Key Text
"On the venerable day of
the Sun let the Magistrates and the people residing in the cities
rest, and let all workshops be closed." Edict
of Constantine A.D. 321
The nominal conversion of Constantine, in the early part of the
fourth century, caused great rejoicing; and the world, cloaked with
a form of righteousness, walked into the church. Now the work of
corruption rapidly progressed. Paganism, while appearing to be vanquished,
became the conqueror. Her spirit controlled the church. Her doctrines,
ceremonies, and superstitions were incorporated into the faith and
worship of the professed followers of Christ.
This compromise between paganism and Christianity resulted in the development
of "the man of sin" foretold in prophecy as opposing and exalting himself above
God.
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"The retention of the old pagan name of Dies Solis, for Sunday is,
in a great measure, owing to the union of pagan and Christian sentiment
with which the first day of the week was recommended by Constantine
to his subjects - pagan and Christian alike - as the 'venerable'
day of the sun." Arthur P. Stanley, History of the Eastern Church,
p. 184
"Thus we learn from Socrates (H.E., vi.c.8) that in his time public
worship was held in the churches of Constantinople on both days....
The view that the Christian's Lord's day or Sunday is but the Christian
Sabbath deliberately transferred from the seventh to the first day
of the week does not indeed find categorical expression till a much
later period.... The earliest recognition of the observance of Sunday
as a legal duty is a constitution of Constantine in A.D. 321, enacting
that all courts of justice, inhabitants of towns, and workshops were
to be at rest on Sunday (venerabili die Solis), with an exception
in favour of those engaged in agricultural labour...The Council of
Laodicea (363) ... forbids Christians from judaizing and resting
on the Sabbath day, preferring the Lord's day, and so far as possible
resting as Christians."-Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1899 Edition, Vol.
XXIII, page 654
"Sunday was a name given by the heathens to the first day of the
week, because it was the day on which they worshipped the sun, ...the
seventh day was blessed and hallowed by God Himself, and ...He requires
His creatures to keep it holy to Him. This commandment is of universal
and perpetual obligation...The Creator 'blessed the seventh day'-declared
it to be a day above all days, a day- on which His favour should
assuredly rest. ...So long, then, as man exists, and the world around
him endures,' does the law of the early Sabbath remain. It cannot
be set aside so long as its foundations last.... It is not the Jewish
Sabbath, properly so-called, which is ordained in the fourth commandment.
In the whole of that injunction there is no Jewish element, any more
than there is in the third commandment, or the sixth." Eadie's
Biblical Cyclopedia, 1872 Edition, page 561.
"...pastoral
intuition suggested to the Church the christianization of the notion
of Sunday as "the day of the sun", which was the Roman name for the
day and which is retained in some modern languages.(29) This was
in order to draw the faithful away from the seduction of cults which
worshipped the sun, and to direct the celebration of the day to Christ,
humanity's true "sun"." John Paul II, Dies Domini, 27. The day of Christ-Light,
1998
"... you may read the Bible from Genesis to Revelation, and you will not find
a single line authorizing the sanctification of Sunday. The Scriptures enforce
the religious observance of Saturday, a day which we never sanctify." The
Faith of Our Fathers, by James Cardinal Gibbons, Archbishop of Baltimore,
88th edition, page 89. Originally published in 1876, republished and Copyright
1980 by TAN Books and Publishers, Inc., pages 72-73.
Key Text
"And he shall speak great words against the most
High, and shall wear out the saints of the most High, and think
to change times and laws: and they shall be given into his
hand until a time and times and the dividing of time. " Daniel
7:25 |
'Deny the authority of the Church and you have no adequate or reasonable explanation
or justification for the substitution of Sunday for Saturday in the Third - Protestant
Fourth - Commandment of God... The Church is above the Bible, and this transference
of Sabbath observance is proof of that fact.'' Catholic
Record, September 1, 1923.
"The Sun was a foremost god with heathen-dom…The sun has worshippers at
this hour in Persia and other lands…. There is, in truth, something royal,
kingly about the sun, making it a fit emblem of Jesus, the Sun of Justice. Hence
the church in these countries would seem to have said, to 'Keep that old pagan
name [Sunday]. It shall remain consecrated, sanctified.' And thus the pagan Sunday,
dedicated to Balder, became the Christian Sunday, sacred to Jesus." William
Gildea, Doctor of Divinity, The Catholic World, March, 1894, p. 809
"There is but one church on the face of the earth which has the power, or claims
power, to make laws binding on the conscience, binding before God, binding under
penalty of hell-fire. For instance, the institution of Sunday. What right has
any other church to keep this day? You answer by virtue of the third commandment
(the papacy did away with the 2nd regarding the worship of graven images, and
called the 4th the 3rd), which says 'Remember that thou keep holy the Sabbath
day.' But Sunday is not the Sabbath. Any schoolboy knows that Sunday is the first
day of the week. I have repeatedly offered one thousand dollars to anyone who
will prove by the Bible alone that Sunday is the day we are bound to keep, and
no one has called for the money. It was the holy Catholic Church that changed
the day of rest from Saturday, the seventh day, to Sunday, the first day of the
week." - T. Enright, C.S.S.R., in a lecture delivered in 1893.
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