We do not know what was the seventh day of creation.
We only know what we have chosen as the seventh day on our calendars.
Nor is our seventh day the seventh day as it was in Israel.
When they are in midday, another place is at midnight.
you are simplistic.
So you are saying Christ did not know the correct Sabbath day He made for man?
Luke 4:16 (KJV)
And he came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up: and, as his custom was,
he went into the synagogue on the sabbath day, and stood up for to read.
The seventh day was set apart and made holy at creation.Gen 2:2-3, Exo 20:10-11.
Christ did all the creating and He knew which day the Sabbath was...
God (Jesus Christ) revealed the seventh day to Israel for forty YEARS.
Every meal they were reminded which day the Sabbath was or not.
Mar 2:27 And he said unto them, The sabbath was made for man,
and not man for the sabbath: Therefore the Son of man is Lord also of the sabbath.
He passed this on to the Apostles and the church.
Why, even secular people seem to know something you don't know...
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"By calculating the eclipses, it can be proven that no time has been lost and the creation days
were seven, divided into 24 hours each."—Dr. Hinkley, The Watchman, July 1926 .
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"The human race never lost the septenary [seven day] sequence of week days and that the
Sabbath of these latter times comes down to us from Adam, though the ages, without a single lapse."
—Dr. Totten, professor of astronomy at Yale University.
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"Seven has been the ancient and honored number among the nations of the earth. They have
measured their time by weeks from the beginning. The origin of this was the Sabbath of God,
as Moses has given the reasons for it in his writings."—Dr. Lyman Coleman.
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"There has been no change in our calendar in past centuries that has affected in any way the cycle
of the week."—James Robertson, Director American Ephemeris, Navy Department, U.S. Naval
Observatory, Washington, D.C., March 12, 1932.
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"It can be said with assurance that not a day has been lost since Creation, and all the calendar
changes notwithstanding, there has been no break in the weekly cycle."—Dr. Frank Jeffries,
Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society and Research Director of the Royal Observatory,
Greenwich, England.
There is no question about which day the seventh day of the week is.
The weekly cycle
the break between the shift from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar?
There was a well known break of 10 days.
In 1582, that Thursday the 4th was followed by Friday the 15th.
The weekly cycle was not interrupted. Now take a look at 1752, Wednesday
the 2nd was followed by Thursday the 14th. Again, the calendar had to be
adjusted to correct it to the seasons but the weekly cycle remained unchanged.