the mystery of the great sabbath switch

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    The Mystery of the Great Sabbath Switch

    I was talking the other day with our neighbor Jim about accidents we had either seen

    or experienced. He told me about an accident that he just couldnt figure out. There was a

    lady he came upon who had wedged her car between the two cables of a guardrail. It

    wasnt front in, but sideways in between the two wires. And he said it was all he could doto keep from laughing as he thought to himself: How did she manage to get into such a

    position? Well, Im sure her embarrassing position wasnt very funny to her.

    Because of the lack of Scriptural evidence for a change in days of worship, explaining

    how Christians ended up worshipping on Sunday can also be a bit embarrassing. Ask ten

    pastors why most Christians keep Sunday rather than the Sabbath and youll get eleven

    different answers!

    Perhaps youve heard about the visitor who asked for directions in New England. A

    local agrees to help him and tries to explain which roads and turns he needs to take to get

    to his destination. Embarrassed that he cant explain how to get where the man where he

    wants to go, the exasperated local says, Well, you just cant get there from here. Whenit comes to the Christian day of worship, it is obvious that we did get here from there. But

    the question is: how did we do it? That is exactly what we will be exploring today in our

    subject: The Mystery of the Great Sabbath Switch.

    From the creation of the world, God set in time an opportunity for each of His

    children, not just those with Jewish blood, to spend regular,periodic,and intensivetime

    with Him, remembering who He is and what we mean to Him. That opportunity for

    regular, periodic and intensive time is called the seventh-day Sabbath and it was initiated

    during the first week of creation. The record of the book of Acts tells us that Christian

    believers in the first century continued to keep the seventh-day Sabbath. In the second

    century, that began to change.

    For the past several weeks we have been looking at the various perspectives of thosewho try to explain why, although the first believers in Christ kept the Sabbath, Christians

    today should no longer concern themselves with the seventh-day Sabbath. We talked

    about, first of all, that some folks say you dont need to keep the Sabbath because you

    dont need to keep the law at all. Were under grace. And we came to see that doing away

    with the whole law in order to avoid keeping the Sabbath deprives us of not having a

    standard of right and wrong and has had a rather negative effect on society. That isnt

    what Paul intended when he proclaimed us to be no longer under the law.

    We also looked at the idea that some put forth that, well, yes, we do need a sabbath,

    but that could be any day. Each of us can just choose for ourselves what day we want to

    keep. The majority of Christians choose to keep Sunday, but we could choose any day. It

    doesnt have to be any specific day. But then we saw that Scripture plainly states that the

    day for worship given to man is predicated upon Gods having rested on the seventh day

    of the creation week. Obviously, God doesnt leave it to us to pick out our own day.

    Today were looking at a third perspective and that is the idea that, yes, we do need a

    sabbath, and yes, God did bless and sanctify the seventh-day Sabbath for the Jewish

    nation in the Old Testament, but that the Church in some way or another exercised

    authority to transfer the holiness of the seventh day to the first. It is the idea of a transfer

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    of the sanctity of the day. Is it really possible that the Sabbaths sanctity has been

    transferred to Sunday?

    In Matthew 18, we find an interesting passage that talks about the promise that God

    has given to His people as a whole of coming together in agreement to Him in prayer and

    loosing and binding things in heaven and earth. Look at Matthew 18:18, 19:

    Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: andwhatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven. Again I sayunto you, That if two of you shall agree on earth as touching any thingthat they shall ask, it shall be done for them of my Father which is inheaven.

    Notice that it uses the word ye, which is you (plural) or you all, if you please.

    The promise is directed to all believers, not just a single leader. There is another related

    passage, Matthew 16, that is probably better known. It is certainly more frequently cited.

    The largest Christian denomination on earth claims this passage as the foundation for

    their leaders authority to loose and bind in matters of doctrine and conscience. NoticeMatthew 16:18:

    And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I willbuild my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. 19 And Iwill give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and whatsoeverthou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever thoushalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.

    Youve heard that beforethat the keys of the kingdom were given to Peter and were

    passed on, in succession, from one supreme church leader to the next? Based on this

    passage, the Church claims that Peter or his successor has the right to loose and bindChristians in matters of conscience.1Is that what Peter himself would say? As we go to

    Acts 5:29, we read:

    Then Peter and the [other] apostles answered and said, We ought toobey God rather than men.

    You see, the promise that Jesus gave in Matthew 16 and Matthew 18 that when two

    believers come to God in agreement asking something of Him, it is not a carte blanche.It

    isnt a blank check that includes changing specific commands of God. (If it did, you

    might imagine two people coming to God and asking Him to wave the requirement of not

    committing adultery.) Jesus said, in Matthew 15:9:

    But in vain they do worship me, teaching [for] doctrines thecommandments of men.

    1The pope can modify divine law, since his power is not of man, but of God, and he acts in the place of

    God upon earth, with the fullest power of binding and loosing his sheep. Petrus de Ancharano quoted in

    Lucius Ferraris,Prompta Bibliotheca, vol. 6, 1772, p. 29, art. 2, Papa.

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    You see, we cannoteven as a churchplace human commandments above what

    God has commanded. Gods Word has greater authority than the authority of His

    Church.

    So now we take up the question, How did we get here from there? How did a

    church that originally kept the Sabbath come to keep Sunday in its place? What is theevidence concerning the change? Are there any documents written within the first

    Christian century that would give us any indication of what the practice of the Church

    was immediately following the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus? And if there are

    such documents, do they give any evidence that the early Church had started to observe

    Sunday as we find within the second century?

    Yes, there are. The very documents that tell us about the death, burial, and

    resurrection of the Lord Jesus were not written immediately after those events, but some

    years later. Those documents are the four gospelsMatthew, Mark, Luke, and John. If

    you ask most Christians why they worship on Sunday, they will tell you that it was

    because Christ rose from the dead on the first day of the week. I too believe that Jesus

    was crucified and rose from the dead on the third day, as the Scriptures say. As the song

    says: Because He lives, I can face tomorrow. The great truth of the resurrection is what

    gives us hope in the face of difficulty. That the crucifixion was not the end of Jesus, that

    Jesus did not have a final resting place in the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea, that Jesus

    overcame death and sin and the grave is what keeps us going. Yet, because of our desire

    to get to the resurrection, we often zip past the events of His crucifixion and overlook the

    details the gospel writers have given with regard to the intervening day on which Jesus

    rested in the grave. Do these writers give any testimony about an early switch of worship

    days from the Sabbath to Sunday as people like Binney postulate? Binney writes:

    Jesus, after his resurrection, changed the Sabbath from the seventh tothe first day of the week . . . When Jesus gave instructions for thischange we are not told, but very likely during the time when he spake tohis apostles of the things pertaining to his kingdom. Acts i, 3. This isprobably one of the many unrecorded things which Jesus did. John xx,30; xxi, 25. Amos Binney, Theological Compend, 1902, p. 171.

    Unrecordedhe is certainly right about that. Such an act is absolutely

    unrecorded. If we start assuming that Jesus said things that arent recorded, where will

    we stop? We need to look at the actual records that were left to us by those who were

    witnesses of the crucifixion and the evidence that they provide of the effect it had on the

    fledgling church.We begin our perusal of the gospels with Luke. By certain descriptions in the book it

    would seem that Luke wrote his gospel written shortly before the destruction of

    Jerusalem. (Thiessen believes it was as early as 58 AD, while others authorities believe it

    to have been in 68 AD.)

    Turn with me to Luke 23. I like Luke. I like the extra insights he includes in recounting

    the story of Jesus. You know, it would be well for us to take the time to read the whole of

    the story of the death and resurrection of Jesus. To walk with Jesus down the stones of

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    the Via Dolorosa,up the way to Golgotha, to watch in admiration as the love of God is

    poured out for us on the cross. That would be worth the reading. But for now we are only

    going to look at the part of the story that takes us from late Friday to Sunday morning

    from Good Friday to Easter Sunday.

    We begin in verse 46.

    And when Jesus had cried with a loud voice, he said, Father, into thyhands I commend my spirit: and having said thus, he gave up the ghost.

    These were the last audible words of Jesus before He died. What do they express?

    They tell us how much He trusted the Father. They tell us that, even though He went

    through this dark, horrible experience, He died, resting in His Fathers love. What is the

    rest of the story?

    47 Now when the centurion saw what was done, he glorified God,saying, Certainly this was a righteous man. 48 And all the people that

    came together to that sight, beholding the things which were done, smotetheir breasts, and returned. 49 And all his acquaintance, and the womenthat followed him from Galilee, stood afar off, beholding these things. 50

    And, behold, [there was] a man named Joseph, a counsellor; [and hewas] a good man, and a just: 51 (The same had not consented to thecounsel and deed of them;) [he was] of Arimathaea, a city of the Jews:who also himself waited for the kingdom of God. 52 This [man] went untoPilate, and begged the body of Jesus. 53 And he took it down, andwrapped it in linen, and laid it in a sepulchre that was hewn in stone,wherein never man before was laid.

    And now Luke includes some details that might seem strange if the Sundayresurrection were intended to inaugurate a new day of worship. Besides this, Luke is the

    only New Testament writer who is not a Jew. Luke, a gentile writer, includes in this

    document written to Theophilus (the original recipient of Lukes gospel), who is also a

    gentile, certain interesting details.

    54 And that day was the preparation, and the sabbath drew on.

    Does he explain to his Greek-speaking friend what the preparation is? He

    apparently doesnt need to. He assumes that his reader already knows. Friday was known

    as the preparation. What is a preparation if it doesnt prepare for something? If a bride

    prepares for a wedding, but never gets married, its pretty disappointing. The

    preparation leads up to something. As a matter of fact, this word, the preparation, in

    Greek isparaskeu, is used in theDidache,a document originating in Syria that, with its

    later additions, takes us down to the third century. They still called Friday, the

    preparation, which gives indirect evidence that they still kept the Sabbath. And so Luke

    says: And that day was the preparation, and the sabbath drew on.

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    55 And the women also, which came with him from Galilee, followedafter, and beheld the sepulchre, and how his body was laid. 56 And theyreturned, and prepared spices and ointments; and rested the sabbath dayaccording to ...

    Jewish custom? No, it didnt say that, did it? No, he says, ... and rested the sabbathday according to the commandment. Here is Luke, writing many years after the events

    and saying that they rested the Sabbath day according to the commandment. And, again,

    he doesnt explain what he meant by the commandment. So apparently he assumes

    that his friend understands about the commandments and knows that people are

    supposed to rest, according to the fourth commandment. Gods fourth commandment is

    Gods invitation to Sabbath rest. Then, and only then, does Luke go on, in Luke 24, verse

    1 to say:

    Now upon the first [day] of the week, very early in the morning, theycame unto the sepulchre, bringing the spices which they had prepared,

    and certain [others] with them. 2 And they found the stone rolled awayfrom the sepulchre.

    Thats a beautiful part of the story, isnt it? The tomb was empty. Jesus wasnt there.

    Lets flip back and see what Matthew says about the same story. Lets see if he gives

    us any hints about a change. By the way, did you notice anything in Luke that said: And

    thats why we keep Sunday today? There wasnt. But we did find him explaining the

    rationale for keeping the Sabbath. This early document, written within the span of the first

    fifty years of the Churchs history, tells us nothing about keeping the first day of the week

    holy. All right. Well lets turn to Matthew. Matthew is quite lengthy in is description of

    the last hours of Christ. We go to the same story, beginning in verse 57, which describes

    the request of Joseph of Arimathaea, who asks Pilate for the body of Jesus. He takes it

    and wraps it in the clean linen cloth. Verse 60, he lays it in the tomb...

    and he rolled a great stone to the door of the sepulchre, and departed.61And there was Mary Magdalene, and the other Mary, sitting over againstthe sepulchre.

    What Matthew says next is unique, for Matthews gospel was known to have been

    addressed to Jews so that they might believe that Jesus was the Messiah. Matthew

    describes the activities of these punctilious Sabbath keepers, the Pharisees, on the day

    following the entombment of Jesus to keep His body from being removed from thesepulcre to prevent any one from believing further in Jesus. Look at verse 62:

    Now the next day, that followed the day of the preparation,...

    What day would that be? The Sabbath, right?

    ... the chief priests and Pharisees came together unto Pilate,

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    Now is that where they were supposed to be on the Sabbath? Where should they have

    been? In a synogogue or in the temple, right? But they are so concerned about keeping

    Jesus down and His followers from being able to claim that He had risen from the dead

    that they run to make sure that His body cant be removed from the tomb. So they go to

    Pilate saying, verse 63:

    Sir, we remember that that deceiver said, while he was yet alive, Afterthree days I will rise again. 64 Command therefore that the sepulchre bemade sure until the third day, lest his disciples come by night, and stealhim away, and say unto the people, He is risen from the dead: so the lasterror shall be worse than the first. 65 Pilate said unto them, Ye have awatch: go your way, make [it] as sure as ye can. 66 So they went, andmade the sepulchre sure, sealing the stone, and setting a watch.

    Notice who put the seal on the stone. It wasnt the Romans. It was the Jewish leaders

    who wanted to keep Jesus sealed in the tomb. These verses show the frenetic activity ofthe leaders of the Jews while Jesus Himself is resting. Those who reject Jesus have no

    rest, as Revelation 14:11 says. They were scampering around trying to make sure He

    stays in the tomb and Jesus is just biding His time, resting until the appropriate time, until

    the Sabbath is over, until it is time to awaken from the sleep of death to take back up his

    work for mankind.

    Do you think that it was just by chance that Jesus rested on this Sabbath day? Was it

    purely coincidence? Was there anything about Jesus ministry that was left to chance?

    Just as He had rested on the seventh day at the completion of the work of creation, so did

    Jesus rest on the seventh day at the completion of the work of redemption. John records

    Jesus final words as It is finished. When Jesus rest was over, He came forth. What

    does the commandment say? Six days shalt thou labor and do all thy work, but the

    seventh day is the Sabbath. When the first day came, it was time to get back to work.

    Now look at verse one of chapter 28.

    In the end of the sabbath ...

    OK, so the Sabbath is over.

    ... as it began to dawn toward the first [day] of the week, came MaryMagdalene and the other Mary to see the sepulchre. 2 And, behold, there

    was a great earthquake: for the angel of the Lord descended fromheaven, and came and rolled back the stone from the door, and sat uponit.

    Dont you just love that description! Heres the angel who opens the tomb, calming

    sitting on the stone. The leaders hoped to seal the tomb, but the earthquake comes and

    shakes the ground. It shakes the tomb open. Jesus is called forth and the angel is not just

    standing there, but sitting on the stone that had closed Jesus in as if to say, There there!

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    You cant keep Jesus in here! A little seal on the stone is not going to keep Him in there!

    Jesus came forth.

    Again, we find nothing in here explaining that the believers made anything of the day

    upon which these events occurred. It was the event itself that was most crucial to them.

    The gospel writers consistently emphasize that He would rise the third day not on the

    first day of the week.Now lets skip on over to John. John throws in some of his own recollections not

    included in the other gospels. We are in chapter 19 of John, verse 30.

    When Jesus therefore had received the vinegar, he said, It is finished:and he bowed his head, and gave up the ghost. 31 The Jews therefore,because it was the preparation, that the bodies should not remain uponthe cross on the sabbath day, (for that sabbath day was an high day,)besought Pilate that their legs might be broken, and [that] they might betaken away. 32 Then came the soldiers, and brake the legs of the first,and of the other which was crucified with him. 33 But when they came to

    Jesus, and saw that he was dead already, they brake not his legs: 34 Butone of the soldiers with a spear pierced his side, and forthwith camethere out blood and water. 35 And he that saw [it] bare record, and hisrecord is true: and he knoweth that he saith true, that ye might believe.

    John includes these additional details because he saw it happen. He knew it was true.

    In verse 38, we find Joseph of Arimathea taking the body. Then verse 39 tells us

    something that the other gospel writers who were not at the cross did not include:

    And there came also Nicodemus, which at the first came to Jesus bynight, and brought a mixture of myrrh and aloes, about an hundred pound

    [weight]. 40 Then took they the body of Jesus, and wound it in linenclothes with the spices, as the manner of the Jews is to bury. 41 Now inthe place where he was crucified there was a garden; and in the garden anew sepulchre, wherein was never man yet laid. 42 There laid they Jesustherefore because of the Jews preparation [day]; for the sepulchre wasnigh at hand.

    John explains the manner of Jewish burial, which would show his intended audience

    to be non-Jews and emphasizes that Joseph and Nicodemus had to get Jesus quickly into

    the tomb because of the Jews scruples about the preparation day. Yet, like Luke, he

    doesnt feel compelled to explain what the preparation was.

    Then comes verse one of chapter 20.

    The first [day] of the week cometh Mary Magdalene early, when it wasyet dark, unto the sepulchre, and seeth the stone taken away from thesepulchre.

    Then Mary runs and tells Peter. Then John and Peter run to the tomb and see for

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    themselves that Jesus body is no longer there! Jesus can hardly wait to begin dispelling

    His disciples grief. On this first day of the new week, He appears again and again to His

    followers to let them know He has conquered sin, death, and the grave. Notice verse 11.

    There we see Mary weeping outside the empty tomb. Adding to the disgrace of her

    Masters crucifixion, now His body has been moved from the tomb in which it had been

    laid. As she stands there all in tears, she hears a voice that she does not recognize, that is,until she hears her own name, Mary, and she recognizes that it is her Master.

    Rabboni, she cries, which is to say, My teacher, my master.

    Look at verse 19:

    Then the same day at evening, being the first [day] of the week, whenthe doors were shut where the disciples were assembled for fear of theJews, came Jesus and stood in the midst, and saith unto them, Peace[be] unto you.

    Jesus delivered the very message that these fearful and perplexed disciples needed to

    hear: Peace be unto you. But there were two disciples who werent present that day. Doyou know which ones they were? Thomas, thats right ... and Judas. Judas, unfortunately,

    never got to see the fulfillment of Jesus promise. In utter despair and anguish of soul, he

    had taken his own life. Thomas also was passing through his own hours of distress. He

    wasnt meeting with the disciples. He did as many people often do when they are

    discouraged; he pulled back from the others. We often think, this is something Ive got to

    deal with on my own. So we stay away from other believers and we try to handle it all by

    ourselves. For a week, it says, he struggled with his doubts. Even though the other

    disciples said that Christ was risen, Thomas had a struggle going on inside with the

    doubts that plagued him. And John tells us, verse 26:

    And after eight days again his disciples were within, and Thomas withthem ...

    A week later, Thomas was with the others when they had all come together. What day

    of the week would that be? That would be another Sunday, wouldnt it? Eight days, in the

    eastern world, is one week. You see, they counted the day you were on and then added

    seven more days. Notice that John doesnt emphasize that this was the first day of the

    week, he just says, after eight days. He is giving us an accurate account of the events,

    but he attaches no special significance to the day on which it took place. So Thomas is

    with them now. Continuing with verse 26:

    [then] came Jesus, the doors being shut, and stood in the midst, andsaid, Peace [be] unto you.

    Now, during the previous week, as the other disciples had tried to convince him that

    Jesus was alive, Thomas had said, I wont believe unless I can put my finger in the nail

    prints and put my hand in the wound in His side. He had given expression to his doubts

    when Jesus hadnt been physically in their midst. But notice what happens next:

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    27 Then saith he to Thomas, Reach hither thy finger, and behold myhands; and reach hither thy hand, and thrust [it] into my side: and be notfaithless, but believing. 28 And Thomas answered and said unto him, MyLord and my God.

    He didnt say, Well, nows my chance, let me stick my finger... No. No. All of his

    doubts just fell away when he saw the Lord, when he heard the encouragement in the

    sound of His voice. That war that was being fought inside of Thomas between faith and

    doubt was immediately surrendered and settled right there and then. And he believed and

    said, My Lord and my God.

    29 Jesus saith unto him, Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hastbelieved: blessed [are] they that have not seen, and [yet] have believed.

    Jesus said this for you and for me. We are not eyewitnesses of the resurrection and

    yet there is a blessing for each of us, if we take the testimony and believe.These are the earliest documents that give witness to the early Sunday morning

    resurrection, but none of these authors attach any special significance to the day. If there

    were a transference of sanctity to Sunday, as the claim is made, then why didnt these

    writers just say so?

    We go through the book of Acts and we find the believers meeting together for

    prayer, study and worship in the synagogues on the Sabbath day. We find James, at the

    council in Acts 15, giving his pronouncement about the Gentiles not requiring

    circumcision, upon the assumption that the Gentiles have heard these matters in the

    various synagogues on the Sabbath day. The elders in Jerusalem take for granted the

    observance of the Sabbath.

    Then too, anticipating the coming destruction of the temple, Jesus told His disciples in

    Matthew 24, to look for the sign that would indicate the time to evacuate the city and

    Judea. When you see the city surrounded by armies, know that the end is near. Verse 15.

    When ye therefore shall see the abomination of desolation, spoken of byDaniel the prophet, stand in the holy place, (whoso readeth, let himunderstand:) 16 Then let them which be in Judaea flee into themountains:

    In preparation for this event, Christ had told them, in verse 20:

    But pray ye that your flight be not in the winter, neither on the sabbathday:

    Now it makes good sense why they wouldnt desire to flee in the winter. It would

    make it a hardship to flee with just the clothes on your back and what little you could

    carry if it were wintertime. But why pray that they not have to flee on the Sabbath? Well,

    some say, thats because the Jews would have closed up the city and the disciples

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    couldnt have escaped. But history reveals that, when the Romans came in 66 AD, the

    Jews went out to chase them, as the Romans retreated to settle internal matters back in

    Rome, and they left the gates open. They werent concerned about the gates, they were

    concerned about chasing the Romans. As the Romans turned and retreated to Rome, the

    Jews thought they had a mighty victory. Meanwhile, the disciples had obeyed the

    command of Jesus and had left the city. And they fled to a little place on the other side ofthe Jordan called Pella. Now the story gets even more interesting here. Do you know what

    the early believers in Jerusalem were called? They werent called Christians. That was a

    term coined in Antioch of Syria. What was the name given them? They were called

    Nazarenes, because Jesus was of Nazareth.

    Notice the words of the Church historian, James Smith.

    The first Christian church established at Jerusalem by apostolic authoritybecame in its doctrine and practices a model for the greater part of thosefounded in the first century. . . . These Judaizing Christians were firstknown by the general appellation of Nazarenes. ... All Christians agreed

    in celebrating the seventh day of the week in conformity to the Jewishconverts. James Smith, History of the Christian Church, pp. 50, 52, 69.

    If we begin to study in history, we see that as disciples went their various ways to

    spread the gospel, they took Gods commandments with them. And that is why the book

    of Revelation talks about the descendents of the woman who keep the commandments of

    God and the saints who keep the commandments and have the faith of Jesus. They

    obeyed Gods commands, including the seventh-day Sabbath.

    The churches that were established in Egypt, India, Abyssinia, and Syria kept the

    Sabbath even centuries on and the Nazarenes continued to keep Gods blessed Sabbath.

    In fact, down to the fourth century, we have the historian Epiphanius telling us that the

    descendents of this same group still kept the Sabbath. Which is why we know that the

    disciples remembered their Lords words: Pray ye that your flight be not in the winter,

    neither on the sabbath day. While they remembered His words, there was no way that

    they could have forgotten their Masters Sabbath.

    Notice what Edward Gibbon, in The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,writes:

    ... The Jewish converts, or, as they were afterwards called, theNazarenes, who had laid the foundations of the church, soon foundthemselves overwhelmed by the increasing multitudes, that from all thevarious religions of polytheism enlisted under the banner of Christ: . . .

    Edward Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, vol. 1, chap.15, p. 387.

    As these multitudes came into the Church, they exercised a powerful influence on the

    direction of the Church. Let me read to you from Jesse Hurlbut.

    For fifty years after St. Pauls life a curtain hangs over the church,through which we vainly strive to look; and when at last the curtain rises,

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    about 120 A.D. with the writings of the earliest church-fathers, we find achurch in many aspects very different from that in the days of St. Peterand St. Paul. Jesse L. Hurlbut, The Story of the Christian Church, p. 41.

    Over this period of fifty years, the Church underwent dramatic change and Hurlbut

    says we can find the evidence of this change in one of the earliest church fathers. So letstake a peak at the earliest of theseJustin Martyr. What does he say about the Sabbath,

    Sunday, and the reason for observing Sunday?

    And on the day called Sunday, all who live in cities or in the countrygather together in one place and memoirs of the apostles or the writingsof the prophets are read, as long as time permits. . . . Sunday is the dayon which we all hold our common assembly because it is the first day onwhich God, having wrought a change in the darkness in matter, made theworld: and Jesus Christ our Saviour on the same day rose from thedead.

    Justin says we keep the day of the Sun because it was the day for the creation of light

    and it was the day that the true Sun rose for our souls. Somehow he misses the fact that

    God Himself established the seventhday as the memorial of creation and not the first.

    (And he is blind to the fact that the Sun was not created on the first day, but on the fourth

    and is only connected with the first day by pagan sun worship!) How could Justin make

    such a mistaken association? It is because of his education and introduction to

    Christianity. Early Christian writers referred to him as St. Justin Martyr and Philosopher

    (cf. Anastasius) or St. Justin Philosopher and Martyr (cf. John of Damascus)

    (foreword, The Fathers of the Church: Writings of Saint Justin Martyr, p. 17, emphasis

    supplied).Before learning of Christ, Justin had been an avid student of philosophy. After

    his conversion, he continued to wear his philosophers gown as a token that he had

    attained the only true philosophy. In chapter 23 of Dialogue with Trypho, Justin

    describes the certain old man, who appealed to Justin to accept Christianity as the

    fulfillment of true philosophy. This one who had introduced him to Christianity dissuaded

    him from keeping the Sabbath with the words: Remain as you were born. In the very

    next chapter ofDialogue with Trypho,Justin asserts the superiority of Sunday over the

    Sabbath because the eighth day is more spiritual than the seventh.

    Now, sirs, I said, it is possible for us to show how the eighth day

    possessed a certain mysterious import, which the seventh day did not

    possess, and which was promulgated by God through these rites [i.e.,circumcision on the eighth day]. Justin Martyr, Dialogue with Trypho, ch.

    24 (c. 150 A.D), emphasis supplied.

    In his mistaken zeal for Sunday, he also asserts that the Sabbath was given to the Jews

    on account of your transgressions and the hardness of your hearts and on account of

    your unrighteousness, and that of your fathers (Justin, Dialogue, 18 and 21). But that

    wasnt why God gave the Sabbath, was it? If Justin had only understand the Scriptures

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    aright, he would have found such passages as Ezekiel 20:12:

    Moreover also I gave them my sabbaths, to be a sign between me and

    them, that they might know that I am the LORD that sanctify them.

    Its not a sign of affliction, is it? Its a sign of sanctification. Interestingly enough, Justinquotes Isaiah 58:1-12, in Dialogue with Trypho, chap. 15, but he omits verses 13-14,

    which show the spiritual value of the Sabbath:

    If thou turn away thy foot from the sabbath, from doing thy pleasure onmy holy day; and call the sabbath a delight, the holy of the LORD,honourable; and shalt honour him, not doing thine own ways, nor findingthine own pleasure, nor speaking thine own words: 14 Then shalt thoudelight thyself in the LORD; and I will cause thee to ride upon the highplaces of the earth, and feed thee with the heritage of Jacob thy father:for the mouth of the LORD hath spoken it. Isaiah 58:13, 14.

    That doesnt sound like affliction either, does it? Isaiah 56 is a passage that shows that

    the Sabbath is also for the strangerthe non-Jewwho comes into relationship with

    the Lord.

    Blessed is the man that doeth this, and the son of man that layeth holdon it; that keepeth the sabbath from polluting it, and keepeth his handfrom doing any evil. 6 Also the sons of the stranger, that join themselvesto the LORD, to serve him, and to love the name of the LORD, to be hisservants, every one that keepeth the sabbath from polluting it, and takethhold of my covenant; 7 Even them will I bring to my holy mountain, and

    make them joyful in my house of prayer: their burnt offerings and theirsacrifices shall be accepted upon mine altar; for mine house shall becalled an house of prayer for all people. Isaiah 56:2, 6, 7.

    Can you see the subtle shift that was taking place in the thinking of the western

    Church? Moving away from dependence on the Word of the Lord, it was imbibing the

    thinking of the philosophy of the pagan world around it.

    Greek philosophy exercised the greatest influence . . . on the Christianmode of thought . . . Adolf von Harnack, History of Dogma, vol. I, p. 128.

    Christianity did not destroy paganism; it adopted it. The Greek mind,dying, came to a transmigrated life in the theology and liturgy of theChurch; the Greek language, having reigned for centuries overphilosophy, became the vehicle of Christian literature and ritual; theGreek mysteries passed down into the impressive mystery of the Mass.... Will Durant, Caesar and Christ, p. 595.

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    This was the very thing against which the Apostle Paul had warned. He was

    concerned about the influence on believers of the philosophy . . . [and] rudiments of this

    world (Colossians 2:8). He warned about those who would attack and plunder the

    Church (Acts 20:29, 30) and about a great falling away from the truth, linked with the

    revealing of the son of perdition (a term used, in John 17:2, to describe Judas, the

    betraying insider), under the influence of the mystery of iniquitythat secretivepower that would set itself against the law of God. Pope John Paul II briefly alluded to the

    working of this mystery in describing the attack of Constantinople:

    Some memories are especially painful, and some events of the distantpast have left deep wounds in the minds and hearts of people to this day.I am thinking of the disastrous sack of the imperial city of Constantinople,which was for so long the bastion of Christianity in the East. It is tragicthat the assailants, who had set out to secure free access for Christiansto the Holy Land, turned against their own brothers in the faith. The factthat they were Latin Christians [Roman Catholics] fills Catholics with

    deep regret. How can we fail to see here the mysterium iniquitatisatwork [2 Thess. 2:7] in the human heart? To God alone belongs judgmentand, therefore, we entrust the heavy burden of the past to his endlessmercy, imploring him to heal the wounds that still cause suffering to thespirit of the Greek people. Pope John Paul II, May 4th, 2001, address tohis Beatitude Christodoulos, Archbishop of Athens and Primate ofGreece.

    How did we get here from there? As Paul stated, there was a mysterious power at

    work within the Churchbeginning in Pauls own timeundermining the law of God,

    abandoning the seventh-day Sabbath as only the first in a series of downward steps away

    from simple faith in the Word of God. These radical changes in the Church would leadChurch historian, James Wharey, to describe the radically affected Church as baptised

    paganism.The mystery of how the great Sabbath switch occurred is solved. We see that the shift

    from Sabbath to Sunday worship was not an indisputable apostolic institution, but was

    rather a controversial innovation by that great vessel of spiritual truth, the Christian

    Church, which allowed itself to be willingly hijacked by the intellectual influences of

    the day, which commandeered it from its intended course of simple faith in the Word of

    God and took it on a collision course with the twin towers of human tradition and

    spiritual compromise. This hijacking led to the spiritual crashing and burning of the

    Church during the era of the Dark Ages.Martin Luther, who was called of God, to call for reformation in the Church that it

    might stand on the Bible and not tradition, was right when he said:

    He who has been wrong for one hundred years was not right for onehour. If the years should make wrong right, the devil would well deserveto be the most just one on earth, for he is now over five thousand yearsold.Walch, vol. 28, p. 358.

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    Christians are not safe in following a tradition passed on without a biblical mandate

    no matter how old it is. Our duty as Christians is to ask of Gods Word, What doth the

    Lord require of thee? (Micah 6:8) and then to follow the counsel revealed as the very

    voice of God to your soul.