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1 posted on 05/02/2009 2:35:35 PM PDT by Conservative Coulter Fan
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To: Conservative Coulter Fan
i always thought it was changed from Sat to Sun because Christ was risen on a Sunday...
2 posted on 05/02/2009 3:00:37 PM PDT by Chode (American Hedonist - Obama is basically Jim Jones with a teleprompter)
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To: Conservative Coulter Fan

Truly wonderful and full of scriptures proving so many things. Thank you.


3 posted on 05/02/2009 3:02:02 PM PDT by Marysecretary (.GOD IS STILL IN CONTROL)
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To: DouglasKC

ping


5 posted on 05/02/2009 3:47:30 PM PDT by STYRO
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To: Conservative Coulter Fan
"until heaven and earth pass away, not the smallest letter or stroke shall pass away from the Law, until all is accomplished"

This should apply to all the commandments....not just the Sabbath.

6 posted on 05/02/2009 4:08:18 PM PDT by blasater1960 ( Dt 30, Ps 111, The Torah is perfect, attainable, now and forever)
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To: Conservative Coulter Fan; Salvation
From my current reading:
The principle underlying the Sabbath is formulated in the Decalogue itself. It consists in this, that man must copy God in the course of life. The divine creative work completed itself in six days, whereupon the seventh followed as a day of rest for God. In connection with God, "rest" cannot, of course, mean mere cessation from labour, far less recovery from fatigue. Such a meaning is by no means required by the Old Testament usage of the word. "Rest" resembles the word "peace" in this respect, that it has in Scripture, in fact to the Shemitic mind generally, a positive rather than a negative import. It stands for consummation of a work accomplished and the joy and satisfaction attendant upon this. Such was its prototype in God. Mankind must copy this, and that not only in the sequences of daily existence as regards individuals; but in its collective capacity through a large historic movement. For mankind, too, a great task waits to be accomplished, and at its close beckons a rest of joy and satisfaction that shall copy the rest of God.

Before all other important things, therefore, the Sabbath is an expression of the eschatological principle on which the life of humanity has been constructed.

...

The universal Sabbath law received a modified significance under the Covenant of Grace. The work which issues into the rest can now no longer be man's own work. It becomes the work of Christ. This the Old Testament and the New Testament have in common. But they differ as to the perspective in which they each see th emergence of work and rest. Inasmuch as the Old Covenant was still looking forward to the performance of the Messianic work, naturally the days of labour to it come first, the day of rest falls at the end of the week. We, under the New Covenant, look back upon the accomplished work of Christ. We, therefore, first celebrate the rest in principle procured by Christ, although the Sabbath also still remains a sign looking forward to the final eschatological rest. The Old Testament people of God had to typify in their life the future developments of redemption. Consequently the precedence of labour and the consequence of rest had to find expression in their calendar. The New Testament Church has no such typical function to perform, for the types have been fulfilled. But is has a great historic event to commemorate, the performance of the work of Christ and the entrance of Him and of His people through Him upon the state of never-ending rest. We do not sufficiently realize the profound sense the early Church had of the epoch-making significance of the appearance, and especially of the resurrection of the Messiah. The latter was to them nothing less than the bringing in of a new, the second, creation. And they felt that this ought to find expression in the placing of the Sabbath with reference to the other days of the week. Believers knew themselves in a measure partakers of the Sabbath-fulfillment. If the one creation required on sequence, then the other required another. It has been strikingly observed, that our Lord died on the eve of that Jewish Sabbath, at th end of one of these typical weeks of labour by which His work and its consummation were prefigured. And Christ entered upon His rest, the rest of His new, eternal life on the first day of the week, so that the Jewish Sabbath comes to lie between, was, as it were, disposed of, buried in His grave. (Delitzsch.) If there is in the New Testament no formal enactment regarding this change, the cause lies in the superfluousness of it. Doubtless Jewish Christians began with observing both days, and only gradually the instinctive perception of the sacredness of the day of the Lord's resurrection began to make itself felt.

--Geerhardus Vos, Biblical Theology, Banner of Truth Press, p 140-142

Hmmm. WWCoG spin-off?

10 posted on 05/02/2009 7:31:45 PM PDT by Lee N. Field (Come, behold the works of the LORD, how he has brought desolations on the earth.)
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To: Conservative Coulter Fan

My goodness the stench!

I thought I was driving past a pulp mill but no, that sulfurous stench is anti-Catholic hatred.


11 posted on 05/02/2009 7:33:16 PM PDT by Petronski (Learn about the 'cytokine storm.')
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To: Conservative Coulter Fan

I’ll stick to Saturday, thanks.


15 posted on 05/03/2009 7:04:10 AM PDT by onedoug
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To: Conservative Coulter Fan
YHvH's blessings on you and your house !
shalom b'SHEM Yah'shua HaMashiach

32 posted on 05/03/2009 8:10:34 AM PDT by Uri’el-2012 (Psalm 119:174 I long for Your salvation, YHvH, Your law is my delight.)
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To: Conservative Coulter Fan; All

I can’t believe we’re even having this discussion.

The Bible says: “One man esteems one day above another: another esteems every day alike. Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind. He that regards the day, regards it unto the Lord; and he that regards not the day, to the Lord he does not regard it. He that eats, eats to the Lord, for he gives God thanks; and he that eats not, to the Lord he eats not, and gives God thanks” (Rom. 14:5-6).

Cased closed.


61 posted on 05/03/2009 10:31:39 AM PDT by Terabitten (Vets wrote a blank check, payable to the Constitution, for an amount up to and including their life.)
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To: Conservative Coulter Fan
"And on the eve of the sabbaths, at the dawn, toward the first of the sabbaths, came Mary the Magdalene, and the other Mary, to see the sepulchre"
(Matthew 28:1, YLT)

113 posted on 05/03/2009 2:24:56 PM PDT by Lexinom
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