tall73 said:
In the new covenant God does not change the law. He changes the nature of the promises. In fact the people do not make promises at all in the new covenant. God says that He Himself with write the law on their hearts and minds (Christ will live in them, and as John says His commands are not burdensome).
I think Paul contradicts your argument:
Col. 2:13-14
When you were dead in your sins and in the uncircumcision of your sinful nature, God made you alive with Christ. He forgave us all our sins, having canceled the written code, with its regulations, that was against us and that stood opposed to us; he took it away, nailing it to the cross.
Rom. 7:6 But now, by dying to what once bound us, we have been released from the law so that we serve in the new way of the Spirit, and not in the old way of the written code.
The "written code, with its regulations", clearly refers to the law from which we have been
released, not the covenant or the promises. "...if you are led by the Spirit, you are not under law" (Gal. 5:18). Why else would Paul consider it a threat to say: "who lets himself be circumcised ... is obligated to obey the whole law"? (v.3)
The promises made to Israel remains, as Paul says: "Christ has become a servant of the Jews on behalf of God's truth, to confirm the promises made to the patriarchs so that the Gentiles may glorify God for his mercy" (Rom. 15:8-9). All God's promises are confirmed in Christ (2 Cor. 1:20). Where they were once confirmed by the law, they are now confirmed by God's grace. Maybe you underestimate the significance of the law being written on our hearts, rather than on Moses' stone tablets.
tall73 said:
I don't have original source material on Epiphanius (if anyone knows of its availablity on the web, please post! ) but from what I have read he seems to state that the controversy arose after the Jewish heiarchy in Jerusalem gave way to a more gentile one following the destruction of the temple and the flight to Pella. This too was in a period where any association with Jews was highly dangerous. So it would make sense for the new gentile administration to make a new Christian tradition that set them apart from the Jews.
And what is wrong with being set apart from the Jews? Didn't Jesus himself start that tradition, which was continued by the apostles? Christian persecution was a given before Constantine put a stop to it by making Christianity legitimate. How would distancing themselves from the Jews
help their cause? Jerusalem was in gentile hands before and after the destruction of the Temple - but while Christians could be reasonably tolerated as a sect of Judaism, after the Jewish patronage had been removed, they were persecuted simply as atheists (i.e. not believing in the Roman gods - as we see in
Pliny's letter to Emperor Trajan). There is also no "new gentile administration" in the church, since it fled from Jerusalem intact (as God promised it would, and Jesus assures us in Revelations - 90AD). The church grows, and the need for a collected canon and frequent councils become apparent. The council wasn't some state-run institution disconnected from and possibly undermining the church - they
represented the church. Leaders were selected by the clear principles set out by the apostles, and they simply exercized their authority (the "keys" Jesus gave to the church).
Finally it seems the council again was the one that made thefinal change, and if the record of the emporer's words are accurate it was done to distinguish from the Jewish practice. You don't have to read documents of that era for long to realize that their theology was in some ways done in oppositon to the Jews.
You are apparently viewing this from the perspective that there was some kind of great conspiracy (no doubt reasoning from the present backwards, like the Mormons do to prove the "great apostasy": things are not as we think they should be, therefore there
must have been some grand corruption). The council - like the individual voices that preceded it - pointed out that there were parallel traditions: Christians keeping the sabbath according to Jewish tradition, and keeping the Sunday according to "ancient" Christian tradition. For the sake of unity and clarity, there was a
need for further councils like the first one in Jerusalem. There were similar differences regarding the paschal feasts, the observances of moons and days (or not), religious dietary requirements, and even of denominations (Paul/Apollos/Cephas/Christ). These differences already existed in Paul's time, and we can see how he addressed all of them. If he had reservations about gentiles who did not keep the sabbath, or kept both the sunday and the sabbath, it stands to reason that he would have weeded it out at the root - as he did with circumcision - but he didn't. Peter (Cephas) was head of the church in Rome, and Apollos (who "watered what Paul planted") was head of the church in Alexandria, where the tradition of keeping the Sunday originated. Paul had no problem with their teachings, and when he did, he corrected them (Gal. 2:11-16). It is significant that there it was the
Jews who shied away from the gentile believers or forced them to follow Jewish customs, and they were reprimanded.
It is only logical that the Bible reflects Jewish tradition, and through it establish the foundation of what was to become the
Christian tradition. The new covenant Jesus heralded through his resurrection was the catalyst for this change. The New Testament is a record surrounding the acts of Jesus and his first apostles,
not a canon of tradition. The Jewish Pascha gave way to the
Eucharist without Jesus expressly announcing it "replaced", and under Peter and Paul's direction the intention of circumcision was superceded by baptism (Col. 2:11-12). To observe these changes, we have the history of the church, and there is no evidence of any conspiracy by so-called "gentiles" (as if, after Christ, there could be anything inherently wrong with being a gentile) to use Christianity as a convenient anti-semitic platfrom. That is a recent invention, and a convenient one, seeing that the Bible is 90% Jewish. It seems more likely that this trend is simply a continuation of the Judaizing influences that have always been part of the church. Paul was critical of this tendency, and explicitly includes the old sabbath observance as a stumbling block in Gal. 4:9-11 (also Col. 2:16 - cf.
Please understand my real position. I have no problem with Sunday worship. I don't mind if people keep both. It is fine to worship in honor of the resurrection. But my point is that the claim to have what is ORIGINAL is not true. Sunday, though not harmful in my opinion, and potentially a blessing, was a later addition to the original deposit of faith. Sabbath was original to the Christian faith, and yet abandoned. If you want to worship on Sunday, that is great. But don't just toss out a command of God and say that the later instituted tradition of Sunday worship replaces it and is the new Sabbath in the new covenant.
Sabbath was original to the
Jews, and continued by those Jews who became Christians. They "remembered the sabbath day" (of the old creation) by celebrating God's rest on the seventh day
of creation. The seventh day of the week is a copy, a shadow of the day of creation -
not in itself meaningful. Christians who believe enter the
reality of that rest - present tense (Heb. 4:3). The
second-century fathers show that the vast majority of Christians met on Sunday and did not keep the Sabbath (110AD). They give no clues that would suggest that Sunday was a recent innovation.
We live on the edge of the
God's sabbath day, expecting the resurrection. Like all the other laws, the sabbath Moses recalled at Horeb is fulfilled - past tense. Not
invalidated, for the same reason the knowledge of your schoolmaster (Gal. 3:24) does not become invalid the moment you graduate.
Sunday worship is a
consequence of the new covenant. Therefore it is not and can never be simple a "moved Sabbath", as if Jesus made no difference. Before Jesus' resurrection, there are many indications of Him and his followers doing something on the sabbath, after his resurrection (and He was on earth for almost 5 weeks afterwards) there are
none. Instead, there are numerous indications of Him and his followers doing things on the
first day of the week, and you suppose this is somehow insiginificant, or circumstantial at best? Why make a point of mentioning a meeting on the first day of the week if that day was like any other, or if the significant assembly was in fact the day before, as it was for the Jews (synagogue simply means "assembly")?
Nightfire said:
...what is being questioned in this thread is how Sunday-keepers can still take the Ten Commandments seriously, and I think we should try to keep the focus on that question.
The only way you can do that is to apply the Sabbath command to Sunday, for which there is no Scriptural support. The nature of the new covenant is spelled out, and Sunday is not in it.
And just because you think it is impossible does not make it so. With God, all things are possible, and changing our perspective from an earthly reality, where certain days and weeks have physical significance, to a heavenly reality, where we find (present tense) our true rest, is exactly what Jesus came to do. It's not
in the gospel, it
is the gospel.