7th Day of rest does not fall under the same as Jewish festive days , reason why i say that is 7th day is one of 10 commandments, yes i know the claims that it was only for Jews but 7th day was given at creation and Adam and Eve were not Jews where they. ? If 7th day was and or is not important in New testament or after Christ then where is the biblical (clear) evidence of such claim.
I think we maybe talking past each other... so again I will try to clarify.
I would never suggest, that any of God's most Holy moral standard for us would be done away with. The Ten Commandments are God's moral standard forever. As presented to Moses, it was
the "letter" of God's moral standard. This "letter" of the Law proves that we are all guilty of violating that letter. In the similar way, that our laws and statutes are the "letter" of our laws. When one goes to court because of a breach of the law, the court determines the guilt or innocents under the letter of that law. Our courts, are about law - not necessarily about justice. However, God's Holy Law is about law and justice. Since no one can keep the letter of the Law, then all are guilty before God. However, if one is in Christ, then they are free from the servitude and penalty of the letter of the Law.
Rom 7:4 Wherefore, my brethren, ye also are become dead to the law by the body of Christ; that ye should be married to another, even to him who is raised from the dead, that we should bring forth fruit unto God.
Rom 7:5 For when we were in the flesh, the motions of sins, which were by the law, did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death.
Jesus Christ gave us the spirit of God's moral Law and not the "letter". (Matthew 22:37-40) Why? Because the Letter was meant to bring about death. The spirit of the Law, was a standard by which to live.
Rom 7:6 But now we are delivered from the law, that being dead wherein we were held; that we should serve in newness of spirit, and not in the oldness of the letter.
In this same manner, Christ moved the Sabbath from the Jewish Saturday, (Which was the letter of the Law), to the first day of the week or the Lord's Day. (The spirit of the Sabbath law). Please note: It is called the Lord's Day, meaning: something belonging to the Lord.
The Lord's Day, is the new Sabbath day for the church because both belong to the Lord.
The observance of the Sabbath Day/Lord’s Day was not a controversy in the early church and the majority of the churches taught and observed in observing the Lord’s Day. Therefore, the Christian Sabbath is still kept today and it is the Lord's Day. Other great men had this to say:
John Bunyan:
"Have a special care to sanctify the Lord's Day; for as thou keepest it, so it will be with thee all the weeklong. Make the Lord s day the market for thy soul; let the whole day be spent in prayer, repetitions, or meditations; lay aside the affairs of the other part of the week; let thy sermon thou hast heard be converted into prayer. Shall God allow thee six days, and wilt thou not afford him one? In the church be careful to serve God, for thou art in his eyes, and not in man's."
Irenaeus Bishop of Lyons, who also lived in the second century, and who was a disciple of Polycarp, who was a companion of apostle John, speaks of the Lord's Day as the Christian Sabbath.
"On the Lord's day," said he, "every one of us Christians keeps the Sabbath."
Clement of Alexandria, of the same century, testifies:
"A Christian, according to the command of the gospel, observes the Lord's day, thereby glorifying the resurrection of the Lord."
Matthew Henry in his commentary points out,
"Those who thought themselves still under some kind of obligation by the ceremonial law esteemed one day above another, kept up a respect to the times of the Passover, Pentecost, new moons, and feast of tabernacles. Those who knew that all these things were abolished by Christ's coming esteemed everyday alike. We must understand with the exception of the Lord's Day, which all Christians unanimously observed. The apostle seems willing to let the ceremonial law wither by degrees, and to let it have an honorable burial."
Therefore, when I hear someone speak of the Sabbath, I assume they mean the Jewish Sabbath. We as Christians do not celebrate both the Sabbath and the Lord's Day. Just the Lord's Day. The new day of rest and worship.