>>>The Early Christians in fact all Christians worshipped on the first day, the day the Lord rose from the dead.>>>>
The apostolic church never kept the first day as a holy day. Rome changed the sabbath over time to appease the pagans...the “day of the sun”
It was a gradual change over a few hundred years. We even read this prophecy in Daniel 7:25......she would attempt to change set times and law. The only law in the 10 having to do with time is the Sabbath.
That being said....do you keep Sunday as the Lord’s day? A day of rest, no unnecessary work, turning thy foot from the Sabbath not doing thine own pleasure?
If so......hey, I’m impressed. I can’t find anyone who even keeps Sunday anymore. You made the argument above....albeit a weak one that Sunday is the Lord’s day and God changed his law......so do you even keep that day?
I’m interested. Thank you.
The Apostolic Church only kept the first day as the Lord’s day.
That’s why in Romance languages and in Greek and Georgian and Aramaic, Saturday and Sunday are
Latin Sabbato Domini (Lord’s)
Greek Σάββατο (sabbato) Κυριακή (Lord’s day)
Georgian შაბათი (shabati) კვირა (Lord’s)
Armenian շաբաթ օրը. (shabat’ory) Կիրակի (Lord’s)
Aramaic σάββατον
The Apostolic church - as clearly evidenced in every early Christian writing, worshiped on Sunday.
Christians worship on Sunday.
Modernist philosophies like the Seventh Day adventists are no different than Wiccans or Mormons - just made-up 19th century drivel.