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Title: The Christian Sabbath
       Is It Of Divine Origin?

Author: J. B. Remsburg

Release Date: December 22, 2011 [EBook #38378]
Last Updated: January 25, 2013

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

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Produced by David Widger





 










THE CHRISTIAN SABBATH  

IS IT OF DIVINE ORIGIN?  




By J. B. Remsburg  











Is the Christian Sabbath of divine origin? I propose to show that it is  notthat there is no more divinity attached to Sunday than to any  other day. I propose to show that the oft-repeated claim that it  superseded the Jewish Sabbath by divine authority is false; I propose to  show that it was originally a heathen holiday, borrowed from the pagan  worldthe venerabile die solis a day once consecrated to the  orb of light, but which has been obscured by the thick clouds of  theological gloom, that in the darkness Superstition's bats and owls may  the more easily secure their prey; I propose to show that this Puritanical  institution, whose decrepit form, supported by the crutches of state laws,  still lingers in our midst, is one of the most despicable frauds that a  tyrannical priesthood ever imposed upon credulous humanity. I propose to  show that he who deals in pious cant about "Sabbath desecration" is a  knave, or else  
     "Most ignorant of what he's most assured."

The testimony that I bring is not the testimony of the enemies of  Christianity, but of its friendsof its most learned, most loyal,  and most honorable defenders. My witnesses include the great apostle,  Paul; the most eminent of the Christian fathers; the Protestant reformers;  and many more of the church's greatest scholars and divines.  

ST. PAUL.  

One man esteemeth one day above another: another esteemeth every day  alike. Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind(Rom. xiv, 5).  

Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of a  holy day, or of the new moon, or of the Sabbath days(Colossians ii. 16).  

JUSTIN MARTYR.  

You, because you are idle for one day, suppose you are pious.... Our God  is not pleased with such observances(Dialogues, chap. xii).  

"You see that the heavens are not idle, nor do they observe the Sabbath"  (Ibid, chap, xxiii).  

IRENÆUS.  

These things [circumcision and Sabbath observance], therefore, which were  given for bondage, and for a sign to them, he [Christ] canceled by the new  covenant of liberty(Against Heresies).  

TERTULLIAN.  

"The observance of the Sabbath is demonstrated to have been temporary"  (Answer to Jews).  

"By us [Christians], to whom Sabbaths are strange" (On Idolatry).  

EUSEBIUS.  

They [the patriarchs] did not therefore regard circumcision nor observe  the Sabbath, neither do we(Ecclesiastical History, Book I., chap. iv).  

ST. CYRIL.  

Jesus Christ hath redeemed thee. Henceforth reject all observance of  Sabbaths(Savage's Sunday Observance).  

ST. EPIPHANIUS.  

God regardeth not outward cessation from works more upon one day than  another(Taylor's Works, Vol. XII).  

ST. JEROME.  

"Considered in a purely Christian point of view all days are alike"  (Neander's Church History, Vol. III.).  

As soon as they [certain devout Christian women] returned home on the  Lord's day, they sat down severally to their work, and made clothes for  themselves and others(Heylyn's History of the Sabbath, Part II., chap.  iii).  

LUTHER.  

"As regards the Sabbath, or Sunday, there is no necessity for keeping it"  (Michelet's Life of Luther, Book IV., chap. ii).  

Paul and the apostles, after the gospel began to be preached and spread  over the world, clearly released the people from the observance of the  Sabbath(Luther's Works, Vol. III., p. 73).  

If anywhere the day is made holy for the mere day's sakeif  anywhere any one sets up its observance upon a Jewish foundationthen  I order you to work on it, to dance on it, to ride on it, to feast on itto  do anything that shall reprove this encroachment on the Christian spirit  of liberty(Table Talk).  

MELANCTHON.  

The scripture allows that the observance of the Sabbath has now become  void, for it teaches that the Mosaic ceremonies are not needful after the  revelation of the gospel(Augsburg Confession).  

"The observance neither of the Sabbath nor of any other day is necessary"  (Ibid).  

BUCER.  

It is not only a superstition, but an apostasy from Christ, to think that  working on the Lord's day, in itself considered, is a sinful thing(Cox's  Sabbath Laws, p. 289).  

ZWINGLE.  

It is lawful on the Lord's day, after divine service, for any man to  pursue his labors(Ibid, p. 287).  

BEZA.  

"No cessation of work on the Lord's day is required of Christians" (Ibid,  p. 286).  

ERASMUS.  

It is meet, therefore, that the keeping of the Sabbath day give place to  the commodity and profit of man(Paraphrase on Mark).  

CALVIN.  

The Fathers frequently call the command for the Sabbath a shadowy  commandment, because it contains the external observance of the day, which  was abolished with the rest of the figures at the advent of Christ.... The  same day which put an end to the shadows admonishes Christians not to  adhere to a shadowy ceremony(Institutes, Book II., chap. viii).  Christians, therefore, should have nothing to do with a superstitious  observance of days(Ibid).  

ARCHBISHOP CRANMER.  

The Jews were commanded to keep the Sabbath day, but we Christians are  not bound to such commandments of Moses's law(Cranmer's Catechism).  

WILLIAM TYNDALE.  

We be lords over the Sabbath, and may yet change it into Monday, or into  any other day as we see need, or may make every tenth day holy(Answer to  More, Book I., chap. xxv).  

JOHN FRITH.  

We are in manner as superstitious in the Sunday as they [the Jews] are in  the Saturday; yea, are we much madder; for the Jews have the word for  their Saturday, since it is the seventh day, and they are commanded to  keep the seventh day solemn; and we have not the word of God for us, but  rather against us, for we keep not the seventh day as the Jews do, but the  first, which is not commanded by God's law(Declaration of Baptism).  

COLERIDGE.  

The English Reformers took the same view of the day as Luther and the  early church(Comments on Luther's Table Talk).  

DR. HESSEY.  

The Reformers were nearly unanimous on this point. Sabbatarianism of  every phase was expressly repudiated by the chief reformers in almost  every country(Bampton Lectures).  

JOHN MILTON.  

"The law of the Sabbath being thus repealed, that no particular day of  worship has been appointed in its place [by divine authority] is evident"  (Christian Doctrines, Book II., chap. vii).  

GROTIUS.  

These things refute those who suppose that the first day of the week was  substituted in place of the Sabbath, for no mention is ever made of such a  thing by Christ or his apostles(Annotations on Exodus).  

ARCHBISHOP PALEY.  

The observance of the Sabbath was not one of the articles enjoined by the  apostles(Moral Philosophy, Book V., chap. vii).  

The opinion that Christ and his apostles meant to retain the duties of  the Jewish Sabbath, shifting only the day from the seventh to the first,  seems to prevail without sufficient reasons(Ibid).The resting on that  day from our employments, longer than we are detained from them by  attendance upon these assemblies, is, to Christians, an ordinance of human  institution(Ibid).  

ARCHBISHOP WHATELY.  

It is not merely that the apostles left us no command perpetuating the  observance of the Sabbath, and transferring the day from the seventh to  the first.... There is not even any tradition of their having made such a  change; nay, more, it is even abundantly plain that they made no such  change(Notes on Paul).  

JEREMY TAYLOR.  

The Lord's day did not succeed in the place of the Sabbath, but the  Sabbath was wholly abrogated(Taylor's Works, Vol. XII).The primitive  Christians did all manner of works upon the Lord's day, even in times of  persecution, when they were the strictest observers of all the divine  commandments(Ductor Dubitantium, Book II., chap. ii).  

BISHOP WHITE.  

In St. Jerome's days, and in the very place where he was residing, the  devoutest Christians did ordinarily work upon the Lord's day, when the  service of the church was ended(Dialogues on the Lord's Day, p. 236).  

BISHOP WARBURTON.  

The observance of the Sabbath is no more a natural duty than  circumcision(Divine Legation, Book IV., sec. 6).  

WILLIAM PENN.  

To call any day of the week a Christian Sabbath is not Christian, but  Jewish(Penn's Works).  

CANON BARRY.  

The notion of a formal substitution, by apostolic authority, of the  Lord's day for the Jewish Sabbath... has no basis whatever in holy  scripture or in Christian antiquity(Lecture on Sabbath).  

REV. JAMES FREEMAN CLARKE.  

Scholars are now generally agreed that the Sabbath obligation was not  transferred by Christ or his apostles to the first day; that there is not  in the Christian scriptures [New Testament] a single command to keep the  Sabbath in any form or on any day(North American Review).  

ANDREWS.  

The festival of Sunday is more ancient than the Christian religion, its  origin being lost in remote antiquity. It did not originate, however, from  any divine command nor from piety toward God; on the contrary, it was set  apart as a sacred day by the heathen world in honor of their chief god,  the sun(History of the Sabbath, p. 258).  

VERSTEGAN.  

Unto the day dedicated unto the especial adoration of the idol of the  sun, they [the pagans] gave the name of Sunday, as much as to say the  sun's day or the day of the sun. This idol was placed in a temple, and  there adored and sacrificed unto(Antiquities, p. 68).  

MORER.  

Sunday being the day on which the gentiles solemnly adored that planet,  and called it Sunday,... the Christians thought fit to keep the same day  and the same name of it, that they might not appear causelessly peevish,  and by that means hinder the conversion of the gentiles(Dialogues on the  Lord's Day, p. 22).  

DEAN MILMAN.  

The day of the sun would be willingly hallowed by almost all of the pagan  world(History of Christianity, Book III., chap. iv).  

DOMVILLE.  

Centuries of the Christian era passed away before the Sunday was observed  by the Christian church as a Sabbath. History does not furnish us with a  single proof or indication that it was at any time so observed previous to  the Sabbatical edict of Constantine in a.d. 321(Six Texts, p. 241).  

Not any ecclesiastical writer of the first three centuries attributed the  origin of Sunday observance either to Christ or to his apostles(Six  Texts, supplement).  

KITTO.  

Though in later times we find considerable reference to a sort of  consecration of the day [Sunday], it does not seem at any period of the  ancient church to have assumed the form of such an observance as some  modern religious communities have contended for. Nor do these writers in  any instance pretend to allege any divine command, or even apostolic  practice, in support of it(Cyclopedia of Biblical Literature, Art.  Lord's Day).  

COX.  

There is no evidence, however, that either at this, or at a period much  later, the observance was viewed as deriving any obligation from the  Fourth Commandment; it seems to have been regarded as an institution  corresponding in nature with Christmas, Good Friday, and other festivals  of the church(Sabbath Laws, p. 281).  

NEANDER.  

The festival of Sunday, like all other festivals, was always only a human  ordinance(Church History, Rose's translation, p. 186).  

DR. HENGSTENBERG.  

The opinion that the Sabbath was transferred to Sunday was first broached  in its perfect form, and with all its consequences, in the controversy  which was carried on in England between the Episcopalians and  Presbyterians [about the close of the sixteenth century]. The  Presbyterians were now in a position which compelled them either to give  up the observance of the Sunday, or to maintain that a divine appointment  from God separated it from the other festivals. The first they could not  do.... They therefore decided upon the latter(Lord's Day, p. 66).  

DR. HEYLYN.  

The brethren had tried many ways to suppress them [church festivals]  formerly, as having too much in them of the superstitions of the church of  Rome, but they had found no way successful till they fell on this, which  was to set on foot some new Sabbath doctrine, and, by advancing the  authority of the Lord's-day Sabbath, to cry down the rest(History of the  Sabbath).Though Jewish and Rabbinical this doctrine was, it carried a  fair show of piety, at the least, in the opinion of the common people, and  such as did not stand to examine the true grounds thereof, but took it  upon the appearance; such as did judge, not by the workmanship of the  stuff, but the gloss and color, in which it is not strange to see how  suddenly men were induced, not only to give way unto it, but without more  ado to abet the same, till in the end, and in very little time, it grew  the most bewitching error and most popular infatuation that ever was  infused into the people of England(Ibid).  

REV. J. N. WAGGONER.  

Read your Bible through a hundred times with reference to this subject,  and you will each time become more and more convinced of the truthfulness  of the following notable facts: 1. There is no divine command for Sunday  observance. 2. There is not the least hint of a Sunday institution. 3.  Christ never changed God's Sabbath to Sunday. 4. He never observed Sunday  as the Sabbath. 5. The apostles never kept Sunday for the Sabbath. 6.  There is no prophecy that Sunday would ever take the place of the Sabbath.  7. Neither God, Christ, angels, nor inspired men have ever said one word  in favor of Sunday as a holy day(The Truth Found).  

CARDINAL GIBBONS.  

Read the Bible from Genesis to Revelation, and you will not find a single  line authorizing the sanctification of Sunday as a Sabbath(Faith of Our  Fathers).  

ALEXANDER CAMPBELL.  

There is no precept or command in the New Testament to compel by civil  law any man who is not a Christian to pay regard to the Lord's day. It is  without authority of the Christian religion. I write this from principle.  I have but one object in viewthe suppression of an anti-rational,  anti-constitutional, and anti-scriptural confederation, that I  conscientiously believe to be dangerous to the community, and inimical to  civil and religious liberty; and while I am able to wield pen, I will  oppose every such encroachment on human right*(Washington, Pa.,  Reporter, 1821).  
     St. Patrlck's   Cathedral,   New   York. Valued  at
     $800,000.    Not  Taxed.

PRESIDENT GARFIELD  

in Congress, June 22, 1874, said: "The divorce between the church and the  state ought to be absolute. It ought to be so absolute that no church  property, anywhere in any state, or in the nation, should be exempted from  equal taxation; for if you exempt the property of any church organization,  to that extent you impose a church tax upon the whole community."  

The census of 1890 gave the United States church property worth  $679,426,489. The 1906 census showed $1,257,575,867. The value had nearly  doubled in 16 years. Although church property doubles in 16 years, church  membership would not double in' 70 years, for the 36,000,000 members in  1911 gained but a half million in 1912. Church progress, then, is not  counted in converts, but in dollars accumulated through an exemption which  in New York equals the cost of caring for all the city's poor.  

PRESIDENT GRANT  

in his annual message of 1875 said: "In a growing country, where real  estate enhances so rapidly with time as in the United States, there is  scarcely a limit to the wealth that may be acquired by corporations,  religious or otherwise, if allowed to retain real estate without taxation.  The contemplation of so vast a property as here alluded to, without  taxation, may lead to sequestration without constitutional authority, and  through blood. I would suggest the taxation of all property equally."  













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