KevinT
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- May 26, 2021
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Yet the Church keeps the first day and has since the beginning. It is the Jews who keep the seventh day.
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I mean from the time that The Acts of the Apostles writes about. That would be not long after the death and resurrection of the Lord.
The Acts of the Apostles covers about 30 AD to 60 AD. I don't mean to be argumentative, but to say that "The Church" (all of Christ's followers) had stopped worshiping on Saturday in favor of Sunday simply can't be supported by 60 AD in any sort of scholarly fashion.
Think about James and his followers who were troubling those in Galatia (Galatians 2). Do you think they had turned away from 7th day Sabbath? What about, near the end of Acts, when Paul returns to Jerusalem and is told of the thousands of Jewish believers in Christ, who where zealous for the law. Do you really think they had adopted Sunday worship? They were just as much part of The Church as were others.
Clearly, there was tension within the nascent Christian community between those with Jewish origins (i.e. those centered in Jerusalem), and those coming into the communion from outside (the 'Gentiles'). The Jerusalem council demonstrates this. With time, there came increasing drive for the Christians to distinguish themselves from Jews (i.e non-Christ-following Jews). A large part of the Jewish population were actively rebellious towards the rule of Rome, and as Rome retaliated, Christians wished to point out that they were different. Furthermore, the group that rejected Jesus as Messiah were antagonistic towards Christians. Thus although Christianity arose from Jewish roots, the two groups became increasingly distinct. Changing from 7th day Sabbath to 1st day Worship was explicitly stated as an important way to show that they were non-Jewish. In fact, for a long time there were regulations by the early (after 100 AD) Christian leaders that the 7th day Sabbath was to be a day of fasting (i.e. not a fun time) in direct contradiction to the Jewish teaching that the Sabbath was to be a day of blessing. Thus one of several drives away from 7th day Sabbath was good old-fashioned antisemitism.
In Acts, there is mention of gatherings of believers. In my location, most churches have a Wednesday night prayer meeting. But no one would say that this act of worship constitutes the consecrated day of rest described in the 10 commandments. So likewise a record of people meeting on Sunday in Acts can not be used as proof that 7th day Sabbath had been discarded.
KT
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