J
Hi. I'm Jeffry. This is my first post here in CC. Been looking for an online Bible Study/Discussion group for some time. I don't know if this is it, or if anyone here is really interested in doing that, but here goes anyway. With full respect to the other members of this group: Where in the NT do we find either Jesus or any of His designated Apostles even suggesting a change to Sunday from God's seventh-day Sabbath? All of them are teaching/keeping God's Sabbath days through the Book of Acts - which records the history of the early church for decades after Christ's death and resurrection.
Has anyone ever wondered why a Roman Emperor and his advisors had Sunday declared the "universal" (catholic) day of weekly 'Christian' observance throughout the entire Roman Empire (i.e. most of the known world at the time)? And why they did so at a Roman political "Council" (Nicea, AD 325-327) almost three hundred years after God had begun His Own church in Jerusalem, on His annual Pentecost Sabbath? Many other churches, so many centuries later, began to leave the Roman one "in protest" - mostly over taxation, money and political power. Why did none of them fail to question the Roman Sunday custom as well? Could it be that 13-1400 years of Roman religious rule had made most Europeans take Sunday for granted? Thanks for listening. jg
Has anyone ever wondered why a Roman Emperor and his advisors had Sunday declared the "universal" (catholic) day of weekly 'Christian' observance throughout the entire Roman Empire (i.e. most of the known world at the time)? And why they did so at a Roman political "Council" (Nicea, AD 325-327) almost three hundred years after God had begun His Own church in Jerusalem, on His annual Pentecost Sabbath? Many other churches, so many centuries later, began to leave the Roman one "in protest" - mostly over taxation, money and political power. Why did none of them fail to question the Roman Sunday custom as well? Could it be that 13-1400 years of Roman religious rule had made most Europeans take Sunday for granted? Thanks for listening. jg