I would like to direct your attention to Constatine I. When he became a christian he changed the sabbath from Saturday to Sunday. This can be found on the History channel, or in news week or in the Catholic records.
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prodromos said:Well of course it was Sabbath keeping, it was the synagogue for crying out loud! Where else was Paul going to find Jews and believing Gentiles gathered together in one place but the synagogue on the Sabbath! "And I became to the Jews as a Jew, in order that I might gain the Jews: to those under law, as under law, not being myself under law, in order that I might gain those under law:"(1 Cor 9:20) If we read on, however, we find that the Jews who had not accepted Christ had a complaint against Paul. In Acts 18:12-13 we find that they accused Paul of "persuading men to worship God contrary to the law".
John
Normann said:Explain it again using scripture and not a calendar!
Play like all calendars were destroyed and there is no way to prove which day is Saturday.
prodromos said:OK, so now only scripture is a valid historical document and we are simply to toss all of history as we know it? We can confidantly accept through history that the day the Jews called the Sabbath is the day English speakers call Saturday. To claim otherwise is ludicrous.
John
JesusPower said:I would like to direct your attention to Constatine I. When he became a christian he changed the sabbath from Saturday to Sunday. This can be found on the History channel, or in news week or in the Catholic records.
JesusPower said:I would like to direct your attention to Constatine I. When he became a christian he changed the sabbath from Saturday to Sunday. This can be found on the History channel, or in news week or in the Catholic records.
Ya know, you actually have a very good point here. What would Jesus say/do? Well, I think He'd be asking why the majority of those that profess to be His followers don't keep the Sabbath as He did. After all, isn't Christ our example? Or is it Constantine or Tertilliun (sp?)?GodlySoul said:it is a silly argument. What do you thik Jesus would say? Just have a sabbath day!
PaleHorse said:Ya know, you actually have a very good point here. What would Jesus say/do? Well, I think He'd be asking why the majority of those that profess to be His followers don't keep the Sabbath as He did. After all, isn't Christ our example? Or is it Constantine or Tertilliun (sp?)?
But obviously we aren't talking about all of those because they don't apply.Normann said:There are in fact over 30 commandments in the 20th chapter of Exodus.
No one can keep a sabbath unless they first work 6 days.
How many more do you need? The Bible tells us that the truth is established by two or three witnesses - at this point you've seen dozens that speak directly of the Sabbath in the NT.pjw said:please, I'd love to see these references to the Sabbath in the NT. not being sarcastic, I'd sincerely love to see them.
It was sancified at Creation (Gen 2:2,3) but it isn't an ordinance - there aren't any ordinances in God's moral law, the Ten Commandments. And yes, the Sabbath is contained in those moral laws, it is the 4th Commandment (Exo 20:8) of the decalogue.I think basically it boils down to 3 issues.
1. Is the Sabbath a Creation ordinance and part of the moral law?
Yes, the commandment reads as follows:2. If the Sabbath is moral law, did God specify in the moral law that the last day of the week was intrinsically part of the Sabbath commandment?
No. Christ did not change it - man has attempted to change it based upon invented symbolic connections even though we find the history of Sunday observance points to other things. For those who wish to change God's law, be warned:3. If the Sabbath is moral law, did Christ change the day of the week from the Jewish observance of the last day of the week to the first day of the week?
Actually God gave Adam a commandment, that we know of, everything was for him, except to eat of the fruit of a particular tree.oldsage said:How do we know it wasn't given to Adam, see when reading books of the bible we must also understand the context of the book, Genesis isn't a book about commands but a book about origins, how things all began. There are several places in the book of Genesis that talk about breaking the law of God and called them sin. At the time of Exodus they were just codified.
Chris
Why not?PaleHorse said:But obviously we aren't talking about all of those because they don't apply.
These are known to us as the 10 Commandments, but they are not the only laws that God gave Moses, so you should be obeying all, including not eating pork, circumcision, slaves, more than one wife, etc... 'cause surely Jesus didn't over turn any of these too!PaleHorse said:We are talking about the decalogue, you know, the one written in stone by God's own finger? The ones that were so important God wrote them TWICE!
These are known to us as the 10 Commandments, but they are not the only laws that God gave Moses, so you should be obeying all, including not eating pork, circumcision, slaves, more than one wife, etc... 'cause surely Jesus didn't over turn any of these too!
CanisLupus said:
God gave the 10 Commandments and also Mosaic laws. The 10 Commandments were "...written with the finger of God." (Ex. 31:18). The Mosaic laws were written by Moses "Moses wrote all the words of the LORD..." (Ex. 24:4).
The Ordinances were the laws written by Moses and they were abolished. "Blotting out the handwriting of ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it to his cross;" (Col. 2:14)
See post 835Cliff2 said:Amen
Just so we would not get all confused between what God wrote and what God told Moses to write is that the law that God wrote was put inside the ark.
The law that God told Mose to write was put on the outside of the ark.
There is a difference and God made that plain for all to see.
CanisLupus said:
God gave the 10 Commandments and also Mosaic laws. The 10 Commandments were "...written with the finger of God." (Ex. 31:18). The Mosaic laws were written by Moses "Moses wrote all the words of the LORD..." (Ex. 24:4).
The Ordinances were the laws written by Moses and they were abolished. "Blotting out the handwriting of ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it to his cross;" (Col. 2:14)
I want the references that refer to the Christian Church keeping the Jewish Sabbath in the New Testament.How many more do you need? The Bible tells us that the truth is established by two or three witnesses - at this point you've seen dozens that speak directly of the Sabbath in the NT.
i meant it's a Creation ordinance in the sense that it was instituted at Creation. I think we agree on this oneIt was sancified at Creation (Gen 2:2,3) but it isn't an ordinance - there aren't any ordinances in God's moral law, the Ten Commandments. And yes, the Sabbath is contained in those moral laws, it is the 4th Commandment (Exo 20:8) of the decalogue.