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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55818 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55818)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Complete Testimony of the Fathers of
-the First Three Centuries Concerning the Sabbath and First Day, by John Nevins Andrews
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Complete Testimony of the Fathers of the First Three Centuries Concerning the Sabbath and First Day
-
-Author: John Nevins Andrews
-
-Release Date: October 26, 2017 [EBook #55818]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SABBATH AND FIRST DAY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David E. Brown, Bryan Ness and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CATALOGUE
-
-Of Books, Pamphlets, Tracts, &c., Issued by the Seventh-Day Adventist
-Publishing Association.
-
-
-THE ADVENT REVIEW & HERALD OF THE SABBATH, weekly. Terms, $2.00 a year,
-in advance.
-
-THE YOUTH'S INSTRUCTOR, monthly, devoted to moral and religious
-instruction. Terms, 50 cts. a year, in advance.
-
-THE HEALTH REFORMER, monthly, devoted to an exposition of the laws of
-life, etc. Terms, $1.00 a year, in advance.
-
-THE ADVENT TIDENDE, a religious monthly in the Danish language. Terms,
-$1.00 a year, in advance.
-
-THE SVENSK ADVENT HÀROLD, a religious monthly in the Swedish tongue.
-Terms, $1.00 a year, in advance.
-
-HYMN AND TUNE BOOK.--536 hymns--147 tunes. $1.00.
-
-THE HISTORY OF THE SABBATH AND FIRST DAY OF THE WEEK. By J. N. Andrews.
-528 pp., $1.25.
-
-THE CHRISTIAN LIFE AND PUBLIC LABORS OF WM. MILLER, the noted Lecturer
-and Writer upon the Prophecies. $1.00.
-
-THOUGHTS ON THE BOOK OF DANIEL, critical and practical. By U. Smith.
-Bound, $1.00; condensed edition, paper, 35 cts.
-
-THOUGHTS ON THE REVELATION, critical and practical. By U. Smith. 328
-pp., $1.00.
-
-THE NATURE AND DESTINY OF MAN. By U. Smith. 384 pp., bound, $1.00,
-paper, 40 cts.
-
-THE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT: or a Discussion between W. H. Littlejohn
-and the editor of the _Christian Statesman_ on the Sabbath question.
-$1.00.
-
-THE SPIRIT OF PROPHECY. By Mrs. E. G. White. $1.00.
-
-LIFE OF ELDER JOSEPH BATES. $1.25.
-
-THE GAME OF LIFE, with notes. Three illustrations, 5×6 inches each,
-representing Satan playing with man for his soul. In board, 50 cts., in
-paper, 30 cts.
-
-(POEM.) A WORD FOR THE SABBATH: or False Theories Exposed. By U. Smith.
-3d ed. revised and enlarged. 40 cts.
-
-THE UNITED STATES IN PROPHECY. By U. Smith. Bound, 50 cts.; paper, 25
-cts.
-
- PROGRESSIVE BIBLE LESSONS for Youth, in boards, 50 cts.
- " " " Children, " 35 cts.
-
- (See third page of cover.)
-
-
-
-
- THE COMPLETE
-
- TESTIMONY OF THE FATHERS
-
- OF THE
-
- _First Three Centuries_
-
- CONCERNING
-
- The Sabbath and First Day
-
- BY ELD. J. N. ANDREWS
-
- SECOND EDITION.
-
- STEAM PRESS
- OF THE SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST PUBLISHING ASSOCIATION
- BATTLE CREEK, MICH.:
-
- 1876.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-The testimony for first-day sacredness is very meager in the
-Scriptures, as even its own advocates must admit. But they have been
-wont to supply the deficiency by a plentiful array of testimonies from
-the early fathers of the church. Here, in time past, they have had
-the field all to themselves, and they have allowed their zeal for the
-change of the Sabbath to get the better of their honesty and their
-truthfulness. The first-day Sabbath was absolutely unknown before the
-time of Constantine. Nearly one hundred years elapsed after John was in
-vision on Patmos before the term "Lord's day" was applied to the first
-day. During this time, it was called "the day of the sun," "the first
-day of the week," and "the eighth day." The first writers who gave
-it the name of "Lord's day," state the remarkable fact that in their
-judgement the true Lord's day consists of every day of a Christian's
-life, a very convincing proof that they did not give this title to
-Sunday because John had so named it on Patmos. In fact, no one of those
-who give this title to Sunday ever assigned as a reason for so doing
-that it was thus called by John. Nor is there any intimation in one
-of the fathers that first-day observance was an act of obedience to
-the fourth commandment, nor one clear statement that ordinary labor on
-that day was sinful. In order to show these facts, I have undertaken to
-give every testimony of every one of the fathers, prior to A. D. 325,
-who mentions either the Sabbath or the first day. Though some of these
-quotations are comparatively unimportant, others are of very great
-value. I have given them all, in order that the reader may actually
-possess their entire testimony. I have principally followed the
-translation of the "Ante-Nicene Christian Library," and have in every
-case made use of first-day translations. The work has been one of great
-labor to me, and I trust will be found of much profit to the candid
-reader.
-
- J. N. ANDREWS.
-
- _Lancaster, Mass., Jan. 1, 1873._
-
-
-PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
-
-In this edition every quotation has been carefully compared with the
-works of the fathers from which they were taken. A few minor errors
-have been detected, but none of importance. The work is commended to
-the attention of candid inquirers with the prayer that God will make it
-instrumental in opening the eyes of many to the truth concerning his
-holy day.
-
- J. N. A.
-
- _Neuchátel, Switzerland, April 7, 1876._
-
-
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF THE FATHERS.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT.
-
-
-With respect to the Sabbath, the religious world may be divided into
-three classes:--
-
-1. Those who retain the ancient seventh-day Sabbath.
-
-2. Those who observe the first-day Sabbath.
-
-3. Those who deny the existence of any Sabbath.[A]
-
-It is inevitable that controversy should exist between these parties.
-Their first appeal is to the Bible, and this should decide the case;
-for it reveals man's whole duty. But there is an appeal by the second
-party, and sometimes by the third, to another authority, the early
-fathers of the church, for the decision of the question.
-
-The controversy stands thus: The second and third parties agree with
-the first that God did anciently require the observance of the seventh
-day; but both deny the doctrine of the first, that he still requires
-men to hallow that day; the second asserting that he has changed the
-Sabbath to the first day of the week; and the third declaring that he
-has totally abolished the institution itself.
-
-The first class plant themselves upon the plain letter of the law
-of God, and adduce those scriptures which teach the perpetuity and
-immutability of the moral law, and which show that the new covenant
-does not abrogate that law, but puts it into the heart of every
-Christian.
-
-The second class attempt to prove the change of the Sabbath by quoting
-those texts which mention the first day of the week, and also those
-which are said to refer to it. The first day is, on such authority,
-called by this party the Christian Sabbath, and the fourth commandment
-is used by them to enforce this new Sabbath.
-
-The third class adduce those texts which assert the dissolution of the
-old covenant; and those which teach the abolition of the ceremonial
-law with all its distinction of days, as new moons, feast days, and
-annual sabbaths; and also those texts which declare that men cannot be
-justified by that law which condemns sin; and from all these contend
-that the law and the Sabbath are both abolished.
-
-But the first class answer to the second that the texts which they
-bring forward do not meet the case, inasmuch as they say nothing
-respecting the change of the Sabbath; and that it is not honest to use
-the fourth commandment to enforce the observance of a day not therein
-commanded. And the third class assent to this answer as truthful and
-just.
-
-To the position of the third class, the first make this answer: That
-the old covenant was made between God and his people _concerning_ his
-law;[B] that it ceased because the people failed in its conditions, the
-keeping of the commandments; that the new covenant does not abrogate
-the law of God, but secures obedience to it by putting it into the
-heart of every Christian; that there are two systems of law, one being
-made up of typical and ceremonial precepts, and the other consisting of
-moral principles only; that those texts which speak of the abrogation
-of the handwriting of ordinances and of the distinction in meats,
-drinks, and days, pertain alone to this shadowy system, and never to
-the moral law which contains the Sabbath of the Lord; and that it is
-not the fault of the law, but of sinners, that they are condemned by
-it; and that justification being attained only by the sacrifice of
-Christ as a sin offering, is in itself a most powerful attestation to
-the perpetuity, immutability, and perfection, of that law which reveals
-sin. And to this answer the second class heartily assent.
-
-But the second class have something further to say. The Bible, indeed,
-fails to assert the change of the Sabbath, but these persons have
-something else to offer, in their estimation, equally as good as the
-Scriptures. The early fathers of the church, who conversed with the
-apostles, or who conversed with some who had conversed with them, and
-those who followed for several generations, are by this class presented
-as authority, and their testimony is used to establish the so-called
-Christian Sabbath on a firm basis. And this is what they assert
-respecting the fathers: That they distinctly teach the change of the
-Sabbath from the seventh to the first day of the week, and that the
-first day is by divine authority the Christian Sabbath.
-
-But the third class squarely deny this statement, and affirm that the
-fathers held the Sabbath as an institution made for the Jews when they
-came out of Egypt, and that Christ abolished it at his death. They
-also assert that the fathers held the first day, not as a Sabbath in
-which men must not labor lest they break a divine precept, but as an
-ecclesiastical institution, which they called the Lord's day, and
-which was the proper day for religious assemblies because custom and
-tradition thus concurred. And so the third class answer the second by
-an explicit denial of its alleged facts. They also aim a blow at the
-first by the assertion that the early fathers taught the no-Sabbath
-doctrine, which must therefore be acknowledged as the real doctrine of
-the New Testament.
-
-And now the first class respond to these conflicting statements of the
-second and the third. And here is their response:--
-
-1. That our duty respecting the Sabbath, and respecting every other
-thing, can be learned only from the Scriptures.
-
-2. That the first three hundred years after the apostles nearly
-accomplished the complete development of the great apostasy, which had
-commenced even in Paul's time; and this age of apostatizing cannot be
-good authority for making changes in the law of God.
-
-3. That only a small proportion of the ministers and teachers of
-this period have transmitted any writings to our time; and these are
-generally fragments of the original works, and they have come down to
-us mainly through the hands of the Romanists, who have never scrupled
-to destroy or to corrupt that which witnesses against themselves,
-whenever it has been in their power to do it.
-
-4. But inasmuch as these two classes, viz., those who maintain the
-first-day Sabbath, and those who deny the existence of any Sabbath,
-both appeal to these fathers for testimony with which to sustain
-themselves, and to put down the first class, viz., those who hallow
-the ancient Sabbath, it becomes necessary that the exact truth
-respecting the writings of that age, which now exist, should be shown.
-There is but one method of doing this which will effectually end the
-controversy. This is to give every one of their testimonies concerning
-the Sabbath and first-day in their own words. In doing this the
-following facts will appear:--
-
-1. That in some important particulars there is a marked disagreement
-on this subject among them. For while some teach that the Sabbath
-originated at creation and should be hallowed even now, others assert
-that it began with the fall of the manna, and ended with the death
-of Christ. And while one class represent Christ as a violator of the
-Sabbath, another class represent him as sacredly hallowing it, and
-a third class declare that he certainly did violate it, and that
-he certainly never did, but always observed it! Some of them also
-affirm that the Sabbath was abolished, and in other places positively
-affirm that it is perpetuated and made more sacred than it formerly
-was. Moreover, some assert that the ten commandments are absolutely
-abolished, whilst others declare that they are perpetuated, and are
-the tests of Christian character in this dispensation. Some call the
-day of Christ's resurrection the first day of the week; others call
-it the day of the sun, and the eighth day; and a larger number call
-it the Lord's day, but there are no examples of this application till
-the close of the second century. Some enjoin the observance of both
-the Sabbath and the first day, while others treat the seventh day as
-despicable.
-
-2. But in several things of great importance there is perfect unity of
-sentiment. They always distinguish between the Sabbath and the first
-day of the week. The change of the Sabbath from the seventh day to the
-first is never mentioned in a single instance. They never term the
-first day the Christian Sabbath, nor do they treat it as a Sabbath of
-any kind. Nor is there a single declaration in any of them that labor
-on the first day of the week is sinful; the utmost that can be found
-being one or two vague expressions which do not necessarily have any
-such sense.
-
-3. Many of the fathers call the first day of the week the Lord's day.
-But none of them claim for it any scriptural authority, and some
-expressly state that it has none whatever, but rests solely upon custom
-and tradition.
-
-4. But the writings of the fathers furnish positive proof that the
-Sabbath was observed in the Christian church down to the time when they
-wrote, and by no inconsiderable part of that body. For some of them
-expressly enjoined its observance, and even some of those who held that
-it was abolished speak of Christians who observed it, whom they would
-consent to fellowship if they would not make it a test.
-
-5. And now mark the work of apostasy: This work never begins by
-thrusting out God's institutions, but always by bringing in those of
-men and at first only asking that they may be tolerated, while yet
-the ones ordained of God are sacredly observed. This, in time, being
-effected, the next effort is to make them equal with the divine. When
-this has been accomplished, the third stage of the process is to honor
-them above those divinely commanded; and this is speedily succeeded
-by the fourth, in which the divine institution is thrust out with
-contempt, and the whole ground given to its human rival.
-
-6. Before the first three centuries had expired, apostasy concerning
-the Sabbath had, with many of the fathers, advanced to the third stage,
-and with a considerable number had already entered upon the fourth. For
-those fathers who hallow the Sabbath do generally associate with it the
-festival called by them the Lord's day. And though they speak of the
-Sabbath as a divine institution, and never speak thus of the so-called
-Lord's day, they do, nevertheless, give the greater honor to this human
-festival. So far had the apostasy progressed before the end of the
-third century, that only one thing more was needed to accomplish the
-work as far as the Sabbath was concerned, and this was to discard it,
-and to honor the Sunday festival alone. Some of the fathers had already
-gone thus far; and the work became general within five centuries after
-Christ.
-
-7. The modern church historians make very conflicting statements
-respecting the Sabbath during the first centuries. Some pass over it
-almost in silence, or indicate that it was, at most, observed only by
-Jewish Christians. Others, however, testify to its general observance
-by the Gentile Christians; yet some of these assert that the Sabbath
-was observed as a matter of expediency and not of moral obligation,
-because those who kept it did not believe the commandments were
-binding. (This is a great error, as will appear in due time.) What is
-said, however, by these modern historians is comparatively unimportant
-inasmuch as their sources of information were of necessity the very
-writings which are about to be quoted.
-
-8. In the following pages will be found, in their own words, every
-statement[C] which the fathers of the first three centuries make by
-way of defining their views of the Sabbath and first-day. And even
-when they merely allude to either day in giving their views of other
-subjects, the nature of the allusion is stated, and, where practicable,
-the sentence or phrase containing it is quoted. The different writings
-are cited in the order in which they purport to have been written. A
-considerable number were not written by the persons to whom they were
-ascribed, but at a later date. As these have been largely quoted by
-first-day writers, they are here given in full. And even these writings
-possess a certain historical value. For though not written by the ones
-whose names they bear, they are known to have been in existence since
-the second or third century, and they give some idea of the views which
-then prevailed.
-
-First of all let us hear the so-called "Apostolical Constitutions."
-These were not the work of the apostles, but they were in existence
-as early as the third century, and were then very generally believed
-to express the doctrine of the apostles. They do therefore furnish
-important historical testimony to the practice of the church at that
-time. Mosheim in his Historical Commentaries, Cent. 1, sect. 51, speaks
-thus of these "Constitutions":--
-
- "The matter of this work is unquestionably ancient; since the
- manners and discipline of which it exhibits a view are those which
- prevailed amongst the Christians of the second and third centuries,
- especially those resident in Greece and the oriental regions."
-
-Of the "Apostolical Constitutions," Guericke's Church History speaks
-thus:--
-
- "This is a collection of ecclesiastical statutes purporting to be
- the work of the apostolic age, but in reality formed gradually
- in the second, third, and fourth centuries, and is of much value
- in reference to the history of polity, and Christian archæology
- generally."--_Ancient Church_, p. 212.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-TESTIMONY OF THE APOSTOLICAL CONSTITUTIONS.
-
-
- "Have before thine eyes the fear of God, and always remember the
- ten commandments of God,--to love the one and only Lord God with
- all thy strength; to give no heed to idols, or any other beings,
- as being lifeless gods, or irrational beings or dæmons. Consider
- the manifold workmanship of God, which received its beginning
- through Christ. Thou shalt observe the Sabbath, on account of Him
- who ceased from his work of creation, but ceased not from his work
- of providence: it is a rest for meditation of the law, not for
- idleness of the hands." Book ii., sect. 4, par. 36.
-
-This is sound Sabbatarian doctrine. But apostasy had begun its work in
-the establishment of the so-called Lord's day, which was destined in
-time to drive out the Sabbath. The next mention of the Sabbath also
-introduces the festival called Lord's day, but the reader will remember
-that this was written, not in the first century, but the third:--
-
- "Let your judicatures be held on the second day of the week, that
- if any controversy arise about your sentence, having an interval
- till the Sabbath, you may be able to set the controversy right, and
- to reduce those to peace who have the contests one with another
- against the Lord's day." Book ii., sect. 6, par. 47.
-
-By the term Lord's day the first day of the week is here intended. But
-the writer does not call the first day the Sabbath, that term being
-applied to the seventh day.
-
- In section 7, paragraph 59, Christians are commanded to assemble
- for worship "every day, morning and evening, singing psalms and
- praying in the Lord's house: in the morning saying the sixty-second
- psalm, and in the evening the hundred and fortieth, but principally
- on the Sabbath day. And on the day of our Lord's resurrection,
- which is the Lord's day, meet more diligently, sending praise to
- God that made the universe by Jesus and sent him to us." "Otherwise
- what apology will he make to God who does not assemble on that day
- to hear the saving word concerning the resurrection, on which we
- pray thrice standing, in memory of him who arose in three days, in
- which is performed the reading of the prophets, the preaching of
- the gospel, the oblation of the sacrifice, the gift of the holy
- food."
-
-The writer of these "Constitutions" this time gives the first day great
-prominence, though still honoring the Sabbath, and by no means giving
-that title to Sunday. But in book v., section 2, paragraph 10, we have
-a singular testimony to the manner in which Sunday was spent. Thus the
-writer says:--
-
- "Now we exhort you, brethren and fellow-servants, to avoid
- vain talk and obscene discourses, and jestings, drunkenness,
- lasciviousness, luxury, unbounded passions, with foolish
- discourses, since we do not permit you so much as on the Lord's
- days, which are days of joy, to speak or act anything unseemly."
-
-From this it appears that the so-called Lord's day was a day of greater
-mirth than the other days of the week. In book v., section 3, paragraph
-14, it is said:--
-
- "But when the first day of the week dawned he arose from the dead,
- and fulfilled those things which before his passion he foretold to
- us, saying: 'The Son of man must continue in the heart of the earth
- three days and three nights.'"
-
-In book v., section 3, paragraph 15, the writer names the days on which
-Christians should fast:--
-
- "But he commanded us to fast on the fourth and sixth days of the
- week; the former on account of his being betrayed, and the latter
- on account of his passion. But he appointed us to break our fast
- on the seventh day at the cock-crowing, but to fast on the Sabbath
- day. Not that the Sabbath day is a day of fasting, being the rest
- from the creation, but because we ought to fast on this one Sabbath
- only, while on this day the Creator was under the earth."
-
-In paragraph 17, Christians are forbidden to "celebrate the day of the
-resurrection of our Lord on any other day than a Sunday." In paragraph
-18, they are again charged to fast on that one Sabbath which comes
-in connection with the anniversary of our Lord's death. In paragraph
-19, the first day of the week is four times called the Lord's day.
-The period of 40 days from his resurrection to his ascension is to be
-observed. The anniversary of Christ's resurrection is to be celebrated
-by the supper.
-
- "And let this be an everlasting ordinance till the consummation of
- the world, until the Lord come. For to Jews the Lord is still dead,
- but to Christians he is risen: to the former, by their unbelief; to
- the latter, by their full assurance of faith. For the hope in him
- is immortal and eternal life. After eight days let there be another
- feast observed with honor, the eighth day itself, on which he gave
- me, Thomas, who was hard of belief, full assurance, by showing
- me the print of the nails, and the wound made in his side by the
- spear. And again, from the first Lord's day count forty days, from
- the Lord's day till the fifth day of the week, and celebrate the
- feast of the ascension of the Lord, whereon he finished all his
- dispensation and constitution," etc.
-
-The things here commanded can come only once in a year. These are the
-anniversary of Christ's resurrection, and of that day on which he
-appeared to Thomas, and these were to be celebrated by the supper.
-The people were also to observe the day of the ascension on the fifth
-day of the week, forty days from his resurrection, on which day he
-finished his work. In paragraph 20, they are commanded to celebrate the
-anniversary of the Pentecost.
-
- "But after ten days from the ascension, which from the first Lord's
- day is the fiftieth day, do ye keep a great festival; for on that
- day, at the third hour, the Lord Jesus sent on us the gift of the
- Holy Ghost."
-
-This was not a weekly but a yearly festival. Fasting is also set forth
-in this paragraph, but every Sabbath except the one Christ lay in the
-tomb is exempted from this fast, and every so-called Lord's day:--
-
- "We enjoin you to fast every fourth day of the week, and every day
- of the preparation [the sixth day], and the surplusage of your fast
- bestow upon the needy; every Sabbath day excepting one, and every
- Lord's day, hold your solemn assemblies, and rejoice; for he will
- be guilty of sin who fasts on the Lord's day, being the day of the
- resurrection, or during the time of Pentecost, or, in general,
- who is sad on a festival day to the Lord. For on them we ought to
- rejoice, and not to mourn."
-
-This writer asserts that it is a sin to fast or mourn on Sunday, but
-never intimates that it is a sin to labor on that day when not engaged
-in worship. We shall next learn that the decalogue is in agreement with
-the law of nature, and that it is of perpetual obligation:--
-
- In book vi., section 4, paragraph 19, it is said: "He gave a
- plain law to assist the law of nature, such an one as is pure,
- saving, and holy, in which his own name was inscribed, perfect,
- which is never to fail, being complete in ten commands, unspotted,
- converting souls."
-
- In paragraph 20 it is said: "Now the law is the decalogue, which
- the Lord promulgated to them with an audible voice."
-
- In paragraph 22 he says: "You therefore are blessed who are
- delivered from the curse. For Christ, the Son of God, by his
- coming has confirmed and completed the law, but has taken away the
- additional precepts, although not all of them, yet at least the
- more grievous ones; having confirmed the former, and abolished the
- latter." And he further testifies as follows: "And besides, before
- his coming he refused the sacrifices of the people, while they
- frequently offered them, when they sinned against him, and thought
- he was to be appeased by sacrifices, but not by repentance."
-
-For this reason the writer truthfully testifies that God refused to
-accept their burnt-offerings and sacrifices, their new moons and their
-Sabbaths.
-
- In book vi., section 23, he says: "He who had commanded to honor
- our parents, was himself subject to them. He who had commanded to
- keep the Sabbath, by resting thereon for the sake of meditating on
- the laws, has now commanded us to consider of the law of creation,
- and of providence every day, and to return thanks to God."
-
-This savors somewhat of the doctrine that all days are alike. Yet this
-cannot be the meaning; for in book vii., section 2, paragraph 23, he
-enjoins the observance of the Sabbath, and also of the Lord's-day
-festival, but specifies one Sabbath in the year in which men should
-fast. Thus he says:--
-
- "But keep the Sabbath, and the Lord's-day festival; because the
- former is the memorial of the creation, and the latter, of the
- resurrection. But there is one only Sabbath to be observed by you
- in the whole year, which is that of our Lord's burial, on which
- men ought to keep a fast, but not a festival. For inasmuch as
- the Creator was then under the earth, the sorrow for him is more
- forcible than the joy for the creation; for the Creator is more
- honorable by nature and dignity than his own creatures."
-
- In book vii., section 2, paragraph 30, he says: "On the day of
- the resurrection of the Lord, that is, the Lord's day, assemble
- yourselves together, without fail, giving thanks to God," etc.
-
- In paragraph 36, the writer brings in the Sabbath again: "O Lord
- Almighty, thou hast created the world by Christ, and hast appointed
- the Sabbath in memory thereof, because that on _that day_ thou hast
- made us _rest from our works_, for the meditation upon thy laws."
-
-In the same paragraph, in speaking of the resurrection of Christ, the
-writer says:--
-
- "On which account we solemnly assemble to celebrate the feast of
- the resurrection on the Lord's day," etc. In the same paragraph
- he speaks again of the Sabbath: "Thou didst give them the law or
- decalogue, which was pronounced by thy voice and written with
- thy hand. Thou didst enjoin the observation of the Sabbath, not
- affording them an occasion of idleness, but an opportunity of
- piety, for their knowledge of thy power, and the prohibition of
- evils; having limited them as within an holy circuit for the sake
- of doctrine, for the rejoicing upon the seventh period."
-
-In this paragraph he also states his views of the Sabbath, and of
-the day which he calls the Lord's day, giving the precedence to the
-latter:--
-
- "On this account he permitted men every Sabbath to rest, that
- so no one might be willing to send one word out of his mouth in
- anger on the day of the Sabbath. For the Sabbath is the ceasing
- of the creation, the completion of the world, the inquiry after
- laws, and the grateful praise to God for the blessings he has
- bestowed upon men. All which the Lord's day excels, and shows the
- Mediator himself, the Provider, the Law-giver, the Cause of the
- resurrection, the First-born of the whole creation," etc. And he
- adds: "So that the Lord's day commands us to offer unto thee, O
- Lord, thanksgiving for all. For this is the grace afforded by thee,
- which on account of its greatness has obscured all other blessings."
-
-It is certainly noteworthy that the so-called Lord's day, for which
-no divine warrant is produced, is here exalted above the Sabbath
-of the Lord notwithstanding the Sabbath is acknowledged to be the
-divine memorial of the creation, and to be expressly enjoined in the
-decalogue, which the writer declares to be of perpetual obligation.
-Tested by his own principles, he had far advanced in apostasy; for he
-held a human festival more honorable than one which he acknowledged to
-be ordained of God; and only a single step remained; viz., to set aside
-the commandment of God for the ordinance of man.
-
-In book viii., section 2, paragraph 4, it is said, when a bishop has
-been chosen and is to be ordained,--
-
- "Let the people assemble, with the presbytery and bishops that are
- present, on the Lord's day, and let them give their consent."
-
-In book viii., section 4, paragraph 33, occurs the final mention of
-these two days in the so-called "Apostolical Constitutions."
-
- "Let the slaves work five days; but on the Sabbath day and the
- Lord's day let them have leisure to go to church for instruction in
- piety. We have said that the Sabbath is on account of the creation,
- and the Lord's day, of the resurrection."
-
-To this may be added the 64th Canon of the Apostles, which is appended
-to the "Constitutions":--
-
- "If any one of the clergy be found to fast on the Lord's day, or on
- the Sabbath day, excepting one only, let him be deprived; but if he
- be one of the laity, let him be suspended."
-
-Every mention of the Sabbath and first-day in that ancient book called
-"Apostolical Constitutions" is now before the reader. This book comes
-down to us from the third century, and contains what was at that time
-very generally believed to be the doctrine of the apostles. It is
-therefore valuable to us, not as authority respecting the teaching of
-the apostles, but as giving us a knowledge of the views and practices
-which prevailed in the third century. At the time these "Constitutions"
-were put in writing, the ten commandments were revered as the immutable
-rule of right, and the Sabbath of the Lord was by many observed as an
-act of obedience to the fourth commandment, and as the divine memorial
-of the creation. But the first-day festival had already attained such
-strength and influence as to clearly indicate that ere long it would
-claim the entire ground. But observe that the Sabbath and the so-called
-Lord's day are treated as distinct institutions, and that no hint of
-the change of the Sabbath to the first day of the week is ever once
-given. The "Apostolical Constitutions" are cited first, not because
-written by the apostles, but because of their title. For the same
-reason the so-called Epistle of Barnabas is quoted next, not because
-written by that apostle, for the proof is ample that it was not, but
-because it is often quoted by first-day writers as the words of the
-apostle Barnabas. It was in existence, however, as early as the middle
-of the second century, and, like the "Apostolical Constitutions," is of
-value to us in that it gives some clue to the opinions which prevailed
-in the region where the writer lived, or at least which were held by
-his party.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-Barnabas--Pliny--Ignatius--The Church at Smyrna--The Epistle to
-Diognetus--Recognitions of Clement--Syriac Documents concerning
-Edessa.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF THE EPISTLE OF BARNABAS.
-
-In his second chapter this writer speaks thus:--
-
- "For he hath revealed to us by all the prophets that he needs
- neither sacrifices, nor burnt-offerings, nor oblations, saying
- thus, 'What is the multitude of your sacrifices unto me, saith
- the Lord? I am full of burnt-offerings, and desire not the fat of
- lambs, and the blood of bulls and goats, not when ye come to appear
- before me: for who hath required these things at your hands? Tread
- no more my courts, not though ye bring with you fine flour. Incense
- is a vain abomination unto me, and your new moons and Sabbaths I
- cannot endure.' He has therefore abolished these things, that the
- new law of our Lord Jesus Christ, which is without the yoke of
- necessity, might have a human oblation."
-
-The writer may have intended to assert the abolition of the sacrifices
-only, as this was his special theme in this place. But he presently
-asserts the abolition of the Sabbath of the Lord. Here is his fifteenth
-chapter entire:--
-
- "Further, also, it is written concerning the Sabbath in the
- decalogue which [the Lord] spoke, face to face, to Moses on Mount
- Sinai, 'And sanctify ye the Sabbath of the Lord with clean hands
- and a pure heart.' And he says in another place, 'If my sons keep
- the Sabbath, then will I cause my mercy to rest upon them.' The
- Sabbath is mentioned at the beginning of the creation [thus]: 'And
- God made in six days the works of his hands, and made an end on
- the seventh day, and rested on it, and sanctified it.' Attend, my
- children, to the meaning of this expression, 'He finished in six
- days.' This implieth that the Lord will finish all things in six
- thousand years, for a day is with him a thousand years. And he
- himself testifieth, saying, 'Behold to-day will be as a thousand
- years.' Therefore, my children, in six days, that is, in six
- thousand years, all things will be finished. 'And he rested on the
- seventh day.' This meaneth: when his Son, coming [again], shall
- destroy the time of the wicked man, and judge the ungodly, and
- change the sun, and the moon, and the stars, then shall he truly
- rest on the seventh day. Moreover, he says, 'Thou shalt sanctify it
- with pure hands and a pure heart.' If, therefore, any one can now
- sanctify the day which God hath sanctified, except he is pure in
- heart in all things, we are deceived. Behold, therefore: certainly
- then one properly resting sanctifies it, when we ourselves,
- having received the promise, wickedness no longer existing, and
- all things having been made new by the Lord, shall be able to
- work righteousness. Then we shall be able to sanctify it, having
- been first sanctified ourselves. Further, he says to them, 'Your
- new moons and your Sabbaths I cannot endure.' Ye perceive how he
- speaks: Your present Sabbaths are not acceptable to me, but that is
- which I have made [namely this], when, giving rest to all things,
- I shall make a beginning of the eighth day, that is, a beginning
- of another world. Wherefore, also, we keep the eighth day with
- joyfulness, the day, also, on which Jesus rose again from the dead.
- And when he had manifested himself, he ascended into the heavens."
-
-Here are some very strange specimens of reasoning. The substance of
-what he says relative to the present observance of the Sabbath appears
-to be this: No one "can now sanctify the day which God hath sanctified
-except he is pure in heart in all things." But this cannot be the case
-until the present world shall pass away, "when we ourselves, having
-received the promise, wickedness no longer existing, and _all things
-having been made new_ by the Lord, shall be able to work righteousness.
-Then we shall be able to sanctify it, having been first sanctified
-ourselves." Men cannot therefore keep the Sabbath while this wicked
-world lasts. And so he says, "Your present Sabbaths are not acceptable
-to me." That is to say, the keeping of the day which God has sanctified
-is not possible in such a wicked world. But though the seventh day
-cannot now be kept, the eighth day can be, and ought to be, because
-when the seventh thousand years are past there will be at the beginning
-of the eighth thousand the new creation. So the persons represented
-by this writer, do not attempt to keep the seventh day which God
-sanctified, for that is too pure to keep in this world, and can only
-be kept after the Saviour comes at the commencement of the seventh
-thousand years; but they "keep the eighth day with joyfulness, the day
-also on which Jesus rose again from the dead." Sunday, which God never
-sanctified, is exactly suitable for observance in the world as it now
-is. But the sanctified seventh day "we shall be able to sanctify" when
-all things have been made new. If our first-day friends think these
-words of some unknown writer of the second century more honorable to
-the first day of the week than to the seventh, they are welcome to
-them. Had the writer said, "It is easier to keep Sunday than the
-Sabbath while the world is so wicked," he would have stated the truth.
-But when in substance he says, "It is more acceptable to God to keep a
-common than a sanctified day while men are so sinful," he excuses his
-disobedience by uttering a falsehood. Several things however should be
-noted:--
-
-1. In this quotation we have the reasons of a no-Sabbath man for
-keeping the festival of Sunday. It is not God's commandment, for there
-was none for that festival; but the day God hallowed being too pure to
-keep while the world is so wicked, Sunday is therefore kept till the
-return of the Lord, and then the seventh day shall be truly sanctified
-by those who now regard it not.
-
-2. But this writer, though saying what he is able in behalf of the
-first day of the week, applies to it no sacred name. He does not call
-it Christian Sabbath, nor Lord's day, but simply "the eighth day," and
-this because it succeeds the seventh day of the week.
-
-3. It is also to be noticed that he expressly dates the Sabbath from
-the creation.
-
-4. The change of the Sabbath was unknown to this writer. He kept the
-Sunday festival, not because it was purer than the sanctified seventh
-day, but because the seventh day was too pure to keep while the world
-is so wicked.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF THE EPISTLE OF PLINY.
-
-Pliny was the Roman governor of Bithynia in the years 103 and 104.
-He wrote a letter to the emperor Trajan, in which he states what he
-had learned of the Christians as the result of examining them at his
-tribunal:--
-
- "They affirmed that the whole of their guilt or error was, that
- they met on a certain stated day [_stato die_], before it was
- light, and addressed themselves in a form of prayer to Christ,
- as to some God, binding themselves by a solemn oath, not for the
- purposes of any wicked design, but never to commit any fraud,
- theft, or adultery; never to falsify their word, nor deny a trust
- when they should be called upon to deliver it up; after which it
- was their custom to separate, and then reassemble to eat in common
- a harmless meal."--_Coleman's Ancient Christianity_, chap. i. sect.
- 1.
-
-The letter of Pliny is often referred to as though it testified that
-the Christians of Bithynia celebrated the first day of the week. Yet
-such is by no means the case, as the reader can plainly see. Coleman
-says of it (page 528):--
-
- "This statement is evidence that these Christians kept a day as
- holy time, but whether it was the last, or the first day of the
- week, does not appear."
-
-Such is the judgment of an able, candid, first-day church historian of
-good repute as a scholar. An anti-Sabbatarian writer of some repute
-speaks thus:--
-
- "As the Sabbath day appears to have been quite as commonly observed
- at this date as the Sun's day (if not even more so), it is just
- as probable that this 'stated day' referred to by Pliny was the
- _seventh_ day, as that it was the _first_ day; though the latter is
- generally taken for granted."--_Obligation of the Sabbath_, p. 300.
-
-Every candid person must acknowledge that it is unjust to represent
-the letter of Pliny as testifying in behalf of the so-called Christian
-Sabbath. Next in order of time come the reputed epistles of Ignatius.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF THE EPISTLES OF IGNATIUS.
-
-Of the fifteen epistles ascribed to Ignatius, eight are, by universal
-consent, accounted spurious; and eminent scholars have questioned the
-genuineness of the remaining seven. There are, however, two forms to
-these seven, a longer and a shorter, and while some doubt exists as
-to the shorter form, the longer form is by common consent ascribed to
-a later age than that of Ignatius. But the epistle to the Magnesians,
-which exists both in the longer and in the shorter form, is the one
-from which first-day writers obtain Ignatius' testimony in behalf of
-Sunday, and they quote for this both these forms. We therefore give
-both. Here is the shorter:--
-
- "For the divinest prophets lived according to Christ Jesus. On this
- account also they were persecuted, being inspired by his grace
- to fully convince the unbelieving that there is one God, who has
- manifested himself by Jesus Christ his Son, who is his eternal
- Word, not proceeding forth from silence, and who in all things
- pleased him that sent him. If, therefore, those who were brought up
- in the ancient order of things have come to the possession of a new
- hope, no longer observing the Sabbath, but living in the observance
- of the Lord's day, on which also our life has sprung again by him
- and by his death--whom some deny, by which mystery we have obtained
- faith, and therefore endure, that we may be found the disciples of
- Jesus Christ, our only master--how shall we be able to live apart
- from him, whose disciples the prophets themselves in the Spirit did
- wait for him as their teacher? And therefore he whom they rightly
- waited for, being come, raised them from the dead." Chaps. viii.
- and ix.
-
-This paragraph is the one out of which a part of a sentence is quoted
-to show that Ignatius testifies in behalf of the Lord's-day festival,
-or Christian Sabbath. But the so-called Lord's day is only brought in
-by means of a false translation. This is the decisive sentence:
-#mêketi sabbatizontes, alla kata kyriakên zôên zôntes#; literally: "no
-longer sabbatizing, but living according to Lord's life."
-
-Eminent first-day scholars have called attention to this fact, and have
-testified explicitly that the term Lord's day has no right to appear
-in the translation; for the original is not #kyriakên hêmeran#,
-Lord's day, but #kyriakên zôên#, Lord's life. This is absolutely
-decisive, and shows that something akin to fraud has to be used in
-order to find a reference in this place to the so-called Christian
-Sabbath.
-
-But there is another fact quite as much to the point. The writer was
-not speaking of those then alive, but of the ancient prophets. This is
-proved by the opening and closing words of the above quotation, which
-first-day writers always omit. The so-called Lord's day is inserted
-by a fraudulent translation; and now see what absurdity comes of it.
-The writer is speaking of the ancient prophets. If, therefore, the
-Sunday festival be inserted in this quotation from Ignatius he is
-made to declare that "the divinest prophets," who "were brought up in
-the ancient order of things," kept the first day and did not keep the
-Sabbath! Whereas, the truth is just the reverse of this. They certainly
-did keep the Sabbath, and did not keep the first day of the week. The
-writer speaks of the point when these men came "to the newness of
-hope," which must be their individual conversion to God. They certainly
-did observe and enforce the Sabbath after this act of conversion. See
-Isa., chaps. 56, 58; Jer. 17; Eze., chaps. 20, 22, 23. But they did
-also, as this writer truly affirms, live according to the Lord's life.
-The sense of the writer respecting the prophets must therefore be
-this: "No longer [after their conversion to God] observing the Sabbath
-[merely, as natural men] but living according to the Lord's life," or
-"according to Christ Jesus."
-
-So much for the shorter form of the epistle to the Magnesians. Though
-the longer form is by almost universal consent of scholars and critics
-pronounced the work of some centuries after the time of Ignatius,
-yet as a portion of this also is often given by first-day writers to
-support Sunday, and given too as the words of Ignatius, we here present
-in full its reference to the first day of the week, and also to the
-Sabbath, which they generally omit. Here are its statements:--
-
- "Let us therefore no longer keep the Sabbath after the Jewish
- manner, and rejoice in days of idleness; for 'he that does not
- work, let him not eat.' For, say the [holy] oracles, 'In the sweat
- of thy face shalt thou eat thy bread.' But let every one of you
- keep the Sabbath after a spiritual manner, rejoicing in meditation
- on the law, not in relaxation of the body, admiring the workmanship
- of God, and not eating things prepared the day before, nor using
- lukewarm drinks, and walking within a prescribed space, nor finding
- delight in dancing and plaudits which have no sense in them. And
- after the observance of the Sabbath, let every friend of Christ
- keep the Lord's day as a festival, the resurrection day, the queen
- and chief of all the days [of the week]. Looking forward to this,
- the prophet declared, 'To the end, for the eighth day,' on which
- our life both sprang up again, and the victory over death was
- obtained in Christ," etc. Chapter ix.
-
-This epistle, though the work of a later hand than that of Ignatius,
-is valuable for the light which it sheds upon the state of things
-when it was written. It gives us a correct idea of the progress of
-apostasy with respect to the Sabbath in the time of the writer. He
-speaks against Jewish superstition in the observance of the Sabbath,
-and condemns days of idleness as contrary to the declaration, "In the
-sweat of thy face shalt thou eat thy bread." But by days of idleness
-he cannot refer to the Sabbath, for this would be to make the fourth
-commandment clash with this text, whereas they must harmonize, inasmuch
-as they existed together during the former dispensation. Moreover,
-the Sabbath, though a day of abstinence from labor, is not a day of
-idleness, but of active participation in religious duties. He enjoins
-its observance after a spiritual manner. And after the Sabbath has
-been thus observed, "let every friend of Christ keep the Lord's day
-_as a festival_, the resurrection day, the queen and chief of all the
-days." The divine institution of the Sabbath was not yet done away,
-but the human institution of Sunday had become its equal, and was even
-commended above it. Not long after this, it took the whole ground, and
-the observance of the Sabbath was denounced as heretical and pernicious.
-
-The reputed epistle of Ignatius to the Trallians in its shorter form
-does not allude to this subject. In its longer form, which is admitted
-to be the work of a later age than that of Ignatius, these expressions
-are found:--
-
- "During the Sabbath, he continued under the earth;" "at the dawning
- of the Lord's day he arose from the dead;" "the Sabbath embraces
- the burial; the Lord's day contains the resurrection." Chap. ix.
-
-In the epistle to the Philippians, which is universally acknowledged
-to be the work of a later person than Ignatius, it is said:--
-
- "If any one fasts on the Lord's day or on the Sabbath, except on
- the paschal Sabbath only, he is a murderer of Christ." Chap. xiii.
-
-We have now given every allusion to the Sabbath and first-day that
-can be found in any writing attributed to Ignatius. We have seen
-that the term "Lord's day" is not found in any sentence written by
-him. The first day is never called the Christian Sabbath, not even
-in the writings falsely attributed to him; nor is there in any of
-them a hint of the modern doctrine of the change of the Sabbath.
-Though falsely ascribed to Ignatius, and actually written in a later
-age, they are valuable in that they mark the progress of apostasy
-in the establishment of the Sunday festival. Moreover, they furnish
-conclusive evidence that the ancient Sabbath was retained for centuries
-in the so-called Catholic church, and that the Sunday festival was
-an institution entirely distinct from the Sabbath of the fourth
-commandment.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF THE CHURCH AT SMYRNA.
-
-The epistle of Polycarp makes no reference to the Sabbath nor to the
-first day of the week. But "the encyclical epistle of the church at
-Smyrna concerning the martyrdom of the holy Polycarp," informs us that
-"the blessed Polycarp suffered martyrdom" "on the great Sabbath at the
-eighth hour." Chapter xxi. The margin says: "The great Sabbath is that
-before the passover." This day, thus mentioned, is not Sunday, but is
-the ancient Sabbath of the Lord.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF THE EPISTLE TO DIOGNETUS.
-
-This was written by an unknown author, and Diognetus himself is known
-only by name, no facts concerning him having come down to us. It dates
-from the first part of the second century. The writer speaks of "the
-superstition as respects the Sabbaths" which the Jews manifested, and
-he adds these words: "To speak falsely of God, as if he forbade us to
-do what is good on the Sabbath days--how is not this impious?" But
-there is nothing in this to which a commandment-keeper would object, or
-which he might not freely utter.
-
-The "Recognitions of Clement" is a kind of philosophical and
-theological romance. It purports to have been written by Clement of
-Rome, in the time of the apostle Peter, but was actually written
-"somewhere in the first half of the third century."
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF THE RECOGNITIONS OF CLEMENT.
-
-In book i., chapter xxxv., he speaks of the giving of the law thus:--
-
- "Meantime they came to Mount Sinai, and thence the law was given to
- them with voices and sights from heaven, written in ten precepts,
- of which the first and greatest was that they should worship God
- himself alone," etc. In book iii., chapter lv., he speaks of these
- precepts as tests: "On account of those, therefore, who by neglect
- of their own salvation please the evil one, and those who by study
- of their own profit seek to please the good One, ten things have
- been prescribed as a test to this present age, according to the
- number of the ten plagues which were brought upon Egypt." In book
- ix., chapter xxviii., he says of the Hebrews, "that no child born
- among them is ever exposed, and that on every seventh day they all
- rest," etc. In book x., chap. lxxii., is given the conversion of
- one Faustinianus by St. Peter. And it is said, "He proclaimed a
- fast to all the people, and on the next Lord's day he baptized him."
-
-This is all that I find in this work relating to the Sabbath and the
-so-called Lord's day. The writer held the ten commandments to be tests
-of character in the present dispensation. There is no reason to believe
-that he, or any other person in that age, held the Sunday festival as
-something to be observed in obedience to the fourth commandment.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF THE SYRIAC DOCUMENTS CONCERNING EDESSA.
-
-On pages 35-55 of this work is given what purports to be "The Teaching
-of the Apostles." On page 36, the ascension of the Lord is said to have
-been upon the "first day of the week, and the end of the Pentecost."
-Two manifest falsehoods are here uttered; for the ascension was upon
-Thursday, and the Pentecost came ten days after the ascension. It is
-also said that the disciples came from Nazareth of Galilee to the mount
-of Olives on that selfsame day before the ascension, and yet that the
-ascension was "at the time of the early dawn." But Nazareth was distant
-from the mount of Olives at least sixty miles!
-
-On page 38, a commandment from the apostles is given: "On the first
-[day] of the week, let there be service, and the reading of the holy
-Scriptures, and the oblation," because Christ arose on that day, was
-born on that day, ascended on that day, and will come again on that
-day. But here is one truth, one falsehood, and two mere assertions. The
-apostles are represented, on page 39, as commanding a fast of forty
-days, and they add: "Then celebrate the day of the passion [Friday],
-and the day of the resurrection," Sunday. But this would be only an
-annual celebration of these days.
-
-And on pages 38 and 39 they are also represented as commanding service
-to be held on the fourth and sixth days of the week. The Sabbath is
-not mentioned in these "Documents," which were written about the
-commencement of the fourth century, when, in many parts of the world,
-that day had ceased to be hallowed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-TESTIMONY OF JUSTIN MARTYR.
-
-
-Justin's "Apology" was written at Rome about the year 140. His
-"Dialogue with Trypho the Jew" was written some years later. In
-searching his works, we shall see how much greater progress apostasy
-had made at Rome than in the countries where those lived whose writings
-we have been examining. And yet nearly all these writings were composed
-at least a century later than those of Justin, though we have quoted
-them before quoting his, because of their asserted apostolic origin,
-or of their asserted origin within a few years of the times of the
-apostles.
-
-It does not appear that Justin, and those at Rome who held with him in
-doctrine, paid the slightest regard to the ancient Sabbath. He speaks
-of it as abolished, and treats it with contempt. Unlike some whose
-writings have been examined, he denies that it originated at creation,
-and asserts that it was made in the days of Moses. He also differs with
-some already quoted in that he denies the perpetuity of the law of ten
-commandments. In his estimation, the Sabbath was a Jewish institution,
-absolutely unknown to good men before the time of Moses, and of no
-authority whatever since the death of Christ. The idea of the change
-of the Sabbath from the seventh day of the week to the first, is not
-only never found in his writings, but is absolutely irreconcilable with
-such statements as the foregoing, which abound therein. And yet Justin
-Martyr is prominently and constantly cited in behalf of the so-called
-Christian Sabbath.
-
-The Roman people observed a festival on the first day of the week
-in honor of the sun. And so Justin in his Apology, addressed to the
-emperor of Rome, tells that monarch that the Christians met on "the
-day of the sun," for worship. He gives the day no sacred title, and
-does not even intimate that it was a day of abstinence from labor, only
-as they spent a portion of it in worship. Here are the words of his
-Apology on the Sunday festival:--
-
- "And on the day called Sunday, all who live in cities or in the
- country gather together to one place, and the memoirs of the
- apostles or the writings of the prophets are read, as long as time
- permits; then, when the reader has ceased, the president verbally
- instructs, and exhorts to the imitation of these good things.
- Then we all rise together and pray, and, as we before said, when
- our prayer is ended, bread and wine and water are brought, and
- the president in like manner offers prayers and thanksgivings,
- according to his ability, and the people assent, saying, Amen;
- and there is a distribution to each, and a participation of that
- over which thanks have been given, and to those who are absent
- a portion is sent by the deacons. And they who are well to do,
- and willing, give what each thinks fit; and what is collected is
- deposited with the president, who succors the orphans and widows,
- and those who, through sickness or any other cause, are in want,
- and those who are in bonds, and the strangers sojourning among us,
- and, in a word, takes care of all who are in need. But Sunday is
- the day on which we all hold our common assembly, because it is the
- first day on which God, having wrought a change in the darkness and
- matter, made the world; and Jesus Christ our Saviour on the same
- day rose from the dead. For he was crucified on the day before that
- of Saturn (Saturday); and on the day after that of Saturn, which is
- the day of the sun, having appeared to his apostles and disciples,
- he taught them these things, which we have submitted to you also
- for your consideration." Chap. lxvii.
-
-Not one word of this indicates that Justin considered the Sunday
-festival as a continuation of the Sabbath of the fourth commandment. On
-the contrary, he shows clearly that no such idea was cherished by him.
-For though the fourth commandment enjoins the observance of the seventh
-day because _God rested on that day_ from the work of creation, Justin
-urged in behalf of the Sunday festival that it is _the day on which
-he began his work_. The honor paid to that festival was not therefore
-in Justin's estimation in any sense an act of obedience to the fourth
-commandment. He mentions as his other reason for the celebration by
-Christians of "the day of the sun," that the Saviour arose that day.
-But he claims no divine or apostolic precept for this celebration; the
-things which he says Christ taught his apostles being the doctrines
-which he had embodied in this Apology for the information of the
-emperor. And it is worthy of notice that though first-day writers
-assert that "Lord's day" was the familiar title of the first day of
-the week in the time of the Apocalypse, yet Justin, who is the first
-person after the sacred writers that mentions the first day, and this
-at a distance of only 44 years from the date of John's vision upon
-Patmos, does not call it by that title, but by the name which it bore
-as a heathen festival! If it be said that the term was omitted because
-he was addressing a heathen emperor, there still remains the fact that
-he mentions the day quite a number of times in his "Dialogue with
-Trypho," and yet never calls it "Lord's day," nor indeed does he call
-it by any name implying sacredness.
-
-Now we present the statements concerning the Sabbath and first-day
-found in his "Dialogue with Trypho the Jew." The impropriety, not to
-say dishonesty, of quoting Justin in behalf of the modern doctrine
-of the change of the Sabbath, will be obvious to all. He was a most
-decided no-law, no-Sabbath writer, who used the day commonly honored as
-a festival by the Romans, as the most suitable, or most convenient, day
-for public worship, a position identical with that of modern no-Sabbath
-men. Justin may be called a law man in this sense, however, that while
-he abolishes the ten commandments, he calls the gospel "the new law."
-He is therefore really one who believes in the gospel and denies the
-law. But let us hear his own words. Trypho, having in chapter viii.
-advised Justin to observe the Sabbath, and "do all things which have
-been written in the law," in chapter x. says to him, "You observe no
-festivals or Sabbaths."
-
-This was exactly adapted to bring out from Justin the answer that
-though he did not observe the seventh day as the Sabbath, he did thus
-rest on the first day, if it were true that that day was with him a
-day of abstinence from labor. And now observe Justin's answer given in
-chapter twelve:--
-
- "The new law requires you to keep perpetual Sabbath, and you,
- because you are idle for one day, suppose you are pious, not
- discerning why this has been commanded you; and if you eat
- unleavened bread, you say the will of God has been fulfilled. The
- Lord our God does not take pleasure in such observances: if there
- is any perjured person or a thief among you, let him cease to be
- so; if any adulterer, let him repent; then he has kept the sweet
- and true Sabbaths of God."
-
-This language plainly implies that Justin held all days to be alike,
-and did not observe any one day as a day of abstinence from labor. But
-in chapter xviii., Justin asserts that the Sabbaths--and he doubtless
-includes the weekly with the annual--were enjoined upon the Jews for
-their wickedness:--
-
- "For we too would observe the fleshly circumcision, and the
- Sabbaths, and in short, all the feasts, if we did not know for
- what reason they were enjoined you--namely, on account of your
- transgressions and the hardness of your hearts. For if we patiently
- endure all things contrived against us by wicked men and demons, so
- that amid cruelties unutterable, death and torments, we pray for
- mercy to those who inflict such things upon us, and do not wish
- to give the least retort to any one, even as the new Law-giver
- commanded us: how is it, Trypho, that we would not observe those
- rites which do not harm us--I speak of fleshly circumcision, and
- Sabbaths, and feasts?"
-
-Not only does he declare that the Jews were commanded to keep the
-Sabbath because of their wickedness, but in chapter xix. he denies that
-any Sabbath existed before Moses. Thus, after naming Adam, Abel, Enoch,
-Lot, and Melchizedek, he says:--
-
- "Moreover, all those righteous men already mentioned, though they
- kept no Sabbaths, were pleasing to God."
-
-But though he thus denies the Sabbatic institution before the time of
-Moses, he presently makes this statement concerning the Jews:--
-
- "And you were commanded to keep Sabbaths, that you might retain
- the memorial of God. For his word makes this announcement, saying,
- 'That ye may know that I am God who redeemed you.'" [Eze. 20:12.]
-
-The Sabbath is indeed the memorial of the God that made the heavens and
-the earth. And what an absurdity to deny that that memorial was set up
-when the creative work was done, and to affirm that twenty-five hundred
-years intervened between the work and the memorial!
-
-In chapter xxi. Justin asserts "that God enjoined you [the Jews] to
-keep the Sabbath, and imposed on you other precepts for a sign, as I
-have already said, on account of your unrighteousness, and that of your
-fathers," &c., and quotes Ezekiel 20 to prove it. Yet that chapter
-declares that it was in order that they might know who was that being
-who sanctified them, _i. e._, that they might know that their God was
-the Creator, that the Sabbath was made to them a sign.
-
-In chapter xxiii., he again asserts that "in the times of Enoch" no one
-"observed Sabbaths." He then protests against Sabbatic observance as
-follows:--
-
- "Do you see that the elements are not idle, and keep no Sabbaths?
- Remain as you were born. For if there was no need of circumcision
- before Abraham, or of the observance of Sabbaths, of feasts and
- sacrifices, before Moses; no more need is there of them now, after
- that, according to the will of God, Jesus Christ the Son of God
- has been born without sin, of a virgin sprung from the stock of
- Abraham."
-
-That is to say, there was no Sabbatic institution before Moses,
-and neither is there any since Christ. But in chapter xxiv., Justin
-undertakes to bring in an argument for Sunday, not as a Sabbath, but
-as having greater mystery in it, and as being more honorable than the
-seventh day. Thus, alluding to circumcision on the eighth day of a
-child's life as an argument for the first-day festival, he says:--
-
- "It is possible for us to show how the eighth day possessed a
- certain mysterious import, which the seventh day did not possess,
- and which was promulgated by God through these rites."
-
-That is to say, because God commanded the Hebrews to circumcise their
-children when they were eight days old, therefore all men should now
-esteem the first day of the week more honorable than the seventh day,
-which he commanded in the moral law, and which Justin himself, in
-chapter xix., terms "the memorial of God." In chapter xxvi., Justin
-says to Trypho that--
-
- "The Gentiles, who have believed on him, and have repented of the
- sins which they have committed, they shall receive the inheritance
- along with the patriarchs and the prophets, and the just men who
- are descended from Jacob, even although they neither keep the
- Sabbath, nor are circumcised, nor observe the feasts."
-
-And in proof of this, he quotes from Isa. 42, and 62, and 63,
-respecting the call of the Gentiles. Upon this (chapter xxvii.), Trypho
-the Jew very pertinently asks:--
-
- "Why do you select and quote whatever you wish from the prophetic
- writings, but do not refer to those which expressly command the
- Sabbath to be observed? For Isaiah thus speaks [chap. 58:13, 14],
- 'If thou shalt turn away thy foot from the Sabbath,'" etc.
-
-To which Justin makes this uncandid answer:--
-
- "I have passed them by, my friends, not because such prophecies
- were contrary to me, but because you have understood, and do
- understand, that although God commands you by all the prophets
- to do the same things which he also commanded by Moses, it was
- on account of the hardness of your hearts, and your ingratitude
- towards him, that he continually proclaims them, in order that,
- even in this way, if you repented, you might please him, and
- neither sacrifice your children to demons, nor be partakers
- with thieves," etc. And he adds: "So that, as in the beginning,
- these things were enjoined you because of your wickedness, in
- like manner, because of your steadfastness in it, or rather your
- increased proneness to it, by means of the same precepts, he calls
- you [by the prophets] to a remembrance or knowledge of it."
-
-These are bitter words from a Gentile who had been a pagan philosopher,
-and they are in no sense a just answer unless it can be shown that the
-law was given to the Jews because they were so wicked, and was withheld
-from the Gentiles because they were so righteous. The truth is just
-the reverse of this. Eph. 2. But to say something against the Sabbath,
-Justin asks:--
-
- "Did God wish the priests to sin when they offer the sacrifices
- on the Sabbaths? or those to sin, who are circumcised and do
- circumcise on the Sabbaths; since he commands that on the eighth
- day--even though it happen to be a Sabbath--those who are born
- shall be always circumcised?" And he asks if the rite could not be
- one day earlier or later, and why those "who lived before Moses"
- "observed no Sabbaths?"
-
-What Justin says concerning circumcision and sacrifices is absolutely
-without weight as an objection to the Sabbath, inasmuch as the
-commandment forbids, not the performance of religious duties, but our
-own work. Ex. 20:8-11. And his often repeated declaration that good men
-before the time of Moses did not keep the Sabbath, is mere assertion,
-inasmuch as God appointed it to a holy use in the time of Adam, and we
-do know of some in the patriarchal age who kept God's commandments, and
-were perfect before him.
-
-In chapter xxix., Justin sneers at Sabbatic observance by saying,
-"Think it not strange that we drink hot water on the Sabbaths." And as
-arguments against the Sabbath he says that God "directs the government
-of the universe on this day equally as on all others," as though this
-were inconsistent with the present sacredness of the Sabbath, when
-it was also true that God thus governed the world in the period when
-Justin acknowledges the Sabbath to have been obligatory. And he again
-refers to the sacrifices and to those who lived in the patriarchal age.
-
-In chapter xli., Justin again brings forward his argument for Sunday
-from circumcision:--
-
- "The command of circumcision, again, bidding [them] always
- circumcise the children on the eighth day, was a type of the true
- circumcision, by which we are circumcised from deceit and iniquity
- through Him who rose from the dead on the first day after the
- Sabbath [namely, through], our Lord Jesus Christ. For the first day
- after the Sabbath, remaining the first of all the days, is called,
- however, the eighth, according to the number of all the days of the
- cycle, and [yet] remains the first."
-
-Sunday-keeping must be closely related to infant baptism, inasmuch as
-one of the chief arguments in modern times for the baptism of infants
-is drawn from the fact that God commanded the Hebrews to circumcise
-their male children; and Justin found his scriptural authority for
-first-day observance in the fact that this rite was to be performed
-when the child was eight days old! Yet this eighth day did not come
-on one day of the week, only, but on every day, and when it came on
-the seventh day it furnished Justin with an argument against the
-sacredness of the Sabbath! But let it come on what day of the week it
-might (and it came on all alike), it was an argument for Sunday! O
-wonderful _eighth_ day, that can thrive on that which is positively
-fatal to the seventh, and that can come every week on the first day
-thereof, though there be only seven days in each week!
-
-In chapters xliii., and xlvi., and xcii., Justin reiterates the
-assertion that those who lived in the patriarchal age did not hallow
-the Sabbath. But as he adds no new thought to what has been already
-quoted from him, these need not be copied.
-
-But in chapter xlvii., we have something of interest. Trypho asks
-Justin whether those who believe in Christ, and obey him, but who wish
-to "observe these [institutions] will be saved?" Justin answers: "In
-my opinion, Trypho, such an one will be saved, if he does not strive
-in every way to persuade other men ... to observe the same things as
-himself, telling them that they will not be saved unless they do so."
-Trypho replied, "Why then have you said, 'In my opinion, such an one
-will be saved,' unless there are some who affirm that such will not be
-saved?"
-
-In reply, Justin tells Trypho that there were those who would have no
-intercourse with, nor even extend hospitality to, such Christians as
-observed the law. And for himself he says:--
-
- "But if some, through weak-mindedness, wish to observe such
- institutions as were given by Moses (from which they expect some
- virtue, but which we believe were appointed by reason of the
- hardness of the people's hearts), along with their hope in this
- Christ, and [wish to perform] the eternal and natural acts of
- righteousness and piety, yet choose to live with the Christians and
- the faithful, as I said before, not inducing them either to be
- circumcised like themselves, or to keep the Sabbath, or to observe
- any other such ceremonies, then I hold that we ought to join
- ourselves to such, and associate with them in all things as kinsmen
- and brethren."
-
-Justin's language shows that there were Sabbath-keeping Christians in
-his time. Such of them as were of Jewish descent no doubt generally
-retained circumcision. But it is very unjust in him to represent the
-Gentile Sabbath-keepers as observing this rite. That there were many
-of these is evident from the so-called "Apostolical Constitutions,"
-and even from the Ignatian Epistles. One good thing, however, Justin
-does say. The keeping of the commandments he terms the performance of
-"the eternal and natural acts of righteousness." He would consent to
-fellowship those who do these things provided they made them no test
-for others. He well knew in such case that the Sabbath would die out in
-a little time. Himself and the more popular party at Rome honored as
-their festival the day observed by the heathen Romans, as he reminds
-the emperor in his Apology, and he was willing to fellowship the
-Sabbath-keepers if they would not test him by the commandments,
-_i. e._, if they would fellowship him in violating them.
-
-That Justin held to the abrogation of the ten commandments is also
-manifest. Trypho, in the tenth chapter of the Dialogue, having said
-to Justin, "You do not obey his commandments," and again, "You do not
-observe the law," Justin answers in chapter xi. as follows:--
-
- "But we do not trust through Moses, or through the law; for then
- we would do the same as yourselves. But now--for I have read that
- there shall be a final law, and a covenant, the chiefest of all,
- which it is now incumbent on all men to observe, as many as are
- seeking after the inheritance of God. For the law promulgated on
- Horeb is now old, and belongs to yourselves alone; but this is for
- all universally. Now, law placed against law has abrogated that
- which is before it, and a covenant which comes after in like manner
- has put an end to the previous one."
-
-We must, therefore, pronounce Justin a man who held to the abrogation
-of the ten commandments, and that the Sabbath was a Jewish institution
-which was unknown before Moses, and of no authority since Christ. He
-held Sunday to be the most suitable day for public worship, but not
-upon the ground that the Sabbath had been changed to it, for he cuts up
-the Sabbatic institution by the roots; and so far is he from calling
-this day the Christian Sabbath that he gives to it the name which it
-bore as a heathen festival.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-Irenæus--Dionysius--Melito--Bardesanes.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF IRENÆUS.
-
-This father was born "somewhere between A. D. 120 and A. D. 140." He
-was "bishop of Lyons in France during the latter quarter of the second
-century," being ordained to that office "probably about A. D. 177." His
-work _Against Heresies_ was written "between A. D. 182 and A. D. 188."
-First-day writers assert that Irenæus "says that the Lord's day was the
-Christian Sabbath." They profess to quote from him these words: "On the
-Lord's day every one of us Christians keeps the Sabbath, meditating on
-the law and rejoicing in the works of God."
-
-No such language is found in any of the writings of this father. We
-will quote his entire testimony respecting the Sabbath and first-day,
-and the reader can judge. He speaks of Christ's observance of the
-Sabbath, and shows that he did not violate the day. Thus he says:--
-
- "It is clear, therefore, that he loosed and vivified those who
- believe in him as Abraham did, doing nothing contrary to the law
- when he healed upon the Sabbath day. For the law did not prohibit
- men from being healed upon the Sabbaths; [on the contrary] it
- even circumcised them upon that day, and gave command that the
- offices should be performed by the priests for the people; yea,
- it did not disallow the healing even of dumb animals. Both at
- Siloam and on frequent subsequent occasions, did he perform cures
- upon the Sabbath; and for this reason many used to resort to
- him on the Sabbath days. For the law commanded them to abstain
- from every servile work, that is, from all grasping after wealth
- which is procured by trading and by other worldly business; but
- it exhorted them to attend to the exercises of the soul, which
- consist in reflection, and to addresses of a beneficial kind for
- their neighbor's benefit. And therefore the Lord reproved those who
- unjustly blamed him for having healed upon the Sabbath days. For he
- did not make void, but fulfilled the law, by performing the offices
- of the high priest, propitiating God for men, and cleansing the
- lepers, healing the sick, and himself suffering death, that exiled
- man might go forth from condemnation, and might return without fear
- to his own inheritance. And again, the law did not forbid those
- who were hungry on the Sabbath days to take food lying ready at
- hand: it did, however, forbid them to reap and to gather into the
- barn."--_Against Heresies_, b. iv. chap. viii. sects. 2, 3.
-
-The case of the priests on the Sabbath he thus presents:--
-
- "And the priests in the temple profaned the Sabbath, and were
- blameless. Wherefore, then, were they blameless? Because when in
- the temple they were not engaged in secular affairs, but in the
- service of the Lord, fulfilling the law, but not going beyond it,
- as that man did, who of his own accord carried dry wood into the
- camp of God, and was justly stoned to death." Book iv. chap. viii.
- sect. 3.
-
-Of the necessity of keeping the ten commandments, he speaks thus:--
-
- "Now, that the law did beforehand teach mankind the necessity of
- following Christ, he does himself make manifest, when he replied
- as follows to him who asked him what he should do that he might
- inherit eternal life: 'If thou wilt enter into life, keep the
- commandments.' But upon the other asking, 'which?' again the Lord
- replied: 'Do not commit adultery, do not kill, do not steal, do
- not bear false witness, honor father and mother, and thou shalt
- love thy neighbor as thyself,'--setting as an ascending series
- before those who wished to follow him, the precepts of the law, as
- the entrance into life; and what he then said to one, he said to
- all. But when the former said, 'All these have I done' (and most
- likely he had not kept them, for in that case the Lord would not
- have said to him, 'Keep the commandments'), the Lord, exposing his
- covetousness, said to him, 'If thou wilt be perfect, go, sell all
- that thou hast, and distribute to the poor; and come follow me,'
- promising to those who would act thus, the portion belonging to the
- apostles.... But he taught that they should obey the commandments
- which God enjoined from the beginning, and do away with their
- former covetousness by good works, and follow after Christ." Book
- iv. chap. xii. sect. 5.
-
-Irenæus certainly teaches a very different doctrine from that of Justin
-Martyr concerning the commandments. He believed that men must keep the
-commandments, in order to enter eternal life. He says further:--
-
- "And [we must] not only abstain from evil deeds, but even from the
- desires after them. Now he did not teach us these things as being
- opposed to the law, but as fulfilling the law, and implanting in us
- the varied righteousness of the law. That would have been contrary
- to the law, if he had commanded his disciples to do anything which
- the law had prohibited." Book iv. chap. xiii. sect. 1.
-
-He also makes the observance of the decalogue the test of true piety.
-Thus he says:--
-
- "They (the Jews) had therefore a law, a course of discipline, and
- a prophecy of future things. For God at the first, indeed, warning
- them by means of natural precepts, which from the beginning he had
- implanted in mankind, that is, by means of the decalogue (which,
- if any one does not observe, he has no salvation), did then demand
- nothing more of them." Book iv. chap. xv. sect. 1.
-
-The precepts of the decalogue he rightly terms "natural precepts," that
-is, precepts which constitute "the work of the law" written by nature
-in the hearts of all men, but marred by the presence of the carnal mind
-or law of sin in the members. That this law of God pertains alike to
-Jews and to Gentiles, he thus affirms:--
-
- "Inasmuch, then, as all natural precepts are common to us and
- to them (the Jews), they had in them, indeed, the beginning and
- origin; but in us they have received growth and completion." Book
- iv. chap. xiii. sect. 4.
-
-It is certain that Irenæus held the decalogue to be now binding on all
-men; for he says of it in the quotation above, "Which if any one does
-not observe, he has no salvation." But, though not consistent with his
-statement respecting the decalogue as the law of nature, he classes
-the Sabbath with circumcision, when speaking of it as a sign between
-God and Israel, and says, "The Sabbaths taught that we should continue
-day by day in God's service." "Moreover the Sabbath of God, that is,
-the kingdom, was, as it were, indicated by created things; in which
-[kingdom], the man who shall have persevered in serving God shall, in a
-state of rest, partake of God's table." He says also of Abraham that he
-was "without observance of Sabbaths." Book iv. chap. xvi. sects. 1, 2.
-But in the same chapter he again asserts the perpetuity and authority
-of the decalogue in these words:--
-
- "Preparing man for this life, the Lord himself did speak in his
- own person to all alike the words of the decalogue; and therefore,
- in like manner, do they remain permanently with us, receiving, by
- means of his advent in the flesh, extension and increase, but not
- abrogation." Section 4.
-
-This statement establishes the authority of each of the ten
-commandments in the gospel dispensation. Yet Irenæus seems to have
-regarded the fourth commandment as only a typical precept, and not of
-perpetual obligation like the others.
-
-Irenæus regarded the Sabbath as something which pointed forward to the
-kingdom of God. Yet in stating this doctrine he actually indicates the
-origin of the Sabbath at creation, though, as we have seen, elsewhere
-asserting that it was not kept by Abraham. Thus, in speaking of the
-reward to be given the righteous, he says:--
-
- "These are [to take place] in the times of the kingdom, that is,
- upon the seventh day, which has been sanctified, in which God
- rested from all the works which he created, which is the true
- Sabbath of the righteous, in which they shall not be engaged in
- any earthly occupation; but shall have a table at hand prepared
- for them by God, supplying them with all sorts of dishes." Book
- v. chap. xxxiii. sect. 2. And he elsewhere says: "In as many
- days as this world was made, in so many thousand years shall it
- be concluded.... For the day of the Lord is as a thousand years:
- and in six days created things were completed: it is evident,
- therefore, that they will come to an end at the sixth thousand
- year." Book v. chap. xxviii. sect. 3.
-
-Though Irenæus is made by first-day writers to bear a very explicit
-testimony that Sunday is the Christian Sabbath, the following, which
-constitutes the seventh fragment of what is called the "Lost Writings
-of Irenæus," is the only instance which I have found in a careful
-search through all his works in which he even mentions the first day.
-Here is the entire first-day testimony of this father:--
-
- "This [custom], of not bending the knee upon Sunday, is a symbol of
- the resurrection, through which we have been set free, by the grace
- of Christ, from sins, and from death, which has been put to death
- under him. Now this custom took its rise from apostolic times, as
- the blessed Irenæus, the martyr and bishop of Lyons, declares in
- his treatise _On Easter_, in which he makes mention of Pentecost
- also; upon which [feast] we do not bend the knee, because it is
- of equal significance with the Lord's day, for the reason already
- alleged concerning it."
-
-This is something very remarkable. It is not what Irenæus said, after
-all, but is what an unknown writer, in a work entitled _Quæs. et Resp.
-ad Othod._, says of him. And all that this writer says of Irenæus is
-that he declares the custom of not kneeling upon Sunday "took its rise
-from apostolic times"! It does not even appear that Irenæus even used
-the term Lord's day as a title for the first day of the week. Its
-use in the present quotation is by the unknown writer to whom we are
-indebted for the statement here given respecting Irenæus. And this
-writer, whoever he be, is of the opinion that the Pentecost is of equal
-consequence with the so-called Lord's day! And well he may so judge,
-inasmuch as both of these Catholic festivals are only established by
-the authority of the church. The testimony of Irenæus in behalf of
-Sunday does therefore amount simply to this: That the resurrection is
-to be commemorated by "not bending the knee upon Sunday"!
-
-The fiftieth fragment of the "Lost Writings of Irenæus" is derived from
-the Nitrian Collection of Syriac MSS. It relates to the resurrection of
-the dead. In a note appended to it the Syriac editor says of Irenæus
-that he "wrote to an Alexandrian to the effect that it is right, with
-respect to the feast of the resurrection, that we should celebrate it
-upon the first day of the week." No extant writing of Irenæus contains
-this statement, but it is likely that the Syriac editor possessed some
-portion of his works now lost. And here again it is worthy of notice
-that we have from Irenæus only the plain name of "first day of the
-week." As to the manner of celebrating it, the only thing which he sets
-forth is "not bending the knee upon Sunday."
-
-In the thirty-eighth fragment of his "Lost Writings" he quotes Col.
-2:16, but whether with reference to the seventh day, or merely
-respecting the ceremonial sabbaths, his comments do not determine.
-We have now given every statement of Irenæus which bears upon the
-Sabbath and the Sunday. It is manifest that the advocates of first-day
-sacredness have made Irenæus testify in its behalf to suit themselves.
-He alludes to the first day of the week once or twice, but never uses
-for it the title of Lord's day or Christian Sabbath, and the _only_
-thing which he mentions as entering into the celebration of the
-festival was that Christians should not kneel in prayer on that day!
-By first-day writers, Irenæus is made to bear an explicit testimony
-that Sunday is the Lord's day and the Christian Sabbath! And to give
-great weight to this alleged fact, they say that he was the disciple
-of Polycarp, who was the disciple of John: and whereas John speaks of
-the Lord's day, Irenæus, who must have known what he meant by the term,
-says that the Lord's day is the first day of the week! But Polycarp,
-in his epistle, does not even mention the first day of the week, and
-Irenæus, in his extended writings, mentions it only twice, and that in
-"lost fragments," preserved at secondhand, and in neither instance does
-he call it any thing but plain "first day of the week"! And the only
-honor which he mentions as due this day is that the knee should not be
-bent upon it! And even this was not spoken of every Sunday in the year,
-but only of "Easter Sunday," the anniversary of Christ's resurrection!
-
-Here we might dismiss the case of Irenæus. But our first-day friends
-are determined at least to connect him with the use of Lord's day as
-a name for Sunday. They therefore bring forward Eusebius, who wrote
-150 years later, to prove that Irenæus did call Sunday by that name.
-Eusebius alludes to the controversy in the time of Irenæus, respecting
-the _annual_ celebration of Christ's resurrection in what was called
-the festival of the passover. He says (Eccl. Hist., b. v. chap. xxiii.)
-that the bishops of different countries, and Irenæus was of the
-number, decreed "that the mystery of our Lord's resurrection should be
-celebrated on no other day than the Lord's day; and that on this day
-alone we should observe the close of the paschal fasts," and not on
-the fourteenth of the first month as practiced by the other party. And
-in the next chapter, Eusebius represents Irenæus as writing a letter
-to this effect to the Bishop of Rome. But observe, Eusebius does
-not quote the words of any of these bishops, but simply gives their
-decisions in his own language. There is therefore no proof that they
-used the term Lord's day instead of first day of the week. But we have
-evidence that in the decision of this case which Irenæus sent forth,
-he used the term "first day of the week." For the introduction to the
-fiftieth fragment of his "Lost Writings," already quoted, gives an
-ancient statement of his words in this decision, as plain "first day of
-the week." It is Eusebius who gives us the term Lord's day in recording
-what was said by these bishops concerning the first day of the week.
-In his time, A. D. 324, Lord's day had become a common designation of
-Sunday. But it was not such in the time of Irenæus, A. D. 178. We have
-found no writer who flourished before him who applies it to Sunday; it
-is not so applied by Irenæus; and we shall find no decisive instance of
-such use till the close of the second century.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF DIONYSIUS, BISHOP OF CORINTH.
-
-This father, about A. D. 170, wrote a letter to the Roman church, in
-which are found these words:--
-
- "We passed this holy Lord's day, in which we read your letter, from
- the constant reading of which we shall be able to draw admonition,
- even as from the reading of the former one you sent us written
- through Clement."
-
-This is the earliest use of the term Lord's day to be found in the
-fathers. But it cannot be called a decisive testimony that Sunday
-was thus known at this date, inasmuch as every writer who precedes
-Dionysius calls it "first day of the week," "eighth day," or "Sunday,"
-but never once by this title; and Dionysius says nothing to indicate
-that Sunday was intended, or to show that he did not refer to that day
-which alone has the right to be called the Lord's "holy day." Isa.
-58:13. We have found several express testimonies to the sacredness of
-the Sabbath in the writers already examined.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF MELITO, BISHOP OF SARDIS.
-
-This father wrote about A. D. 177. We know little of this writer except
-the titles of his books, which Eusebius has preserved to us. One of
-these titles is this: "On the Lord's Day." But it should be remembered
-that down to this date no writer has called Sunday the Lord's day;
-and that every one who certainly spoke of that day called it by some
-other name than Lord's day. To say, therefore, as do first-day writers,
-that Melito wrote of Sunday, is to speak without just warrant. He uses
-#Greek: tês kyriakês#, "the Lord's," but
-does not join with it #hêmera#, a "day," as
-does John. He wrote of something pertaining to the Lord, but it is not
-certain that it was the Lord's day. Moreover, Clement, who next uses
-this term, uses it in a mystical sense.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF THE HERETIC BARDESANES.
-
-Bardesanes, the Syrian, flourished about A. D. 180. He belonged to the
-Gnostic sect of Valentinians, and abandoning them, "devised errors of
-his own." In his "Book of the Laws of Countries," he replies to the
-views of astrologers who assert that the stars govern men's actions. He
-shows the folly of this by enumerating the peculiarities of different
-races and sects. In doing this, he speaks of the strictness with which
-the Jews kept the Sabbath. Of the new sect called Christians, which
-"Christ at his advent planted in every country," he says:--
-
- "On one day, the first of the week, we assemble ourselves
- together, and on the days of the readings we abstain from [taking]
- sustenance."
-
-This shows that the Gnostics used Sunday as the day for religious
-assemblies. Whether he recognized others besides Gnostics, as
-Christians, we cannot say. We find no allusion, however, to Sunday as
-a day of abstinence from labor, except so far as necessary for their
-meetings. What their days of fasting, which are here alluded to, were,
-cannot now be determined. It is also worthy of notice that this writer,
-who certainly speaks of Sunday, and this as late as A. D. 180, does not
-call it Lord's day, nor give it any sacred title whatever, but speaks
-of it as "first day of the week." No writer down to A. D. 180, who is
-known to speak of Sunday, calls it the Lord's day.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-Theophilus--Clement of Alexandria.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF THEOPHILUS OF ANTIOCH.
-
-This father became Bishop of Antioch in A. D. 168, and died A. D.
-181. First-day writers represent him as saying, "Both _custom_ and
-_reason_ challenge from us that we should honor the Lord's day, seeing
-on that day it was that our Lord Jesus completed his resurrection
-from the dead." These writers, however, give no reference to the
-particular place in the works of Theophilus where this is to be found.
-I have carefully examined every paragraph of all the extant writings
-of this father, and that several times over, without discovering any
-such statement. I am constrained, therefore, to state that nothing of
-the kind above quoted is to be found in Theophilus! And further than
-this, the term Lord's day does not occur in this writer, nor does he
-even refer to the first day of the week except in quoting Genesis 1,
-in a _single instance_! But though he makes no mention of the Sunday
-festival, he makes the following reference to the Sabbath in his
-remarks concerning the creation of the world:--
-
- "Moreover [they spoke], concerning the seventh day, which all men
- acknowledge; but the most know not that what among the Hebrews
- is called the 'Sabbath,' is translated into Greek the 'seventh'
- (#hebdomas#), a name which is
- adopted by every nation, although they know not the reason of the
- appellation." _Theophilus to Autolycus_, b. ii. chap. xii.
-
-Though Theophilus is in error in saying that the Hebrew word _Sabbath_
-is translated into Greek _seventh_, his statement indicates that he
-held the origin of the Sabbath to be when God sanctified the seventh
-day. These are the words of Scripture, as given by him, on which he
-wrote the above:--
-
- "And on the sixth day God finished his works which he made, and
- rested on the seventh day from all his works which he made. And God
- blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it; because in it he rested
- from all his works which God began to create." Book ii. chap. xi.
-
-In the fifteenth chapter of this book, he compares those who "keep the
-law and commandments of God" to the fixed stars, while the "wandering
-stars" are "a type of the men who have wandered from God, abandoning
-his law and commandments." Of the law itself, he speaks thus:--
-
- "We have learned a holy law; but we have as law-giver him who is
- really God, who teaches us to act righteously, and to be pious,
- and to do good." After quoting all but the third and fourth
- commandments, he says: "Of this great and wonderful law which tends
- to all righteousness, the TEN HEADS are such as we have already
- rehearsed." Book iii. chap. ix.
-
-He makes the keeping of the law and commandments the condition of a
-part in the resurrection to eternal life:--
-
- "For God has given us a law and holy commandments; and every one
- who keeps these can be saved, and, obtaining the resurrection, can
- inherit incorruption." Book ii. chap. xxvii.
-
-And yet this man who bears such a noble testimony to the commandments
-and the law, and who says not one word concerning the festival of
-Sunday, is made to speak explicitly in behalf of this so-called
-Christian Sabbath!
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA, A. D. 194.
-
-This father was born about A. D. 160, and died about A. D. 220. He
-wrote about A. D. 194, and is the first of the fathers who uses the
-term Lord's day in such a manner as possibly to signify by it the first
-day of the week. And yet he expressly speaks of the Sabbath as a day of
-rest, and of the first day of the week as a day for labor! The change
-of the Sabbath and the institution of the so-called Christian Sabbath
-were alike unknown to him. Of the ten commandments, he speaks thus:--
-
- "We have the decalogue given by Moses, which, indicating by
- an elementary principle, simple and of one kind, defines the
- designation of sins in a way conducive to salvation," etc.--_The
- Instructor_, b. iii. chap. xii.
-
-He thus alludes to the Sabbath:--
-
- "Thus the Lord did not hinder from doing good while keeping the
- Sabbath; but allowed us to communicate of those divine mysteries,
- and of that holy light, to those who are able to receive
- them."--_The Miscellanies_, b. i. chap. i.
-
- "To restrain one's self from doing good is the work of vice; but to
- keep from wrong is the beginning of salvation. So the Sabbath, by
- abstinence from evils, seems to indicate self-restraint." Book iv.
- chap. iii.
-
-He calls love the Lord of the Sabbath:--
-
- "He convicted the man, who boasted that he had fulfilled the
- injunctions of the law, of not loving his neighbor; and it is by
- beneficence that the love which, according to the Gnostic ascending
- scale, is Lord of the Sabbath, proclaims itself." Book iv. chap. vi.
-
-Referring to the case of the priests in Eze. 43:27, he says:--
-
- "And they purify themselves seven days, the period in which
- creation was consummated. For on the seventh day the rest is
- celebrated; and on the eighth, he brings a propitiation, as it is
- written in Ezekiel, according to which propitiation the promise is
- to be received." Book iv. chap. xxv.
-
-We come now to the first instance in the fathers in which the term
-Lord's day is perhaps applied to Sunday. Clement is the father who does
-this, and he very properly substantiates it with evidence. He does not
-say that Saint John thus applied this name, but he finds authority for
-this in the writings of the heathen philosopher Plato, who, he thinks,
-spoke of it prophetically!
-
- "And the Lord's day Plato prophetically speaks of in the tenth book
- of the _Republic_, in these words: 'And when seven days have passed
- to each of them in the meadow, on the eighth day they are to set
- out and arrive in four days.' By the meadow is to be understood the
- fixed sphere, as being a mild and genial spot, and the locality of
- the pious; and by the seven days each motion of the seven planets,
- and the whole practical art which speeds to the end of the rest.
- But after the wandering orbs the journey leads to Heaven, that
- is, to the eighth motion and day. And he says that souls are gone
- on the fourth day, pointing out the passage through the four
- elements." Book v. chap. xiv.
-
-By the eighth day to which Clement here applies the name of Lord's day
-the first day is possibly intended, though he appears to speak solely
-of mystical days. But having said thus much in behalf of the eighth
-day, he in the very next sentence commences to establish from the Greek
-writers the sacredness of that seventh day which the Hebrews hallowed.
-This shows that whatever regard he might have for the eighth day, he
-certainly cherished the seventh day as sacred. Thus he continues:--
-
- "But the seventh day is recognized as sacred, not by the Hebrews
- only, but also by the Greeks; according to which the whole world of
- all animals and plants revolves. Hesiod says of it:--
-
- "'The first, and fourth, and seventh days were held sacred.'
-
- "And again: 'And on the seventh the sun's resplendent orb.'
-
- "And Homer: 'And on the seventh then came the sacred day.'
-
- "And: 'The seventh was sacred.'
-
- "And again: 'It was the seventh day, and all things were
- accomplished.'
-
- "And again: 'And on the seventh morn we leave the stream of
- Acheron.'
-
- "Callimachus the poet also writes: 'It was the seventh morn, and
- they had all things done.'
-
- "And again: 'Among good days is the seventh day, and the seventh
- race.'
-
- "And: 'The seventh is among the prime, and the seventh is perfect.'
-
- "And:
-
- 'Now all the seven were made in starry heaven,
- In circles shining as the years appear.'
-
- "The Elegies of Solon, too, intensely deify the seventh day." Book
- v. chap. xiv.
-
-
-Some of these quotations are not now found in the writings which
-Clement cites. And whether or not he rightly applies them to
-the seventh-day Sabbath, the fact that he does so apply them is
-incontestible proof that he honored that day as sacred, whatever might
-also be his regard for that day which he distinguishes as the eighth.
-
-In book vi., chapter v., he alludes to the celebration of some of the
-annual sabbaths. And in chapter xvi., he thus speaks of the fourth
-commandment:--
-
- "And the fourth word is that which intimates that the world
- was created by God, and that _he gave us the seventh day as a
- rest_, on account of the trouble that there is in life. For God
- is incapable of weariness, and suffering, and want. _But we who
- bear flesh need rest. The seventh day, therefore, is proclaimed a
- rest_--abstraction from ills--preparing for the primal day, our
- true rest; which, in truth, is the first creation of light, in
- which all things are viewed and possessed. From this day the first
- wisdom and knowledge illuminate us."
-
-This certainly teaches that the Sabbath was made for man, and that
-he now needs it as a day of rest. It also indicates that Clement
-recognized the authority of the fourth commandment, for he treats of
-the ten commandments in order, and comments on what each enjoins or
-forbids. In the next paragraph, however, he makes some remarkable
-suggestions. Thus he says:--
-
- "Having reached this point, we must mention these things by the
- way; since the discourse has turned on the seventh and the eighth.
- For the eighth may possibly turn out to be properly the seventh,
- and the seventh, manifestly the sixth, and the latter,[D] properly
- the Sabbath, and the seventh, a day of work. For the creation of
- the world was concluded in six days." Book vi. chap. xvi.
-
-Clement thinks it possible that the eighth day (Sunday), may really
-be the seventh day, and that the seventh day (Saturday) may in fact
-be the true sixth day. But let not our Sunday friends exult at this,
-for Clement by no means helps their case. Having said that Sunday may
-be properly the seventh day, and Saturday manifestly the sixth day,
-he calls "the LATTER properly the Sabbath, and the seventh a day of
-work"! By "the latter," of necessity must be understood the day last
-mentioned, which he says should be called not the seventh, but the
-sixth; and by "the seventh," must certainly be intended that day which
-he says is not the eighth, but the seventh, that is to say, Sunday.
-It follows therefore in the estimation of Clement that Sunday was
-a day of ordinary labor, and Saturday, the day of rest. He had an
-excellent opportunity to say that the eighth day or Sunday was not
-only the seventh day, but also the true Sabbath, but instead of doing
-this he gives this honor to the day which he says is not the seventh
-but the sixth, and declares that the real seventh day or Sunday is "a
-day of work." And he proceeds at length to show the sacredness and
-importance of the number six. His opinion of the numbering of the days
-is unimportant; but the fact that this father who is the first writer
-that connects the term Lord's day with the eighth day or Sunday, does
-expressly represent that day as one of ordinary labor, and does also
-give to the previous day the honors of the Sabbath is something that
-should shut the mouths of those who claim him as a believer in the
-so-called Christian Sabbath.
-
-In the same chapter, this writer alludes to the Sabbath vaguely,
-apparently understanding it to prefigure the rest that remains to the
-people of God:--
-
- "Rightly, then, they reckon the number seven motherless and
- childless, interpreting the Sabbath, and figuratively expressing
- the nature of the rest, in which 'they neither marry nor are given
- in marriage any more.'"
-
-The following quotation completes the testimony of Clement. He speaks
-of the precept concerning fasting, that it is fulfilled by abstinence
-from sinful pleasure. And thus he says:--
-
- "He fasts, then, according to the law, abstaining from bad deeds,
- and, according to the perfection of the gospel, from evil thoughts.
- Temptations are applied to him, not for his purification, but, as
- we have said, for the good of his neighbors, if, making trial of
- toils and pains, he has despised and passed them by. The same holds
- of pleasure. For it is the highest achievement for one who has had
- trial of it, afterwards to abstain. For what great thing is it, if
- a man restrains himself in what he knows not? He, in fulfillment of
- the precept, according to the gospel, keeps the Lord's day, when
- he abandons an evil disposition, and assumes that of the Gnostic,
- glorifying the Lord's resurrection in himself." Book vii. chap. xii.
-
-Clement asserts that one fasts according to the law when he abstains
-from evil deeds, and, according to the gospel, when he abstains
-from evil thoughts. He shows how the precept respecting fasting is
-fulfilled when he speaks of one who "in fulfillment of the precept,
-according to the gospel, keeps the Lord's day when he abandons an evil
-disposition." This abandonment of an evil disposition, according to
-Clement, keeps the Lord's day, and glorifies the Lord's resurrection.
-But this duty pertains to no one day of the week, but to all alike, so
-that he seems evidently to inculcate a perpetual Lord's day, even as
-Justin Martyr enjoins the observance of a "perpetual Sabbath," to be
-acceptably sanctified by those who maintain true repentance. Though
-these writers are not always consistent with themselves, yet two
-facts go to show that Clement in this book means just what his words
-literally import, viz., that the keeping of the Lord's day and the
-glorifying of the resurrection is not the observance of a certain day
-of the week, but the performance of a work which embraces every day of
-one's whole life.
-
-1. The first of these facts is his express statement of this doctrine
-in the first paragraph of the seventh chapter of this book. Thus he
-says:--
-
- "Now, we are commanded to reverence and to honor the same one,
- being persuaded that he is Word, Saviour, and Leader, and by him,
- the Father, NOT ON SPECIAL DAYS, AS SOME OTHERS, but _doing this
- continually in our whole life_, and in every way. Certainly the
- elect race, justified by the precept, says, 'Seven times a day have
- I praised thee.' Whence _not_ in a specified place, or selected
- temple, or at _certain festivals_, and on _appointed days_, but
- _during his whole life_, the Gnostic in every place, even if he
- be alone by himself, and wherever he has any of those who have
- exercised the like faith, honors God; that is, acknowledges his
- gratitude for the knowledge of the way to live." Book vii. chap.
- vii.
-
-2. The second of these facts is that in book vi., chapter xvi., as
-already quoted, he expressly represents Sunday as "a day of work."
-
-Certainly Clement of Alexandria should not be cited as teaching the
-change of the Sabbath, or advocating the so-called Christian Sabbath.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-TESTIMONY OF TERTULLIAN, A. D. 200.
-
-
-This writer contradicts himself in the most extraordinary manner
-concerning the Sabbath and the law of God. He asserts that the Sabbath
-was abolished by Christ, and elsewhere emphatically declares that he
-did not abolish it. He says that Joshua violated the Sabbath, and then
-expressly declares that he did not violate it. He says that Christ
-broke the Sabbath, and then shows that he never did this. He represents
-the eighth day as more honorable than the seventh, and elsewhere states
-just the reverse. He asserts that the law is abolished, and in other
-places affirms its perpetual obligation. He speaks of the Lord's day
-as the eighth day, and is the second of the early writers who makes
-an application of this term to Sunday, if we allow Clement to have
-really spoken of it. But though he thus uses the term like Clement he
-also like him teaches a perpetual Lord's day, or, like Justin Martyr,
-a perpetual Sabbath in the observance of every day. And with the
-observance of Sunday as the Lord's day he brings in "offerings for the
-dead" and the perpetual use of the sign of the cross. But he expressly
-affirms that these things rest, not upon the authority of the
-Scriptures, but wholly upon that of tradition and custom. And though he
-speaks of the Sabbath as abrogated by Christ, he expressly contradicts
-this by asserting that Christ "did not at all rescind the Sabbath,"
-and that he imparted an additional sanctity to that day which from the
-beginning had been consecrated by the benediction of the Father. This
-strange mingling of light and darkness plainly indicates the age in
-which this author lived. He was not so far removed from the time of the
-apostles but that many clear rays of divine truth shone upon him; and
-he was far enough advanced in the age of apostasy to have its dense
-darkness materially affect him. He stood on the line between expiring
-day and advancing night. Sometimes the law of God was unspeakably
-sacred; at other times tradition was of higher authority than the law.
-Sometimes divine institutions were alone precious in his estimation; at
-others he was better satisfied with those which were sustained only by
-custom and tradition.
-
-Tertullian's first reference to Sunday is found in that part of
-his Apology in which he excuses his brethren from the charge of
-sun-worship. Thus he says:--
-
- "Others, again, certainly with more information and greater
- verisimilitude, believe that the sun is our God. We shall be
- counted Persians, perhaps, though we do not worship the orb of day
- painted on a piece of linen cloth, having himself everywhere in
- his own disk. The idea, no doubt, has originated from our being
- known to turn to the east in prayer. But you, many of you, also,
- under pretense sometimes of worshiping the heavenly bodies, move
- your lips in the direction of the sunrise. In the same way, if
- we devote Sunday to rejoicing, from a far different reason than
- sun-worship, we have some resemblance to those of you who devote
- the day of Saturn to ease and luxury, though they, too, go far away
- from Jewish ways, of which indeed they are ignorant."--_Thelwell's
- Translation_, sect. 16.
-
-Several important facts are presented in this quotation.
-
-1. Sunday was an ancient heathen festival in honor of the sun.
-
-2. Those Christians who observed the festival of Sunday were claimed by
-the heathen as sun-worshipers.
-
-3. The entrance of the Sunday festival into the church in an age
-of apostasy when men very generally honored it, was not merely not
-difficult to be effected, it was actually difficult to be prevented.
-
-It would seem from the closing sentence that some of the heathen
-used the seventh day as a day of ease and luxury. But Mr. Reeve's
-Translation gives a very different sense. He renders Tertullian thus:--
-
- "We solemnize the day after Saturday in contradistinction to those
- who call this day their Sabbath, and devote it to ease and eating,
- deviating from the old Jewish customs, which they are now very
- ignorant of."
-
-The persons here mentioned so contemptuously could not be heathens,
-for they do not call any day "their Sabbath." Nor could they be Jews,
-as is plain from the form of expression used. If we accept Mr. Reeve's
-Translation, these persons were Christians who observe the seventh day.
-Tertullian does not say that the Sunday festival was observed by divine
-authority, but that they might distinguish themselves from those who
-call the seventh day the Sabbath.
-
-Tertullian again declares that his brethren did not observe the days
-held sacred by the Jews.
-
- "We neither accord with the Jews in their peculiarities in regard
- to food, nor in their sacred days."--_Apology_, sect. 21.
-
-But those Christians who would not keep the Sabbath because the
-festival of Sunday was in their estimation more worthy of honor, or
-more convenient to observe, were greatly given to the observance of
-other days, in common with the heathen, besides Sunday. Thus Tertullian
-charges home upon them this sin:--
-
- "The Holy Spirit upbraids the Jews with their holy days. 'Your
- sabbaths, and new moons, and ceremonies,' says he, 'my soul
- hateth.' By us (to whom Sabbaths are strange, and the new
- moons, and festivals formerly beloved by God) the Saturnalia
- and New Year's and mid-winter's festivals and Matronalia are
- frequented--presents come and go--New Year's gifts--games join
- their noise--banquets join their din! Oh! better fidelity of
- the nations to their own sect, which claims no solemnity of the
- Christians for itself! Not the Lord's day, not Pentecost, even
- if they had known them, would they have shared with us; for they
- would fear lest they should seem to be Christians. _We_ are not
- apprehensive lest we seem to be _heathens_! If any indulgence is
- to be granted to the flesh, you have it. I will not say your own
- days, but more too; for to the _heathens_ each festive day occurs
- but once annually; _you_ have a festive day every eighth day."--_On
- Idolatry_, chap. xiv.
-
-These Sunday-festival Christians, "to whom Sabbaths" were "strange,"
-could not have kept Sunday as a Sabbath. They had never heard that by
-divine authority the Sabbath was changed from the seventh to the first
-day of the week, and that Sunday is the Christian Sabbath. Let any
-candid man read the above words from Tertullian, and then deny, if he
-can, that these strangers to the Sabbath, and observers of heathen
-festivals, were not a body of apostatizing Christians!
-
-Hereafter Tertullian will give an excellent commentary on his quotation
-from Isaiah. It seems from him that the so-called Lord's day came once
-in eight days. Were these words to be taken in their most obvious
-sense, then it would come one day later each week than it did the
-preceding week, and thus it would come successively on all the days of
-the week in order, at intervals of eight days. He might in such case
-well say:--
-
- "However, _every_ day is the Lord's; every hour, every time, is apt
- for baptism; if there is a difference in the _solemnity_, in the
- _grace_, distinction there is none."--_On Baptism_, chap. xix.
-
-But it seems that Tertullian by the eighth day intended Sunday. And
-here is something from him relative to the manner of keeping it. Thus
-he says:--
-
- "In the matter of _kneeling_ also, prayer is subject to diversity
- of observance, through the act of some few who abstain from
- kneeling on the Sabbath; and since this dissension is particularly
- on its trial before the churches, the Lord will give his grace that
- the dissentients may either yield, or else indulge their opinion
- without offense to others. We, however (just as we have received),
- only on the day of the Lord's resurrection ought to guard not only
- against kneeling, but every posture and office of solicitude;
- deferring even our businesses, lest we give any place to the
- devil. Similarly, too, in the period of Pentecost; which period
- we distinguish by the same solemnity of exultation. But who would
- hesitate _every_ day to prostrate himself before God, at least
- in the first prayer with which we enter on the daylight."--_On
- Prayer_, chap. xxiii.
-
-A more literal translation of this passage would expressly connect the
-term Lord's day with the day of Christ's resurrection, the original
-being "die Dominico resurrexionis." The special weekly honor which
-Tertullian would have men confer solely upon Sunday was to pray on that
-day in a _standing_ posture. And somewhat to his annoyance, "some few"
-would thus act with reference to the Sabbath. There is, however, some
-reference to the deferral of business on Sunday. And this is worthy of
-notice, for it is the first sentence we have discovered that looks like
-abstinence from labor on Sunday, and we shall not find another before
-the time of Constantine's famous Sunday law, A. D. 321.
-
-But this passage is far from asserting that labor on Sunday was sinful.
-It speaks of "deferring even our businesses;" but this does not
-necessarily imply anything beyond its postponement during the hours
-devoted to religious services. And we shall find nothing in Tertullian,
-nor in his cotemporaries, that will go beyond this, while we shall find
-much to restrict us to the interpretation of his words here given.
-Tertullian could not say that Sabbaths were strange to him and his
-brethren if they religiously refrained from labor on each Sunday. But
-let us hear him again concerning the observance of Sunday and kindred
-practices:--
-
- "We take also, in meetings before daybreak, and from the hand of
- none but the presidents, the sacrament of the Eucharist, which the
- Lord both commanded to be eaten at meal-times, and enjoined to be
- taken by all [alike]. As often as the anniversary comes round, we
- make offerings for the dead as birth-day honors. We count fasting
- or kneeling in worship on the Lord's day to be unlawful. We rejoice
- in the same privilege also from Easter to Whit-sunday. We feel
- pained should any wine or bread, even though our own, be cast upon
- the ground. At every forward step and movement, at every going in
- and out, when we put on our clothes and shoes, when we bathe, when
- we sit at table, when we light the lamps, on couch, on seat, in all
- the ordinary actions of daily life, we trace upon the forehead the
- sign [of the cross].
-
- "If, for these and other such rules, you insist upon having
- positive Scripture injunction, you will find none. Tradition will
- be held forth to you as the originator of them, custom, as their
- strengthener, and faith, as their observer. That reason will
- support tradition, and custom, and faith, you will either yourself
- perceive, or learn from some one who has."--_De Corona_, sects. 3
- and 4.
-
-The things which he counted unlawful on Sunday he expressly names.
-These are fasting and kneeling on that day. But ordinary labor does
-not come into his list of things unlawful on that day. And now observe
-what progress apostasy and superstition had made in other things also.
-"Offerings for the dead" were regularly made, and the sign of the cross
-was repeated as often as God would have men rehearse his commandments.
-See Deut. 6:6-9. And now if you wish to know Tertullian's authority
-for the Sunday festival, offerings for the dead, and the sign of the
-cross, he frankly tells you what it is. He had no authority from the
-Scriptures. Custom and tradition were all that he could offer. Modern
-divines can find plenty of authority, from the Scriptures, as they
-assert, for maintaining the so-called Lord's day. Tertullian knew of
-none. He took the Sunday festival, offerings for the dead, and the sign
-of the cross, on the authority of custom and tradition; if you take the
-first on such authority, why do you not, also, the other two?
-
-But Tertullian finds it necessary to write a second defense of his
-brethren from the charge of being sun-worshipers, a charge directly
-connected with their observance of the festival of Sunday. Here are his
-words:--
-
- "Others, with greater regard to good manners, it must be confessed,
- suppose that the sun is the god of the Christians, because it is a
- well-known fact that we pray towards the east, or because we make
- Sunday a day of festivity. What then? Do you do less than this? Do
- not many among you, with an affectation of sometimes worshiping
- the heavenly bodies likewise, move your lips in the direction of
- the sunrise? It is you, at all events, who have even admitted the
- sun into the calendar of the week; and you have selected its day
- [Sunday], in preference to the preceding day, as the most suitable
- in the week for either an entire abstinence from the bath, or for
- its postponement until the evening, or for taking rest, and for
- banqueting. By resorting to these customs, you deliberately deviate
- from your own religious rites to those of strangers. For the Jewish
- feasts are the Sabbath and 'the Purification,' and Jewish also are
- the ceremonies of the lamps, and the fasts of unleavened bread, and
- the 'littoral prayers,' all which institutions and practices are of
- course foreign from your gods. Wherefore, that I may return from
- this digression, you who reproach us with the sun and Sunday should
- consider your proximity to us. We are not far off from your Saturn
- and your days of rest."--_Ad Nationes_, b. i. chap. xiii.
-
-Tertullian in this discourse addresses himself to the nations still in
-idolatry. The heathen festival of Sunday, which was with some nations
-more ancient, had been established among the Romans at a comparatively
-recent date, though earlier than the time of Justin Martyr, the
-first Christian writer in whom an authentic mention of the day is
-found. The heathen reproached the early Sunday Christians with being
-sun-worshipers, "because," says Tertullian, "we pray towards the east,
-or because we make Sunday a day of festivity." And how does Tertullian
-answer this grave charge? He could not say, We do it by command of God
-to honor the first day of the week, for he expressly states in a former
-quotation that no such precept exists. So he retorts thus: "What then?
-Do you [heathen] do less than this?" And he adds: "You have selected
-its day [Sunday] in preference to the preceding day" (Saturday), etc.
-That is to say, Tertullian wishes to know why, if the heathen could
-choose Sunday in preference to Saturday, the Christians could not have
-the same privilege! Could there be a stronger incidental evidence that
-Sunday was cherished by the early apostatizing Christians, not because
-commanded of God, but because it was generally observed by their
-heathen neighbors, and therefore more convenient to them?
-
-But Tertullian next avows his faith in the ten commandments as "the
-rules of our regenerate life," that is to say, the rules which govern
-Christian men; and he gives the preference to the seventh day over the
-eighth:--
-
- "I must also say something about the period of the soul's birth,
- that I may omit nothing incidental in the whole process. A
- mature and regular birth takes place, as a general rule, at the
- commencement of the tenth month. They who theorize respecting
- numbers, honor the number ten as the parent of all the others,
- and as imparting perfection to the human nativity. For my own
- part, I prefer viewing this measure of time in reference to God,
- as if implying that the ten months rather initiated man into the
- ten commandments; so that the numerical estimate of the time
- needed to consummate our natural birth should correspond to the
- numerical classification of _the rules of our regenerate life_.
- But inasmuch as birth is also completed with the seventh month, I
- more readily recognize in this number than in the eighth the honor
- of a numerical agreement with the Sabbatical period; so that the
- month in which God's image is sometimes produced in a human birth,
- shall in its number tally with the day on which God's creation was
- completed and hallowed."--_De Anima_, chap. xxxvii.
-
-This kind of reasoning is of course destitute of any force. But in
-adducing such an argument Tertullian avows his faith in the ten
-commandments as the rule of the Christian's life, gives the preference
-to the seventh day as the Sabbath, and deduces the origin of the
-Sabbath from God's act of hallowing the seventh day at creation.
-
-Though Tertullian elsewhere, as we shall see, speaks lightly of the
-law of God, and represents it as abolished, his next testimony most
-sacredly honors that law, and while acknowledging the Sabbath as one of
-its precepts, he recognizes the authority of the whole code. Thus he
-says:--
-
- "Of how deep guilt, then, adultery--which is likewise a matter
- of fornication, in accordance with its criminal function--is to
- be accounted, the law of God first comes to hand to show us; if
- it is true [as it is], that after interdicting the superstitious
- service of alien gods, and the making of idols themselves, after
- commending [to religious observance] the veneration of the Sabbath,
- after commanding a religious regard toward parents, second [only
- to that] toward God, [that law] laid, as the next substratum in
- strengthening and fortifying such counts, no other precept than
- 'Thou shalt not commit adultery.'"--_On Modesty_, chap. v.
-
-And of this precept Tertullian presently tells us that it stands "in
-the very forefront of _the most holy law_, among the primary counts of
-_the celestial edict_."
-
-In his treatise "On Fasting," chapter xiv., he terms "the Sabbath--a
-day never to be kept as a fast except at the passover season, according
-to a reason elsewhere given." And in chapter xv., he excepts from the
-two weeks in which meat was not eaten "the Sabbaths" and "the Lord's
-days."
-
-But in his "Answer to the Jews," chapter ii., he represents the law as
-variously modified from Adam to Christ; he denies "that the Sabbath
-is still to be observed;" classes it with circumcision; declares
-that Adam was "inobservant of the Sabbath," affirms the same of Abel,
-Noah, Enoch, and Melchizedek, and asserts that Lot "was freed from
-the conflagration of the Sodomites" "for the merits of righteousness,
-without observance of the law." And in the beginning of chapter iii.,
-he again classes the Sabbath with circumcision, and asserts that
-Abraham did not "observe the Sabbath."
-
-In chapter iv., he declares that "the observance of the Sabbath" was
-"temporary." And he continues thus:--
-
- "For the Jews say, that from the beginning God sanctified the
- seventh day, by resting on it from all his works which he made;
- and that thence it was, likewise, that Moses said to the people:
- 'Remember the day of the Sabbaths,'" etc.
-
-Now see how Tertullian and his brethren disposed of this commandment
-respecting the seventh day:--
-
- "Whence we [Christians] understand that _we_ still more ought to
- observe a Sabbath from all 'servile work' always, and not only
- every seventh day, but through all time."
-
-That is to say in plain language, they would, under pretense of keeping
-every day as a Sabbath, not only work on the seventh day of the
-week, but on all the days of the week. But this plainly proves that
-Tertullian did not think the seventh day was superseded by the first.
-And thus he proceeds:--
-
- "And through this arises the question for us, _what_ Sabbath God
- willed us to keep."
-
-Our first-day friends quote Tertullian in behalf of what they call
-the Christian Sabbath. Had he believed in such an institution he
-would certainly have named it in answer to this question. But mark his
-answer:--
-
- "For the Scriptures point to a Sabbath eternal and a Sabbath
- temporal. For Isaiah the prophet says, '_Your_ Sabbaths my soul
- hateth.' And in another place he says, 'My Sabbaths ye have
- profaned.' Whence we discern that the temporal Sabbath is human,
- and the eternal Sabbath is accounted divine."
-
-This temporal Sabbath is the seventh day; this eternal Sabbath is the
-keeping of all days alike, as Tertullian affirms that he and those with
-him did.
-
-He next declares that Isaiah's prediction respecting the Sabbath in the
-new earth (Isa. 66: 22, 23), was "fulfilled in the times of Christ,
-when all flesh--that is, every nation--came to adore in Jerusalem
-God the Father." And he adds: "Thus, therefore, before this temporal
-Sabbath [the seventh day], there was withal an eternal Sabbath
-foreshown and foretold," _i. e._, the keeping of all days alike. And
-this he fortifies by the assertion that the holy men before Moses did
-not observe the seventh day. And in proof that the Sabbath was one day
-to cease, he cites the compassing of Jericho for seven days, one of
-which must have been the Sabbath. And to this he adds the case of the
-Maccabees who fought certain battles on the Sabbath. In due time we
-shall see how admirably he answers such objections as these of his own
-raising.
-
-In chapter vi., he repeats his theory of the "Sabbath temporal" [the
-seventh day], and the "Sabbath eternal" or the "Spiritual Sabbath,"
-which is "to observe a Sabbath from all 'servile works' always, and
-not only every seventh day, but through all time." He says that the
-ancient law has ceased, and that "the new law" and the "Spiritual
-Sabbath" have come.
-
-In the twentieth chapter of his first book against Marcion, Tertullian
-cites Hosea 2:11, and Isa. 1:13, 14, to prove that the Sabbath is
-now abrogated. And in his fifth book against Marcion, chapter iv.,
-he quotes Gal. 4:10; John 19:31; Isa. 1:13, 14; Amos 5:21, and Hosea
-2:11, to prove that "the Creator abolished his own laws," and that he
-"destroyed the institutions which he set up himself." These quotations
-are apparently designed to prove that the Sabbath is abolished, but he
-does not enter into argument from them. But in the nineteenth chapter
-of this book he quotes Col. 2:16, 17, and simply says of the law:
-"The apostle here teaches clearly how it has been abolished, even by
-passing from shadow to substance--that is, from figurative types to the
-reality, which is Christ." This remark is truthful and would justly
-exclude the moral law from this abolition.
-
-But in chapter xxi. of his second book against Marcion, he answers
-the very objection against the Sabbath which himself has elsewhere
-urged, as we have noticed, drawn from the case of Jericho. He says to
-Marcion:--
-
- "You do not, however, consider the law of the Sabbath: they are
- human works, not divine, which it prohibits. For it says, 'Six days
- shalt thou labor, and do all thy work; but the seventh day is the
- Sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work.'
- What work? Of course your own. The conclusion is, that from the
- Sabbath day he removes those works which he had before enjoined for
- the six days, that is, your own works; in other words, human works
- of daily life. Now, the carrying around of the ark is evidently
- not an ordinary daily duty, nor yet a human one; but a rare and
- a sacred work, and, as being then ordered by the direct precept
- of God, a divine one.... Thus, in the present instance, there is
- a clear distinction respecting the Sabbath's prohibition of human
- labors, not divine ones. Accordingly, the man who went and gathered
- sticks on the Sabbath day was punished with death. For it was his
- own work which he did; and this the law forbade. They, however, who
- on the Sabbath carried the ark round Jericho, did it with impunity.
- For it was not their own work, but God's, which they executed, and
- that, too, from his express commandment."
-
-In the following chapter he again cites Isa. 1:11-14, as proof that the
-Sabbath is abolished. He will, however, presently explain this text
-which he has so many times used against the Sabbath, and show that it
-actually has no such bearing. In the meantime he will again declare
-that Joshua did not break the Sabbath, and having done this he will
-find it in order again to assert that "the Sabbath was actually then
-broken by Joshua." In his fourth book against Marcion, chapter xii., he
-discusses the question whether Christ as Lord of the Sabbath had the
-right to annul the Sabbath, and whether in his life he did actually
-violate it. To do this he again cites the case of Jericho, and actually
-affirms that the Sabbath was broken on that occasion, and at the same
-time denies it. Thus he says:--
-
- "If Christ interfered with the Sabbath, he simply acted after the
- Creator's example; inasmuch as in the siege of the city of Jericho
- the carrying around the walls of the ark of the covenant for eight
- days running, and therefore on a Sabbath day, actually annulled
- the Sabbath, by the Creator's command--according to the opinion of
- those who think this of Christ [Luke 6:1-5] in their ignorance that
- neither Christ nor the Creator violated the Sabbath, as we shall
- by-and-by show. And yet the Sabbath was actually then broken by
- Joshua, so that the present charge might be alleged also against
- Christ."
-
-The Sabbath was not violated in the case of Jericho, and yet it
-certainly was there violated! Tertullian adds that if Christ hated the
-Sabbath he was in this like the Creator himself, who declares [Isa.
-1:14] that he hates it. He forgets that the Creator has expressly
-declared his great regard for the Sabbath by this very prophet
-[chap. 58:13, 14], and overlooks the fact that what God hates is the
-hypocritical conduct of the people as set forth in Isaiah 1. In his
-fourth book against Marcion, chapter xvi., Christ is mentioned as
-the Lord of the Sabbath, but nothing is said bearing upon Sabbatic
-obligation. In chapter xxx., of this same book, he alludes to the cure
-wrought by Christ upon the Sabbath day, mentioned in Luke 13:11-16,
-and says, "When, therefore, he did a work according to the condition
-prescribed by the law, he affirmed, instead of breaking, the law," etc.
-
-In the twelfth chapter of this book, however, he asserts many things
-relative to Christ. He says that the disciples in rubbing out the ears
-of corn on the Sabbath "had violated the holy day. Christ excuses them
-and became their accomplice in breaking the Sabbath." He argues that
-as the Sabbath from the beginning, which he here places at the fall
-of the manna though elsewhere dating it from the creation, had never
-been designed as a day of fasting, the Saviour did right in justifying
-the act of the disciples in the cornfield. And he terms the example of
-David a "colorable precedent" to justify the eating of the corn. But
-though he represents the Saviour as "annulling the Sabbath" at this
-time, he also asserts that in this very case "he maintains the honor of
-the Sabbath as a day which is to be free from gloom rather than from
-work." He justifies the Saviour in his acts of healing on the Sabbath,
-declaring that in this he was doing that which the Sabbath law did not
-forbid. Tertullian next affirms precisely the reverse of many things
-which he has advanced against the Sabbath, and even answers his own
-objections against it. Thus he says:--
-
- "In order that he might, whilst allowing that amount of work
- which he was about to perform for a soul, remind them what works
- the law of the Sabbath forbade--even human works; and what it
- enjoined--even divine works, which might be done for the benefit of
- any soul, he was called 'Lord of the Sabbath' because he maintained
- the Sabbath as his own institution. Now, even if he had annulled
- the Sabbath, he would have had the right to do so, as being its
- Lord, [and] still more as he who instituted it. But lie did not
- utterly destroy it, although its Lord, in order that it might
- henceforth be plain that the Sabbath was not broken by the Creator,
- even at the time when the ark was carried around Jericho. For that
- was really God's work, which he commanded himself, and which he had
- ordered for the sake of the lives of his servants when exposed to
- the perils of war." Book iv. chap. xii.
-
-In this paragraph Tertullian explains the law of God in the clearest
-manner. He shows beyond all dispute that neither Joshua nor Christ ever
-violated it. He also declares that Christ did not abolish the Sabbath.
-In the next sentence he goes on to answer most admirably his own
-repeated perversion of Isaiah 1:13, 14, and to contradict some of his
-own serious errors. Listen to him:--
-
- "Now, although he has in a certain place expressed an aversion of
- Sabbaths, by calling them '_your Sabbaths_,' reckoning them as
- men's Sabbaths, not his own, because they were celebrated without
- the fear of God by a people full of iniquities, and loving God
- 'with the lip, not the heart,' he has yet put his own Sabbaths
- (those, that is, which were kept according to his prescription) in
- a different position; for by the same prophet, in a later passage,
- he declares them to be 'true, delightful, and inviolable.' [Isa
- 58:13; 56:2.] Thus _Christ did not at all rescind the Sabbath_: he
- kept the law thereof, and both in the former case did a work which
- was beneficial to the life of his disciples (for he indulged them
- with the relief of food when they were hungry), and in the present
- instance cured the withered hand; in each case intimating by facts,
- 'I came not to destroy the law, but to fulfill it,' although
- Marcion has gagged his mouth by this word."
-
-Here Tertullian shows that God did not hate his own Sabbath, but only
-the hypocrisy of those who professed to keep it. He also expressly
-declares that the Saviour "did not at all rescind the Sabbath." And now
-that he has his hand in, he will not cease till he has testified to a
-noble Sabbatarian confession of faith, placing its origin at creation,
-and perpetuating the institution with divine safeguards and additional
-sanctity. Moreover he asserts that Christ's adversary [Satan] would
-have had him do this to some other days, a heavy blow as it happens
-upon those who in modern times so stoutly maintain that he consecrated
-the first day of the week to take the place of the Creator's rest-day.
-Listen again to Tertullian, who continues as follows:--
-
- "For even in the case before us he fulfilled the law, while
- interpreting its condition; [moreover,] he exhibits in a clear
- light the different kinds of work, while doing what the law excepts
- from the sacredness of the Sabbath, [and] while imparting to the
- Sabbath day itself, which _from the beginning_ had been consecrated
- by the benediction of the Father, an additional sanctity by
- his own beneficent action. For he furnished to this day divine
- safeguards,--a course which his adversary would have pursued for
- some other days, to avoid honoring the Creator's Sabbath, and
- restoring to the Sabbath the works which were proper for it.
- Since, in like manner, the prophet Elisha on this day restored to
- life the dead son of the Shunammite woman, you see, O Pharisee,
- and you too, O Marcion, how that it was [proper employment] for
- the Creator's Sabbaths of old to do good, to save life, not to
- destroy it; how that Christ introduced nothing new, which was not
- after the example, the gentleness, the mercy, and the prediction
- also of the Creator. For in this very example he fulfills the
- prophetic announcement of a specific healing: 'The weak hands are
- strengthened,' as were also 'the feeble knees' in the sick of the
- palsy."--_Tertullian against Marcion_, b. iv. chap. xii.
-
-Tertullian mistakes in his reference to the Shunammite woman. It was
-not the Sabbath day on which she went to the prophet. 2 Kings 4:23. But
-in the last three paragraphs quoted from him, which in his work form
-one continuous statement, he affirms many important truths which are
-worthy of careful enumeration. They are as follows:--
-
-1. Christ, in determining what should, and what should not, be done on
-the Sabbath, "was called 'Lord of the Sabbath,' because he maintained
-the Sabbath as his own institution."
-
-2. "The Sabbath was not broken by the Creator, even at the time when
-the ark was carried around Jericho."
-
-3. The reason why God expressed his aversion to "your Sabbaths," as
-though they were "men's Sabbaths, not his own," was "because they were
-celebrated without the fear of God, by a people full of iniquities."
-See Isa. 1:13, 14.
-
-4. "By the same prophet [Isa. 58:13; 56:2], he declares them [the
-Sabbaths] to be 'true and delightful and inviolable.'"
-
-5. "Thus Christ did not at all rescind the Sabbath."
-
-6. "He kept the law thereof."
-
-7. "The Sabbath day itself, which from the beginning had been
-consecrated by the benediction of the Father." This language expressly
-assigns the origin of the Sabbath to the act of the Creator at the
-close of the first week of time.
-
-8. Christ imparted to the Sabbath "an additional sanctity by his own
-beneficent action."
-
-9. "He furnished to this day divine safeguards,--a course which his
-adversary would have pursued for some other days, to avoid honoring the
-Creator's Sabbath, and restoring to the Sabbath the works which were
-proper for it."
-
-This last statement is indeed very remarkable. Christ furnished "the
-Creator's Sabbath," the seventh day, with "divine safeguards." His
-adversary (THE adversary of Christ is the devil) would have had this
-course "pursued for some other days." That is to say, the devil would
-have been pleased had Christ consecrated some other day, instead of
-adding to the sanctity of his Father's Sabbath. What Tertullian says
-that the devil would have been pleased to have Christ do, that our
-first-day friends now assert that he did do in the establishment of
-what they call the Christian Sabbath! Such an institution, however,
-was never heard of in the days of the so-called Christian fathers.
-Notwithstanding Tertullian's many erroneous statements concerning the
-Sabbath and the law, he has here borne a noble testimony to the truth,
-and this completes his words.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-Fabian--Origen--Hippolytus--Novatian.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF THE EPISTLES AND DECREES OF POPE FABIAN.
-
-This man was bishop of Rome from A. D. 236 to A. D. 250. The letters
-ascribed to Fabian were probably written at a considerably later date.
-We quote them, however, at the very point of time wherein they claim
-to have been written. Their testimony is of little importance, but
-they breathe the self-important spirit of a Roman bishop. We quote as
-follows:--
-
- "You ought to know what is being done in things sacred in the
- church of Rome, in order that, by following her example, ye may
- be found to be true children of her who is called your mother.
- Accordingly, as we have received the institution from our fathers,
- we maintain seven deacons in the city of Rome, distributed over
- seven districts of the state, who attend to the services enjoined
- on them week by week, and on the Lord's days, and the solemn
- festivals," etc.--_Epistle First._
-
-This pope is said to have made the following decree, which contains the
-only other reference to the so-called Lord's day to be found in the
-writings attributed to him:--
-
- "We decree that on each Lord's day the oblation of the altar should
- be made by all men and women in bread and wine, in order that by
- means of these sacrifices they may be released from the burden of
- their sins."--_Decrees of Fabian_, b. v. chap. vii.
-
-In these quotations we see that the Roman church is made the mother
-of all churches, and also that the Roman bishop thinks himself the
-rightful ruler over all Christian people. And it is in fit keeping with
-these features of the great apostasy that the pope, instead of pointing
-sinful men to the sacrifice made on Calvary, should "decree that on
-each Lord's day" every person should offer an "oblation" of "bread and
-wine" on the altar, "that by means of THESE SACRIFICES they may be
-released from the burden of their sins"!
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF ORIGEN.
-
-Origen was born about A. D. 185, probably at Alexandria in Egypt.
-He was a man of immense learning, but unfortunately adopted a
-spiritualizing system in the interpretation of the Scriptures that was
-the means of flooding the church with many errors. He wrote during the
-first half of the third century. I have carefully examined all the
-writings of every Christian writer preceding the council of Nice with
-the single exception of Origen. Some of his works, as yet, I have not
-been able to obtain. While, therefore, I give the entire testimony of
-every other father on the subject of inquiry, in his case I am unable
-to do this. But I can give it with sufficient fullness to present him
-in a just light. His first reference to the Sabbath is a denial that it
-should be literally understood. Thus he says:--
-
- "There are countless multitudes of believers who, although unable
- to unfold methodically and clearly the results of their spiritual
- understanding, are nevertheless most firmly persuaded that neither
- ought circumcision to be understood literally, nor the rest of the
- Sabbath, nor the pouring out of the blood of an animal, nor that
- answers were given by God to Moses on these points. And this method
- of apprehension is undoubtedly suggested to the minds of all by the
- power of the Holy Spirit."--_De Principiis_, b. ii. chap. vii.
-
-Origen asserts that the spiritual interpretation of the Scriptures
-whereby their literal meaning is set aside is something divinely
-inspired! But when this is accepted as the truth who can tell what they
-mean by what they say?
-
-In the next chapter he quotes Isa. 1:13, 14, but with reference to
-the subject of the soul and not to that of the Sabbath. In chapter
-xi., alluding again to the hidden meaning of the things commanded in
-the Scriptures, he asserts that when the Christian has "returned to
-Christ" he will, amongst other things enumerated, "see also the reasons
-for the festival days, and holy days, and for all the sacrifices and
-purifications." So it seems that Origen thought the spiritual meaning
-of the Sabbath, which he asserted in the place of the literal, was to
-be known only in the future state!
-
-In book iv. chapter i., he quotes Col. 2:16, but gives no exposition of
-its meaning. But having asserted that the things commanded in the law
-were not to be understood literally, and having intimated that their
-hidden meaning cannot be known until the saints are with Christ, he
-proceeds in section 17 of this chapter to prove that the literal sense
-of the law is impossible. One of the arguments by which he proves the
-point is, that men were commanded not to go out of their houses on the
-Sabbath. He thus quotes and comments on Ex. 16:29:--
-
- "'Ye shall sit, every one in your dwellings; no one shall move
- from his place on the Sabbath day,' which precept it is impossible
- to observe literally; for no man can sit a whole day so as not to
- move from the place where he sat down." Origen quotes a certain
- Samaritan who declares that one must not change his posture on the
- Sabbath, and he adds, "Moreover the injunction which runs, 'Bear no
- burden on the Sabbath day,' seems to me an impossibility."
-
-This argument is framed for the purpose of proving that the Scriptures
-cannot be taken in their literal sense. But had he quoted the text
-correctly there would be no force at all to his argument. They must not
-go out to gather manna, but were expressly commanded to use the Sabbath
-for holy convocations, that is, for religious assemblies. Lev. 23:3.
-And as to the burdens mentioned in Jer. 17:21-27, they are sufficiently
-explained by Neh. 13:15-22. Such reasons as these for denying the
-obvious, simple signification of what God has commanded, are worthy of
-no confidence. In his letter to Africanus, Origen thus alludes to the
-Sabbath, but without further remarking upon it:--
-
- "You will find the law about not bearing a burden on the Sabbath
- day in Jeremiah as well as in Moses."
-
-Though these allusions of Origen to the Sabbath are not in themselves
-of much importance, we give them all, that his testimony may be
-presented as fully as possible. His next mention of the Sabbath seems
-from the connection to relate to Paul:--
-
- "Was it impious to abstain from corporeal circumcision, and from a
- literal Sabbath, and literal festivals, and literal new moons, and
- from clean and unclean meats, and to turn the mind to the good and
- true and spiritual law of God," etc.--_Origen against Celsus_, b.
- ii. chap. vii.
-
-We shall soon get his idea of the true Sabbath as distinguished from
-the "literal" one. He gives the following reason for the "literal
-Sabbath" among the Hebrews:--
-
- "In order that there might be leisure to listen to their sacred
- laws, the days termed 'Sabbath,' and the other festivals which
- existed among them, were instituted." Book iv. chap. xxxi.
-
-What Origen mentions as the reason for the institution of the Sabbath
-is in fact only one of its incidental benefits. The real reason for
-its institution, viz., that the creation of the heavens and the earth
-should be remembered, he seems to have overlooked because so literally
-expressed in the commandment. Of God's rest-day he thus speaks:--
-
- "With respect, however, to the creation of the world, and the 'rest
- [_Sabbatismou_] which is reserved after it for the people of God,'
- the subject is extensive, and mystical, and profound, and difficult
- of explanation." Book v. chap. lix.
-
-Origen's next mention of the Sabbath not only places the institution of
-the Sabbath at the creation, but gives us some idea of his "mystical"
-Sabbath as distinguished from "a literal" one. Speaking of the
-Creator's rest from the six days' work he thus alludes to Celsus:--
-
- "For he [Celsus] knows nothing of the day of the Sabbath and rest
- of God, _which follows the completion of the world's creation_,
- and _which lasts during the duration of the world_, and in which
- all those will keep festival with God who have done all _their_
- works in _their_ six days, and who, because they have omitted none
- of their duties, will ascend to the contemplation [of celestial
- things], and to the assembly of righteous and blessed beings." Book
- vi. chap. lxi.
-
-Here we get an insight into Origen's mystical Sabbath. It began at
-creation, and will continue while the world endures. To those who
-follow the letter it is indeed only a weekly rest, but to those who
-know the truth it is a perpetual Sabbath, enjoyed by God during all
-the days of time, and entered by believers either at conversion or at
-death. And this last thought perhaps explains why he said before that
-the reasons for days observed by the Hebrews would be understood after
-this life.
-
-But last of all we come to a mention of the so-called Lord's day by
-Origen. As he has a mystical or perpetual Sabbath like some of the
-earlier fathers, in which, under pretense of keeping every day as a
-Sabbath, they actually labor on every one, so has he also, like what
-we have found in some of them, a Lord's day which is not merely one
-definite day of the week, but which embraces every day, and covers all
-time. Here are his words:--
-
- "For 'to keep a feast,' as one of the wise men of Greece has well
- said, 'is nothing else than to do one's duty;' and that man truly
- celebrates a feast who does his duty and prays always, offering up
- continually bloodless sacrifices in prayer to God. That therefore
- seems to me a most noble saying of Paul, 'Ye observe days, and
- months, and times, and years. I am afraid of you, lest I have
- bestowed upon you labor in vain.'
-
- "If it be objected to us on this subject that we ourselves are
- accustomed to observe certain days, as, for example, the Lord's
- day, the Preparation, the Passover, or Pentecost, I have to answer,
- that to the perfect Christian, who is ever in his thoughts, words,
- and deeds, serving his natural Lord, God the Word, _all his days
- are the Lord's_, and _he is always keeping the Lord's day_." Book
- viii., close of chapter xxi. and beginning of chapter xxii.
-
-With respect to what he calls the Lord's day, Origen divides his
-brethren into two classes, as he had before divided the people of
-God into two classes with respect to the Sabbath. One class are the
-imperfect Christians, who content themselves with the literal day; the
-other are the perfect Christians, whose Lord's day embraces all the
-days of their life. Undoubtedly Origen reckoned himself one of the
-perfect Christians. His observance of the Lord's day did not consist
-in the elevation of one day above another, for he counted them all
-alike as constituting one perpetual Lord's day, the very doctrine
-which we found in Clement of Alexandria, who was Origen's teacher in
-his early life. The keeping of the Lord's day with Origen as with
-Clement embraced all the days of his life, and consisted according to
-Origen in serving God in thought, word, and deed, continually; or as
-expressed by Clement, one "keeps the Lord's day when he abandons an
-evil disposition, and assumes that of the Gnostic."
-
-These things prove that Origen did not count Sunday as the Lord's
-day to be honored above the other days as a divine memorial of the
-resurrection, for he kept the Lord's day during every day in the
-week. Nor did he hold Sunday as the Lord's day to be kept as a day of
-abstinence from labor, while all the other days were days of business,
-for whatever was necessary to keeping Lord's day he did on every day of
-the week.
-
-As to the imperfect Christians who honored a literal day as the Lord's
-day, Origen shows what rank it stood in by associating it with the
-Preparation, the Passover, and the Pentecost, all of which in this
-dispensation are mere church institutions, and none of them days of
-abstinence from labor. The change of the Sabbath from the seventh day
-to the first, or the existence of the so-called Christian Sabbath was
-in Origen's time absolutely unknown.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF HIPPOLYTUS, BISHOP OF PORTUS.
-
-Hippolytus, who was bishop of Portus, near Rome, wrote about A. D.
-230. It is evident from his testimony that he believed the Sabbath was
-made by God's act of sanctifying the seventh day at the beginning. He
-held that day to be the type of the seventh period of a thousand years.
-Thus he says:--
-
- "And 6000 years must needs be accomplished, in order that the
- Sabbath may come, the rest, the holy day on which God rested from
- all his works. For the Sabbath is the type and emblem of the future
- kingdom of the saints, when they shall reign with Christ, when
- he comes from Heaven, as John says in his Apocalypse: for a day
- with the Lord is as a thousand years. Since, then, in six days
- God made all things, it follows that six thousand years must be
- fulfilled."--_Commentaries on Various Books of Scripture._ Sect. 4,
- on Daniel.
-
-The churches of Ethiopia have a series of Canons, or church rules,
-which they attribute to this father. Number thirty-three reads thus:--
-
- "That commemoration should be made of the faithful dead every day,
- with the exception of the Lord's day."
-
-The church of Alexandria have also a series which they ascribe to him.
-The thirty-third is thus given:--
-
- "Of the _Atalmsas_ (the oblation), which they shall present for
- those who are dead, that it be not done on the Lord's day."
-
-The thirty-eighth one has these words:--
-
- "Of the night on which our Lord Jesus Christ rose. That no one
- shall sleep on that night, and wash himself with water."
-
-These are the only things in Hippolytus that can be referred to the
-Sunday festival. Prayers and offerings for the dead, which we find
-some fifty years earlier in Tertullian, are, according to Hippolytus,
-lawful on every day but the so-called Lord's day. They grew up with
-the Sunday festival, and are of equal authority with it. Tertullian, as
-we have already observed, tells us frankly that there is no scriptural
-authority for the one or the other, and that they rest on custom and
-tradition alone.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF NOVATIAN, A ROMAN PRESBYTER.
-
-Novatian, who wrote about A. D. 250, is accounted the founder of the
-sect called _Cathari_, or _Puritans_. He tried to resist some of the
-gross corruptions of the church of Rome. He wrote a treatise on the
-Sabbath, which is not extant. There is no reference to Sunday in any of
-his writings. In his treatise "On the Jewish Meats," he speaks of the
-Sabbath thus:--
-
- "But how perverse are the Jews, and remote from the understanding
- of their law, I have fully shown, as I believe, in two former
- letters, wherein it was absolutely proved that they are ignorant of
- what is the true circumcision, and what the true Sabbath." Chapter
- i.
-
-If we contrast the doctrine of the Pharisees concerning the Sabbath
-with the teaching of the Saviour, or with that of Isaiah in his
-fifty-eighth chapter, we shall not think Novatian far from the truth
-in his views of the Jewish people. In his treatise "Concerning the
-Trinity" is the following allusion to the Sabbath:--
-
- "For in the manner that as man he is of Abraham, so also as God he
- is before Abraham himself. And in the same manner as he is as man
- the 'Son of David,' so as God he is proclaimed David's Lord. And in
- the same manner as he was made as man 'under the law,' so as God he
- is declared to be 'Lord of the Sabbath.'" Chapter xi.
-
-These are the only references to the Sabbath in what remains of
-the writings of Novatian. He makes the following striking remarks
-concerning the moral law:--
-
- "The law was given to the children of Israel for this purpose, that
- they might profit by it, and RETURN _to those virtuous manners_,
- which, although _they have received them from their fathers_,
- they had corrupted in Egypt by reason of their intercourse with a
- barbarous people. Finally, also, those _ten commandments_ on the
- tables _teach nothing new_, but _remind_ them of _what had been
- obliterated_--that righteousness in them, which had been put to
- sleep, might revive again as it were by the afflatus of the law,
- after the manner of a fire [nearly extinguished]."--_On the Jewish
- Meats_, chap. iii.
-
-It is therefore certain that in the judgment of Novatian, the ten
-commandments enjoined nothing that was not sacredly regarded by
-the patriarchs before that Jacob went down into Egypt. It follows,
-therefore, that in his opinion the Sabbath was made, not at the fall of
-the manna, but when God sanctified the seventh day, and that holy men
-from the earliest ages observed it. The Sunday festival with its varied
-names and titles he never mentions.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-Cyprian--Dionysius of Alexandria--Anatolius--Commodianus--Archelaus.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF CYPRIAN, BISHOP OF CARTHAGE.
-
-Cyprian wrote about A. D. 255. I find only two references to Sunday in
-his works. The first is in his thirty-second epistle (the thirty-eighth
-of the Oxford edition), in which he says of one Aurelius that "he reads
-on the Lord's day" for him. But in the second instance he defines the
-meaning of the term, and gives evidence in support of his application
-of it to the first day of the week. He is arguing in behalf of infant
-baptism, or rather in controverting the opinion that baptism should
-be deferred till the child is eight days old. Though the command to
-circumcise infants when eight days of age is one of the chief grounds
-of authority for infant baptism, yet the time in that precept according
-to Cyprian does not indicate the age of the child to be baptized, but
-prefigures the fact that the eighth day is the Lord's day. Thus he
-says:--
-
- "For in respect of the observance of the eighth day in the Jewish
- circumcision of the flesh, a sacrament was given beforehand in
- shadow and in usage; but when Christ came, it was fulfilled in
- truth. For because the eighth day, that is, the first day after
- the Sabbath, was to be that on which the Lord should rise again,
- and should quicken us, and give us circumcision of the Spirit,
- the eighth day, that is, the first day after the Sabbath, and the
- Lord's day, went before in the figure; which figure ceased when
- by and by the truth came, and spiritual circumcision was given to
- us."--_Epistle_ lviii. sect. 4; in the Oxford edition, _Epistle_
- lxiv.
-
-Circumcision is made to prove twin errors of the great apostasy,
-_infant baptism_ and that _the eighth day is the Lord's day_. But the
-eighth day in the case of circumcision was not the day succeeding the
-seventh, that is, the first day of the week, but the eighth day of the
-life of each infant, and therefore it fell on one day of the week as
-often as upon another. Such is the only argument addressed by Cyprian
-for first-day sacredness, and this one seems to have been borrowed from
-Justin Martyr, who, as we have seen, used it about one hundred years
-before him. It is however quite as weighty as the argument of Clement
-of Alexandria, who adduced in its support what he calls a prophecy of
-the eighth day out of the writings of the heathen philosopher Plato!
-And both are in the same rank with that of Tertullian, who confessed
-that they had not the authority of Scripture, but accepted in its stead
-that of custom and tradition!
-
-In his "Exhortation to Martyrdom," section 11, Cyprian quotes the
-larger part of Matt. 24, and in that quotation at verse 20, the Sabbath
-is mentioned, but he says nothing concerning that institution. In his
-"Testimonies against the Jews," book i., sections 9 and 10, he says
-"that the former law which was given by Moses, was about to cease,"
-and that "a new law was to be given;" and in the conclusion of his
-"Treatise against the Jews," section 119, he says "that the yoke of the
-law was heavy which is cast off by us," but it is not certain that he
-meant to include in these statements the precepts of the moral law.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF DIONYSIUS, BISHOP OF ALEXANDRIA.
-
-This father, who was one of Origen's disciples, wrote about A. D. 260.
-In the first canon of his "Epistle to Bishop Basilides" he treats
-of "the proper hour for bringing the fast to a close on the day of
-Pentecost." He has occasion to quote what the four evangelists say
-of the Sabbath and first-day in connection with the resurrection of
-Christ. But in doing this he adds not one word expressive of first-day
-sacredness, nor does he give it any other title than that of plain
-"first day of the week." The seventh day is simply called "the
-Sabbath." He also speaks of "the preparation and the Sabbath" as the
-"last two days" of a six days' fast, at the anniversary of the week of
-Christ's death.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF ANATOLIUS, BISHOP OF LAODICEA.
-
-This father wrote about A. D. 270. He participated in the discussion
-of the question whether the festival of Easter, or passover, should be
-celebrated on the fourteenth day of the first month, the same day on
-which the Jews observed the passover, or whether it should be observed
-on the so-called Lord's day next following. In this discussion he
-uses the term Lord's day, in his first canon once, quoting it from
-Origen; in his seventh, twice; in his tenth, twice; in his eleventh,
-four times; in his twelfth, once; in his sixteenth, twice. These are
-all the instances in which he uses the term. We quote such of them as
-shed any light upon the meaning of it as used by him. In his seventh
-canon he says: "The obligation of the Lord's resurrection binds to
-keep the paschal festival on the Lord's day." In his tenth canon he
-uses this language: "The solemn festival of the resurrection of the
-Lord can be celebrated only on the Lord's day." And also "that it
-should not be lawful to celebrate the Lord's mystery of the passover
-at any other time but on the Lord's day, on which the resurrection
-of the Lord from death took place, and on which rose also for us the
-cause of everlasting joy." In his eleventh canon he says: "On the
-Lord's day was it that light was shown to us in the beginning, and now
-also in the end, the comforts of all present and the tokens of all
-future blessings." In his sixteenth canon he says: "Our regard for the
-Lord's resurrection which took place on the Lord's day will lead us to
-celebrate it on the same principle."
-
-The reader may be curious to know why a controversy should have arisen
-respecting the proper day for the celebration of the passover in the
-Christian church when no such celebration had ever been commanded.
-The explanation is this: The festival was celebrated solely on the
-authority of tradition, and there were in this case two directly
-conflicting traditions, as is fully shown in the tenth canon of this
-father. One party had their tradition from John the apostle, and held
-that the paschal feast should be celebrated every year "whenever the
-fourteenth day of the moon had come, and the lamb was sacrificed by
-the Jews." But the other party had their tradition from the apostles
-Peter and Paul that this festival should not be celebrated on that
-day, but upon the so-called Lord's day next following. And so a fierce
-controversy arose which was decided in A. D. 325, by the council of
-Nice, in favor of Saint Peter, who had on his side his pretended
-successor, the powerful and crafty bishop of Rome.
-
-The term Lord's day is never applied to Sunday till the closing years
-of the second century. And Clement, who is the first to make such an
-application, represents the true Lord's day as made up of every day of
-the Christian's life. And this opinion is avowed by others after him.
-
-But after we enter the third century the name Lord's day is quite
-frequently applied to Sunday. Tertullian, who lived at the epoch where
-we first find this application, frankly declares that the festival of
-Sunday, to which he gives the name of Lord's day, had no Scriptural
-authority, but that it was founded upon tradition. But should not the
-traditions of the third century be esteemed sufficient authority for
-calling Sunday the Lord's day? The very men of that century who speak
-thus of Sunday strenuously urge the observance of the feast of the
-passover. Shall we accept this festival which they offer to us on the
-authority of their apostolic tradition? As if to teach us the folly
-of adding tradition to the Bible as a part of our rule of faith, it
-happens that there are, even from the early part of the second century,
-two directly conflicting traditions as to what day should be kept for
-the passover. And one party had theirs from Saint John, the other had
-theirs from Saint Peter and Saint Paul! And it is very remarkable that
-although each of these parties claimed to know from one or the other
-of these apostles that they had the right day for the passover and the
-other had the wrong one, there is never a claim by one of these fathers
-that Sunday is the Lord's day because John on the isle of Patmos
-called it such! If men in the second and third centuries were totally
-mistaken in their traditions respecting the passover, as they certainly
-were, shall we consider the traditions of the third century sufficient
-authority for asserting that the title of Lord's day belongs to Sunday
-by apostolic authority?
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF COMMODIANUS.
-
-This person was a native of Africa, and does not appear to have ever
-held any office in the Christian church. He wrote about A. D. 270. The
-only allusions made by him to the Sabbath are in the following words
-addressed to the Jews:--
-
- "There is not an unbelieving people such as yours. O evil men! in
- so many places, and so often rebuked by the law of those who cry
- aloud. And the Lofty One despises your Sabbaths, and altogether
- rejects your universal monthly feasts according to law, that ye
- should not make to him the commanded sacrifices; who told you
- to throw a stone for your offense."--_Instructions in Favor of
- Christian Discipline_, sect. 40.
-
-This statement is very obscure, and there is nothing in the connection
-that sheds any light upon it. His language may have reference to the
-ceremonial sabbaths, or it may include also the Sabbath of the Lord. If
-it includes the Sabbath made for man it may be intended, like the words
-of Isa. 1:13, 14, to rebuke the hypocrisy of those who profess to keep
-it rather than to condemn the institution itself.
-
-He makes only one use of the term Lord's day, and that is as obscure as
-is his reference to the subject of the Sabbath. Here it is:--
-
- "Neither dost thou fear the Lord, who cries aloud with such an
- utterance; even he who commands us to give food even to our
- enemies. Look forward to thy meals from that Tobias who always on
- _every day_ shared them entirely with the poor man. Thou seekest to
- feed him, O fool, who feedeth thee again. Dost thou wish that he
- should prepare for me, who is setting before him his burial? The
- brother oppressed with want, nearly languishing away, cries out at
- the splendidly fed, and with distended belly. What sayest thou of
- the Lord's day? If he have not placed himself before, call forth a
- poor man from the crowd whom thou mayest take to thy dinner. In the
- tablets is your hope from a Christ refreshed." Section 61.
-
-Whether Commodianus meant to charge his brethren to relieve the hungry
-on one day only of the week, or whether he held to such a Lord's day
-as that of Clement of Alexandria, Origen, and others (namely, one that
-includes every day of the life of him who refrains from sin), and so
-would have his brethren imitate Tobias, who fed the hungry _every
-day_, must be left undetermined. He could not have believed that Sunday
-was the Lord's day by divine appointment, for he refers to the passover
-festival (which rests solely upon the traditions and commandments of
-men) as coming "once in the year" and he designates it as "Easter that
-day of ours _most blessed_." Section 75. The day of the passover was
-therefore in his estimation the most sacred day in the Christian church.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF ARCHELAUS, BISHOP OF CASCAR.
-
-This person wrote about A. D. 277, or according to other authorities
-he wrote not far from A. D. 300. He flourished in Mesopotamia. What
-remains of his writings is simply the record of his "Disputation with
-Manes," the heretic. I do not find that he ever uses the term "Lord's
-day." He introduces the Sabbath and states his views of it thus:--
-
- "Moses, that illustrious servant of God, committed to those who
- wished to have the right vision, an emblematic law, and also a real
- law. Thus, to take an example, after God had made the world, and
- all things that are in it, in the space of six days, he rested on
- the seventh day from all his works; by which statement I do not
- mean to affirm that he rested because he was fatigued, but that he
- did so as having brought to its perfection every creature which he
- had resolved to introduce. And yet in the sequel it (the new law)
- says: 'My Father worketh hitherto, and I work.' Does that mean,
- then, that he is still making heaven, or sun, or man, or animals,
- or trees, or any such thing? Nay; but the meaning is, that when
- these visible objects were perfectly finished, he rested from that
- kind of work; while, however, he still continues to work at objects
- invisible with an inward mode of action, and saves men. In like
- manner, then, the legislator desires also that every individual
- among us should be devoted unceasingly to this kind of work,
- even as God himself is; and he enjoins us consequently to rest
- continuously from secular things, and to engage in no worldly sort
- of work whatsoever; and this is called our Sabbath. This he also
- added in the law, that nothing senseless should be done, but that
- we should be careful and direct our life in accordance with what is
- just and righteous." Section 31.
-
-These words appear to teach that he held to a perpetual Sabbath,
-like Justin Martyr, Tertullian, and others. Yet this does not seem
-possible, inasmuch as, unlike Justin, who despises what he calls days
-of "idleness," this writer says that we are "to engage in no worldly
-sort of work whatsoever and this is that our Sabbath." It is hardly
-possible that he could hold it a wicked thing to labor on one or all of
-the six working days. Yet he either means to assert that it is sinful
-to work on a single one of the days, or else he asserts the perpetual
-obligation of that Sabbath which it is manifest he believed originated
-when God set apart the seventh day, and which he acknowledges on the
-authority of what "he also added in the law." We shall shortly come to
-his final statement, which seems clearly to show that the second of
-these views was the one held by this writer.
-
-After showing in this same section that the death penalty at the hand
-of the magistrate for the violation of the Sabbath is no longer in
-force because of forgiveness through the Saviour, and after answering
-the objection of Manes in sections 40, 41, 42, that Christ in healing
-on the Sabbath directly contradicted what Moses did to those who in his
-time violated the Sabbath, he states his views of the perpetuity of the
-ancient Sabbath in very clear language. Thus he says:--
-
- "Again, as to the assertion that the Sabbath has been abolished,
- we deny that he has abolished it plainly (_plane_); for he was
- himself also Lord of the Sabbath. And this (the law's relation
- to the Sabbath) was like the servant who has charge of the
- bridegroom's couch, and who prepares the same with all carefulness,
- and does not suffer it to be disturbed or touched by any stranger,
- but keeps it intact against the time of the bridegroom's arrival;
- so that when he is come, the bed may be used as it pleases himself,
- or as it is granted to those to use it whom he has bidden enter
- along with him." Section 42.
-
-Three things are plainly taught. 1. The law sacredly guarded the
-Sabbath till the coming of Christ. 2. When Christ came, he did not
-abolish the Sabbath, for he was its Lord. 3. And the whole tenor of
-this writer's language shows that he had no knowledge of the change of
-the Sabbath in honor of Christ's resurrection, nor does he even once
-allude to the first day of the week.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-Victorinus--Peter--Methodius--Lactantius--Poem on Genesis--Conclusion.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF VICTORINUS, BISHOP OF PETAU.
-
-This person wrote about A. D. 300. His bishopric was in Germany. Of his
-work on the "Creation of the World," only a fragment is now preserved.
-In the first section he speaks thus of the sanctification of the
-seventh day:--
-
- "God produced that entire mass for the adornment of his majesty in
- six days; on the seventh to which he consecrated it [some words
- are here lost out of the text] with a blessing. For this reason,
- therefore, because in the septenary number of days both heavenly
- and earthly things are ordered, in place of the beginning. I will
- consider of this seventh day after the principle of all matters
- pertaining to the number seven."
-
-Victorinus, like some other of the fathers, held that the "true and
-just Sabbath should be observed in the seventh millenary." He believed
-that the Sabbath was abolished by the Saviour. He was in sympathy with
-the act of the church of Rome in turning the Sabbath into a fast. He
-held to a two days' weekly fast, as his words necessarily imply. He
-would have men fast on the sixth day to commemorate Christ's death,
-and on the seventh, lest they should seem to keep the Sabbath with the
-Jews, but on the so-called Lord's day they were to go forth to their
-bread with giving of thanks. Thus he reasons:--
-
- "On this day [the sixth] also, on account of the passion of the
- Lord Jesus Christ, we make either a station to God, or a fast. On
- the seventh day he rested from all his works, and blessed it, and
- sanctified it. On the former day [the sixth] we are accustomed to
- fast rigorously, that on the Lord's day we may go forth to our
- bread with giving of thanks. And let the _parasceve_ [the sixth
- day] become a rigorous fast, lest we should appear to observe
- any Sabbath with the Jews, which Christ himself, the Lord of the
- Sabbath, says by his prophet that 'his soul hateth;' which Sabbath
- he in his body abolished, although, however, he had formerly
- himself commanded Moses that circumcision should not pass over the
- eighth day, which day very frequently happens on the Sabbath, as we
- read written in the gospel. Moses, foreseeing the hardness of that
- people, on the Sabbath raised up his hands, therefore, and thus
- fastened himself to a cross. And in the battle they were sought
- for by the foreigners on the Sabbath day, that they might be taken
- captive, and, as if by the very strictness of the law, might be
- fashioned to the avoidance of its teachings." Section 4.
-
-These statements are in general of little consequence, but some of
-them deserve notice. First, we have one of the grand elements which
-contributed to the abandonment of the Sabbath of the Lord, viz., hatred
-toward the Jews for their conduct toward Christ. Those who acted
-thus forgot that Christ himself was the Lord of the Sabbath, and that
-it was his institution and not that of the Jews to which they were
-doing despite. Secondly, it was the church of Rome that turned the
-Sabbath into a fast one hundred years before this, in order to suppress
-its observance, and Victorinus was acting under its instructions.
-Thirdly, we have a reference to the so-called Lord's day, as a day of
-thanksgiving, but no connection between it and the Sabbath is indicated
-for in his time the change of the Sabbath had not been thought of. He
-has other reasons for neglecting the seventh day which here follow:--
-
- "And thus in the sixth psalm for the eighth day, David asks the
- Lord that he would not rebuke him in his anger, nor judge him
- in his fury; for this is indeed the eighth day of that future
- judgment, which will pass beyond the order of the sevenfold
- arrangement. Jesus also, the son of Nave, the successor of
- Moses, himself broke the Sabbath day; for on the Sabbath day he
- commanded the children of Israel to go round the walls of the city
- of Jericho with trumpets, and declare war against the aliens.
- Matthias also, prince of Judah, broke the Sabbath; for he slew the
- prefect of Antiochus the king of Syria on the Sabbath, and subdued
- the foreigners by pursuing them. And in Matthew we read, that it
- is written Isaiah also and the rest of his colleagues broke the
- Sabbath--that that true and just Sabbath should be observed in the
- seventh millenary of years. Wherefore to those seven days the Lord
- attributed to each a thousand years; for thus went the warning: 'In
- mine eyes, 0 Lord, a thousand years are as one day.' Therefore in
- the eyes of the Lord each thousand of years is ordained, for I find
- that the Lord's eyes are seven. Wherefore, as I have narrated, that
- true Sabbath will be in the seventh millenary of years, when Christ
- with his elect shall reign." Section 5.
-
-This completes the testimony of Victorinus. He evidently held that
-the Sabbath originated at the sanctification of the seventh day, but
-for the reasons here given, the most of which are trivial, and all of
-which are false, he held that it was abolished by Christ. His argument
-from the sixth psalm, and from Isaiah's violation of the Sabbath, is
-something extraordinary. He had an excellent opportunity to say that
-though the seventh-day Sabbath was abolished, yet we have the Christian
-Sabbath, or the Lord's day, to take its place. But he shows positively
-that he knew of no such institution; for he says, "That true and just
-Sabbath" will be "in the seventh millenary of years."
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF PETER, BISHOP OF ALEXANDRIA.
-
-This father wrote about A. D. 306. In his "Canon 15" he thus sets forth
-the celebration of the fourth, the sixth, and the first days of the
-week:--
-
- "No one shall find fault with us for observing the fourth day of
- the week, and the preparation [the sixth day], on which it is
- reasonably enjoined us to fast according to the tradition. On the
- fourth day, indeed, because on it the Jews took counsel for the
- betrayal of the Lord; and on the sixth, because on it he himself
- suffered for us. But the Lord's day we celebrate as a day of joy,
- because on it he rose again, on which day we have received it for a
- custom not even to bow the knee."
-
-On this Balsamon, an ancient writer whose commentary is appended
-to this canon, remarks that this canon is in harmony with the 64th
-apostolical canon, which declares "that we are not to fast on the
-Sabbath, with one exception, the great Sabbath [the one connected with
-the passover], and to the 69th canon, which severely punishes those
-who do not fast in the Holy Lent, and on every fourth day of the week
-and day of preparation." So it appears that they were commanded by the
-canons to fast on the fourth and sixth days of the week, and forbidden
-to do this on the Sabbath and first-day.
-
-Zonaras, another ancient commentator upon the canons of Peter, gives us
-the authority upon which these observances rest. No one of these three
-days is honored by God's commandment. Zonaras mentions the fasts on the
-fourth and sixth days, and says no one will find fault with these. But
-he deems it proper to mark Peter's reason for the Lord's-day festival,
-and the nature of that festival. Thus he says:--
-
- "But on the Lord's day we ought not to fast, for it is a day of
- joy for the resurrection of the Lord, and on it, says he, we
- have received that we ought not even to bow the knee. This word,
- therefore, is to be carefully observed, 'we have received' and 'it
- is enjoined upon us according to the tradition.' For from hence
- it is evident that long-established custom was taken for law.
- Moreover, the great Basil annexes also the causes for which it was
- forbidden to bend the knee on the Lord's day, and from the passover
- to Pentecost."
-
-The honors which were conferred upon this so-called Lord's day are
-specified. They are two in number. 1. It was "a day of joy," and
-therefore not a day of fasting. 2. On it they "ought not even to bow
-the knee." This last honor however applied to the entire period of
-fifty days between the passover and the Pentecost as well as to each
-Sunday in the year. So that the first honor was the only one which
-belonged to Sunday exclusively. That honor excluded fasting, but it is
-never said to exclude labor, or to render it sinful. And the authority
-for these two first-day honors is frankly given. It is not the words
-of holy Scripture nor the commandment of God, but "it is enjoined
-upon us according to the tradition. For from hence it is evident that
-long-established custom was taken for law." Such is the testimony of
-men who knew the facts. In our days men dare not thus acknowledge them,
-and therefore they assert that the fourth commandment has been changed
-by divine authority, and that it is sinful to labor upon the first day
-of the week.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF METHODIUS, BISHOP OF TYRE.
-
-This father wrote about A. D. 308, and suffered martyrdom in A. D. 312.
-A considerable portion of his writings have come down to our time,
-but in them all I find not one mention of the first day of the week.
-He held to the perpetuity of the ten commandments, for he says of the
-beast with ten horns:--
-
- "Moreover, the ten horns and stings which he is said to have upon
- his heads are the ten opposites, O virgins, to the decalogue, by
- which he was accustomed to gore and cast down the souls of many,
- imagining and contriving things in opposition to the law, 'Thou
- shalt love the Lord thy God,' and to the other precepts which
- follow."--_Banquet of the Ten Virgins_, Discourse viii. chap. xiii.
-
-In commenting on the feast of tabernacles (Lev. 23:39-43) he says:--
-
- "These things being like air and phantom shadows, foretell the
- resurrection and the putting up of our tabernacle that had fallen
- upon the earth, which at length, in the seventh thousand of years,
- resuming again immortal, we shall celebrate the great feast of true
- tabernacles in the new and indissoluble creation, the fruits of
- the earth having been gathered in, and men no longer begetting and
- begotten, but God resting from the works of creation." Discourse
- ix. chap. i.
-
-Methodius understood the six days of creation, and the seventh day
-sanctified by the Creator, to teach that at the end of 6000 years the
-great day of joy shall come to the saints of God:--
-
- "For since in six days God made the heaven and the earth, and
- finished the whole world, and rested on the seventh day from all
- his works which he had made, and blessed the seventh day and
- sanctified it, so by a figure in the seventh month, when the fruits
- of the earth have been gathered in, we are commanded to keep the
- feast to the Lord, which signifies that, when this world shall
- be terminated at the seventh thousand years, when God shall have
- completed the world, he shall rejoice in us." Discourse ix. chap.
- i. sect. 4.
-
-In the fifth chapter of this discourse he speaks of the day of Judgment
-as "the millennium of rest, which is called the seventh day, even the
-true Sabbath." He believed that each day of the first seven represented
-one thousand years, and so the true Sabbath of the Lord sets forth the
-final triumph of the saints in the seventh period of a thousand years.
-And in his work "On Things Created," section 9, he refers to this
-representation of one day as a thousand years, and quotes in proof of
-it Ps. 90:2, 4. Then he says:--
-
- "For when a thousand years are reckoned as one day in the sight of
- God, and from the creation of the world to his rest is six days, so
- also to our time, six days are defined, as those say who are clever
- arithmeticians. Therefore, they say that an age of six thousand
- years extends from Adam to our time. For they say that the Judgment
- will come on the seventh day, that is, in the seventh thousand
- years."
-
-The only weekly Sabbath known to Methodius was the ancient seventh
-day sanctified by God in Eden. He does not intimate that this
-divine institution has been abolished; and what he says of the ten
-commandments implies the reverse of that, and he certainly makes no
-allusion to the festival of Sunday, which on the authority of "custom"
-and "tradition" had been by so many elevated above the Sabbath of the
-Lord.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF LACTANTIUS.
-
-Lactantius was born in the latter half of the third century, was
-converted about A. D. 315, and died at Treves about A. D. 325. He
-was very eminent as a teacher of rhetoric, and was intrusted with
-the education of Crispus, the son of Constantine. The writings of
-Lactantius are quite extensive; they contain, however, no reference to
-the first day of the week. Of the Sabbath he speaks twice. In the first
-instance he says that one reason alleged by the Jews for rejecting
-Christ was,
-
- "That he destroyed the obligation of the law given by Moses; that
- is, that he did not rest on the Sabbath, but labored for the good
- of men," etc.--_Divine Institutes_, b. iv. chap. xvii.
-
-It is not clear whether Lactantius believed that Christ violated the
-Sabbath, nor whether he did away with the moral law while teaching
-the abrogation of the ceremonial code. But he bears a most decisive
-testimony to the origin of the Sabbath at creation:--
-
- "God completed the world and this admirable work of nature in
- the space of six days (as is contained in the secrets of holy
- Scripture), and CONSECRATED the seventh day, on which he had rested
- from his works. But this is the Sabbath day, which in the language
- of the Hebrews received its name from the number, whence the
- seventh is the legitimate and complete number." Book vii. chap. xiv.
-
-It is certain that Lactantius did not regard the Sabbath as the
-memorial of the flight out of Egypt, but as that of the creation of the
-heavens and the earth. He also believed that the seven days prefigured
-the seven thousand years of our earth's history:--
-
- "Therefore, since all the works of God were completed in six days,
- the world must continue in its present state through six ages, that
- is, six thousand years. For the great day of God is limited by a
- circle of a thousand years, as the prophet shows, who says, 'In thy
- sight, O Lord, a thousand years are as one day.' And as God labored
- during those six days in creating such great works, so his religion
- and truth must labor during these six thousand years, while
- wickedness prevails and bears rule. And again, since God, having
- finished his works, rested the seventh day and blessed it, at the
- end of the six thousandth year all wickedness must be abolished
- from the earth, and righteousness reign for a thousand years and
- there must be tranquility and rest from the labors which the world
- now has long endured." Book vii. chap. xiv.
-
-Thus much for Lactantius. He could not have believed in first-day
-sacredness, and there is no clear evidence that he held to the
-abrogation of the Sabbath. Finally we come to a poem on Genesis by an
-unknown author, but variously attributed to Cyprian, to Victorinus, to
-Tertullian, and to later writers.
-
-
-TESTIMONY OF THE POEM ON GENESIS.
-
- "The seventh came, when God
- At his works' end did rest, DECREEING IT
- SACRED UNTO THE COMING AGES' JOYS."
-
- Lines 51-53.
-
-Here again we have an explicit testimony to the divine appointment of
-the seventh day to a holy use while man was yet in Eden, the garden of
-God. And this completes the testimony of the fathers to the time of
-Constantine and the Council of Nice.
-
-One thing is everywhere open to the reader's eye as he passes through
-these testimonies from the fathers: they lived in what may with
-propriety be called the age of apostatizing. The apostasy was not
-complete, but it was steadily developing itself. Some of the fathers
-had the Sabbath in the dust, and honored as their weekly festival the
-day of the sun, though claiming for it no divine authority. Others
-recognize the Sabbath as a divine institution which should be honored
-by all mankind in memory of the creation, and yet at the same time
-they exalt above it the festival of Sunday, which they acknowledge
-had nothing but custom and tradition for its support. The end may be
-foreseen: in due time the Sunday festival obtained the whole ground for
-itself, and the Sabbath was driven out. Several things conspired to
-accomplish this result:--
-
-1. The Jews, who retained the ancient Sabbath, had slain Christ. It was
-easy for men to forget that Christ as Lord of the Sabbath had claimed
-it as his institution, and to call the Sabbath a Jewish institution
-which Christians should not regard.
-
-2. The church of Rome as the chief in the work of apostasy took the
-lead in the earliest effort to suppress the Sabbath by turning it into
-a fast.
-
-3. In the Christian church almost from the beginning men voluntarily
-honored the fourth, the sixth, and the first days of the week to
-commemorate the betrayal, the death, and the resurrection of Christ,
-acts of respect in themselves innocent enough.
-
-4. But the first day of the week corresponded to the widely observed
-heathen festival of the sun, and it was therefore easy to unite
-the honor of Christ with the convenience and worldly advantage of
-his people, and to justify the neglect of the ancient Sabbath by
-stigmatizing it as a Jewish institution with which Christians should
-have no concern.
-
-The _progressive_ character of the work of apostasy with respect to the
-Sabbath is incidentally illustrated by what Giesler, the distinguished
-historian of the church, says of the Sabbath and first-day in his
-record of the first, the second, and the third century. Of the first
-century he says:--
-
- "Whilst the Christians of Palestine, who kept the whole Jewish law,
- celebrated of course all the Jewish festivals, the heathen converts
- observed only the Sabbath, and, in remembrance of the closing
- scenes of our Saviour's life, the passover (1 Cor. 5:6-8), though
- without the Jewish superstitions, Gal. 4:10; Col. 2:16. Besides
- these the Sunday as the day of our Saviour's resurrection (Acts
- 20:7; 1 Cor. 16:2; Rev. 1:10), #hê kyriakê hêmera#, was
- devoted to religious worship."--_Giesler's Ecclesiastical History_,
- vol. i. sect. 29, edition 1836.
-
-Sunday having obtained a foothold, see how the case stands in the
-second century. Here are the words of Giesler again:--
-
- "Both Sunday and the Sabbath were observed as festivals; the
- latter however without the Jewish superstitions therewith
- connected."--_Id._ vol. i. sect. 52.
-
-This time, as Giesler presents the case, Sunday has begun to get the
-precedence. But when he gives the events of the third century he drops
-the Sabbath from his record and gives the whole ground to the Sunday
-and the yearly festivals of the church. Thus he says:--
-
- "In Origen's time the Christians had no general festivals,
- excepting the Sunday, the Parasceve (or preparation), the passover,
- and the feast of Pentecost. Soon after, however, the Christians in
- Egypt began to observe the festival of the Epiphany, on the sixth
- of January."--_Id._ vol. i. sect. 70.
-
-These three statements of Giesler, relating as they do to the first,
-second, and third centuries, are peculiarly calculated to mark the
-progress of the work of apostasy. Coleman tersely states this work in
-these words:--
-
- "The observance of the Lord's day was ordered while the Sabbath
- of the Jews was continued; nor was the latter superseded until
- the former had acquired the same solemnity and importance, which
- belonged, at first, to that great day which God originally
- ordained and blessed.... But in time, after the Lord's day
- was fully established, the observance of the Sabbath of the
- Jews was gradually discontinued, and was finally denounced as
- heretical."--_Ancient Christianity Exemplified_, chap. xxvi. sect.
- 2.
-
-We have traced the work of apostasy in the church of Christ, and have
-noted the combination of circumstances which contributed to suppress
-the Sabbath, and to elevate the first day of the week. And now we
-conclude this series of testimonies out of the fathers by stating the
-well-known but remarkable fact, that at the very point to which we
-are brought by these testimonies, the emperor Constantine while yet,
-according to Mosheim, a heathen, put forth the following edict, A. D.
-321, concerning the ancient Sunday festival:--
-
- "Let all the judges and town people, and the occupation of all
- trades, rest on the venerable day of the sun: but let those who are
- situated in the country, freely and at full liberty, attend to the
- business of agriculture; because it often happens that no other day
- is so fit for sowing corn and planting vines; lest, the critical
- moment being let slip, men should lose the commodities granted by
- Heaven."
-
-By the act of a wicked man the heathen festival of Sunday has now
-ascended the throne of the Roman Empire. We cannot here follow its
-history through the long ages of papal darkness and apostasy. But as we
-close, we cite the words of Mosheim respecting this law as a positive
-proof that up to this time, as shown from the fathers, Sunday had been
-a day of ordinary labor when men were not engaged in worship. He says
-of it:--
-
- "The first day of the week, which was the ordinary and stated time
- for the public assemblies of the Christians, _was, in consequence
- of a peculiar law enacted by Constantine, observed with greater
- solemnity than it had formerly been_."--Mosheim, century 4, part
- ii. chap. iv. sect. 5.
-
-This law restrained merchants and mechanics, but did not hinder the
-farmer in his work. Yet it caused the day to be observed with greater
-solemnity than formerly it had been. These words are spoken with
-reference to Christians, and prove that in Mosheim's judgment, as a
-historian, Sunday was a day on which ordinary labor was customary and
-lawful with them prior to A. D. 321, as the record of the fathers
-indicates, and as many historians testify.
-
-But even after this the Sabbath once more rallied, and became strong
-even in the so-called Catholic church, until the Council of Laodicea A.
-D. 364 prohibited its observance under a grievous curse. Thenceforward
-its history is principally to be traced in the records of those bodies
-which the Catholic church has anathematized as heretics.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[A] Those who compose this class are unanimous in the view that the
-Sunday festival was established by the church; and they all agree in
-making it their day of worship, but not for the same reason; for, while
-one part of them devoutly accept the institution as the Lord's day
-on the authority of the church, the other part make it their day for
-worship simply because it is the most convenient day.
-
-[B] Such is the exact nature of the covenant mentioned in Ex. 24:8;
-and Paul, in Heb. 9:18-20, quotes this passage, calling the covenant
-therein mentioned "the first testament," or covenant.
-
-[C] The case of Origen is a partial exception. Not all his works
-have been accessible to the writer, but sufficient of them have been
-examined to lay before the reader a just representation of his doctrine.
-
-[D] We notice that one first-day writer is so determined that Clement
-shall testify in behalf of Sunday, that he deliberately changes his
-words. Instead of giving his words as they are, thus: "the _latter_,
-properly the Sabbath," in which case, as the connection shows, Saturday
-is the day intended, he gives them thus: "The _eighth_, properly
-the Sabbath," thereby making him call Sunday the Sabbath. This is a
-remarkable fraud, but it shows that the words as written by Clement
-could not be made to uphold Sunday. See "The Lord's Day," by Rev. G. H.
-Jenks, p. 50.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
-
- Text in italics is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
-
- Greek transliterations are surrounded by pound signs: #hebdomas#.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Complete Testimony of the Fathers
-of the First Three Centuries Concerning the Sabbath and First Day, by John Nevins Andrews
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Complete Testimony of the Fathers of
-the First Three Centuries Concerning the Sabbath and First Day, by John Nevins Andrews
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Complete Testimony of the Fathers of the First Three Centuries Concerning the Sabbath and First Day
-
-Author: John Nevins Andrews
-
-Release Date: October 26, 2017 [EBook #55818]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SABBATH AND FIRST DAY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David E. Brown, Bryan Ness and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<blockquote>
-<div class="bbox">
-<p class="ph2">CATALOGUE</p>
-
-<p class="center">Of Books, Pamphlets, Tracts, &amp;c., Issued by the Seventh-Day
-Adventist Publishing Association.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Advent Review &amp; Herald of the Sabbath</span>, weekly.
-Terms, $2.00 a year, in advance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Youth&#8217;s Instructor</span>, monthly, devoted to moral and
-religious instruction. Terms, 50 cts. a year, in advance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Health Reformer</span>, monthly, devoted to an exposition
-of the laws of life, etc. Terms, $1.00 a year, in advance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Advent Tidende</span>, a religious monthly in the Danish
-language. Terms, $1.00 a year, in advance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Svensk Advent Hàrold</span>, a religious monthly in the
-Swedish tongue. Terms, $1.00 a year, in advance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Hymn and Tune Book.</span>&mdash;536 hymns&mdash;147 tunes. $1.00.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The History of the Sabbath and First Day of the
-Week.</span> By J. N. Andrews. 528 pp., $1.25.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Christian Life and Public Labors of Wm. Miller</span>,
-the noted Lecturer and Writer upon the Prophecies. $1.00.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Thoughts on the Book of Daniel</span>, critical and practical.
-By U. Smith. Bound, $1.00; condensed edition, paper, 35 cts.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Thoughts on the Revelation</span>, critical and practical.
-By U. Smith. 328 pp., $1.00.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Nature and Destiny of Man.</span> By U. Smith. 384
-pp., bound, $1.00, paper, 40 cts.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Constitutional Amendment</span>: or a Discussion between
-W. H. Littlejohn and the editor of the <i>Christian Statesman</i>
-on the Sabbath question. $1.00.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Spirit of Prophecy.</span> By Mrs. E. G. White. $1.00.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Life of Elder Joseph Bates.</span> $1.25.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Game of Life</span>, with notes. Three illustrations, 5×6
-inches each, representing Satan playing with man for his soul.
-In board, 50 cts., in paper, 30 cts.</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smcap">Poem.</span>) <span class="smcap">A Word for the Sabbath</span>: or False Theories Exposed.
-By U. Smith. 3d ed. revised and enlarged. 40 cts.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The United States in Prophecy.</span> By U. Smith. Bound,
-50 cts.; paper, 25 cts.</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="smcap">Progressive Bible Lessons</span> for Youth, in boards, 50 cts.<br />
-<span class="gap"> &#8220;</span> <span class="gap"> &#8220;</span><span class="gap"> &#8220;</span> <span class="gap"> Children,</span> <span class="gap2"> &#8220;</span> <span class="gap3"> 35 cts.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">(See third page of cover.)</p>
-
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="titlepage">
-<h1>
-<small>THE COMPLETE</small><br />
-<br />
-TESTIMONY OF THE FATHERS<br />
-<br />
-<small>OF THE</small><br />
-<br />
-<small><i>First Three Centuries</i></small><br />
-<br />
-<small>CONCERNING</small><br />
-<br />
-The Sabbath and First Day</h1>
-
-<p class="ph1">BY ELD. J. N. ANDREWS</p>
-
-<p><small>SECOND EDITION.</small></p>
-
-<p>STEAM PRESS<br />
-<small>OF THE SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST PUBLISHING ASSOCIATION</small><br />
-BATTLE CREEK, MICH.:<br />
-<br />
-1876.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[Pg ii]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">
-PREFACE.</h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> testimony for first-day sacredness is very meager
-in the Scriptures, as even its own advocates must admit.
-But they have been wont to supply the deficiency by a
-plentiful array of testimonies from the early fathers of
-the church. Here, in time past, they have had the field
-all to themselves, and they have allowed their zeal for the
-change of the Sabbath to get the better of their honesty
-and their truthfulness. The first-day Sabbath was absolutely
-unknown before the time of Constantine. Nearly
-one hundred years elapsed after John was in vision on
-Patmos before the term &#8220;Lord&#8217;s day&#8221; was applied to
-the first day. During this time, it was called &#8220;the day
-of the sun,&#8221; &#8220;the first day of the week,&#8221; and &#8220;the eighth
-day.&#8221; The first writers who gave it the name of &#8220;Lord&#8217;s
-day,&#8221; state the remarkable fact that in their judgement
-the true Lord&#8217;s day consists of every day of a Christian&#8217;s
-life, a very convincing proof that they did not give this
-title to Sunday because John had so named it on Patmos.
-In fact, no one of those who give this title to Sunday
-ever assigned as a reason for so doing that it was thus
-called by John. Nor is there any intimation in one of
-the fathers that first-day observance was an act of obedience
-to the fourth commandment, nor one clear statement
-that ordinary labor on that day was sinful. In order
-to show these facts, I have undertaken to give every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
-testimony of every one of the fathers, prior to <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 325,
-who mentions either the Sabbath or the first day. Though
-some of these quotations are comparatively unimportant,
-others are of very great value. I have given them all,
-in order that the reader may actually possess their entire
-testimony. I have principally followed the translation of
-the &#8220;Ante-Nicene Christian Library,&#8221; and have in every
-case made use of first-day translations. The work has
-been one of great labor to me, and I trust will be found
-of much profit to the candid reader.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. N. Andrews.</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><i>Lancaster, Mass., Jan. 1, 1873.</i></p></blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="ph3">PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> this edition every quotation has been carefully compared
-with the works of the fathers from which they
-were taken. A few minor errors have been detected, but
-none of importance. The work is commended to the attention
-of candid inquirers with the prayer that God will
-make it instrumental in opening the eyes of many to the
-truth concerning his holy day.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. N. A.</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><i>Neuchátel, Switzerland, April 7, 1876.</i></p></blockquote>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="ph2">TESTIMONY OF THE FATHERS.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT.</h3>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">With</span> respect to the Sabbath, the religious
-world may be divided into three classes:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. Those who retain the ancient seventh-day
-Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p>2. Those who observe the first-day Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p>3. Those who deny the existence of any
-Sabbath.<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></p>
-
-<p>It is inevitable that controversy should exist
-between these parties. Their first appeal is to
-the Bible, and this should decide the case; for it
-reveals man&#8217;s whole duty. But there is an appeal
-by the second party, and sometimes by the
-third, to another authority, the early fathers of
-the church, for the decision of the question.</p>
-
-<p>The controversy stands thus: The second and
-third parties agree with the first that God did
-anciently require the observance of the seventh
-day; but both deny the doctrine of the first, that
-he still requires men to hallow that day; the
-second asserting that he has changed the Sabbath<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
-to the first day of the week; and the third declaring
-that he has totally abolished the institution
-itself.</p>
-
-<p>The first class plant themselves upon the plain
-letter of the law of God, and adduce those
-scriptures which teach the perpetuity and immutability
-of the moral law, and which show
-that the new covenant does not abrogate that
-law, but puts it into the heart of every Christian.</p>
-
-<p>The second class attempt to prove the change
-of the Sabbath by quoting those texts which
-mention the first day of the week, and also those
-which are said to refer to it. The first day is,
-on such authority, called by this party the
-Christian Sabbath, and the fourth commandment
-is used by them to enforce this new Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p>The third class adduce those texts which
-assert the dissolution of the old covenant; and
-those which teach the abolition of the ceremonial
-law with all its distinction of days, as new
-moons, feast days, and annual sabbaths; and also
-those texts which declare that men cannot be
-justified by that law which condemns sin; and
-from all these contend that the law and the
-Sabbath are both abolished.</p>
-
-<p>But the first class answer to the second that
-the texts which they bring forward do not meet
-the case, inasmuch as they say nothing respecting
-the change of the Sabbath; and that it is not
-honest to use the fourth commandment to enforce
-the observance of a day not therein commanded.
-And the third class assent to this answer as
-truthful and just.</p>
-
-<p>To the position of the third class, the first
-make this answer: That the old covenant was
-made between God and his people <i>concerning</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
-his law;<a name="FNanchor_A_2" id="FNanchor_A_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a> that it ceased because the people failed
-in its conditions, the keeping of the commandments;
-that the new covenant does not abrogate
-the law of God, but secures obedience to it by
-putting it into the heart of every Christian; that
-there are two systems of law, one being made up
-of typical and ceremonial precepts, and the other
-consisting of moral principles only; that those
-texts which speak of the abrogation of the handwriting
-of ordinances and of the distinction in
-meats, drinks, and days, pertain alone to this
-shadowy system, and never to the moral law
-which contains the Sabbath of the Lord; and
-that it is not the fault of the law, but of sinners,
-that they are condemned by it; and that justification
-being attained only by the sacrifice of
-Christ as a sin offering, is in itself a most powerful
-attestation to the perpetuity, immutability,
-and perfection, of that law which reveals sin.
-And to this answer the second class heartily
-assent.</p>
-
-<p>But the second class have something further to
-say. The Bible, indeed, fails to assert the change
-of the Sabbath, but these persons have something
-else to offer, in their estimation, equally as good
-as the Scriptures. The early fathers of the
-church, who conversed with the apostles, or who
-conversed with some who had conversed with
-them, and those who followed for several generations,
-are by this class presented as authority,
-and their testimony is used to establish the so-called
-Christian Sabbath on a firm basis. And
-this is what they assert respecting the fathers:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
-That they distinctly teach the change of the
-Sabbath from the seventh to the first day of the
-week, and that the first day is by divine authority
-the Christian Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p>But the third class squarely deny this statement,
-and affirm that the fathers held the Sabbath
-as an institution made for the Jews when
-they came out of Egypt, and that Christ abolished
-it at his death. They also assert that the fathers
-held the first day, not as a Sabbath in which
-men must not labor lest they break a divine
-precept, but as an ecclesiastical institution, which
-they called the Lord&#8217;s day, and which was the
-proper day for religious assemblies because
-custom and tradition thus concurred. And so
-the third class answer the second by an explicit
-denial of its alleged facts. They also aim a blow
-at the first by the assertion that the early fathers
-taught the no-Sabbath doctrine, which must
-therefore be acknowledged as the real doctrine of
-the New Testament.</p>
-
-<p>And now the first class respond to these conflicting
-statements of the second and the third.
-And here is their response:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. That our duty respecting the Sabbath, and
-respecting every other thing, can be learned only
-from the Scriptures.</p>
-
-<p>2. That the first three hundred years after the
-apostles nearly accomplished the complete development
-of the great apostasy, which had commenced
-even in Paul&#8217;s time; and this age of apostatizing
-cannot be good authority for making
-changes in the law of God.</p>
-
-<p>3. That only a small proportion of the ministers
-and teachers of this period have transmitted
-any writings to our time; and these are generally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
-fragments of the original works, and they have
-come down to us mainly through the hands of
-the Romanists, who have never scrupled to destroy
-or to corrupt that which witnesses against
-themselves, whenever it has been in their power
-to do it.</p>
-
-<p>4. But inasmuch as these two classes, viz.,
-those who maintain the first-day Sabbath, and
-those who deny the existence of any Sabbath,
-both appeal to these fathers for testimony with
-which to sustain themselves, and to put down
-the first class, viz., those who hallow the ancient
-Sabbath, it becomes necessary that the exact
-truth respecting the writings of that age, which
-now exist, should be shown. There is but one
-method of doing this which will effectually end
-the controversy. This is to give every one of
-their testimonies concerning the Sabbath and
-first-day in their own words. In doing this the
-following facts will appear:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. That in some important particulars there is
-a marked disagreement on this subject among
-them. For while some teach that the Sabbath
-originated at creation and should be hallowed
-even now, others assert that it began with the
-fall of the manna, and ended with the death of
-Christ. And while one class represent Christ as
-a violator of the Sabbath, another class represent
-him as sacredly hallowing it, and a third class
-declare that he certainly did violate it, and that
-he certainly never did, but always observed it!
-Some of them also affirm that the Sabbath was
-abolished, and in other places positively affirm
-that it is perpetuated and made more sacred than
-it formerly was. Moreover, some assert that the
-ten commandments are absolutely abolished,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
-whilst others declare that they are perpetuated,
-and are the tests of Christian character in this
-dispensation. Some call the day of Christ&#8217;s resurrection
-the first day of the week; others call it
-the day of the sun, and the eighth day; and a
-larger number call it the Lord&#8217;s day, but there
-are no examples of this application till the close
-of the second century. Some enjoin the observance
-of both the Sabbath and the first day, while
-others treat the seventh day as despicable.</p>
-
-<p>2. But in several things of great importance
-there is perfect unity of sentiment. They always
-distinguish between the Sabbath and the first
-day of the week. The change of the Sabbath
-from the seventh day to the first is never mentioned
-in a single instance. They never term the
-first day the Christian Sabbath, nor do they treat
-it as a Sabbath of any kind. Nor is there a single
-declaration in any of them that labor on the
-first day of the week is sinful; the utmost that
-can be found being one or two vague expressions
-which do not necessarily have any such sense.</p>
-
-<p>3. Many of the fathers call the first day of the
-week the Lord&#8217;s day. But none of them claim
-for it any scriptural authority, and some expressly
-state that it has none whatever, but rests
-solely upon custom and tradition.</p>
-
-<p>4. But the writings of the fathers furnish positive
-proof that the Sabbath was observed in the
-Christian church down to the time when they
-wrote, and by no inconsiderable part of that
-body. For some of them expressly enjoined its observance,
-and even some of those who held that
-it was abolished speak of Christians who observed
-it, whom they would consent to fellowship if
-they would not make it a test.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>5. And now mark the work of apostasy: This
-work never begins by thrusting out God&#8217;s institutions,
-but always by bringing in those of men
-and at first only asking that they may be tolerated,
-while yet the ones ordained of God are sacredly
-observed. This, in time, being effected, the
-next effort is to make them equal with the divine.
-When this has been accomplished, the third stage
-of the process is to honor them above those divinely
-commanded; and this is speedily succeeded
-by the fourth, in which the divine institution is
-thrust out with contempt, and the whole ground
-given to its human rival.</p>
-
-<p>6. Before the first three centuries had expired,
-apostasy concerning the Sabbath had, with many
-of the fathers, advanced to the third stage, and
-with a considerable number had already entered
-upon the fourth. For those fathers who hallow
-the Sabbath do generally associate with it the
-festival called by them the Lord&#8217;s day. And
-though they speak of the Sabbath as a divine institution,
-and never speak thus of the so-called
-Lord&#8217;s day, they do, nevertheless, give the greater
-honor to this human festival. So far had the
-apostasy progressed before the end of the third
-century, that only one thing more was needed to
-accomplish the work as far as the Sabbath was
-concerned, and this was to discard it, and to honor
-the Sunday festival alone. Some of the fathers
-had already gone thus far; and the work
-became general within five centuries after Christ.</p>
-
-<p>7. The modern church historians make very
-conflicting statements respecting the Sabbath
-during the first centuries. Some pass over it almost
-in silence, or indicate that it was, at most,
-observed only by Jewish Christians. Others,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
-however, testify to its general observance by the
-Gentile Christians; yet some of these assert that
-the Sabbath was observed as a matter of expediency
-and not of moral obligation, because those
-who kept it did not believe the commandments
-were binding. (This is a great error, as will appear
-in due time.) What is said, however, by
-these modern historians is comparatively unimportant
-inasmuch as their sources of information
-were of necessity the very writings which are
-about to be quoted.</p>
-
-<p>8. In the following pages will be found, in their
-own words, every statement<a name="FNanchor_A_3" id="FNanchor_A_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a> which the fathers
-of the first three centuries make by way of defining
-their views of the Sabbath and first-day.
-And even when they merely allude to either day
-in giving their views of other subjects, the nature
-of the allusion is stated, and, where practicable,
-the sentence or phrase containing it is quoted.
-The different writings are cited in the order in
-which they purport to have been written. A
-considerable number were not written by the
-persons to whom they were ascribed, but at a
-later date. As these have been largely quoted
-by first-day writers, they are here given in full.
-And even these writings possess a certain historical
-value. For though not written by the ones
-whose names they bear, they are known to have
-been in existence since the second or third century,
-and they give some idea of the views which
-then prevailed.</p>
-
-<p>First of all let us hear the so-called &#8220;Apostolical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
-Constitutions.&#8221; These were not the work of the
-apostles, but they were in existence as early as
-the third century, and were then very generally
-believed to express the doctrine of the apostles.
-They do therefore furnish important historical testimony
-to the practice of the church at that time.
-Mosheim in his Historical Commentaries, Cent. 1,
-sect. 51, speaks thus of these &#8220;Constitutions&#8221;:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;The matter of this work is unquestionably ancient;
-since the manners and discipline of which it exhibits a
-view are those which prevailed amongst the Christians of
-the second and third centuries, especially those resident
-in Greece and the oriental regions.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Of the &#8220;Apostolical Constitutions,&#8221; Guericke&#8217;s
-Church History speaks thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is a collection of ecclesiastical statutes purporting
-to be the work of the apostolic age, but in reality
-formed gradually in the second, third, and fourth centuries,
-and is of much value in reference to the history of
-polity, and Christian archæology generally.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Ancient
-Church</i>, p. 212.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">
-CHAPTER II.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF THE APOSTOLICAL CONSTITUTIONS.</h3>
-
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;<span class="smcap">Have</span> before thine eyes the fear of God, and always
-remember the ten commandments of God,&mdash;to love the
-one and only Lord God with all thy strength; to give no
-heed to idols, or any other beings, as being lifeless gods,
-or irrational beings or dæmons. Consider the manifold
-workmanship of God, which received its beginning through
-Christ. Thou shalt observe the Sabbath, on account of
-Him who ceased from his work of creation, but ceased
-not from his work of providence: it is a rest for meditation
-of the law, not for idleness of the hands.&#8221; Book ii.,
-sect. 4, par. 36.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>This is sound Sabbatarian doctrine. But apostasy
-had begun its work in the establishment of
-the so-called Lord&#8217;s day, which was destined in
-time to drive out the Sabbath. The next mention
-of the Sabbath also introduces the festival
-called Lord&#8217;s day, but the reader will remember
-that this was written, not in the first century,
-but the third:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let your judicatures be held on the second day of
-the week, that if any controversy arise about your sentence,
-having an interval till the Sabbath, you may be
-able to set the controversy right, and to reduce those to
-peace who have the contests one with another against the
-Lord&#8217;s day.&#8221; Book ii., sect. 6, par. 47.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>By the term Lord&#8217;s day the first day of the
-week is here intended. But the writer does not
-call the first day the Sabbath, that term being
-applied to the seventh day.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>In section 7, paragraph 59, Christians are commanded
-to assemble for worship &#8220;every day, morning and evening,
-singing psalms and praying in the Lord&#8217;s house: in
-the morning saying the sixty-second psalm, and in the
-evening the hundred and fortieth, but principally on the
-Sabbath day. And on the day of our Lord&#8217;s resurrection,
-which is the Lord&#8217;s day, meet more diligently, sending
-praise to God that made the universe by Jesus and
-sent him to us.&#8221; &#8220;Otherwise what apology will he make
-to God who does not assemble on that day to hear the
-saving word concerning the resurrection, on which we
-pray thrice standing, in memory of him who arose in three
-days, in which is performed the reading of the prophets,
-the preaching of the gospel, the oblation of the sacrifice,
-the gift of the holy food.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The writer of these &#8220;Constitutions&#8221; this time
-gives the first day great prominence, though still
-honoring the Sabbath, and by no means giving
-that title to Sunday. But in book v., section 2,
-paragraph 10, we have a singular testimony to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
-the manner in which Sunday was spent. Thus
-the writer says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now we exhort you, brethren and fellow-servants, to
-avoid vain talk and obscene discourses, and jestings,
-drunkenness, lasciviousness, luxury, unbounded passions,
-with foolish discourses, since we do not permit you so
-much as on the Lord&#8217;s days, which are days of joy, to
-speak or act anything unseemly.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>From this it appears that the so-called Lord&#8217;s
-day was a day of greater mirth than the other
-days of the week. In book v., section 3, paragraph 14,
-it is said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;But when the first day of the week dawned he arose
-from the dead, and fulfilled those things which before
-his passion he foretold to us, saying: &#8216;The Son of man
-must continue in the heart of the earth three days and
-three nights.&#8217;&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In book v., section 3, paragraph 15, the writer
-names the days on which Christians should fast:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;But he commanded us to fast on the fourth and sixth
-days of the week; the former on account of his being betrayed,
-and the latter on account of his passion. But
-he appointed us to break our fast on the seventh day at
-the cock-crowing, but to fast on the Sabbath day. Not
-that the Sabbath day is a day of fasting, being the rest
-from the creation, but because we ought to fast on this
-one Sabbath only, while on this day the Creator was under
-the earth.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In paragraph 17, Christians are forbidden to
-&#8220;celebrate the day of the resurrection of our Lord
-on any other day than a Sunday.&#8221; In paragraph
-18, they are again charged to fast on that one Sabbath
-which comes in connection with the anniversary
-of our Lord&#8217;s death. In paragraph 19,
-the first day of the week is four times called the
-Lord&#8217;s day. The period of 40 days from his resurrection
-to his ascension is to be observed. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
-anniversary of Christ&#8217;s resurrection is to be celebrated
-by the supper.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;And let this be an everlasting ordinance till the consummation
-of the world, until the Lord come. For to
-Jews the Lord is still dead, but to Christians he is risen:
-to the former, by their unbelief; to the latter, by their
-full assurance of faith. For the hope in him is immortal
-and eternal life. After eight days let there be another
-feast observed with honor, the eighth day itself, on which
-he gave me, Thomas, who was hard of belief, full assurance,
-by showing me the print of the nails, and the
-wound made in his side by the spear. And again, from
-the first Lord&#8217;s day count forty days, from the Lord&#8217;s
-day till the fifth day of the week, and celebrate the feast
-of the ascension of the Lord, whereon he finished all his
-dispensation and constitution,&#8221; etc.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The things here commanded can come only
-once in a year. These are the anniversary of
-Christ&#8217;s resurrection, and of that day on which
-he appeared to Thomas, and these were to be
-celebrated by the supper. The people were also
-to observe the day of the ascension on the fifth
-day of the week, forty days from his resurrection,
-on which day he finished his work. In paragraph
-20, they are commanded to celebrate the
-anniversary of the Pentecost.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;But after ten days from the ascension, which from
-the first Lord&#8217;s day is the fiftieth day, do ye keep a great
-festival; for on that day, at the third hour, the Lord
-Jesus sent on us the gift of the Holy Ghost.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This was not a weekly but a yearly festival.
-Fasting is also set forth in this paragraph, but
-every Sabbath except the one Christ lay in the
-tomb is exempted from this fast, and every so-called
-Lord&#8217;s day:&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;We enjoin you to fast every fourth day of the week,
-and every day of the preparation [the sixth day], and the
-surplusage of your fast bestow upon the needy; every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
-Sabbath day excepting one, and every Lord&#8217;s day, hold
-your solemn assemblies, and rejoice; for he will be guilty
-of sin who fasts on the Lord&#8217;s day, being the day of the
-resurrection, or during the time of Pentecost, or, in general,
-who is sad on a festival day to the Lord. For on
-them we ought to rejoice, and not to mourn.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This writer asserts that it is a sin to fast or
-mourn on Sunday, but never intimates that it is
-a sin to labor on that day when not engaged in
-worship. We shall next learn that the decalogue
-is in agreement with the law of nature, and that
-it is of perpetual obligation:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>In book vi., section 4, paragraph 19, it is said: &#8220;He
-gave a plain law to assist the law of nature, such an
-one as is pure, saving, and holy, in which his own
-name was inscribed, perfect, which is never to fail, being
-complete in ten commands, unspotted, converting souls.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In paragraph 20 it is said: &#8220;Now the law is the decalogue,
-which the Lord promulgated to them with an audible
-voice.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In paragraph 22 he says: &#8220;You therefore are blessed
-who are delivered from the curse. For Christ, the Son
-of God, by his coming has confirmed and completed the
-law, but has taken away the additional precepts, although
-not all of them, yet at least the more grievous ones; having
-confirmed the former, and abolished the latter.&#8221;
-And he further testifies as follows: &#8220;And besides, before
-his coming he refused the sacrifices of the people,
-while they frequently offered them, when they sinned
-against him, and thought he was to be appeased by sacrifices,
-but not by repentance.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>For this reason the writer truthfully testifies
-that God refused to accept their burnt-offerings
-and sacrifices, their new moons and their Sabbaths.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>In book vi., section 23, he says: &#8220;He who had commanded
-to honor our parents, was himself subject to them.
-He who had commanded to keep the Sabbath, by resting
-thereon for the sake of meditating on the laws, has now
-commanded us to consider of the law of creation, and of
-providence every day, and to return thanks to God.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>This savors somewhat of the doctrine that all
-days are alike. Yet this cannot be the meaning;
-for in book vii., section 2, paragraph 23, he enjoins
-the observance of the Sabbath, and also of the
-Lord&#8217;s-day festival, but specifies one Sabbath in
-the year in which men should fast. Thus he
-says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;But keep the Sabbath, and the Lord&#8217;s-day festival; because
-the former is the memorial of the creation, and the
-latter, of the resurrection. But there is one only Sabbath
-to be observed by you in the whole year, which is that of
-our Lord&#8217;s burial, on which men ought to keep a fast,
-but not a festival. For inasmuch as the Creator was
-then under the earth, the sorrow for him is more forcible
-than the joy for the creation; for the Creator is more
-honorable by nature and dignity than his own creatures.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In book vii., section 2, paragraph 30, he says: &#8220;On the
-day of the resurrection of the Lord, that is, the Lord&#8217;s
-day, assemble yourselves together, without fail, giving
-thanks to God,&#8221; etc.</p>
-
-<p>In paragraph 36, the writer brings in the Sabbath
-again: &#8220;O Lord Almighty, thou hast created the world
-by Christ, and hast appointed the Sabbath in memory
-thereof, because that on <i>that day</i> thou hast made us <i>rest
-from our works</i>, for the meditation upon thy laws.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In the same paragraph, in speaking of the
-resurrection of Christ, the writer says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;On which account we solemnly assemble to celebrate
-the feast of the resurrection on the Lord&#8217;s day,&#8221; etc. In
-the same paragraph he speaks again of the Sabbath:
-&#8220;Thou didst give them the law or decalogue, which was
-pronounced by thy voice and written with thy hand.
-Thou didst enjoin the observation of the Sabbath, not
-affording them an occasion of idleness, but an opportunity
-of piety, for their knowledge of thy power, and the
-prohibition of evils; having limited them as within an
-holy circuit for the sake of doctrine, for the rejoicing upon
-the seventh period.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In this paragraph he also states his views of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
-the Sabbath, and of the day which he calls the
-Lord&#8217;s day, giving the precedence to the latter:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;On this account he permitted men every Sabbath to
-rest, that so no one might be willing to send one word
-out of his mouth in anger on the day of the Sabbath.
-For the Sabbath is the ceasing of the creation, the completion
-of the world, the inquiry after laws, and the
-grateful praise to God for the blessings he has bestowed
-upon men. All which the Lord&#8217;s day excels, and shows
-the Mediator himself, the Provider, the Law-giver, the
-Cause of the resurrection, the First-born of the whole
-creation,&#8221; etc. And he adds: &#8220;So that the Lord&#8217;s day
-commands us to offer unto thee, O Lord, thanksgiving for
-all. For this is the grace afforded by thee, which on
-account of its greatness has obscured all other blessings.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>It is certainly noteworthy that the so-called
-Lord&#8217;s day, for which no divine warrant is produced,
-is here exalted above the Sabbath of the
-Lord notwithstanding the Sabbath is acknowledged
-to be the divine memorial of the creation,
-and to be expressly enjoined in the decalogue,
-which the writer declares to be of perpetual obligation.
-Tested by his own principles, he had
-far advanced in apostasy; for he held a human
-festival more honorable than one which he acknowledged
-to be ordained of God; and only a
-single step remained; viz., to set aside the commandment
-of God for the ordinance of man.</p>
-
-<p>In book viii., section 2, paragraph 4, it is said,
-when a bishop has been chosen and is to be
-ordained,&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let the people assemble, with the presbytery and
-bishops that are present, on the Lord&#8217;s day, and let them
-give their consent.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In book viii., section 4, paragraph 33, occurs the
-final mention of these two days in the so-called
-&#8220;Apostolical Constitutions.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span></p>
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let the slaves work five days; but on the Sabbath
-day and the Lord&#8217;s day let them have leisure to go to
-church for instruction in piety. We have said that the
-Sabbath is on account of the creation, and the Lord&#8217;s day,
-of the resurrection.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>To this may be added the 64th Canon of the
-Apostles, which is appended to the &#8220;Constitutions&#8221;:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;If any one of the clergy be found to fast on the
-Lord&#8217;s day, or on the Sabbath day, excepting one only,
-let him be deprived; but if he be one of the laity, let
-him be suspended.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Every mention of the Sabbath and first-day
-in that ancient book called &#8220;Apostolical Constitutions&#8221;
-is now before the reader. This book
-comes down to us from the third century, and
-contains what was at that time very generally
-believed to be the doctrine of the apostles. It is
-therefore valuable to us, not as authority respecting
-the teaching of the apostles, but as giving
-us a knowledge of the views and practices which
-prevailed in the third century. At the time
-these &#8220;Constitutions&#8221; were put in writing, the
-ten commandments were revered as the immutable
-rule of right, and the Sabbath of the Lord
-was by many observed as an act of obedience to
-the fourth commandment, and as the divine memorial
-of the creation. But the first-day festival
-had already attained such strength and influence
-as to clearly indicate that ere long it would
-claim the entire ground. But observe that the
-Sabbath and the so-called Lord&#8217;s day are treated
-as distinct institutions, and that no hint of the
-change of the Sabbath to the first day of the
-week is ever once given. The &#8220;Apostolical Constitutions&#8221;
-are cited first, not because written by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
-the apostles, but because of their title. For the
-same reason the so-called Epistle of Barnabas is
-quoted next, not because written by that apostle,
-for the proof is ample that it was not, but because
-it is often quoted by first-day writers as
-the words of the apostle Barnabas. It was in
-existence, however, as early as the middle of the
-second century, and, like the &#8220;Apostolical Constitutions,&#8221;
-is of value to us in that it gives some
-clue to the opinions which prevailed in the region
-where the writer lived, or at least which
-were held by his party.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III.</h2></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p class="center">Barnabas&mdash;Pliny&mdash;Ignatius&mdash;The Church at Smyrna&mdash;The
-Epistle to Diognetus&mdash;Recognitions of Clement&mdash;Syriac
-Documents concerning Edessa.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF THE EPISTLE OF BARNABAS.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> his second chapter this writer speaks thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;For he hath revealed to us by all the prophets that
-he needs neither sacrifices, nor burnt-offerings, nor oblations,
-saying thus, &#8216;What is the multitude of your sacrifices
-unto me, saith the Lord? I am full of burnt-offerings,
-and desire not the fat of lambs, and the blood of
-bulls and goats, not when ye come to appear before me:
-for who hath required these things at your hands? Tread
-no more my courts, not though ye bring with you fine
-flour. Incense is a vain abomination unto me, and your
-new moons and Sabbaths I cannot endure.&#8217; He has
-therefore abolished these things, that the new law of our
-Lord Jesus Christ, which is without the yoke of necessity,
-might have a human oblation.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The writer may have intended to assert the
-abolition of the sacrifices only, as this was his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
-special theme in this place. But he presently
-asserts the abolition of the Sabbath of the Lord.
-Here is his fifteenth chapter entire:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Further, also, it is written concerning the Sabbath
-in the decalogue which [the Lord] spoke, face to face, to
-Moses on Mount Sinai, &#8216;And sanctify ye the Sabbath of
-the Lord with clean hands and a pure heart.&#8217; And he
-says in another place, &#8216;If my sons keep the Sabbath,
-then will I cause my mercy to rest upon them.&#8217; The
-Sabbath is mentioned at the beginning of the creation
-[thus]: &#8216;And God made in six days the works of his hands,
-and made an end on the seventh day, and rested on it,
-and sanctified it.&#8217; Attend, my children, to the meaning
-of this expression, &#8216;He finished in six days.&#8217; This implieth
-that the Lord will finish all things in six thousand
-years, for a day is with him a thousand years. And he
-himself testifieth, saying, &#8216;Behold to-day will be as a
-thousand years.&#8217; Therefore, my children, in six days,
-that is, in six thousand years, all things will be finished.
-&#8216;And he rested on the seventh day.&#8217; This meaneth:
-when his Son, coming [again], shall destroy the time of
-the wicked man, and judge the ungodly, and change the
-sun, and the moon, and the stars, then shall he truly
-rest on the seventh day. Moreover, he says, &#8216;Thou
-shalt sanctify it with pure hands and a pure heart.&#8217; If,
-therefore, any one can now sanctify the day which God
-hath sanctified, except he is pure in heart in all things,
-we are deceived. Behold, therefore: certainly then one
-properly resting sanctifies it, when we ourselves, having
-received the promise, wickedness no longer existing, and
-all things having been made new by the Lord, shall be
-able to work righteousness. Then we shall be able to
-sanctify it, having been first sanctified ourselves. Further,
-he says to them, &#8216;Your new moons and your Sabbaths
-I cannot endure.&#8217; Ye perceive how he speaks:
-Your present Sabbaths are not acceptable to me, but that
-is which I have made [namely this], when, giving rest to
-all things, I shall make a beginning of the eighth day,
-that is, a beginning of another world. Wherefore, also,
-we keep the eighth day with joyfulness, the day, also,
-on which Jesus rose again from the dead. And when he
-had manifested himself, he ascended into the heavens.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Here are some very strange specimens of reasoning.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
-The substance of what he says relative
-to the present observance of the Sabbath appears
-to be this: No one &#8220;can now sanctify the day
-which God hath sanctified except he is pure in
-heart in all things.&#8221; But this cannot be the case
-until the present world shall pass away, &#8220;when
-we ourselves, having received the promise, wickedness
-no longer existing, and <i>all things having
-been made new</i> by the Lord, shall be able to work
-righteousness. Then we shall be able to sanctify
-it, having been first sanctified ourselves.&#8221; Men
-cannot therefore keep the Sabbath while this
-wicked world lasts. And so he says, &#8220;Your present
-Sabbaths are not acceptable to me.&#8221; That
-is to say, the keeping of the day which God has
-sanctified is not possible in such a wicked world.
-But though the seventh day cannot now be kept,
-the eighth day can be, and ought to be, because
-when the seventh thousand years are past there
-will be at the beginning of the eighth thousand
-the new creation. So the persons represented
-by this writer, do not attempt to keep the seventh
-day which God sanctified, for that is too
-pure to keep in this world, and can only be kept
-after the Saviour comes at the commencement of
-the seventh thousand years; but they &#8220;keep the
-eighth day with joyfulness, the day also on which
-Jesus rose again from the dead.&#8221; Sunday, which
-God never sanctified, is exactly suitable for observance
-in the world as it now is. But the
-sanctified seventh day &#8220;we shall be able to sanctify&#8221;
-when all things have been made new. If
-our first-day friends think these words of some
-unknown writer of the second century more
-honorable to the first day of the week than to
-the seventh, they are welcome to them. Had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
-the writer said, &#8220;It is easier to keep Sunday than
-the Sabbath while the world is so wicked,&#8221; he
-would have stated the truth. But when in substance
-he says, &#8220;It is more acceptable to God to
-keep a common than a sanctified day while men
-are so sinful,&#8221; he excuses his disobedience by uttering
-a falsehood. Several things however should
-be noted:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. In this quotation we have the reasons of a
-no-Sabbath man for keeping the festival of Sunday.
-It is not God&#8217;s commandment, for there
-was none for that festival; but the day God hallowed
-being too pure to keep while the world
-is so wicked, Sunday is therefore kept till the
-return of the Lord, and then the seventh day
-shall be truly sanctified by those who now regard
-it not.</p>
-
-<p>2. But this writer, though saying what he is
-able in behalf of the first day of the week, applies
-to it no sacred name. He does not call it Christian
-Sabbath, nor Lord&#8217;s day, but simply &#8220;the
-eighth day,&#8221; and this because it succeeds the seventh
-day of the week.</p>
-
-<p>3. It is also to be noticed that he expressly
-dates the Sabbath from the creation.</p>
-
-<p>4. The change of the Sabbath was unknown
-to this writer. He kept the Sunday festival, not
-because it was purer than the sanctified seventh
-day, but because the seventh day was too pure to
-keep while the world is so wicked.</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF THE EPISTLE OF PLINY.</h3>
-
-<p>Pliny was the Roman governor of Bithynia in
-the years 103 and 104. He wrote a letter to the
-emperor Trajan, in which he states what he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
-learned of the Christians as the result of examining
-them at his tribunal:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;They affirmed that the whole of their guilt or error
-was, that they met on a certain stated day [<i>stato die</i>], before
-it was light, and addressed themselves in a form of
-prayer to Christ, as to some God, binding themselves by
-a solemn oath, not for the purposes of any wicked design,
-but never to commit any fraud, theft, or adultery; never
-to falsify their word, nor deny a trust when they should
-be called upon to deliver it up; after which it was their
-custom to separate, and then reassemble to eat in common
-a harmless meal.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Coleman&#8217;s Ancient Christianity</i>,
-chap. i. sect. 1.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The letter of Pliny is often referred to as though
-it testified that the Christians of Bithynia celebrated
-the first day of the week. Yet such is by
-no means the case, as the reader can plainly see.
-Coleman says of it (page 528):&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;This statement is evidence that these Christians kept
-a day as holy time, but whether it was the last, or the
-first day of the week, does not appear.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Such is the judgment of an able, candid, first-day
-church historian of good repute as a scholar.
-An anti-Sabbatarian writer of some repute speaks
-thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;As the Sabbath day appears to have been quite as
-commonly observed at this date as the Sun&#8217;s day (if not
-even more so), it is just as probable that this &#8216;stated
-day&#8217; referred to by Pliny was the <i>seventh</i> day, as that it
-was the <i>first</i> day; though the latter is generally taken for
-granted.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Obligation of the Sabbath</i>, p. 300.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Every candid person must acknowledge that it
-is unjust to represent the letter of Pliny as testifying
-in behalf of the so-called Christian Sabbath.
-Next in order of time come the reputed
-epistles of Ignatius.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF THE EPISTLES OF IGNATIUS.</h3>
-
-<p>Of the fifteen epistles ascribed to Ignatius,
-eight are, by universal consent, accounted spurious;
-and eminent scholars have questioned the
-genuineness of the remaining seven. There are,
-however, two forms to these seven, a longer and
-a shorter, and while some doubt exists as to the
-shorter form, the longer form is by common consent
-ascribed to a later age than that of Ignatius.
-But the epistle to the Magnesians, which exists
-both in the longer and in the shorter form, is the
-one from which first-day writers obtain Ignatius&#8217;
-testimony in behalf of Sunday, and they quote
-for this both these forms. We therefore give
-both. Here is the shorter:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;For the divinest prophets lived according to Christ
-Jesus. On this account also they were persecuted, being
-inspired by his grace to fully convince the unbelieving
-that there is one God, who has manifested himself by
-Jesus Christ his Son, who is his eternal Word, not proceeding
-forth from silence, and who in all things pleased
-him that sent him. If, therefore, those who were brought
-up in the ancient order of things have come to the possession
-of a new hope, no longer observing the Sabbath, but
-living in the observance of the Lord&#8217;s day, on which also
-our life has sprung again by him and by his death&mdash;whom
-some deny, by which mystery we have obtained faith, and
-therefore endure, that we may be found the disciples of
-Jesus Christ, our only master&mdash;how shall we be able to
-live apart from him, whose disciples the prophets themselves
-in the Spirit did wait for him as their teacher?
-And therefore he whom they rightly waited for, being
-come, raised them from the dead.&#8221; Chaps. viii. and ix.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This paragraph is the one out of which a part
-of a sentence is quoted to show that Ignatius
-testifies in behalf of the Lord&#8217;s-day festival, or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
-Christian Sabbath. But the so-called Lord&#8217;s day
-is only brought in by means of a false translation.
-This is the decisive sentence: <span title="mêketi sabbatizontes, alla kata kyriakên zôên zôntes;">&#956;&#951;&#954;&#941;&#964;&#953; &#963;&#945;&#976;&#976;&#945;&#964;&#943;&#950;&#959;&#957;&#964;&#949;&#962; &#7936;&#955;&#955;&#8048;
-&#954;&#945;&#964;&#8048; &#954;&#965;&#961;&#953;&#945;&#954;&#8052;&#957; &#950;&#969;&#8052;&#957; &#950;&#8182;&#957;&#964;&#949;&#962;</span>;
-literally: &#8220;no
-longer sabbatizing, but living according to
-Lord&#8217;s life.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Eminent first-day scholars have called attention
-to this fact, and have testified explicitly that
-the term Lord&#8217;s day has no right to appear in
-the translation; for the original is not <span title="kyriakên
-hêmeran">&#954;&#965;&#961;&#953;&#945;&#954;&#8052;&#957; &#7969;&#956;&#8051;&#961;&#945;&#957;</span>, Lord&#8217;s day,
-but <span title="kyriakên zôên">&#954;&#965;&#961;&#953;&#945;&#954;&#8052;&#957; &#950;&#969;&#8052;&#957;</span>, Lord&#8217;s life.
-This is absolutely decisive, and shows that something
-akin to fraud has to be used in order to
-find a reference in this place to the so-called
-Christian Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p>But there is another fact quite as much to the
-point. The writer was not speaking of those
-then alive, but of the ancient prophets. This is
-proved by the opening and closing words of the
-above quotation, which first-day writers always
-omit. The so-called Lord&#8217;s day is inserted by a
-fraudulent translation; and now see what absurdity
-comes of it. The writer is speaking of the
-ancient prophets. If, therefore, the Sunday festival
-be inserted in this quotation from Ignatius
-he is made to declare that &#8220;the divinest prophets,&#8221;
-who &#8220;were brought up in the ancient order
-of things,&#8221; kept the first day and did not keep
-the Sabbath! Whereas, the truth is just the reverse
-of this. They certainly did keep the Sabbath,
-and did not keep the first day of the week.
-The writer speaks of the point when these men
-came &#8220;to the newness of hope,&#8221; which must be
-their individual conversion to God. They certainly
-did observe and enforce the Sabbath after this
-act of conversion. See Isa., chaps. 56, 58; Jer. 17;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
-Eze., chaps. 20, 22, 23. But they did also, as this
-writer truly affirms, live according to the Lord&#8217;s
-life. The sense of the writer respecting the prophets
-must therefore be this: &#8220;No longer [after their
-conversion to God] observing the Sabbath [merely,
-as natural men] but living according to the
-Lord&#8217;s life,&#8221; or &#8220;according to Christ Jesus.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>So much for the shorter form of the epistle to
-the Magnesians. Though the longer form is by
-almost universal consent of scholars and critics
-pronounced the work of some centuries after the
-time of Ignatius, yet as a portion of this also is
-often given by first-day writers to support Sunday,
-and given too as the words of Ignatius, we
-here present in full its reference to the first day
-of the week, and also to the Sabbath, which they
-generally omit. Here are its statements:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let us therefore no longer keep the Sabbath after the
-Jewish manner, and rejoice in days of idleness; for &#8216;he
-that does not work, let him not eat.&#8217; For, say the [holy]
-oracles, &#8216;In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat thy
-bread.&#8217; But let every one of you keep the Sabbath after
-a spiritual manner, rejoicing in meditation on the law,
-not in relaxation of the body, admiring the workmanship
-of God, and not eating things prepared the day before,
-nor using lukewarm drinks, and walking within a prescribed
-space, nor finding delight in dancing and plaudits
-which have no sense in them. And after the observance
-of the Sabbath, let every friend of Christ keep the Lord&#8217;s
-day as a festival, the resurrection day, the queen and
-chief of all the days [of the week]. Looking forward to
-this, the prophet declared, &#8216;To the end, for the eighth
-day,&#8217; on which our life both sprang up again, and the
-victory over death was obtained in Christ,&#8221; etc. Chapter
-ix.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This epistle, though the work of a later hand
-than that of Ignatius, is valuable for the light
-which it sheds upon the state of things when it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
-was written. It gives us a correct idea of the
-progress of apostasy with respect to the Sabbath
-in the time of the writer. He speaks against
-Jewish superstition in the observance of the Sabbath,
-and condemns days of idleness as contrary
-to the declaration, &#8220;In the sweat of thy face shalt
-thou eat thy bread.&#8221; But by days of idleness
-he cannot refer to the Sabbath, for this would be
-to make the fourth commandment clash with this
-text, whereas they must harmonize, inasmuch as
-they existed together during the former dispensation.
-Moreover, the Sabbath, though a day of
-abstinence from labor, is not a day of idleness, but
-of active participation in religious duties. He
-enjoins its observance after a spiritual manner.
-And after the Sabbath has been thus observed,
-&#8220;let every friend of Christ keep the Lord&#8217;s day
-<i>as a festival</i>, the resurrection day, the queen and
-chief of all the days.&#8221; The divine institution of
-the Sabbath was not yet done away, but the
-human institution of Sunday had become its
-equal, and was even commended above it. Not
-long after this, it took the whole ground, and the
-observance of the Sabbath was denounced as
-heretical and pernicious.</p>
-
-<p>The reputed epistle of Ignatius to the Trallians
-in its shorter form does not allude to this subject.
-In its longer form, which is admitted to be
-the work of a later age than that of Ignatius,
-these expressions are found:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;During the Sabbath, he continued under the earth;&#8221;
-&#8220;at the dawning of the Lord&#8217;s day he arose from the
-dead;&#8221; &#8220;the Sabbath embraces the burial; the Lord&#8217;s
-day contains the resurrection.&#8221; Chap. ix.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In the epistle to the Philippians, which is universally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
-acknowledged to be the work of a later
-person than Ignatius, it is said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;If any one fasts on the Lord&#8217;s day or on the Sabbath,
-except on the paschal Sabbath only, he is a murderer of
-Christ.&#8221; Chap. xiii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>We have now given every allusion to the Sabbath
-and first-day that can be found in any writing
-attributed to Ignatius. We have seen that
-the term &#8220;Lord&#8217;s day&#8221; is not found in any sentence
-written by him. The first day is never
-called the Christian Sabbath, not even in the
-writings falsely attributed to him; nor is there in
-any of them a hint of the modern doctrine of the
-change of the Sabbath. Though falsely ascribed
-to Ignatius, and actually written in a later age,
-they are valuable in that they mark the progress
-of apostasy in the establishment of the Sunday
-festival. Moreover, they furnish conclusive evidence
-that the ancient Sabbath was retained for
-centuries in the so-called Catholic church, and
-that the Sunday festival was an institution entirely
-distinct from the Sabbath of the fourth
-commandment.</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF THE CHURCH AT SMYRNA.</h3>
-
-<p>The epistle of Polycarp makes no reference to
-the Sabbath nor to the first day of the week.
-But &#8220;the encyclical epistle of the church at
-Smyrna concerning the martyrdom of the holy
-Polycarp,&#8221; informs us that &#8220;the blessed Polycarp
-suffered martyrdom&#8221; &#8220;on the great Sabbath at
-the eighth hour.&#8221; Chapter xxi. The margin
-says: &#8220;The great Sabbath is that before the
-passover.&#8221; This day, thus mentioned, is not Sunday,
-but is the ancient Sabbath of the Lord.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF THE EPISTLE TO DIOGNETUS.</h3>
-
-<p>This was written by an unknown author, and
-Diognetus himself is known only by name, no
-facts concerning him having come down to us.
-It dates from the first part of the second century.
-The writer speaks of &#8220;the superstition as respects
-the Sabbaths&#8221; which the Jews manifested, and
-he adds these words: &#8220;To speak falsely of God,
-as if he forbade us to do what is good on the
-Sabbath days&mdash;how is not this impious?&#8221; But
-there is nothing in this to which a commandment-keeper
-would object, or which he might
-not freely utter.</p>
-
-<p>The &#8220;Recognitions of Clement&#8221; is a kind of
-philosophical and theological romance. It purports
-to have been written by Clement of Rome,
-in the time of the apostle Peter, but was actually
-written &#8220;somewhere in the first half of the third
-century.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF THE RECOGNITIONS OF CLEMENT.</h3>
-
-<p>In book i., chapter xxxv., he speaks of the giving
-of the law thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Meantime they came to Mount Sinai, and thence the
-law was given to them with voices and sights from heaven,
-written in ten precepts, of which the first and greatest
-was that they should worship God himself alone,&#8221; etc.
-In book iii., chapter lv., he speaks of these precepts as
-tests: &#8220;On account of those, therefore, who by neglect
-of their own salvation please the evil one, and those who
-by study of their own profit seek to please the good One,
-ten things have been prescribed as a test to this present
-age, according to the number of the ten plagues which
-were brought upon Egypt.&#8221; In book ix., chapter xxviii.,
-he says of the Hebrews, &#8220;that no child born among them
-is ever exposed, and that on every seventh day they all
-rest,&#8221; etc. In book x., chap. lxxii., is given the conversion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
-of one Faustinianus by St. Peter. And it is said,
-&#8220;He proclaimed a fast to all the people, and on the next
-Lord&#8217;s day he baptized him.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This is all that I find in this work relating to
-the Sabbath and the so-called Lord&#8217;s day. The
-writer held the ten commandments to be tests of
-character in the present dispensation. There is
-no reason to believe that he, or any other person
-in that age, held the Sunday festival as something
-to be observed in obedience to the fourth
-commandment.</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF THE SYRIAC DOCUMENTS CONCERNING
-EDESSA.</h3>
-
-<p>On pages 35-55 of this work is given what
-purports to be &#8220;The Teaching of the Apostles.&#8221;
-On page 36, the ascension of the Lord is said to
-have been upon the &#8220;first day of the week, and
-the end of the Pentecost.&#8221; Two manifest falsehoods
-are here uttered; for the ascension was
-upon Thursday, and the Pentecost came ten days
-after the ascension. It is also said that the disciples
-came from Nazareth of Galilee to the
-mount of Olives on that selfsame day before the
-ascension, and yet that the ascension was &#8220;at
-the time of the early dawn.&#8221; But Nazareth was
-distant from the mount of Olives at least sixty
-miles!</p>
-
-<p>On page 38, a commandment from the apostles
-is given: &#8220;On the first [day] of the week, let
-there be service, and the reading of the holy
-Scriptures, and the oblation,&#8221; because Christ
-arose on that day, was born on that day, ascended
-on that day, and will come again on that day.
-But here is one truth, one falsehood, and two mere
-assertions. The apostles are represented, on page<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
-39, as commanding a fast of forty days, and they
-add: &#8220;Then celebrate the day of the passion [Friday],
-and the day of the resurrection,&#8221; Sunday.
-But this would be only an annual celebration of
-these days.</p>
-
-<p>And on pages 38 and 39 they are also represented
-as commanding service to be held on the
-fourth and sixth days of the week. The Sabbath
-is not mentioned in these &#8220;Documents,&#8221; which
-were written about the commencement of the
-fourth century, when, in many parts of the world,
-that day had ceased to be hallowed.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF JUSTIN MARTYR.</h3>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Justin&#8217;s</span> &#8220;Apology&#8221; was written at Rome
-about the year 140. His &#8220;Dialogue with Trypho
-the Jew&#8221; was written some years later. In
-searching his works, we shall see how much
-greater progress apostasy had made at Rome
-than in the countries where those lived whose
-writings we have been examining. And yet
-nearly all these writings were composed at least
-a century later than those of Justin, though we
-have quoted them before quoting his, because of
-their asserted apostolic origin, or of their asserted
-origin within a few years of the times of the
-apostles.</p>
-
-<p>It does not appear that Justin, and those at
-Rome who held with him in doctrine, paid the
-slightest regard to the ancient Sabbath. He
-speaks of it as abolished, and treats it with contempt.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
-Unlike some whose writings have been
-examined, he denies that it originated at creation,
-and asserts that it was made in the days of Moses.
-He also differs with some already quoted in that
-he denies the perpetuity of the law of ten commandments.
-In his estimation, the Sabbath was
-a Jewish institution, absolutely unknown to good
-men before the time of Moses, and of no authority
-whatever since the death of Christ. The idea
-of the change of the Sabbath from the seventh
-day of the week to the first, is not only never
-found in his writings, but is absolutely irreconcilable
-with such statements as the foregoing,
-which abound therein. And yet Justin Martyr
-is prominently and constantly cited in behalf of
-the so-called Christian Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p>The Roman people observed a festival on the
-first day of the week in honor of the sun. And
-so Justin in his Apology, addressed to the emperor
-of Rome, tells that monarch that the Christians
-met on &#8220;the day of the sun,&#8221; for worship.
-He gives the day no sacred title, and does not
-even intimate that it was a day of abstinence
-from labor, only as they spent a portion of it in
-worship. Here are the words of his Apology on
-the Sunday festival:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;And on the day called Sunday, all who live in cities
-or in the country gather together to one place, and the
-memoirs of the apostles or the writings of the prophets
-are read, as long as time permits; then, when the reader
-has ceased, the president verbally instructs, and exhorts
-to the imitation of these good things. Then we all rise
-together and pray, and, as we before said, when our
-prayer is ended, bread and wine and water are brought,
-and the president in like manner offers prayers and
-thanksgivings, according to his ability, and the people
-assent, saying, Amen; and there is a distribution to each,
-and a participation of that over which thanks have been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
-given, and to those who are absent a portion is sent by
-the deacons. And they who are well to do, and willing,
-give what each thinks fit; and what is collected is deposited
-with the president, who succors the orphans and widows,
-and those who, through sickness or any other cause,
-are in want, and those who are in bonds, and the strangers
-sojourning among us, and, in a word, takes care of
-all who are in need. But Sunday is the day on which
-we all hold our common assembly, because it is the first
-day on which God, having wrought a change in the darkness
-and matter, made the world; and Jesus Christ our
-Saviour on the same day rose from the dead. For he
-was crucified on the day before that of Saturn (Saturday);
-and on the day after that of Saturn, which is the day of
-the sun, having appeared to his apostles and disciples, he
-taught them these things, which we have submitted to
-you also for your consideration.&#8221; Chap. lxvii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Not one word of this indicates that Justin considered
-the Sunday festival as a continuation of
-the Sabbath of the fourth commandment. On
-the contrary, he shows clearly that no such idea
-was cherished by him. For though the fourth
-commandment enjoins the observance of the seventh
-day because <i>God rested on that day</i> from
-the work of creation, Justin urged in behalf of
-the Sunday festival that it is <i>the day on which
-he began his work</i>. The honor paid to that festival
-was not therefore in Justin&#8217;s estimation in
-any sense an act of obedience to the fourth commandment.
-He mentions as his other reason for
-the celebration by Christians of &#8220;the day of the
-sun,&#8221; that the Saviour arose that day. But he
-claims no divine or apostolic precept for this celebration;
-the things which he says Christ taught
-his apostles being the doctrines which he had embodied
-in this Apology for the information of the
-emperor. And it is worthy of notice that though
-first-day writers assert that &#8220;Lord&#8217;s day&#8221; was
-the familiar title of the first day of the week in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
-the time of the Apocalypse, yet Justin, who is
-the first person after the sacred writers that mentions
-the first day, and this at a distance of only
-44 years from the date of John&#8217;s vision upon
-Patmos, does not call it by that title, but by the
-name which it bore as a heathen festival! If it
-be said that the term was omitted because he was
-addressing a heathen emperor, there still remains
-the fact that he mentions the day quite a number
-of times in his &#8220;Dialogue with Trypho,&#8221; and yet
-never calls it &#8220;Lord&#8217;s day,&#8221; nor indeed does he
-call it by any name implying sacredness.</p>
-
-<p>Now we present the statements concerning the
-Sabbath and first-day found in his &#8220;Dialogue
-with Trypho the Jew.&#8221; The impropriety, not to
-say dishonesty, of quoting Justin in behalf of the
-modern doctrine of the change of the Sabbath,
-will be obvious to all. He was a most decided
-no-law, no-Sabbath writer, who used the day
-commonly honored as a festival by the Romans,
-as the most suitable, or most convenient, day for
-public worship, a position identical with that of
-modern no-Sabbath men. Justin may be called
-a law man in this sense, however, that while he
-abolishes the ten commandments, he calls the
-gospel &#8220;the new law.&#8221; He is therefore really
-one who believes in the gospel and denies the
-law. But let us hear his own words. Trypho,
-having in chapter viii. advised Justin to observe
-the Sabbath, and &#8220;do all things which have been
-written in the law,&#8221; in chapter x. says to him,
-&#8220;You observe no festivals or Sabbaths.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This was exactly adapted to bring out from
-Justin the answer that though he did not observe
-the seventh day as the Sabbath, he did thus rest
-on the first day, if it were true that that day was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
-with him a day of abstinence from labor. And
-now observe Justin&#8217;s answer given in chapter
-twelve:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;The new law requires you to keep perpetual Sabbath,
-and you, because you are idle for one day, suppose you
-are pious, not discerning why this has been commanded
-you; and if you eat unleavened bread, you say the will
-of God has been fulfilled. The Lord our God does not
-take pleasure in such observances: if there is any perjured
-person or a thief among you, let him cease to be so;
-if any adulterer, let him repent; then he has kept the
-sweet and true Sabbaths of God.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This language plainly implies that Justin held
-all days to be alike, and did not observe any one
-day as a day of abstinence from labor. But in
-chapter xviii., Justin asserts that the Sabbaths&mdash;and
-he doubtless includes the weekly with
-the annual&mdash;were enjoined upon the Jews for
-their wickedness:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;For we too would observe the fleshly circumcision, and
-the Sabbaths, and in short, all the feasts, if we did not
-know for what reason they were enjoined you&mdash;namely, on
-account of your transgressions and the hardness of your
-hearts. For if we patiently endure all things contrived
-against us by wicked men and demons, so that amid cruelties
-unutterable, death and torments, we pray for mercy
-to those who inflict such things upon us, and do not wish
-to give the least retort to any one, even as the new Law-giver
-commanded us: how is it, Trypho, that we would
-not observe those rites which do not harm us&mdash;I speak of
-fleshly circumcision, and Sabbaths, and feasts?&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Not only does he declare that the Jews were
-commanded to keep the Sabbath because of their
-wickedness, but in chapter xix. he denies that
-any Sabbath existed before Moses. Thus, after
-naming Adam, Abel, Enoch, Lot, and Melchizedek,
-he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Moreover, all those righteous men already mentioned,
-though they kept no Sabbaths, were pleasing to God.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>But though he thus denies the Sabbatic institution
-before the time of Moses, he presently
-makes this statement concerning the Jews:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you were commanded to keep Sabbaths, that
-you might retain the memorial of God. For his word
-makes this announcement, saying, &#8216;That ye may know
-that I am God who redeemed you.&#8217;&#8221; [Eze. 20:12.]</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The Sabbath is indeed the memorial of the God
-that made the heavens and the earth. And what
-an absurdity to deny that that memorial was set
-up when the creative work was done, and to affirm
-that twenty-five hundred years intervened
-between the work and the memorial!</p>
-
-<p>In chapter xxi. Justin asserts &#8220;that God enjoined
-you [the Jews] to keep the Sabbath,
-and imposed on you other precepts for a
-sign, as I have already said, on account of your
-unrighteousness, and that of your fathers,&#8221; &amp;c.,
-and quotes Ezekiel 20 to prove it. Yet that
-chapter declares that it was in order that they
-might know who was that being who sanctified
-them, <i>i. e.</i>, that they might know that their God
-was the Creator, that the Sabbath was made to
-them a sign.</p>
-
-<p>In chapter xxiii., he again asserts that &#8220;in the
-times of Enoch&#8221; no one &#8220;observed Sabbaths.&#8221;
-He then protests against Sabbatic observance as
-follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you see that the elements are not idle, and keep
-no Sabbaths? Remain as you were born. For if there
-was no need of circumcision before Abraham, or of the
-observance of Sabbaths, of feasts and sacrifices, before
-Moses; no more need is there of them now, after that,
-according to the will of God, Jesus Christ the Son of God
-has been born without sin, of a virgin sprung from the
-stock of Abraham.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>That is to say, there was no Sabbatic institution<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
-before Moses, and neither is there any since
-Christ. But in chapter xxiv., Justin undertakes
-to bring in an argument for Sunday, not as a
-Sabbath, but as having greater mystery in it,
-and as being more honorable than the seventh
-day. Thus, alluding to circumcision on the
-eighth day of a child&#8217;s life as an argument for the
-first-day festival, he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is possible for us to show how the eighth day possessed
-a certain mysterious import, which the seventh
-day did not possess, and which was promulgated by God
-through these rites.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>That is to say, because God commanded the
-Hebrews to circumcise their children when they
-were eight days old, therefore all men should now
-esteem the first day of the week more honorable
-than the seventh day, which he commanded in
-the moral law, and which Justin himself, in chapter
-xix., terms &#8220;the memorial of God.&#8221; In chapter
-xxvi., Justin says to Trypho that&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Gentiles, who have believed on him, and have
-repented of the sins which they have committed, they
-shall receive the inheritance along with the patriarchs and
-the prophets, and the just men who are descended from
-Jacob, even although they neither keep the Sabbath, nor
-are circumcised, nor observe the feasts.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>And in proof of this, he quotes from Isa. 42,
-and 62, and 63, respecting the call of the Gentiles.
-Upon this (chapter xxvii.), Trypho the Jew very
-pertinently asks:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why do you select and quote whatever you wish from
-the prophetic writings, but do not refer to those which
-expressly command the Sabbath to be observed? For
-Isaiah thus speaks [chap. 58:13, 14], &#8216;If thou shalt turn
-away thy foot from the Sabbath,&#8217;&#8221; etc.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>To which Justin makes this uncandid answer:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have passed them by, my friends, not because such
-prophecies were contrary to me, but because you have
-understood, and do understand, that although God commands
-you by all the prophets to do the same things
-which he also commanded by Moses, it was on account of
-the hardness of your hearts, and your ingratitude towards
-him, that he continually proclaims them, in order that,
-even in this way, if you repented, you might please him,
-and neither sacrifice your children to demons, nor be partakers
-with thieves,&#8221; etc. And he adds: &#8220;So that, as in
-the beginning, these things were enjoined you because of
-your wickedness, in like manner, because of your steadfastness
-in it, or rather your increased proneness to it, by
-means of the same precepts, he calls you [by the prophets]
-to a remembrance or knowledge of it.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>These are bitter words from a Gentile who had
-been a pagan philosopher, and they are in no
-sense a just answer unless it can be shown that
-the law was given to the Jews because they were
-so wicked, and was withheld from the Gentiles because
-they were so righteous. The truth is just
-the reverse of this. Eph. 2. But to say something
-against the Sabbath, Justin asks:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did God wish the priests to sin when they offer the
-sacrifices on the Sabbaths? or those to sin, who are circumcised
-and do circumcise on the Sabbaths; since he
-commands that on the eighth day&mdash;even though it happen
-to be a Sabbath&mdash;those who are born shall be always
-circumcised?&#8221; And he asks if the rite could not be one
-day earlier or later, and why those &#8220;who lived before
-Moses&#8221; &#8220;observed no Sabbaths?&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>What Justin says concerning circumcision and
-sacrifices is absolutely without weight as an objection
-to the Sabbath, inasmuch as the commandment
-forbids, not the performance of religious
-duties, but our own work. Ex. 20:8-11. And
-his often repeated declaration that good men before
-the time of Moses did not keep the Sabbath,
-is mere assertion, inasmuch as God appointed it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
-to a holy use in the time of Adam, and we do
-know of some in the patriarchal age who kept
-God&#8217;s commandments, and were perfect before him.</p>
-
-<p>In chapter xxix., Justin sneers at Sabbatic observance
-by saying, &#8220;Think it not strange that
-we drink hot water on the Sabbaths.&#8221; And as
-arguments against the Sabbath he says that God
-&#8220;directs the government of the universe on this
-day equally as on all others,&#8221; as though this were
-inconsistent with the present sacredness of the
-Sabbath, when it was also true that God thus
-governed the world in the period when Justin
-acknowledges the Sabbath to have been obligatory.
-And he again refers to the sacrifices and
-to those who lived in the patriarchal age.</p>
-
-<p>In chapter xli., Justin again brings forward his
-argument for Sunday from circumcision:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;The command of circumcision, again, bidding [them]
-always circumcise the children on the eighth day, was a
-type of the true circumcision, by which we are circumcised
-from deceit and iniquity through Him who rose
-from the dead on the first day after the Sabbath [namely,
-through], our Lord Jesus Christ. For the first day after
-the Sabbath, remaining the first of all the days, is called,
-however, the eighth, according to the number of all the
-days of the cycle, and [yet] remains the first.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Sunday-keeping must be closely related to infant
-baptism, inasmuch as one of the chief arguments
-in modern times for the baptism of infants
-is drawn from the fact that God commanded the
-Hebrews to circumcise their male children; and
-Justin found his scriptural authority for first-day
-observance in the fact that this rite was to be
-performed when the child was eight days old!
-Yet this eighth day did not come on one day of
-the week, only, but on every day, and when it
-came on the seventh day it furnished Justin with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
-an argument against the sacredness of the Sabbath!
-But let it come on what day of the week
-it might (and it came on all alike), it was an argument
-for Sunday! O wonderful <i>eighth</i> day,
-that can thrive on that which is positively fatal
-to the seventh, and that can come every week on
-the first day thereof, though there be only seven
-days in each week!</p>
-
-<p>In chapters xliii., and xlvi., and xcii., Justin reiterates
-the assertion that those who lived in the
-patriarchal age did not hallow the Sabbath. But
-as he adds no new thought to what has been already
-quoted from him, these need not be copied.</p>
-
-<p>But in chapter xlvii., we have something of interest.
-Trypho asks Justin whether those who
-believe in Christ, and obey him, but who wish to
-&#8220;observe these [institutions] will be saved?&#8221;
-Justin answers: &#8220;In my opinion, Trypho, such
-an one will be saved, if he does not strive in every
-way to persuade other men ... to observe
-the same things as himself, telling them that they
-will not be saved unless they do so.&#8221; Trypho
-replied, &#8220;Why then have you said, &#8216;In my opinion,
-such an one will be saved,&#8217; unless there are
-some who affirm that such will not be saved?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In reply, Justin tells Trypho that there were
-those who would have no intercourse with, nor
-even extend hospitality to, such Christians as observed
-the law. And for himself he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;But if some, through weak-mindedness, wish to observe
-such institutions as were given by Moses (from
-which they expect some virtue, but which we believe were
-appointed by reason of the hardness of the people&#8217;s
-hearts), along with their hope in this Christ, and [wish to
-perform] the eternal and natural acts of righteousness
-and piety, yet choose to live with the Christians and the
-faithful, as I said before, not inducing them either to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
-circumcised like themselves, or to keep the Sabbath, or
-to observe any other such ceremonies, then I hold that
-we ought to join ourselves to such, and associate with
-them in all things as kinsmen and brethren.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Justin&#8217;s language shows that there were Sabbath-keeping
-Christians in his time. Such of
-them as were of Jewish descent no doubt generally
-retained circumcision. But it is very unjust
-in him to represent the Gentile Sabbath-keepers
-as observing this rite. That there were many of
-these is evident from the so-called &#8220;Apostolical
-Constitutions,&#8221; and even from the Ignatian Epistles.
-One good thing, however, Justin does say.
-The keeping of the commandments he terms the
-performance of &#8220;the eternal and natural acts of
-righteousness.&#8221; He would consent to fellowship
-those who do these things provided they made
-them no test for others. He well knew in such
-case that the Sabbath would die out in a little
-time. Himself and the more popular party at
-Rome honored as their festival the day observed
-by the heathen Romans, as he reminds the emperor
-in his Apology, and he was willing to fellowship
-the Sabbath-keepers if they would not
-test him by the commandments, <i>i. e.</i>, if they
-would fellowship him in violating them.</p>
-
-<p>That Justin held to the abrogation of the ten
-commandments is also manifest. Trypho, in the
-tenth chapter of the Dialogue, having said to
-Justin, &#8220;You do not obey his commandments,&#8221;
-and again, &#8220;You do not observe the law,&#8221; Justin
-answers in chapter xi. as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;But we do not trust through Moses, or through the
-law; for then we would do the same as yourselves. But
-now&mdash;for I have read that there shall be a final law, and
-a covenant, the chiefest of all, which it is now incumbent
-on all men to observe, as many as are seeking after the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
-inheritance of God. For the law promulgated on Horeb
-is now old, and belongs to yourselves alone; but this is
-for all universally. Now, law placed against law has abrogated
-that which is before it, and a covenant which
-comes after in like manner has put an end to the previous
-one.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>We must, therefore, pronounce Justin a man
-who held to the abrogation of the ten commandments,
-and that the Sabbath was a Jewish institution
-which was unknown before Moses, and of
-no authority since Christ. He held Sunday to
-be the most suitable day for public worship, but
-not upon the ground that the Sabbath had been
-changed to it, for he cuts up the Sabbatic institution
-by the roots; and so far is he from calling
-this day the Christian Sabbath that he gives to
-it the name which it bore as a heathen festival.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V.</h2></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p class="center">Irenæus&mdash;Dionysius&mdash;Melito&mdash;Bardesanes.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF IRENÆUS.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">This</span> father was born &#8220;somewhere between <span class="smcap">a.
-d.</span> 120 and <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 140.&#8221; He was &#8220;bishop of Lyons
-in France during the latter quarter of the second
-century,&#8221; being ordained to that office &#8220;probably
-about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 177.&#8221; His work <i>Against Heresies</i>
-was written &#8220;between <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 182 and <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 188.&#8221;
-First-day writers assert that Irenæus &#8220;says that
-the Lord&#8217;s day was the Christian Sabbath.&#8221; They
-profess to quote from him these words: &#8220;On the
-Lord&#8217;s day every one of us Christians keeps the
-Sabbath, meditating on the law and rejoicing in
-the works of God.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>No such language is found in any of the writings
-of this father. We will quote his entire
-testimony respecting the Sabbath and first-day,
-and the reader can judge. He speaks of Christ&#8217;s
-observance of the Sabbath, and shows that he
-did not violate the day. Thus he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is clear, therefore, that he loosed and vivified
-those who believe in him as Abraham did, doing nothing
-contrary to the law when he healed upon the Sabbath day.
-For the law did not prohibit men from being healed upon
-the Sabbaths; [on the contrary] it even circumcised them
-upon that day, and gave command that the offices should
-be performed by the priests for the people; yea, it did
-not disallow the healing even of dumb animals. Both at
-Siloam and on frequent subsequent occasions, did he perform
-cures upon the Sabbath; and for this reason many
-used to resort to him on the Sabbath days. For the law
-commanded them to abstain from every servile work, that
-is, from all grasping after wealth which is procured by
-trading and by other worldly business; but it exhorted
-them to attend to the exercises of the soul, which consist
-in reflection, and to addresses of a beneficial kind for
-their neighbor&#8217;s benefit. And therefore the Lord reproved
-those who unjustly blamed him for having healed
-upon the Sabbath days. For he did not make void, but
-fulfilled the law, by performing the offices of the high
-priest, propitiating God for men, and cleansing the lepers,
-healing the sick, and himself suffering death, that exiled
-man might go forth from condemnation, and might return
-without fear to his own inheritance. And again, the law
-did not forbid those who were hungry on the Sabbath
-days to take food lying ready at hand: it did, however,
-forbid them to reap and to gather into the barn.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Against
-Heresies</i>, b. iv. chap. viii. sects. 2, 3.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The case of the priests on the Sabbath he
-thus presents:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;And the priests in the temple profaned the Sabbath,
-and were blameless. Wherefore, then, were they blameless?
-Because when in the temple they were not engaged
-in secular affairs, but in the service of the Lord, fulfilling
-the law, but not going beyond it, as that man did, who of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
-his own accord carried dry wood into the camp of God,
-and was justly stoned to death.&#8221; Book iv. chap. viii.
-sect. 3.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Of the necessity of keeping the ten commandments,
-he speaks thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now, that the law did beforehand teach mankind the
-necessity of following Christ, he does himself make manifest,
-when he replied as follows to him who asked him
-what he should do that he might inherit eternal life: &#8216;If
-thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments.&#8217; But
-upon the other asking, &#8216;which?&#8217; again the Lord replied:
-&#8216;Do not commit adultery, do not kill, do not steal, do
-not bear false witness, honor father and mother, and
-thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself,&#8217;&mdash;setting as an
-ascending series before those who wished to follow him,
-the precepts of the law, as the entrance into life; and
-what he then said to one, he said to all. But when the
-former said, &#8216;All these have I done&#8217; (and most likely he
-had not kept them, for in that case the Lord would not
-have said to him, &#8216;Keep the commandments&#8217;), the Lord,
-exposing his covetousness, said to him, &#8216;If thou wilt be
-perfect, go, sell all that thou hast, and distribute to the
-poor; and come follow me,&#8217; promising to those who
-would act thus, the portion belonging to the apostles....
-But he taught that they should obey the commandments
-which God enjoined from the beginning, and
-do away with their former covetousness by good works,
-and follow after Christ.&#8221; Book iv. chap. xii. sect. 5.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Irenæus certainly teaches a very different
-doctrine from that of Justin Martyr concerning
-the commandments. He believed that men must
-keep the commandments, in order to enter eternal
-life. He says further:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;And [we must] not only abstain from evil deeds, but
-even from the desires after them. Now he did not teach
-us these things as being opposed to the law, but as fulfilling
-the law, and implanting in us the varied righteousness
-of the law. That would have been contrary to the
-law, if he had commanded his disciples to do anything
-which the law had prohibited.&#8221; Book iv. chap. xiii.
-sect. 1.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>He also makes the observance of the decalogue
-the test of true piety. Thus he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;They (the Jews) had therefore a law, a course of
-discipline, and a prophecy of future things. For God at
-the first, indeed, warning them by means of natural
-precepts, which from the beginning he had implanted in
-mankind, that is, by means of the decalogue (which, if
-any one does not observe, he has no salvation), did then
-demand nothing more of them.&#8221; Book iv. chap. xv.
-sect. 1.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The precepts of the decalogue he rightly terms
-&#8220;natural precepts,&#8221; that is, precepts which constitute
-&#8220;the work of the law&#8221; written by nature
-in the hearts of all men, but marred by the presence
-of the carnal mind or law of sin in the
-members. That this law of God pertains alike
-to Jews and to Gentiles, he thus affirms:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Inasmuch, then, as all natural precepts are common
-to us and to them (the Jews), they had in them, indeed,
-the beginning and origin; but in us they have received
-growth and completion.&#8221; Book iv. chap. xiii. sect. 4.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>It is certain that Irenæus held the decalogue
-to be now binding on all men; for he says of it
-in the quotation above, &#8220;Which if any one does
-not observe, he has no salvation.&#8221; But, though
-not consistent with his statement respecting the
-decalogue as the law of nature, he classes the
-Sabbath with circumcision, when speaking of it
-as a sign between God and Israel, and says, &#8220;The
-Sabbaths taught that we should continue day by
-day in God&#8217;s service.&#8221; &#8220;Moreover the Sabbath
-of God, that is, the kingdom, was, as it were, indicated
-by created things; in which [kingdom],
-the man who shall have persevered in serving
-God shall, in a state of rest, partake of God&#8217;s
-table.&#8221; He says also of Abraham that he was
-&#8220;without observance of Sabbaths.&#8221; Book iv.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
-chap. xvi. sects. 1, 2. But in the same chapter
-he again asserts the perpetuity and authority of
-the decalogue in these words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Preparing man for this life, the Lord himself did
-speak in his own person to all alike the words of the
-decalogue; and therefore, in like manner, do they remain
-permanently with us, receiving, by means of his advent
-in the flesh, extension and increase, but not abrogation.&#8221;
-Section 4.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This statement establishes the authority of
-each of the ten commandments in the gospel
-dispensation. Yet Irenæus seems to have regarded
-the fourth commandment as only a
-typical precept, and not of perpetual obligation
-like the others.</p>
-
-<p>Irenæus regarded the Sabbath as something
-which pointed forward to the kingdom of God.
-Yet in stating this doctrine he actually indicates
-the origin of the Sabbath at creation, though, as
-we have seen, elsewhere asserting that it was
-not kept by Abraham. Thus, in speaking of the
-reward to be given the righteous, he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;These are [to take place] in the times of the kingdom,
-that is, upon the seventh day, which has been sanctified,
-in which God rested from all the works which he created,
-which is the true Sabbath of the righteous, in which they
-shall not be engaged in any earthly occupation; but shall
-have a table at hand prepared for them by God, supplying
-them with all sorts of dishes.&#8221; Book v. chap. xxxiii.
-sect. 2. And he elsewhere says: &#8220;In as many days as
-this world was made, in so many thousand years shall it
-be concluded.... For the day of the Lord is as a
-thousand years: and in six days created things were
-completed: it is evident, therefore, that they will come
-to an end at the sixth thousand year.&#8221; Book v. chap.
-xxviii. sect. 3.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Though Irenæus is made by first-day writers
-to bear a very explicit testimony that Sunday is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
-the Christian Sabbath, the following, which constitutes
-the seventh fragment of what is called
-the &#8220;Lost Writings of Irenæus,&#8221; is the only instance
-which I have found in a careful search
-through all his works in which he even mentions
-the first day. Here is the entire first-day testimony
-of this father:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;This [custom], of not bending the knee upon Sunday,
-is a symbol of the resurrection, through which we have
-been set free, by the grace of Christ, from sins, and from
-death, which has been put to death under him. Now
-this custom took its rise from apostolic times, as the
-blessed Irenæus, the martyr and bishop of Lyons, declares
-in his treatise <i>On Easter</i>, in which he makes mention of
-Pentecost also; upon which [feast] we do not bend the
-knee, because it is of equal significance with the Lord&#8217;s
-day, for the reason already alleged concerning it.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This is something very remarkable. It is not
-what Irenæus said, after all, but is what an unknown
-writer, in a work entitled <i>Quæs. et Resp.
-ad Othod.</i>, says of him. And all that this writer
-says of Irenæus is that he declares the custom of
-not kneeling upon Sunday &#8220;took its rise from
-apostolic times&#8221;! It does not even appear that
-Irenæus even used the term Lord&#8217;s day as a title
-for the first day of the week. Its use in the
-present quotation is by the unknown writer to
-whom we are indebted for the statement here
-given respecting Irenæus. And this writer, whoever
-he be, is of the opinion that the Pentecost
-is of equal consequence with the so-called Lord&#8217;s
-day! And well he may so judge, inasmuch as
-both of these Catholic festivals are only established
-by the authority of the church. The testimony
-of Irenæus in behalf of Sunday does
-therefore amount simply to this: That the resurrection<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
-is to be commemorated by &#8220;not bending
-the knee upon Sunday&#8221;!</p>
-
-<p>The fiftieth fragment of the &#8220;Lost Writings of
-Irenæus&#8221; is derived from the Nitrian Collection
-of Syriac MSS. It relates to the resurrection of
-the dead. In a note appended to it the Syriac
-editor says of Irenæus that he &#8220;wrote to an
-Alexandrian to the effect that it is right, with
-respect to the feast of the resurrection, that we
-should celebrate it upon the first day of the
-week.&#8221; No extant writing of Irenæus contains
-this statement, but it is likely that the Syriac
-editor possessed some portion of his works now
-lost. And here again it is worthy of notice that
-we have from Irenæus only the plain name of
-&#8220;first day of the week.&#8221; As to the manner of
-celebrating it, the only thing which he sets forth
-is &#8220;not bending the knee upon Sunday.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In the thirty-eighth fragment of his &#8220;Lost
-Writings&#8221; he quotes Col. 2:16, but whether with
-reference to the seventh day, or merely respecting
-the ceremonial sabbaths, his comments do not
-determine. We have now given every statement
-of Irenæus which bears upon the Sabbath and
-the Sunday. It is manifest that the advocates
-of first-day sacredness have made Irenæus testify
-in its behalf to suit themselves. He alludes
-to the first day of the week once or twice, but
-never uses for it the title of Lord&#8217;s day or Christian
-Sabbath, and the <i>only</i> thing which he mentions
-as entering into the celebration of the festival
-was that Christians should not kneel in prayer
-on that day! By first-day writers, Irenæus is
-made to bear an explicit testimony that Sunday
-is the Lord&#8217;s day and the Christian Sabbath!
-And to give great weight to this alleged fact, they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
-say that he was the disciple of Polycarp, who
-was the disciple of John: and whereas John
-speaks of the Lord&#8217;s day, Irenæus, who must
-have known what he meant by the term, says
-that the Lord&#8217;s day is the first day of the week!
-But Polycarp, in his epistle, does not even mention
-the first day of the week, and Irenæus, in
-his extended writings, mentions it only twice,
-and that in &#8220;lost fragments,&#8221; preserved at secondhand,
-and in neither instance does he call it any
-thing but plain &#8220;first day of the week&#8221;! And
-the only honor which he mentions as due this
-day is that the knee should not be bent upon it!
-And even this was not spoken of every Sunday
-in the year, but only of &#8220;Easter Sunday,&#8221; the
-anniversary of Christ&#8217;s resurrection!</p>
-
-<p>Here we might dismiss the case of Irenæus.
-But our first-day friends are determined at least
-to connect him with the use of Lord&#8217;s day as
-a name for Sunday. They therefore bring forward
-Eusebius, who wrote 150 years later, to
-prove that Irenæus did call Sunday by that
-name. Eusebius alludes to the controversy in
-the time of Irenæus, respecting the <i>annual</i> celebration
-of Christ&#8217;s resurrection in what was called
-the festival of the passover. He says (Eccl. Hist.,
-b. v. chap. xxiii.) that the bishops of different
-countries, and Irenæus was of the number, decreed
-&#8220;that the mystery of our Lord&#8217;s resurrection
-should be celebrated on no other day than the
-Lord&#8217;s day; and that on this day alone we should
-observe the close of the paschal fasts,&#8221; and not on
-the fourteenth of the first month as practiced by
-the other party. And in the next chapter, Eusebius
-represents Irenæus as writing a letter to
-this effect to the Bishop of Rome. But observe,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
-Eusebius does not quote the words of any of these
-bishops, but simply gives their decisions in his
-own language. There is therefore no proof that
-they used the term Lord&#8217;s day instead of first
-day of the week. But we have evidence that in
-the decision of this case which Irenæus sent forth,
-he used the term &#8220;first day of the week.&#8221; For
-the introduction to the fiftieth fragment of his
-&#8220;Lost Writings,&#8221; already quoted, gives an ancient
-statement of his words in this decision, as plain
-&#8220;first day of the week.&#8221; It is Eusebius who gives
-us the term Lord&#8217;s day in recording what was
-said by these bishops concerning the first day of
-the week. In his time, <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 324, Lord&#8217;s day had
-become a common designation of Sunday. But
-it was not such in the time of Irenæus, <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 178.
-We have found no writer who flourished before
-him who applies it to Sunday; it is not so applied
-by Irenæus; and we shall find no decisive
-instance of such use till the close of the second
-century.</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF DIONYSIUS, BISHOP OF CORINTH.</h3>
-
-<p>This father, about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 170, wrote a letter to
-the Roman church, in which are found these
-words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;We passed this holy Lord&#8217;s day, in which we read
-your letter, from the constant reading of which we shall
-be able to draw admonition, even as from the reading of
-the former one you sent us written through Clement.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This is the earliest use of the term Lord&#8217;s day
-to be found in the fathers. But it cannot be
-called a decisive testimony that Sunday was thus
-known at this date, inasmuch as every writer who
-precedes Dionysius calls it &#8220;first day of the week,&#8221;
-&#8220;eighth day,&#8221; or &#8220;Sunday,&#8221; but never once by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
-this title; and Dionysius says nothing to indicate
-that Sunday was intended, or to show that he
-did not refer to that day which alone has the
-right to be called the Lord&#8217;s &#8220;holy day.&#8221; Isa.
-58:13. We have found several express testimonies
-to the sacredness of the Sabbath in the writers
-already examined.</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF MELITO, BISHOP OF SARDIS.</h3>
-
-<p>This father wrote about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 177. We know
-little of this writer except the titles of his
-books, which Eusebius has preserved to us. One
-of these titles is this: &#8220;On the Lord&#8217;s Day.&#8221; But
-it should be remembered that down to this date
-no writer has called Sunday the Lord&#8217;s day; and
-that every one who certainly spoke of that day
-called it by some other name than Lord&#8217;s day. To
-say, therefore, as do first-day writers, that Melito
-wrote of Sunday, is to speak without just warrant.
-He uses <span title="tês kyriakês">&#964;&#8134;&#962; &#954;&#965;&#961;&#953;&#945;&#954;&#8134;&#962;</span>, &#8220;the Lord&#8217;s,&#8221; but does
-not join with it <span title="hêmera">&#7969;&#956;&#941;&#961;&#945;</span>, a &#8220;day,&#8221; as does John. He
-wrote of something pertaining to the Lord, but it
-is not certain that it was the Lord&#8217;s day. Moreover,
-Clement, who next uses this term, uses it in
-a mystical sense.</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF THE HERETIC BARDESANES.</h3>
-
-<p>Bardesanes, the Syrian, flourished about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span>
-180. He belonged to the Gnostic sect of Valentinians,
-and abandoning them, &#8220;devised errors of
-his own.&#8221; In his &#8220;Book of the Laws of Countries,&#8221;
-he replies to the views of astrologers who
-assert that the stars govern men&#8217;s actions. He
-shows the folly of this by enumerating the peculiarities
-of different races and sects. In doing this,
-he speaks of the strictness with which the Jews<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
-kept the Sabbath. Of the new sect called Christians,
-which &#8220;Christ at his advent planted in
-every country,&#8221; he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;On one day, the first of the week, we assemble ourselves
-together, and on the days of the readings we abstain
-from [taking] sustenance.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This shows that the Gnostics used Sunday as
-the day for religious assemblies. Whether he
-recognized others besides Gnostics, as Christians,
-we cannot say. We find no allusion, however, to
-Sunday as a day of abstinence from labor, except
-so far as necessary for their meetings. What
-their days of fasting, which are here alluded to,
-were, cannot now be determined. It is also
-worthy of notice that this writer, who certainly
-speaks of Sunday, and this as late as <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 180,
-does not call it Lord&#8217;s day, nor give it any sacred
-title whatever, but speaks of it as &#8220;first day of
-the week.&#8221; No writer down to <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 180, who is
-known to speak of Sunday, calls it the Lord&#8217;s
-day.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI.</h2></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p class="center">Theophilus&mdash;Clement of Alexandria.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF THEOPHILUS OF ANTIOCH.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">This</span> father became Bishop of Antioch in <span class="smcap">a. d.</span>
-168, and died <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 181. First-day writers represent
-him as saying, &#8220;Both <i>custom</i> and <i>reason</i>
-challenge from us that we should honor the Lord&#8217;s
-day, seeing on that day it was that our Lord Jesus
-completed his resurrection from the dead.&#8221;
-These writers, however, give no reference to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
-particular place in the works of Theophilus where
-this is to be found. I have carefully examined
-every paragraph of all the extant writings of
-this father, and that several times over, without
-discovering any such statement. I am constrained,
-therefore, to state that nothing of the kind above
-quoted is to be found in Theophilus! And further
-than this, the term Lord&#8217;s day does not occur
-in this writer, nor does he even refer to the
-first day of the week except in quoting Genesis
-1, in a <i>single instance</i>! But though he makes
-no mention of the Sunday festival, he makes the
-following reference to the Sabbath in his remarks
-concerning the creation of the world:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Moreover [they spoke], concerning the seventh day,
-which all men acknowledge; but the most know not that
-what among the Hebrews is called the &#8216;Sabbath,&#8217; is translated
-into Greek the &#8216;seventh&#8217; (<span title="hebdomas">&#7953;&#946;&#948;&#959;&#956;&#8048;&#962;</span>), a name which is
-adopted by every nation, although they know not the
-reason of the appellation.&#8221; <i>Theophilus to Autolycus</i>, b.
-ii. chap. xii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Though Theophilus is in error in saying that
-the Hebrew word <i>Sabbath</i> is translated into Greek
-<i>seventh</i>, his statement indicates that he held the
-origin of the Sabbath to be when God sanctified
-the seventh day. These are the words of Scripture,
-as given by him, on which he wrote the
-above:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;And on the sixth day God finished his works which
-he made, and rested on the seventh day from all his works
-which he made. And God blessed the seventh day, and
-sanctified it; because in it he rested from all his works
-which God began to create.&#8221; Book ii. chap. xi.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In the fifteenth chapter of this book, he compares
-those who &#8220;keep the law and commandments
-of God&#8221; to the fixed stars, while the &#8220;wandering
-stars&#8221; are &#8220;a type of the men who have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
-wandered from God, abandoning his law and commandments.&#8221;
-Of the law itself, he speaks thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;We have learned a holy law; but we have as law-giver
-him who is really God, who teaches us to act righteously,
-and to be pious, and to do good.&#8221; After quoting all but
-the third and fourth commandments, he says: &#8220;Of this
-great and wonderful law which tends to all righteousness,
-the <span class="smcap">TEN HEADS</span> are such as we have already rehearsed.&#8221;
-Book iii. chap. ix.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>He makes the keeping of the law and commandments
-the condition of a part in the resurrection
-to eternal life:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;For God has given us a law and holy commandments;
-and every one who keeps these can be saved, and, obtaining
-the resurrection, can inherit incorruption.&#8221; Book ii.
-chap. xxvii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>And yet this man who bears such a noble testimony
-to the commandments and the law, and
-who says not one word concerning the festival of
-Sunday, is made to speak explicitly in behalf of
-this so-called Christian Sabbath!</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA,
-<span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 194.</h3>
-
-<p>This father was born about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 160, and died
-about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 220. He wrote about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 194, and
-is the first of the fathers who uses the term
-Lord&#8217;s day in such a manner as possibly to signify
-by it the first day of the week. And yet he
-expressly speaks of the Sabbath as a day of rest,
-and of the first day of the week as a day for labor!
-The change of the Sabbath and the institution
-of the so-called Christian Sabbath were
-alike unknown to him. Of the ten commandments,
-he speaks thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;We have the decalogue given by Moses, which, indicating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
-by an elementary principle, simple and of one kind,
-defines the designation of sins in a way conducive to salvation,&#8221;
-etc.&mdash;<i>The Instructor</i>, b. iii. chap. xii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>He thus alludes to the Sabbath:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thus the Lord did not hinder from doing good while
-keeping the Sabbath; but allowed us to communicate of
-those divine mysteries, and of that holy light, to those
-who are able to receive them.&#8221;&mdash;<i>The Miscellanies</i>, b. i.
-chap. i.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To restrain one&#8217;s self from doing good is the work of
-vice; but to keep from wrong is the beginning of salvation.
-So the Sabbath, by abstinence from evils, seems to
-indicate self-restraint.&#8221; Book iv. chap. iii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>He calls love the Lord of the Sabbath:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;He convicted the man, who boasted that he had fulfilled
-the injunctions of the law, of not loving his neighbor;
-and it is by beneficence that the love which, according
-to the Gnostic ascending scale, is Lord of the Sabbath,
-proclaims itself.&#8221; Book iv. chap. vi.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Referring to the case of the priests in Eze. 43:27,
-he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;And they purify themselves seven days, the period in
-which creation was consummated. For on the seventh
-day the rest is celebrated; and on the eighth, he brings
-a propitiation, as it is written in Ezekiel, according to
-which propitiation the promise is to be received.&#8221; Book
-iv. chap. xxv.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>We come now to the first instance in the fathers
-in which the term Lord&#8217;s day is perhaps applied
-to Sunday. Clement is the father who does
-this, and he very properly substantiates it with
-evidence. He does not say that Saint John thus
-applied this name, but he finds authority for this
-in the writings of the heathen philosopher Plato,
-who, he thinks, spoke of it prophetically!</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;And the Lord&#8217;s day Plato prophetically speaks of in
-the tenth book of the <i>Republic</i>, in these words: &#8216;And
-when seven days have passed to each of them in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
-meadow, on the eighth day they are to set out and arrive
-in four days.&#8217; By the meadow is to be understood the
-fixed sphere, as being a mild and genial spot, and the locality
-of the pious; and by the seven days each motion of
-the seven planets, and the whole practical art which
-speeds to the end of the rest. But after the wandering
-orbs the journey leads to Heaven, that is, to the eighth
-motion and day. And he says that souls are gone on the
-fourth day, pointing out the passage through the four elements.&#8221;
-Book v. chap. xiv.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>By the eighth day to which Clement here applies
-the name of Lord&#8217;s day the first day is possibly
-intended, though he appears to speak solely
-of mystical days. But having said thus much in
-behalf of the eighth day, he in the very next
-sentence commences to establish from the Greek
-writers the sacredness of that seventh day which
-the Hebrews hallowed. This shows that whatever
-regard he might have for the eighth day, he
-certainly cherished the seventh day as sacred.
-Thus he continues:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;But the seventh day is recognized as sacred, not by
-the Hebrews only, but also by the Greeks; according to
-which the whole world of all animals and plants revolves.
-Hesiod says of it:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;The first, and fourth, and seventh days were held
-sacred.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And again: &#8216;And on the seventh the sun&#8217;s resplendent
-orb.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And Homer: &#8216;And on the seventh then came the
-sacred day.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And: &#8216;The seventh was sacred.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And again: &#8216;It was the seventh day, and all things
-were accomplished.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And again: &#8216;And on the seventh morn we leave the
-stream of Acheron.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Callimachus the poet also writes: &#8216;It was the seventh
-morn, and they had all things done.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And again: &#8216;Among good days is the seventh day,
-and the seventh race.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>&#8220;And: &#8216;The seventh is among the prime, and the seventh
-is perfect.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">&#8216;Now all the seven were made in starry heaven,</div>
-<div class="verse">In circles shining as the years appear.&#8217;</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Elegies of Solon, too, intensely deify the seventh
-day.&#8221; Book v. chap. xiv.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Some of these quotations are not now found in
-the writings which Clement cites. And whether
-or not he rightly applies them to the seventh-day
-Sabbath, the fact that he does so apply them
-is incontestible proof that he honored that day as
-sacred, whatever might also be his regard for that
-day which he distinguishes as the eighth.</p>
-
-<p>In book vi., chapter v., he alludes to the celebration
-of some of the annual sabbaths. And in
-chapter xvi., he thus speaks of the fourth
-commandment:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;And the fourth word is that which intimates that the
-world was created by God, and that <i>he gave us the seventh
-day as a rest</i>, on account of the trouble that there is in
-life. For God is incapable of weariness, and suffering,
-and want. <i>But we who bear flesh need rest. The seventh
-day, therefore, is proclaimed a rest</i>&mdash;abstraction from ills&mdash;preparing
-for the primal day, our true rest; which, in
-truth, is the first creation of light, in which all things are
-viewed and possessed. From this day the first wisdom
-and knowledge illuminate us.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This certainly teaches that the Sabbath was
-made for man, and that he now needs it as a day
-of rest. It also indicates that Clement recognized
-the authority of the fourth commandment, for he
-treats of the ten commandments in order, and
-comments on what each enjoins or forbids. In
-the next paragraph, however, he makes some remarkable
-suggestions. Thus he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Having reached this point, we must mention these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
-things by the way; since the discourse has turned on the
-seventh and the eighth. For the eighth may possibly turn
-out to be properly the seventh, and the seventh, manifestly
-the sixth, and the latter,<a name="FNanchor_A_4" id="FNanchor_A_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_4" class="fnanchor">[D]</a> properly the Sabbath,
-and the seventh, a day of work. For the creation of the
-world was concluded in six days.&#8221; Book vi. chap. xvi.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Clement thinks it possible that the eighth day
-(Sunday), may really be the seventh day, and
-that the seventh day (Saturday) may in fact
-be the true sixth day. But let not our Sunday
-friends exult at this, for Clement by no means
-helps their case. Having said that Sunday may
-be properly the seventh day, and Saturday manifestly
-the sixth day, he calls &#8220;the <span class="smcap">LATTER</span> properly
-the Sabbath, and the seventh a day of
-work&#8221;! By &#8220;the latter,&#8221; of necessity must be
-understood the day last mentioned, which he says
-should be called not the seventh, but the sixth;
-and by &#8220;the seventh,&#8221; must certainly be intended
-that day which he says is not the eighth, but the
-seventh, that is to say, Sunday. It follows therefore
-in the estimation of Clement that Sunday was
-a day of ordinary labor, and Saturday, the day of
-rest. He had an excellent opportunity to say that
-the eighth day or Sunday was not only the seventh
-day, but also the true Sabbath, but instead of
-doing this he gives this honor to the day which
-he says is not the seventh but the sixth, and declares
-that the real seventh day or Sunday is &#8220;a
-day of work.&#8221; And he proceeds at length to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
-show the sacredness and importance of the number
-six. His opinion of the numbering of the
-days is unimportant; but the fact that this father
-who is the first writer that connects the term
-Lord&#8217;s day with the eighth day or Sunday, does
-expressly represent that day as one of ordinary
-labor, and does also give to the previous day the
-honors of the Sabbath is something that should
-shut the mouths of those who claim him as a believer
-in the so-called Christian Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p>In the same chapter, this writer alludes to the
-Sabbath vaguely, apparently understanding it to
-prefigure the rest that remains to the people of
-God:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rightly, then, they reckon the number seven motherless
-and childless, interpreting the Sabbath, and figuratively
-expressing the nature of the rest, in which &#8216;they
-neither marry nor are given in marriage any more.&#8217;&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The following quotation completes the testimony
-of Clement. He speaks of the precept
-concerning fasting, that it is fulfilled by abstinence
-from sinful pleasure. And thus he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;He fasts, then, according to the law, abstaining from
-bad deeds, and, according to the perfection of the gospel,
-from evil thoughts. Temptations are applied to him, not
-for his purification, but, as we have said, for the good of
-his neighbors, if, making trial of toils and pains, he has
-despised and passed them by. The same holds of pleasure.
-For it is the highest achievement for one who has
-had trial of it, afterwards to abstain. For what great
-thing is it, if a man restrains himself in what he knows
-not? He, in fulfillment of the precept, according to the
-gospel, keeps the Lord&#8217;s day, when he abandons an evil
-disposition, and assumes that of the Gnostic, glorifying
-the Lord&#8217;s resurrection in himself.&#8221; Book vii. chap. xii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Clement asserts that one fasts according to the
-law when he abstains from evil deeds, and, according
-to the gospel, when he abstains from evil<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
-thoughts. He shows how the precept respecting
-fasting is fulfilled when he speaks of one who
-&#8220;in fulfillment of the precept, according to the
-gospel, keeps the Lord&#8217;s day when he abandons
-an evil disposition.&#8221; This abandonment of an
-evil disposition, according to Clement, keeps the
-Lord&#8217;s day, and glorifies the Lord&#8217;s resurrection.
-But this duty pertains to no one day of the week,
-but to all alike, so that he seems evidently to
-inculcate a perpetual Lord&#8217;s day, even as Justin
-Martyr enjoins the observance of a &#8220;perpetual
-Sabbath,&#8221; to be acceptably sanctified by those
-who maintain true repentance. Though these
-writers are not always consistent with themselves,
-yet two facts go to show that Clement in
-this book means just what his words literally
-import, viz., that the keeping of the Lord&#8217;s day
-and the glorifying of the resurrection is not the
-observance of a certain day of the week, but the
-performance of a work which embraces every
-day of one&#8217;s whole life.</p>
-
-<p>1. The first of these facts is his express statement
-of this doctrine in the first paragraph of
-the seventh chapter of this book. Thus he
-says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now, we are commanded to reverence and to honor
-the same one, being persuaded that he is Word, Saviour,
-and Leader, and by him, the Father, <span class="smcap">NOT ON SPECIAL
-DAYS, AS SOME OTHERS</span>, but <i>doing this continually in our
-whole life</i>, and in every way. Certainly the elect race,
-justified by the precept, says, &#8216;Seven times a day have I
-praised thee.&#8217; Whence <i>not</i> in a specified place, or selected
-temple, or at <i>certain festivals</i>, and on <i>appointed
-days</i>, but <i>during his whole life</i>, the Gnostic in every place,
-even if he be alone by himself, and wherever he has any
-of those who have exercised the like faith, honors God;
-that is, acknowledges his gratitude for the knowledge of
-the way to live.&#8221; Book vii. chap. vii.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>2. The second of these facts is that in book vi.,
-chapter xvi., as already quoted, he expressly
-represents Sunday as &#8220;a day of work.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Certainly Clement of Alexandria should not be
-cited as teaching the change of the Sabbath, or
-advocating the so-called Christian Sabbath.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF TERTULLIAN, <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 200.</h3>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">This</span> writer contradicts himself in the most
-extraordinary manner concerning the Sabbath
-and the law of God. He asserts that the Sabbath
-was abolished by Christ, and elsewhere emphatically
-declares that he did not abolish it. He
-says that Joshua violated the Sabbath, and then
-expressly declares that he did not violate it. He
-says that Christ broke the Sabbath, and then
-shows that he never did this. He represents the
-eighth day as more honorable than the seventh,
-and elsewhere states just the reverse. He asserts
-that the law is abolished, and in other places
-affirms its perpetual obligation. He speaks of
-the Lord&#8217;s day as the eighth day, and is the
-second of the early writers who makes an application
-of this term to Sunday, if we allow Clement
-to have really spoken of it. But though
-he thus uses the term like Clement he also like
-him teaches a perpetual Lord&#8217;s day, or, like
-Justin Martyr, a perpetual Sabbath in the observance
-of every day. And with the observance
-of Sunday as the Lord&#8217;s day he brings in &#8220;offerings
-for the dead&#8221; and the perpetual use of the
-sign of the cross. But he expressly affirms that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
-these things rest, not upon the authority of the
-Scriptures, but wholly upon that of tradition and
-custom. And though he speaks of the Sabbath
-as abrogated by Christ, he expressly contradicts
-this by asserting that Christ &#8220;did not at all rescind
-the Sabbath,&#8221; and that he imparted an
-additional sanctity to that day which from the
-beginning had been consecrated by the benediction
-of the Father. This strange mingling of light
-and darkness plainly indicates the age in which
-this author lived. He was not so far removed
-from the time of the apostles but that many clear
-rays of divine truth shone upon him; and he
-was far enough advanced in the age of apostasy
-to have its dense darkness materially affect him.
-He stood on the line between expiring day and
-advancing night. Sometimes the law of God
-was unspeakably sacred; at other times tradition
-was of higher authority than the law. Sometimes
-divine institutions were alone precious in
-his estimation; at others he was better satisfied
-with those which were sustained only by custom
-and tradition.</p>
-
-<p>Tertullian&#8217;s first reference to Sunday is found
-in that part of his Apology in which he excuses
-his brethren from the charge of sun-worship.
-Thus he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Others, again, certainly with more information and
-greater verisimilitude, believe that the sun is our God.
-We shall be counted Persians, perhaps, though we do
-not worship the orb of day painted on a piece of linen
-cloth, having himself everywhere in his own disk. The
-idea, no doubt, has originated from our being known to
-turn to the east in prayer. But you, many of you, also,
-under pretense sometimes of worshiping the heavenly
-bodies, move your lips in the direction of the sunrise. In
-the same way, if we devote Sunday to rejoicing, from a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
-far different reason than sun-worship, we have some resemblance
-to those of you who devote the day of Saturn
-to ease and luxury, though they, too, go far away from
-Jewish ways, of which indeed they are ignorant.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Thelwell&#8217;s
-Translation</i>, sect. 16.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Several important facts are presented in this
-quotation.</p>
-
-<p>1. Sunday was an ancient heathen festival in
-honor of the sun.</p>
-
-<p>2. Those Christians who observed the festival
-of Sunday were claimed by the heathen as sun-worshipers.</p>
-
-<p>3. The entrance of the Sunday festival into
-the church in an age of apostasy when men very
-generally honored it, was not merely not difficult
-to be effected, it was actually difficult to be
-prevented.</p>
-
-<p>It would seem from the closing sentence that
-some of the heathen used the seventh day as a
-day of ease and luxury. But Mr. Reeve&#8217;s Translation
-gives a very different sense. He renders
-Tertullian thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;We solemnize the day after Saturday in contradistinction
-to those who call this day their Sabbath, and devote
-it to ease and eating, deviating from the old Jewish
-customs, which they are now very ignorant of.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The persons here mentioned so contemptuously
-could not be heathens, for they do not call any
-day &#8220;their Sabbath.&#8221; Nor could they be Jews,
-as is plain from the form of expression used.
-If we accept Mr. Reeve&#8217;s Translation, these persons
-were Christians who observe the seventh
-day. Tertullian does not say that the Sunday
-festival was observed by divine authority, but
-that they might distinguish themselves from
-those who call the seventh day the Sabbath.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>Tertullian again declares that his brethren did
-not observe the days held sacred by the Jews.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;We neither accord with the Jews in their peculiarities
-in regard to food, nor in their sacred days.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Apology</i>,
-sect. 21.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>But those Christians who would not keep the
-Sabbath because the festival of Sunday was in
-their estimation more worthy of honor, or more
-convenient to observe, were greatly given to the
-observance of other days, in common with the
-heathen, besides Sunday. Thus Tertullian charges
-home upon them this sin:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Holy Spirit upbraids the Jews with their holy
-days. &#8216;Your sabbaths, and new moons, and ceremonies,&#8217;
-says he, &#8216;my soul hateth.&#8217; By us (to whom Sabbaths
-are strange, and the new moons, and festivals
-formerly beloved by God) the Saturnalia and New Year&#8217;s
-and mid-winter&#8217;s festivals and Matronalia are frequented&mdash;presents
-come and go&mdash;New Year&#8217;s gifts&mdash;games join
-their noise&mdash;banquets join their din! Oh! better fidelity
-of the nations to their own sect, which claims no solemnity
-of the Christians for itself! Not the Lord&#8217;s day,
-not Pentecost, even if they had known them, would they
-have shared with us; for they would fear lest they should
-seem to be Christians. <i>We</i> are not apprehensive lest we
-seem to be <i>heathens</i>! If any indulgence is to be granted
-to the flesh, you have it. I will not say your own days,
-but more too; for to the <i>heathens</i> each festive day occurs
-but once annually; <i>you</i> have a festive day every eighth
-day.&#8221;&mdash;<i>On Idolatry</i>, chap. xiv.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>These Sunday-festival Christians, &#8220;to whom
-Sabbaths&#8221; were &#8220;strange,&#8221; could not have kept
-Sunday as a Sabbath. They had never heard
-that by divine authority the Sabbath was changed
-from the seventh to the first day of the week, and
-that Sunday is the Christian Sabbath. Let any
-candid man read the above words from Tertullian,
-and then deny, if he can, that these strangers to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
-the Sabbath, and observers of heathen festivals,
-were not a body of apostatizing Christians!</p>
-
-<p>Hereafter Tertullian will give an excellent commentary
-on his quotation from Isaiah. It seems
-from him that the so-called Lord&#8217;s day came once
-in eight days. Were these words to be taken in
-their most obvious sense, then it would come one
-day later each week than it did the preceding
-week, and thus it would come successively on all
-the days of the week in order, at intervals of
-eight days. He might in such case well say:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;However, <i>every</i> day is the Lord&#8217;s; every hour, every
-time, is apt for baptism; if there is a difference in the
-<i>solemnity</i>, in the <i>grace</i>, distinction there is none.&#8221;&mdash;<i>On
-Baptism</i>, chap. xix.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>But it seems that Tertullian by the eighth day
-intended Sunday. And here is something from
-him relative to the manner of keeping it. Thus
-he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;In the matter of <i>kneeling</i> also, prayer is subject to diversity
-of observance, through the act of some few who
-abstain from kneeling on the Sabbath; and since this
-dissension is particularly on its trial before the churches,
-the Lord will give his grace that the dissentients may
-either yield, or else indulge their opinion without offense
-to others. We, however (just as we have received), only
-on the day of the Lord&#8217;s resurrection ought to guard not
-only against kneeling, but every posture and office of
-solicitude; deferring even our businesses, lest we give
-any place to the devil. Similarly, too, in the period of
-Pentecost; which period we distinguish by the same
-solemnity of exultation. But who would hesitate <i>every</i>
-day to prostrate himself before God, at least in the first
-prayer with which we enter on the daylight.&#8221;&mdash;<i>On Prayer</i>,
-chap. xxiii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>A more literal translation of this passage would
-expressly connect the term Lord&#8217;s day with the
-day of Christ&#8217;s resurrection, the original being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
-&#8220;die Dominico resurrexionis.&#8221; The special weekly
-honor which Tertullian would have men confer
-solely upon Sunday was to pray on that day
-in a <i>standing</i> posture. And somewhat to his
-annoyance, &#8220;some few&#8221; would thus act with reference
-to the Sabbath. There is, however, some
-reference to the deferral of business on Sunday.
-And this is worthy of notice, for it is the first
-sentence we have discovered that looks like abstinence
-from labor on Sunday, and we shall not
-find another before the time of Constantine&#8217;s famous
-Sunday law, <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 321.</p>
-
-<p>But this passage is far from asserting that labor
-on Sunday was sinful. It speaks of &#8220;deferring
-even our businesses;&#8221; but this does not necessarily
-imply anything beyond its postponement
-during the hours devoted to religious services.
-And we shall find nothing in Tertullian, nor in
-his cotemporaries, that will go beyond this, while
-we shall find much to restrict us to the interpretation
-of his words here given. Tertullian could
-not say that Sabbaths were strange to him and
-his brethren if they religiously refrained from labor
-on each Sunday. But let us hear him again
-concerning the observance of Sunday and kindred
-practices:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;We take also, in meetings before daybreak, and from
-the hand of none but the presidents, the sacrament of the
-Eucharist, which the Lord both commanded to be eaten
-at meal-times, and enjoined to be taken by all [alike].
-As often as the anniversary comes round, we make offerings
-for the dead as birth-day honors. We count fasting
-or kneeling in worship on the Lord&#8217;s day to be unlawful.
-We rejoice in the same privilege also from Easter to Whit-sunday.
-We feel pained should any wine or bread, even
-though our own, be cast upon the ground. At every forward
-step and movement, at every going in and out, when
-we put on our clothes and shoes, when we bathe, when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
-we sit at table, when we light the lamps, on couch, on
-seat, in all the ordinary actions of daily life, we trace upon
-the forehead the sign [of the cross].</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If, for these and other such rules, you insist upon
-having positive Scripture injunction, you will find none.
-Tradition will be held forth to you as the originator of
-them, custom, as their strengthener, and faith, as their observer.
-That reason will support tradition, and custom,
-and faith, you will either yourself perceive, or learn from
-some one who has.&#8221;&mdash;<i>De Corona</i>, sects. 3 and 4.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The things which he counted unlawful on
-Sunday he expressly names. These are fasting
-and kneeling on that day. But ordinary labor
-does not come into his list of things unlawful on
-that day. And now observe what progress apostasy
-and superstition had made in other things
-also. &#8220;Offerings for the dead&#8221; were regularly
-made, and the sign of the cross was repeated as often
-as God would have men rehearse his commandments.
-See Deut. 6:6-9. And now if you wish
-to know Tertullian&#8217;s authority for the Sunday festival,
-offerings for the dead, and the sign of the
-cross, he frankly tells you what it is. He had no
-authority from the Scriptures. Custom and tradition
-were all that he could offer. Modern divines
-can find plenty of authority, from the Scriptures,
-as they assert, for maintaining the so-called Lord&#8217;s
-day. Tertullian knew of none. He took the
-Sunday festival, offerings for the dead, and the
-sign of the cross, on the authority of custom and
-tradition; if you take the first on such authority,
-why do you not, also, the other two?</p>
-
-<p>But Tertullian finds it necessary to write a
-second defense of his brethren from the charge of
-being sun-worshipers, a charge directly connected
-with their observance of the festival of Sunday.
-Here are his words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Others, with greater regard to good manners, it must
-be confessed, suppose that the sun is the god of the Christians,
-because it is a well-known fact that we pray towards
-the east, or because we make Sunday a day of festivity.
-What then? Do you do less than this? Do not many
-among you, with an affectation of sometimes worshiping
-the heavenly bodies likewise, move your lips in the direction
-of the sunrise? It is you, at all events, who have even
-admitted the sun into the calendar of the week; and you
-have selected its day [Sunday], in preference to the preceding
-day, as the most suitable in the week for either an
-entire abstinence from the bath, or for its postponement
-until the evening, or for taking rest, and for banqueting.
-By resorting to these customs, you deliberately deviate
-from your own religious rites to those of strangers. For
-the Jewish feasts are the Sabbath and &#8216;the Purification,&#8217;
-and Jewish also are the ceremonies of the lamps, and the
-fasts of unleavened bread, and the &#8216;littoral prayers,&#8217; all
-which institutions and practices are of course foreign from
-your gods. Wherefore, that I may return from this digression,
-you who reproach us with the sun and Sunday
-should consider your proximity to us. We are not far
-off from your Saturn and your days of rest.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Ad Nationes</i>,
-b. i. chap. xiii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Tertullian in this discourse addresses himself to
-the nations still in idolatry. The heathen festival
-of Sunday, which was with some nations more
-ancient, had been established among the Romans
-at a comparatively recent date, though earlier
-than the time of Justin Martyr, the first Christian
-writer in whom an authentic mention of the
-day is found. The heathen reproached the early
-Sunday Christians with being sun-worshipers,
-&#8220;because,&#8221; says Tertullian, &#8220;we pray towards the
-east, or because we make Sunday a day of festivity.&#8221;
-And how does Tertullian answer this grave
-charge? He could not say, We do it by command
-of God to honor the first day of the week, for he
-expressly states in a former quotation that no
-such precept exists. So he retorts thus: &#8220;What<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
-then? Do you [heathen] do less than this?&#8221;
-And he adds: &#8220;You have selected its day [Sunday]
-in preference to the preceding day&#8221; (Saturday),
-etc. That is to say, Tertullian wishes to
-know why, if the heathen could choose Sunday
-in preference to Saturday, the Christians could
-not have the same privilege! Could there be a
-stronger incidental evidence that Sunday was
-cherished by the early apostatizing Christians, not
-because commanded of God, but because it was
-generally observed by their heathen neighbors,
-and therefore more convenient to them?</p>
-
-<p>But Tertullian next avows his faith in the ten
-commandments as &#8220;the rules of our regenerate
-life,&#8221; that is to say, the rules which govern Christian
-men; and he gives the preference to the seventh
-day over the eighth:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;I must also say something about the period of the
-soul&#8217;s birth, that I may omit nothing incidental in the
-whole process. A mature and regular birth takes place,
-as a general rule, at the commencement of the tenth
-month. They who theorize respecting numbers, honor
-the number ten as the parent of all the others, and as imparting
-perfection to the human nativity. For my own
-part, I prefer viewing this measure of time in reference to
-God, as if implying that the ten months rather initiated
-man into the ten commandments; so that the numerical
-estimate of the time needed to consummate our natural
-birth should correspond to the numerical classification of
-<i>the rules of our regenerate life</i>. But inasmuch as birth is
-also completed with the seventh month, I more readily
-recognize in this number than in the eighth the honor of
-a numerical agreement with the Sabbatical period; so
-that the month in which God&#8217;s image is sometimes produced
-in a human birth, shall in its number tally with the
-day on which God&#8217;s creation was completed and hallowed.&#8221;&mdash;<i>De
-Anima</i>, chap. xxxvii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This kind of reasoning is of course destitute of
-any force. But in adducing such an argument<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
-Tertullian avows his faith in the ten commandments
-as the rule of the Christian&#8217;s life, gives the
-preference to the seventh day as the Sabbath,
-and deduces the origin of the Sabbath from God&#8217;s
-act of hallowing the seventh day at creation.</p>
-
-<p>Though Tertullian elsewhere, as we shall see,
-speaks lightly of the law of God, and represents
-it as abolished, his next testimony most sacredly
-honors that law, and while acknowledging the
-Sabbath as one of its precepts, he recognizes the
-authority of the whole code. Thus he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of how deep guilt, then, adultery&mdash;which is likewise
-a matter of fornication, in accordance with its criminal
-function&mdash;is to be accounted, the law of God first comes to
-hand to show us; if it is true [as it is], that after interdicting
-the superstitious service of alien gods, and the making
-of idols themselves, after commending [to religious observance]
-the veneration of the Sabbath, after commanding
-a religious regard toward parents, second [only to that]
-toward God, [that law] laid, as the next substratum in
-strengthening and fortifying such counts, no other precept
-than &#8216;Thou shalt not commit adultery.&#8217;&#8221;&mdash;<i>On Modesty</i>,
-chap. v.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>And of this precept Tertullian presently tells
-us that it stands &#8220;in the very forefront of <i>the
-most holy law</i>, among the primary counts of <i>the
-celestial edict</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In his treatise &#8220;On Fasting,&#8221; chapter xiv., he
-terms &#8220;the Sabbath&mdash;a day never to be kept
-as a fast except at the passover season, according
-to a reason elsewhere given.&#8221; And in chapter
-xv., he excepts from the two weeks in which
-meat was not eaten &#8220;the Sabbaths&#8221; and &#8220;the
-Lord&#8217;s days.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But in his &#8220;Answer to the Jews,&#8221; chapter ii.,
-he represents the law as variously modified from
-Adam to Christ; he denies &#8220;that the Sabbath is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
-still to be observed;&#8221; classes it with circumcision;
-declares that Adam was &#8220;inobservant of the
-Sabbath,&#8221; affirms the same of Abel, Noah, Enoch,
-and Melchizedek, and asserts that Lot &#8220;was freed
-from the conflagration of the Sodomites&#8221; &#8220;for
-the merits of righteousness, without observance
-of the law.&#8221; And in the beginning of chapter
-iii., he again classes the Sabbath with circumcision,
-and asserts that Abraham did not &#8220;observe
-the Sabbath.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In chapter iv., he declares that &#8220;the observance
-of the Sabbath&#8221; was &#8220;temporary.&#8221; And
-he continues thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;For the Jews say, that from the beginning God sanctified
-the seventh day, by resting on it from all his works
-which he made; and that thence it was, likewise, that
-Moses said to the people: &#8216;Remember the day of the
-Sabbaths,&#8217;&#8221; etc.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Now see how Tertullian and his brethren disposed
-of this commandment respecting the seventh
-day:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Whence we [Christians] understand that <i>we</i> still more
-ought to observe a Sabbath from all &#8216;servile work&#8217; always,
-and not only every seventh day, but through all time.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>That is to say in plain language, they would,
-under pretense of keeping every day as a Sabbath,
-not only work on the seventh day of the
-week, but on all the days of the week. But this
-plainly proves that Tertullian did not think the
-seventh day was superseded by the first. And
-thus he proceeds:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;And through this arises the question for us, <i>what</i>
-Sabbath God willed us to keep.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Our first-day friends quote Tertullian in behalf
-of what they call the Christian Sabbath.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
-Had he believed in such an institution he would
-certainly have named it in answer to this question.
-But mark his answer:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;For the Scriptures point to a Sabbath eternal and a
-Sabbath temporal. For Isaiah the prophet says, &#8216;<i>Your</i>
-Sabbaths my soul hateth.&#8217; And in another place he says,
-&#8216;My Sabbaths ye have profaned.&#8217; Whence we discern
-that the temporal Sabbath is human, and the eternal Sabbath
-is accounted divine.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This temporal Sabbath is the seventh day;
-this eternal Sabbath is the keeping of all days
-alike, as Tertullian affirms that he and those with
-him did.</p>
-
-<p>He next declares that Isaiah&#8217;s prediction respecting
-the Sabbath in the new earth (Isa. 66:
-22, 23), was &#8220;fulfilled in the times of Christ,
-when all flesh&mdash;that is, every nation&mdash;came to
-adore in Jerusalem God the Father.&#8221; And he
-adds: &#8220;Thus, therefore, before this temporal Sabbath
-[the seventh day], there was withal an
-eternal Sabbath foreshown and foretold,&#8221; <i>i. e.</i>, the
-keeping of all days alike. And this he fortifies
-by the assertion that the holy men before Moses
-did not observe the seventh day. And in proof
-that the Sabbath was one day to cease, he cites
-the compassing of Jericho for seven days, one of
-which must have been the Sabbath. And to this
-he adds the case of the Maccabees who fought
-certain battles on the Sabbath. In due time we
-shall see how admirably he answers such objections
-as these of his own raising.</p>
-
-<p>In chapter vi., he repeats his theory of the
-&#8220;Sabbath temporal&#8221; [the seventh day], and the
-&#8220;Sabbath eternal&#8221; or the &#8220;Spiritual Sabbath,&#8221;
-which is &#8220;to observe a Sabbath from all &#8216;servile
-works&#8217; always, and not only every seventh day,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
-but through all time.&#8221; He says that the ancient
-law has ceased, and that &#8220;the new law&#8221; and the
-&#8220;Spiritual Sabbath&#8221; have come.</p>
-
-<p>In the twentieth chapter of his first book
-against Marcion, Tertullian cites Hosea 2:11,
-and Isa. 1:13, 14, to prove that the Sabbath is
-now abrogated. And in his fifth book against
-Marcion, chapter iv., he quotes Gal. 4:10; John
-19:31; Isa. 1:13, 14; Amos 5:21, and Hosea
-2:11, to prove that &#8220;the Creator abolished his
-own laws,&#8221; and that he &#8220;destroyed the institutions
-which he set up himself.&#8221; These quotations
-are apparently designed to prove that the
-Sabbath is abolished, but he does not enter into
-argument from them. But in the nineteenth
-chapter of this book he quotes Col. 2:16, 17,
-and simply says of the law: &#8220;The apostle here
-teaches clearly how it has been abolished, even
-by passing from shadow to substance&mdash;that is,
-from figurative types to the reality, which is
-Christ.&#8221; This remark is truthful and would
-justly exclude the moral law from this abolition.</p>
-
-<p>But in chapter xxi. of his second book against
-Marcion, he answers the very objection against
-the Sabbath which himself has elsewhere urged,
-as we have noticed, drawn from the case of Jericho.
-He says to Marcion:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;You do not, however, consider the law of the Sabbath:
-they are human works, not divine, which it prohibits.
-For it says, &#8216;Six days shalt thou labor, and do
-all thy work; but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the
-Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work.&#8217; What
-work? Of course your own. The conclusion is, that
-from the Sabbath day he removes those works which he
-had before enjoined for the six days, that is, your own
-works; in other words, human works of daily life. Now,
-the carrying around of the ark is evidently not an ordinary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
-daily duty, nor yet a human one; but a rare and a
-sacred work, and, as being then ordered by the direct
-precept of God, a divine one.... Thus, in the present
-instance, there is a clear distinction respecting the Sabbath&#8217;s
-prohibition of human labors, not divine ones. Accordingly,
-the man who went and gathered sticks on the
-Sabbath day was punished with death. For it was his
-own work which he did; and this the law forbade.
-They, however, who on the Sabbath carried the ark
-round Jericho, did it with impunity. For it was not
-their own work, but God&#8217;s, which they executed, and
-that, too, from his express commandment.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In the following chapter he again cites Isa. 1:11-14,
-as proof that the Sabbath is abolished.
-He will, however, presently explain this text
-which he has so many times used against the
-Sabbath, and show that it actually has no such
-bearing. In the meantime he will again declare
-that Joshua did not break the Sabbath, and having
-done this he will find it in order again to assert
-that &#8220;the Sabbath was actually then broken
-by Joshua.&#8221; In his fourth book against Marcion,
-chapter xii., he discusses the question whether
-Christ as Lord of the Sabbath had the right to
-annul the Sabbath, and whether in his life he
-did actually violate it. To do this he again cites
-the case of Jericho, and actually affirms that the
-Sabbath was broken on that occasion, and at the
-same time denies it. Thus he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;If Christ interfered with the Sabbath, he simply
-acted after the Creator&#8217;s example; inasmuch as in the
-siege of the city of Jericho the carrying around the walls
-of the ark of the covenant for eight days running, and
-therefore on a Sabbath day, actually annulled the Sabbath,
-by the Creator&#8217;s command&mdash;according to the opinion
-of those who think this of Christ [Luke 6:1-5] in their
-ignorance that neither Christ nor the Creator violated
-the Sabbath, as we shall by-and-by show. And yet the
-Sabbath was actually then broken by Joshua, so that the
-present charge might be alleged also against Christ.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>The Sabbath was not violated in the case of
-Jericho, and yet it certainly was there violated!
-Tertullian adds that if Christ hated the Sabbath
-he was in this like the Creator himself, who
-declares [Isa. 1:14] that he hates it. He forgets
-that the Creator has expressly declared his great
-regard for the Sabbath by this very prophet
-[chap. 58:13, 14], and overlooks the fact that
-what God hates is the hypocritical conduct of
-the people as set forth in Isaiah 1. In his fourth
-book against Marcion, chapter xvi., Christ is
-mentioned as the Lord of the Sabbath, but nothing
-is said bearing upon Sabbatic obligation. In
-chapter xxx., of this same book, he alludes to the
-cure wrought by Christ upon the Sabbath day,
-mentioned in Luke 13:11-16, and says, &#8220;When,
-therefore, he did a work according to the condition
-prescribed by the law, he affirmed, instead
-of breaking, the law,&#8221; etc.</p>
-
-<p>In the twelfth chapter of this book, however,
-he asserts many things relative to Christ. He
-says that the disciples in rubbing out the ears of
-corn on the Sabbath &#8220;had violated the holy
-day. Christ excuses them and became their
-accomplice in breaking the Sabbath.&#8221; He argues
-that as the Sabbath from the beginning, which
-he here places at the fall of the manna though
-elsewhere dating it from the creation, had never
-been designed as a day of fasting, the Saviour
-did right in justifying the act of the disciples in
-the cornfield. And he terms the example of
-David a &#8220;colorable precedent&#8221; to justify the
-eating of the corn. But though he represents
-the Saviour as &#8220;annulling the Sabbath&#8221; at this
-time, he also asserts that in this very case &#8220;he
-maintains the honor of the Sabbath as a day<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
-which is to be free from gloom rather than from
-work.&#8221; He justifies the Saviour in his acts of
-healing on the Sabbath, declaring that in this
-he was doing that which the Sabbath law did
-not forbid. Tertullian next affirms precisely the
-reverse of many things which he has advanced
-against the Sabbath, and even answers his own
-objections against it. Thus he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;In order that he might, whilst allowing that amount
-of work which he was about to perform for a soul, remind
-them what works the law of the Sabbath forbade&mdash;even
-human works; and what it enjoined&mdash;even divine works,
-which might be done for the benefit of any soul, he was
-called &#8216;Lord of the Sabbath&#8217; because he maintained the
-Sabbath as his own institution. Now, even if he had
-annulled the Sabbath, he would have had the right to do
-so, as being its Lord, [and] still more as he who instituted
-it. But lie did not utterly destroy it, although its Lord,
-in order that it might henceforth be plain that the Sabbath
-was not broken by the Creator, even at the time
-when the ark was carried around Jericho. For that was
-really God&#8217;s work, which he commanded himself, and
-which he had ordered for the sake of the lives of his
-servants when exposed to the perils of war.&#8221; Book iv.
-chap. xii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In this paragraph Tertullian explains the law
-of God in the clearest manner. He shows beyond
-all dispute that neither Joshua nor Christ ever
-violated it. He also declares that Christ did not
-abolish the Sabbath. In the next sentence he
-goes on to answer most admirably his own repeated
-perversion of Isaiah 1:13, 14, and to
-contradict some of his own serious errors. Listen
-to him:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now, although he has in a certain place expressed an
-aversion of Sabbaths, by calling them &#8216;<i>your Sabbaths</i>,&#8217;
-reckoning them as men&#8217;s Sabbaths, not his own, because
-they were celebrated without the fear of God by a people
-full of iniquities, and loving God &#8216;with the lip, not the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
-heart,&#8217; he has yet put his own Sabbaths (those, that
-is, which were kept according to his prescription) in a
-different position; for by the same prophet, in a later
-passage, he declares them to be &#8216;true, delightful, and
-inviolable.&#8217; [Isa 58:13; 56:2.] Thus <i>Christ did not
-at all rescind the Sabbath</i>: he kept the law thereof, and
-both in the former case did a work which was beneficial
-to the life of his disciples (for he indulged them with the
-relief of food when they were hungry), and in the present
-instance cured the withered hand; in each case intimating
-by facts, &#8216;I came not to destroy the law, but to fulfill
-it,&#8217; although Marcion has gagged his mouth by this
-word.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Here Tertullian shows that God did not hate
-his own Sabbath, but only the hypocrisy of those
-who professed to keep it. He also expressly declares
-that the Saviour &#8220;did not at all rescind the
-Sabbath.&#8221; And now that he has his hand in, he
-will not cease till he has testified to a noble Sabbatarian
-confession of faith, placing its origin at
-creation, and perpetuating the institution with
-divine safeguards and additional sanctity. Moreover
-he asserts that Christ&#8217;s adversary [Satan]
-would have had him do this to some other days,
-a heavy blow as it happens upon those who in
-modern times so stoutly maintain that he consecrated
-the first day of the week to take the place
-of the Creator&#8217;s rest-day. Listen again to Tertullian,
-who continues as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;For even in the case before us he fulfilled the law,
-while interpreting its condition; [moreover,] he exhibits
-in a clear light the different kinds of work, while doing
-what the law excepts from the sacredness of the Sabbath,
-[and] while imparting to the Sabbath day itself, which
-<i>from the beginning</i> had been consecrated by the benediction
-of the Father, an additional sanctity by his own beneficent
-action. For he furnished to this day divine safeguards,&mdash;a
-course which his adversary would have pursued for some
-other days, to avoid honoring the Creator&#8217;s Sabbath, and
-restoring to the Sabbath the works which were proper for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
-it. Since, in like manner, the prophet Elisha on this day
-restored to life the dead son of the Shunammite woman,
-you see, O Pharisee, and you too, O Marcion, how that
-it was [proper employment] for the Creator&#8217;s Sabbaths of
-old to do good, to save life, not to destroy it; how that
-Christ introduced nothing new, which was not after the
-example, the gentleness, the mercy, and the prediction
-also of the Creator. For in this very example he fulfills
-the prophetic announcement of a specific healing: &#8216;The
-weak hands are strengthened,&#8217; as were also &#8216;the feeble
-knees&#8217; in the sick of the palsy.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Tertullian against Marcion</i>,
-b. iv. chap. xii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Tertullian mistakes in his reference to the
-Shunammite woman. It was not the Sabbath day
-on which she went to the prophet. 2 Kings 4:23.
-But in the last three paragraphs quoted
-from him, which in his work form one continuous
-statement, he affirms many important truths
-which are worthy of careful enumeration. They
-are as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. Christ, in determining what should, and
-what should not, be done on the Sabbath, &#8220;was
-called &#8216;Lord of the Sabbath,&#8217; because he maintained
-the Sabbath as his own institution.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>2. &#8220;The Sabbath was not broken by the Creator,
-even at the time when the ark was carried
-around Jericho.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>3. The reason why God expressed his aversion
-to &#8220;your Sabbaths,&#8221; as though they were &#8220;men&#8217;s
-Sabbaths, not his own,&#8221; was &#8220;because they were
-celebrated without the fear of God, by a people
-full of iniquities.&#8221; See Isa. 1:13, 14.</p>
-
-<p>4. &#8220;By the same prophet [Isa. 58:13; 56:2],
-he declares them [the Sabbaths] to be &#8216;true and
-delightful and inviolable.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>5. &#8220;Thus Christ did not at all rescind the Sabbath.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>6. &#8220;He kept the law thereof.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>7. &#8220;The Sabbath day itself, which from the beginning
-had been consecrated by the benediction
-of the Father.&#8221; This language expressly assigns
-the origin of the Sabbath to the act of the Creator
-at the close of the first week of time.</p>
-
-<p>8. Christ imparted to the Sabbath &#8220;an additional
-sanctity by his own beneficent action.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>9. &#8220;He furnished to this day divine safeguards,&mdash;a
-course which his adversary would have pursued
-for some other days, to avoid honoring the
-Creator&#8217;s Sabbath, and restoring to the Sabbath
-the works which were proper for it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This last statement is indeed very remarkable.
-Christ furnished &#8220;the Creator&#8217;s Sabbath,&#8221; the
-seventh day, with &#8220;divine safeguards.&#8221; His adversary
-(<span class="smcap">THE</span> adversary of Christ is the devil)
-would have had this course &#8220;pursued for some
-other days.&#8221; That is to say, the devil would
-have been pleased had Christ consecrated some
-other day, instead of adding to the sanctity of
-his Father&#8217;s Sabbath. What Tertullian says that
-the devil would have been pleased to have Christ
-do, that our first-day friends now assert that he
-did do in the establishment of what they call the
-Christian Sabbath! Such an institution, however,
-was never heard of in the days of the so-called
-Christian fathers. Notwithstanding Tertullian&#8217;s
-many erroneous statements concerning
-the Sabbath and the law, he has here borne a noble
-testimony to the truth, and this completes his
-words.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII.</h2></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p class="center">Fabian&mdash;Origen&mdash;Hippolytus&mdash;Novatian.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF THE EPISTLES AND DECREES OF
-POPE FABIAN.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">This</span> man was bishop of Rome from <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 236
-to <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 250. The letters ascribed to Fabian were
-probably written at a considerably later date.
-We quote them, however, at the very point of
-time wherein they claim to have been written.
-Their testimony is of little importance, but they
-breathe the self-important spirit of a Roman
-bishop. We quote as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;You ought to know what is being done in things sacred
-in the church of Rome, in order that, by following
-her example, ye may be found to be true children of her
-who is called your mother. Accordingly, as we have received
-the institution from our fathers, we maintain seven
-deacons in the city of Rome, distributed over seven districts
-of the state, who attend to the services enjoined on
-them week by week, and on the Lord&#8217;s days, and the solemn
-festivals,&#8221; etc.&mdash;<i>Epistle First.</i></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This pope is said to have made the following
-decree, which contains the only other reference to
-the so-called Lord&#8217;s day to be found in the writings
-attributed to him:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;We decree that on each Lord&#8217;s day the oblation of
-the altar should be made by all men and women in bread
-and wine, in order that by means of these sacrifices they
-may be released from the burden of their sins.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Decrees
-of Fabian</i>, b. v. chap. vii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In these quotations we see that the Roman
-church is made the mother of all churches, and
-also that the Roman bishop thinks himself the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
-rightful ruler over all Christian people. And it
-is in fit keeping with these features of the great
-apostasy that the pope, instead of pointing sinful
-men to the sacrifice made on Calvary, should &#8220;decree
-that on each Lord&#8217;s day&#8221; every person should
-offer an &#8220;oblation&#8221; of &#8220;bread and wine&#8221; on the
-altar, &#8220;that by means of <span class="smcap">THESE SACRIFICES</span> they
-may be released from the burden of their sins&#8221;!</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF ORIGEN.</h3>
-
-<p>Origen was born about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 185, probably at
-Alexandria in Egypt. He was a man of immense
-learning, but unfortunately adopted a spiritualizing
-system in the interpretation of the Scriptures
-that was the means of flooding the church
-with many errors. He wrote during the first
-half of the third century. I have carefully examined
-all the writings of every Christian writer
-preceding the council of Nice with the single
-exception of Origen. Some of his works, as yet,
-I have not been able to obtain. While, therefore,
-I give the entire testimony of every other
-father on the subject of inquiry, in his case I am
-unable to do this. But I can give it with sufficient
-fullness to present him in a just light. His
-first reference to the Sabbath is a denial that it
-should be literally understood. Thus he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;There are countless multitudes of believers who, although
-unable to unfold methodically and clearly the
-results of their spiritual understanding, are nevertheless
-most firmly persuaded that neither ought circumcision to
-be understood literally, nor the rest of the Sabbath, nor
-the pouring out of the blood of an animal, nor that
-answers were given by God to Moses on these points.
-And this method of apprehension is undoubtedly suggested
-to the minds of all by the power of the Holy
-Spirit.&#8221;&mdash;<i>De Principiis</i>, b. ii. chap. vii.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>Origen asserts that the spiritual interpretation
-of the Scriptures whereby their literal meaning
-is set aside is something divinely inspired! But
-when this is accepted as the truth who can tell
-what they mean by what they say?</p>
-
-<p>In the next chapter he quotes Isa. 1:13, 14,
-but with reference to the subject of the soul and
-not to that of the Sabbath. In chapter xi., alluding
-again to the hidden meaning of the things
-commanded in the Scriptures, he asserts that
-when the Christian has &#8220;returned to Christ&#8221; he
-will, amongst other things enumerated, &#8220;see also
-the reasons for the festival days, and holy days,
-and for all the sacrifices and purifications.&#8221; So
-it seems that Origen thought the spiritual meaning
-of the Sabbath, which he asserted in the
-place of the literal, was to be known only in the
-future state!</p>
-
-<p>In book iv. chapter i., he quotes Col. 2:16, but
-gives no exposition of its meaning. But having
-asserted that the things commanded in the law
-were not to be understood literally, and having
-intimated that their hidden meaning cannot be
-known until the saints are with Christ, he proceeds
-in section 17 of this chapter to prove that
-the literal sense of the law is impossible. One of
-the arguments by which he proves the point is,
-that men were commanded not to go out of their
-houses on the Sabbath. He thus quotes and
-comments on Ex. 16:29:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Ye shall sit, every one in your dwellings; no one
-shall move from his place on the Sabbath day,&#8217; which
-precept it is impossible to observe literally; for no man
-can sit a whole day so as not to move from the place
-where he sat down.&#8221; Origen quotes a certain Samaritan
-who declares that one must not change his posture on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
-Sabbath, and he adds, &#8220;Moreover the injunction which
-runs, &#8216;Bear no burden on the Sabbath day,&#8217; seems to me
-an impossibility.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This argument is framed for the purpose of
-proving that the Scriptures cannot be taken in
-their literal sense. But had he quoted the text
-correctly there would be no force at all to his
-argument. They must not go out to gather
-manna, but were expressly commanded to use the
-Sabbath for holy convocations, that is, for religious
-assemblies. Lev. 23:3. And as to the
-burdens mentioned in Jer. 17:21-27, they are
-sufficiently explained by Neh. 13:15-22. Such
-reasons as these for denying the obvious, simple
-signification of what God has commanded, are
-worthy of no confidence. In his letter to Africanus,
-Origen thus alludes to the Sabbath, but
-without further remarking upon it:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;You will find the law about not bearing a burden on
-the Sabbath day in Jeremiah as well as in Moses.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Though these allusions of Origen to the Sabbath
-are not in themselves of much importance,
-we give them all, that his testimony may be
-presented as fully as possible. His next mention
-of the Sabbath seems from the connection to relate
-to Paul:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Was it impious to abstain from corporeal circumcision,
-and from a literal Sabbath, and literal festivals, and literal
-new moons, and from clean and unclean meats, and
-to turn the mind to the good and true and spiritual law
-of God,&#8221; etc.&mdash;<i>Origen against Celsus</i>, b. ii. chap. vii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>We shall soon get his idea of the true Sabbath
-as distinguished from the &#8220;literal&#8221; one. He gives
-the following reason for the &#8220;literal Sabbath&#8221;
-among the Hebrews:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;In order that there might be leisure to listen to their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
-sacred laws, the days termed &#8216;Sabbath,&#8217; and the other
-festivals which existed among them, were instituted.&#8221;
-Book iv. chap. xxxi.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>What Origen mentions as the reason for the
-institution of the Sabbath is in fact only one of
-its incidental benefits. The real reason for its
-institution, viz., that the creation of the heavens
-and the earth should be remembered, he seems
-to have overlooked because so literally expressed
-in the commandment. Of God&#8217;s rest-day he thus
-speaks:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;With respect, however, to the creation of the world,
-and the &#8216;rest [<i>Sabbatismou</i>] which is reserved after it for
-the people of God,&#8217; the subject is extensive, and mystical,
-and profound, and difficult of explanation.&#8221; Book v.
-chap. lix.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Origen&#8217;s next mention of the Sabbath not only
-places the institution of the Sabbath at the creation,
-but gives us some idea of his &#8220;mystical&#8221;
-Sabbath as distinguished from &#8220;a literal&#8221; one.
-Speaking of the Creator&#8217;s rest from the six days&#8217;
-work he thus alludes to Celsus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;For he [Celsus] knows nothing of the day of the Sabbath
-and rest of God, <i>which follows the completion of the
-world&#8217;s creation</i>, and <i>which lasts during the duration of the
-world</i>, and in which all those will keep festival with God
-who have done all <i>their</i> works in <i>their</i> six days, and who,
-because they have omitted none of their duties, will ascend
-to the contemplation [of celestial things], and to the
-assembly of righteous and blessed beings.&#8221; Book vi.
-chap. lxi.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Here we get an insight into Origen&#8217;s mystical
-Sabbath. It began at creation, and will continue
-while the world endures. To those who follow
-the letter it is indeed only a weekly rest, but to
-those who know the truth it is a perpetual Sabbath,
-enjoyed by God during all the days of time,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
-and entered by believers either at conversion or
-at death. And this last thought perhaps explains
-why he said before that the reasons for days observed
-by the Hebrews would be understood
-after this life.</p>
-
-<p>But last of all we come to a mention of the
-so-called Lord&#8217;s day by Origen. As he has a
-mystical or perpetual Sabbath like some of the
-earlier fathers, in which, under pretense of keeping
-every day as a Sabbath, they actually labor
-on every one, so has he also, like what we have
-found in some of them, a Lord&#8217;s day which is not
-merely one definite day of the week, but which
-embraces every day, and covers all time. Here
-are his words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;For &#8216;to keep a feast,&#8217; as one of the wise men of
-Greece has well said, &#8216;is nothing else than to do one&#8217;s
-duty;&#8217; and that man truly celebrates a feast who does his
-duty and prays always, offering up continually bloodless
-sacrifices in prayer to God. That therefore seems to me
-a most noble saying of Paul, &#8216;Ye observe days, and
-months, and times, and years. I am afraid of you, lest
-I have bestowed upon you labor in vain.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If it be objected to us on this subject that we ourselves
-are accustomed to observe certain days, as, for example,
-the Lord&#8217;s day, the Preparation, the Passover, or Pentecost,
-I have to answer, that to the perfect Christian, who
-is ever in his thoughts, words, and deeds, serving his
-natural Lord, God the Word, <i>all his days are the Lord&#8217;s</i>,
-and <i>he is always keeping the Lord&#8217;s day</i>.&#8221; Book viii., close
-of chapter xxi. and beginning of chapter xxii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>With respect to what he calls the Lord&#8217;s day,
-Origen divides his brethren into two classes, as
-he had before divided the people of God into two
-classes with respect to the Sabbath. One class are
-the imperfect Christians, who content themselves
-with the literal day; the other are the perfect
-Christians, whose Lord&#8217;s day embraces all the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
-days of their life. Undoubtedly Origen reckoned
-himself one of the perfect Christians. His observance
-of the Lord&#8217;s day did not consist in the
-elevation of one day above another, for he counted
-them all alike as constituting one perpetual
-Lord&#8217;s day, the very doctrine which we found in
-Clement of Alexandria, who was Origen&#8217;s teacher
-in his early life. The keeping of the Lord&#8217;s day
-with Origen as with Clement embraced all the
-days of his life, and consisted according to Origen
-in serving God in thought, word, and deed,
-continually; or as expressed by Clement, one
-&#8220;keeps the Lord&#8217;s day when he abandons an
-evil disposition, and assumes that of the Gnostic.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>These things prove that Origen did not count
-Sunday as the Lord&#8217;s day to be honored above
-the other days as a divine memorial of the resurrection,
-for he kept the Lord&#8217;s day during every
-day in the week. Nor did he hold Sunday as
-the Lord&#8217;s day to be kept as a day of abstinence
-from labor, while all the other days were days of
-business, for whatever was necessary to keeping
-Lord&#8217;s day he did on every day of the week.</p>
-
-<p>As to the imperfect Christians who honored a
-literal day as the Lord&#8217;s day, Origen shows what
-rank it stood in by associating it with the Preparation,
-the Passover, and the Pentecost, all of
-which in this dispensation are mere church institutions,
-and none of them days of abstinence
-from labor. The change of the Sabbath from the
-seventh day to the first, or the existence of the
-so-called Christian Sabbath was in Origen&#8217;s time
-absolutely unknown.</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF HIPPOLYTUS, BISHOP OF PORTUS.</h3>
-
-<p>Hippolytus, who was bishop of Portus, near<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
-Rome, wrote about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 230. It is evident from
-his testimony that he believed the Sabbath was
-made by God&#8217;s act of sanctifying the seventh day
-at the beginning. He held that day to be the
-type of the seventh period of a thousand years.
-Thus he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;And 6000 years must needs be accomplished, in order
-that the Sabbath may come, the rest, the holy day on
-which God rested from all his works. For the Sabbath
-is the type and emblem of the future kingdom of the
-saints, when they shall reign with Christ, when he comes
-from Heaven, as John says in his Apocalypse: for a day
-with the Lord is as a thousand years. Since, then, in
-six days God made all things, it follows that six thousand
-years must be fulfilled.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Commentaries on Various Books
-of Scripture.</i> Sect. 4, on Daniel.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The churches of Ethiopia have a series of
-Canons, or church rules, which they attribute to
-this father. Number thirty-three reads thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;That commemoration should be made of the faithful
-dead every day, with the exception of the Lord&#8217;s day.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The church of Alexandria have also a series
-which they ascribe to him. The thirty-third is
-thus given:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of the <i>Atalmsas</i> (the oblation), which they shall present
-for those who are dead, that it be not done on the
-Lord&#8217;s day.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The thirty-eighth one has these words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of the night on which our Lord Jesus Christ rose.
-That no one shall sleep on that night, and wash himself
-with water.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>These are the only things in Hippolytus that
-can be referred to the Sunday festival. Prayers
-and offerings for the dead, which we find some
-fifty years earlier in Tertullian, are, according to
-Hippolytus, lawful on every day but the so-called<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
-Lord&#8217;s day. They grew up with the Sunday
-festival, and are of equal authority with it. Tertullian,
-as we have already observed, tells us
-frankly that there is no scriptural authority for
-the one or the other, and that they rest on custom
-and tradition alone.</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF NOVATIAN, A ROMAN PRESBYTER.</h3>
-
-<p>Novatian, who wrote about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 250, is accounted
-the founder of the sect called <i>Cathari</i>,
-or <i>Puritans</i>. He tried to resist some of the
-gross corruptions of the church of Rome. He
-wrote a treatise on the Sabbath, which is not
-extant. There is no reference to Sunday in any
-of his writings. In his treatise &#8220;On the Jewish
-Meats,&#8221; he speaks of the Sabbath thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;But how perverse are the Jews, and remote from the
-understanding of their law, I have fully shown, as I believe,
-in two former letters, wherein it was absolutely
-proved that they are ignorant of what is the true circumcision,
-and what the true Sabbath.&#8221; Chapter i.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>If we contrast the doctrine of the Pharisees
-concerning the Sabbath with the teaching of the
-Saviour, or with that of Isaiah in his fifty-eighth
-chapter, we shall not think Novatian far from the
-truth in his views of the Jewish people. In
-his treatise &#8220;Concerning the Trinity&#8221; is the following
-allusion to the Sabbath:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;For in the manner that as man he is of Abraham, so
-also as God he is before Abraham himself. And in the
-same manner as he is as man the &#8216;Son of David,&#8217; so as
-God he is proclaimed David&#8217;s Lord. And in the same
-manner as he was made as man &#8216;under the law,&#8217; so as
-God he is declared to be &#8216;Lord of the Sabbath.&#8217;&#8221; Chapter
-xi.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>These are the only references to the Sabbath
-in what remains of the writings of Novatian. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
-makes the following striking remarks concerning
-the moral law:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;The law was given to the children of Israel for this
-purpose, that they might profit by it, and <span class="smcap">RETURN</span> <i>to those
-virtuous manners</i>, which, although <i>they have received them
-from their fathers</i>, they had corrupted in Egypt by reason
-of their intercourse with a barbarous people. Finally,
-also, those <i>ten commandments</i> on the tables <i>teach nothing
-new</i>, but <i>remind</i> them of <i>what had been obliterated</i>&mdash;that
-righteousness in them, which had been put to sleep,
-might revive again as it were by the afflatus of the law,
-after the manner of a fire [nearly extinguished].&#8221;&mdash;<i>On the
-Jewish Meats</i>, chap. iii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>It is therefore certain that in the judgment of
-Novatian, the ten commandments enjoined nothing
-that was not sacredly regarded by the patriarchs
-before that Jacob went down into Egypt.
-It follows, therefore, that in his opinion the Sabbath
-was made, not at the fall of the manna, but
-when God sanctified the seventh day, and that
-holy men from the earliest ages observed it.
-The Sunday festival with its varied names and
-titles he never mentions.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX.</h2></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p class="center">Cyprian&mdash;Dionysius of Alexandria&mdash;Anatolius&mdash;Commodianus&mdash;Archelaus.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF CYPRIAN, BISHOP OF CARTHAGE.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Cyprian</span> wrote about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 255. I find only
-two references to Sunday in his works. The
-first is in his thirty-second epistle (the thirty-eighth
-of the Oxford edition), in which he says
-of one Aurelius that &#8220;he reads on the Lord&#8217;s day&#8221;
-for him. But in the second instance he defines<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
-the meaning of the term, and gives evidence in
-support of his application of it to the first day of
-the week. He is arguing in behalf of infant baptism,
-or rather in controverting the opinion that
-baptism should be deferred till the child is eight
-days old. Though the command to circumcise
-infants when eight days of age is one of the chief
-grounds of authority for infant baptism, yet the
-time in that precept according to Cyprian does
-not indicate the age of the child to be baptized,
-but prefigures the fact that the eighth day is the
-Lord&#8217;s day. Thus he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;For in respect of the observance of the eighth day in
-the Jewish circumcision of the flesh, a sacrament was
-given beforehand in shadow and in usage; but when
-Christ came, it was fulfilled in truth. For because the
-eighth day, that is, the first day after the Sabbath, was to
-be that on which the Lord should rise again, and should
-quicken us, and give us circumcision of the Spirit, the
-eighth day, that is, the first day after the Sabbath, and
-the Lord&#8217;s day, went before in the figure; which figure
-ceased when by and by the truth came, and spiritual circumcision
-was given to us.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Epistle</i> lviii. sect. 4; in
-the Oxford edition, <i>Epistle</i> lxiv.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Circumcision is made to prove twin errors of
-the great apostasy, <i>infant baptism</i> and that <i>the
-eighth day is the Lord&#8217;s day</i>. But the eighth
-day in the case of circumcision was not the day
-succeeding the seventh, that is, the first day of
-the week, but the eighth day of the life of each
-infant, and therefore it fell on one day of the
-week as often as upon another. Such is the only
-argument addressed by Cyprian for first-day
-sacredness, and this one seems to have been borrowed
-from Justin Martyr, who, as we have seen,
-used it about one hundred years before him. It
-is however quite as weighty as the argument of
-Clement of Alexandria, who adduced in its support<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
-what he calls a prophecy of the eighth day
-out of the writings of the heathen philosopher
-Plato! And both are in the same rank with that
-of Tertullian, who confessed that they had not
-the authority of Scripture, but accepted in its
-stead that of custom and tradition!</p>
-
-<p>In his &#8220;Exhortation to Martyrdom,&#8221; section 11,
-Cyprian quotes the larger part of Matt. 24, and in
-that quotation at verse 20, the Sabbath is mentioned,
-but he says nothing concerning that institution.
-In his &#8220;Testimonies against the Jews,&#8221;
-book i., sections 9 and 10, he says &#8220;that the former
-law which was given by Moses, was about to
-cease,&#8221; and that &#8220;a new law was to be given;&#8221;
-and in the conclusion of his &#8220;Treatise against the
-Jews,&#8221; section 119, he says &#8220;that the yoke of the
-law was heavy which is cast off by us,&#8221; but it is
-not certain that he meant to include in these
-statements the precepts of the moral law.</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF DIONYSIUS, BISHOP OF ALEXANDRIA.</h3>
-
-<p>This father, who was one of Origen&#8217;s disciples,
-wrote about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 260. In the first canon of
-his &#8220;Epistle to Bishop Basilides&#8221; he treats of
-&#8220;the proper hour for bringing the fast to a close
-on the day of Pentecost.&#8221; He has occasion to
-quote what the four evangelists say of the Sabbath
-and first-day in connection with the resurrection
-of Christ. But in doing this he adds not
-one word expressive of first-day sacredness, nor
-does he give it any other title than that of plain
-&#8220;first day of the week.&#8221; The seventh day is
-simply called &#8220;the Sabbath.&#8221; He also speaks of
-&#8220;the preparation and the Sabbath&#8221; as the &#8220;last
-two days&#8221; of a six days&#8217; fast, at the anniversary
-of the week of Christ&#8217;s death.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF ANATOLIUS, BISHOP OF LAODICEA.</h3>
-
-<p>This father wrote about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 270. He participated
-in the discussion of the question whether
-the festival of Easter, or passover, should be celebrated
-on the fourteenth day of the first month,
-the same day on which the Jews observed the
-passover, or whether it should be observed on the
-so-called Lord&#8217;s day next following. In this discussion
-he uses the term Lord&#8217;s day, in his first
-canon once, quoting it from Origen; in his seventh,
-twice; in his tenth, twice; in his eleventh,
-four times; in his twelfth, once; in his sixteenth,
-twice. These are all the instances in which he
-uses the term. We quote such of them as shed
-any light upon the meaning of it as used by him.
-In his seventh canon he says: &#8220;The obligation
-of the Lord&#8217;s resurrection binds to keep the paschal
-festival on the Lord&#8217;s day.&#8221; In his tenth
-canon he uses this language: &#8220;The solemn festival
-of the resurrection of the Lord can be celebrated
-only on the Lord&#8217;s day.&#8221; And also &#8220;that
-it should not be lawful to celebrate the Lord&#8217;s
-mystery of the passover at any other time but on
-the Lord&#8217;s day, on which the resurrection of the
-Lord from death took place, and on which rose
-also for us the cause of everlasting joy.&#8221; In his
-eleventh canon he says: &#8220;On the Lord&#8217;s day was
-it that light was shown to us in the beginning,
-and now also in the end, the comforts of all present
-and the tokens of all future blessings.&#8221; In
-his sixteenth canon he says: &#8220;Our regard for
-the Lord&#8217;s resurrection which took place on the
-Lord&#8217;s day will lead us to celebrate it on the
-same principle.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The reader may be curious to know why a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
-controversy should have arisen respecting the
-proper day for the celebration of the passover in
-the Christian church when no such celebration
-had ever been commanded. The explanation is
-this: The festival was celebrated solely on the
-authority of tradition, and there were in this case
-two directly conflicting traditions, as is fully
-shown in the tenth canon of this father. One
-party had their tradition from John the apostle,
-and held that the paschal feast should be celebrated
-every year &#8220;whenever the fourteenth day
-of the moon had come, and the lamb was sacrificed
-by the Jews.&#8221; But the other party had
-their tradition from the apostles Peter and Paul
-that this festival should not be celebrated on that
-day, but upon the so-called Lord&#8217;s day next following.
-And so a fierce controversy arose which
-was decided in <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 325, by the council of Nice,
-in favor of Saint Peter, who had on his side his
-pretended successor, the powerful and crafty
-bishop of Rome.</p>
-
-<p>The term Lord&#8217;s day is never applied to Sunday
-till the closing years of the second century.
-And Clement, who is the first to make such an
-application, represents the true Lord&#8217;s day as
-made up of every day of the Christian&#8217;s life.
-And this opinion is avowed by others after him.</p>
-
-<p>But after we enter the third century the name
-Lord&#8217;s day is quite frequently applied to Sunday.
-Tertullian, who lived at the epoch where
-we first find this application, frankly declares
-that the festival of Sunday, to which he gives
-the name of Lord&#8217;s day, had no Scriptural authority,
-but that it was founded upon tradition. But
-should not the traditions of the third century be
-esteemed sufficient authority for calling Sunday<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
-the Lord&#8217;s day? The very men of that century
-who speak thus of Sunday strenuously urge the
-observance of the feast of the passover. Shall
-we accept this festival which they offer to us on
-the authority of their apostolic tradition? As if
-to teach us the folly of adding tradition to the
-Bible as a part of our rule of faith, it happens that
-there are, even from the early part of the second
-century, two directly conflicting traditions as to
-what day should be kept for the passover. And
-one party had theirs from Saint John, the other
-had theirs from Saint Peter and Saint Paul!
-And it is very remarkable that although each of
-these parties claimed to know from one or the
-other of these apostles that they had the right
-day for the passover and the other had the wrong
-one, there is never a claim by one of these fathers
-that Sunday is the Lord&#8217;s day because John
-on the isle of Patmos called it such! If men in
-the second and third centuries were totally mistaken
-in their traditions respecting the passover,
-as they certainly were, shall we consider the
-traditions of the third century sufficient authority
-for asserting that the title of Lord&#8217;s day belongs
-to Sunday by apostolic authority?</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF COMMODIANUS.</h3>
-
-<p>This person was a native of Africa, and does
-not appear to have ever held any office in the
-Christian church. He wrote about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 270.
-The only allusions made by him to the Sabbath
-are in the following words addressed to the
-Jews:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is not an unbelieving people such as yours. O
-evil men! in so many places, and so often rebuked by
-the law of those who cry aloud. And the Lofty One despises<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
-your Sabbaths, and altogether rejects your universal
-monthly feasts according to law, that ye should
-not make to him the commanded sacrifices; who told you
-to throw a stone for your offense.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Instructions in Favor
-of Christian Discipline</i>, sect. 40.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This statement is very obscure, and there is
-nothing in the connection that sheds any light
-upon it. His language may have reference to
-the ceremonial sabbaths, or it may include also
-the Sabbath of the Lord. If it includes the Sabbath
-made for man it may be intended, like the
-words of Isa. 1:13, 14, to rebuke the hypocrisy
-of those who profess to keep it rather than to
-condemn the institution itself.</p>
-
-<p>He makes only one use of the term Lord&#8217;s day,
-and that is as obscure as is his reference to the
-subject of the Sabbath. Here it is:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Neither dost thou fear the Lord, who cries aloud
-with such an utterance; even he who commands us to
-give food even to our enemies. Look forward to thy
-meals from that Tobias who always on <i>every day</i> shared
-them entirely with the poor man. Thou seekest to feed
-him, O fool, who feedeth thee again. Dost thou wish
-that he should prepare for me, who is setting before him
-his burial? The brother oppressed with want, nearly
-languishing away, cries out at the splendidly fed, and
-with distended belly. What sayest thou of the Lord&#8217;s
-day? If he have not placed himself before, call forth a
-poor man from the crowd whom thou mayest take to thy
-dinner. In the tablets is your hope from a Christ refreshed.&#8221;
-Section 61.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Whether Commodianus meant to charge his
-brethren to relieve the hungry on one day only
-of the week, or whether he held to such a Lord&#8217;s
-day as that of Clement of Alexandria, Origen,
-and others (namely, one that includes every day
-of the life of him who refrains from sin), and so
-would have his brethren imitate Tobias, who fed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
-the hungry <i>every day</i>, must be left undetermined.
-He could not have believed that Sunday was the
-Lord&#8217;s day by divine appointment, for he refers
-to the passover festival (which rests solely upon
-the traditions and commandments of men) as
-coming &#8220;once in the year&#8221; and he designates it
-as &#8220;Easter that day of ours <i>most blessed</i>.&#8221; Section
-75. The day of the passover was therefore
-in his estimation the most sacred day in the
-Christian church.</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF ARCHELAUS, BISHOP OF CASCAR.</h3>
-
-<p>This person wrote about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 277, or according
-to other authorities he wrote not far from <span class="smcap">A.
-D.</span> 300. He flourished in Mesopotamia. What
-remains of his writings is simply the record of
-his &#8220;Disputation with Manes,&#8221; the heretic. I do
-not find that he ever uses the term &#8220;Lord&#8217;s day.&#8221;
-He introduces the Sabbath and states his views
-of it thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Moses, that illustrious servant of God, committed to
-those who wished to have the right vision, an emblematic
-law, and also a real law. Thus, to take an example,
-after God had made the world, and all things that are in
-it, in the space of six days, he rested on the seventh day
-from all his works; by which statement I do not mean
-to affirm that he rested because he was fatigued, but
-that he did so as having brought to its perfection every
-creature which he had resolved to introduce. And yet
-in the sequel it (the new law) says: &#8216;My Father worketh
-hitherto, and I work.&#8217; Does that mean, then, that he is
-still making heaven, or sun, or man, or animals, or trees,
-or any such thing? Nay; but the meaning is, that when
-these visible objects were perfectly finished, he rested
-from that kind of work; while, however, he still continues
-to work at objects invisible with an inward mode of
-action, and saves men. In like manner, then, the legislator
-desires also that every individual among us should
-be devoted unceasingly to this kind of work, even as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
-God himself is; and he enjoins us consequently to rest
-continuously from secular things, and to engage in no
-worldly sort of work whatsoever; and this is called our
-Sabbath. This he also added in the law, that nothing
-senseless should be done, but that we should be careful
-and direct our life in accordance with what is just and
-righteous.&#8221; Section 31.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>These words appear to teach that he held to a
-perpetual Sabbath, like Justin Martyr, Tertullian,
-and others. Yet this does not seem possible, inasmuch
-as, unlike Justin, who despises what he
-calls days of &#8220;idleness,&#8221; this writer says that we
-are &#8220;to engage in no worldly sort of work whatsoever
-and this is that our Sabbath.&#8221; It is
-hardly possible that he could hold it a wicked
-thing to labor on one or all of the six working
-days. Yet he either means to assert that it is
-sinful to work on a single one of the days, or else
-he asserts the perpetual obligation of that Sabbath
-which it is manifest he believed originated
-when God set apart the seventh day, and which
-he acknowledges on the authority of what &#8220;he
-also added in the law.&#8221; We shall shortly come
-to his final statement, which seems clearly to
-show that the second of these views was the one
-held by this writer.</p>
-
-<p>After showing in this same section that the
-death penalty at the hand of the magistrate for
-the violation of the Sabbath is no longer in force
-because of forgiveness through the Saviour, and
-after answering the objection of Manes in sections
-40, 41, 42, that Christ in healing on the
-Sabbath directly contradicted what Moses did to
-those who in his time violated the Sabbath, he
-states his views of the perpetuity of the ancient
-Sabbath in very clear language. Thus he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Again, as to the assertion that the Sabbath has been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
-abolished, we deny that he has abolished it plainly
-(<i>plane</i>); for he was himself also Lord of the Sabbath.
-And this (the law&#8217;s relation to the Sabbath) was like the
-servant who has charge of the bridegroom&#8217;s couch, and
-who prepares the same with all carefulness, and does not
-suffer it to be disturbed or touched by any stranger, but
-keeps it intact against the time of the bridegroom&#8217;s
-arrival; so that when he is come, the bed may be used
-as it pleases himself, or as it is granted to those to use it
-whom he has bidden enter along with him.&#8221; Section 42.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Three things are plainly taught. 1. The law
-sacredly guarded the Sabbath till the coming of
-Christ. 2. When Christ came, he did not abolish
-the Sabbath, for he was its Lord. 3. And the
-whole tenor of this writer&#8217;s language shows that
-he had no knowledge of the change of the Sabbath
-in honor of Christ&#8217;s resurrection, nor does
-he even once allude to the first day of the week.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X.</h2></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p class="center">Victorinus&mdash;Peter&mdash;Methodius&mdash;Lactantius&mdash;Poem on Genesis&mdash;Conclusion.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF VICTORINUS, BISHOP OF PETAU.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">This</span> person wrote about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 300. His bishopric
-was in Germany. Of his work on the
-&#8220;Creation of the World,&#8221; only a fragment is now
-preserved. In the first section he speaks thus of
-the sanctification of the seventh day:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;God produced that entire mass for the adornment of
-his majesty in six days; on the seventh to which he consecrated
-it [some words are here lost out of the text] with
-a blessing. For this reason, therefore, because in the
-septenary number of days both heavenly and earthly
-things are ordered, in place of the beginning. I will
-consider of this seventh day after the principle of all
-matters pertaining to the number seven.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>Victorinus, like some other of the fathers, held
-that the &#8220;true and just Sabbath should be observed
-in the seventh millenary.&#8221; He believed
-that the Sabbath was abolished by the Saviour.
-He was in sympathy with the act of the church
-of Rome in turning the Sabbath into a fast. He
-held to a two days&#8217; weekly fast, as his words necessarily
-imply. He would have men fast on the
-sixth day to commemorate Christ&#8217;s death, and
-on the seventh, lest they should seem to keep the
-Sabbath with the Jews, but on the so-called
-Lord&#8217;s day they were to go forth to their bread
-with giving of thanks. Thus he reasons:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;On this day [the sixth] also, on account of the passion
-of the Lord Jesus Christ, we make either a station to
-God, or a fast. On the seventh day he rested from all
-his works, and blessed it, and sanctified it. On the former
-day [the sixth] we are accustomed to fast rigorously,
-that on the Lord&#8217;s day we may go forth to our bread with
-giving of thanks. And let the <i>parasceve</i> [the sixth day]
-become a rigorous fast, lest we should appear to observe
-any Sabbath with the Jews, which Christ himself, the
-Lord of the Sabbath, says by his prophet that &#8216;his soul
-hateth;&#8217; which Sabbath he in his body abolished, although,
-however, he had formerly himself commanded
-Moses that circumcision should not pass over the eighth
-day, which day very frequently happens on the Sabbath,
-as we read written in the gospel. Moses, foreseeing the
-hardness of that people, on the Sabbath raised up his
-hands, therefore, and thus fastened himself to a cross.
-And in the battle they were sought for by the foreigners
-on the Sabbath day, that they might be taken captive,
-and, as if by the very strictness of the law, might be fashioned
-to the avoidance of its teachings.&#8221; Section 4.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>These statements are in general of little consequence,
-but some of them deserve notice. First,
-we have one of the grand elements which contributed
-to the abandonment of the Sabbath of
-the Lord, viz., hatred toward the Jews for their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
-conduct toward Christ. Those who acted thus
-forgot that Christ himself was the Lord of the
-Sabbath, and that it was his institution and not
-that of the Jews to which they were doing
-despite. Secondly, it was the church of Rome
-that turned the Sabbath into a fast one hundred
-years before this, in order to suppress its observance,
-and Victorinus was acting under its instructions.
-Thirdly, we have a reference to the
-so-called Lord&#8217;s day, as a day of thanksgiving,
-but no connection between it and the Sabbath is
-indicated for in his time the change of the Sabbath
-had not been thought of. He has other
-reasons for neglecting the seventh day which
-here follow:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;And thus in the sixth psalm for the eighth day,
-David asks the Lord that he would not rebuke him in his
-anger, nor judge him in his fury; for this is indeed the
-eighth day of that future judgment, which will pass beyond
-the order of the sevenfold arrangement. Jesus
-also, the son of Nave, the successor of Moses, himself
-broke the Sabbath day; for on the Sabbath day he commanded
-the children of Israel to go round the walls of
-the city of Jericho with trumpets, and declare war against
-the aliens. Matthias also, prince of Judah, broke the
-Sabbath; for he slew the prefect of Antiochus the king
-of Syria on the Sabbath, and subdued the foreigners by
-pursuing them. And in Matthew we read, that it is
-written Isaiah also and the rest of his colleagues broke
-the Sabbath&mdash;that that true and just Sabbath should be
-observed in the seventh millenary of years. Wherefore
-to those seven days the Lord attributed to each a thousand
-years; for thus went the warning: &#8216;In mine eyes,
-0 Lord, a thousand years are as one day.&#8217; Therefore in
-the eyes of the Lord each thousand of years is ordained,
-for I find that the Lord&#8217;s eyes are seven. Wherefore, as
-I have narrated, that true Sabbath will be in the seventh
-millenary of years, when Christ with his elect shall reign.&#8221;
-Section 5.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This completes the testimony of Victorinus.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
-He evidently held that the Sabbath originated
-at the sanctification of the seventh day, but for
-the reasons here given, the most of which are
-trivial, and all of which are false, he held that it
-was abolished by Christ. His argument from the
-sixth psalm, and from Isaiah&#8217;s violation of the
-Sabbath, is something extraordinary. He had
-an excellent opportunity to say that though the
-seventh-day Sabbath was abolished, yet we have
-the Christian Sabbath, or the Lord&#8217;s day, to take
-its place. But he shows positively that he knew
-of no such institution; for he says, &#8220;That true
-and just Sabbath&#8221; will be &#8220;in the seventh millenary
-of years.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF PETER, BISHOP OF ALEXANDRIA.</h3>
-
-<p>This father wrote about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 306. In his
-&#8220;Canon 15&#8221; he thus sets forth the celebration of
-the fourth, the sixth, and the first days of the
-week:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;No one shall find fault with us for observing the
-fourth day of the week, and the preparation [the sixth
-day], on which it is reasonably enjoined us to fast according
-to the tradition. On the fourth day, indeed, because
-on it the Jews took counsel for the betrayal of the Lord;
-and on the sixth, because on it he himself suffered for us.
-But the Lord&#8217;s day we celebrate as a day of joy, because
-on it he rose again, on which day we have received it for
-a custom not even to bow the knee.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>On this Balsamon, an ancient writer whose commentary
-is appended to this canon, remarks that
-this canon is in harmony with the 64th apostolical
-canon, which declares &#8220;that we are not to
-fast on the Sabbath, with one exception, the
-great Sabbath [the one connected with the passover],
-and to the 69th canon, which severely
-punishes those who do not fast in the Holy Lent,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
-and on every fourth day of the week and day of
-preparation.&#8221; So it appears that they were
-commanded by the canons to fast on the fourth
-and sixth days of the week, and forbidden to do
-this on the Sabbath and first-day.</p>
-
-<p>Zonaras, another ancient commentator upon
-the canons of Peter, gives us the authority upon
-which these observances rest. No one of these
-three days is honored by God&#8217;s commandment.
-Zonaras mentions the fasts on the fourth and
-sixth days, and says no one will find fault with
-these. But he deems it proper to mark Peter&#8217;s
-reason for the Lord&#8217;s-day festival, and the nature
-of that festival. Thus he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;But on the Lord&#8217;s day we ought not to fast, for it is
-a day of joy for the resurrection of the Lord, and on it,
-says he, we have received that we ought not even to bow
-the knee. This word, therefore, is to be carefully observed,
-&#8216;we have received&#8217; and &#8216;it is enjoined upon us according
-to the tradition.&#8217; For from hence it is evident
-that long-established custom was taken for law. Moreover,
-the great Basil annexes also the causes for which it
-was forbidden to bend the knee on the Lord&#8217;s day, and
-from the passover to Pentecost.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The honors which were conferred upon this so-called
-Lord&#8217;s day are specified. They are two in
-number. 1. It was &#8220;a day of joy,&#8221; and therefore
-not a day of fasting. 2. On it they &#8220;ought not
-even to bow the knee.&#8221; This last honor however
-applied to the entire period of fifty days between
-the passover and the Pentecost as well as to each
-Sunday in the year. So that the first honor was
-the only one which belonged to Sunday exclusively.
-That honor excluded fasting, but it is
-never said to exclude labor, or to render it sinful.
-And the authority for these two first-day honors
-is frankly given. It is not the words of holy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
-Scripture nor the commandment of God, but &#8220;it
-is enjoined upon us according to the tradition.
-For from hence it is evident that long-established
-custom was taken for law.&#8221; Such is the testimony
-of men who knew the facts. In our days
-men dare not thus acknowledge them, and therefore
-they assert that the fourth commandment
-has been changed by divine authority, and that
-it is sinful to labor upon the first day of the
-week.</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF METHODIUS, BISHOP OF TYRE.</h3>
-
-<p>This father wrote about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 308, and suffered
-martyrdom in <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 312. A considerable portion
-of his writings have come down to our time, but
-in them all I find not one mention of the first
-day of the week. He held to the perpetuity of
-the ten commandments, for he says of the beast
-with ten horns:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Moreover, the ten horns and stings which he is said
-to have upon his heads are the ten opposites, O virgins,
-to the decalogue, by which he was accustomed to gore
-and cast down the souls of many, imagining and contriving
-things in opposition to the law, &#8216;Thou shalt love the
-Lord thy God,&#8217; and to the other precepts which follow.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Banquet
-of the Ten Virgins</i>, Discourse viii. chap. xiii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In commenting on the feast of tabernacles
-(Lev. 23:39-43) he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;These things being like air and phantom shadows,
-foretell the resurrection and the putting up of our tabernacle
-that had fallen upon the earth, which at length, in
-the seventh thousand of years, resuming again immortal,
-we shall celebrate the great feast of true tabernacles in
-the new and indissoluble creation, the fruits of the earth
-having been gathered in, and men no longer begetting
-and begotten, but God resting from the works of creation.&#8221;
-Discourse ix. chap. i.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Methodius understood the six days of creation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
-and the seventh day sanctified by the Creator, to
-teach that at the end of 6000 years the great
-day of joy shall come to the saints of God:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;For since in six days God made the heaven and the
-earth, and finished the whole world, and rested on the
-seventh day from all his works which he had made, and
-blessed the seventh day and sanctified it, so by a figure
-in the seventh month, when the fruits of the earth have
-been gathered in, we are commanded to keep the feast to
-the Lord, which signifies that, when this world shall be
-terminated at the seventh thousand years, when God
-shall have completed the world, he shall rejoice in us.&#8221;
-Discourse ix. chap. i. sect. 4.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In the fifth chapter of this discourse he speaks
-of the day of Judgment as &#8220;the millennium of
-rest, which is called the seventh day, even the
-true Sabbath.&#8221; He believed that each day of
-the first seven represented one thousand years,
-and so the true Sabbath of the Lord sets forth
-the final triumph of the saints in the seventh
-period of a thousand years. And in his work
-&#8220;On Things Created,&#8221; section 9, he refers to this
-representation of one day as a thousand years, and
-quotes in proof of it Ps. 90:2, 4. Then he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;For when a thousand years are reckoned as one day
-in the sight of God, and from the creation of the world
-to his rest is six days, so also to our time, six days are
-defined, as those say who are clever arithmeticians.
-Therefore, they say that an age of six thousand years extends
-from Adam to our time. For they say that the
-Judgment will come on the seventh day, that is, in the
-seventh thousand years.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The only weekly Sabbath known to Methodius
-was the ancient seventh day sanctified by God in
-Eden. He does not intimate that this divine institution
-has been abolished; and what he says
-of the ten commandments implies the reverse of
-that, and he certainly makes no allusion to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
-festival of Sunday, which on the authority of
-&#8220;custom&#8221; and &#8220;tradition&#8221; had been by so many
-elevated above the Sabbath of the Lord.</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF LACTANTIUS.</h3>
-
-<p>Lactantius was born in the latter half of the
-third century, was converted about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 315, and
-died at Treves about <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 325. He was very
-eminent as a teacher of rhetoric, and was intrusted
-with the education of Crispus, the son of Constantine.
-The writings of Lactantius are quite
-extensive; they contain, however, no reference
-to the first day of the week. Of the Sabbath he
-speaks twice. In the first instance he says that
-one reason alleged by the Jews for rejecting
-Christ was,</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;That he destroyed the obligation of the law given by
-Moses; that is, that he did not rest on the Sabbath, but
-labored for the good of men,&#8221; etc.&mdash;<i>Divine Institutes</i>, b.
-iv. chap. xvii.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>It is not clear whether Lactantius believed
-that Christ violated the Sabbath, nor whether he
-did away with the moral law while teaching the
-abrogation of the ceremonial code. But he bears
-a most decisive testimony to the origin of the
-Sabbath at creation:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;God completed the world and this admirable work of
-nature in the space of six days (as is contained in the
-secrets of holy Scripture), and <span class="smcap">CONSECRATED</span> the seventh
-day, on which he had rested from his works. But this
-is the Sabbath day, which in the language of the Hebrews
-received its name from the number, whence the seventh
-is the legitimate and complete number.&#8221; Book vii. chap.
-xiv.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>It is certain that Lactantius did not regard the
-Sabbath as the memorial of the flight out of
-Egypt, but as that of the creation of the heavens<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
-and the earth. He also believed that the seven
-days prefigured the seven thousand years of our
-earth&#8217;s history:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Therefore, since all the works of God were completed
-in six days, the world must continue in its present state
-through six ages, that is, six thousand years. For the
-great day of God is limited by a circle of a thousand
-years, as the prophet shows, who says, &#8216;In thy sight,
-O Lord, a thousand years are as one day.&#8217; And as God
-labored during those six days in creating such great
-works, so his religion and truth must labor during these
-six thousand years, while wickedness prevails and bears
-rule. And again, since God, having finished his works,
-rested the seventh day and blessed it, at the end of the
-six thousandth year all wickedness must be abolished
-from the earth, and righteousness reign for a thousand
-years and there must be tranquility and rest from the
-labors which the world now has long endured.&#8221; Book
-vii. chap. xiv.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Thus much for Lactantius. He could not
-have believed in first-day sacredness, and there
-is no clear evidence that he held to the abrogation
-of the Sabbath. Finally we come to a poem
-on Genesis by an unknown author, but variously
-attributed to Cyprian, to Victorinus, to Tertullian,
-and to later writers.</p>
-
-
-<h3>TESTIMONY OF THE POEM ON GENESIS.</h3>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">&#8220;The seventh came, when God</div>
-<div class="verse">At his works&#8217; end did rest, <span class="smcap">decreeing it</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span class="smcap">Sacred unto the coming ages&#8217; joys</span>.&#8221;</div>
-</div>
- <div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse-right">Lines 51-53.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Here again we have an explicit testimony to
-the divine appointment of the seventh day to a
-holy use while man was yet in Eden, the garden
-of God. And this completes the testimony of
-the fathers to the time of Constantine and the
-Council of Nice.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>One thing is everywhere open to the reader&#8217;s
-eye as he passes through these testimonies from
-the fathers: they lived in what may with propriety
-be called the age of apostatizing. The
-apostasy was not complete, but it was steadily
-developing itself. Some of the fathers had the
-Sabbath in the dust, and honored as their weekly
-festival the day of the sun, though claiming for
-it no divine authority. Others recognize the
-Sabbath as a divine institution which should be
-honored by all mankind in memory of the creation,
-and yet at the same time they exalt above
-it the festival of Sunday, which they acknowledge
-had nothing but custom and tradition for
-its support. The end may be foreseen: in due
-time the Sunday festival obtained the whole
-ground for itself, and the Sabbath was driven
-out. Several things conspired to accomplish
-this result:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. The Jews, who retained the ancient Sabbath,
-had slain Christ. It was easy for men to forget
-that Christ as Lord of the Sabbath had claimed
-it as his institution, and to call the Sabbath a
-Jewish institution which Christians should not
-regard.</p>
-
-<p>2. The church of Rome as the chief in the
-work of apostasy took the lead in the earliest
-effort to suppress the Sabbath by turning it into
-a fast.</p>
-
-<p>3. In the Christian church almost from the beginning
-men voluntarily honored the fourth, the
-sixth, and the first days of the week to commemorate
-the betrayal, the death, and the resurrection
-of Christ, acts of respect in themselves innocent
-enough.</p>
-
-<p>4. But the first day of the week corresponded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
-to the widely observed heathen festival of the
-sun, and it was therefore easy to unite the honor
-of Christ with the convenience and worldly advantage
-of his people, and to justify the neglect
-of the ancient Sabbath by stigmatizing it as a
-Jewish institution with which Christians should
-have no concern.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>progressive</i> character of the work of apostasy
-with respect to the Sabbath is incidentally
-illustrated by what Giesler, the distinguished historian
-of the church, says of the Sabbath and
-first-day in his record of the first, the second,
-and the third century. Of the first century he
-says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Whilst the Christians of Palestine, who kept the whole
-Jewish law, celebrated of course all the Jewish festivals,
-the heathen converts observed only the Sabbath, and, in
-remembrance of the closing scenes of our Saviour&#8217;s life,
-the passover (1 Cor. 5:6-8), though without the Jewish
-superstitions, Gal. 4:10; Col. 2:16. Besides these the
-Sunday as the day of our Saviour&#8217;s resurrection (Acts 20:7;
-1 Cor. 16:2; Rev. 1:10), <span title="hê kyriakê hêmera">&#7969; &#954;&#965;&#961;&#953;&#945;&#954;&#8052; &#7969;&#956;&#941;&#961;&#945;</span>, was devoted
-to religious worship.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Giesler&#8217;s Ecclesiastical History</i>,
-vol. i. sect. 29, edition 1836.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Sunday having obtained a foothold, see how
-the case stands in the second century. Here are
-the words of Giesler again:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Both Sunday and the Sabbath were observed as festivals;
-the latter however without the Jewish superstitions
-therewith connected.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Id.</i> vol. i. sect. 52.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This time, as Giesler presents the case, Sunday
-has begun to get the precedence. But when he
-gives the events of the third century he drops
-the Sabbath from his record and gives the whole
-ground to the Sunday and the yearly festivals of
-the church. Thus he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;In Origen&#8217;s time the Christians had no general festivals,
-excepting the Sunday, the Parasceve (or preparation), the
-passover, and the feast of Pentecost. Soon after, however,
-the Christians in Egypt began to observe the festival
-of the Epiphany, on the sixth of January.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Id.</i> vol.
-i. sect. 70.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>These three statements of Giesler, relating as
-they do to the first, second, and third centuries,
-are peculiarly calculated to mark the progress of
-the work of apostasy. Coleman tersely states
-this work in these words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;The observance of the Lord&#8217;s day was ordered while
-the Sabbath of the Jews was continued; nor was the latter
-superseded until the former had acquired the same
-solemnity and importance, which belonged, at first, to
-that great day which God originally ordained and blessed....
-But in time, after the Lord&#8217;s day was fully established,
-the observance of the Sabbath of the Jews was
-gradually discontinued, and was finally denounced as
-heretical.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Ancient Christianity Exemplified</i>, chap. xxvi.
-sect. 2.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>We have traced the work of apostasy in the
-church of Christ, and have noted the combination
-of circumstances which contributed to suppress
-the Sabbath, and to elevate the first day of the
-week. And now we conclude this series of testimonies
-out of the fathers by stating the well-known
-but remarkable fact, that at the very
-point to which we are brought by these testimonies,
-the emperor Constantine while yet, according
-to Mosheim, a heathen, put forth the following
-edict, <span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 321, concerning the ancient Sunday
-festival:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let all the judges and town people, and the occupation
-of all trades, rest on the venerable day of the sun:
-but let those who are situated in the country, freely and
-at full liberty, attend to the business of agriculture; because
-it often happens that no other day is so fit for sowing
-corn and planting vines; lest, the critical moment being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
-let slip, men should lose the commodities granted by
-Heaven.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>By the act of a wicked man the heathen festival
-of Sunday has now ascended the throne of
-the Roman Empire. We cannot here follow its
-history through the long ages of papal darkness
-and apostasy. But as we close, we cite the words
-of Mosheim respecting this law as a positive
-proof that up to this time, as shown from the fathers,
-Sunday had been a day of ordinary labor
-when men were not engaged in worship. He
-says of it:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;The first day of the week, which was the ordinary
-and stated time for the public assemblies of the Christians,
-<i>was, in consequence of a peculiar law enacted by Constantine,
-observed with greater solemnity than it had formerly
-been</i>.&#8221;&mdash;Mosheim, century 4, part ii. chap. iv.
-sect. 5.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This law restrained merchants and mechanics,
-but did not hinder the farmer in his work. Yet
-it caused the day to be observed with greater
-solemnity than formerly it had been. These
-words are spoken with reference to Christians,
-and prove that in Mosheim&#8217;s judgment, as a historian,
-Sunday was a day on which ordinary labor
-was customary and lawful with them prior to
-<span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 321, as the record of the fathers indicates,
-and as many historians testify.</p>
-
-<p>But even after this the Sabbath once more
-rallied, and became strong even in the so-called
-Catholic church, until the Council of Laodicea
-<span class="smcap">a. d.</span> 364 prohibited its observance under a grievous
-curse. Thenceforward its history is principally
-to be traced in the records of those bodies
-which the Catholic church has anathematized as
-heretics.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="ph3">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> Those who compose this class are unanimous in the view
-that the Sunday festival was established by the church; and
-they all agree in making it their day of worship, but not for the
-same reason; for, while one part of them devoutly accept the
-institution as the Lord&#8217;s day on the authority of the church, the
-other part make it their day for worship simply because it is the
-most convenient day.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_A_2" id="Footnote_A_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_2"><span class="label">[B]</span></a> Such is the exact nature of the covenant mentioned in Ex.
-24:8; and Paul, in Heb. 9:18-20, quotes this passage, calling
-the covenant therein mentioned &#8220;the first testament,&#8221; or covenant.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_A_3" id="Footnote_A_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_3"><span class="label">[C]</span></a> The case of Origen is a partial exception. Not all his works
-have been accessible to the writer, but sufficient of them have
-been examined to lay before the reader a just representation of
-his doctrine.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_A_4" id="Footnote_A_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_4"><span class="label">[D]</span></a> We notice that one first-day writer is so determined that
-Clement shall testify in behalf of Sunday, that he deliberately
-changes his words. Instead of giving his words as they are,
-thus: &#8220;the <i>latter</i>, properly the Sabbath,&#8221; in which case, as the connection
-shows, Saturday is the day intended, he gives them thus:
-&#8220;The <i>eighth</i>, properly the Sabbath,&#8221; thereby making him call
-Sunday the Sabbath. This is a remarkable fraud, but it shows
-that the words as written by Clement could not be made to uphold
-Sunday. See &#8220;The Lord&#8217;s Day,&#8221; by Rev. G. H. Jenks, p. 50.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph3">TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:</p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Greek transliterations can be seen by hovering over the Greek text.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Complete Testimony of the Fathers
-of the First Three Centuries Concerning the Sabbath and First Day, by John Nevins Andrews
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