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Re: Was the first day of the week or Sunday ever made a day of worship?
[Re: dedication]
#186287
03/26/18 07:37 PM
03/26/18 07:37 PM
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SDA Active Member 2024
5500+ Member
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Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 6,509
Midland
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It's back to the "dateline" question.
No, I wasn't getting into that. We have Biblical confirmation as to which day is the seventh day in the middle east. That same day stretched east and west from the middle east without any controversy as "which day it was" as it was governed by the setting sun -- the same as it is today.
But you did answer my question here. If we have the Bible as infallible, and assuming we can trace THE seventh day from Biblical times to today, then we would know for sure that it matches the Word of God. There would be the implication as to if there were a dateline somewhere then, but not really sure that would be relevant. Which kind of still leaves the question, should we look for Jerusalem for the Sabbath or our locale but which would conflict with sunset at our locale.
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Re: Was the first day of the week or Sunday ever made a day of worship?
[Re: dedication]
#186288
03/26/18 07:45 PM
03/26/18 07:45 PM
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SDA Active Member 2024
5500+ Member
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Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 6,509
Midland
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As to the "day of atonement"
First -- it is not one of God's ten commandments written in stone which are to be engraved upon our hearts and minds. The ten commandments are NOT nailed to the cross -- every single one of them outlines our love for God and our love for others, and warns us as to what is sin.
Second -- the temple services had many holy things to teach the people of the ministry, mission and atonement of Jesus Christ. It was an "object lesson" teaching the plan of salvation. The temple services ceased when the veil was torn from top to bottom at Christ's death on the cross.
Thirdly -- if you feel convicted to observe the day of atonement, (that is, set apart the time to reflect on its meaning, not replicate the ceremonies done on the day of atonement) by all means do so. It would do us all good to set apart time to study the "object lessons" and contemplate more fully the plan of salvation in Jesus Christ. Interesting you'd recommend that. When would you say the day of atonement begins on a round world...? The tablet of stones, written with God's finger, were put in the ark. The laws written by Moses on parchment, were put in the side of the ark. If it cannot be shown workable for a round world, it would be further evidence, besides what Paul wrote and had conflict with the Judaizers, that they are not valid today.
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Re: Was the first day of the week or Sunday ever made a day of worship?
[Re: Rick H]
#186289
03/26/18 07:45 PM
03/26/18 07:45 PM
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SDA Active Member 2024
5500+ Member
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Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 6,509
Midland
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Ask 10 neo-Jews when the day of atonement begins and you get 15 different answers.
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Re: Was the first day of the week or Sunday ever made a day of worship?
[Re: James Peterson]
#186290
03/26/18 07:58 PM
03/26/18 07:58 PM
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SDA Active Member 2024
5500+ Member
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Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 6,509
Midland
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You have it all upside down. - The commandment does NOT say, "Remember Saturday because it is holy ..." as if Saturday were inherently holy in and of itself and therefore given authority over people to bring them into judgment over whether they approached the day looking solemn or not.
- Rather, the commandment says, "Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy ...." meaning that the day derives its state from the (un)holiness of people's actions during its stateless hours, hours that are as stateless as any other during the week.
James, could you show the commandment does not mean to say "THE" seventh day, as in a specific day, but "A" seventh day? Ex 23:12 Six days thou shalt do thy work, and on the seventh day thou shalt rest: that thine ox and thine ass may rest, and the son of thy handmaid, and the stranger, may be refreshed.
How does that fit in with your idea that each should have their own "A" seventh day? Ex 35:2 Six days shall work be done, but on the seventh day there shall be to you an holy day, a sabbath of rest to the LORD: whosoever doeth work therein shall be put to death.
Since you speak of stoning, how would one know when one's "A" seventh was to be able to enforce this? De 5:14 But the seventh day is the sabbath of the LORD thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, nor thy manservant, nor thy maidservant, nor thine ox, nor thine ass, nor any of thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates; that thy manservant and thy maidservant may rest as well as thou.
Seems that there is "A" seventh day of LORD thy God, that we are to remember and honor.
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Re: Was the first day of the week or Sunday ever made a day of worship?
[Re: kland]
#186291
03/26/18 09:17 PM
03/26/18 09:17 PM
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Global Moderator Supporting Member 2022
5500+ Member
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Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 6,701
Canada
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It's back to the "dateline" question.
No, I wasn't getting into that. We have Biblical confirmation as to which day is the seventh day in the middle east. That same day stretched east and west from the middle east without any controversy as "which day it was" as it was governed by the setting sun -- the same as it is today.
But you did answer my question here. If we have the Bible as infallible, and assuming we can trace THE seventh day from Biblical times to today, then we would know for sure that it matches the Word of God. There would be the implication as to if there were a dateline somewhere then, but not really sure that would be relevant. Which kind of still leaves the question, should we look for Jerusalem for the Sabbath or our locale but which would conflict with sunset at our locale. I did answer that last part as well. HereAbout 2/3 down. We can know what day is the Sabbath -- but anyone matching "sunset time" to Jerusalem doesn't understand how the day on a round world operates. And I know you know answer.
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Re: Was the first day of the week or Sunday ever made a day of worship?
[Re: kland]
#186292
03/26/18 09:22 PM
03/26/18 09:22 PM
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Global Moderator Supporting Member 2022
5500+ Member
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Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 6,701
Canada
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As to the "day of atonement"
First -- it is not one of God's ten commandments written in stone which are to be engraved upon our hearts and minds. The ten commandments are NOT nailed to the cross -- every single one of them outlines our love for God and our love for others, and warns us as to what is sin.
Second -- the temple services had many holy things to teach the people of the ministry, mission and atonement of Jesus Christ. It was an "object lesson" teaching the plan of salvation. The temple services ceased when the veil was torn from top to bottom at Christ's death on the cross.
Thirdly -- if you feel convicted to observe the day of atonement, (that is, set apart the time to reflect on its meaning, not replicate the ceremonies done on the day of atonement) by all means do so. It would do us all good to set apart time to study the "object lessons" and contemplate more fully the plan of salvation in Jesus Christ. Interesting you'd recommend that. When would you say the day of atonement begins on a round world...? The tablet of stones, written with God's finger, were put in the ark. The laws written by Moses on parchment, were put in the side of the ark. If it cannot be shown workable for a round world, it would be further evidence, besides what Paul wrote and had conflict with the Judaizers, that they are not valid today. No -- I didn't say we needed to keep the day of atonement. My first two points show why we don't keep it. But if James is convicted that it should be kept -- by all means he should keep it.
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Re: Was the first day of the week or Sunday ever made a day of worship?
[Re: Rick H]
#186295
03/27/18 01:12 AM
03/27/18 01:12 AM
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SDA Active Member 2018
Regular Member
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Joined: Aug 2014
Posts: 63
Colorado, USA
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According to these letters from the US Naval Observatory and the Royal Observatory in Greenwich the weekly cycle has continued without change "since long before the Christian era." The Bible never indicates that the cycle for the sabbath ever changed between Moses and the Christian era. Because God identified the sabbath that Moses kept as the same that was blessed at creation, we can be confident that the day we call sabbath now has continued in an unbroken line since creation. As for whether to look to Jerusalem or anywhere else for the beginning of Sabbath, there would be a problem in ancient times, or even just a few centuries ago, with knowing what time it was while far away. The ancient Greeks recognized that local time varied by location and tried to work out how to calculate this, but that wasn't until after the Jews had already been to Babylon and back. The calculation, or even knowing that there was a difference, required observing things like solar eclipses in different places and then later comparing notes on what time of day they happened. So, the Jews in Babylon before those Greek mathematicians couldn't have known the time in Jerusalem, but yet they were able to keep the Sabbath from even to even by local time wherever they happened to be. Notice that in the calendars given in the first link October 4 of 1582 then skips to October 15 for Spain, Portugal, and Italy, but the day of the week is unaffected. The same happens in the 1752 calendar for English speaking countries with September 2 jumping to September 14.
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Re: Was the first day of the week or Sunday ever made a day of worship?
[Re: Rick H]
#186301
03/27/18 07:22 PM
03/27/18 07:22 PM
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SDA Active Member 2024
5500+ Member
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Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 6,509
Midland
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I personally believe (and I don't expect you to agree) but from the Genesis one account, I believe the earth had just one huge continent at the end of the third day of creation. Science seems to confirm that once there was only one huge land mass. The Americas were attached to Europe and Africa. Genesis says the water was gathered in one place, the dry land appeared. Eden was planted "eastward" possibly somewhat east of the center of that huge continent.
Do you believe there was a vast body of water at the Creation?
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Re: Was the first day of the week or Sunday ever made a day of worship?
[Re: Rick H]
#186302
03/27/18 09:48 PM
03/27/18 09:48 PM
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SDA Active Member 2020
5500+ Member
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Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 6,368
Western, USA
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I personally believe (and I don't expect you to agree) but from the Genesis one account, I believe the earth had just one huge continent at the end of the third day of creation. Science seems to confirm that once there was only one huge land mass. The Americas were attached to Europe and Africa. Do you believe that the world before the flood (on the side of Creation) has any resemblance to the world after the flood?
Oh, that men might open their minds to know God as he is revealed in his Son! {ST, January 20, 1890}
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Re: Was the first day of the week or Sunday ever made a day of worship?
[Re: APL]
#186304
03/28/18 03:05 AM
03/28/18 03:05 AM
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Global Moderator Supporting Member 2022
5500+ Member
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Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 6,701
Canada
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I personally believe (and I don't expect you to agree) but from the Genesis one account, I believe the earth had just one huge continent at the end of the third day of creation. Science seems to confirm that once there was only one huge land mass. The Americas were attached to Europe and Africa. Do you believe that the world before the flood (on the side of Creation) has any resemblance to the world after the flood? Yes and no. First the "no". The beautiful Eden like landscapes were gone, the earth was much more rugged and rocky. The temperature changed. The land mass was broken into continents. Now the "yes" It was the same earth, even though it was ravished by a major catastrophy and flood. The earth's tectonic plates were broken, thus breaking the land masses into continents. We find the bones of pre-flood animals scattered over all earth's continents.
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Here is the link to this week's Sabbath School Lesson Study and Discussion Material: Click Here
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