (small s) or rest in church tradition, because it was convenient. However, it ought not be a command, but a convenience using the one day in 7 principle. If a pope, pastor or other church leader commands a rest on either day, he is doing so on his own authority. Neither Jesus nor the Apostles required such a thing of the church.sparklz said:a lot of people are saying the Lord's day is Sunday. How?
babbred said:I've been involved in various denominations. They all worshipped on Sunday and Wedesdays (I'm from the Bible Belt where Wed services are normal), and I never heard the Voice of God saying we were sinning. The other posters here have raised some excellent points, with which I agree.
1. There's no verses in the NT to support it. Indeed, under Paul, the church tried to move away from the Judaic influence so Gentiles wouldn't feel uncomfortable. If Paul accepted those who weren't circumcised, I don't think he would have made too big a deal on what day they worshipped.
2. How far do we go? Do we stay home on Sat, not drive, shop or do anything remotely un-Sabbathlike? I used to babysit for an Orthodox Jewish couple. They would set their VCR (this was long before Tivo) because they couldn't watch TV, make sure their answering machine was on because they couldn't answer the phone, and left some lights on because they couldn't flip a light switch! In fact, I remember once they had some friends visiting on a Sabbath. One of the friends keeled over from a heart attack, and they had to have us call the ambulance. And when it arrived, one of my parents had to ride in the ambulance with the poor man because the hospital was beyond the limits of what Jews could travel on a Sabbath! So if you're going to keep the Law, then you need to keep all of it.
In regard to your #1: The issue of circumcision is not part of the 10 Commandments, it is part of the law of Moses, which Christ did away with on the cross. The Sabbath, however, God included as part of His eternal moral code, which He wrote in stone on Mt. Sinai.
deu58 said:Hi Gypsy Bella
I have just posted in the why worry about the ten commandments thread, My last couple of posts deal with this very subject, Thanks for you replies,
yours in Christ
deu58
First we need to identify the audience to whom James is speaking to, James was the leader of the Jerusalem church, His church was Jewish, His teachings would reflect the Jewish Christian attitude towards the law of Moses of which they still practiced in it's entirety. Not just 10 but all 613 commandments of the law, It was decided at the Jerusalem council that Gentiles were not required to follow the same Mosaic practice's as the Christian Jews.James 2
8If you really fulfill the royal law according to the Scripture, "You shall love your neighbor as yourself," you do well; 9but if you show partiality, you commit sin, and are convicted by the law as transgressors. 10For whoever shall keep the whole law, and yet stumble in one point, he is guilty of all. 11For He who said, "Do not commit adultery," also said, "Do not murder." Now if you do not commit adultery, but you do murder, you have become a transgressor of the law. 12So speak and so do as those who will be judged by the law of liberty. 13For judgment is without mercy to the one who has shown no mercy. Mercy triumphs over judgment.
Actually ,the bible nor Jesus changed the Sabbath as He kept the sabbath as did all the disciples including Paul. History and the catholic church wholly admit the change to distance themselves from the Jews. And if we look at the origination of the Sabbath God instituted the Sabbath as a memorial of creation and a sign that He was the true God of creation separating His people from the pagans. At Sinai God said to remember the Sabbath, why? The Jews had been in Egypt for 400 years and they had forgotten it. It was reestablished to again separate His people from the pagans cultures. If we look at the 7 day sabbath in history you can see it has been kept continuously by many of Gods Bible only people.( can give proof for this if requested)12volt_man said:We didn't change it. Christ changed it.
If six days shall we labor and then rest on the seventh then why do we labor for five days and rest on Saturday and Sunday?OccamsLaser said:The Bible also tells you to "Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy. Six days you shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the LORD your God."
Which other among the Ten Commandments are also "non-essential," open to negotiation and disagreement?
kissybug27 said:... Now I'm not saying that Sunday is the right or wrong day but I am saying that before you tell someone thier wrong you need to research what you are saying. ...
OccamsLaser said:The Bible also tells you to "Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy. Six days you shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the LORD your God."
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