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Who Authorized Sunday Worship? - Religion (3) - Nairaland

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Saturday Sabbath To Sunday Worship;were Christians Right On This? / Is Sunday Worship Scriptural? / A Secret About Sunday Worship You Won't Be Told By Your Pastors. (2) (3) (4)

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Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by MuttleyLaff: 8:20am On Mar 02, 2017
MZLady39:
Oh MuttleyLaff,
My brother....you have to get out and get some fresh air.....(meaning another thread).
Take a break from this thread..venture out, spread your wings, post some comments.. and then, if you can't resist, please come back.

From your sister...the lady musketeer in the trio smiley
My sister, I know you rather, I stroke Splinz's ego and tickle his toes than be responding to all this his pontificated self-indulgent twaddle

Splinz thinks that him writing long posts about keeping the 4th commandment and Saturday as sabbath, makes him look right.

He fails to know that there is nothing wrong in worshiping on Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday or Friday
and wont accept that we're free to worship God on Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday or Friday, if we, so want to.

The NT and the law of liberty are who have authorised this complete freedom to act as one wishes regarding which day to worship God

If none of Jesus' disciples or apostles ever took Sunday to be a rest day or the Sabbath.
why would any right thinking person assume that Sunday is a believer's sabbath.

Without mincing words, specifying a day, whether Saturdays or Sundays, to be set aside, purposely and particularly for keeping as sabbath, is all that's completely wrong and totally false
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by MuttleyLaff: 8:20am On Mar 02, 2017
Splinz:
Oh really!? Wow... I'm not in the know that the early Church worshiped on the "Lord's Day". Well, lets find out
Isn't this remark typical, as usual he is pretending to knows less about something that is public and bible knowledge.

Splinz:
Before examination, let’s read the first three verses of this chapter to put verse 2 in context: “Now concerning the collection for the saints, as I have given order to the churches of Galatia, even so do you. Upon the first day of the week let every one of you lay by him in store, as God has prospered him, that there be no gatherings when I come. And when I come, whomsoever you shall approve by your letters, them will I send to bring your liberality unto Jerusalem.”

This passage supposedly gives authority for passing the “collection plate” every Sunday. Does it represent a general command to all Christians, for all time, to give freewill offerings at “Sunday services”? No! However, the passage does speak of an offering, a collection to be taken up for a specific purpose. The offering described here is unique in five ways. As you read these points, see if there is even a remote indication or hint that God in any way commands or authorizes Sunday-keeping through it.

First, it is a specific offering described in Romans 15:25-28: “But now I go unto Jerusalem to minister unto the saints. For it has pleased them of Macedonia and Achaia to make a certain contribution for the poor saints which are at Jerusalem. It has pleased them verily; and their debtors they are. For if the Gentiles have been made partakers of their spiritual things, their duty is also to minister unto them in carnal [physical] things. When therefore I have performed this, and have sealed to them this fruit, I will come by you into Spain.”

This passage shows the collection was “for the poor saints…at Jerusalem.” It was not a collection plate passed on Sunday. The Jerusalem saints were to receive food because they were suffering from drought and famine. The Greek word translated “fruit” can also refer to grain, produce or wine, which can be stored for long periods.

There is no reference to money here. There is also nothing about giving a collection to the minister or a church hierarchy.

Second, it was done at one specific time—when Paul passed through (“I will come by you into Spain”).

Third, it was given at one specific place (“let everyone of you lay by him in store”). This is because Paul would come later (vs. 3 – “when I come”) to gather what brethren had been saving at home (“lay by him in store”). This was not an offering kept at the church, or given every—or any—Sunday.

Fourth, this command is specific to the Corinthians (vs. 1). There is no command for Sunday collections here, but merely instruction to local brethren to store an important offering for poor brethren!

Fifth, this letter was received in Corinth during the Days of Unleavened Bread. “First day of the week” should properly be translated “first of the weeks (plural).” The collection was almost certainly to happen immediately after the Days of Unleavened Bread, in the first week counting toward Pentecost.

Verse 4—“and if it be meet that I go also, they shall go with me”—coupled with verse 3 referencing “them,” shows that it took several people to transport this large offering to Jerusalem. This would not be necessary if it was simply cash and coins taken up in an offering plate. It would be necessary if much food and drink was involved.
What a load of guff. This twaddle is hard to believe.

Splinz:
So bro, there's no such proofs here that the early Church worshiped on Sundays.
Now, lets look at your next point...
SMH. You need to be reminded that there's no proof that the early Church worshiped or broke bread on Saturdays
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by MuttleyLaff: 8:20am On Mar 02, 2017
Splinz:
This is nothing short of a heartbreak to me, really. So the "Lord's Day" is Sunday? Indeed!

The Lord's Day
Like many of other Scriptural truths misinterpreted and misunderstood, mainstream churchianity has always termed their Sunday worships as worshiping on the "Lord's Day". This would have been humorous had it not been for what truly is the Lord's Day according to Scriptures.

Understand. There are numerous Scriptural references to the Day of the Lord (Isaiah 2: 12-18; 13: 9; Jeremiah 46: 10; Joel 1: 15, 16; 2 Peter 3: 10, Amos 5:18-20, etc.). And all of these passages speaks of the "Day of God's Wrath" on rebellious mankind. Listen: "Woe to you who long for the day of the LORD! Why do you long for the day of the LORD? That day will be darkness, not light" (Amos 5:18).

And besides, notice that Revelation does not say "the first day of the week" or "Sunday" is what John calls the "Lord's Day". So then, according to the true meaning of the Lord's Day, John was taken in the Spirit to a great Day in the future. A day of great anguish, pains, sorrows and gnashing of teeth! The plaques spoken of in Revelation will be poured out on disobedience children. Again, listen to this lengthy passage:

"The great day of the LORD is near, near and hastening fast; the sound of the day of the LORD is bitter, the mighty man cries aloud there. A day of wrath is that day, a day of distress and anguish, a day of ruin and devastation, a day of darkness and gloom, a day of clouds and thick darkness, a day of trumpet blast and battle cry against the fortified cities and against the lofty battlements. I will bring distress on men, so that they shall walk like the blind, because they have sinned against the LORD; their blood shall be poured out like dust, and their flesh like dung. Neither their silver nor their gold shall be able to deliver them on the day of the wrath of the LORD. In the fire of his jealous wrath, all the earth shall be consumed; for a full, yea, sudden end he will make of all the inhabitants of the earth" (Zephaniah 1:14-18).

So then, we see that the Lord's Day is no day for worship but a day of great wrath revealed to John! This was to warn us to desist from sins in other to escape this gloomy day for sinners! How could the early Church have desired such a day, and why should you? God forbid!


PS: Beautiful and desirable is a day God calls “My holy day”, and that day is the Sabbath day (Isaiah 58:13).
Why not desire this holy day, and save yourself from wrath? smiley
Above when he said,
Sacrifice and offering and burnt offerings and offering for sin you desired not, neither had pleasure in them; which are offered by the law;
(i.e. these are offered according to the law of Moses)

- Hebrews 10:8

9But now that you know God, or rather are known by God, how is it that you are turning back to those weak and worthless principles?
Do you wish to be enslaved by them all over again?
10You are trying to earn favor with God by observing certain days (e.g. keeing the sabbath) or months or seasons or years.

- Galatians 4:9-10

13Stop bringing meaningless offerings!
Your incense is detestable to me. New Moons, Sabbaths and convocations-- I cannot bear your
worthless assemblies
14I hate your New Moons and prescribed festivals. They have become a burden to Me; I am tired of putting up with them.

- Isaiah 1:13-14

Every day is holy unto the Lord
God is tired of putting up with your sabbath. He cannot stand them, so please pack it in and close the sabbath keeping shop
I really do hope you surely and truly are heartbroken, because, at least this way, the truth will seep into you through the cracks
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by MuttleyLaff: 8:21am On Mar 02, 2017
Splinz:
John 20:19

“Then the same day at evening, being THE FIRST DAY OF THE WEEK, when the doors were shut where the disciples were assembled for fear of the Jews, came Jesus and stood in the midst, and said unto them, Peace be unto you.” Was this a Sunday worship service? Was it to celebrate Christ’s Resurrection?

Christ had just been resurrected—late Sabbath afternoon, between 3 and 6 p.m. Some disciples had gone to the tomb early Sunday morning to see if He was there. Other accounts we will review demonstrate that He was already gone—already “risen.” His first opportunity to see the disciples would have been on Sunday—the first day of the week. He had just been horribly tortured and crucified, and gone for three days in the tomb. It was natural for Christ to meet with them right after this had happened.

The account says nothing of this being a “worship service,” or a “resurrection service.” The brethren were meeting privately, probably secretly in a closed room, “for fear of the Jews.” Remember, the Jews had crucified their friend and Master. They would have had much to discuss. Also remember that they had all been living together in this single upper room (Acts 1:13). It was also impossible that the meeting was some kind of “Sunday resurrection celebration,” because the disciples did not believe that Jesus was risen (Mark 16:14; Luke 24:37, 39, 41)!


There is certainly nothing in this account that references either Sunday or that the Sabbath is done away.
Therefore, we conclude that it contains no authority for changing God’s Sabbath to Sunday.
Hurray, hallelujah, he agrees that, we can conclude that there is no authority for changing God’s Sabbath to Sunday
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by MuttleyLaff: 8:22am On Mar 02, 2017
petra1:
Kindly watch your tongue brother.
If you have something to say, kindly share it from scripture.
I don't converse with rude talkers .

Dont mind him.
He was getting carried away, that's the reason for his jeering and snide remarks
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by MuttleyLaff: 8:23am On Mar 02, 2017
petra1:
It would have been very nice explanation to dismiss the Sunday worship except that. He waited a whole week to appear to them again on another Sunday. If the first Sunday evening appearance was a coincidence. What about second week.
On another Sunday when they were gathered together.
Why Sunday? Simply because the church services were held every Sunday. It wasn't a roman invention .

Why collecting special offerings on Sunday for jesrusalem? Why not Monday or Saturday sabbath?
Ah dont you know why, it is because Saturday is sabbath, a day of rest now.
You can't be expecting believers to be collecting special offering on Saturday
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by MuttleyLaff: 8:25am On Mar 02, 2017
Splinz:
Sorry, you're wrong. Lets see which day the early Church kept.

Paul and Barnabas Teach on the Sabbath).

Bro did you see that!?? “And THE NEXT SABBATH” Not “AND THE NEXT SUNDAY!”

petra1:
You're right.
They went to the sinagogue to preach to the Jews the Judaists but not the church gathering
. The church meets on sundays

Splinz:
Apparently, you don't get it. Both Jews and the Gentiles were taught on the Sabbath. These are biblical facts! Nothing like the Church meetings on Sunday.

Besides, do you not know that a Christian is also a Jew? (Romans 2:29). And that salvation is of the Jews (John 4:22)? So who are the Jews and the Church?

Such bold statement of yours simply means you don't really know much about who a Christian is. Such a sad reality

petra1:
I'm trying my best to overlook your rudeness . Maybe to you it's a weapon of intimidation. But I will advice you to humble yourself and stop assuming position of a master so that just in case you are proven wrong you can accept . Gods word should be communicated in humility. It's just my word of advice to you.

Now back to the topic . You want to know why Christians worship on Sunday . You asked the question . Pls kindly be patient to hear the answers . You already made it clear that you don't know that there is a difference between the day of the lord and the lords day. You made it known to us all also that you don't known that Sunday is the lords day . So pls kindly allow me to expresss my knowledge freely and read it with open mind ...

I will go over my points again
petra1, anything and everything you write about to Splinz flies and just goes over his head

One example of Splinz's bunch of ignorances, is here where he has it in his head, that the Gentiles Paul visited are believers, when they were not

The Gentiles that Paul was teaching to, on the sabbath, were Greek proselytes who converted to Judaism (i.e. Judaists using petra1's coinage)
Paul was not keeping the sabbath but was attending the Jew & Greek gatherings on their sabbath day to convince & win them over with the gospel
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by MuttleyLaff: 8:26am On Mar 02, 2017
Splinz:
Musketeers armed with the truths.
Fully rooted and built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus Himself as the Chief cornerstone (Ephesians 2:20).
Indeed, it is a privilege. cool

Too serious over estimation
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by MuttleyLaff: 8:52am On Mar 02, 2017
petra1:
You didn't address the scriptures I posted.
You're quoting Paul imitating christ. Christ violated the law concerning the sabbath.
It was against the law to work or Labour on sabbath day. Christ did work heal, go to farm to harvest corn on sabbath day
This was why the Jews were seeking all the more to kill him, because not only was he breaking the Sabbath,
but he was even calling God his own Father, making himself equal with God

- John 5:18

petra1 Jesus did not violate the law concerning the sabbath
It is the Pharisees who accused him of breaking the sabbath and making Himself equal to God

What Jesus had been doing was correcting the application of the keeping the sabbath
and this He did, by doing things, the right way or manner, on the sabbath
e.g. heal the sick who have no rest from sickness, feed when hungry to have rest from hunger pangs etcetera
The Pharisees, were hypocrites, they worked on the sabbath but insisted the people not to even when it is justified to do so

petra1:
So if Paul's imitation of christ was about the sabbath then it's a violation of the sabbath Paul was teaching us to emulate
Bottom line is that neither Jesus nor Paul have ever explicitly commanded the keeping of sabbath
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by Splinz(m): 2:58pm On Mar 02, 2017
petra1:

THE CHURCH WORSHIP ON SUNDAYS

The early church refers to Sunday as first day of the week . Or the lords day . Because Jesus rose on Sunday , the church began to meet on Sunday . This was well before Constantine became emperor

Another lie and false teaching. Bro, Jesus didn't rise on Sunday. This is because your Good Friday crucifixion and early Sunday morning resurrection fails Jesus given SIGN woefully!

When asked by the Pharisees to show them a sign, Jesus replied and said: “An evil and adulterous generation seeks for a sign; but no sign shall be given to it except the sign of the prophet Jonah. For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the whale, so will the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth” (Matthew 12:39). “Three days and three nights” is equivalent to 72 hours, i.e, 12 hours in a day (John 11:9) and 12 hours in a night, making it altogether 24 hours in what is commonly called “a day”.

In fact, Genesis 1:4-13 plainly says that God “divided the light from darkness. And God called the light Day and the darkness He called Night. And the evening [darkness] and the morning [light] were the first day…And the evening [darkness] and the morning [light] were the second day…And the evening [now THREE periods of darkness called night—three nights] and the morning [now THREE periods of light called day—three days] were the third day.”

This is the Bible’s definition of the length of time accounted for within the phrase “the third day.” It spanned three periods of darkness and three periods of light. It has been proven that each of these periods is twelve hours. Six times twelve hours equals 72 hours! What could be more plain?

So then, a late Friday afternoon entombment means a late Monday afternoon resurrection. It is as simple as counting one, two, three!

What! Did Jesus failed His own SIGN? No, let God be true and every man a liar (Romans 3:4). So you see, your claims that Jesus resurrected on Sunday is nothing but fictitious tales invented by those marked for destruction, to lead people into worshiping “another Jesus” (2 Corinthians 11:4), since the one and only true Jesus Christ of the Bible never resurrected on Sunday nor was He crucified on Friday. Bro, your theory falls like a pack of cards!
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by petra1(m): 3:15pm On Mar 02, 2017
Splinz:


Another lie and false teaching. Bro, Jesus didn't rise on Sunday. This is because your Good Friday crucifixion and early Sunday morning resurrection fails

He rose on Sunday the Bible was clear on that but if you're talking about 3 days and 3 nights . It's because Jesus didn't die on Friday but Wednesday night
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by Nobody: 3:27pm On Mar 02, 2017
Bro. Splinz,

While I disagree with some of Petra1's interepretations, he is correct on Jesus having risen on Sunday.
Matthew 28:1...would confirm Sunday (as first day of the week) if we are calling Sabbath (Saturday-the 7th day). Jesus was not in the tomb as Mary approached the tomb early Sunday.
It may not be the best approach to go into the full-day part (evening/morning) because that may cause more confusion.
I support you on most everything else smiley
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by Splinz(m): 3:40pm On Mar 02, 2017
petra1:

Lets look at it in a modern translation.

Revelation 1:10(MSG)
10 It was Sunday and I was in the Spirit, praying. I heard a loud voice behind me, trumpet-clear and piercing

The lords day is Sunday .

Please, kindly dump this so-called Modern Translation. It serves nothing other than ulterior motives. I've seen lots of new translations that can be properly labeled “pure human inventions”, and this your translation is one of them. What distorted and altered junk!

So you know, I have accessed to even the original Greek manuscripts. So, you can't sway someone like me with your translation. I repeat, both “The Day of the Lord” (Zephaniah 1:14-18) and “The Lord's Day” (Rev. 1:10) means the same thing—the Day of wrath. You can't prove otherwise.

Acts 20:7 (MSG)
7 We met on Sunday to worship and celebrate the Master's Supper. Paul addressed the congregation. Our plan was to leave first thing in the morning, but Paul talked on, way past midnight

What a distorted piece!

Acts 20:7-8

“And upon THE FIRST DAY OF THE WEEK, when the disciples came together to break bread, Paul preached unto them, ready to depart on the morrow; and continued his speech until midnight. And there were many lights in the upper chamber, where they were gathered together.”

This account does, in fact, speak of a religious meeting on the first day of the week. But the last phrase demonstrates that it had grown dark—“there were many lights.” This was because Paul had continued his Sabbath preaching “until midnight.” Since God counts days from sunset to sunset (Lev. 23:32; Gen. 1:5, 8, 13, 19, 23, 31), this was what we would call Saturday night. It had nothing to do with a Sunday morning worship service. Paul was a visiting apostle. Such an event was special, and people wanted to hear him preach as long as possible. And it was a farewell sermon.

What Does “Break Bread” Mean?

This is an interesting account for other reasons. Paul was visiting the Troas congregation immediately after the Days of Unleavened Bread (vs. 6). Here is what the others traveling with him did: “And we went before to ship, and sailed unto Assos, there intending to take in Paul: For so had he appointed, minding himself to go afoot. And when he met with us at Assos, we took him in, and came to Mitylene” (vs. 13-14).

Paul’s plan was to walk an arduous journey of 19½ miles across a peninsula to meet his companions. These men had to sail 60 miles around the peninsula to their rendezvous point with Paul. Both Paul and his companions were going to be doing very hard work, all day, on the first day of the week. They had enjoyed the Sabbath together and Paul was “ready to depart on the morrow” (vs. 6), or Sunday morning. Verse 6 also shows that this occasion had occurred “after the days of unleavened bread”—one of God’s annual Feasts.

Again, Paul had spent an entire Sabbath preaching to the brethren, continuing well into Saturday night—or the first day of the week—which started at sundown Saturday evening. Some claim Acts 20:7 refers to keeping the Lord’s Supper on Sunday morning because the term “break bread” was used. This assumption is not true. Paul’s long preaching had left people hungry. It was midnight. They wanted to eat. This is why verse 11 says those present “had broken bread and eaten.” This was an ordinary meal, not the observing of the Lord’s Supper. Other passages prove this.

Acts 2:46 speaks of the disciples who, “continuing daily…breaking bread from house to house, did eat their meat with gladness.” The account shows that the brethren were doing this daily. Obviously, human beings do eat daily.

Further, Acts 27:34-35 explains, “Wherefore…take some meat…he [Paul] took bread…and when he had broken it, he began to eat.” Finally, even Christ said, in Matthew 26:29, that He would not take the “Lord’s Supper” until after He had returned to earth and was in His kingdom. However, Luke 24:30, at a later time, shows Him to have sat “at meat,” or eating a meal, with the disciples. He broke bread and blessed it on that occasion. There are cultures today, particularly in Europe, who still use the term “break bread” to mean the actual breaking of a certain type of bread as they eat a meal.

The Acts 20 account provides no authority for Sunday-worship. It is not even talking about Sunday morning, except that Paul had an all-day walk ahead of him starting then. Rather, it validates that the brethren met on the Sabbath with Paul, and that he and his companions were perfectly willing to perform hard labor—after the Sabbath, on the first day of the week.
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by Splinz(m): 3:43pm On Mar 02, 2017
petra1:



He rose on Sunday the Bible was clear on that but if you're talking about 3 days and 3 nights . It's because Jesus didn't die on Friday but Wednesday night

Interesting! Oh, He died on Wednesday and rose on Sunday? How many days/hours is that? If Jesus died on Wednesday, doesn't that means that He resurrected on Saturday, the Sabbath day?
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by Splinz(m): 3:47pm On Mar 02, 2017
MZLady39:
Bro. Splinz,

While I disagree with some of Petra1's interepretations, he is correct on Jesus having risen on Sunday.
Matthew 28:1...would confirm Sunday (as first day of the week) if we are calling Sabbath (Saturday-the 7th day). Jesus was not in the tomb as Mary approached the tomb early Sunday.
It may not be the best approach to go into the full-day part (evening/morning) because that may cause more confusion.
I support you on most everything else smiley

Thank you. But you're wrong. Jesus didn't rise on Sunday. Study the points I raised again. You'll see that the Fri-Sun traditions failed Jesus SIGN woefully!
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by Splinz(m): 3:58pm On Mar 02, 2017
petra1:

Paul also talked about the needlessness of the sabbath worship

Colossians 2:16
16 Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of an holyday, or of the new moon, or of the sabbath days:


On the contrary, Paul talked of the keeping of the Sabbath: “So then, there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God” (Hebrews 4:9). smiley
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by Splinz(m): 4:33pm On Mar 02, 2017
DoctorAlien:
Good work brother Splinz! May GOD reward your efforts to spread His truth bountifully.

Amen! Thanks bro.
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by Nobody: 4:36pm On Mar 02, 2017
Splinz:


Thank you. But you're wrong. Jesus didn't rise on Sunday. Study the points I raised again. You'll see that the Fri-Sun traditions failed Jesus SIGN woefully!


Bro. Splinz....love ya
To be continued..... smiley
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by Splinz(m): 5:06pm On Mar 02, 2017
MZLady39:



Bro. Splinz....love ya
To be continued..... smiley

See you sister. cool
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by Splinz(m): 7:20pm On Mar 02, 2017
Where “Sunday Keeping” Came From (cont...)

Even though God commanded that the Sabbath be kept forever, we saw that the churches of the world replaced it with the popular tradition of Sunday-keeping. By now it is obvious that this practice did not come from God or His Church. But let’s see more.

Many have assumed the unscriptural tradition that Christ was resurrected from the tomb on Sunday. If Sunday can be established as the day that Christ was resurrected, it can be a means of injecting the pagan Easter festival and celebration, with its Sunday sunrise services, into Christianity.

Many pagan festivals, including Christmas (Saturnalia), Easter (the festival of Ishtar) and worship on the day of the Sun, were observed throughout the Roman Empire long before Christ. The apostate church (the “woman” Rev. 17) simply adopted them into practice, and enforced them on all citizens in the empire through the civil government. Actually, the first one to enforce Sunday worship was not a Pope or a church, but was Constantine, the Roman emperor.

Here is what happened next. At the Council of Laodicea, in A.D. 363, the following decree was passed: “Christians must not Judaize by resting on the Sabbath, but must work on that day, resting rather on Sunday. But, if any be found to be Judaizing, let them be declared anathema from Christ.”

Understand what this decree meant. When one was branded “anathema” (accursed or heretic) by the church, he was arrested by the state, tortured and, unless he recanted, this continued until death. This was enforced so strictly that people were required to rest on Sunday, and work on Saturday, in order to engage in business or hold a job. This enforcement governed their “buying and selling.” (Rev. 13:17)

For those who are familiar with history, millions of people were killed for rejecting Sunday worship. Yes, maximum force was used to forced obedience to this pagan doctrine! But of course, the true Church resisted it and stand firm on the Scriptural enforcement of Saturday—the Sabbath. And for this resistance, thousands of the saints were martyred, while some fearing death, recanted.

Here is the question: If the apostles and early saints kept Sunday as a day of worship, what was the need of brutal force and death threats to enforce its observance?
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by petra1(m): 8:54pm On Mar 02, 2017
MZLady39:
Bro. Splinz,

While I disagree with some of Petra1's interepretations, he is correct on Jesus having risen on Sunday.
Matthew 28:1...would confirm Sunday (as first day of the week) if we are calling Sabbath (Saturday-the 7th day). Jesus was not in the tomb as Mary approached the tomb early Sunday.
It may not be the best approach to go into the full-day part (evening/morning) because that may cause more confusion.
I support you on most everything else smiley

The sabbath of Jesus death was not the weekly sabbath but the high sabbath

1 Like

Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by MuttleyLaff: 9:10pm On Mar 02, 2017
Splinz:
Another lie and false teaching. Bro, Jesus didn't rise on Sunday.
This is because your Good Friday crucifixion and early Sunday morning resurrection fails Jesus given SIGN woefully!

When asked by the Pharisees to show them a sign, Jesus replied and said: “An evil and adulterous generation seeks for a sign; but no sign shall be given to it except the sign of the prophet Jonah. For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the whale, so will the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth” (Matthew 12:39).

“Three days and three nights” is equivalent to 72 hours, i.e, 12 hours in a day (John 11:9) and 12 hours in a night, making it altogether 24 hours in what is commonly called “a day”.

In fact, Genesis 1:4-13 plainly says that God “divided the light from darkness. And God called the light Day and the darkness He called Night. And the evening [darkness] and the morning [light] were the first day…And the evening [darkness] and the morning [light] were the second day…And the evening [now THREE periods of darkness called night—three nights] and the morning [now THREE periods of light called day—three days] were the third day.”

This is the Bible’s definition of the length of time accounted for within the phrase “the third day.” It spanned three periods of darkness and three periods of light. It has been proven that each of these periods is twelve hours. Six times twelve hours equals 72 hours! What could be more plain?

So then, a late Friday afternoon entombment means a late Monday afternoon resurrection. It is as simple as counting one, two, three!

What! Did Jesus failed His own SIGN? No, let God be true and every man a liar (Romans 3:4). So you see, your claims that Jesus resurrected on Sunday is nothing but fictitious tales invented by those marked for destruction, to lead people into worshiping “another Jesus” (2 Corinthians 11:4), since the one and only true Jesus Christ of the Bible never resurrected on Sunday nor was He crucified on Friday. Bro, your theory falls like a pack of cards!

petra1:
He rose on Sunday the Bible was clear on that but if you're talking about 3 days and 3 nights.
It's because Jesus didn't die on Friday but Wednesday night
Close, He died on Wednesday but actually was buried on Wednesday night Petra1

Splinz:
Interesting! Oh, He died on Wednesday and rose on Sunday?
Yes

Splinz:
How many days/hours is that?
3 days and 3 nights spent in grave as prophesied

Splinz:
If Jesus died on Wednesday, doesn't that means that He resurrected on Saturday, the Sabbath day?
No, He didnt resurrect on Saturday, the Sabbath day
because when He died, He was buried on Wednesday night then rose before sunrise on Sunday.
Dont be surprised now. Or are you just knowing this?

MZLady39:
Bro. Splinz,
While I disagree with some of Petra1's interepretations, he is correct on Jesus having risen on Sunday.
Matthew 28:1...would confirm Sunday (as first day of the week) if we are calling Sabbath (Saturday-the 7th day).
Jesus was not in the tomb as Mary approached the tomb early Sunday.
It may not be the best approach to go into the full-day part (evening/morning) because that may cause more confusion.
I support you on most everything else smiley

The two of them are about to have a fall-out

Splinz:
Thank you. But you're wrong.
Jesus didn't rise on Sunday. Study the points I raised again. You'll see that the Fri-Sun traditions failed Jesus SIGN woefully!
Jesus was buried on Wednesday night >> Thursday night >> Friday night >> Saturday night, means He spent 3x nights in the grave
Thurday day >> Friday day >> Saturday day >> Sunday day, means He spent 3x days in the grave

So, Jesus after spending 3 days and 3 nights in the grave, then rose from the dead before sunrise on Sunday
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by petra1(m): 9:21pm On Mar 02, 2017
Splinz:

Please, kindly dump this so-called Modern Translation. It serves nothing other than ulterior motives. I've seen lots of new translations that can be properly labeled “pure human inventions”, and this your translation is one of them. What distorted and altered junk!

It's a comon sense to understand and know that Sunday was referred to as the lords day. It's not really a nice thing for you to start condemning bible translations just because it contrary to what you've always believe. You should rather ponder on the issue and do a little research .

So you know, I have accessed to even the original Greek manuscripts. So, you can't sway someone like me with your translation. I repeat, both “The Day of the Lord” (Zephaniah 1:14-18) and “The Lord's Day” (Rev. 1:10) means the same thing—the Day of wrath. You can't prove otherwise.

It's a new generation. We all have access to Hebrew and Greek . You are just doing a play of words here . That's not scholastic you know.

The day of the lord refers to the Armageddon and the second coming. It is futuristic . Armageddon hasn't come neither second coming . The lords day was Sunday . Every Sunday is either called lords day .
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by petra1(m): 9:32pm On Mar 02, 2017
MuttleyLaff:


Close, He died on Wednesday but actually was buried on Wednesday night Petra1

From my study ,Christ was dead for three full days and for three full nights. He was put in the grave Wednesday just before sunset and was resurrected at the end of Saturday at sunset. The Jews count night first .

Genesis 1:5 (KJV Strong's)
. . . . And the evening and the morning were the first day.
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by petra1(m): 9:39pm On Mar 02, 2017
Splinz:


On the contrary, Paul talked of the keeping of the Sabbath: “So then, there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God” (Hebrews 4:9). smiley

That's a spiritual sabbath in Christ . This is not making reference to a day . Christ is our rest . But concerning the sabbath of days which is a shadow of christ . The Bible is clear on that. It's case closed . It's a choice though. I can't judge for for observing it. Neither should you me

Romans 14:5 .
5 One man esteemeth one day above another: another esteemeth every day alike. Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind.

Colossians 2:16-17
16 Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of an holyday, or of the new moon, or of the sabbath days: 17 Which are a shadow of things to come; but the body is of Christ.
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by MuttleyLaff: 9:40pm On Mar 02, 2017
petra1:
From my study ,Christ was dead for three full days and for three full nights.
He was put in the grave Wednesday just before sunset and was resurrected at the end of Saturday at sunset.
The Jews count night first .

Genesis 1:5 (KJV Strong's)
. . . . And the evening and the morning were the first day.
Jesus was buried on Wednesday night >> Thursday night >> Friday night >> Saturday night, means He spent 3x nights in the grave
Thurday day >> Friday day >> Saturday day >> Sunday day, means He spent 3x days in the grave

So, Jesus after spending 3 days and 3 nights in the grave, then rose from the dead before sunrise on Sunday

We are saying the same thing as you can see from the above slightly edited with underlines for days and nights emphasis reproduced post
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by petra1(m): 9:45pm On Mar 02, 2017
MZLady39:
Bro. Splinz,
While I disagree with some of Petra1's interepretations, he is correct on Jesus having risen on Sunday.

Kindly read all my posts with open mind .
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by petra1(m): 9:46pm On Mar 02, 2017
MuttleyLaff:
Jesus was buried on Wednesday night >> Thursday night >> Friday night >> Saturday night, means He spent 3x nights in the grave
Thurday day >> Friday day >> Saturday day >> Sunday day, means He spent 3x days in the grave

So, Jesus after spending 3 days and 3 nights in the grave, then rose from the dead before sunrise on Sunday

We are saying the same thing as you can see from the above slightly edited with underlines for days and nights emphasis reproduced post


Yes I agree with you I was only giving my explanation.
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by Splinz(m): 9:56pm On Mar 02, 2017
petra1:


That's a spiritual sabbath in Christ . This is not making reference to a day . Christ is our rest . But concerning the sabbath of days which is a shadow of christ . The Bible is clear on that. It's case closed . It's a choice though. I can't judge for for observing it. Neither should you me

Now this is funny. How did you coined it again: "A spiritual Sabbath?". Bro, wow... you must be a scholar! Your understanding of these things can befuddle one.
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by Nobody: 9:58pm On Mar 02, 2017
petra1:


Kindly read all my posts with open mind .

Sir,
Now I'm harmlessly fierce when it comes to the actual Sabbath day, but I will kindly look at your posts within the next week. Give me a little time.
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by Splinz(m): 10:12pm On Mar 02, 2017
petra1:

It's not really a nice thing for you to start condemning bible translations just because it contrary to what you've always believe. You should rather ponder on the issue and do a little research .

This is not about my beliefs, it's about the errors inherent in that translation. And I'm not mincing words in advicing you to dump it, it wouldn't help you at all, except you want to continue with your hybrid doctrines. Since you claimed to also have access to the Greek and Hebrew manuscripts, why not give it to me at once? I want to see how John was worshiping on Sunday in Rev. 1:10.
Re: Who Authorized Sunday Worship? by petra1(m): 10:16pm On Mar 02, 2017
Splinz:


Now this is funny. How did you coined it again: "A spiritual Sabbath?". Bro, wow... you must be a scholar! Your understanding of these things can befuddle one.

What sabbath was being referred to here ?

Hebrews 4:8
8 For if Joshua had given them rest, he would not have said anything about another day.


They had the sabbath of days and week and years . But there's a true sabbath . Which is a spiritual place in christ . By salvation we are legally in his sabbath . But it's only by faith we enter it practically . It's a place of trust to rest on his word.

Hebrews 4:9-11
9 There remaineth therefore a rest to the people of God. 10 For he that is entered into his rest, he also hath ceased from his own works, as God did from his.
11 Let us labour therefore to enter into that rest, lest any man fall after the same example of unbelief
.

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