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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #61071 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/61071)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Constitutional Amendment: or, The
-Sunday, the Sabbath, the Change, and , by Wolcott H. Littlejohn
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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/license
-
-
-Title: The Constitutional Amendment: or, The Sunday, the Sabbath, the Change, and Restitution
- A discussion between W. H. Littlejohn, Seventh-day
- Adventist, and the editor of the Christian Statesman
-
-Author: Wolcott H. Littlejohn
-
-Release Date: January 1, 2020 [EBook #61071]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CONSTITUTIONAL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Brian Wilson, Bryan Ness, David King, 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.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT: OR, THE SUNDAY, THE SABBATH, THE CHANGE,
- AND RESTITUTION.
-
-
-
-
- THE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT:
-
- OR
-
- THE SUNDAY, THE SABBATH,
-
- THE
-
- CHANGE, AND RESTITUTION.
-
-
- A DISCUSSION BETWEEN
-
- W. H. LITTLEJOHN, SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST,
-
- AND THE
-
- EDITOR OF THE CHRISTIAN STATESMAN.
-
-
- STEAM PRESS
- OF THE SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST PUBLISHING ASSOCIATION,
- BATTLE CREEK, MICH.:
-
- 1873.
-
-
-
-
-Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1873, by the
-
-S. D. A. P. ASSOCIATION,
-
-In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE.
-
-
-As it has been thought best that the following articles, which, with the
-exception of the Replies and Rejoinders, have already been published in
-the _Christian Statesman_, the _Sabbath Recorder_, and the _Advent
-Review_, should have a still wider circulation, it has been at last
-decided to present them to the public in the form of the present volume.
-
-The occasion of their first appearance was as follows: Within the last
-few years, a party has been organized in this country, whose especial
-aims are the amendment of the Constitution, so that the names of God and
-Christ may appear in it; the recognition in the same instrument of the
-Bible as the fountain of national law; the securing of the reading of
-the Bible in the common schools; and the enforcement by law of the
-observance of Sunday, as the Christian Sabbath. Slowly, but steadily,
-the friends of this movement are bringing it to the public notice and
-enlarging the circle of its active supporters. A single glance at the
-existing state of affairs reveals the fact that, at no distant date, the
-issues which these men are making up will be the ones over which
-contending parties will wage fierce contest. Already the press of the
-country, by the drift of events which they find themselves incapable of
-controlling, are compelled, almost daily, to record transactions which
-are not only calling the attention of the people to a conflict which is
-both imminent and irrepressible, but which are also continually adding
-fuel to a flame which even now burns with a fierceness and volume
-indicative of its future scope and power.
-
-In view of these facts, the writer of the subjoined articles, while
-taking no particular interest in party politics, merely as such,
-nevertheless felt a profound conviction that the time had come, in the
-providence of God, when Christian men should offer a solemn protest
-against a state of affairs which, while ostensibly inaugurated in the
-interest of the kingdom of Christ, will ultimately prove most
-destructive of religious liberty. This, he therefore attempted to do,
-purely from the stand-point of the Bible. Through the courtesy of the
-editor of the _Christian Statesman_, which paper is the organ of the
-amendment party, the first seven of the following communications were
-permitted to appear in the columns of that periodical. Subsequently, the
-editor of that paper felt it incumbent upon him to take issue with what
-was thus published, and to answer the same in a series of editorial
-articles. To these again, the author of the original communications
-published a series of rejoinders, in defense of the positions assumed by
-him in the outset, and in controversion of those of the reviewer. These
-articles, the replies of the editor, and the rejoinders thereto, having
-been grouped together in the present volume, are offered to a candid
-public for serious consideration.
-
-The reader will readily perceive that the whole discussion turns upon
-the Sabbath question. Fortunately, also, he will discover that the
-ground covered in the debate by the respective disputants is that
-generally occupied by the classes of believers whom they represent.
-Leaving him, therefore, to decide for himself as to which of the views
-presented has the sanction of the divine mind, the writer of the present
-preface can do no more than to give expression to his earnest desire
-that the God of all truth will vouchsafe his Spirit for the illumination
-of every mind which comes to the consideration of this subject with an
-honest purpose to ascertain his will in the matter under consideration.
-
-W. H. L.
-
-_Allegan, Mich._
-
-
-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
-Article I. 5
-
-Article II. 16
-
-Article III. 28
-
-Article IV. 36
-
-Article V. 48
-
-Article VI. 57
-
-Article VII. 71
-
-Explanatory Remarks. 86
-
-Replies and Rejoiners. 87
-
-Article I. 87
-
-Rejoinder. 93
-
-Article II. 107
-
-Rejoinder. 116
-
-Article III. 133
-
-Rejoinder. 139
-
-Article IV. 154
-
-Rejoinder. 161
-
-Article V. 177
-
-Rejoinder. 182
-
-Article VI. 202
-
-Rejoinder. 207
-
-Article VII. 225
-
-Rejoinder. 231
-
-Article VIII. 254
-
-Rejoinder. 261
-
-Article IX. 280
-
-Rejoinder. 287
-
-Article X. 313
-
-Rejoinder. 321
-
-Article XI. 351
-
-Rejoinder. 355
-
-Index of Points Discussed. 379
-
-
-
-
- ARTICLE I.
-
-
-One of the marked features of our time is the tendency toward the
-discussion of the Sabbath question. Nor can this subject be treated with
-more indifference in the future than it is at the present. Agitation,
-ceaseless, unrelenting, excited, and finally severe, is rendered certain
-by the temper of all the parties to the controversy. On the one hand,
-the friends of Sunday observance are dissatisfied with the laxity of the
-regard which is paid it, and are loud in their demands for statutory
-relief; denouncing upon the nation the wrath of God, in unstinted
-measure, should their petition be set at naught. On the other hand, the
-enemies of the Sabbath institution, in all of its phases, are becoming
-bold in their protestations against a legalized Sabbath, as something
-extremely oppressive and inexpressibly intolerable in its very nature.
-
-In all parts of the country, activity characterizes the camps of both
-these contending hosts. Everywhere the elements of strength—hitherto
-unorganized, and inefficient to the accomplishment of great results
-because of that fact—are being brought out and employed in effective
-service.
-
-Cincinnati, Chicago, New York, Boston, San Francisco, in their turn,
-become the theaters where the skirmish lines of future combatants, on a
-larger scale, are brought into occasional collision. The ordinary
-appliances of dinners, processions, national and State conventions,
-city, town, and district societies, are rapidly becoming the order of
-the day, while those who are brought within the range of their influence
-are stimulated and aroused, on the one hand, by earnest appeals to the
-Bible and religion, and on the other, to natural rights and individual
-conscience. So far has the matter now proceeded, so much has already
-been said, so fully has the contest been opened, that retrogression
-means defeat to either the one or the other party. And as to compromise,
-this can never be attained, from the fact that the position from which
-both parties are now seeking to emerge is that of toleration. Why, says
-the ardent advocate of the Sunday law, it is not sufficient that I
-observe the day of rest with strictness and fidelity in my own family. I
-owe a duty to the public; I am a member of a great Commonwealth, which
-God treats as a personality, and if I do not see to it that the statute
-laws of the land are in harmony with, and enforce the requirements of,
-the law of God, this nation, like all others which have ignored their
-obligation to legalize and enforce his will in matters of this nature,
-will be devoted to a ruin for which I shall be accountable, and in which
-I shall be a sharer. Moved by such considerations as these, his purse is
-open and his labors untiring for the accomplishment of that which now
-appears to him to be in the line of both individual interest and
-religious duty.
-
-Again, his neighbor across the way being, perhaps, of the free-thinking
-order, and an ardent admirer of the complete separation of Church and
-State, wonders that he has so long consented to that abridgment of his
-personal liberty which has been made by statutory provision, and which
-has hitherto compelled him to surrender much of what he calls natural
-right to the whims and caprices of those with whom he differs so widely
-on all questions bearing upon the relation of man to his God.
-Henceforth, says he, I pledge my means, my influence, and my untiring
-effort, to a revolution which, if need be, shall shake society to its
-very center, rather than to consent to the legalized perpetuation of an
-institution which requires on my part an acknowledgment of a faith which
-I have never held, and of doctrines which I detest.
-
-Of course, all do not share alike, either in the enthusiasm or the
-animosity which characterizes certain individuals when entering upon a
-conflict like the one in question. In every party is found more or less
-of the aggressive and the conservative elements. Especially is this true
-in the incipient stages of its history. Some men are necessarily more
-earnest than are others in everything which they undertake. Some are
-bold, headlong, defiant; others, cautious, slow, and timid. One class
-leaps to its conclusions first, and looks for its arguments afterward;
-the other moves circumspectly, and, while it gives a general assent to
-the desirability of results, finds a world of trouble in deciding upon
-what means ought to be employed in securing them. One is forever foaming
-because of delay, and fears defeat as the result of hesitation; while
-the other protests against too rapid and ill-considered action.
-
-Such is, at present, the condition more especially of the positive side
-of the Sunday movement in this country. The strong men and the weak men,
-the resolute men and the undecided men, are struggling for the mastery
-of the policy in the camp. One sort discovers no difficulties in the way
-of immediate and complete success. Lead us to the front, say they, our
-cause is just, and all that is necessary to success is the courage and
-inspiration of battle. But hold, say the others, not too fast; public
-sentiment is not prepared for the issue. And besides, we are not so
-clear in our minds as are you respecting the lengths to which this
-controversy should be carried, and the line of argument which ought to
-be pursued. Why, say the first, what need can there be of more delay?
-Nothing is more manifest than the means which we ought to employ for the
-accomplishment of our purpose. Our work is simply that of enforcement.
-Has not God said in so many words, in the decalogue, “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”? Is not this
-language explicit? Is it not a part of that law which nearly all
-Christians acknowledge to be binding? Do we not enforce the observance
-of the remaining commandments by statutory provision? And is it not
-equally clear that this should be treated in like manner? Why delay,
-then? Why not move upon the enemy’s works with the inspiring battle-cry
-of “God in the Constitution?” Why not at once clamor for the amendment
-of that instrument, and for the passage of statutes by which the better
-observance of the Christian Sabbath can be secured? Give us these, and
-our victory is won. Our Sunday mails, and trains, and travel, and public
-amusements of every name and nature, can be removed at a single stroke.
-As a result, the nation will stand higher in the estimation of God; and
-the people, having acknowledged his supremacy, will have taken a long
-step in the direction of final renovation and conversion.
-
-But wait, says another, not too fast in matters of so great moment.
-Please bear in mind the fact that this contest is to be one of words and
-arguments. Your danger is that of underrating the capacity and
-intelligence of our opponents. If you expect to meet them successfully,
-it must be by a logic which will bear criticism and examination.
-
-As an individual, I am by no means certain that the Bible authority for
-our movement is so clear and abundant as you seem to imagine.
-
-The law which you quote in justification of our course is truly a
-Sabbath law, and its import is unmistakable; but, unfortunately, instead
-of making for our cause, it is diametrically opposed to your efforts,
-and plainly declares that the _seventh day_ of the week is the Sabbath
-of the Lord, whereas you are unmistakably occupying before the world a
-position no less awkward than that of insisting that the first, and not
-the seventh, is the one which should be enforced by legal enactment.
-While, therefore, I am in full sympathy with the general purposes of
-this movement, I am convinced that, before we shall succeed, we must
-rest it upon a different basis than the fourth commandment. So far as my
-individual preferences go—in order to avoid the difficulties which lie
-along the line of Scripture justification for our conduct—I suggest that
-we rest it upon the broad principle of social necessity, relying for our
-success upon the generally conceded fact that _rest_ upon one day in
-seven is indispensable to the well-being of individuals and communities.
-
-But, says a third party, while I agree with you in condemning the
-proposition that the fourth commandment, as originally given, furnishes
-us warrant for the observance of the first day of the week, I can never
-consent to the idea of its unconditional repeal; for without it in some
-form we are entirely without a Sabbath law; a condition of things which
-would be deplorable indeed. I therefore conclude that that law has been
-brought over into our dispensation, and so far changed as to adapt it to
-the enforcement of the observance of the first day of the week,
-agreeably to the example of Christ and the apostles. With this view, I
-can safely predict power and triumph for the grand scheme upon which we
-have entered. Give us a Sabbath of divine appointment and backed by a
-sacred precept, and victory is certain. But so sure as we lower the
-controversy to one which is merely corporeal in its nature and results,
-and pecuniary in its considerations, defeat is written upon our banners,
-since you have taken from us all the inspiration of the contest, and
-dried up the very springs of our enthusiasm and courage.
-
-What the final result of such discussions will be, there is little room
-for doubt. That a revolution is fairly inaugurated in the minds of the
-people, it is now too late to question. What remains to be done,
-therefore, is simply to execute the grand purpose for which it has been
-instituted.
-
-That this cannot be accomplished by a merely negative policy, has been
-illustrated too many times in history to require further demonstration.
-Men, having once entered the field of conflict, universally become less
-and less scrupulous in regard to the means employed to secure the
-desired object. In the primary meetings of a great movement, the voice
-of the conservative may be listened to with attention and respect; but
-should he give expression to the same prudent counsel upon the battle
-field, when the sword of the enemy is red with the blood of his
-compatriots, his utterances would be silenced in a storm of indignation
-such as would threaten his very existence, and consign his name to the
-list of those whose fidelity was at least questionable, and whose
-sympathy with the common foe was far from being impossible.
-
-So, likewise, with the half-way men in this incipient struggle, which is
-about to throw open the gates of controversy upon one of those religious
-questions which, above all others, is sure to be characterized, first,
-by uncharitableness, and finally, by bitter hate and animosity. With
-each advancing month, their hold upon the confidence of their associates
-will grow less and less, and the counsels of their party will come more
-and more fully under the control of those positive, nervous spirits, who
-are swept along by convictions so deep and strong that they will bear
-down everything before them.
-
-Nevertheless, candid reader, it is by no means certain that there may
-not be much of truth in the positions assumed by the more moderate men
-in the existing issue. At all events—since we have not as yet entered
-into that impassioned state of the public mind from which calm
-deliberation is banished by the necessity of immediate action—let us
-pause here for a moment, and carefully weigh the correctness of the
-suggestions presented above.
-
-Is it worth the while to enter the lists in the approaching struggle, in
-order to secure the results proposed?
-
-I say proposed, because, of course, the result is as yet more or less
-uncertain; nevertheless, we incline to the opinion that the end desired
-will be substantially realized, so far as appearance is concerned. Yet
-this will not be brought about in a moment, nor will it be accomplished
-without a hard fight. It must, from the very necessity of the case, be a
-contest which will enter, divide, and distract families, and which will
-alienate a large portion of the community from the other. But, with a
-united and well-drilled ministry, on the one band, backed by the compact
-organization of their respective churches, and opposed by a
-heterogeneous mass of discordant elements, there can be little doubt as
-to final success.
-
-First, then, let us suppose that the policy inaugurated shall be that of
-the class represented above as desiring to strip the subject of its
-religious garb, and to array it in the habiliments of mere policy and
-temporal considerations. Are the benefits reasonably to be expected from
-such a course such as would warrant the enthusiasm now manifested by the
-advocates of the proposed reformation? We believe not. In fine, so
-certain are we of it, that we should not hesitate to predict immediate
-and perfect paralysis to their efforts, so soon as they should inscribe
-this doctrine upon their banners. How many of the gentlemen in question
-are really so profoundly interested in the social status of the
-working-man that their zeal in his behalf could be wrought up to the
-point of sacrificing time and money, and of devoting voice and pen to
-the mere work of giving him a septenary day of physical rest? What
-satisfaction would be afforded them by the reflection that, as the
-result of legal enactment, the carefully appointed police in our great
-cities should be able to meet each other on the boundary lines of their
-respective beats, on the morning of Sunday, with the accustomed
-salutation, All is quiet! and cessation from labor is complete in all
-parts of the great metropolis? Who would highly prize a coerced rest of
-this sort? What particular gratification would be afforded to the
-religious world, as they gather, in their costly churches, by the
-thought that the great mass of the people were quietly sleeping, or
-lazily lounging in the various places of their retirement? Certainly
-there is nothing in such a state of things which offers results
-sufficiently desirable either to reward them for the great sacrifices
-with which it would be necessary that they should be purchased, in the
-first instance, or to secure that patient continuance in vigilant
-perseverance which would be required to insure the perpetuity of an
-order of things at once so compulsory and so precarious. We say,
-therefore, that to rest the contest upon this issue would be simply to
-falsify the facts. It is not the physical consideration of rest, in any
-large degree, which animates the mind and strengthens the resolve of
-those engaged in the newly organized reform. No; there is something
-behind all this. The informing soul, that which electrifies, stimulates,
-and nerves to action, is the profound conviction that this is a
-religious movement; that which is sought is the honoring of God by the
-observance of a Sabbath such as is found in his word. If this be not so,
-if the higher idea of Christian worship as the primary one is not
-paramount in this matter, then the whole thing is a farce, from
-beginning to end. Not only so; if what is sought is merely the
-improvement of bodily condition, then the plan suggested is, in many
-cases, far from being the best which might be offered. Take, if you
-please, our over-populated cities, with the dense masses of human beings
-who are there crowded together, under most unfavorable circumstances,
-many of them perishing for lack of pure air, and others pale and sickly
-for want of exposure to the vivifying rays of the sun, which is
-continually shut out from their gaze by the massive piles of masonry by
-which they are inclosed; who will not say that, leaving the spiritual
-out of consideration, and setting aside the idea of the sanctity of the
-day, it would be a blessing incalculably greater for them, should
-provision be made whereby this should become to them a day of
-recreation, while wandering amid flowers, and over hills, and through
-groves, instead of one in which, either from necessity or choice, they
-should still perpetuate the confinement which has already nearly proved
-fatal in their cases?
-
-
-
-
- ARTICLE II.
-
-
-Turning from the secular phase of this subject, let us regard it for a
-moment from the religious stand-point.
-
-Is there anything in the purpose itself which is worthy of the cost at
-which alone it can be realized? In other words, since the object aimed
-at is ostensibly that of bringing the nation up to the point of a
-general regard for the first day of the week as a Sabbath, would such a
-result be one which should be profoundly desired?
-
-We reply that this will depend altogether upon circumstances. In this
-case, as in the first, mere cessation from labor on that day, which is
-not prompted by a regard for the will and approval of Jehovah, could
-afford no relief to a nation, which is seeking to avert divine
-displeasure since there is no element in the act itself calculated to
-recommend it to the favor of Heaven. To illustrate: The individual
-sentenced to solitary confinement in the State’s Prison is precluded
-from the possibility of laboring on the Sunday; will any one therefore
-argue that there is any merit in his inaction on that day? Again: The
-heathen nations, in common with the majority of the Christian world,
-have many of them regarded the Sunday as a sacred day; should we
-presume, therefore, that they are looked upon by the Almighty more
-complacently on this account? You answer, No; and urge, as a reason for
-this reply, that they have been engaged in a false worship, and have not
-been actuated by any regard for the true God. Where, then, is the line?
-Manifestly, right here: The men who honor God by the keeping of any day
-must be prompted by the conviction that they are doing it in strict and
-cheerful obedience to a divine command.
-
-Here, then, is the crucible in which we will try the metal of this
-modern movement. If, when their grand design shall be accomplished—as
-the result of many labors and toils—and, even though before their
-purpose is attained, it shall be found necessary for them to reach their
-object through a conflict intensely bitter and impassioned on the part
-of the opposition, we shall witness the spectacle of a nation bowing
-submissively to the _law_ and _will_ of _God_ in the humble and fervent
-observance of a weekly rest of _divine appointment_, it will be the
-grandest triumph which history has recorded. No treasure of gold—we were
-about to say no sacrifice of life—would be too great a price to pay for
-so glorious a victory. Let it be understood, however, that this must be
-a voluntary and intelligent worship on the part, at least, of the mass
-of the people.
-
-But will this be true, should our friends compass the great object of
-their ambition? Let us inquire once more after their intentions. What is
-it they advocate? The answer is, A universal regard for the first day of
-the week, as the Sabbath of the Lord.
-
-But what is the authority upon which the majority of them rest their
-argument for the proposed observance? Is it merely pecuniary advantage?
-No, say they, it is out of a sincere regard for the God of Heaven, and a
-conscientious desire to fulfill his law. But this implies religious
-duty. So far, so good. It also clearly sets forth the fact that God has
-a law, and a Sabbath which it enforces. The appeal, therefore, must
-inevitably be to that law, as the proper instrument from which to
-instruct the people.
-
-To that they must be brought, again and again. Its import must be
-patiently taught, its sacredness must be thoroughly inculcated. Let them
-but be satisfied by _sound logic_ that the divine statute is explicit in
-its demands for a strict observance of the first day of the week, let
-them be thoroughly educated into the idea that they are under its
-jurisdiction, and let them be instructed that this whole movement
-proceeds upon this religious conviction, and you have laid a foundation
-which will uphold a structure of imposing dimensions and enduring
-character, the cornerstone whereof is the fear of God, and an
-acknowledgment of his presence in the affairs of men. But how is it in
-the case in question? Is the commandment of a nature such as to support,
-in every particular, the tenets presented by the reform under
-consideration? This is really the vital point. Let it speak for itself.
-It is the fourth of the decalogue which is urged: “Remember the Sabbath
-day, to keep it holy. 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, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy man-servant,
-nor thy maid-servant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within
-thy gates: for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and
-all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the Lord
-blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed it.” If this is not a Sabbath law,
-then there is none in existence; for, _mark it_, this is the only
-instance in all the Scriptures in which it will be claimed by any one
-that we have a positive command for the observance of the Sabbath. So
-far, therefore, as the first day of the week is concerned, its friends
-have this advantage, that, if they but succeed in resting it upon this
-commandment, their labor is ended; for it—_i. e._, the commandment—has
-no rival. All that is needed, consequently, is a clear, pointed exegesis
-showing that the day in question is the one, the observance of which the
-divine Lawgiver has required. But, unfortunately, such an exegesis would
-be beset with difficulties. To begin with, Who shall be able to
-harmonize the declaration which the commandment contains in these words,
-“The _seventh day_ is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it thou shalt
-not do any work,” with the utterance of those who, on the contrary, say
-that the _first day_ is the Sabbath of the Lord, and must be observed as
-such? The divine Lawgiver—as if determined that there shall be no room
-for debate in regard to the day which he had in his mind—has identified
-it in a manner such as to leave no room for dispute. In the first place,
-he announces his willingness that six days of the week should be devoted
-to secular employment, “Six days shalt thou labor, and do all thy work:”
-then follows the disjunctive, “but—the seventh day is the Sabbath of the
-Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work.” Here it is made plain
-that it is the “Sabbath of the Lord” upon which we are to rest. Again,
-passing over the intermediate space, we come to the close of the
-commandment, in which he sets forth three important transactions by
-which that was constituted the Sabbath, and by which it may ever be
-recognized. He says, “For in six days the Lord made heaven and earth,
-the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore
-the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed it.” That is, the day
-which we are to keep as the Sabbath of the Lord is the one upon which he
-_rested_, which he _blessed_, and which he _hallowed_. Therefore, before
-the first day of the week can, with any show of reason, be kept in
-fulfillment of this commandment, _i. e._, before it can be regarded as
-the “Sabbath of the Lord,” it must be shown that, at some time, God has
-rested upon it, blessed, and hallowed it. But this would be a difficult
-task; for not only are the Scriptures silent, so far as the affirmation
-of this fact is concerned with reference to the first day of the week,
-but, on the contrary, they positively declare that it was the very day
-upon which Jehovah _entered upon the stupendous undertaking of making a
-world_. Should additional evidence be required on this point, _i. e._,
-that the last day of the week, and not the first, is the one which
-Jehovah intended to sanctify, we have but to cite the intelligent reader
-to the fact that Moses, the prophets, the Lord himself, the holy women
-after his death, and the whole Jewish nation—in whose language the
-decalogue was given—are, and have been, unanimous in placing this
-construction upon the Sabbatic law.
-
-Should any, however, perceiving the dilemma into which they are thrown
-by the effort to enforce their view in the use of the law, as it was
-originally given, seek relief in the position that it was so far amended
-in the days of Christ as to admit of the substitution of the day of his
-resurrection for that of God’s rest at the end of creation week, we
-reply, If such a fact can be clearly made out, it would certainly
-furnish the very help which is needed just at this juncture, and without
-which confusion must inevitably characterize the movements of those who
-feel the necessity of a Sabbatic law for the keeping of Sunday.
-
-Let us, therefore, carefully investigate this most important point. Is
-it true that the Son of God did so change the phraseology of the
-commandment of the Father that, from his time forward, its utterances
-have not only justified the secularizing of the last, but have also
-enforced, by the penalty of eternal death, a strictly religious regard
-for the first day of the week, on the part of both the Jewish and the
-Gentile world? Now this, if accomplished, was no trifling affair, and
-could not have been done in a corner; since it involved the guilt or
-innocence, the life or death, of countless millions of men and women,
-whose condemnation in the day of Judgment for the violation of Sunday
-sanctity would turn, of necessity, upon the words of one who both had
-the power to change, and had brought the knowledge of that change
-clearly before them. Certain it is, therefore—since God does not first
-judge, and legislate afterward—all the light which is necessary for the
-proper elucidation of this subject is now to be found in his written
-word. To this, then, we turn; and with a profound conviction that the
-language of Christ was true in its largest sense, “If any man will do
-his will he shall know of the doctrine,”—we inquire, Where is it stated,
-_in so many words_, that God made the amendment in question?
-
-Should the response be returned, as it certainly must be, that such a
-statement is not to be found within the lids of the Bible, we answer
-that this is a concession which, most assuredly, will greatly embarrass
-our friends in the proposed reform. Sagacious men will not be slow in
-discovering its bearing upon the subject, and it will be very difficult
-to explain such an omission to the satisfaction of cautious and
-reflecting minds. Should it be suggested, however, that—notwithstanding
-the fact the change has not been set forth in so many words—it has
-nevertheless occurred, and is therefore binding, we answer: Although the
-transaction upon the face of it, to say the least, would be a singular
-one, if an alteration has really been made, the next thing to be
-ascertained is its precise nature. We have already seen that the first
-law was very explicit in its statements; and all are conversant with the
-fact that to it was given the greatest publicity, and that it was
-uttered by the voice, and written by the finger of God, under the most
-imposing circumstances. Now, if Christ—whose power to do so we shall not
-question here—has really undertaken the task of adding to, or taking
-from, this most sacred precept, will some one furnish us with an
-_authentic copy_ of the statute, as amended? Now this is a reasonable
-and just request. To declare simply that a change has occurred, without
-making known precisely what that change is, is but to bewilder and
-confuse. Conscious of this fact, the State is always extremely careful
-to give to its citizens—in the most public manner—every variation which
-is made in its enactments, lest the loyal man should be incapable of
-proving his fidelity by obedience, or the disloyal justify his violation
-upon the plea of necessary ignorance. Shall man be more just than his
-Maker? Shall Christ—who, in every other respect, has, in matters of
-duty, furnished us with line upon line, and precept upon precept—be
-found, at last, upon this most important point, to have been unmindful
-of the highest interests of his followers? Most assuredly not. He that
-never slumbereth nor sleepeth, He that knoweth the end from the
-beginning, He who hath said, “Where there is no law there is no
-transgression,” has certainly never required his people to occupy a
-position in the face of their enemies so extremely embarrassing as that
-in which they would be compelled to ignore the plainest dictates of
-reason and Scripture, by seeking to condemn in the world a practice
-which is not necessarily immoral in itself, and against which there is
-no explicit denunciation of the Bible. Who, then, we inquire again, will
-furnish us from the sacred page the precept so remodeled as to meet the
-exigences of this case? Is it _larger_ or more _condensed_ than before?
-Does the first clause read, “Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy?”
-If so, it is well. Is the second in order expressed in these words, “Six
-days shalt thou labor, and do all thy work?” This, again, is good. But
-how is it with the third, “The seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord
-thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work?” Here, unquestionably, the
-change must begin. Who among us, therefore, can produce the divine
-warrant for a reading of this passage which shall make it harmonize with
-the keeping of Sunday? Who dare declare, upon his veracity, that he has
-ever discovered in the sacred word an instance in which it has been so
-rewritten as to read, “But the _first_ day is the Sabbath of the Lord
-thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work?”
-
-Furthermore, passing over the instructions in regard to sons, daughters,
-servants, the stranger, etc., what has the pen of the divine remodeler
-done with the _reason_ of the commandment as found in the words, “For in
-six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them
-is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath
-day, and hallowed it?” Has that been stricken out altogether? Or, is
-there a glaring inconsistency in the remodeled statute, by which it is
-made to state that the _first_ day of the week, instead of the
-_seventh_, is now the Sabbath of the Lord our God, because of the fact
-that, in the creation of the world, God rested upon, blessed, and
-hallowed, the latter? These are weighty questions. Upon them, virtually,
-turns the issue of an amended law. For, to amend, is so to change or
-alter as to vary the duty of a subject; and if no one is capable of
-informing definitely and particularly in regard to the precise
-variations of the phraseology, then, of course, no one is able to decide
-just how far our course of action should deviate from what it has been
-hitherto, in order to meet the demands of the divine will as now
-expressed, in a rule which has never been seen, and which no hand would
-venture to trace with any claim to exactitude. Who, then, we inquire
-again, is sufficient for this task? Not one among the millions of
-Protestants who are so earnestly clamoring for the sanctity of the day
-in question will seriously lay claim to the ability to perform that
-which would at once elevate him to a position—in view of the relief
-which it would bring to thousands of troubled minds—more exalted than
-that of any saint or martyr who has ever lived.
-
-Nor is this all; behind all this pretentious claim for an amended law
-are very many indications of a wide-spread conviction—though undefined
-and hardly recognized by the individuals themselves—that the fact upon
-which they place so much stress is, after all, one in regard to which
-there are serious doubts in their own minds. As an illustration of this,
-we have but to call attention to two things. First, on each Lord’s day,
-so-called, thousands of congregations—after devoutly listening to the
-reading of the fourth commandment of the decalogue, word for word,
-syllable for syllable, letter for letter, precisely as it was written
-upon the table of stone by the finger of God—are in the habit of
-responding with solemn cadence to the utterances of the preacher, “O
-Lord, incline our hearts to keep this law.” Now this prayer means
-something, or nothing. It is either an expression of desire, on the part
-of those employing it, for grace to enable them rightly to observe the
-commandment as it reads—seventh day and all—or else it is a solemn
-mockery, which must inevitably provoke the wrath of Heaven. These
-people, therefore, judging from the most charitable stand-point, are
-witnesses—unconscious though they may be of the fact—of a generally
-pervading opinion that the verbiage of the fourth commandment has not
-been changed, and that it is as a whole as binding as ever. Second, nor
-is it simply true that those only who have a liturgy have committed
-themselves to this idea. It is astonishing to what extent it has crept
-into creeds, confessions of faith, church disciplines, and documents of
-a like nature. But among the most striking of all evidences of its
-universality, when properly understood, is the practice of nearly all
-religious denominations of printing, for general distribution among the
-Sunday-school scholars, verbatim copies of the decalogue, as given in
-the twentieth chapter of Exodus. Yet this practice would be a pernicious
-one, and worthy of the most severe censure, as calculated to lead astray
-and deceive the minds of the young, if it were really true that this
-code, in at least one very important particular, failed to meet the
-facts in the case, as it regards present duty.
-
-In view of these considerations, a change of the base of operations
-becomes indispensable. A commandment, altered in its expressions so as
-to vary its import, and yet no one acquainted with the exact terms in
-which it is at present couched—and all, in reality, being so skeptical
-upon the point that even its most ardent advocates reason as if it had
-never occurred—would certainly furnish a foundation altogether
-insufficient for the mighty superstructure of a great reform, which
-proposes, ere the accomplishment of its mission, to revolutionize the
-State.
-
-
-
-
- ARTICLE III.
-
-
-Where, then, shall we turn for relief? There is one, and but one, more
-chance.
-
-Acknowledging that the law, as originally given, will not answer the
-purpose, and that its amendment cannot be made out with sufficient
-clearness to warrant the taking of a stand upon it, we turn, for the
-last time, to examine a position quite generally advanced; namely, that
-of Sunday observance inaugurated, justified, and enforced, by the
-resurrection and example of Christ. Is it true, then, that such is the
-fact? Have we, at last, found relief from all our difficulties in the
-life and career of no less a personage than the divine Son of God? Let
-us see.
-
-The point of the argument is briefly this:—
-
-Our Lord—by rising from the dead, and by his practice of meeting with
-his disciples on that day—both introduced, and made obligatory upon his
-followers, the necessity of distinguishing between the first and the
-remaining days of the week, as we would between the sacred and the
-profane. Now, if this be a case which can be clearly made out, then we
-are immediately relieved in one particular; that is, we have found
-authority for the observance of the Sunday. But how is it as it regards
-the seventh day? This, we have seen, was commanded by God the Father.
-The obligation of that command is still recognized. Now, consequently,
-if Christ the Son has, upon his own authority, introduced another day
-immediately following the seventh, and clothed it with divine honors, is
-it a necessary inference that the former is therefore set aside? To our
-mind, it is far from being such. If God has a law for the observance of
-a given day, and Christ has furnished us with an example for that of
-another also, then the necessary conclusion is, that the first must be
-kept out of respect for God the Father, and the last through reverence
-to Christ the Son. Three facts, therefore, must be clearly made out, or
-our situation is indeed one of perplexity.
-
-First, it must be shown, authoritatively, that the resurrection effected
-the change which is urged, and that the practice of Christ was what it
-is claimed to have been.
-
-Second, that that practice was designed to be exemplary; in other words,
-that what he did in these particulars was of a nature such that we are
-required to imitate it.
-
-Third, it must also be shown that he not only sanctified the first, but,
-also, that he secularized the seventh day of the week.
-
-But can this be done? Let us see. First, then, we will consider the
-matter of the resurrection. Now, that it was an event of surpassing
-glory, and one ever to be held in grateful remembrance, there is no room
-for dispute among Christians. But shall we, therefore, decide that it
-must of necessity be commemorated by a day of rest? This would be
-assuming a great deal. It seems to us that it would be better, far
-better, to leave decisions of such importance as this entirely with the
-Holy Spirit. Protestants, at least, warned by the example of Roman
-Catholics, should avoid the danger of attempting to administer in the
-matter of designating holy days; since, manifestly, this is alone the
-province of God. Hence, we inquire, Has the Holy Ghost ever said that
-the resurrection of Christ imparted a holy character to the day upon
-which it occurred? The answer must, undeniably, be in the negative. No
-such declaration is found in the Holy Word. Nor is this all; even from
-the stand-point of human reason, every analogy is against it. It were
-fitting that, when God had closed the work of creation, and ceased to
-labor, he should appoint a day in commemoration of that rest. The
-propriety of such a course, all can see. But, on the contrary, is it not
-equally manifest that to have remained inactive on that glorious
-morning, when the Son of God had burst the bands of death, and the news
-was flying through all parts of the great city of Jerusalem, “Jesus has
-risen to life again,” would have been a condition of things wholly out
-of the question? Both the enemies and the friends of Christ—the one
-class stimulated by hate, and the other released by the mighty power of
-God from the overwhelming gloom and crushing despondency of three
-terrible days—were, by the very necessities of the case, moved to action
-by an energy which would cause them to overleap every barrier and to
-break away from every restraint. Everything, everywhere, animated by the
-new aspect which affairs had suddenly assumed, demanded immediate,
-ceaseless, and untiring activity. And such it had. From the early
-morning, until far into the hours of the succeeding night, scribe and
-Pharisee, priest and Levite, believer and unbeliever, were hearing,
-gathering, and distributing, all that could be learned of this most
-mysterious event. We say, consequently, that so far is it from being
-true that the day of the resurrection is one which should be hallowed,
-either exactly or substantially as that of the decalogue, the very
-opposite is the fact; and, if it were to be celebrated at all, every
-consideration of fitness demands that it should be done by excessive
-demonstrations of outward and uncontrolled joy, rather than by quietude
-and restraint.
-
-Passing now to the other branches of the subject, we inquire, finally,
-What was there in the _example_ of Christ and the apostles which in any
-way affects the question? If they are to be quoted at all upon this
-subject, it is but reasonable that their history should be examined with
-reference both to the seventh and the first day; for, if precedent, and
-not positive enactment, is to be the rule by which our faith is to be
-decided, in a point of this significance, it is at least presumable that
-the historic transactions by which this question is to be determined
-will be ample in number, and of a nature to meet and explain all the
-phases of the subject. That is, the Gospels and the Acts of the
-Apostles—covering, as their history does, a period of about thirty
-years—will afford numerous and conclusive evidences that both Christ and
-the apostles did actually dishonor the old, and invest with peculiar
-dignity and authority the new, Sabbath. First, we inquire then, Is
-there, in all the New Testament, the record of a single instance in
-which Jesus or his followers transacted, upon the seventh day of the
-week, matters incompatible with the notion of its original and continued
-sanctity? The answer is, of necessity, in the negative. The most careful
-and protracted search has failed to produce a single case in which the
-son of Joseph and Mary departed in this particular from the usages of
-his nation, or in which his immediate representatives, during the period
-of their canonical history, failed to follow, in the most scrupulous
-manner, the example of Him of whom it is said that, “as his custom was,
-he went into the synagogue on the Sabbath day, and stood up for to
-read.” (Luke 4:16.) Nor is this all; it is a remarkable fact, and one
-well calculated to stagger the investigator at the very threshold of his
-researches into the data for the modern view, that, whereas the Sabbath
-is mentioned fifty-six times in the New Testament, it is in every
-instance, save one (where it refers to the annual Sabbaths of the Jews),
-applied to the last day of the week. So far, therefore, as the negative
-argument is concerned, which was based upon the presumption that the
-claims of the old day were constructively annulled by the appointment of
-a new one, its force is entirely broken by the record, which, as we have
-seen, instead of proving such an abolition, is rather suggestive of the
-perpetuity of the old order of things. Hence, we turn to the positive
-side of the subject.
-
-How do we know that Christ ever designed that his example should produce
-in our minds the conviction that he had withdrawn his regard from the
-day of his Father’s rest, and placed it upon that of his own
-resurrection? Did he, in laying the foundation for the new
-institution—as in the case of the Lord’s supper—inaugurate the same by
-his own action, and then say to his disciples, As oft as ye do this, do
-it in remembrance of me? Did he ever explain to any individual that his
-especial object in meeting with his followers on the evenings of the
-first and second Sundays (?) after his return from the dead was designed
-to inspire in the minds of future believers the conviction that those
-hours, from that time forward, had been consecrated to a religious use?
-If so, the record is very imperfect, in that it failed to hand down to
-us a most significant fact. I say significant, because, without such a
-declaration, the minds of common men, such as made up the rank and file
-of the immediate followers of Christ, were hardly competent to the
-subtile task of drawing, unaided, such nice distinctions. How natural,
-how easy, by a single word, to have put all doubt to rest, and to have
-given to future ages a foundation, broad and deep, upon which to ground
-the argument for the change.
-
-But this, as we have already seen, was not done! and after the lapse of
-eighteen hundred years, men—in the stress of a situation which renders
-it necessary that they should obtain divine sanction, in order to the
-perpetuity of a favored institution—are ringing the changes of an
-endless variety of conjectures drawn from transactions, which, in the
-record itself, were mentioned as possessing no peculiar characteristics,
-which should in any way affect the _mere time_ upon which they occurred.
-
-Let us, therefore, with a proper sense of the modesty with which we
-should ever enter upon the task of deciding upon the institutions of the
-church, when there is no divine precept for the guidance of our
-judgment, examine for ourselves. As we do this, it will be well, also,
-to bear in mind the fact that our prejudices will be very likely to lie
-entirely upon the side of life-long practice and traditionary
-inheritance. In fact, nearly every consideration, political, financial,
-and social, will be found, if not guarded with the strictest care,
-wooing us to a decision which—though it might dishonor God, and do
-violence to the principles of a clear, natural logic—would exempt us,
-individually, from personal sacrifice and pecuniary loss.
-
-
-
-
- ARTICLE IV.
-
-
-First, then, we suggest that it would be well to collate all the texts
-in the New Testament in which the first day of the week is mentioned.
-They are as follows: “In the end of the Sabbath, as it began to dawn
-toward the first day of the week, came Mary Magdalene and the other Mary
-to see the sepulcher.” Matt. 28:1.
-
-“And when the Sabbath was past, Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of
-James, and Salome, had bought sweet spices, that they might come and
-anoint Him. And very early in the morning, the first day of the week,
-they came unto the sepulcher at the rising of the sun.” Mark 16:1, 2.
-
-“Now when Jesus was risen early the first day of the week, he appeared
-first to Mary Magdalene, out of whom he had cast seven devils.” Mark
-16:9.
-
-“And they returned, and prepared spices and ointments; and rested the
-Sabbath day, according to the commandment. Now upon the first day of the
-week, very early in the morning, they came unto the sepulcher, bringing
-the spices which they had prepared, and certain others with them.” Luke
-23:56, and 24:1.
-
-“The first day of the week cometh Mary Magdalene early, when it was yet
-dark, unto the sepulcher, and seeth the stone taken away from the
-sepulcher.” John 20:1.
-
-“Then the same day at evening, being the first day of the week, when the
-doors were shut where the disciples were assembled for fear of the Jews,
-came Jesus and stood in the midst, and saith unto them, Peace be unto
-you.” John 20:19.
-
-“Upon the first day of the week let every one of you lay by him in
-store, as God hath prospered him, that there be no gatherings when I
-come.” 1 Cor. 16:2.
-
-“And upon the first day of the week, when the disciples came together to
-break bread, Paul preached unto them, ready to depart on the morrow; and
-continued his speech until midnight.” Acts 20:7.
-
-Doubtless the reader is not a little surprised, provided he has never
-given his attention to the subject before, at discovering the
-meagerness, so far as numbers at least are concerned, of the passages
-alluded to above. Nevertheless, let us take the data, thus furnished,
-and from them endeavor to derive all the information which they can
-legitimately be made to afford. At first glance, it will be discovered
-that six of the passages of Scripture under consideration relate to one
-and the same day, which was that of the resurrection. Written as they
-were from five to sixty-two years this side of that occurrence, and
-penned by men who were profoundly interested in everything which was
-calculated to throw light upon matters of duty and doctrine, we would
-naturally expect that they would seize these most favorable
-opportunities for instructing those whom they were endeavoring to
-enlighten in regard to the time of, and circumstances connected with,
-the change of the Sabbath. Let us observe, therefore, how they discharge
-this most important responsibility. It will not be urged by any that
-John 20:1, and Mark 16:9, furnish anything which in any way strengthens
-the Sunday argument. The statements which they contain are merely to the
-effect that Mary Magdalene was the one to whom Christ first presented
-himself, and that she visited the tomb very early in the morning.
-Neither will it be insisted that the declaration found in Matt. 28:1,
-and Mark 16:1, 2, and Luke 23:56, and 24:1, afford any positive
-testimony for the sanctity of the first day of the week. On the
-contrary, we think that every candid person will concede that the
-bearing which they have upon the subject is rather against, than
-favorable to, the case which our friends are so anxious to make out. To
-illustrate: In Matt. 28:1, we read that “in the end of the Sabbath, as
-it began to dawn toward the first day of the week, came Mary Magdalene,
-and the other Mary, to see the sepulcher.” Again, in Mark 16:1, 2, the
-same general fact is stated, with the simple variation that, instead of
-the expression, “in the end of the Sabbath,” are substituted the words,
-“when the Sabbath was passed,” while in Luke 23:56, and 24:1, it is
-declared that these things transpired on the first day of the week, the
-context carefully setting forth the fact that the women had “rested upon
-the Sabbath, according to the commandment,” and that it being past, they
-came to the sepulcher, bringing with them the spices which they had
-prepared.
-
-Now, putting all these things together, what have we learned?
-Manifestly, the following facts: First; when the events transpired which
-are set forth in these scriptures, there was a Sabbath; since it is
-stated, by way of locating them in point of time, that the Sabbath had
-ended before the affairs spoken of were transacted. Secondly; that the
-Sabbath, to which reference was made, was the seventh day of the week,
-since it preceded the first, and was that of the commandment. Thirdly;
-that, if the first day of the week was a Sabbath, as is now claimed, the
-women were ignorant of it, since it is clear that they did not go to the
-tomb on the seventh day to embalm the body, because of its being holy
-time; whereas, upon the first day of the week their scruples were gone,
-and they came to the sepulcher, bearing their spices with them, to
-accomplish a work which they would not have regarded as legitimate on
-the Sabbath. Fourthly; that the seventh day was not only the Sabbath at
-the time mentioned, but also that, according to the convictions of the
-historians, it was the Sabbath at the time of their writing—since they
-apply to it the definite article “_the_;” whereas, if there had been a
-change of Sabbaths, it would have been natural to distinguish between
-them in the use of explanatory words and phrases, such as are now
-applied, as, for instance, “the Jewish Sabbath,” “the Christian
-Sabbath,” &c., &c. Fifthly; that, while Matthew, Mark, and Luke do, in
-every instance cited above, honor the seventh day of the week in the
-most scrupulous manner, by applying to it the Bible title of the
-Sabbath, they do, nevertheless, make mention of the day of the
-resurrection in each case, in the same connection, in the use of its
-secular name, “the first day of the week.” A slight which is utterly
-inexplicable, provided the latter had really put on a sacred character;
-since, that being true, it was much more important that its new claims
-should be recognized and inculcated by those who could speak with
-authority, than it was that they should perpetuate the distinction of a
-day whose honors had become obsolete. Having now examined five of the
-six texts under consideration, there remains but one more to occupy our
-attention. This reads as follows: “Then the same day at evening, being
-the first day of the week, when the doors were shut where the disciples
-were assembled for fear of the Jews, came Jesus and stood in the midst,
-and saith unto them, Peace be unto you.” John 20:19. Here, again, we are
-struck with the manifest disposition on the part of John, in common with
-the other evangelists, to avoid the application of any sacred title to
-the first day of the week. Twice, in this chapter, he makes mention of
-that which is now regarded as the “Queen of days,” but in both
-instances, he avoids, as if with studied care, attaching to it any
-denomination by which its superiority over other days should be
-indicated. How perfectly in keeping, for instance, it would have been
-with the facts as they are now claimed to have existed—as well as with
-the interests and desires of millions who have since lived—had he in the
-text before us so varied the phraseology of the first clause that it
-would read as follows: “And the same day at evening, being the
-_Christian Sabbath_, when the disciples were assembled,” &c. This,
-however, he did not do, and we inquire of the reader, right here,
-concerning his _motive_ in omitting that which now appears to us so
-desirable, and which would have been perfectly legitimate were the views
-of our friends correct. Did he intentionally omit an important fact? Was
-it left out because of an oversight on his part? Or, would it be safer
-to conclude that perhaps, after all, the difficulty lies, not with the
-apostle, or with the Holy Spirit, which dictated his language, but with
-the theory, which seems to be out of joint with his utterances?
-
-Nevertheless, as it is still urged that, in the absence of a positive
-declaration, this, the only remaining text, does furnish abundant
-evidence of the sacred regard in which the day of the resurrection was
-held—since it gives an account of a religious meeting held upon it,
-manifestly for the purpose of recognizing its heavenly character—let us
-examine more critically into the nature of the claims which are based
-upon its record. That those with whom we differ should be tenacious in
-their efforts to rest their cause very largely upon the account found in
-John 20:19, is not at all surprising. It is the only chance, as we have
-seen, which is left them of basing their argument upon a passage of
-Scripture which relates to the day of the resurrection. So far as 1 Cor.
-16:2, and Acts 20:7, are concerned, it will not be disputed by any that
-their testimony is merely collateral evidence. If Sunday has become the
-Sabbath, it was by virtue of transactions which occurred immediately in
-connection with the rising of Christ. In other words, it was on the
-third day after the crucifixion that Christ, if at all, began to impress
-upon the minds of his disciples the Sabbatic character which had already
-attached to, and was henceforth to continue in, the day which saw him a
-conqueror over death and the grave.
-
-Nay, more; if the change occurred at all, it must have dated from the
-very moment that the angel descended, the guard was stricken down, and
-the Son of God, glorified, came forth. This being the case, from that
-time forward it would naturally be the effort of Christ to produce in
-the minds of his followers the conviction of this most momentous fact.
-Every action of his would necessarily be—if not directly for the purpose
-of imprinting the peculiar sacredness of the hours upon those by whom he
-was surrounded—at least of a character such as to impart no sanction
-either to a deliberate, or even an unintentional disregard, on the part
-of any, of their hallowed nature. Hence, our friends, seizing upon the
-fact that he met with them while assembled together in the after part of
-the day, have endeavored to clothe the incident with great interest, and
-have largely elaborated their arguments to show that this was not an
-accidental occurrence, but rather partook of the nature of a religious
-meeting, Christ himself honoring these instinctive efforts on the part
-of the disciples to act in harmony with the spirit of the hour, by his
-own personal presence.
-
-Before we sanction this view of the subject, however, let us give our
-attention for a moment to the manner in which the previous portion of
-the day, then closing, had up to that point been spent. Certain it is,
-that Jesus had not, during its declining hours, been suddenly moved by a
-newly created impulse for the accomplishment of an object which had been
-just as desirable for twelve hours as it was at that moment. Sunday
-sanctity had already become a fixed fact, and its knowledge as essential
-to the well-being of the disciples in the morning, as at the evening. We
-naturally conclude, therefore, that the very first opportunity for its
-disclosure would have been the one which Christ would embrace. This was
-afforded in his conversation with Mary. But, while there is no evidence
-that it was imparted, it is at least presumable that she was left
-entirely ignorant of it.
-
-The second occasion was presented in that of the journey of the two
-disciples from Jerusalem to Emmaus, a distance of seven and a half
-miles. Jesus walked with them and talked with them by the way, reasoned
-with them about the resurrection, made as though he would have gone
-farther, discovered himself to them in the breaking of bread, and
-disappeared, leaving them to retrace the seven and a half miles to the
-city, with no word of caution against it on his part. Nay, more; his
-marked approval of the propriety of the act might properly have been
-inferred from the fact that he himself accompanied them in the first
-instance, in the garb of a wayfaring man; at the same time acting the
-part of one who was so far convinced of the rectitude of his own and of
-their action, that he was ready to continue his journey until night
-should render it impracticable. (Luke 24:28.) Following these men now,
-as they retrace their steps to the city from which they had departed,
-and to which they were now returning—manifestly all unconscious that
-they were trespassing upon time which had been rescued from that which
-might properly be devoted to secular pursuits—let us observe them, as
-they mingle once more with their former companions in grief. How does it
-happen that they are congregated at this precise point of time? Is it
-because they have at last discovered the fact that it has been made in
-the special sense a proper day for religious assemblies? If so, whence
-have they derived their conviction? Certainly not from Mary, or the two
-disciples just returning from Emmaus. Assuredly, also, not from Christ
-himself.
-
-But, again, is it not really from an induction on their own part, by
-which they have themselves discovered the fitness of making the day of
-resurrection also that of worship? Listen a moment. Hear their excited
-remarks as, at this juncture, they are joined by the two. Do you catch
-these words, “The Lord is risen indeed, and hath appeared to Simon”?
-(Luke 24:34.) Does not this establish the fact of their confidence in
-the previous report? Unfortunately, the historian adds, “Neither
-believed they them.” Here they are, then, manifestly still doubting the
-very fact which some have thought they were convened to celebrate.
-
-But, again, what is the _place_ of their convocation? Unquestionably,
-neither the temple nor the synagogue. The record states that where they
-were assembled, “the doors were closed for fear of the Jews.” Evidently,
-they were in some place of retirement and comparative safety, hiding
-away from the fury of a people who, in their madness and cruel hate, had
-crucified even the Lord of glory. We ask again, Where were they? Let
-Mark explain. Certainly he is competent to the task. When describing the
-very transaction we are considering, he says: “Afterward he appeared to
-the eleven as they sat at meat, and upbraided them with their unbelief
-and hardness of heart, because they believed not them which had seen him
-after he was risen.” Mark 16:14. Here, then, is the clue to the whole
-matter. It was not a religious meeting, because they were in a frame of
-mind to be censured, rather than applauded, because of unbelief. It was
-merely the body of the apostles, gathered in their own quarters for the
-purpose of partaking of an evening meal, where they were in the habit of
-eating, and drinking, and sleeping—and where, at this time, they kept
-particularly close, because of the perils which surrounded them on every
-hand. That this is true, is further sustained by two additional
-considerations.
-
-First; it was a place where Christ expected to find meat, and where he
-requested such for his own use, and was supplied from their bounty with
-broiled fish and an honeycomb, which, the record states, “he took and
-did eat before them.” (Luke 24:41-43.)
-
-Secondly; that they were in possession of just such a rendezvous, is
-clearly stated in John 20:10, where, speaking of Peter and John when
-going from the sepulcher, it says, “They went away unto their own home.”
-A few days later, Luke declares (Acts 1:13,) that when they came in from
-the ascension, they “went up into an upper room, where abode both Peter,
-and James, and John, and Andrew, Philip, and Thomas; Bartholomew, and
-Matthew, James the son of Alpheus, and Simon Zelotes, and Judas the
-brother of James.”
-
-Thus, by a natural and easy combination of the facts brought to view by
-the inspired penman, the whole matter has been reduced to a simple
-transaction, such as might have been repeated many times during the
-forty days, and such as—in and of itself—fails to disclose any evidence
-that the occurrences narrated, either necessarily or presumptively,
-afford the slightest justification for the supposition that Christ
-himself either designed, or that the apostles might legitimately
-conclude that he intended, by joining them under these familiar
-circumstances, to authorize one of the mightiest innovations upon the
-practice of ages which the world has ever seen.
-
-
-
-
- ARTICLE V.
-
-
-Nor is this matter at all relieved by the statement found in John 20:26,
-that after eight days, Thomas being present, he appeared unto them a
-second time under similar circumstances. For even should we grant that
-this was on the next Sunday evening—a matter in which there is, at
-least, room for a difference of opinion—the subject is merely
-complicated the more, so far as the view of our friends is concerned,
-since here a second opportunity, and that a most excellent one, for
-calling the attention of the disciples to the new character which a once
-secular day had assumed, was entirely neglected. In this also, as in the
-first instance, the conversation was of a nature to show that the object
-of the interview was to give additional evidence (because of the
-presence of Thomas) of the re-animation of the body of Christ, without
-any reference to its effect upon the character of the day upon which it
-occurred. But such silence, under _such_ circumstances, in regard to so
-important a matter, is in itself conclusive evidence that the change
-claimed had not really taken place. Furthermore, it will not be urged
-that more than two out of the five first-days which occurred between the
-resurrection and the ascension were days of assembly. Had they been—as
-it had been decided, according to the view of those urging the
-transition, that the Sunday should not be hallowed by positive
-declaration, but simply inaugurated by quiet precedent, then the
-presumption is, that this precedent, instead of being left upon the
-insufficient support of two Sabbaths out of five, would have been
-carefully placed upon the whole number. Nor would the precaution have
-ended here. In a matter vital in its nature, certain it is that the
-honest seeker after truth would not be left to grope his way through a
-metaphysical labyrinth of philosophic speculation in regard to the
-effect of certain transactions upon the character of the time upon which
-they occurred; or the bearing of certain meetings of Christ and the
-apostles upon the question as to whether Sunday had assumed a sacred
-character, when at the same time his perplexity was rendered
-insupportable by the fact, that the historian states, that like meetings
-occurred on days for which no one will claim any particular honor.
-
-Take, for instance, the meeting of Jesus with the apostles at the sea of
-Galilee (John 21), while they were engaged in a fishing excursion.
-Assuredly, this did not take place on Sunday; else, according to the
-view of our friends, they would not have been engaged in such an
-employment. Just what day it was, no one is able to decide; but all
-agree that its character was in no way affected by the profoundly
-interesting interview which occurred upon it between the Master and his
-disciples. If it were, then there is at least one holy day in the week
-which we cannot place in the calendar, since no one can decide whether
-it was the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, or sixth.
-
-If, however, you would have a still more forcible illustration of the
-fact that religious meetings, were they never so solemn, can in nowise
-alter the nature of the hours on which they occur, let me call your
-attention to the day of the ascension (Acts 1). Here is an occasion of
-transcendent glory. If the statements in the sacred narrative of events,
-which transpired during its hours, could only be predicated of either
-one or the other of the first-day meetings of Christ with his disciples,
-it would at least be with an increased show of reason that they could be
-woven into the tissue of a Sabbatic argument. Here are found many of the
-elements essential to the idea of religions services, of which the
-instances in question are so remarkably destitute.
-
-In the first place, those who followed our Lord to the place of meeting
-were intelligent believers in the fact of his resurrection.
-
-In the second place, the assembly was not confined to a mere handful of
-individuals, seeking for retiracy within an upper room where they were
-in the habit of eating, drinking, and sleeping; but it transpired in the
-open air, where Jesus was in the habit of meeting with his followers.
-
-In the third place, the congregation was made up of persons whom the
-Holy Spirit had thus brought together for the purpose of becoming the
-honored witnesses of the resurrection and ascension of Christ.
-
-In the fourth place, it was graced by the visible forms of holy angels
-in glistering white, who participated in the services.
-
-In the fifth place, Jesus himself addressed them at length, lifted up
-his hands to heaven, and brought down its benediction upon them, and in
-the sight of the assembled multitude, steadily and majestically rising
-above them, he floated upward, until a cloud received him out of their
-sight.
-
-In the sixth place, it is said, in so many words, that the “_people
-worshiped_ him there.”
-
-Now, suppose, for the sake of the argument, that some modern sect should
-endeavor to transform our unpretending Thursday, which was really the
-day of the ascension, since it was the fortieth after the resurrection,
-into one of peculiar dignity, claiming, in defense of their position,
-the example of Christ, and urging that the course which he pursued could
-only be satisfactorily explained on the ground that he was laying the
-foundation for its future Sabbatic observance, how would our friends
-meet them in such an emergency? Deny the facts, they could not, for the
-record is ample. There would, therefore, be but one alternative left.
-
-If transactions of this character are of a nature such that they
-_necessarily_ exalt the days upon which they occur to the rank of holy
-days, then Thursday is one, and should be treated as such. No line of
-argument, however ingenious, could evade this conclusion, so long as the
-premises in question were adhered to. Planting himself squarely upon
-them, with the consent of modern Christendom, the advocate of the newly
-discovered holy day, finding the record perfectly free from
-embarrassments in the nature of transactions which would appear to be
-incompatible with the notion that everything which Christ and his
-apostles did was in harmony with his view, if possessed of that skill
-and ability which has marked the efforts of some modern theologians in
-such discussions, could weave a web of inference and conjecture almost
-interminable in its length.
-
-All the facts connected with the meeting could be expanded, and turned
-over and over, and exhibited from innumerable stand-points, so as to
-yield the largest amount of evidence possible. Having dwelt at large
-upon everything which was said and done at Bethany, he might return with
-the solemn procession to the great city. Having done this, he would not
-fail to call our attention to the fact that they did not conduct
-themselves in a manner such as men might have been expected to do under
-the circumstances on a common day, but that, on the contrary, impressed
-with the sacredness of the hours which had witnessed the glorious
-ascension of the Son of God, they immediately repaired to a place of
-assembly, manifestly for the purpose of continued worship. Again,
-scrutinizing with polemic eye every syllable of the history, in order to
-extract from it all the hidden testimony which it might contain, his
-attention would be arrested by these words, “A Sabbath day’s journey.”
-Immediately, he inquires, Why employ such an expression as this—one
-which occurs nowhere else in the sacred volume? Certainly it cannot be
-the result of accident. The Holy Spirit must have designed to signify
-_something_ by such a use of the term in the connection under
-consideration. A Sabbath day’s journey! What importance could be
-attached to the fact that the particular point from which Christ
-ascended was no more than a Sabbath day’s journey from Jerusalem? The
-expression is not sufficiently definite to designate the precise spot,
-and must, therefore, have been employed to express some other idea. What
-was it? Undeniably, it was introduced into this connection because of
-the _nature_ of the _time_ on which the journey occurred. It was a
-_Sabbath day_, and, as such, it was important that succeeding
-generations should not be left to infer from the account given, that it
-was a matter of indifference to the Lord how far travel should be
-carried on such an occasion; but, on the contrary, that he was jealous
-on this point, and that the expression in question was employed to show
-that the procession of Christ’s followers, and Christ, himself, bowed
-reverently to the national regulation respecting the distance to which
-it was proper for one to depart from his home during the continuance of
-holy time.
-
-But this line of argument, though plausible in itself, and superior in
-fact to that which is many times used to support the tottering fabric of
-first-day observance, would not, we fancy, persuade an intelligent
-public to introduce a new Sabbath into their calendar. The verdict which
-even those with whom we differ would be compelled to render would be
-that which both reason and piety would dictate; namely, that the fatal
-defect in the logic was the want of a thus saith the Lord.
-
-Passing now from the first six of the eight texts which relate to the
-first day of the week, let us give to 1 Cor. 16:2, and Acts 20:7, a
-consideration of sufficient length only to enable us to assign to them
-the proper place which they should occupy in this controversy. While it
-will be observed that they present the only mention of the first day of
-the week after leaving the gospels, and while it is remembered that they
-are separated from the occurrences there narrated by the space of
-twenty-six years, it is a remarkable fact that the first of them, if not
-in itself clearly against the conception of Sunday sanctity, at least,
-affords no strength for the argument in its favor. It reads as follows:
-“Upon the first day of the week let every one of you lay by him in
-store, as God hath prospered him, that there be no gatherings when I
-come.” 1 Cor. 16:2.
-
-Now, bear in mind that the inference here is, that the gatherings spoken
-of were to be made in the assemblies of the Corinthians, the presumption
-following that, as they must have been in the habit of convening on the
-first day of the week, the apostle took advantage of this fact in order
-to secure the desired collections for the saints at Jerusalem. You will
-observe, consequently, that the postulate, or assumed point in the
-discussion, is that the Corinthians were at the church, or place of
-meeting, when the “laying by,” which was ordered above, took place. If,
-therefore, this be not true, the whole logical superstructure which
-rests upon it necessarily falls to the ground.
-
-Let us inquire after the facts. Does the apostle say, Let every one of
-you lay by himself at the church? or, does he command that his pro-rata
-donation should be placed in the contribution box of the assembly? We
-answer: There is not a word to this effect. Nor is this all; the very
-idea of the text is diametrically opposed to this notion. Before the
-contrary can be shown to be true, it will be necessary to demonstrate
-that which is absurd in itself; namely, the proposition that what an
-individual has voluntarily placed beyond his own reach and control by
-putting it in a common fund, can, at the same time, be said to be “laid
-by him in store.”
-
-Furthermore, Mr. J. W. Morton, a gentleman who has given the subject
-mature reflection and careful investigation, by a comparison of the
-different versions and the original, has demonstrated the fact that, if
-properly translated, the idea of the passage is simply that, for the
-purpose of uniformity of action, and to prevent confusion from secular
-matters when the apostle himself should arrive, each person should lay
-by himself _at home_ the amount of his charities according to his
-ability. We give the following from his pen: “The whole question turns
-upon the meaning of the expression, ‘by him;’ and I marvel greatly how
-you can imagine that it means, ‘in the collection box of the
-congregation.’ Greenfield, in his lexicon, translates the Greek term,
-‘by one’s self; _i. e._, at home.’ Two Latin versions—the Vulgate, and
-that of Castellio—render it, ‘_apud se_,’ with one’s self, at home.
-Three French translations, those of Martin, Osterwald, and De Sacy,
-‘_chez soi_,’ at his own house, at home. The German of Luther, ‘_bei
-sich selbst_,’ by himself, at home. The Dutch, ‘by hemselven;’ same as
-German. The Italian of Diodati, ‘_appressio di se_,’ in his own
-presence, at home. The Spanish of Felipe Scio, ‘_en su casa_,’ in his
-own house. The Portuguese of Ferrara, ‘_para isso_,’ with himself. The
-Swedish, ‘_nær sig sielf_,’ near himself. I know not how much this list
-of authorities might be swelled, for I have not examined one translation
-that differs from those quoted above.”—_Vindication of the True
-Sabbath_, p. 61.
-
-The simple fact is, therefore, that while the text in question yields no
-proof that Sunday was then regarded as a day of convocation, it was one
-which might he encumbered with matters which would necessarily call
-attention to the pecuniary affairs of individual Christians, and so
-avoid the necessity of their giving thought to such things when Paul
-himself should arrive; thereby preventing delay on his part, and leaving
-them free to devote their whole time to the consideration of religious
-themes. Thus much for 1 Cor. 16:2.
-
-
-
-
- ARTICLE VI.
-
-
-Advancing now to the remaining scripture, which is found in Acts 20:7,
-we append its words as follows: “And upon the first day of the week,
-when the disciples came together to break bread, Paul preached unto
-them, ready to depart on the morrow; and continued his speech until
-midnight.” By reading that which immediately follows the above, we shall
-learn the following facts: First, that here is indeed a record of a
-religious meeting upon the first day of the week (verse 7). Second, that
-it was held in that portion of the day when the darkness prevailed,
-since it was necessary to employ many lights (verse 8). Third, that Paul
-preached unto them, and that, while he was speaking, Eutychus fell to
-the ground; and Paul, having restored him to life, returned to his labor
-(verses 7-11). Fourth, that he broke bread, or administered the Lord’s
-supper (verse 11). Fifth, that he preached until break of day (verse
-11). Sixth, that Luke, and the other disciples, preceding him, sailed
-the vessel to Assos (verse 13). Seventh, that Paul, having preached all
-night, until the dawning of the day, crossed the country on foot,
-stepped aboard of the vessel, and went on his journey toward Jerusalem
-(verses 13, 14). Now let it be borne in mind, that Troas was a city on
-the west coast of Asia, located at the base of a peninsula, on the
-opposite side of which lay the city of Assos; distant about nineteen and
-a half miles in direct line from the former place. Let it also be
-remembered that the promontory in question, projecting as it did into
-the sea for some miles, made it necessary for a vessel, passing from
-Troas to Assos, to traverse a much greater distance, and to consume more
-time than one would be compelled to do in passing from one of these
-points to the other by the overland route. This explains the reason why
-Paul, who was exceedingly anxious to spend all the time he could with
-the brethren, consented to perform the journey on foot; thus being
-enabled to spend several additional hours with them, while Luke and his
-associates were toiling to bring the boat around the headland to the
-place of the apostle’s final embarkation.
-
-Returning now to the consideration of the meeting in question, it
-becomes important to know just when it was entered upon. Did it answer
-to what we would call a Sunday-evening meeting? If so, then Paul resumed
-his journey on Monday morning. But, before we give an affirmative
-response to this question, would it not be well to inquire in relation
-to the system for computing time which ought to be followed in this
-case? We moderns have generally adopted that of the Romans. With it,
-beginning the day, as it does, at midnight, we would naturally answer
-the interrogatory above in the affirmative. Should we do this, however,
-we should unquestionably fall into a grievous error. The days of the
-Bible commenced invariably with the setting of the sun.
-
-That this is so, the following quotation from the American Tract
-Society’s Bible Dictionary is sufficient to demonstrate: “The civil day
-is that, the beginning and end of which are determined by the custom of
-any nation. The Hebrews began their day in the evening (Lev. 23:32); the
-Babylonians at sunrise, and we begin at midnight.” Art. Day, p. 114.
-
-Reasoning, therefore, upon this hypothesis, the bearing of the text is
-immediately reversed. As the meeting was held in that portion of the
-first day of the week in which it was necessary that lamps should be
-lighted, it follows that it commenced with the setting of the sun on
-Saturday evening, and continued until daylight on what we call Sunday
-morning. It is consequently clear that we have at last found one first
-day in the Scriptures, the first half of which was observed in a manner
-compatible with the idea of its being regarded as a Sabbath. But, as a
-Sabbath day is twenty-four, and not merely twelve, hours long, it is
-indispensable that those who seek to avail themselves of the record
-before us, should be able to establish the point that there is nothing
-in it which would go to show that the remaining portion of the day was
-devoted to purposes, and employed in a manner, irreconcilable with the
-hypothesis of its sanctity. Can they do this? Let us see. Would it be
-legitimate for believers at the present time to traverse on foot a
-distance of nineteen and a half miles between the rising and the setting
-of the sun, on the first day of the week, in order to pursue a journey
-toward a point of destination hundreds of miles in the distance? Would
-it be admissible for others, prosecuting the same journey, to weigh
-anchor and hoist sail in a friendly port, and coast along the shore for
-a much greater distance?
-
-Who, among the friends of Sunday observance at the present time, would
-venture to answer these questions in the affirmative, without putting on
-the record some qualifying or explanatory clause? We hazard the
-assertion that few of them, conscientious as we believe many of them
-are, would be willing, by such a response, to place themselves on the
-category of those who, to say the least, may have very lax views in
-regard to what may be done upon holy time. And yet this is precisely the
-situation in which Luke has left Paul, himself, and his associates,
-before the generations of Christians who were to follow them.
-
-We ask, therefore, again, Can it be true that the great apostle to the
-Gentiles, standing as a representative man in the great work of
-transferring the religious world from the observance of the seventh, to
-that of the first, day of the week, and this not by positive precept,
-but, as it is claimed, simply by precedent and example, should have
-allowed himself to throw that example, as in the case before us, against
-the very work which he was seeking to accomplish? In other words, is not
-the obvious import of the text such that the average reader, with no
-favorite theory to make out, and a mind unbiased by the effect of
-education and early training, would naturally come to the conclusion
-that Paul and the disciples with him, and those from whom he parted at
-Troas, looked upon the day of that departure as but a common one?
-
-We believe that if any other meaning can be drawn from the history
-before us, it will be reached through constraint, and not through the
-easy process of obvious reason. It is useless to talk about inability to
-control the vessel, and the urgent necessity of occupying every hour in
-order to reach Jerusalem in time for the feast. So far as the first of
-these points is concerned, if it were well taken, is it not to be
-presumed that, for the vindication of the course pursued, and for the
-benefit of posterity, it would have found a place in the sacred record?
-And as to the matter of limited time, the question of twelve hours
-longer or shorter, was immaterial in a journey of the length of the one
-under consideration. Besides, upon following the account as given, we
-have from Luke himself that, before they reached their destination, they
-stopped at Tyre for seven days (chap. 21:4), and at Cesarea, many days
-(chap. 21:10), and yet had ample time to accomplish their object in
-reaching Jerusalem before the feast.
-
-We say again, therefore, that these considerations, in the absence of
-any allusions to them in the context, are simply gratuitous, or, at
-least, are far-fetched. The narrative still remains. The great fact that
-Paul and his followers did travel upon the first day of the week is made
-conspicuous, and the only legitimate conclusion to be drawn therefrom is
-that which alone harmonizes with the consistency of Paul’s life and that
-of his brethren, as well as the wisdom and beneficence of the great God,
-namely: That he did so because of his conviction that it was a day which
-might properly be devoted to labor and travel. With this understanding,
-the story is relieved of all embarrassment, and becomes a simple and
-highly interesting account of a meeting convened on the first day of the
-week, because of the approaching departure of a beloved brother and
-apostle, and rendered also worthy of record by the miracle which was
-performed upon Eutychus. But with such a decision, our labor is ended,
-and with it the whole theory in regard to the Sabbatic character of
-Sunday is exploded; for, not only does the scripture which we have been
-investigating fail to yield the doctrine which it was supposed to
-contain, but, on the contrary, it presents Paul as standing emphatically
-against it. This being true, it belongs to a faith which he never
-proclaimed, and which, consequently, was associated in his mind with
-that which should not be received, though it were “preached by an angel
-from Heaven.”
-
-Nevertheless, that we may not appear to have overlooked the two
-remaining texts, which are generally quoted as affording additional
-proof of the distinguished regard in which the first day of the week was
-held, we turn our attention for a moment to Acts 2:1, and Rev. 1:10.
-
-As it regards the first of these scriptures, the claim is, that the
-outpouring of the Spirit occurred with reference to a divine disposition
-to honor the day of the resurrection. To this we reply, first, that if
-this were so, it is a remarkable fact that there is nothing in the
-connection to show it. The name of the day, even, is not so much as
-mentioned. The inspired annalist, were this supposition true, would most
-assuredly have given prominence to an idea which, it is claimed, was the
-governing one in the mind of the Spirit, in order to enable succeeding
-generations to extract from the facts narrated the true moral which they
-were intended to convey. But mark his words. Is the declaration, “When
-the first day of the week was fully come”? If so, we might say that this
-day was foremost in his own mind, and in that of the Spirit.
-
-But such was not his language. On the contrary, his statement is, “When
-the day of Pentecost was fully come.” Hence, it was the day of
-Pentecost, or the great Jewish feast, which is here made to stand out
-conspicuously upon the sacred page. If, therefore, we are to decide that
-the transaction in question was intended to hallow any particular
-twenty-four hours, undeniably they were those within which the Pentecost
-fell. But those did not occur regularly upon the first day of the week,
-nor was the institution one of weekly recurrence. It was annual in its
-return, transpiring one year upon the first, and perhaps the next year
-upon the second, and so on, through every day of the week. To reason,
-consequently, that, because it happened to take place at this time upon
-Sunday, the fact is necessarily significant of a change in the character
-of the day, is altogether inconclusive.
-
-That were a cheap logic indeed, which would argue that the Pentecost,
-which was mentioned expressly, and the return of which was waited for
-with patience, was in no-wise affected, illustrated, or perpetuated, by
-the outpouring of the Spirit upon it, whereas, a septenary division of
-time—not thought worthy of mention by its peculiar title—was thenceforth
-rendered glorious. Stand together, however, they cannot; for, if it were
-the Pentecost which was to be handed down in this way to those who
-should come after, then it would, of necessity, be celebrated annually,
-and not each week; but, if it were the first day of the week which alone
-was made the object of divine favor, then why wait until the arrival of
-the great annual Sabbath at the end of the fifty days? Why was not some
-other first day taken—say one of the six which had already occurred
-between the resurrection and that time—in this manner avoiding the
-possibility of confusion as to which event was thus honored?
-
-Should it be replied that the Spirit could not be poured out until the
-great antitype of the fifty-day feast had been met in Heaven, we answer:
-Then it was _this_ event, and not the resurrection, which furnishes the
-occasion for the remarkable demonstrations which were manifested before
-the people. We repeat again, therefore, that from whatever stand-point
-we look at the text, it is the _Pentecost_, and not the first day of the
-week, to which, if to anything, it attaches special importance. This is
-further demonstrated by the fact that it is to this hour a matter of
-grave discussion between theologians whether the day of Pentecost, at
-the time under consideration, did really fall upon the first day of the
-week or upon some other. Leaving to them, therefore, the delicate and
-arduous task of adjusting questions of this nature—which are neither
-important in themselves, nor easy of decision—we hasten to glance at
-Rev. 1:10. It reads as follows: “I was in the Spirit on the Lord’s day,
-and heard behind me a great voice, as of a trumpet.”
-
-Here is something which certainly has a bearing upon the subject. The
-language employed is of thrilling interest. Says the apostle, “I was in
-the Spirit on the Lord’s day.” This being uttered about A. D. 95,
-determines the point that God has a day in this dispensation, and also
-proves that he has but one; since the language would be very indefinite
-were there two or more days of such a nature. But by what system of
-reasoning is the conclusion reached that this must of necessity be the
-first day of the week? Assuredly, it can only be by inference. If it can
-first be proved that the day of the resurrection has, by divine
-authority, been anywhere styled the “Lord’s day,” then the point is
-unquestionably gained. When those words were penned, more than sixty
-years had passed since it is claimed that Sunday had been clothed with
-divine honor. The whole canon of the New Testament, save the gospel of
-John, had been written within that time. Ample opportunity had been
-afforded for the work of placing upon record the sacred appellation
-which was to be given to that period of time, which, having been
-separated from everything of a secular nature, had been elevated to the
-dignity of a holy rest. But had this ever occurred? The facts are
-briefly these: The first day of the week, as we have seen, being
-mentioned eight times in the New Testament, is always spoken of as plain
-first day of the week; John himself, writing his gospel after the
-appearance of the Apocalypse, everywhere applies to it this unpretending
-title. Whenever the term Sabbath is used, on the other hand—as we have
-seen that it is fifty-six times in the New Testament—it is applied, with
-one exception, to the Sabbath of the commandment, or the seventh day of
-the week.
-
-In view of these facts, take a common man, without bias or predilection,
-one, if you please, who has never heard of the controversy in question,
-place in his hands the Bible without note or comment, let him read the
-following texts which confessedly refer to the seventh day of the week,
-and we think the verdict which he would render would be decidedly in
-favor of the venerable Sabbath of the Lord; of which it is true, as it
-is of no other day, that he has again and again claimed it as his own.
-The italics are our own. “If thou turn away thy foot from the _Sabbath_,
-from doing thy pleasure on _my holy day_; and call the Sabbath a
-delight, the _holy of the Lord_, honorable; and shalt honor him, not
-doing thine own ways, nor finding thine own pleasure, nor speaking thine
-own words; then shalt thou delight thyself in the Lord.” Isa. 58:13, 14.
-
-“But the seventh day is the _Sabbath of the Lord thy God_: in it thou
-shalt not do any work:” “for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth,
-the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day; wherefore
-the Lord _blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed it_.” Ex. 20:10, 11.
-
-“And he said unto them, The Sabbath was made for man, and not man for
-the Sabbath; therefore the Son of man is Lord also of the Sabbath.” Mark
-2:27, 28.
-
-If such a decision be a just one, however, where are we in the matter
-under examination? What has become of the modern Sabbath reform for
-which we have been seeking justification in the word of God? First, we
-sought to place it upon the commandment; this, we found to be out of the
-question. Second, we investigated the claim of an amended law; that, we
-discovered to be entirely without authority, and against even the
-conviction and practice of the very men who urged it. Third, we turn, as
-a last resort, to the precedents of Bible history; these, we found, so
-far as they affect the question at all, to be overwhelmingly against a
-movement which, while it claims to be in the interest of the God of
-Heaven, is confronted by the following astounding facts: First, the day
-whose observance it seeks to enforce by statute law is one, the keeping
-of which, God has never commanded. Second, Christ has never commanded
-it. Third, no inspired man has ever commanded it. Fourth, God himself
-never rested upon it. Fifth, Christ never rested upon it. Sixth, there
-is no record that either prophets or apostles ever rested upon it.
-Seventh, it is one upon which God himself worked. Eighth, it is one
-which, during his lifetime, Christ always treated as a day of labor.
-Ninth, it is one upon which, after his resurrection, he countenanced, by
-his own personal example, travel upon the highway. Tenth, it is one upon
-which the two disciples, in going to and returning from Emmaus, traveled
-a distance of fifteen miles. Eleventh, it was on that day that Paul
-walked from Troas to Assos, a distance of nineteen and one-half miles.
-Twelfth, it was on that day that Luke and his associates passed from one
-to the other of these places by a longer route, working their vessel
-round the promontory.
-
-That all these things could be true, and yet our friends be right in the
-supposition that they are engaged in a work which commands the approval
-of Heaven, is too absurd to require further discussion. A movement
-pushed forward in the face of these facts may succeed, so far as
-political success and legal enactment are concerned, but when the logic
-for its Scriptural character is scrutinized as closely as it will be
-before it shall plant its banners upon the capitol of the nation, all
-conscientious convictions in regard to its heavenly birth will give
-place to an inspiration, the source of whose strength will be found in
-the superiority of party drill, and the overwhelming power of mere
-numbers. Who shall say that the God of Heaven has not permitted it to
-come to the surface for the very purpose of calling the attention of
-honest men and women, as it only could be done by the debate which will
-arise in controversy, to the scantiness of that Sunday wardrobe by
-which, as with it our friends attempt to clothe a favorite institution,
-we are so forcibly reminded of the bed and covering spoken of by the
-prophet Isaiah: The first of which was “too short to stretch one’s self
-upon,” and the last, “too narrow to wrap one’s self within?” So sure as
-investigation is provoked upon this subject, so certain is it that,
-sooner or later, thinking men and women will discover—as we have already
-done in this article—that there is indeed a crying demand for a Sabbath
-reform. Not one, however, which rests merely upon the power of
-Congressional enactment, and Presidential sanction, but one which shall
-find its authority in the highest of all laws, and which shall have the
-approval of the King of kings and Lord of lords.
-
-
-
-
- ARTICLE VII.
-
-
-The conflict is finally open. The spirit of inquiry has lifted itself in
-the nation; and all eyes will be turned toward the Bible, as really the
-only source from which can be derived authority for a Sabbath reform
-which shall be worthy of the name.
-
-Commencing with its opening pages, they will trace the Sabbatic
-narrative until they have been able to verify the following summary of
-history and doctrine:—
-
-1. The Sabbath, as the last day of the week, originated in Eden, and was
-given to Adam, as the federal head of the race, while he yet retained
-his primal innocence. Proof: “And on the seventh day God ended his work
-which he had made; and he rested on the seventh day from all his work
-which he had made. And God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it;
-because that in it he had rested from all his work which God created and
-made.” Gen. 2:2, 3.
-
-2. That, though the history of the period, stretching from the creation
-to the exodus, is extremely brief, it is manifest, even from that
-period, that the good of those ages had not lost sight of it; since the
-children of Israel were acquainted with its existence thirty days before
-reaching Mount Sinai. “And He said unto them, This is that which the
-Lord hath said, Tomorrow is the rest of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord;
-bake that which ye will bake to-day, and seethe that ye will seethe; and
-that which remaineth over lay up for you to be kept until the morning.”
-Ex. 16:23. “Six days ye shall gather it; but on the seventh day, which
-is the Sabbath, in it there shall be none.” Ex. 16:26.
-
-3. That God, unwilling to commit the interest of so important an
-institution to the keeping of tradition, framed a command for its
-perpetuity, which he spoke with his own voice and wrote with his own
-finger, placing it in the bosom of the great moral law of the ten
-precepts: “Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. 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, thou, nor thy son,
-nor thy daughter, thy man-servant, nor thy maid-servant, nor thy cattle,
-nor thy stranger that is within thy gates: for in six days the Lord made
-heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the
-seventh day; wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed
-it.” Ex. 20:8-11.
-
-That this law has been brought over into our dispensation, and every jot
-and tittle of it is binding now, and will continue to be, so long as the
-world stands. “Think not that I am come to destroy the law or the
-prophets; I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill. For verily I say
-unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no
-wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled. Whosoever, therefore,
-shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he
-shall be called the least in the kingdom of Heaven; but whosoever shall
-do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of
-Heaven.”—JESUS, Matt. 5:17-19. “Do we then make void the law through
-faith? God forbid; yea, we establish the law.”—PAUL, Romans 3:31.
-“Wherefore the law is holy, and the commandment holy, and just, and
-good.” Romans 7:12. “If ye fulfill the royal law according to the
-scripture, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself, ye do well; but if
-ye have respect to persons, ye commit sin, and are convinced of the law
-as transgressors. For whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend
-in one point, he is guilty of all. For he that said, Do not commit
-adultery, said also, Do not kill. Now if thou commit no adultery, yet if
-thou kill, thou art become a transgressor of the law.”—JAMES, Jas.
-2:8-11. “Whosoever committeth sin transgresseth also the law; for sin is
-the transgression of the law. And ye know that he was manifested to take
-away our sins; and in him is no sin. Whosoever abideth in him sinneth
-not; whosoever sinneth hath not seen him, neither known him.”—JOHN, 1
-John 3:4-6.
-
-5. That, agreeably to this view, Christ—of whom it is said, “Thy law is
-within my heart”—was a habitual observer, during his lifetime, of the
-Sabbath of the decalogue. “And he came to Nazareth, where he had been
-brought up; and, _as his custom was_, he went into the synagogue on the
-Sabbath day, and stood up for to read.” Luke 4:16. “If ye keep my
-commandments, ye shall abide in my love; even as I have kept my Father’s
-commandments, and abide in his love.” John 15:10.
-
-6. That the women, whose religious conceptions had been formed under his
-teachings, carefully regarded it. “And they returned, and prepared
-spices and ointments; and rested the Sabbath day, according to the
-commandment.” Luke 23:56.
-
-7. The Lord instructed his disciples that it would exist at least forty
-years after his death, since he taught them to pray continually that
-their flight, at the destruction of Jerusalem, which occurred A. D. 70,
-might not take place on that day. “But pray ye that your flight be not
-in the winter, neither on the Sabbath day.” Matt. 24:20.
-
-8. That the great apostle to the Gentiles was in the habit of making it
-a day of public teaching. “And Paul, as his _manner was_, went in unto
-them, and three Sabbath days reasoned with them out of the Scriptures.”
-Acts 27:2. “And he reasoned in the synagogue every Sabbath, and
-persuaded the Jews and the Greeks.” Acts 18:4.
-
-9. That, in the year of our Lord 95, John still recognized its
-existence. “I was in the Spirit on the Lord’s day, and heard behind me a
-great voice, as of a trumpet.” Rev. 1:10.
-
-10. That God has never removed the blessing which he placed upon it in
-the beginning, or annulled the sanctification by which it was at that
-time set apart to a holy use.
-
-11. That, in perfect keeping with the above propositions, it is, equally
-in the New with the Old Testament, scores of times denominated the
-Sabbath; and that, while God, and Christ, and prophets, and apostles,
-and inspired men, unite in applying to it this sacred title, they never,
-in any single instance, allow themselves to speak of any other day in
-the week in the use of this peculiar appellation.
-
-12. That it is not only to continue during the present order of things,
-but that, in the new earth, clothed in all the freshness and beauty of
-its Edenic glory, creation, more than ever before, will be the subject
-of devout gratitude, and weekly commemoration on the part of the
-immortal and sinless beings who shall worship God therein forever. “For
-as the new heavens and the new earth, which I will make shall remain
-before me, saith the Lord, so shall your seed and your name remain. And
-it shall come to pass, that from one new moon to another, and from one
-Sabbath to another, shall all flesh come to worship before me, saith the
-Lord.” Isa. 66:22, 23.
-
-Putting all these facts together—connected, consistent, and unanswerable
-as they are—men will discover that a great departure has taken place
-from the original practice of the church, and against the explicit
-command of God. Should they ask, as assuredly they will, when, and by
-whom, it was inaugurated, it will not be a fruitless effort on their
-part to obtain needed information. God has made ample provision for the
-instruction of those who would do his will, and for the condemnation of
-those who refuse so to do. Referring to prophecies given centuries ago,
-mapping out beforehand the history of the world, they will find the
-prophet Daniel—while describing the work of the “little horn,” which
-arose among the ten horns of the great and terrible beast, and which
-little horn nearly all Protestant commentators agree in applying to the
-papal church—stating of it, by way of prediction, that it should “wear
-out the saints of the Most High, and think to change times and laws,”
-and that they should “be given into his hand until a time and times and
-the dividing of time.” (Dan. 7:25.) Consulting history, they will
-discover that, so far as the saints are concerned, these terrible words
-have been so completely fulfilled that this power has actually put to
-death, in one way or other, at least fifty millions of the people of
-God.
-
-Again, perceiving, as they will readily, that the “laws,” which this
-presumptuous power should blasphemously claim to be able to change, are
-the laws of God, what will be their astonishment at learning, from the
-representatives of this great oppressive system—which alone has extended
-through a period sufficiently long to cover the “time, times and half a
-time,” or the 1260 years of Daniel’s prophecy—that it actually boasts
-that it has done the very work in question. Nay, more; what limit can be
-put to their surprise when they find these men absolutely pointing with
-exultation to the practice of the Christian world in the observance of
-Sunday, as an evidence of the ability of the Roman Catholic church to
-alter and amend the commands of God! That they do this, however, in the
-most unequivocal terms, will be abundantly proved by the following
-quotations from their own publications:—
-
-“_Question._ Is it then Saturday we should sanctify, in order to obey
-the ordinance of God? _Ans._ During the old law, Saturday was the day
-sanctified; but _the church_, instructed by Jesus Christ, and directed
-by the Spirit of God, has substituted Sunday for Saturday; so we now
-sanctify the first, not the seventh, day. Sunday means, and now is, the
-day of the Lord. _Ques._ Had the church power to make such a change?
-_Ans._ Certainly; since the Spirit of God is her guide, the change is
-inspired by the Holy Spirit.”—_Cath. Catechism of Christian Religion._
-
-“_Ques._ How prove you that the church has power to command feasts and
-holy days? _Ans._ By the very act of changing the Sabbath into Sunday,
-which Protestants allow of; and therefore they fondly contradict
-themselves by keeping Sunday strictly, and breaking most other feasts
-commanded by the same church.
-
-“_Ques._ How prove you that? _Ans._ Because, by keeping Sunday, they
-acknowledge the church’s power to ordain feasts, and to command them
-under sin; and by not keeping the rest by her commanded, they again
-deny, in fact, the same power.—_Abridgment of Christian Doctrine._
-
-“It is worth its while to remember that this observance of the
-Sabbath—in which, after all, the only Protestant worship consists—not
-only has no foundation in the Bible, but it is in flagrant contradiction
-with its letter, which commands rest on the Sabbath, which is Saturday.
-It was the _Catholic church_ which, by the authority of Jesus Christ,
-has transferred this rest to the Sunday in remembrance of the
-resurrection of our Lord. Thus the observance of Sunday by the
-Protestants is an homage they pay, in spite of themselves, to the
-authority of the church.”—_Plain Talk about Protestantism of To-day_, p.
-225.
-
-Instinctively anticipating some providential mode of escape from the
-terrible consequences of that great apostasy, out of which the religious
-world has for centuries been endeavoring to work its way, conscientious
-men and women will catch the notes of warning which for twenty-five
-years have been sounding through the land, in these words: “Here is the
-patience of the saints: here are they that keep the commandments of God,
-and the faith of Jesus.” Rev. 14:12.
-
-Inquiring into the origin of the message which is thus being given to
-the world, they will find that, for a quarter of a century, God has been
-calling attention to the subject of his law and his Sabbath, and that a
-denomination of earnest men and women, but little known as yet among the
-learned and mighty of the land, have been devoting themselves with zeal
-and a spirit of self-sacrifice to the tremendous task of restoring God’s
-downtrodden Sabbath to the hearts and judgments of the people. They will
-find, also, that these persons have not entered upon this labor because
-they anticipated an easy and speedy victory; nor, indeed, because they
-ever believed that the great mass of mankind would so far shake off the
-trammels of tradition and the fear of reproach as to be able to venture
-an unreserved surrender to the teachings of the Bible; but simply
-because they saw in it that which was at once the path of duty, and that
-of fulfilling prophecy.
-
-Having accepted Dan. 7:25, in common with the religious world, as
-applying to the papacy, and learning, as the result of investigation,
-that the days of the great persecution were to reach from the decree of
-Justinian (A. D. 538,) giving authority to the Bishop of Rome to become
-the corrector of heretics, to A. D. 1798—when the pope was carried into
-captivity, having received a wound with the sword agreeably to Rev.
-13:10—these students of God’s word at once perceived that the next thing
-in order would be the completion of the restitution, which had begun in
-the taking away of his ability to put the saints to death, by a work
-equally called for in the inspired prediction; namely, that of rescuing
-from his hands the “times and laws” which he thought to change. Or, in
-other words, that the effort of the pope to remove the Sabbath of the
-Lord from the seventh to the first day of the week should be made to
-appear in its true light; namely, as the work of a blasphemous power
-which had held the world in its grasp for centuries.
-
-But, while they were clear in those convictions which led them in 1846,
-under the title of Seventh-day Adventists, to claim that they were
-fulfilling the prophecy of Rev. 14:9-12, they discerned that the same
-facts which brought them to this conclusion also compelled the
-conviction that theirs was to be the road of persecution: hardship, and
-privation. They read in Rev. 12:17, in these words, “The dragon was
-wroth with the woman, and went to make war with the remnant of her seed,
-which keep the commandments of God, and have the testimony of Jesus
-Christ,” the history of the last generation of Christians; and saw that,
-in God’s inscrutable providence, it was to be their fortune to be the
-object of diabolic hate, because of the commandments of God and the
-testimony of Jesus Christ, to which they cling with determined
-perseverance.
-
-Once more: In studying the 11th to the 18th verses inclusive of the 13th
-chapter of the same book, they saw that—if their view of the work which
-was assigned them was correct—that portion of the Scriptures was applied
-to the United States of America, and indicated that this country was to
-be the theater of a mighty contest between those who “keep the
-commandments of God and the faith of Jesus,” and the government under
-which they live, from which they could only be delivered by the coming
-of Christ. This view they unhesitatingly proclaimed. For twenty years,
-they have announced it as a part of their faith. When they first
-declared it to be such, they brought upon themselves ridicule and
-contempt, for, humanly speaking, every probability was against them. The
-government was ostensibly republican in form, and professedly tolerant
-to the very extreme, in all matters of religious opinion. The
-Constitution had even provided that “Congress should make no law
-respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
-exercise thereof.”
-
-Nevertheless, so firm were they in the conviction that they had the
-right application of the prophecy, that they unhesitatingly walked out
-upon their faith; and for a fifth of a century they have talked it, and
-published it everywhere, notwithstanding the odium it has brought upon
-them. Lest we might appear to be drawing upon our own imagination in a
-matter of such importance, we append the following extracts from their
-works. The words in parentheses are our own, and serve to explain that
-which a larger quotation from the context would make clear of itself:
-
-“When the ‘beast’ (the papacy) had the dominion, all in authority must
-be Catholics. The popular sentiment then was that none should hold
-offices in the government, except they professed the Catholic faith. The
-popular religion at that period was Catholicism. They legislated upon
-religious subjects, and required all men to conform to the popular
-institutions and dogmas of the papacy, or suffer and die. The image must
-be made in the United States, where Protestantism is the prevailing
-religion. Image signifies _likeness_; therefore Protestantism and
-Republicanism will _unite_; or, in other words, the making of laws will
-go into the hands of Protestants, when all in authority will profess the
-popular sentiments of the day, and make laws binding certain religious
-institutions (_i. e._, Sunday observance, &c.), upon all, without
-distinction.”—_Advent Review and Sabbath Herald_, Vol. 6, No. 6, 1854.
-
-“It seems to me, even to look at the subject in the light of reason,
-that a conflict must in time come between commandment-keepers and the
-United States. This, of course, will lead those who find that they
-cannot sustain their Sunday institution by argument to resort to some
-other means.”—_Advent Review and Herald_, Vol. 10, No. 11, 1857.
-
-“When all concur upon this question (Sunday-keeping), except a few who
-conscientiously observe the fourth commandment, how long before their
-constancy would be attributed to obstinacy and bigotry? And how long
-before the sentence would go forth, as it did in the days of Pliny,
-‘that for this, if for nothing else, they deserved to be
-punished.’”—_Review and Herald_, Vol. 19, No. 15.[1]
-
-How changed the political sky to-day from what it was when these words
-began to be spoken! Now, thoughtful men are pondering whether, after
-all, these things may not be so. They see a powerful organization
-looming up in the country, which appends to the call for their
-conventions the names of some of the most influential men in the land.
-They hear them declaring in so many words, that what they are determined
-to do is to sweep away the constitutional barrier between them and a
-coerced observance of Sunday, so that all may be compelled to regard it
-as sacred. What we want, say they, and what we are determined to have,
-is such an amendment of the Constitution, 1. That it shall recognize God
-and Christ; 2. That it shall enable us to secure the reading of the
-Bible in the common schools; 3. That we may be enabled to enforce the
-better observance of the Christian Sabbath, _i. e._, Sunday.
-
-These declarations, a few years since, would have appalled every lover
-of constitutional liberty. Every man and woman imbued with a proper
-sense of the genius of our institutions would have been struck with
-horror at the very thought of pursuing the course in question. But a
-change has come over the spirit of the land. Steadily, the advocates of
-a day which has no authority in the word of God are drifting where all
-before them have done who have sought to maintain a human institution
-upon the claim of divine authority. It is idle for them to say at this
-stage of the proceedings that they propose to regard the rights of those
-who have conscientious scruples on this subject. God has said that the
-matter will culminate in oppression; nay, even though this were not so,
-reason itself would prove that this would be the case. Without
-questioning the sincerity of the men who at the present make these
-statements, we appeal to that very sincerity for the evidence that this
-matter will end just where the Seventh-day Adventists have claimed that
-it would.
-
-They have convinced themselves that they are called of God to a mighty
-work. They believe that they have a noble mission. They are men of mind
-and nerve. But, when a few months shall have revealed the insufficiency
-of their logic, when Seventh-day Baptists and Seventh-day Adventists
-shall have confronted them with a plain “Thus saith the Lord,” against
-their favorite scheme, they would be more than human if—refusing to
-yield to arguments which they cannot answer—they should continue to look
-with complacence upon the very men who, after all, will prove to be
-their most formidable antagonists in the great conflict. In fact, it
-would be a denial of both nature and history to say that they would not
-at last come to regard them in the light of enemies of God, really more
-worthy of condemnation and coercion than those who were simply
-unbelievers in any Sabbath at all, and so incapable of standing before
-the systematic effort which they have set in motion.[2]
-
-But, candid reader, the facts are before you, and between us and these
-events there will be ample time for calm reflection, and deliberate
-decision. Where do you choose to stand in this final conflict between
-the venerable Sabbath of the Lord and its modern papistic rival? Will
-you keep the commandments of God, as uttered by his voice and written by
-his finger? or will you henceforth pay intelligent homage to the man of
-sin, by the observance of a day which finds its authority alone in the
-mutilated form of the commandments, as they come from his hand? May God
-help you to make a wise choice.
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- For further information upon this subject, the reader is referred to
- “The Three Angels’ Messages” and the “United States in Prophecy,”
- published at the _Review and Herald_ Office, Battle Creek, Mich.
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- Persons desiring to investigate this question still further, by
- addressing the author of these articles, will receive by mail, without
- charge, a tract in which he has discussed at length a branch of this
- subject merely alluded to in this communication.
-
-
-
-
- EXPLANATORY REMARKS.
-
-
-Immediately on the publication of the foregoing articles in the
-_Christian Statesman_, the editor of that paper announced his purpose to
-review them in the columns of that periodical. This purpose he
-subsequently carried out in the publication of eleven communications, in
-which various strictures were offered upon the positions taken by me in
-my original contributions. I immediately requested the privilege of
-replying to these criticisms in the columns of the _Statesman_, so that
-those who had read my argument in the beginning, and the replies of the
-editor of the _Statesman_ thereto, might have an opportunity to see the
-relative strength of the positions occupied by that gentleman and myself
-tested in fair and open debate. My petition, however, was denied, and I
-was compelled either to remain silent or seek elsewhere for an
-opportunity to make my defense. Fortunately, at this juncture, the
-columns of the _Advent Review_, which is the organ of the Seventh-day
-Adventists, were freely offered me for the purpose in question, and in
-them the Replies of the editor of the _Statesman_, and my Rejoinders
-thereto, have since been published. To these Replies and Rejoinders, as
-they appeared therein, the remainder of the present volume is devoted.
-To them, the reader is earnestly invited to give his most serious
-attention, since they present, side by side, the lines of argument
-usually employed for and against the Sabbath of the Lord.
-
-W. H. L.
-
-
-
-
- REPLIES AND REJOINDERS.
-
-
-
-
- Reply of the Editor of the Christian Statesman.
- ARTICLE ONE.
- SEVENTH-DAY SABBATARIANS AND THE CHRISTIAN AMENDMENT.
-
-
-We have given not a little space to the argument against the Christian
-Amendment of our National Constitution from the stand-point of the
-advocates of the seventh-day Sabbath. This argument, in brief, is this:
-The proposed amendment, in its practical working, is intended to secure
-the better observance of the first day of the week, as the civil
-Sabbath. But the Bible, the revealed law of God, it is affirmed,
-contains no warrant either for individual or national observance of the
-first day of the week. The amendment, therefore, it is maintained,
-should not be favored, but earnestly opposed, by those who acknowledge
-the supreme authority of the law of the Bible.
-
-This, it will be seen at a glance, is no argument against the principle
-of the proposed amendment. On the other hand, it bases itself on that
-very principle, viz., that it is the bounden duty of the nation to
-acknowledge the authority of God, and take his revealed word as the
-supreme rule of its conduct. The argument, therefore, instead of being
-directed against the amendment itself, is directed almost entirely
-against that interpretation of the divine law of the Scriptures which
-fixes the Christian Sabbath on the first day of the week. We consented
-to admit to our columns a short series of brief articles presenting an
-argument against the amendment. Pressing the lines of courtesy and
-fairness far beyond the limits of our agreement, we have, in fact,
-admitted many long articles, the burden of which has been to show that
-there is no warrant in the word of God for the observance of the first
-day of the week as the Sabbath of divine appointment. We shall expect
-equal generosity from the journals of our seventh-day Sabbatarian
-friends.
-
-The amendment proposed is in substance as follows: An acknowledgment of
-God as the ultimate source of all power and authority in civil
-government; of Jesus Christ as ruler of nations; and of the Bible as the
-fountain of law, and the supreme rule of national conduct. Let this be
-distinctly borne in mind. We have here a clear assertion of the very
-principles for which the seventh-day Sabbatarian most strenuously
-contends.
-
-Just here, we would take occasion to say that even if the proposed
-amendment contained an express acknowledgment, in so many words, of the
-first-day Sabbath, and if the argument for the seventh-day Sabbath were
-a perfect demonstration, there would still be, on that account, as
-matters actually stand in our land at present, no valid objection
-against such explicit Constitutional acknowledgment of the first day.
-
-Suppose a company of the advocates of the seventh-day Sabbath, going
-forth as missionaries, should discover, in a distant sea, an island
-inhabited by a people in many respects highly civilized, possessing a
-portion of the Bible, and observing one day in seven, say the fourth day
-of the week, as a day of rest and worship of the true God, and
-acknowledging it as such in their Constitution of government. Suppose
-that in the same island should be found a large and active minority,
-thoroughly infidel and atheistic, striving in every way to overturn the
-Sabbath. The missionaries, perceiving much room and opportunity for
-doing good to the people, settle among them, and seek, among many
-things, to change the Sabbath to what they regard as the proper day. In
-what way would they attempt to accomplish this? Would they permit
-themselves for a moment to be classed with the infidel and atheistic
-opponents of the Sabbath? Would they not stand side by side with those
-who defended the Sabbath observances of the country against the attacks
-of immoral and unbelieving enemies of all Christian institutions?
-
-If these missionaries were advocates of the first-day Sabbath, and we
-were of the number, for our part, this is what we would do: We would
-practice for ourselves the observance of what we are persuaded is the
-Christian Sabbath. We would multiply and scatter abroad copies of the
-entire Bible, and seek to convince the people and the nation that God’s
-law requires the observance of the first day. In the meantime, confident
-that, by the blessing of the Head of the church, the circulation of the
-divine word and the proclamation of its truths would at length change
-the conviction of the islanders, we should say to them: “Do not cease to
-observe a day of rest and worship. To have one such a day in every seven
-is right. Do not blot out its acknowledgment from the Constitution. You
-need its legal safe-guards. True, there is no divine warrant for the
-observance of the fourth day of the week instead of the first. But a
-fourth-day Sabbath is better than no Sabbath at all. We will help you to
-preserve from the assaults of our common enemies the observances of the
-Sabbath, that you may have them to transfer, as we urge you to do, to
-the first day of the week.” Would the advocates of the seventh-day
-Sabbath do otherwise, except in substituting the seventh day for the
-first? And now let us take the actual, corresponding case in our own
-land. The great mass of Christians here, as elsewhere, regard the first
-day of the week as the Sabbath of the Lord. Admit, for the sake of the
-illustration, that they have no better ground for their opinion than the
-islanders mentioned above. Is it not right for them to have a day of
-rest and worship? Is it not right for them to observe one such a day in
-seven? Is it maintained that, because the day is not the proper one,
-there is and can be nothing right about these Sabbath observances? Then,
-if all is wrong, it must be better to have no Sabbath at all, and
-utterly secularize the week. This, our seventh-day friends cannot and
-will not admit. They gladly testify that our first-day Sabbath, poorly
-as it may be observed, is infinitely to be preferred to the unbroken
-current of the worldliness of the week. A Sabbathless week; successive
-rounds of equally secularized days, marked, if marked at all, by the
-recurrence of unusual worldly gayety and dissipation; this is what
-infidelity and atheism would give us for the existing Sabbath. Do the
-friends of the seventh-day Sabbath desire any such substitution? Their
-argument against the proposed amendment on the ground that it expressly
-or impliedly contains an acknowledgment of the first-day Sabbath, is,
-that it will enforce existing Sabbath laws, and strengthen first-day
-Sabbath observances. But is it not better to do this than accept the
-dread alternative? Even from this point of view, then, we claim for the
-proposed amendment, what in some cases it has actually, and, we believe,
-most consistently, received, the approval and support of seventh-day
-Sabbatarians.
-
-But we return to the form of the proposed amendment. It expresses, as it
-should, only the most fundamental principles. It asserts the duty of the
-nation to acknowledge God in Christian relations. It recognizes the
-Bible as the fountain of the nation’s laws, and the supreme rule of its
-conduct. Now, if we were among either the first-day or the seventh-day
-missionaries, in the case of the islanders already referred to, such a
-national acknowledgment of the authority of the Bible is just exactly
-what we would desire. If the islanders had this principle, as has been
-supposed, incorporated into their written Constitution, we could ask for
-nothing more advantageous for our missionary work. If they had it not,
-and certain citizens were laboring to secure its insertion by an
-amendment of the instrument, we would most assuredly accord these
-laborers our heartiest encouragement and support. We should suspect
-ourselves of prejudice, or rather of a deficiency in good common sense,
-if we found ourselves inclined to pursue an opposite course. Believing
-that God’s law requires the observance of another day than the fourth,
-how could we reasonably do anything else than co-operate and rejoice in
-the work of leading such a people to acknowledge the supreme authority
-of that law, and to register their purpose in the fundamental instrument
-of their government, to adjust all national affairs according to its
-requirements?
-
-And now, what can be said of our seventh-day Sabbatarian brethren? Are
-they not inconsistent? They proclaim the duty of the nation to
-acknowledge “the highest of all laws.” So far, we are agreed. They
-maintain that the Bible is that law. Here, too, we are at one. And yet
-they—not all of them, we are happy to state—oppose a movement which aims
-to secure in the organic law and life of the nation a sincere, reverent,
-and obedient acknowledgment of the authority of the Bible—an
-acknowledgment which forecloses discussion on no question on which
-Christians or others may differ, but which brings the final appeal in
-all national controversies to the tribunal of the unerring word of God.
-
-The inconsistency of this attitude of opposition to the Christian
-Amendment cannot but create unfavorable presumptions in regard to the
-soundness of judgment of any who may occupy it. An attack from so weak a
-point, upon the Constitutional acknowledgment of the Christian
-Scriptures, it will be generally felt, does not betoken a very
-formidable assault upon the Sabbath of the Christian church. And yet,
-notwithstanding this, to our mind, exceedingly unfortunate connection,
-we would bear cheerful testimony to the fact that the articles we have
-inserted, so far as they are an argument against the first-day Sabbath,
-and this is manifestly the point which the writer had principally in
-view, contain a clear, calm, courteous, and attractively written
-presentation of one side of a very important subject. We shall present
-the other side of the question in succeeding issues of this journal.
-
-
-
-
- REJOINDER, BY W. H. LITTLEJOHN.
- “SEVENTH-DAY SABBATARIANS AND THE CHRISTIAN AMENDMENT.”
-
-
-We have debated for some time in our own mind the propriety of
-attempting an answer to the strictures, if such they may be called, upon
-our articles on the Constitutional Amendment. Having decided, however,
-that they contain a show of logic which might deceive the careless
-reader, we have at last determined to give them a notice commensurate
-with the importance they assume, if not from their intrinsic merit, at
-least from the distinguished source whence they emanate.
-
-Before doing this, we take pleasure in acknowledging the generosity of
-their author in allowing us to discuss in the columns of his paper the
-subject from a stand-point of a nature calculated to dampen rather than
-stimulate the ardor of his readers in the work in which, with him, they
-are engaged. From the outset, we have discovered no disposition to take
-any advantage by which the full effect of what we had to say might in
-any way be lessened. On the contrary, attention has several times been
-called to our communications, as being worthy of perusal by all.
-
-Having said thus much in reference to the treatment we received at the
-hands of the editor of the _Statesman_ up to the time of the completion
-of the publication of our articles, we shall be pardoned for expressing
-our surprise at finding ourselves, in his first reply, standing somewhat
-in the attitude of one who had taken advantage of indulgence shown him
-to present a line of argument different from that proposed at the
-beginning.
-
-It is possible that we have mistaken the design of the statements to
-which we allude. This we hope may prove to be the case; for, so far as
-we are concerned, individually, we have covered the precise ground which
-we designed to at the first. If the editor of the _Statesman_ has found
-himself disappointed, either in the nature or the length of the
-argument, he is to blame, and not we.
-
-1. Because, so far as the matter of length is concerned, we stated to
-him that we should leave that entirely “with his magnanimity, convinced
-that he would not cut us short in our work so long as what we had to say
-was pointed, gentlemanly, and of such a nature as to bear forcibly upon
-the question at issue between us.”
-
-2. As it regards the scope of the articles, we stated, unqualifiedly,
-that we should treat the subject from the stand-point of an observer of
-the seventh day, appealing to the Bible for our authority. Nor were we
-content with declaring our plan of opposition by _letter_, but we went
-so far as to give, in the caption of our articles themselves, an outline
-of the order in which we should treat the subject. It was as follows:
-“The Constitutional Amendment; _or_, the Sunday, the Sabbath, the
-Change, and the Restitution.” In it, as will be observed, is exactly set
-forth the manner in which we discussed the propriety of the amendment;
-(1) Showing the emptiness of the claims of the Sunday. (2) The force and
-obligation of those of the seventh day. (3) The manner in which the
-change of days occurred, and (4) The work which God has inaugurated for
-the purpose of bringing about the Restitution.
-
-Thus much by way of personal acknowledgment and explanation.
-
-We turn now to the criticism proper upon our argument.
-
-First, there is an attempt to state the positions which we assumed to
-prove.
-
-In reply, it is sufficient to say that it is deficient in one very
-important particular. That particular relates to our proposition that
-God himself has inaugurated a movement _entirely outside of, and opposed
-to_, the Constitutional Amendment party, for the purpose of bringing
-about a Sabbath reform in his own way. For proof of this, we appeal to
-our last article in full. It is, to say the least, not a little
-remarkable that the editor of the _Statesman_ should have overlooked
-this point in our communications, since a perception of it would have
-saved him the perpetration of the great mistake which he has made, as we
-shall see hereafter.
-
-Secondly, It is intimated that the proposed amendment is not necessarily
-connected with the Sabbath question; and that, therefore, observers of
-the seventh day should unite with those of the first in securing its
-passage, which, being done, the differences between them could be
-settled at leisure.
-
-Now we confess to not a little surprise that such a position should be
-taken by a gentleman of so much candor and penetration as the editor of
-the _Statesman_. Have we then been deceived up to this point? Is it true
-that Sunday observance has not heretofore been represented as something
-of vital importance to the nation, to be secured, and only secured, by
-the alteration of the Constitution as proposed? Have these gentlemen not
-been really in earnest when they have appealed to the strong love of the
-people for the strict observance of what they have been pleased to call
-the Sabbath, in their endeavors to arouse them to the significance of
-their movement? If they have not, then they are unworthy of public
-confidence, and should henceforth be cast down from the leadership of a
-great party, which boasts, not only its morality, but also its
-Christianity.
-
-Let us see, then, whether the amendment, which is now in their hands,
-is, or is not, by their own confession, to be employed in the interest
-of Sunday observance.
-
-That the _Christian Statesman_ is a fair exponent of the opinions and
-intentions of the leading spirits in the movement for the amendment, we
-think no one will have the hardihood to deny. What it advocates and
-favors, then, is destined to stand or fall with the triumph or defeat of
-the men who speak through it. Turning to the prospectus of the identical
-copy of the _Statesman_ which contains the criticism which we are
-reviewing, we find the following statement: “The design of this paper,
-as its name suggests, is the discussion of the principles of civil
-government in the light of Christianity. It has been established to
-advocate the proposed Religious Amendment to the Constitution of the
-United States. At the same time, it will aid in maintaining all existing
-Christian features in our civil institutions, in particular, laws
-against the desecration of the Christian Sabbath,” &c.
-
-We might pause here, but, in a matter of this importance, let us make
-certainty doubly certain.
-
-It was _strange_ that the writer should have made the assertion which he
-did, with the prospectus from which we have quoted before him. It is
-_passing strange_ that—as if guided by a Providence which had doomed him
-to make a complete exposure of his real sentiments, although in so doing
-his own consistency should be involved—he should, within two weeks from
-the penning of the above assertion, go back upon the files of his
-periodical for two years, and reprint, by way of _emphasis_, according
-to his own statement, the following editorial, which forever settles the
-point that he believes and knows that the amendment and Sunday-keeping
-are destined to be joined together in a common victory. As the reader
-peruses this editorial, let him bear in mind the fact that it is not the
-effusion of an excited and exasperated man, but the expression of a deep
-and settled conviction which has once found utterance, and which so
-perfectly expresses the real sentiments of its author that, after years
-of deliberate reflection, he felt the truth of what he had said so
-forcibly that he was constrained to give it fresh utterance. Let him
-also note the fact that the italics are not our own, but those of the
-editor. We regret that we have not space to give it in full, and invite
-those who can do so, by all means to turn to the copy of the _Statesman_
-which contains it, and read it for themselves.
-
-“Time for the meeting of Congress, ... Two years ago we printed the
-following telegram, dated at Washington, on Sabbath, Dec. 4, and
-commented on it in the following terms, which we now emphatically
-repeat: ‘The trains yesterday and _to-day_ brought large accessions to
-the number of Congressmen and visitors already here, and _by to-morrow
-morning_ it is expected that nearly every Senator and member will have
-arrived.’ Thus the fact is heralded over the whole country that a large
-number of the members of the National Congress openly and wantonly
-indulge in common travel on the Sabbath.... And there are other
-reflections suggested by their conduct.
-
-“1. _Not one of those men who thus violated the Sabbath is fit to hold
-any official position in a Christian nation...._ The interests of a
-nation can never be safe in the hands of Sabbath-breakers, and every one
-of these Congressmen has done that for which, if our laws were right, he
-ought to be impeached and removed.
-
-“2. _The sin of these Congressmen is a national sin_, because the nation
-has not said to them in the Constitution, the supreme rule for our
-public servants, ‘We charge you to serve us in accordance with the
-higher law of God.’ These Sabbath-breaking railroads, moreover, are
-corporations created by the State, and amenable to it. The State is
-responsible to God for the conduct of these creatures which it calls
-into being. It is bound, therefore, to restrain them from this, as from
-other crimes; and any violation of the Sabbath, by any corporation,
-should work immediate forfeiture of its charter. And the Constitution of
-the United States, with which all State legislation is required to be in
-harmony, should be of such character as to prevent any State from
-tolerating such infractions of fundamental moral law.
-
-“3. Give us in the National Constitution the simple acknowledgment of
-the law of God as the supreme law of nations, _and all the results
-indicated in this note will ultimately be secured_. Let no one say that
-the movement does not contemplate sufficiently practical
-ends.”—_Christian Statesman_, Vol. 6, No. 15.
-
-Now let it be borne in mind that the question at issue is one of
-_practical bearing_, and not of mere technical distinction. We are not
-splitting hairs as to what _consistency would demand_ under certain
-circumstances; but the matter in dispute is, Is it not in the highest
-degree probable that a party, represented by men who express,
-beforehand, sentiments like those contained in the above editorial,
-would, when having vaulted into the seat of power, attempt the coercion
-of all into a strict observance of the Sunday? Is not the line of
-argument employed above that which would _compel them to this action_,
-since it is there insisted that God holds the nation and the State
-responsible for any dereliction in duty in this direction? Furthermore,
-is it not _promised_, in so many words, that if the amendment is
-carried, the end desired shall be secured by statutes so relentless that
-all offending corporations shall have their charters taken away, and by
-a public opinion so uncompromising that no man who presumes to violate
-the Sabbath law shall be thought worthy of any position of trust?
-
-Thirdly, Waiving, for the time being, the point that the Sunday and the
-amendment stand together, it is urged that, though they do, this should
-not prevent seventh-day observers from supporting the latter, since it
-is better to submit to Sunday laws than to have the nation pass into the
-hands of atheists.
-
-Before debating this proposition at length, it will be well to bear in
-mind that what I have said in the _Statesman_, as well as what I now
-say, is spoken simply with reference to one occupying the position of a
-Seventh-day Adventist.
-
-So far as our Seventh-day Baptist friends are concerned, we have no
-disposition to hold them responsible for the views which we, as
-Adventists, hold. But so far as it regards our relation to this subject,
-it is materially affected by these considerations. A failure to discern
-this has led the gentleman into very absurd positions. When he attempts
-to make a _Seventh-day Adventist conscience_, he must form it upon a
-_Seventh-day Adventist model_. Before he can do this, all his bright
-visions of a temporal millennium and good days to come, must vanish into
-thin air. To say, as he does, that common sense would teach him to
-pursue a certain line of conduct, is one thing; to say that, did he
-occupy the position which we hold, common sense would teach him to do
-the same thing, is another, and entirely different, thing. Let it be
-borne in mind, therefore, that we are not now discussing the proposition
-whether we _ought to be Seventh-day Adventists_, but, taking the ground
-which he has _chosen_, whether, _as Adventists_, we ought to support the
-proposed amendment. This being done, we are ready to inquire, What is
-the peculiar faith of the people in question?
-
-We answer, 1. They believe that Jesus Christ is about to come in the
-clouds of heaven. 2. That they represent a body of believers which the
-Lord is raising up in order that they may lift the standard of his
-downtrodden law and Sabbath, as one around which those who will be ready
-to hail him at his appearing, though few in numbers, will ultimately be
-gathered. 3. That, in the light of prophecy, those who thus break away
-from the errors of the papacy are in danger of persecution, not from
-infidels and atheists, bad as they may be, but from those who, in the
-guise of religion, shall, without warrant from God, endeavor to enforce
-by statute law the observance of a day which finds no authority in the
-word of God, but has for its support simply the _dictum_ of the man of
-sin. 4. That the very body of men whose appearance in this country they
-have for twenty years so confidently predicted, as being the ones who
-should do the work in question, have actually appeared, and are
-inaugurating the campaign which is very soon to be waged with
-unrelenting fury against those who keep the commandments of God and the
-faith of Jesus.
-
-All these features of their faith were shadowed forth in our
-communications in the _Statesman_.
-
-With this understanding, how utterly empty and infelicitous is the logic
-of our friend. Take, for example, his chosen illustration of the
-islanders. There is in it hardly a single point _appropos_ to the case
-in hand.
-
-1. The island to which the missionaries are supposed to go is one in
-which, according to his statement, the fourth-day Sabbath is already
-acknowledged as such in their Constitution of government, and therefore
-carries with it the sanction and authority of statute law; whereas, with
-us there is no such Constitutional acknowledgment.
-
-2. In the case of the islanders, their mistake in the selection of the
-day is evidently attributed wholly to ignorance, since they were in
-possession of only a _part_ of the Bible, and their remedy was to be
-found in furnishing them with copies of the complete work; but our
-opponents, on the contrary, are in possession, and have been from
-childhood, of the Scriptures in full. Nor can the ministry, who are
-leading the movement in question, plead ignorance of the line of
-argument by which the seventh-day Sabbath is supported, since, for at
-least two hundred years, it has been iterated and reiterated, until
-their familiarity with it and their complete rejection of it is proved,
-not only by what they say, but also by what they do. Instance the fining
-and imprisonment, at sundry times, even in this country, of men who,
-having conscientiously observed the seventh day, have attempted to enjoy
-the privilege which God has given them, both by precept and example, of
-working on the first day of the week.
-
-3. In the case cited, the infidel minority is supposed to be on the
-point of mounting the throne of power, and of sweeping away every
-vestige of the Sabbath institution; whereas, in our case, as seen above,
-the danger which threatens the people of God in these last days, is not
-to be apprehended alone from those who scoff at God and the Bible, but
-from those who, according to Paul, having “a form of godliness,” shall
-“deny the power thereof.” In other words, who, while accepting the
-Scriptures, if you please, shall disregard their explicit statements, as
-in the case of the commandments, substituting in the place of the
-seventh day, which God has styled his Sabbath, the first, which he has
-never claimed as his own, nor enjoined on any man.
-
-With this statement of our views, further remark is uncalled for. We
-think that even our reviewer will now perceive that, before he could
-bring us to accept as logical the proposition numbered three, above, it
-would be necessary for him to overturn the very foundations of the
-system of truth which we now hold. This, however, we fancy is a task
-which our opponent judging from the line of argument which he has thus
-far pursued, would not undertake with much prospect of success, until he
-has become more thoroughly conversant with the scope and nature of the
-work in which we are engaged.
-
-Fourthly. It is suggested that we are in danger of being classed with
-infidels and atheists.
-
-So far as this peril is concerned, we simply remark that it is generally
-found to be best in the long run to do right for the sake of right,
-regardless of what men may say concerning you, leaving the result with
-God. The individual who would desert sound principles because some
-wicked man or set of men might, for the time being, be confounded with
-him, is destitute of true morality. Besides, in the matter in question,
-who is it from whom Seventh-day Adventists need apprehend that such an
-erroneous impression will receive publicity? We trust not from our
-friend, because, in the article in question, he frankly acknowledges
-their devotion to the Bible in its strict construction.
-
-Is it, then, from the infidels themselves? Well, if it should be, we
-think we can undeceive them. I will tell you what we will do. Whenever
-they attempt to “fawn upon us overmuch,” we will preach to them the _law
-of God, Sabbath and all_, and my word for it, they will themselves
-shortly draw a line of demarkation between them and us, so broad and
-distinct that all who are not willfully blind will have no difficulty in
-discerning it; for it is a remarkable fact that it is as true now as it
-formerly was, that the “carnal mind is not subject to the law of God,
-neither indeed can be.” The infidel of the present day hates that law
-with a hatred, the intensity of which is only equalled by that of the
-large body of first-day observers—we are happy to say not of the
-_Statesman_ school—who have abolished the ten commandments in order to
-dispose of one of them, and whose special delight seems to consist in
-berating the law which David pronounced “perfect,” and Paul declared to
-be “holy, just, and good.”
-
-Finally, we submit that when it can be shown, 1. That God would be
-better pleased with a nation having a Constitution which contained his
-printed name, while wielding the whole power of that Constitution
-against the only Sabbath which he has ever commanded, than he would be
-with one which—while his name would fail to appear in its fundamental
-law—was nevertheless administered in the interests of civil and
-religious liberty; and 2. That the best method of converting atheists is
-one by which they would be exasperated by fines and imprisonments
-inflicted in the name of the God of the Bible for the desecration of a
-day which they know that it nowhere commands; and 3. That it would be
-reasonable to expect that men should, by their votes, elevate to place
-and authority those who are destined to put manacles upon their wrists,
-and padlocks upon their tongues; then, and not till then, can
-Seventh-day Adventists be expected to support an amendment which, though
-in many respects desirable, will inevitably be employed against God, his
-people, and his law.
-
-
-
-
- STATESMAN’S REPLY.
- ARTICLE TWO.
- THE SEVENTH DAY NOT OBSERVED BY THE EARLY CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
-
-
-Having shown in our last article that seventh-day Sabbatarians, to be
-consistent with themselves in appealing to the Bible as of supreme
-authority, should be among the earnest friends of the Religious
-Amendment, we come now to consider their argument against the first-day
-Sabbath.
-
-On many points dwelt upon in the articles we have published, there is no
-difference of view. We believe that the Sabbath was instituted, not in
-the wilderness, for Israel; but in Eden, for mankind. We maintain, also,
-that the law of the Sabbath is an essential part of the great moral code
-of the ten commandments, spoken by God’s voice amid the awful
-manifestations of Sinai, and written by the finger of God on tables of
-stone as a law of perpetual obligation for the whole human family.
-These, and other points admitted on both sides, need not occupy time and
-space in this discussion. We are concerned here, and now, simply with
-the transfer of the Sabbath from the seventh to the first day of the
-week. Our readers have had before them an argument, of considerable
-length, to show that God never authorized a change of day. We proceed to
-prove that the transfer was made by divine authority and approval.
-
-In doing this, we shall first have to inquire into the facts of history.
-We shall have to ask, Was the observance of the seventh-day Sabbath,
-acknowledged as binding up to the resurrection of Christ, continued by
-the apostles and the early church after that event? Was any other day
-substituted by them in its place? For an answer to these questions, we
-must appeal to _facts_. We make our appeal to the records of the New
-Testament. A careful and thorough examination of these authoritative
-records shows conclusively that _the seventh day was not observed as the
-Sabbath after the resurrection of Christ by the apostles and the early
-church_.
-
-It is admitted on all hands that Christ himself, before his death, and
-his disciples, up to the time of his resurrection, kept the seventh day
-holy. It is also admitted on both sides that after the resurrection the
-apostles and other followers of Christ kept holy one day in seven. While
-they abounded daily in the work of the Lord, the seventh-day
-Sabbatarians will concede with us that there was still one day marked
-out from the rest of the week as sacred time. What day was thus
-distinguished? Was it the seventh, otherwise known as the Sabbath? Let
-us see.
-
-The word Sabbath occurs in the New Testament, after the close of the
-gospel history, twelve times. In two of these instances, viz., Acts
-20:7, and 1 Cor. 16:2, the word means “week,” and not the seventh day,
-as also in a number of instances in the gospels. In Acts 1:12, the word
-is used to indicate a certain distance. The term is employed in two
-other places, viz., Acts 13:27, and 15:21, in incidental reference to
-the service of the Jewish synagogues. In Colossians 2:16, Paul mentions
-the seventh-day Sabbath only to deny the obligation of its observance.
-This important passage will be considered farther on. There remain,
-then, six instances, two of them in regard to one and the same day and
-meeting, in which the word is found in accounts of gatherings for
-religious purposes on that day, the seventh of the week. These meetings
-were as follows: 1. At Antioch, in Pisidia, Acts 13:14; 2. At the same
-place, the next seventh day, Acts 13:42, 44; 3. At Philippi, Acts 16:13;
-4. At Thessalonica, Acts 17:2; and 5. At Corinth, Acts 18:4. At
-Thessalonica, there were three Sabbaths, and at Corinth, every Sabbath,
-it may be inferred, for several weeks, thus marked by religious
-meetings. We are informed that Paul went into the synagogue at
-Thessalonica on the Sabbath, or seventh day, “as his manner was.” And,
-accordingly, particularly during his first and second, or his more
-properly termed, missionary tours, as distinguished from his journeys in
-revisiting churches already organized, we may unhesitatingly infer that
-there were other similar meetings on the seventh day, as at Salamis,
-Acts 13:15; at Iconium, Acts 14:1; and at Ephesus, Acts 18:19, and 19:8.
-
-And here we note the fact that _in not a single one of these instances
-was the meeting a gathering of Christians_. In no case was it the
-assembly of the members of a Christian church for worship. In every
-case, these meetings on the seventh day were in Jewish places of
-worship, all in synagogues regularly occupied by Jewish assemblies,
-except that at Philippi, which was at a _proseucha_, a Jewish place of
-prayer out of the city by the river’s side. In every instance, it was a
-gathering of Jews and Jewish proselytes, with the addition of a greater
-or lesser number of Gentiles, the sight of a crowd of whom at Antioch,
-the second day of meeting in their synagogue, excited the jealousy and
-rage of the Jews. And in these gatherings, in every case, Paul labored
-_as a missionary_, glad to avail himself of every opportunity to
-proclaim the saving truths of the gospel of Christ.
-
-Can any intelligent and candid reader of the inspired records fail to
-understand the narrative of Paul’s missionary work? He was sent forth
-“to turn sinners from darkness to light.” As he himself states at
-Antioch, addressing the Jews: “It was necessary that the word of God
-should first have been spoken to you.” His “heart’s desire and prayer to
-God for Israel was that they might be saved.” Accordingly, wherever he
-went, he was found going to them on the seventh day in _their_ places of
-worship, not in Christian houses of prayer; meeting with them in _their_
-assemblies, not in assemblies of professed followers of Christ. Just as
-a Christian missionary, in modern times, going to a heathen land, would
-avail himself, if possible, of the customary assemblies of the
-residents, whatever day they might keep holy, so Paul and his
-fellow-missionaries availed themselves of the seventh-day assemblies of
-the Jews, that from among them, as well as from among the Gentiles, they
-might gather out an _ecclesia_—a body of followers of the Lord Jesus, in
-whom Jew and Gentile should be one.
-
-The question, therefore, still remains to be answered: Which day of the
-week did the church at Jerusalem, existing at the time of Christ’s
-ascension, which day did the apostles in their relations with this
-church, which day did the churches, organized and established by the
-apostles, and under their example and divine authority, observe as a
-holy day, a Sabbath to the Lord? In all the references to the seventh
-day, or Jewish Sabbath, there is not, as we have seen, a particle of
-evidence that that day was thus observed.
-
-On the other hand, there is positive testimony that the very
-congregations or churches of Christians, organized at the places where
-Paul performed missionary labor on the seventh day, ignored that day,
-and in its stead observed another day of the week as holy time. For
-example, at Corinth, “as his manner was,” Paul went first to the Jews
-and preached to them in their synagogue, the word of God, _reasoning
-with them_, and persuading them and the Greeks to accept of Christ.
-Then, when the Jews opposed themselves and blasphemed, he shook his
-raiment, and said unto them, “Your blood be upon your own heads; I am
-clean: from henceforth I will go unto the Gentiles.” So he left the
-synagogue and the Jews, not the city, and entering into the house of
-Justus, received Crispus, the chief ruler of the synagogue, with all his
-house, and many of the Corinthians, as converts into the Christian
-church. Here we have the church of Corinth. Which day of the week did it
-observe as the Sabbath of the Lord? the seventh? Though Paul “continued
-there a year and six months, teaching the word of God among them,” there
-is not a word more about seventh-day services. This, it is true, would
-be merely negative, if it were all. But this is not all. In Paul’s
-direction to this same church, a few years later, he makes clear and
-certain, what before was probable, that their stated day for religious
-services was not the seventh, but the first, day of the week. 1 Cor.
-16:2. The plain and most explicit teaching of this passage will be fully
-considered hereafter.
-
-Again, when Paul entered into the synagogue at Ephesus, and reasoned
-with the Jews (Acts 18:19), and, because he could not tarry long at this
-time, soon returned again, and met the objections of disputatious Jews
-for the space of three months (Acts 19:8), his labors as a missionary
-are said to have been in the synagogue, no doubt on the Sabbath of the
-Jews, or the seventh day. But once more separating the Christian
-converts from the unbelieving and blaspheming Jews, and forming the
-Christian church of Ephesus, he continued there in incessant labors for
-two years. And now we hear no more of seventh-day assemblies. This,
-again, may be said to be merely negative, as we hear of no special honor
-put upon any day. But we have not done with this. Passing the last years
-of his life in this city of Ephesus, the apostle John writes of “the
-Lord’s day,” known and observed by the Christians among whom he dwelt.
-That this holy day of the early church, called the Lord’s day, was not
-the seventh, but the first, is shown by the most satisfactory historical
-testimony, which will be adduced in full in its proper connection.
-
-Once more. When Paul came to Troas to preach Christ’s gospel, and a door
-was opened to him of the Lord (2 Cor. 2:12), whether it was on his first
-very brief visit (Acts 16:8), or more probably in going over “those
-parts,” on his way from Ephesus to Macedonia (Acts 20:2), he no doubt,
-“as his manner was,” went into the synagogue and reasoned with the Jews.
-A congregation of Christian disciples was formed, and the apostle
-departed for Greece. After an absence of some months, Paul returns to
-Troas, and with his companions remains there seven days, departing again
-on the second day of the week. Whether he departed on the first or
-second, however, the fact remains that, during his abode of seven days
-at Troas, there was one seventh day. Do we hear of any religious meeting
-on that day? Did the disciples then assemble for divine service? Let us
-hear the record: “We abode seven days. And upon the first day of the
-week, when the disciples came together to break bread, Paul preached
-unto them, ready to depart on the morrow.” The seventh day is passed by.
-The day for the assembling of the Christian disciples is not the Sabbath
-of the Jews. Another day has taken its place. This most explicit
-instance at Troas of ignoring the seventh day, and honoring another in
-its place, as the stated day for the religious services of Christians,
-abundantly confirms, if confirmation were needed, the conclusions
-already reached in the instances at Corinth and Ephesus.
-
-Thus the _facts_ of the records of inspired history conclusively prove
-that the seventh day was not observed by the apostles and early
-Christians as their sacred day of divine worship, or the Sabbath of the
-Lord. We might add here that the testimony of all the earliest Christian
-writers, who received from the apostles and the companions of the
-apostles the institutions of the Christian church, is full and explicit
-to the same effect. But we shall hear their evidence for the first day,
-and thus also against the seventh, in good time.
-
-It will now be in place to consider how apostolic precept corresponds
-with apostolic example, and that of the churches, in regard to the
-seventh day. Colossians 2:16, a most important passage, making
-particular mention of the seventh-day Sabbath, yet singularly overlooked
-by seventh-day Sabbatarians, now claims our attention for a moment.
-Judaizing teachers, so busy everywhere throughout the early church, had
-been at work among the Christian disciples at Colosse. They had been
-insisting upon the observance of the seventh day as the Sabbath of the
-Lord. One would think that some of these men had come down to our time
-and learned to use very good English. We refer these representatives of
-an ancient, but not honorably mentioned, class for instruction to the
-apostle’s words to the Colossians: “Let no man judge you in meat or in
-drink, or in respect of a holy day [literally, _of a feast_], or of the
-new moon, or of the Sabbath days;” _i. e._, of yearly, monthly, or
-weekly Jewish celebrations. We do not wait to examine the parallel
-passages in Gal. 4:10, and Rom. 14:5, where the obligation of Jewish
-observances, including the seventh-day Sabbath, is denied, and where, in
-the latter case, to make the argument even stronger, the toleration of
-these observances as a weakness is considerately advised. Surely, it is
-no wonder that seventh-day Sabbatarians seem not to be aware of the
-existence of these portions of the divine word! It cannot be pleasant to
-be made to feel that, like the Judaizers of old, they bring themselves
-under the sharp rebuke of the inspired apostle by judging Christians in
-respect of the seventh-day Sabbath.
-
-We will now sum up this part of the discussion: Admitting that the
-Sabbath was instituted in Eden for mankind; that it is of perpetual
-obligation; that it was observed by Christ himself before his death, and
-by his disciples until his resurrection, as by the Jews of old, on the
-seventh day of the week; we have gone on to see that the apostles and
-the early church, still having one stated day each week as a holy day,
-did _not_ continue the observance of the seventh day. We have seen that
-the seventh day, after the resurrection, is mentioned only in connection
-with assemblies, in Jewish places of worship, of Jews, Jewish
-proselytes, and, in some instances, a larger or smaller addition of
-Gentiles, among all of whom the apostle labored as a missionary for the
-conversion of souls, and the formation of Christian congregations, or
-churches. We have found that no instance can be adduced of the apostles
-in their relations to Christian churches, nor of assemblies of Christian
-disciples, meeting to observe the seventh day as the Sabbath of the
-Lord. On the other hand, we have found them ignoring the seventh day and
-honoring another, in perfect harmony with the apostle Paul’s rebuke of
-Judaizing teachers who insisted on having Christian disciples observe
-the seventh day, and his condescending toleration of their weakness.
-
-
-
-
- A REJOINDER.
- “THE SEVENTH DAY NOT OBSERVED BY THE EARLY CHRISTIAN CHURCH.”
-
-
-It is, we confess, with some degree of embarrassment, that we attempt
-the answering of the second article from the pen of the editor of the
-_Statesman_, in reply to the argument which we presented in the columns
-of that paper. Our difficulty does not arise from any confusion into
-which we have been thrown by the superior logic of our opponent; it
-consists, rather, in knowing just where and how to commence the work.
-
-So far as statements are concerned, they are numerous and repeated again
-and again, in substance. But we have no disposition, nor have we the
-space, to take them up singly, in their numerical and repetitious order,
-for consideration. And, besides, the fallacy of nearly every one of them
-has been demonstrated in what we have already written. This being the
-case, we have determined to take the general scope of the criticism, and
-thus, as briefly as may be, make suggestions which, if carried out, will
-answer its assumptions, as well as its attempted efforts at deduction.
-
-We remark, then, in the outset, that we are happy to meet the writer
-upon the common ground of a Sabbath having originated in Eden, and
-inserted in a law of perpetual obligation on both Jews and Gentiles.
-
-Let the reader keep these mutual concessions continually before his
-eyes. They are of great significance in this debate. 1. They prove that
-the Sabbath is not Jewish in its origin, but was given to Adam, as their
-representative head, for the benefit of the whole race, more than two
-thousand years before there was a Jew in existence. 2. They also prove
-that the Sabbath institution was rendered obligatory upon all men by a
-divine precept, with the phraseology of which we are all acquainted. 3.
-That that precept is explicit in its declaration that the last and not
-the first day of the week was the Sabbath. 4. That before any other day
-can be substituted in the place of the one designated, the Power which
-originated it must authorize the change.
-
-So much for the important results which necessarily flow from the
-principles which we hold in common, if indeed we are right in supposing
-that the writer _really_ means what he _actually_ says; namely, that he
-holds to the perpetuity of the fourth commandment of the decalogue. We
-shall see, hereafter, whether or not his statements are to be taken for
-all which they express.
-
-We advance, now, in our examination of the criticism before us.
-
-What direction, then, does the effort take in the main? It will be
-granted that the plan of defense adopted is that of attempting to prove
-that the early church did violate the seventh, and did honor the first,
-day of the week. But with what success has the effort been attended? We
-know that it is stated several times that the apostles disregarded what
-the author is pleased to call the _Jewish_ Sabbath—after he had conceded
-the principle that that of the commandment was _Edenic_ in its
-origin—but did he make out his case? So far from it, in every instance
-where he has found them connected in the record with the Sabbath day, it
-has ever been in the performance of duties _religious in their nature_.
-For should we concede that he is right in supposing that Paul went into
-the synagogues to teach on the Sabbath day, simply because he would find
-hearers there, this, assuredly, would not prove that Paul was a
-Sabbath-breaker.
-
-Let me take the gentleman’s favorite illustration of a missionary in a
-foreign land, at the present time. Now suppose that his lot were cast in
-a country where the first day of the week, or the day of the sun, was
-regarded as holy by the natives, and he should be found on that day
-regularly teaching them in their places of assembly, would _that_ decide
-the question that he was necessarily a violator of the first-day
-Sabbath? You answer immediately in the negative. So, too, in the case of
-Paul. The fact that it can be shown that it was his custom to teach in
-the synagogues on the seventh day of the week, if it has no power to
-prove that he was a conscientious _observer_ of that day, cannot at
-least be cited as furnishing evidence that he _disregarded_ it. We ask,
-then, again, Has a scintilla of positive testimony been given that Paul
-ever broke a single Sabbath of the Lord, as contained in the divine
-precept? Once more it must be conceded that there has not. But is it not
-a little singular that in a history of thirty years, where the Sabbath
-is so often mentioned, not one single action has ever been discovered in
-the least incompatible with Paul’s veneration of the seventh day? We let
-the reader answer.
-
-Furthermore, we have from the pen of our opponent himself the frank
-admission that, in the historic territory over which he has been
-passing, it has been uniformly true that both Luke and Paul have ever,
-when speaking of the seventh day, called it “the Sabbath.” Now let the
-reader remember that this confession is full and sweeping in its
-character. Then let him ask himself whether it is natural to suppose
-that men, having repudiated an old Sabbath, and zealous for the
-establishment of a new one, would be likely to make up the record in
-question in such a form that the old Sabbath, whenever spoken of, should
-always be styled “the Sabbath,” and the new one be mentioned merely as
-the “first day of the week?” In order to impress the fallacy of such an
-idea, we have but to call attention to the fact that men, at the present
-time, possessing the same natures and dispositions as formerly, would
-avoid such a course with the most scrupulous care. Instance the fact
-that seventh-day observers never allude to the Sunday as _the Sabbath_,
-but avoid such a reference under all circumstances; while the devotees
-of the Sunday, when speaking of the last day of the week, almost
-uniformly speak of it as the _Jewish Sabbath_, if Sabbath they will
-allow themselves to call it at all.
-
-But again. We are told, very candidly, that by the word Sabbath, in Acts
-13:44, where it is said that the “next Sabbath day came almost the whole
-city together” to hear the word of God, is meant the next seventh day
-succeeding the first seventh day on which Paul addressed the Jews at
-Antioch. This being true, it is settled beyond dispute that, in the mind
-of Luke, there was no Sabbath day occurring between the one on which
-Paul spoke to the people, and the seventh day of the next week when he
-addressed them the second time; for, if there had been, then it would
-not have been proper to call the last Sabbath mentioned the “_next_”
-one, since another Sabbath would have intervened between the two in
-question. In other words, according to the view of our friend, the
-Sunday, which was the next day after the first discourse of Paul, was
-really the next Sabbath which followed it; whereas, the inspired penman
-ignores it altogether, and, passing over it with silence, calls the last
-day of that same week “the Sabbath.”
-
-Again, it is stated in Acts 15:21, that the “Scriptures are read in the
-synagogues _every_ Sabbath day.” Here, again, it is conceded that the
-reference is to the seventh day of the week. If this be true, however,
-then James, as well as Luke, had, in his lexicon of terms, the “Sabbath
-day” as the one which answered to the seventh day and not to the first;
-for no one will insist that the Scriptures were read in the synagogues
-of the Jews regularly on the first day of the week; but James says that
-they were read there _every_ Sabbath day; therefore, in his mind—as we
-have already remarked—the first day was not the Sabbath.
-
-Once more: It is stated of Paul that he reasoned in the synagogues
-_every_ Sabbath, and persuaded the Jews and the Greeks. Here also it is
-urged—admitting that the reference is to the seventh day—that Paul went
-into the synagogue in order to get a hearing. But this he could not do
-on the first day, since he would have found the synagogue closed, and no
-audience. Nevertheless, the statement stands unqualified that Paul
-preached “_every Sabbath_.” Now if this be true, and the first as well
-as the seventh day might, according to the view of the historian, be
-called a Sabbath, then we have him stating that Paul preached in the
-place in question on both the first and seventh days. On the other hand,
-if he regarded the first day as alone the Sabbath, then he meant to
-teach that Paul preached in the synagogue on that day, and that day
-only. But my opponent will not insist upon either of these positions.
-The only conclusion that is left us, therefore, is that the Holy Ghost,
-who inspired Luke in the selection of terms, employed the appellation of
-Sabbath as applying only to the day which had been sanctified in Eden,
-and had always been known by that title.
-
-Now let us give our attention for a moment to the objection so strongly
-urged that in the book of the Acts, and in the epistles, there is no
-well-authenticated instance in which the apostles held meetings, with
-Christians exclusively, on the seventh day. The point of the proposition
-might be thus stated: If the early Christians did hold meetings on the
-seventh day, the record would have shown it: this it fails to do;
-therefore, the presumption is that they did not regard it as holy.
-
-This is a sword that cuts _both_ ways, if it cuts at all. We do not
-wonder that, when our friend laid hold of its hilt, he said,
-tremblingly, This is a _negative weapon_; so that, when we should
-attempt to borrow it of him, we might find the edge, which was designed
-for his _own neck, dulled by his own concession_.
-
-But let us proceed. Is it true, so far as the ancient Sabbath of the
-Lord is concerned, that, unless we can find historic accounts of its
-observance in the New Testament, we must therefore conclude that it was
-not regarded? We answer, No; simply because its observance is not alone
-taught by precedent. It rests upon a positive command of God,
-incorporated in a law which was brought over into this dispensation, as
-we have seen, and made obligatory upon Christians. It was not,
-therefore, necessary that a detailed account of its observance should be
-placed upon the record, in order to prove that it was regarded by the
-early church; since the very fact that they acknowledged the law of God,
-is in itself proof that they sanctified the Sabbath which it ordained.
-Until, therefore, the gentleman can shake the pillars of that law—as we
-shall show he has not yet succeeded in doing—it is of itself a guarantee
-that every seventh day was regarded with solemnity by those who were
-endeavoring to keep its precepts.
-
-In proof of this, we have but to mention the fact that from Moses to
-David—a space covering five hundred years—the term Sabbath is not
-employed once in the sacred history, and yet the gentleman will agree
-with me that the good men of those ages hallowed it, simply because he
-agrees with me that they had a precept requiring them to do so.
-
-But, again, we must be allowed to insist that the very silence of which
-the gentleman complains does indirectly prove, independent of the
-commandment, that the first generation of Christians were Sabbatarians.
-What we mean to be understood as saying is, that they at least did not
-violate the regulations concerning the strict observance of the Sabbath,
-as enforced among the Jews; for had they done so, a record of thirty
-years could not have failed to bring to light numerous collisions, which
-would have been inevitable between Jews and Christians, the one class
-despising and trampling down the Sabbath of the law, and the other
-following them with that vulture glance of inquisition, by which—as in
-the case of our Lord—they were in the habit of watching their
-antagonists, with a view to condemning them before the law. And,
-besides, with what show of consistency could Paul have stood up before
-them, announcing himself as one who had never violated the customs of
-the fathers (Acts 28:17), if he had been seen weekly transgressing the
-law of one of the dearest institutions handed down to them from the
-remotest antiquity?
-
-Thus much for one side of the logic of our opponent. Now let us apply it
-to the Sunday. As we do so, it will be recollected that there has been
-no effort made, as yet, to place it upon a positive precept. Its
-existence, therefore, if such it has at all, must be attributable to
-precedent. Thus far, such precedent has not been cited, except by way of
-anticipation. When it comes up, we will consider it in order. In the
-meantime, let it be remembered that our friend has voluntarily taken a
-position which will compel him to admit that, unless he can find at
-least one clear and unquestionable case in which the Sunday was from
-beginning to end devoutly celebrated, his cause is a hopeless one. Nay,
-more, to make out his point, every candid mind will demand that, in the
-absence of positive command, he shall be able to show numerous instances
-in which the day, whose claims he seeks to vindicate, was intelligently
-honored; for, be it remembered, that, according to his own declaration,
-the apostle was traveling from point to point, writing and preaching,
-and Luke was keeping a diary of his labors, for the purpose of
-instructing that generation of Christians, as well as this, concerning
-duty and doctrine. If, therefore, Sunday sanctity came under the head of
-those doctrines, it was important, overwhelmingly so, that such a fact
-should be set forth clearly, since an habitual disregard on the part of
-any, of the new Sabbath, would bring upon them the condemnation of
-Heaven. Furthermore, the line of demarkation, which the new day would
-have drawn between the disciples and the Hebrews, would have been so
-broad, and the discussions upon those points would have been so numerous
-and so full, while the transition was taking place, that its existence
-could not have failed to become discernible in the writings of that
-period.
-
-Here we must change our line of argument, and turn to the consideration
-of Col. 2:14-17, and of Rom. 14:5. Our opponent intimates that
-Sabbatarians are in the habit of evading these texts. In this remark, he
-does us great injustice. The statement is so far from being true that I
-make no doubt that, within the last twenty years, Seventh-day Adventist
-preachers alone have, by voice and pen, commented upon them at least a
-thousand times. But the best method of showing the charge to be untrue
-will be found in an examination of the texts themselves. The first is as
-follows: “Blotting out the handwriting of ordinances that was against
-us, which was contrary to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it to
-his cross; ... Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or
-in respect of an holy day, or of the new moon, or of the sabbath days:
-which are a shadow of things to come; but the body is of Christ.” Col.
-2:14, 16, 17. Now be it remembered that he affirms that these scriptures
-teach the abolition of the creation Sabbath; also, that, while we
-concede the point that there are here mentioned sabbaths which were
-abolished at the crucifixion of Christ, we deny that the seventh-day
-Sabbath was among them, and insist that they were simply the ceremonial
-sabbaths of the Jews to which reference is made.
-
-In proof of our position, we offer the following considerations: 1. That
-which was repealed is represented as having been “blotted out.” Now the
-Scriptures are remarkable for the force and propriety of the
-illustrations which they employ. But who will say that the terms
-“blotting out” could properly be applied to writing engraved in stone,
-as was the Sabbath law in its original copy? 2. That which was blotted
-out was the “handwriting of ordinances;” but the commandments were the
-finger-writing of God. 3. That which was blotted out was found among
-ordinances that were “_against_ us, and _contrary_ to us.” But Jesus
-says, “The Sabbath was made _for_ man.” Mark 2:27, 28. 4. That which was
-blotted out and taken out of the way “was nailed to his cross.” But it
-is inconceivable that such language could be spoken of the tables of
-stone, since they are not of a nature such that the work spoken of could
-be readily accomplished, and therefore the figure will not apply to them
-except when forced. 5. It must be admitted that these things concerning
-which we are not to allow men to judge us were either all of them
-shadows of Christ, or that if the _others_ were not, the _sabbath days_
-were. If they were all shadows, then the sabbaths undeniably were such;
-for the expression, “which were a shadow of things to come,” stands
-immediately connected with the term “sabbath days.”
-
-But this decides the point in controversy; for our friend has already
-voluntarily declared that the seventh-day Sabbath originated in Eden.
-This being true, it cannot be regarded as a “shadow” or type of Christ,
-since it was in being before man had ever fallen, and, consequently,
-before a Saviour was either needed or promised. It is commemorative in
-its character, and was calculated to carry the mind back to the
-creation, to the rest of Jehovah, rather than forward to the crucifixion
-of his Son. Do you inquire, then, what sabbaths the apostle had in view?
-We answer: He locates them among “commandments written in ordinances.”
-In other words, in the Mosaic ceremonies. Now take your Bible and turn
-to the twenty-third chapter of Leviticus, and you will find that the
-Jews had three annual feasts—the passover, the Pentecost, and the feast
-of tabernacles—besides the new moons, and the seven annual sabbaths. The
-sabbaths were as follows, to wit: 1. The first day of unleavened bread.
-2. The seventh day of that feast. 3. The day of Pentecost. 4. The first
-day of the seventh month. 5. The tenth day of that month. 6. The
-fifteenth day of that month. 7. The twenty-second day of the same. These
-are the ones, beyond all question, to which reference is here made.[3]
-1. Because they were in the handwriting of Moses, and could be blotted
-out. 2. Because they were found in handwriting of ordinances. 3. They
-were among ceremonies that were against us, and contrary to us (Acts
-15:10). 4. The law in which they originated might have been nailed to
-the cross. 5. That law was also one which shadowed forth Christ (Heb,
-10:1).
-
-To the second text we shall give but little space. In the presentation
-of it, our friend attempts to be _facetious_. Nor are we disposed to
-find fault with him for this. It is sometimes admissible, even in the
-discussion of the _gravest_ questions, to indulge in _harmless_ humor.
-That the effort in question partakes of _this character_, _i. e._, that
-it is _harmless_, we shall not dispute. At all events, when we read it,
-it amused rather than offended us. A second thought, however, suggests
-the possibility that if _we_ were not damaged by the sally, it might
-have been _pernicious_, nevertheless, since it is possible for it to
-_react upon its author_. Certain it is, that it will damage either him
-or Paul, because he represents the great apostle as making a special
-effort, in his general labors, to teach men that they must under _all_
-circumstances keep _one_ day holy, and that under _some_ they might be
-allowed to regard a _second_ also in the same light. But, unfortunately,
-if this exegesis is correct, and if the language of Rom. 14:5, applies
-to the weekly Sabbath at all, Paul blundered egregiously in
-communicating his intentions; since he virtually told them whom he was
-addressing that, of the days of which _he was speaking_, they _need not_
-keep them at all, or they _might_, at will. Here follows the text “One
-man esteemeth one day above another: another esteemeth every day alike.
-Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind.”
-
-Now we have heard men Who believed in no Sabbath employ this text again
-and again to prove that there is now no holy time; we have also heard
-conscientious first-day observers argue forcibly and conclusively that
-this text proved no such thing, simply because it referred to days that
-were connected with meats and drinks, and not to the weekly Sabbath at
-all. But we confess that the position of our friend is somewhat novel.
-Nevertheless, we feel sure that the reputation of the great apostle for
-perspicuity will not suffer by this attempt, and we think that, so far
-as he is concerned himself, reflection will prevent him from ever
-seriously urging it. In conclusion on this point, we append a brief
-comment from the pen of Adam Clarke, whose reputation, and the fact that
-he was an observer of Sunday, will give him no little authority with our
-opponent. He says: “Reference is here made to the _Jewish_ institutions,
-and especially their festivals; such as the passover, pentecost, feast
-of tabernacles, new moons, jubilee, &c. The converted _Jew_ still
-thought these of moral obligation; the _Gentile_ Christian, not having
-been bred up in this way, had no such prejudices.”—_Com. in loco._
-
-The only remaining text cited is that of Gal. 4:10. After what has been
-said, no further comment from us will be required. The reader, desirous
-of satisfying himself that this text also has no reference to the weekly
-Sabbath, and of necessity refers either to heathen festivals or Jewish
-ceremonial days, can read the context, and consult standard authorities,
-such as Clarke or Barnes.[4]
-
-Let us now survey the ground over which we have passed. So far as we
-have gone, what has been done toward proving a practice of first-day
-observance on the part of the early church? We answer, Nothing,
-absolutely nothing. The only texts which have been cited for this
-purpose are 1 Cor. 16:2, Rev. 1:10, and Acts 20:7. So far as they are
-concerned, we have previously shown that the first of them does not in
-any way affect the question of Sunday observance; that the second
-relates to the seventh day of the week and not to the first; and that
-the third proves that Paul traveled nineteen and one-half miles on the
-Sunday. When our reviewer shall attempt to stir a single stone in the
-structure of argument which we reared in our former articles on these
-points, we shall be by his side, to see that he does it fairly. Until
-then, the intelligent reader need not be told that it is vain for him to
-try to make capital by quoting them as above.
-
-Thus much for the first day. We inquire next, What has been conceded or
-proved, which is favorable to the seventh-day Sabbath? 1. That it
-originated in Eden. 2. That it was enforced by the fourth commandment.
-3. That that commandment is still binding. 4. That the effort to show a
-change in its phraseology from Col. 2:16, Rom. 14:5, and Gal. 4:10, was
-a complete failure; and therefore that it reads as it did formerly, that
-“the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord.” 5. That there is a Sabbath
-in this dispensation. 6. That, being enforced by positive command, it
-stands in need of no precedent. 7. That, while the apostles did many
-times preach on that day, there is not one instance in which they
-violated it. 8. That had they desecrated it, the conflicts which would
-have been thus created, must have found a place in the history of those
-times. 9. That in the book of Acts it is always called “the Sabbath.”
-10. That it was the only Sabbath known to the apostles, since they speak
-of it not only as “_the_ Sabbath,” but as “the _next_ Sabbath,” and
-“_every_ Sabbath.”
-
-In concluding, we suggest that we leave our reviewer in a situation
-which, to a man of his clearness of perception, must be a very
-unsatisfactory one. Having insisted upon the perpetuity of the fourth
-commandment, he is compelled to take one of two positions. Either, 1.
-That it reads the same as it did when it enforced the seventh day; or,
-2. That its phraseology has been changed. We confess that we have been
-unable to decide which of these positions he prefers. Nor is it material
-here. If he adopts the first, the thoughtful reader will agree with me
-that it is simply absurd to argue that a statute, while reading the
-same, means differently from what it did formerly. On the other hand,
-should he adopt the latter, then we inquire why he has not given it to
-us as it reads since it has been changed, and thus ended the controversy
-by gratifying our most reasonable request.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- “It is not clear that the apostle refers at all to the _Sabbath_ in
- this place [Col. 2:16], whether Jewish or Christian; his σαββατων, _of
- sabbaths, or weeks_, most probably refers to their feasts of
- weeks.”—_A. Clarke, in loco._
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- “The days here referred to are doubtless the days of the Jewish
- festivals.... It is not a fair interpretation of this to suppose that
- the apostle refers to the _Sabbath_, properly so called, for this was
- a part of the decalogue, and was observed by the Saviour himself, and
- by the apostles also. It _is_ a fair interpretation to apply it to all
- those days which are not commanded to be kept holy in the
- Scriptures.”—_A. Barnes, in loco._
-
-
-
-
- STATESMAN’S REPLY.
- ARTICLE THREE.
- TESTIMONY FROM THE GOSPELS FOR THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.
-
-
-In a previous article it was seen that from the resurrection of Christ
-there is no instance recorded in Scripture of the observance of the
-seventh day as the Sabbath of the Lord by any assembly of Christians. On
-the contrary, it was seen that the Judaizing spirit, which in some
-instances insisted on such observance by Christians, was rebuked by the
-inspired apostle. In connection with this was noted the fact that in the
-case of Jews converted to Christianity, yet inclined still to regard the
-seventh day with other Jewish celebrations, Christians were directed to
-bear with such observance as a weakness in their brethren. It was also
-seen that while the observance of the seventh day was not continued,
-another day of the week, the first, took its place as the stated day for
-religious assemblies and services. Let us now examine the testimony from
-the Gospels for this day, reserving the remainder of scriptural proof
-for another article.
-
-The manner in which the first day of the week is pointed out in the
-Gospels as the day of the Lord’s resurrection, is itself striking and
-significant. All four of the evangelists concur in making prominent the
-fact that it was on this day that Christ rose from the dead. This fact
-is stated by Matthew, 28:1-6; twice by Mark, 16:1-6, and again in verse
-9; by Luke, 24:1-6; by John, 20:1, 2. This concurrent, particular
-mention of the first day of the week as the day of the resurrection, in
-four independent historical accounts, the earliest of which was written
-probably about twenty years after that event, has a significance readily
-overlooked, but well worth noting.
-
-To appreciate this fully, we must distinguish between the words of the
-historians and the words of the persons whose sayings they record—a most
-important point in the study of any history. Observing this distinction,
-then, we note that the promise of Christ, as recorded by the historians,
-was, that he would rise from the dead on the third day, dating from and
-including the day of his crucifixion and burial. The chief priests and
-Pharisees, asking Pilate to have the sepulcher guarded; the angels at
-the sepulcher the morning of the resurrection; the two disciples,
-conversing with the risen Lord on the way to Emmaus, and the Lord
-himself, speak of it as the _third_ day. In no other way does any one
-whose language is recorded by the historians refer to the day of the
-resurrection. Now, had the historians themselves, writing after an
-interval of from nearly twenty to over sixty years, simply desired to
-state the fact of the Lord’s resurrection, it would have been sufficient
-for them to say that, according to His promise, he rose on the _third_
-day. But instead of this, they all concur in pointing out particularly
-the _first_ day of the week as the resurrection day. On the supposition
-that, when the historians wrote, the first day was regarded precisely
-like the second and third days of the week, as it was at the time of the
-resurrection, this change of statement is singular and inexplicable. On
-the other hand, on the supposition that the first day had become an
-honored and noted day among Christians, this mention of it by all the
-evangelists, and that, too, in a uniform and somewhat formal phrase, and
-the difference between the language of the historians and that of the
-persons of whom they write, are naturally and satisfactorily explained.
-In this change of language, then, on the part of the inspired
-historians, and in their concurrent and prominent mention of the first
-day, we have strong presumptive evidence in favor of the marked
-character of that day at the time when the Gospel histories were
-written. Testimony of this kind, in the form of unstudied allusion or
-undesigned coincidence, though easily passed without notice, is
-acknowledged on all hands to be of great weight.
-
-After showing himself probably four times to one or more of his
-disciples during the day of his resurrection, Christ appeared late in
-the evening to the disciples collectively, Thomas alone being absent.
-“Then the same day at evening (_opsia_, _late evening_, from _opse_,
-_late_), being the first day of the week, when the doors were shut where
-the disciples were assembled for fear of the Jews, came Jesus and stood
-in the midst, and saith unto them, Peace be unto you.” (John 20:19.) Let
-the facts be noted. 1. It was the evening of the first day of the week.
-2. The disciples were met together, manifestly, _not_ to commemorate the
-resurrection, but for what purpose, or where, it does not matter. 3. The
-Lord came and blessed them, and, as we learn from the following verses,
-imparted to them spiritual instruction, and breathed on them the Holy
-Ghost. These facts should be borne in mind as we proceed.
-
-We come now to the record of the first day of the following week; “And
-after eight days again his disciples were within, and Thomas with them.
-Then came Jesus, the doors being shut, and stood in the midst, and said,
-Peace be unto you.” (John 20:26.) This interval of eight days, from and
-including the resurrection day, brings us, according to the common mode
-of reckoning, and as no one is disposed to dispute, to the first day of
-the next week. The preceding first day, the disciples were met
-collectively. Again, this first day, they are met, and Thomas with them.
-It has been said that very probably the disciples met every day during
-the interval, and, therefore, they put no special honor upon the first
-day. But the question is not just here whether the disciples meant to
-honor the first day or not. Did the Lord himself single it out from the
-days of the week and honor it? This is the question at present. It may
-be admitted that the disciples met every day during the interval. This
-is exceedingly probable. The fact remains clear that the Lord did not
-meet with them. And this very passing by of these supposed meetings of
-the disciples by the Lord, during six days, the last of which was the
-seventh-day Sabbath, renders his actual meeting with them, as recorded,
-on the first day again, all the more significant. The disciples may not
-have designed to honor the day, but the Lord himself, passing by the
-seventh day along with the other five intervening, selects and homes the
-first day by once more meeting on it with his disciples.
-
-Nor is it to be admitted that the disciples were destitute of all regard
-to the returning first day of the week as the day of the Lord’s
-resurrection. The very circumstances in which, by the ordering of the
-Master, they were placed, could not fail to teach them to look upon it
-with special regard. They had been assembled on the evening of the
-preceding first day. The Lord had met with them and blessed them, and
-breathed on them the Holy Ghost. Earnestly longing to enjoy his
-comforting and slivering presence again, we may suppose they met on the
-second day. But the Lord does not come. More deeply feeling their need,
-they assemble again the third day. Still the desired presence is
-withheld. So on, with ever-increasing desires, they meet, day after day.
-How natural would it be for them to think of the seventh day, on which
-they had so often enjoyed sweet counsel with the Master, going to the
-house of God. “Surely,” their thought might well be, “He will meet with
-us in our assembly to-day.” But no. The time for the special
-manifestation of himself to his worshiping disciples in their collective
-gathering had not come. Would not the disciples then remember, if they
-had ever forgotten it, that it was on the first day of the week the Lord
-rose from the dead, and on that day he had stood in the midst of them
-and said, Peace be unto you? And remembering this, they would meet on
-the return of the first day with earnest expectation of the return of
-the Master. Nor are they disappointed. Once more he comes, and stands in
-the midst, and grants his benediction.
-
-Here then are the facts concerning sacred time, as recorded in the
-Gospel history, subsequent to the resurrection of Christ. The seventh
-day is not mentioned. If the disciples met on that day, as they probably
-did, the inspired penmen take no notice of the fact. There is no meeting
-of the risen Lord with his disciples. The seventh day is passed by. On
-the other hand, the first day is mentioned in a particular manner, in
-changed and special language, by all the evangelists, as a noted day
-would naturally be mentioned and marked out as the resurrection day. On
-it the Lord repeatedly met with his disciples, blessed them, taught them
-important spiritual lessons, and breathed on them the Holy Ghost, the
-earnest of the abundant outpouring of the Spirit. How fell of meaning
-these facts! On the last seventh day on which the disciples rested
-according to the commandment, the Lord himself is lying in the tomb. The
-glory of the seventh day dies out with the fading light of that day
-throughout the whole of which the grave claimed the body of the
-Redeemer. But the glory of the Sabbath of the Lord survives. It receives
-fresh luster from the added glories of the Lord of the Sabbath. “The
-stone which the builders refused is become the head-stone of the
-corner.” It is very early in the morning the first day of the week.
-Again God said, Let there be light, and there was light. The Sun of
-righteousness has risen with healing in his wings. This is the day which
-the Lord hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in it. The first day of
-the week has become the Lord’s day.
-
-
-
-
- A REJOINDER.
- “TESTIMONY FROM THE GOSPELS FOR THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.”
-
-
-Without prolonged preliminary remarks, we shall endeavor to consider the
-points of argument presented by our reviewer in the article entitled,
-“Testimony from the Gospels for the first-day Sabbath.” In entering upon
-our task, we feel almost as if we were doing a work of supererogation,
-from the fact that what we are called upon to answer is so far from
-being a refutation of what we had said in our positive argument, that it
-appears to be little more than a re-statement of positions which we
-believe we have once fairly met and conclusively answered. Nevertheless,
-we express our satisfaction at the concessions apparently made by the
-writer. The common plea that the disciples were assembled on the day of
-the resurrection in order to honor the resuscitation of the body of
-Christ, is seemingly ignored. The points now urged seem to be those of a
-disposition on the part of the Lord himself to honor the first day of
-the week, and of such a use of language on the part of the historians as
-it would be natural for them to make, provided it had become a settled
-thing with them to regard the Sunday as a day which Christ had set apart
-for holy uses.
-
-So far as it regards the position assumed, that there is peculiar
-significance in the manner in which the first day is pointed out, with
-it we are ready most heartily to agree. But so far as the assertion is
-concerned, that, in the _manner_ of the pointing out, there is found
-strong presumptive evidence that they design to teach succeeding
-generation that they looked upon the first day of the week as _holy
-time_, we can by no means admit that it is correct. On the contrary, we
-believe that their language establishes, beyond controversy, the
-opposite position. Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, were blunt,
-straightforward, direct men in all that they said. They had nothing to
-disguise, nor could anything be gained by indirection in statement.
-
-Furthermore, every motive of esteem for Christ, as well as that which
-would actuate them in their desire to instruct subsequent generations in
-regard to the estimation in which they should hold the day of Christ’s
-resurrection, demanded that their language should be full and explicit,
-and that it should state, in so many words, that it was sacred to holy
-uses. But have they done this? No; the gentleman does not so much as
-urge that they have. All his emphasis is placed upon the fact that, in
-speaking of it, they call it the “first day of the week,” instead of the
-“third after his crucifixion.” He may well say that the distinction
-between these two forms of expression would be readily “passed over.”
-Has it come to this, then, that the Holy Spirit, in enforcing important
-duties upon Christians, is compelled to depart from the natural, clear,
-and positive statement of facts, and to employ polemical niceties which,
-we believe, if they have any force at all, can only be discerned by
-minds whose susceptibilities for refinement are infinitely superior to
-those of common men and women, and the poor and ignorant to whom the
-gospel was preached.
-
-If the _Sunday_ had become the “_Christian Sabbath_,” why not _say so_?
-If, indeed, it was on the “Lord’s day” that Jesus arose, why was not
-this asserted? Or, if the first day of the week was regarded as the
-Christian Sabbath, why such a studied avoidance of the application of
-this term to that day? Will the gentleman insist that if the evangelists
-had stated, in so many words, that the Lord appeared among them after
-his resurrection on the first “_Lord’s day_,” or the first “_Christian
-Sabbath_,” that it would not have been just what the facts would have
-warranted, if his theory be correct, and that thereby all dispute, as to
-which day is the Lord’s day, or Christian Sabbath, would have been
-forever terminated? Then why endeavor to impress the reader with the
-thought that there is really any peculiar significance in the form of
-expression employed, or that it furnishes a strong presumptive argument
-in favor of first-day sanctity?
-
-The language of the historians is just that which men would use when
-speaking of a secular day, and not that which they would naturally
-employ when alluding to a consecrated one. The expression, “first day of
-the week,” was not only the briefer—as compared to the other, that is,
-the “third days the crucifixion”—but was definite in every particular.
-Once more, therefore, we insist that the fact that the inspired
-evangelists persisted, twenty years after the occurrence of the events
-recorded, in calling the Sunday “the first day of the week”—as they have
-done in the six times in which they have mentioned it—if guided at all
-in the selection of this term by the usage and opinions of the times in
-which they wrote, have furnished us with a commentary which, if it
-proves anything at all, proves that the day now regarded as holy was not
-so esteemed at that time by the disciples generally, else those among
-them who, as historians, would have been glad to have conferred upon it
-this honor, would have referred to it in the use of its sacred title,
-“Sabbath,” or the “Lord’s day.”
-
-As it regards the _design of Christ_, we take issue with our friend, and
-offer the following reasons for our confident assertion that he is
-wrong: 1. His conclusion is not one which is either necessary or
-obvious. God has shown us his method of making a holy day. That method
-he has set forth in clear and positive statement, and the observance of
-such a day he has enforced by explicit command. This being the case, we
-must infer that he chose that manner because it was the best. Hence we
-should naturally conclude that when he wished to change the day of his
-choice, once enforced by a law still binding, he would make known his
-mind in a manner so clear and impressive that there could be no room for
-doubt. This, however, in the action of Christ alluded to, is far from
-being the case, because the meeting of the Lord with the apostles did
-not necessarily affect the nature of the time on which it occurred.
-Instance the fact heretofore cited, that he met with them on a fishing
-day (John chap. 21), and again on Thursday, the day of the ascension,
-without in any way changing the character of those days, as all will
-admit. Now, if this could be true of those two days, might it not also
-be true of the first day of the week? 2. Because, as we have seen, there
-is not the slightest evidence that the _apostles inferred_ that it was
-the intention of Christ to produce the impression claimed. For, had this
-been the case, their convictions must have found expression for our
-benefit. 3. Because, manifestly, the conversation of Christ is given, so
-far as it inculcated any duty not elsewhere expressed; and in his words
-there is no allusion to any design on his part to teach them that the
-time on which they were assembled was holy. 4. Because there is a
-sufficient reason found for the meeting of Christ with the apostles on
-these two occasions, in his desire to establish them in the conviction
-of his resurrection, and to instruct them in regard to future action.
-
-Before passing from this branch of the subject, we must be allowed to
-express our surprise that, in the anxiety of our friend to make out his
-case, he has made a declaration which we think he would not have done
-had he been more deliberate in his selection of facts. He says, in
-speaking of John 20:26—the second and only additional instance in which,
-after the first, he claims that Christ met with the apostles on the
-first day of the week—as follows: “This interval of eight days, from and
-including the resurrection day, brings us, according to the common mode
-of reckoning, and as no one is disposed to dispute, to the first day of
-the next week.” To this we reply that, if he means to be understood, by
-this statement, that there is no dispute as to whether the second
-gathering under consideration did occur just one week after the first,
-he mistakes greatly. It is by no means true that this is a matter about
-which there is no difference of opinion. In order to show the reader
-that we are right in this, we quote the following from many testimonies
-which might be introduced: “‘After eight days’ from this meeting, if
-made to signify only one week, necessarily carries us to the second day
-of the week. But a different expression is used by the Spirit of
-inspiration when simply one week is intended. ‘After seven days,’ is the
-chosen term of the Holy Spirit when designating just one week. ‘After
-eight days,’ most naturally implies the ninth or tenth day; but allowing
-it to mean the eighth day, it fails to prove that this appearance of the
-Saviour was upon the first day of the week.” In a note on the above
-remarks, the same author says “Those who were to come before God from
-Sabbath to Sabbath to minister in his temple, were said to come ‘after
-seven days.’ 1 Chron. 9:25; 2 Kings 11:5.”—_Hist. of Sabbath, by J. H.
-Andrews_, p. 148.
-
-Right here, also, is the proper place to give attention to the elaborate
-argument which is made to produce upon the mind of the reader the
-impression that the presence of Christ, in the two instances mentioned,
-was expressly designed for the purpose of distinguishing the two
-first-days (?) upon which he manifested himself to his disciples. We
-should not do justice to our opponent, should we refuse to grant him
-credit for making a doubtful circumstance go as far in his favor as it
-were possible for any man to do. What he has said is both poetic and
-pathetic. Poetic, because it is purely a figment of his own imagination.
-Pathetic, because the spectacle here brought to view is one which
-appeals most forcibly to the sympathies of the generous reader. Who
-would not commiserate the condition of men who, for six weary days, sat
-in public assembly, waiting the momentary expected advent of their Lord?
-Who would not rejoice when finally he appeared in their midst, even if
-it were on the first day of the week? How natural, too, it would be for
-the reader, having his sympathies thus aroused, to follow him who has
-shown an art, at least dramatic, in playing upon their feelings, to the
-conclusion to which he springs—not by the route of logical deduction—but
-by that of a more fascinating sentimentalism.
-
-But before he does this, let us descend for a moment from the hights of
-fancy to the lower grounds of prosaic fact. It strikes us that the
-gentleman will discover that he has paid too high a price for what he
-has obtained. Where did he learn that they assembled on the six days in
-question? Assuredly not from the record, for that is silent upon this
-point. Nay, more; he does not himself claim that he has any written
-authority for it, but simply says that he “believes” so and so, and then
-proceeds to his deductions. Well, with this understanding of the matter,
-and knowing that it is merely an inference of the writer, let us follow
-his conclusions to their legitimate consequences. Having done this, we
-perceive, 1. That at last we have reached a whole week, every day of
-which was one of religious meetings, and yet not one word recorded in
-regard to the gatherings which occurred on six out of the seven days of
-the week. This being true by his own concession, what has become of that
-argument in which he indulged so largely in his effort to prove that
-because there was no account of a meeting of Christians on the Sabbath,
-they were consequently not in the habit of meeting on that day? Does it
-not fall to the ground, utterly emptied of all its force, if it ever had
-any? 2. Where, now, is his oft-repeated declaration that there is no
-account of the meeting of any of the apostles with a Christian church on
-the Sabbath, and the conclusion therefrom, that they therefore held
-none? Here is the admission of the writer himself, that the apostles and
-the church at Jerusalem did meet on at least one seventh day after the
-resurrection of Christ. 3. What has become of the instructive lesson
-which Christ imparted to his followers on the evening of the day of his
-resurrection? Has it not been insisted that that visit was made for the
-_especial purpose_ of teaching, them, by example, and by meeting with
-them, that the day on which it occurred was _holy time_? If we have
-rightly apprehended the logic of our opponent, this was the precise
-moral which our Lord designed to convey by his manifestation on that
-occasion. How clear it is that such a conviction has rested upon the
-mind of the writer, and how often he has repeated it.
-
-But how was it with the apostles? Now, certainly, they were not _more
-obtuse_ than _we_ are. Assuredly, they knew as much about the will and
-purpose of Christ in meeting with them the first time, as we do now. Did
-_they_ then infer that Christ met with them expressly for the purpose,
-not of honoring by positive precept, but by the fact of his assembling
-with them, the day on which that assembly occurred? If so, why should
-they, according to the view we are considering, have gathered themselves
-together every day for the whole subsequent week, expecting his
-presence? Would they not have discovered that _such presence_, under
-_such circumstances_, would have utterly _nullified_ the moral lesson of
-the _first visit_, since it would not afterwards be true that the first
-day of the week was the _only one_ which he had thus distinguished,
-thereby marking it out from the rest of the week?
-
-So much for the consequences which would necessarily follow, had that
-occurred which the writer says he “believes” took place. But,
-fortunately, or unfortunately for him, the whole thing is a myth from
-beginning to end. The only force which it posseses lies in the assumed
-fact that it brings together eight meetings on consecutive days, on two
-of which, and two only, the Lord met with his followers, those two being
-first days of the weeks to which they belonged. Therefore, before the
-statement can possess any argumentative power, we must first grant him
-the privilege of assuming that six of these meetings occurred when there
-is not a scintilla of evidence in the sacred narrative to favor his
-view.
-
-That must be a desperate cause indeed which compels its advocates to
-such a resort to make out their case. Nevertheless, if the conception
-has accomplished nothing more, it has furnished us a key by which we
-have been able to unlock the secret conviction of the writer, and by
-that means, we learn that he does not himself believe either that Christ
-_told_ his disciples on the day of the resurrection that that was holy
-time; or that they had decided _in their own minds_ that his visit
-necessarily pointed out this fact; or that the meeting of a Christian
-church on a secular day proves that they regarded that day as sacred; or
-that it is necessary to suppose that any church _disregarded the
-Sabbath_, simply because there is no _historic mention_ of their
-observance of it. This being true, we hope from this time forward that
-we shall see a line of argument pursued which will be consistent with
-the admissions inadvertently made above.
-
-Finally—as we have the concession of the writer, that the mention of the
-term, “first day of the week,” in the texts under consideration,
-accorded with the use of language as employed twenty years after the
-crucifixion—let us glance at his proof-texts for ourselves. In doing so,
-the reader will bear in mind that these texts furnish all the gospel
-testimony in reference to the supposed repudiation of God’s ancient
-Sabbath and the substitution of a new one in its place, and also that
-the terms employed, as stated above, were used with reference to their
-meaning at the time they were penned.
-
-The first is found in Matt. 28:1-6. In Matt. 28:1, the apostle says: “In
-the end of the Sabbath, as it began to dawn toward the first day of the
-week, came Mary Magdalene and the other Mary to see the sepulcher.” Now
-which day, in the parlance of the disciples of our Lord, twenty years
-after his death, was styled the Sabbath? Which was mentioned by the use
-of a secular title, whereas, custom, reason, and religion, all warranted
-and would have seemed to demand the application to it of a religious
-title, such as Sabbath, or Lord’s day? We leave the reader to answer.
-
-The next scripture is found in Mark 16:1, 2. Here, again, the same
-distinction is preserved between the holy and the profane. “When the
-Sabbath was past,” the women who had bought sweet spices came to the
-sepulcher very early in the morning, the first day of the week. The next
-passage is in verse 9 of the same chapter, where it is barely stated
-that Jesus, having risen on the first day of the week, appeared first to
-Mary Magdalene. Did the historian, Mark, ruthlessly wound the feelings
-of his Christian brethren, by neglecting two splendid opportunities for
-settling the matter of a change of days for all future generations, or
-did he not believe in such a change? Which view is the more consistent,
-under the circumstances, with the manner in which he speaks?
-
-The next test in order, with the context, will be found in Luke
-23:54-56, and 24:1. Let the reader turn to these passages in his Bible
-and examine them carefully. In Luke 23:56, it is stated that the women
-“rested the Sabbath day, according to the commandment;” and in the first
-verse of the following chapter, it is said that “upon the first day of
-the week, very early in the morning, they came unto the sepulcher.”
-Here, again, Luke—than whom there is no sacred writer who uses terms
-more frequently with reference to their technical meaning—furnishes us a
-comment in perfect harmony with that of the others. Mark him; he is very
-specific. He says the women “rested the Sabbath day, according to the
-commandment.” Observe, it is not the “_old_ commandment,” but “_the_
-commandment.” But again, What day was it upon which they rested? It was
-the Sabbath day. How did it stand related in the order of the week to
-the first day? It was the day before it. Did the women, according to his
-statement, observe the first day? No; for they came to do that upon it
-which they would not do on the Sabbath, _i. e._, to embalm the body of
-Christ. But were they deceived, and was the day on which they came to
-the tomb, after all, sacred to the Lord, because of the resurrection of
-Christ, which had occurred early in the morning? Was this indeed the
-Lord’s day, the Christian Sabbath? And had the old Sabbath expired at
-the cross (Col. 2:16) before the deluded women rested upon it? Then we
-inquire again, Why should an inspired apostle pass by unimproved this
-magnificent opportunity for recognizing the new order of things by
-dropping that plain, unpretending “first day of the week,” and stating
-for the benefit of posterity that the day on which they repaired to the
-sepulcher was the Sabbath of the commandment, as changed by the
-authority of Christ?
-
-The remaining passages are those of John 20:1, 19. Here, once more, it
-is stated that “the first day of the week cometh Mary Magdalene early to
-the sepulcher,” and also in the 19th verse, that Jesus met with his
-disciples in the evening of the first day of the week. In these words,
-John, the beloved disciple, like all before him, alludes to the day as
-though it were a common one.
-
-Thus we have seen that the four gospel historians all unite in ignoring
-the sacred title of Sunday, if it had any, and merely designate it by
-its proper numeral; while three of them call the seventh day the
-Sabbath, and locate it in the week as the day which precedes the first.
-
-Now we appeal to the candid reader in view of these facts, and ask him
-to decide which day of the week was looked upon as peculiarly sacred at
-the time the gospels were written, provided the gentleman is _right_ in
-supposing that the historians used language with reference to its
-acceptance when they wrote, instead of what it meant when the events,
-which they record, transpired. We believe the verdict will not be long
-delayed. They call the seventh day “the Sabbath of the commandment.”
-That commandment, it is conceded, is still binding. If it reads the same
-now that it did then, the day which was the Sabbath at that time,
-according to that commandment, is still the Sabbath according to the
-same commandment. But if that commandment has been changed, we once more
-challenge the religious world to furnish us a copy of it as it now
-reads. Until they do so, we shall continue to observe the Sabbath upon
-which the devout women rested; on which our Lord himself rested in the
-tomb from his labors; and which four inspired men, twenty years later,
-more or less, still persisted in calling “_the_ Sabbath.”
-
-
-
-
- STATESMAN’S REPLY.
- ARTICLE FOUR.
- ARGUMENT FOR THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH FROM THE GIFT OF THE HOLY SPIRIT ON
- THE DAY OF PENTECOST.
-
-
-The testimony brought forward in our last number from the Gospels for
-the first-day Sabbath finds abundant confirmation in other portions of
-the New-Testament Scriptures. We shall confine ourselves in this article
-to the argument drawn from the beginning of the second chapter of the
-Acts: “And when the day of Pentecost was fully come, they were all with
-one accord in one place.” There has been so much discussion of this
-passage that a somewhat careful consideration of it may be of interest
-in itself, as well as from its important connection with the subject now
-specially in hand. In regard to it, we note:
-
-1. The day of the outpouring of the Spirit was the day of Pentecost—not
-some day preceding or following. The correct rendering of the original
-words is not, as Lightfoot gives it, “when the day of Pentecost had
-passed,” nor as Hitzig would have it, “as the day of Pentecost was
-approaching its fulfillment;” but, “while the day of Pentecost was being
-fulfilled;” that is, during the progress of that particular day, or, as
-our authorized English version has it, “when the day of Pentecost was
-fully come.”
-
-2. This day of Pentecost, on which the Holy Spirit was given, was the
-first day of the week. A number of eminent authorities, chief among whom
-is the chronologist Wieseler, compute it to have been the seventh. This
-question hinges upon that of the day of the Lord’s death. It is almost
-universally admitted that Christ was crucified on Friday. But it is
-disputed whether that Friday was the fourteenth or the fifteenth of
-Nisan. From Leviticus 23:15, 16, we learn that Pentecost, signifying
-literally the fiftieth, was counted from the second day of unleavened
-bread. The paschal lamb was killed at the close of the fourteenth day of
-the month Abib or Nisan, and the next day, the fifteenth, was the first
-day of unleavened bread. This day was regarded as a holy Sabbath; and
-from the morrow following, that is, from the sixteenth of Nisan, fifty
-days were to be reckoned to determine the day of Pentecost.
-
-Wieseler contends that the Lord was crucified on the fifteenth of
-Nisan—the first day of unleavened bread. The sixteenth of the month
-would therefore fall on the seventh day of the week, and fifty days,
-reckoned from and including this, according to the manner of the Jews,
-would fix the day of Pentecost on the Jewish Sabbath. It is interesting
-to observe that many who agree with Wieseler in regarding the Friday of
-Christ’s crucifixion as the fifteenth of Nisan, still reckon the fifty
-days so as to make Pentecost fall on the first day of the week.
-Prominent among these chronologists is Canon Wordsworth.
-
-In all frankness, we would admit that Wordsworth’s reckoning will not
-hold. If the Friday on which the Lord was crucified was the fifteenth of
-Nisan, and if that day was observed as the first day of unleavened bread
-so that the specified fifty days would be reckoned from the following
-day, then Pentecost must have occurred on the seventh day of the week.
-
-Others of our ablest scholars, such as Greswell, Elliott, and Schaff,
-maintain that the day on which our Lord was crucified was the fourteenth
-of Nisan. An exhaustive discussion of this whole question would be out
-of place in these columns. We give a brief, and we think conclusive,
-argument in favor of the view that the Friday of our Lord’s death was
-the fourteenth of Nisan, and that therefore the fifteenth Nisan, or
-first day of unleavened bread, coincided with the Jewish Sabbath. The
-reasons in favor of this view are the following:—
-
-(1.) The language of John, chap. 18:28, intimates clearly that the Jews
-had not, on the morning of Friday, yet partaken of the passover. Friday
-could not therefore have been the fifteenth of Nisan.
-
-(2.) The same day, Friday, John states that “it was the preparation of
-the passover.” (Chap. 19:14.) It seems next to impossible to understand
-this expression in any other way than as referring to that day, Friday,
-as the day of preparation for Passover observance, or, in other words,
-as the day preceding the fifteenth Nisan.
-
-(3.) John’s statement, in chap. 19:31, that the Sabbath following the
-day of crucifixion was “a high day,” admits of no easy or natural
-explanation except that of the coincidence of the first day of
-unleavened bread, or the fifteenth Nisan, with the seventh-day Sabbath.
-
-(4.) The anti-typical character of Christ, as the Paschal Lamb of God
-and the true Passover Sacrifice (John 1:29, 36; 1 Cor. 5:7), would lead
-us to expect that the very day and hour of his death would correspond
-with the time of the killing of the typical Passover lamb. If it be
-urged that Christ himself, with his disciples, in obeying the
-requirements of the law, killed the Passover on the evening of the
-fourteenth, and that the Synoptical Gospels intimate this, it may be
-replied that such an interpretation of Matthew, Mark, and Luke, is not
-required, and that the exceeding difficulty, not to say impossibility,
-of harmonizing it with the statements already quoted from John, is quite
-decisive against it. It is much easier to interpret the Synoptists in
-the light of John’s Gospel. In this chapter, 13:1, we are informed of a
-supper _before_ the passover. That this was the same supper spoken of by
-the Synoptists, though one day before the usual time, in order that the
-true Passover lamb might be put to death at the time appointed, appears
-from the peculiar nature of the message sent by chosen apostle, to the
-“good man of the house”—a message of special direction, pointing out
-something of an unusual character. (See Matthew 28:18; Mark 14:14; and
-Luke 22:11.) There are also in the Synoptical Gospels a number of
-statements showing that the Friday on which our Lord was crucified was
-not marked by the Sabbatic sacredness belonging to the first day of
-unleavened bread. (See Matthew 27:59; Mark 15:42, 46; Luke 23:56.) This
-seems to be the easiest and most natural way of harmonizing the apparent
-discrepancies between the Synoptists and John.
-
-(5.) Wieseler’s own chronological tables may be used against him to show
-that the Friday of our Lord’s crucifixion was the fourteenth of Nisan.
-We would speak with becoming diffidence, in any attempt to make out a
-system of chronology for the events recorded in Scripture. There are,
-however, in Wieseler’s elaborate book, tables independently proved to be
-accurate. By them, admitting the year of our Lord’s crucifixion to have
-been A. D. 30, which is regarded by most chronologists as highly
-probable, and admitting also that the day was Friday, which will not be
-disputed, it is shown, beyond all doubt, that Christ died on the
-fourteenth of Nisan, and must have eaten the passover with his disciples
-on the first hours of that day, the preceding evening. The tables
-referred to show, by the most minute and accurate calculations, that in
-the year, A. D. 30, the new moon for the month Nisan appeared on
-Wednesday, the next to the last day of the preceding month,
-corresponding to March 22, at eight minutes past eight o’clock in the
-evening. Hence, it would follow that the first day of Nisan commenced on
-Friday evening, March 24, corresponding, as to daylight, with Saturday,
-March 25; of course, the Friday of the next week, would be the seventh
-Nisan, and the same day, the following week, the fourteenth. Thus,
-according to Wieseler’s own tables, Friday of the week of our Lord’s
-passion is made out to be the fourteenth of Nisan. The fifteenth of
-Nisan, then, or the first day of unleavened bread, coincided at that
-time with the seventh day of the week, or the Jewish Sabbath; and
-reckoning fifty days from the morrow, that day included, we find
-Pentecost falling on the first day of the eighth week following our
-Lord’s crucifixion.
-
-So clear and emphatic is the testimony of the primitive church to this
-fact that many who hold that the Friday of Christ’s death was the
-fifteenth Nisan still do so in cordial indorsement of that fact. They
-reconcile the apparent difference between John and the Synoptists by
-supposing that the Jewish authorities, probably because of the
-crucifixion, or for some other reason, did not observe the Passover at
-the usual time, but, passing by the fifteenth Nisan, in reality kept the
-sixteenth in its place; and thus counting the fifty days from the
-seventeenth of the month, instead of the sixteenth, Pentecost would fall
-on the first day of the week.
-
-It is worth mentioning, before we pass on, that the Karaite Jews, like
-the Sadducces before them, understand the word “Sabbath” in Leviticus
-23:11, 15, 16, to mean, not the first day of unleavened bread, which was
-kept as a Sabbath, on whatever day of the week it might fall, but the
-seventh day of the week, the regular weekly Sabbath of the Jews.
-According to this understanding, the fifty days would always be reckoned
-from the morrow after the seventh day, and Pentecost would always fall
-on the first day of the week.
-
-Having thus been at some pains to establish the fundamental position in
-this argument a position to which scholars generally are coming with
-constantly increasing unanimity, we need not dwell long upon the
-manifest application of what has been proven. The facts here, after
-Christ’s ascension, are full of significance, as we have seen the facts
-to be concerning the days just succeeding his resurrection. After the
-Lord’s ascension, his disciples abode in Jerusalem, awaiting the
-promised gift of the Spirit. Many days passed by, including two seventh
-days, and still no fulfillment of the promise. On the first day of the
-second week after the ascension, the disciples were all with one accord
-in one place. Once more, the day which the Lord had singled out and
-honored is specially honored by the plentiful effusion of the Spirit of
-God. And thus the day which Christ taught his disciples to regard with
-special sacredness, by repeatedly appearing to them in their collective
-gatherings, and blessing them, is even more clearly and significantly
-marked out from the other days of the week by this most marvelous
-outpouring of the Holy Spirit.
-
-If it be objected that it was the Jewish festival, and not the first day
-of the week, that was honored, it is readily replied that there is no
-trace of the services of the Jewish festival on that blessed day. The
-Holy Ghost was given, not to persons observing Jewish ordinances and
-keeping the Pentecost of the old dispensation with a new meat-offering
-and first-fruits. He was given to Christian disciples met on the
-Christian’s honored day; and the disciples who on that day had received
-important spiritual instructions from the Lord just after his
-resurrection, and who now, on the same day, received the promised
-Spirit, begin the true work of the Christian Sabbath by preaching the
-gospel of salvation, and three thousand souls are added to the church of
-Christ.
-
-The objection, on the score that Pentecost only happened to fall on the
-first day that year, is unworthy of any one who believes that “not a
-sparrow falls to the ground, without our Heavenly Father’s notice.” It
-has been admitted that if the view of the Karaite Jews were true, and
-Pentecost occurred every year on the first day of the week, then would
-there be a strong argument for the first-day Sabbath in the
-pre-arrangements of God’s providence. But to our mind, the argument from
-the pre-arrangement of providence is stronger on the other and better
-interpretation of Leviticus 23:11, 15, 16. He who in infinite wisdom
-arranged everything from the beginning, so ordered all events connected
-with Christ’s death, as to make the day of Pentecost coincide with the
-Christian Sabbath, and then gathered to himself, not the first-fruits of
-the fields of grain, but three thousand immortal souls, the first-fruits
-of the ingathering of the spiritual fields white to the harvest—the
-harvest of all the Gentile nations yet to be brought into the church of
-Christ, with the restoration of the covenant people of old. This is a
-Pentecost worthy of the church of Him who died for sinners of every
-race, and of the honored day which commemorates his rising from the
-dead.
-
-
-
-
- A REJOINDER.
-“ARGUMENT FOR THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH FROM THE GIFT OF THE HOLY SPIRIT ON
- THE DAY OF PENTECOST.”
-
-
-It is always a source of satisfaction to one, in examining opinions from
-which he is compelled to differ, to feel that the presentation of them
-which he is considering is the best which could be made under the
-circumstances. With pleasure, therefore, we recognize the manifest
-tokens of research and erudition on the part of the author of the views
-presented in the columns of the _Statesman_, in the communication
-entitled, “Argument for the first-day Sabbath from the gift of the Holy
-Spirit on the day of Pentecost.” We do not flatter ourselves, however,
-that all which has been said in that article was for our benefit. It is
-not a little remarkable that three-fourths of its contents are devoted
-to the settlement of a point, which—while indeed it affects the question
-at issue—is not one upon which we bestowed many words, having preferred
-to consider, for the sake of argument, that the Pentecost did, on the
-year of our Lord’s crucifixion, fall upon the first day of the week; and
-then, having done this, to prove that this coincidence in no way
-affected, necessarily, the nature of that day.
-
-Nevertheless, we must beg leave here to express our gratitude that,
-notwithstanding the concession in question, the readers of the
-_Statesman_ are at last instructed by an abler pen than our own in
-reference to the diversity of opinion which exists among the learned as
-to whether, indeed, it is safe to conclude that the Sunday, to the
-exclusion of the Sabbath, was the day upon which the Holy Spirit
-descended upon the apostles. Be it remembered, also, that the learned
-men who stand as the advocates of the seventh day as the one which God
-thus honored were not observers of that day as the Sabbath. All the
-authorities quoted are men who, if they regarded any Sabbath at all,
-gave their preference to the first, and not to the last, day of the
-week. This being the case, they certainly cannot be charged with any
-bias in favor of the creation Sabbath. Not only so, but all their
-predilections were doubtless against that day, and favorable to its
-rival. Hence we see that when, under these circumstances, it is admitted
-that such distinguished men as Lightfoot, Weiseler, and Hitzig, have
-agreed that the last day of the week was the one on which the Pentecost
-occurred at the time in question, they did so—not in the interest of
-preconceived notions, nor for the purpose of bolstering up a theory
-which was in desperate need of help—but because there was, to their
-minds, at least, much which compelled a conclusion they would gladly
-have avoided.
-
-Right here, also, in order to widen the breach in the wall of evidence,
-we beg leave to act in harmony with the plan pursued by the writer, and
-to present a note from the pen of one no less distinguished than
-Professor Hackett, which will make it manifest beyond dispute that the
-scholars who at the present time sympathize with those cited above, who
-regard the seventh day of the week and not the first as having been the
-day of the Pentecost, are both numerous and celebrated: “It is generally
-supposed that this Pentecost, signalized by the outpouring of the
-Spirit, fell on the Jewish Sabbath, our Saturday.” Quoted in “Hist. of
-Sab.,” by J. N. A., page 150. Let the reader bear in mind that we are
-not assuming to decide between these long lines of doctors who differ so
-widely upon a very important point, as regarded by some; but that our
-purpose is simply to call attention to the fact of this discrepancy, and
-to show its bearing upon the subject under discussion.
-
-The first query which should be propounded, therefore, is this: Has God
-ever declared that the day of the Pentecost, which we are trying to
-locate, was identical with the first day of the week? The answer is in
-the negative. There is not one word in the text (Acts 2:1, 2), or in the
-Testament, in regard to the day of the week on which these events
-occurred. It is simply stated that they took place “when the day of
-Pentecost was fully come,” How remarkable, if the object was not to
-honor a feast which occurred annually, but especially for the purpose of
-distinguishing the first day of the week! Before, however, that day
-could be illustrated by the outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon it, it
-must first he decided—and that, too, from Bible evidence—that such
-outpouring did occur on the day specified. Can this be done? We appeal
-for a response to the average Christian men and women of this time. Tell
-me, after having read the three-column argument of the gentleman, has
-not the effect of what he has said been to unsettle, rather than to
-establish, your convictions upon the point before our minds? If never
-before, is it not now true that you feel somewhat shaken in regard to
-the identity of the Sunday with the Pentecost, on the year of the
-crucifixion? In view of what has been written, would you undertake to
-establish your faith from any deduction which you yourself could make
-from plain Scripture declarations? Is it not true that your opinion in
-the promises depends entirely upon the faith of the one or the other
-class of scholars who have ranged themselves on both sides of this
-subject? Has the religion of Jesus Christ then changed? Is it no longer
-true that its great and important practical truths are withheld “from
-the wise and prudent, and revealed unto babes”? Has God left the
-important question of first-day sanctity, not upon the solid basis of
-explicit command, but upon the doubtful inference which is to be derived
-from certain transactions which occurred on a certain day, and then left
-the day of their occurrence to occupy a position in the week so doubtful
-that the most learned of those who had a desire to keep it should be
-honestly divided in opinion as to which day it was? We believe not. To
-our mind, it is simple presumption to intimate that God—who is not
-willing that any should perish, and who has said that he will do nothing
-but he will reveal it to his servants the prophets—should deal with his
-creatures in a manner at once so indirect and so obscure.
-
-Having seen that there is a wide divergence of views among the very men
-who are the observers of the modern Sunday, in regard to its claims to
-distinction on the score of its having been first honored by the
-outpouring of the Spirit on the fiftieth day after the resurrection, let
-us look for a moment at the situation with reference to the possible
-effect upon the seventh day, of the logic employed. Taking it for
-granted that our friends would not fly from their favorite deduction
-provided it should prove to be true that they are mistaken in regard to
-the time of the Pentecost, let us concede, for the time being, that the
-long line of celebrities, headed by such men as Lightfoot, Weiseler, and
-Hitzig, were right in arguing that Saturday, and not Sunday, was the day
-on which the great Jewish festival occurred; then, beyond all dispute,
-it must be conceded by our opponents that this was but another effort on
-the part of Jehovah to illustrate, for the benefit of succeeding
-generations, the day which he had previously made memorable by his
-resting, his blessing, and his sanctification. In other words, with this
-view of the design of the outpouring of the Spirit, the effect upon the
-ancient Sabbath would be the same as it is now claimed to have been upon
-the first day of the week. The point, therefore, of the identity of the
-days is to _them_ a _vital_ one. If they are wrong in this, they are
-wrong in all. We appeal to them, therefore, in view of the infinite
-consequences which hang upon the proper celebration of the right
-Sabbath, to at least make their logic so plain that it will be accepted
-by men of their own faith, before they speak of its strength with great
-assumption of confidence. Before any person has a right to employ the
-events which transpired at the time of the Pentecostal outpouring of the
-Spirit in the interest of Sunday sanctity, he must be able to solve, at
-least to the satisfaction of his own mind, all the difficulties which
-complicate this question. As God has never seen fit to say that the
-Jewish feast, at the time under consideration, transpired on the first
-day of the week, he must be able to establish that proposition
-independently of an explicit _thus saith the Lord_.
-
-There are two ways by which this may be attempted. (1.) By proving that
-the Pentecost always took place on the first day of the week; or, (2.)
-By demonstrating that Christ was crucified on Friday, the fourteenth day
-of Nisan, and that consequently the Pentecost must have fallen upon a
-Sunday following, and separated from that day by about fifty days. But,
-so far as the first proposition is concerned, which would be by far the
-easier of demonstration, if it were true—should the reader be inclined
-to favor it—he must convince himself that he could establish it against
-the conviction and the learning of the writer in question; for he
-rejects it as being untenable. Should he therefore turn to the second,
-then, as remarked above, he must be able to prove, not merely that
-Christ died on the fourteenth day of the Jewish month Nisan, but that
-likewise that fourteenth day of the month was also the sixth day of the
-week. When we say that this will be a task which few minds are capable
-of performing, and from which those who are best informed will the most
-readily turn away, We but assert what the writer in question has very
-distinctly shadowed forth in the facile manner in which he disposes of
-the obscurity of the statements in the three Synoptical Gospels by
-arbitrarily deciding that they must be interpreted by that of John.
-
-What the real object of the writer was in making the statement that the
-Karaites and the Sadducees hold to the first theory stated above, we are
-at a loss to decide, since he himself concludes that they were wrong in
-their hypothesis. But let us suppose for a moment that they were right,
-and that the Pentecost always followed the weekly Sabbath; would that
-prove that it occurred on Sunday? We answer, Yes. But would it prove
-that Sunday was therefore holy time? We answer, No; it would not so much
-as touch this independent question. Or rather, it should be said, if it
-affected it at all, it would increase the strength of the seventh-day
-Sabbath argument. Do you ask, How? We answer that, according to their
-theory, you must first have a weekly Sabbath before you could decide
-when you had reached the Pentecost Sunday. The direction in Leviticus
-was, that they should count to themselves seven Sabbaths from the day
-that they brought the sheaf of the wave-offering, which would bring them
-to the feast in question.
-
-Now let it be supposed that the crucifixion answered to the ancient
-Passover, and that the apostles proceeded to the determination of the
-time when the Pentecost would be reached, according to the theory of the
-Karaites. The first thing which would have been necessary was, the
-weekly Sabbath, which immediately followed the crucifixion of Christ.
-Having found it, they would have numbered seven Sabbaths, and have
-decided that the day immediately following the last of these answered to
-the feast. But unfortunately for them they would have discovered—had
-they believed in the modern doctrine that the law of the Sabbath was
-nailed to the cross, Col. 2:16(?)—that they were deprived of a starting
-point; for the Sabbath institution is a thing of commandment. Take away
-the commandment, and the institution is gone. Therefore, as the cross
-had accomplished its work, and had been taken down on Friday, God had
-removed the landmark from which they were commanded to measure the time
-which should bring them to the Pentecost at the very period when they
-needed it most. In reality, there was left them no Sabbath which
-answered to the one in Leviticus.
-
-Should it be replied, however, that the Sabbath, though gone in fact,
-existed nevertheless in name, it might be responded that this would
-indeed be an anomalous condition of things. Mark it: it is not the
-incidental mention, by its proper name, of an institution which had
-ceased to be, which we are considering; but it is the deliberate action
-of that God who knows the end from the beginning, in compelling the
-disciples to treat the seventh day of the week as the Sabbath, in order
-to the decision of an important fact; for eight weeks after, as is
-claimed, it had lost its Sabbatic character.
-
-Again; should it be urged, as a means of escape from the embarrassments
-of the situation, that God did not actually require them to count the
-seventh day as the Sabbath, since there was really no day of Pentecost
-which they were obliged to keep on the year of our Lord’s crucifixion,
-we answer, Very good. Then, of course, we shall hear nothing hereafter
-from the argument for Sunday sanctity which is based upon the hypothesis
-that the day of Pentecost fell on the first day of the week in the year
-in question, since it will have been admitted that there was no
-Pentecost that year, and consequently that it could not properly be said
-to have fallen upon any day.
-
-Once more; should it be insisted that though the Pentecostal feast was
-not binding in the year of our Lord 30, or thereabout, but that the
-antitype of the feast was the thing of importance, then, in reply, it
-may be said that God rendered it necessary for them, in order to locate
-that antitype according to the Karaite view, to count the Sabbath which
-followed the crucifixion as the Sabbath of emotion, a thing which
-certainly will be very difficult of explanation by those who can speak
-as becomingly of the providence of God as did the gentleman in the
-article which is passing under review.
-
-Finally, we repeat, therefore, that, if indeed there were a legal
-Pentecost this side of the death of our Lord, and if the Karaite system
-for locating it were the right one, then the seventh day which followed
-the death of Christ was distinguished by three very significant facts.
-1. It was honored by the women (and therefore by the disciples) by their
-resting upon it. 2. Luke, in speaking of it thirty years subsequent to
-its occurrence, mentions it as the Sabbath, “according to the
-commandment.” 3. God made it necessary that the whole Jewish nation
-should keep the Pentecostal feast fifty days after the crucifixion of
-the Lord; and, in doing so, that they should count the seventh day of
-the week as still continuing to be the Sabbath.
-
-In passing to the last branch of the subject, which will be treated in
-this article, we invite the reader to note the following facts, as we
-shall have occasion to employ them hereafter: 1. That the writer
-proceeds with his reasoning upon the hypothesis that the months at the
-time of the crucifixion were Jewish months, commencing with the new
-moon. 2. That the days were Jewish days, commencing and ending with the
-setting of the sun. These points we have previously urged, and are happy
-to see that they are conceded as being correct.
-
-In conclusion, we turn our attention to the remaining feature of the
-communication in the _Statesman_, _i. e._, that portion of the article
-which relates to the real matter in dispute, namely—granting, for the
-sake of argument, that the first day of the week was the one on which
-the Pentecost fell in the year under consideration—whether that fact
-necessarily affected the character of that day so as to mark it out as
-one which God had chosen as peculiarly his own. For, be it remembered,
-that—though the whole argument which has been made respecting the
-identity of those two days should be conceded—we should then simply be
-prepared to decide whether the facts agreed upon would prove what is
-claimed, or not.
-
-We ask, therefore, the candid attention of all to the use which has been
-made of the elaborate argument which we have been carefully considering,
-point by point. We would naturally have expected—if the gentleman felt
-that he had proved what he desired to, namely, that the Pentecost fell
-upon the first day of the week—that the real sinews of a masterly logic
-would have been discovered in an effort to show that it followed of
-necessity that it must therefore have been holy time. But has he done
-this? Or, in other words, if he has, in what manner has he brought it
-about? Has it been by fair logical deduction? We believe that there are
-very few who will insist that he has attempted such a deduction, with
-any measure of success, at the very point where it should have been
-expected most.
-
-What he has said in the connection is very _pretty_. Yes, pretty is the
-word which precisely expresses it. How handsomely he alludes to the
-analogy between the natural harvest and the in-gathering of souls. But
-who does not know that such analogies are cheap things, and that one
-gifted with a prolific fancy can multiply them indefinitely? What was
-expected, and what we had a right to demand, was something which partook
-of the nature of certainty. How great was our disappointment at learning
-that the writer did not even _pretend to have any authority from the
-Lord_, so far as written statements are concerned. The whole thing he
-thought was fairly _deducible_ from the coincidence of days, since
-nothing ever merely “happens” to occur in the providence of God.
-
-What has been gained, then? Manifestly, simply the point that God had
-some object in view in having the Pentecost fall on the first day of the
-week in the year of our Lord 30, or thereabout. The next question to be
-decided is, What was that object? Right here is where we _need help_.
-_God could have given_ it to us, had he _seen fit_ so to do. He has not
-done so, therefore it is safe to conclude that it was not important that
-we should know what his purpose was.
-
-But if any gentleman can be found who is _wise above what is written_,
-and who is able to decide with unerring certainty as to the motives of
-God at all times, and under all circumstances, we should like to
-propound a few questions to him. First, what did God mean when, in his
-providence, he allowed the Pentecost to fall upon Monday, Tuesday,
-Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, or Saturday? It is said that God _had a
-purpose_ in it; but can any one tell us _what_ that purpose was? When he
-has answered this, then we have a list of similar interrogatories, to
-the solution of which his wisdom will be invited. In the meantime, we
-shall adopt the suggestions of men in regard to plans of Deity with
-great caution, for, if it should fall out in the day of Judgment that we
-had followed their fallacious inferences, to the disregard of a
-positive, written law of God, we know not what defense could be made for
-our course of conduct, since we had been previously informed that “his
-judgments are _unsearchable_,” “and his ways _past finding out_.”
-
-Now let us look at the proposition concerning the outpouring of the
-Spirit. It is agreed on all hands that the manifestation occurred as
-written. It is inferred by the writer in question that it was done with
-reference especially to the honoring as sacred of the day of the
-resurrection. Here, again, is the assumption of knowledge which has
-never been imparted by divine authority. God has never _said_ that he
-meant any such thing. Not only so, but it cannot even be fairly inferred
-that such was his purpose. First. Because he does not so much as
-mention, in the record, the first day of the week by name, an omission
-which can never be explained satisfactorily by those who insist that the
-events which occurred on the day of Pentecost transpired with especial
-reference to the honoring above all others, on the part of Jehovah, of
-the first day of the week. Secondly. Because, were we to judge at all in
-the matter, as he passed over six first-days, waiting for the arrival of
-the Pentecost, we must conclude that there was something in connection
-with that feast which induced him to act when he did, and as he did.
-Thirdly. Because the Pentecost furnished an opportunity for the display
-of the power of the ascended Christ before thousands of Jews and
-proselytes from all parts of the habitable globe, more advantageously
-than could be done at any other time; thus rendering it unnecessary that
-any other reason should be sought in explanation of its selection from
-among the other days of the year for the great outpouring of the Spirit.
-Fourthly. Because, in apostolic times, it was not an uncommon thing for
-the Holy Ghost to fall upon men on all days of the week; thus proving
-that God is not restricted in the outpouring of his Spirit to holy times
-and places, and that it is not safe to conclude that any display of his
-power in this direction was made at any one time because of a special
-regard for the particular hours on which it took place.
-
-In conclusion, as the fabric of Sunday sanctity, in so far as it is
-based upon the transactions of the day of Pentecost, is seen to rest,
-purely upon the opinions of men, and since those who observe the day are
-divided in sentiment as to whether the Pentecost did indeed really fall
-upon it at all, we close this article, as we did the last, by stating
-that we have a _positive commandment_ which is admitted to be binding,
-and which, as given in the Bible, says that the “seventh day is the
-Sabbath of the Lord thy God; in it thou shalt not do any work.” Also,
-that our advice to those who are weary with threading the interminable
-labyrinth of conjecture and hypothesis is, Place your feet upon the rock
-of the written word; there, and there only, you are safe. Should any one
-seek to lure you from this position by the assertion that the law upon
-which you have planted yourself has been amended, it will be safe to
-follow them only when they are able to tell you when and where the
-commandment, as given in Exodus, was changed, and exactly how it reads
-since the change has occurred.
-
-
-
-
- STATESMAN’S REPLY.
- ARTICLE FIVE.
- THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH AT TROAS.
-
-
-The day on which the Saviour rose from the dead, the day which the risen
-Saviour singled out and blessed repeatedly with his presence, the day on
-which the Holy Ghost was given to the church,—this honored day certainly
-could not pass without stated observance by the disciples of the risen
-and ascended Lord. It is but reasonable to expect that the day which
-Christ and the Holy Spirit honored would be honored by the early church.
-
-Passing on in the sacred narrative, we come to the account of first-day
-Sabbath observance some twenty-six or twenty-eight years after the
-Pentecostal gift of the Spirit. In just such a matter-of-course way as
-that in which a well known and established custom would be noted, is the
-observance of the first day at Troas mentioned in Acts 20:6, 7: “We
-sailed away from Philippi after the days of unleavened bread, and came
-... to Troas in five days, where we abode seven days. And upon the first
-day of the week, when the disciples came together to break bread, Paul
-preached unto them, ready to depart on the morrow, and continued his
-speech until midnight.” Several important points should here be noted:—
-
-1. Paul and his companions remained at Troas seven days—from the third
-day of one week until the second day of the next week.
-
-2. At this time, there was at Troas a company or church of Christian
-disciples, who would, of course, hold regular religious services.
-
-3. Besides the Trojan Christians, there were at Troas, during these
-“seven days,” at least nine others, including Paul and Luke (see verse
-4), who would not let a week pass without observing a stated day of
-worship. And yet,
-
-4. Neither the disciples resident at Troas, nor Paul and his companions,
-pay any regard to the seventh day. The whole narrative plainly intimates
-that Paul held himself in readiness to depart waiting only for the
-stated weekly day of public service. And the seventh day has no more
-sacredness assigned to it than the fifth or sixth. Had it been the
-customary day of meeting, the disciples would have assembled on it, and
-Paul would have been ready to depart _on the morrow_, the first day of
-the week. On the other hand,
-
-5. The first day of the week was observed as the stated, customary
-weekly day of divine service by the Christians at Troas. The word,
-rendered “came together,” indicates this. It is most intimately related
-to the word in Hebrews 10:25, rendered “assembling together.” The latter
-is the noun, with an added preposition from the former word, the verb.
-These two terms, and another kindred word, are the common terms for
-regular church meetings in the New Testament. (See Hebrews 10:25; 1 Cor.
-11:17, 18; 14:23, 26.) Again, it will be noticed that the meeting of the
-disciples on this first day was for regular public services of the
-Christian church. They came together to “break bread,” or observe the
-Lord’s supper, and to hear the preaching of the gospel. Besides, let it
-be noticed, it is not said that Paul summoned the disciples together;
-but it is said that they “came together.” Or, if we follow the reading
-of the oldest manuscripts, the customary character of this Christian
-first-day assemblage will be made even more manifest. This reading is as
-follows: “And upon the first day of the week, when _we_ came together.”
-Whether this is the correct reading or not, it expresses undoubtedly the
-fact. Paul, Luke, and their companions, as well as the Trojan
-Christians, met for divine service, according to the usual practice of
-Christians generally, on the first day of the week.
-
-It remains for us to consider the mode of reckoning time which would fix
-Paul’s departure from Troas on the morning of the first day of the week.
-Frankness and justice require us to state that even so authoritative a
-writer as Mr. Howson, in that able and scholarly work, “The Life and
-Epistles of St. Paul,” adopts this mode of reckoning, and, in accordance
-with it, pictures out Paul’s solitary journey from Troas to Assos on the
-hallowed hours of the Christian Sabbath.
-
-No one will dispute for a moment that, according to the Jewish mode of
-reckoning, the day would begin at sundown, and in this way the evening
-of the meeting at Troas would be the evening succeeding the seventh day,
-and Paul’s journey of nearly twenty miles would be on the first day of
-the week. But it is perfectly clear from the Scriptures that the Roman
-method of reckoning the commencement of the day had already, to some
-extent, supplanted the Jewish mode. Nor is it any wonder that the method
-of the Romans, who were at the time in authority in Palestine, should
-have obtained some recognition, even among the Jews.
-
-John, in a passage quoted in a former article, uses the following
-language: “The same day at evening, being the first day of the week.”
-(John 20:19) The meeting at Troas, in the evening of the first day, may
-not have been without reference to the meeting of the Lord with his
-disciples late in the evening of the same day he arose from the dead.
-But whether there is any reference in the meeting at Troas to the
-meeting recorded by John or not, the passage above quoted clearly proves
-that the late evening succeeding the first day of the week was reckoned
-a part of the first day, and not a part of the day following—“The _same_
-day at evening [_opsia_, late evening, after dark, it would appear],
-being the first day of the week.”
-
-Matthew, writing particularly for Jewish Christians, adopts the Roman
-method in chap. 28:1, in the expression: “In the end of the Sabbath
-[literally, late of the Sabbath, _opse_, late, away on after dark], as
-it began to dawn toward the first day of the week.” Here, manifestly,
-the seventh day is reckoned as continuing during a number of hours,
-which, according to the Jewish mode, belonged to the following day. If
-Matthew, writing for Jewish Christians, employs the Roman mode of
-reckoning, is it not altogether probable that Luke, writing especially
-for Gentiles, would adopt the same mode?
-
-But we need only look carefully at Luke’s own language to settle this
-point. His statement is that Paul preached, “ready to depart _on the
-morrow_.” It is agreed on all hands that the Christian disciples at
-Troas came together on the first day of the week, and that Paul preached
-to them on that day. Now, if the time of meeting was the evening
-succeeding the seventh day, according to the Jewish mode of reckoning,
-could it be said that Paul, taking his leave at a later hour that same
-day, departed _on the morrow_? The original term, _epaurion_, is an
-adverb, literally signifying “upon the morrow.” But connected with it is
-the feminine article, agreeing with the word, “day,” understood. This
-makes the expression, if possible, still more explicit—“the day which is
-the morrow,” the next day. Can there remain the slightest doubt as to
-Luke’s meaning? The Christian congregation at Troas met on one day of
-the week. Paul preached to them on that day. It was the first day. _On
-the morrow_, not the same day, but another, the following, the second
-day of the week, Paul departed, as he had held himself for some days in
-readiness to do, on his way to Assos. Thus, as we have a right to
-expect, there is no violation by the apostle and his fellow-Christians
-of the law of the Sabbath.
-
-We have not dwelt upon this question of different modes of reckoning
-because of any importance which may be claimed for it in connection with
-the main inquiry before us. It is entirely immaterial to the point at
-issue in this discussion whether Luke employs the Jewish or the Roman
-mode. Even if it could be made to appear that he makes use of the
-former, there could be found nothing in his narrative in favor of the
-seventh-day Sabbath. The argument for the first-day Sabbath would still
-remain in its integrity, leaving for consideration simply the question
-as to the consistency of certain acts, in a certain case, with the law
-of a holy day of rest and worship. For the sake of giving a pretty full
-exposition of a passage important in itself, and because a wrong
-interpretation has been given by high authority in countenance of a
-mischievous theory of the Sabbath, we have occupied much of our space
-for this issue in showing that the evening or night of the first day of
-the week was the end of the Christian Sabbath, and that Paul and his
-companions, like good, Sabbath-keeping Christians, waited, though ready
-to depart, until Monday morning, before starting on their journey to
-Assos.
-
-We propose to conclude the argument from Scripture in our next number.
-After this, we shall give the testimony of the standard authorities of
-the first three centuries of the Christian era. And then, with the facts
-concerning sacred time before us, we shall inquire what theory of the
-Sabbath harmonizes all the authenticated facts into one consistent
-whole.
-
-
-
-
- A REJOINDER.
- “THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH AT TROAS.”
-
-
-In entering upon an examination of the propositions laid down in the
-article entitled, “The First-day Sabbath at Troas,” it will be well for
-us first to inquire into the object which the writer had in view in
-presenting them for our consideration. In doing so, we shall find that
-he does not claim that the test or context of Acts 20:7, furnishes any
-positive precept for Sunday observance. His effort is merely to
-establish a custom. Suppose, therefore, that we should grant all that he
-asks, so far as the church of Troas is concerned, would that prove that
-Christians universally are under obligation to follow a like custom? We
-think not, unless it can be shown that God has adopted this mode of
-inculcating religious duty. But this he has never done. If the writer
-had first established a positive law, then he might, with some show of
-reason, appeal to custom to show that that law was interpreted as he
-understands it; but when he reverses the order, and endeavors to prove
-the law by the custom, then he has reversed God’s great plan, which is
-that of teaching by explicit statute.
-
-Furthermore, even should a custom be established, the writer must be
-able to show that such a custom was kept up, not as a matter of
-convenience or taste, but because of a conviction of religious duty. In
-other words, it is possible, to say the least, that the church at Troas
-were in the habit of meeting on the first day of the week, not because
-they looked upon it as holy time, but for certain utilitarian purposes,
-best known to themselves. Let us furnish an illustration precisely in
-point:—
-
-Should some person, eighteen hundred years hence—provided time should
-last so long—write a history of the present period, as he cast his eye
-over the literature of our day, he would find that, in all parts of this
-country, Christians were in the habit of assembling on Wednesday
-evening, for the purposes of worship. Would he, therefore, be justified
-in concluding that Wednesday is regarded by us as peculiarly sacred to
-the Lord? You answer, No, and most properly, for you know that our
-motives are entirely different from what he would understand them to be.
-So, too, with Troas. Granted, for the sake of the argument, that, as the
-writer claims, they were in the habit of assembling on the late Sunday
-evening; it by no means follows that they did so because they regarded
-it as devoted to the Lord. Does he say that they partook of the
-sacrament on that day? Grant that, for the sake of the argument. But
-does not every student of the Bible know, and is it not the conviction
-of the world to-day, that the Lord’s supper can be partaken of with as
-much propriety at one time as at another? Is it not a fact that the time
-of its institution did not coincide with Sunday? Is it not true that
-originally they partook of it on all days of the week? (Acts 2:42, 46.)
-If so, it would manifestly be unsafe to attach any special significance
-to the fact that, at this time, it was celebrated on the Sunday, So much
-for the hypothesis of the _custom_, in question.
-
-Now that we have said what we have with reference to a custom made out,
-it will be well to inquire in the next place, Has the writer established
-the usage which he sought to prove? If so, we have failed to discover
-the process by which it has been done. Has he found an explicit
-statement that the church at Troas was in the habit of meeting on the
-first day of the week? Very far from it. Having traced the sacred
-narrative for twenty-six years—mark it, reader, over one-fourth of a
-century—he has found a solitary assembly of Christians convened on the
-first day of the week. But what were the facts in the case? Was this an
-ordinary occasion? Were they by themselves alone? No; it was a time of
-unusual interest. The great apostle to the Gentiles was there, paying
-them a flying visit. He was about to depart on the morrow. It was
-perhaps the last time they would ever see him. They wanted to partake of
-the emblems of the Lord’s body from his venerated hand. They wanted to
-shake that hand in a final farewell, and to plant the kiss of love upon
-his careworn face. The circumstances, then, were unusual. The same
-combination of facts might never exist again. There is, therefore, so
-far as the general view is concerned, nothing which would justify the
-decision that they had ever convened for like reasons, previously, at
-the same time of the week, or that they ever would thereafter. The
-writer evidently felt this, and, with an acuteness of intellectual
-perception which to the common mind is almost incredible, he has
-discovered overwhelming support for his theory, where the ordinary
-reader would have discerned none.
-
-How strange it is that, again and again, we find that the strongholds of
-Sunday sanctity are located just beyond the boundary where the man of
-average ability and learning is permitted to go. The Greek, he is told,
-has a significance which, if lightly expressed, would establish a custom
-beyond all doubt. Well, we have seen above what the value of a custom
-is, unless explained. But we ask—and we ask it in the behalf of the
-millions who have never so much as seen even the Greek alphabet, and yet
-to whom eternal life is as precious as to the man of letters—can it be
-possible that God has suspended the terrible realities of Heaven and
-hell upon the discharge of a duty vailed from their eyes by the
-obscurity of a language whose mysteries they can never hope to
-penetrate? For, mark it, this is not one of those points which can be
-settled without difficulty, even by those familiar with the tongue in
-question. Were our learning equal to that of the gentleman who has
-penned the criticism under consideration, we might flatly contradict the
-statements which he makes; but this would simply serve to produce a
-dead-lock in the mind of the reader, while he remained as far from a
-satisfactory solution of the difficulty as ever. The only reply which we
-shall make, therefore, is as follows:—
-
-The distinction drawn between the present text and the original is
-either obscure, or it is obvious. If it is obscure, it is unimportant;
-if obvious, then it could be seen by scholars, and is so important that
-it would have attracted universal attention and comment by first-day
-writers and translators. What, therefore, are the facts in the case?
-Certain it is that, if it exists at all, it escaped the notice of the
-translators of our common version. That they would have given a
-rendering as favorable to the first day as the facts would warrant, no
-man will dispute. The suggestion that the text would bear the
-translation, “_we_ having come together to break bread,” &c.,[5] while
-it does not materially alter the sense, so far as the practice of the
-church at Troas is concerned, if admissible, renders it highly probable
-that Luke and his associates were there until the breaking of the bread;
-a point which we shall use hereafter. In the meantime, we give the
-following translations in order to show the conviction of their authors,
-respecting the meaning of the original:—
-
-“And on the first day of the week, when we assembled,” &c.—_Syriac._
-
-“On the first day of the week, when we were met together.”—_Wesley, N.
-T., with Notes._
-
-“And upon the first day of the week, when the disciples were got
-together.”—_Wakefield._
-
-“And on the first day of the week, the disciples being
-assembled.”—_Whiting._
-
-“And on the first day of the week, we, having come together to break
-bread.”—_Am. Bible Union._
-
-“And on the first day of the week, we being assembled to break
-bread.”—_Sawyer._
-
-“And on the first day of the week, when the disciples met
-together.”—_Doddridge in Campbell and Macknight’s Trans._
-
-“And on the first day of the week, we having assembled.”—_Emphatic
-Diaglott._
-
-We think the reader is now ready to admit that the traces of a custom
-which relies for its existence upon an original text, rendered as given
-above by so many different persons, none of whom can be charged with
-favoring the seventh-day Sabbath, are, to say the least, too faint to be
-of practical argumentative utility. To our mind, the inference is simply
-this: Paul, about to depart on his journey to Jerusalem, appointed, for
-himself and his companions and the disciples at Troas, a final meeting,
-at which it was announced that the Eucharist would be celebrated. At
-this meeting, all the parties came together, agreeably to the
-announcement previously made, and partook of the Lord’s supper. A
-fitting close of a week of apostolic labor in an Asiatic city.
-
-The next item worthy of our attention is found in the hypothesis, that,
-during the time Paul was at Troas, the seventh day of the week was
-passed by without any religious meeting occurring thereupon; and that
-Paul waited until the arrival of the first day, because that was the one
-on which the meetings of the church were regularly held. How a writer so
-intimately acquainted with the character and labors of St. Paul, the
-individual in question undoubtedly is, could draw the inference which he
-has, is more than we can fathom. Who, that has read the history of a man
-whose nervous activity drove him to dispute daily in the school of
-Tyrannus (Acts 19:9), and to seek every opportunity for the presentation
-of his gospel to the Jews in their synagogues, and the Greeks in their
-places of public gathering, could be induced to believe that he could
-remain for seven long days in the city of Troas without a solitary
-religious assembly, until the expiration of that time? And yet this is
-the very decision which we are called upon to indorse. Before we can do
-this, however, we ask for the proof. The answer is, it must be so,
-because the record contains no account of the holding of such meetings
-until the first day of the week.
-
-But is this satisfactory? Do not all the circumstances of the case, as
-well as the temperament and character of Paul, render certain the act
-that such meetings were held, even, though it is not stated in so many
-words? Paul with a Christian church at Troas for one week, and not
-preach to them! Impossible. To show the writer that the mention of
-religions meetings in brief history is not necessary in order to prove
-that they occurred on a given day, or on stated days, let me call his
-attention to the fact, that, between the day of Pentecost and the
-meeting at Troas, according, to his own showing, there were at least
-twenty-six intervening years; that during those years, agreeably to his
-view, there were thirteen hundred and fifty-two first-days, all of which
-were holy time, and nearly all of which must have been honored by stated
-meetings on the part of the apostles; and yet, out of that whole number,
-he only claims to produce the record of one solitary day on which such
-meeting occurred. What are the facts, then? Paul probably preached every
-day of the seven, while he was at Troas. Do you ask why the account is
-not given of such meetings in the book of the Acts? I answer that the
-Holy Spirit was giving, through Luke, a succinct history of the more
-striking occurrences which transpired in their travels. The story of the
-first-day meeting at Troas found its way into the sacred narrative,
-because its importance to after generations was enhanced by the
-accidental fall, and the miraculous restoration to life of Eutychus, and
-perhaps by other facts connected with that event, of equal interest. I
-think that one of them was a disposition on the part of God to provide
-his commandment-keeping servants in succeeding generations with a
-passage in the life of Paul, which should forever silence the cavils of
-men who should undertake to belittle his ancient Sabbath, and to foist
-into its place a day which He never commanded. This we will further
-consider in our next point.
-
-Having endeavored to establish the point that the seventh-day Sabbath
-was not observed at Troas, an effort is made to show that a change of
-time had occurred, so that Luke, in giving his account of the
-transactions mentioned above, treated the day as commencing and ending,
-not according to the Jewish method, with the setting of the sun, but
-after the Roman fashion, with midnight. The reader will readily discover
-the object to be gained by this maneuver, if such I may be allowed to
-call it. We had insisted that the first day of the week commenced at
-sunset; that Paul met with the disciples in the dark portion of that day
-(verse 8), preached to them during that night, and on the next morning
-commenced a journey of nineteen and a half miles on foot, on that which
-answered to the daylight portion of our Sunday. This, if true, with the
-majority of readers, would have forever settled the question that Paul
-did not believe in first-day sanctity. A remedy, therefore, must be had.
-The gentleman thinks he has found one. That he has made a desperate
-effort to obtain it, we are compelled to admit. No man, it seems to us
-would ever resort to an experiment so hazardous, who did not find
-himself in the stress of a situation which otherwise would be utterly
-insupportable. With the most deliberate calculation, and in the face of
-authority which he himself highly honors, he has decided that the
-journey in question occurred on the second day of the week, instead of
-the first, which ended at twelve o’clock the previous night. Well,
-suppose we admit, for a moment, that this was true; what then? The
-Sunday is thereby rescued from profanation by Paul; but it is also true
-that the second day of the week is thereby honored with the meeting of a
-Christian church, and that it was it, and not the first, after all,
-which was honored by the breaking of bread during its hours.[6] So much
-for some of the consequences of the position, if well taken.
-
-But now let us turn to the argument for the change. Is it really true
-that Roman, and not Jewish, time, is employed in a portion of the New
-Testament? If so, the perplexities of the situation are very great. How
-shall we know when to apply the one, and when the other? How can we tell
-precisely where the dividing line should be drawn? We hope, in all
-conscience, independently of the question at issue, that the writer is
-not correct. He seems to find the first intimation of a change in the
-gospels. Matt. 28:1, and John 20:19, are referred to in support of his
-view. Now suppose we concede for a time the point which he desires, and
-admit that these passages prove the use in them of Roman time; also
-that, as he claims, the meeting spoken of in John 20:19, occurred in the
-evening (Roman time), and after the coming on of darkness. This done, we
-inquire, Was it a Jewish day or a Roman day that was sanctified by the
-resurrection of Christ, and his appearance to his assembled disciples?
-We think that few will dispute that it was a Jewish day.
-
-But when did the Jewish day commence? The undeniable answer is, At
-sunset. But when did Christ appear to the disciples, according to Roman
-time, as argued? We answer, In the darkness of the evening, and,
-therefore, after the ending of the Jewish first day. What is the
-necessary conclusion? We reply, One of two things. 1. Either that the
-visit of Christ had no reference to the sanctity of the day on which it
-occurred; or 2. That it was designed to honor the second day of the
-Jewish week. We leave the writer in question to take whichever horn of
-this dilemma he pleases. If he should insist that John employed Roman
-time, then all which he has said in reference to the effect of the visit
-of Christ upon the first day of the Jewish week is emptied of all force.
-Never was self-stultification more complete. In his effort to escape
-from the paws of the Trojan bear (secular travel on Sunday), the writer
-has thrown himself into the jaws of the lion (no Scripture precedent for
-Sunday-keeping). For, if he is right in supposing that the meeting in
-John 20:19, occurred on the Roman evening of that day—that is, after
-sunset, and the coming on of darkness—then, of course, it did not
-transpire on the Jewish first day of the week, which had previously
-ended, according to his own admission, at the going down of the sun; but
-it actually took place after the commencement of the second day of the
-Jewish week.
-
-Not only so, but the second meeting, of Christ with his disciples (after
-eight days), according to his own reasoning, must have fallen on the
-second Jewish day of the next week. And, finally, accepting his logic
-that the meeting of Acts 20:7, also fell on the Roman evening of the
-first day of the week, that precedent, so long cherished, and so often
-cited, is now forever disposed of, since it, too, illustrates the second
-Jewish day of the week, and not the first, if, indeed, it adds luster to
-any. But, reader, it would be neither Christian nor manly to adopt an
-exegesis of Scripture presented by an opponent, simply because such an
-exegesis would prove his overthrow. Truth is worth more than mere
-victory. The gentleman has made a mistake in deciding that Roman time is
-employed in the Bible, and that mistake has brought him to confusion.
-But now we propose to show that Roman time is not employed, even though
-in so doing we shall assist him out of his trouble for the time being.
-Let no one suppose, however, that the relief which we shall afford him
-will be permanent, for, unfortunately for him, we shall rescue him from
-one death simply to deliver him to another.
-
-The whole question turns upon the commencement and end of the Bible day.
-If it can be shown that it began and terminated with the setting of the
-sun, then, beyond all dispute, the meeting in Troas occurred at the
-commencement of the first day of the week, at the coming on of darkness,
-the only period in that day when lights could be employed to advantage
-(verse 8). We proceed, therefore, to our task. We have heretofore quoted
-from the Tract Society’s Bible Dictionary, under the article, day, to
-prove a general agreement that the Hebrews commenced and ended their day
-with the setting of the sun. In addition to this, we might refer the
-reader to Smith’s Comprehensive Dictionary of the Bible on the same
-subject. In fact, we might multiply authorities without end; but this is
-not necessary here. By turning to Genesis, chapter 1, the reader will
-find that God measured the day by “the evening and the morning”
-(darkness and light). He will here observe that with the ancient Hebrews
-the whole night preceded the day to which it belonged. Advancing to
-Leviticus 23:32, he will there read the command of God, that the people
-should keep their Sabbaths “from even to even.” But as the Sabbath was
-the last day of the week, and was to commence and end with the evening,
-he will discover that it will be necessary that all the other days
-should commence and end in the same manner.
-
-Passing now to the New Testament, he will find the same custom
-prevailing in the days of our Lord. Nay, more; he will there obtain the
-authority of Luke himself, who wrote the book of Acts, for believing
-that Christ and the Jews followed that system of beginning and ending
-the day which God had inaugurated in the outset. We read in Luke 4:40:
-“Now when the sun was setting, all they that had any sick with divers
-diseases, brought them unto him; and he laid his hands on every one of
-them, and healed them.” By tracing back the event, as given by Luke, in
-its parallel, as found in Mark 1, we find that Christ was healing in the
-synagogue on the Sabbath day, and that he subsequently repaired to the
-house of Peter, and healed his wife’s mother; and that, “at even, when
-the sun did set,” the Jews brought to him all those that were diseased,
-and possessed with devils, for the purpose of having him heal them.
-This, however, they could not have done on the Sabbath day, according to
-their views; therefore they prove that the custom was still prevalent
-among them of ending the days with the setting of the sun. But,
-furthermore, has it not been argued by the writer himself, that the day
-of Pentecost was coincident with the first day of the week? We think
-this will hardly be disputed. If it be true, however, and if the logic
-be sound, that the Spirit which was poured out on the day of Pentecost
-was designed to indicate that it corresponded with the Christian
-Sabbath, then we need not argue further, for no man will deny that that
-day was emphatically Jewish in its beginning and ending.
-
-This army of Scripture testimony, gleaned from a history of 4000 years,
-if met at all, it will be necessary that it should be done by clear and
-emphatic statements emanating from the same source from which the
-authorities in question are drawn. Has the gentleman furnished any such
-evidence? The reader will readily discover that he has not. The only
-texts brought forward in support of the change upon which he insists are
-John 20:19, and Matt. 28:1. In reference to the first of these, it will
-only be required that attention should be called to the fact that, with
-the Hebrews, each day had two evenings. (Exodus 12:6, margin; and
-Numbers 9:3, and 28:4, margin.) On this point, the Bible Dictionary
-says: “The Hebrews reckoned two evenings in each day.... According to
-the Karaites, this time between the evenings is the interval from sunset
-to complete darkness, that is, the evening twilight. According to the
-Pharisees and the Rabbins, the first evening began when the sun inclined
-to descend more rapidly; that is, at the ninth hour; while the second or
-real evening commenced at sunset.” (Art. Evening.) Now let it be
-supposed that Christ met with his disciples somewhere between three
-o’clock and sunset, on the day of the resurrection, and the statement
-that he met with them the “same day at evening,” is at once verified,
-and the necessity for the supposition of a change of time disappears.
-
-In explanation of Matt. 28:1, we cannot do better, perhaps, than to
-append the following comment from Albert Barnes: “The word _end_, here
-means the same as _after_ the Sabbath; _i. e._, after the Sabbath was
-fully completed, or finished, and may be expressed in the following
-manner: ‘In the night following the Sabbath; for the Sabbath closed at
-sunset, as it began to dawn toward the first day of the week.’” That Mr.
-Barnes is right in his criticism, will become apparent when we compare
-Matt. 28:1, with the parallel passage in Mark 16:1, 2, where the same
-historic fact is introduced with these words: “When the Sabbath was
-past.” A complete harmony is thus preserved between the two evangelists,
-and all requisition for the extreme resort to the hypothesis of a sudden
-and unprecedented employment of the Roman system for the computation of
-time is dispensed with.
-
-As it regards the objection, which is based upon the use made in Acts
-20:7, of the words, “on the morrow,” we reply that it is not well taken.
-That it was perfectly compatible with a Jewish custom, when speaking of
-the daylight portion of any day from the stand-point of the previous
-evening, to allude to it as “the morrow,” we cite the following
-passages: “Then the soldiers, as it was commanded them, took Paul, and
-brought him by night to Antipatris. _On the morrow_ they left the
-horsemen to go with him, and returned to the castle.” Acts 23:31, 32.
-“Saul also sent messengers unto David’s house, to watch him, and to slay
-him in the morning; and Michal, David’s wife, told him, saying, If thou
-save not thy life to-night, _to-morrow_ thou shalt be slain.” 1 Samuel
-19:11.
-
-In addition to the above texts, we might quote the authority of Mr.
-Howson, who is so justly complimented for his scholarship by the writer.
-He cannot be charged with leaning toward our views of the Sabbath, and,
-therefore, if he had any bias in the case, it would be against, and not
-in favor of, the position which we are trying to maintain. If there was
-really any force in the criticism which is offered respecting the use of
-the preposition and the term with which it is connected, assuredly the
-discriminating eye of this gentleman would not have allowed it to escape
-detection. Nevertheless, he, as the writer admits, deliberately decides,
-while examining at length the very passages now before us, that the
-events there spoken of, journey and all, did transpire on the Sunday. In
-doing so, it follows, as a matter of course, that he did not regard the
-difficulty which is urged concerning the words, “on the morrow,” as one
-at all formidable.
-
-Thus much by way of a brief refutation of the diversity theory for the
-commencing of the days of the Bible. We have seen heretofore, that, if
-the advocate of this theory were right and we wrong, he has lost to his
-cause the three precedental meetings of John 20:19, John 20:26, and Acts
-20:7, since they occurred on the second, and not the first, Jewish day
-of the week. Let us now view the situation from the stand-point of one
-who believes that the sacred, instead of the heathen, method is followed
-consistently throughout the Scriptures. In Acts 20:7, the text which is
-passing under review, it is said that there was a meeting held upon the
-first day of the week, and that Paul preached until midnight. It now
-becomes important to know on what portion of the first day of the week
-this meeting fell. By examining the record, we find the statement that
-there were many lights employed in the chamber where they were gathered.
-We know, therefore, that the meeting must have taken place during the
-dark portion of the first day of the week. But as we have seen that the
-Jewish day commenced with sunset, the only hours of darkness which
-belong to it were to be found between that time and the next morning.
-Advancing, we learn that, having spent the night in preaching, breaking
-of bread, &c., the apostle devoted the daylight portion of the first day
-of the week to the accomplishment of a journey of nineteen and a half
-miles, while his companions sailed the vessel a greater distance round
-the headland to Assos. Here, then, is apostolic example for travel upon
-the first day of the week. The writer endeavored to escape this
-conclusion, by asserting that the meeting in question and the travel
-took place on the second day of the week. This view, we have met, and
-successfully answered. The record states that it was upon the first day
-of the week when they came together. It then proceeds to give a
-connected account of what transpired on that day, and among other
-things, is found the story of Paul and his companions starting for
-Jerusalem. Now, if the events related did really transpire on two days,
-instead of on one merely, as would naturally be inferred from the
-context, the burden of the proof is with our opponent. We rest the
-matter, therefore, right here. The only attempt which he has made has
-been a complete failure. That he thought it was the best he could do
-under the circumstances, we doubt not.
-
-There remains now no item of difference between ourselves and the writer
-in the _Statesman_ which should occupy us longer. For, between him and
-myself there is no room for dispute respecting the morality of traveling
-on the Sabbath, since, according to his own confession, the object which
-Paul had in remaining at Troas was that of a good “_Sabbath-keeping
-Christian_,” who was unwilling to violate the sacredness of holy time by
-the performance of secular labor. Here, then, we pause. As we do so, we
-appeal to the judgment of the candid men and women who have read the
-criticism of our friend and our reply thereto. Did Paul conscientiously
-regard the first day of the week, while traveling on foot nineteen and a
-half miles upon it, and did Luke and his six companions, in sailing a
-much greater distance on the same hours, transgress the law of God, and
-ignore the example of Christ; or, did they look upon the first day of
-the week as one which God had given to man for the purposes of labor and
-travel? If you still decide that it was holy time, you must be able to
-reconcile their action with this theory. This, however, you can never
-do. If, on the contrary, you shall determine that they treated it as a
-secular day, then it remains so still, for its character has not changed
-from that day to this.
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- As it is not insisted that this translation is a correct one, I shall
- not turn aside for the purpose of showing, as might easily be done,
- from the original, that it is not admissible where the rule of strict
- construction is followed.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- The honoring of the second day here alluded to rests upon the
- hypothesis that the breaking of bread spoken of in Acts 20:11, answers
- to the Lord’s supper. It is, however, by no means certain that this
- was the case, since scholars differ widely in opinion respecting the
- matter; some holding to the opinion that reference was made to the
- Lord’s supper, and others to the view that the breaking of bread
- referred merely to a common meal.
-
-
-
-
- STATESMAN’S REPLY.
- ARTICLE SIX
- TESTIMONY OF PAUL AND JOHN TO THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.
-
-
-Two important portions of the inspired records remain to be considered.
-The first of these reads as follows: “Now concerning the collection for
-the saints, as I have given order to the churches of Galatia, even so do
-ye. Upon the first day of the week let every one of you lay by him in
-store, as God hath prospered him, that there be no gatherings when I
-come.” (1 Cor. 16:1, 2.)
-
-From this passage it is clear that the churches of Galatia, as well as
-the church at Corinth, or that Christians generally, were required to
-set apart a proportion of their worldly goods, as God prospered them,
-for benevolent purposes. It is also clear that the act of setting apart
-the required proportion of means was to be performed statedly, every
-week, on the first day of the week.
-
-Whatever may be the correct interpretation of the words, “lay by him in
-store,” enough is beyond all doubt and agreed upon by all, to show that
-the first day of the week was regarded by the apostle and the Christian
-churches as a special day, and one more fitting than others for the
-benevolent and religious duty enjoined.
-
-The phrase rendered in our version “by him,” is unquestionably an
-idiomatic Greek expression for “at home.” (Compare Luke 24:12, and John
-20:10.) And even if we understand this phrase to be connected with the
-word rendered, “in store,” which is a participle signifying “treasure
-up,” the proof of first-day sacred observance is still clear and strong.
-But the true connection of the words, “at home,” is with what precedes.
-“Let every one place or devote at home.” Place what? The answer is not
-hard to find—a proportion of the weekly earnings; a suitable part of
-what God in his bounty had given. When this proportion was separated by
-each Christian at home, from the rest of his weekly earnings, it was to
-be treasured up. But where? This is the important question. Where was
-the money each Christian set apart at home on the first day of the week,
-from his weekly receipts, to be kept in store? It appears that this
-treasuring up was not at each Christian’s home:
-
-1. Because the phrase, “at home,” grammatically connects, not with the
-word “treasuring,” but with the preceding verb. This verb does not mean
-“lay by,” but “lay,” or “place.” The preposition rendered “by” is part
-of the phrase, “at home.” If it is insisted that the idea of treasuring
-in store is in the word rendered “lay,” then we have this tautology:
-“Let every one place in store or lay by at home, placing in store.” Paul
-did not write in this way.
-
-2. The first day of the week must have offered a special facility for
-doing what was required. True, if nothing more is meant than laying by
-at home, even that marks the first day with distinguishing honor. But
-the placing or putting of God’s portion by itself; separated from the
-remainder of the receipts of the past week, on each first-day, in each
-Christian’s home, was in order to something else, for which the first
-day alone gave opportunity. On that day, as we have learned from Acts
-20:7, and other portions of Scripture, Christians were accustomed to
-meet for public religious services, and at these public gatherings, each
-Christian put into the treasury of the church what he had set apart at
-home from the rest of the gains of the week.
-
-3. The most conclusive argument, however, is drawn from the end that
-Paul desired to accomplish. He states expressly that his aim in giving
-his directions was to avoid the necessity of gatherings or collections
-when he should come. The force of this consideration is evaded by
-explaining the apostle’s words as meaning “small collections.” But if
-every Christian had his money laid by at home, whether it were much or
-little, the “collections” would still have to be made. Each Christian,
-it is true, would have his sum already made up, and would need to make
-no personal gathering. But the apostle’s word is much more naturally and
-fittingly applied to collections on a larger and wider scale. And to
-effect the apostle’s end, and avoid such collections at his coming, the
-Corinthians, like the Galatians, were to make a collection every Lord’s
-day, of what each one at home had set apart or placed aside from the
-proceeds of his business during the preceding week. In no other way
-would the moneys needed be in perfect readiness for the apostle. If left
-in the hands of individuals scattered around, there would be uncertainty
-about the apostle’s receipt of them, and there would still be trouble in
-connection with collections on his arrival. But with the moneys already
-gathered, at the regular weekly meetings, into the common treasury of
-the church, and there waiting his coming, his aim is satisfactorily
-accomplished.
-
-The only remaining passage is Rev. 1:10: “I was in the Spirit on the
-Lord’s day.” It has been admitted by opponents of the first-day Sabbath,
-that if, by the Lord’s day in this passage, the first day of the week is
-meant, their cause is lost. And lost it is; for no other day can be
-meant. Three interpretations have been given of John’s words:—
-
-1. By the Lord’s day is meant the day of Judgment. Wetstein, in his
-elaborate edition of the Greek New Testament, in the year 1752, first
-advanced this view. His comment is; “Hunc diem judicii vidit in spiritu;
-_i. e._, prævidit representatum.” “John saw in Spirit the day of
-Judgment; that is, he foresaw it represented.” The phrase, “the day of
-the Lord,” does mean in the Scriptures the day of Judgment. But that
-phrase is different from the one here employed. The literal rendering of
-the former is, “the day of the Lord.” The literal rendering of the other
-is, “the dominical day.” This was not a day foreseen, but a day on which
-John was in the Spirit—a day of weekly recurrence which the Lord claims
-as his own, as he claims the dominical supper.
-
-2. By the Lord’s day, it is maintained again, is meant the seventh-day
-Sabbath. In support of this view it is said that the phrase employed by
-John corresponds with such Old-Testament expressions as “a Sabbath to
-the Lord,” and with the Saviour’s language: “The Son of man is Lord even
-of the Sabbath.” But the very fact that the seventh day had a well-known
-and distinctive name by which it was always designated, is strong
-presumptive proof that this new and unusual phrase used by John cannot
-apply to it. It would be most natural to suppose that some other day is
-meant, and this is clearly proved to be the fact.
-
-3. The phrase, the Lord’s day, was the common expression for designating
-the first-day Sabbath from John’s time onward. As the meal which the
-Lord hallowed as his own was called the Lord’s supper, so the day
-hallowed by the Lord’s resurrection, by his repeated meeting with his
-disciples after rising from the dead, by the descent of his Spirit, by
-the weekly religious assemblies of his people with their communions,
-preaching and hearing the word, prayers and almsgiving, was properly
-termed the Lord’s day. It has been argued on the other side of the
-question that the Lord had a day, and but one in the week, called
-specially his own. But as has been shown, Jesus himself, after his
-resurrection, paid no regard to the seventh day. His disciples did not
-observe it. It could not, therefore, have been the Lord’s day. On the
-other hand, Jesus did honor the first day, and the Christian churches
-everywhere did the same; and thus this honored day is the only one of
-which John could speak when he said he was “in the Spirit on the Lord’s
-day.” By this name, as will be seen in our next article, the first day
-of the week was known in the early church.
-
-
-
-
- A REJOINDER.
- “TESTIMONY OF PAUL AND JOHN TO THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.”
-
-
-With no small degree of interest we have perused the article entitled,
-“Testimony of Paul and John to the First-day Sabbath,” The two texts
-which it brings forward in defense of the theory of a changed Sabbath,
-are regarded by the friends of that theory, generally, as among the
-strongest of its supports. The first of them (1 Cor. 16:1, 2), we had
-assailed, and adduced a criticism, from the pen of Mr. J. W. Morton,
-which was of great importance. In it, the very stronghold of the Sunday
-argument had been fearlessly attacked, and, to our mind, carried beyond
-all question. The writer whom we quoted presented twelve versions and
-translations, all of which clearly sustained the position that the
-expression, “by him,” was equivalent to the term, “at home” If this were
-true, then beyond all dispute the Sunday argument had been denuded of
-all its strength, provided it ever had any; for the support of its logic
-was the assumption that the transaction brought to view in this text was
-to take place in the respective assemblies of the saints.
-
-It is, therefore, with the most profound satisfaction that—if we rightly
-apprehend the remarks of our reviewer—we accept his concession of the
-point that the words, “by him,” do indeed answer to a Greek idiom, of
-which the original terms are equivalent to the expression, “at home.”
-This being true, we are agreed that at least a _portion_ of the duty
-which Paul commanded was to be performed, not at the house of assembly,
-but at the _dwelling_ of _the individual Christian_. In other words, he
-admits that the money which they were to “place or devote” to charitable
-purposes, was first to be estimated and separated while yet they were in
-their own houses. Having conceded thus much, he reasons that the money
-was to be carried to the place of worship, and laid up in store, or
-deposited among the collections regularly made on the first day of the
-week. In order to sustain this view, he offers a grammatical criticism
-to which it cannot be objected that it is not drawn finely enough to
-meet the taste of the most fastidious. But the writer does not seem to
-plant himself so squarely upon it as we would naturally expect one would
-who feels that he is standing upon solid ground.
-
-The _force of his logic_ seems to be drawn from the _object_ which Paul
-had in view, in ordering beforehand this weekly laying aside of money
-for the poor saints at Jerusalem. The writer thinks that the evident
-reference of Paul, in the words, “that there be no gatherings when I
-come,” is to contributions to be taken up in the congregation when he
-should have reached the place. If he is wrong in this, he is wrong in
-all; for no one will dispute that money _could_[7] be “laid by in store”
-_at home_, as well as in the church, since to lay by in store, is to put
-in some safe and accessible place.
-
-Right here, then, we inquire, What were the “gatherings” which Paul
-sought to avoid on his arrival? They could refer to but one of two
-things; either, first, the collection of moneys in the church; or,
-secondly, the collecting of them by individuals from those who were
-indebted to them. That the first was not the sense in which Paul
-employed the word, we submit is apparent, from the fact that the end to
-be gained by writing months beforehand, in order to prevent the taking
-up of a collection in the church, was not commensurate with the dignity
-which is given to it by so prominent a place in the sacred epistle. So
-far as the collection itself was concerned, it could have been brought
-about, unquestionably, within the space of fifteen minutes. The amount
-of time, therefore, which it would consume, is too insignificant to be
-worthy of mention.
-
-Again, as it regards the moral complexion of the act, it will not be
-objected by our reviewer that it was to be avoided from any scruples in
-that direction, since he believes that such collections were taken up on
-every first day of the week. On the other hand, taking the second view
-as being the one which properly expresses the facts, we find that it is
-in perfect harmony with the circumstances of the case, and consistent
-with the notion that Paul had a sufficient motive for writing before
-hand, as he did, concerning the collections. He was about to make a
-brief visit to Corinth. How long he should remain, he could not tell.
-While there, he wanted the undivided attention of the people to be given
-to religious purposes, and also that the money which he expected, should
-be in readiness, so that no delay might be necessary.
-
-This, however, could not be, since, not knowing the exact time of his
-arrival, they would not be likely to have it on hand when he should
-come, unless they laid it by, weekly, at their homes. Should he,
-therefore, drop in upon them suddenly, they would be thrown into a
-confusion of mind illy compatible with the purposes of daily worship
-during his visit, since they would be annoyed and distracted by the
-necessity of gathering from this direction and that, the amounts of the
-weekly contribution which they had agreed to make for the benefit of the
-suffering saints at Jerusalem.
-
-But once more: Having settled the point that the explanation claimed
-does not satisfactorily account for the mention of the subject in an
-epistle, while the one which we present meets the requirements of the
-case in every particular—since it both supplies the money, and furnishes
-the apostle with a body of Christians ready to listen to the preaching
-of the word—let us look at the matter from another stand-point.
-
-The plan proposed by Paul could have been arrived at in but one of two
-ways. Every Christian was expected, either, first, to give a fixed sum,
-every week, of an amount equal to that which the general valuation of
-his property would require; or, secondly, he was, as the writer
-supposes, to pay in a fluctuating amount weekly, that amount to be
-determined by the gains or losses of the week.
-
-We will suppose, for a moment, that the first theory is correct, and
-will test the plan in question thereby. While doing so, for convenience’
-sake, we will employ the currency of our own time. Here is a Corinthian
-Christian who is worth, say $10,000. He decides that he will give, for
-the purposes mentioned, ten dollars per week. He has money in his purse,
-and nothing to prevent his doing it at any time. Being anxious to obey
-the injunction of Paul, he proceeds as the writer suggests. On Sunday
-morning he is at home, knowing just what he must contribute on that day,
-when he goes to church, having previously decided this point. The
-amount, as we have seen, is precisely ten dollars. But Paul says he must
-do something with it “at home,” before going to church. What was he to
-do with it? The writer says, “to place or devote it.” Well, he takes out
-his purse; from it he extracts just ten dollars. He holds it in his
-fingers. Now, what shall he do with it? The writer says he must “_place_
-or _devote_ it.” Yes, but we inquire. What does _place_ or _devote
-mean_, in such a connection as this? In other words, What shall he do
-with the money at home? Shall he take it out, and turn it over, and look
-at it, and put it back into his purse again, and then go to church and
-place it in the contribution box? We answer that this would be a solemn
-farce. To say, also, that having taken it out of his purse he must not
-put it back again, but must place it in some other pocket, and then
-carry it to church, is simply ridiculous. So far, therefore, as the men
-were concerned whose property was fixed, and whose contributions were
-the same, weekly, all that was said by Paul about “devoting or placing”
-at home was pure nonsense, in the light of the exposition offered.[8]
-
-Now for the other class, or the men of fluctuating resources. How shall
-they proceed? Were they to estimate the amount of their weekly gains,
-and to collect in the sum, on the last day, which they were to give on
-the first day of the week? If so, then in their cases, as well as in
-those of the first order, the whole process was a mere sham, an empty
-and meaningless form. For they also, at their homes, would simply have
-to take out their money and look at it, and then put it back and go to
-the church for the purpose of donating it.
-
-But again; as we have seen, that unless the work of deciding how much
-they ought to give, and separating the amount for that purpose while at
-home on the first day of the week, was a part of the plan of the
-apostle, the whole suggestion had in it neither rhyme nor reason, we now
-turn to the only alternative left our opponent; which is the conclusion
-that the work indicated by the term, “place or devote at home,” was that
-of _deciding upon_, and _separating_ the sum which they could spare to
-the weekly contribution.
-
-What are the consequences of such a position? We reply, It overturns and
-utterly uproots the whole theory of Sunday sanctity; for the lesson
-taught by 1 Cor. 16:1, 2, instead of being favorable to the conception
-that Paul held to such a theory, shows that he regarded the first day of
-the week as secular time. Do you ask, How do you reach such a
-conclusion? I answer, It is inevitable, since the men who were acting
-under the instruction of Paul could not carry out the work prescribed by
-him without devoting at least the morning of the first day of the week
-to worldly business, such as that of figuring up and deciding upon the
-losses and profits of the preceding week, and, perhaps, collecting from
-outstanding matters the pro-rata amount necessary for the stated
-collection at the church.
-
-Should it be objected that our suggestion is open to the criticism that
-the well-to-do class of Christians could have furnished their means at
-any time, we answer, Very true; but that, should week after week elapse
-without the separation, on the part of the wealthy, of the stipulated
-sum, it might, before the arrival of the apostle, reach figures which it
-would be difficult even for them to meet without perplexity. And
-besides, the better, easier, more natural, and we think, spiritually,
-the more profitable method, even for them, would be found in doing it
-weekly. We might offer many reasons for this conviction, had we space.
-Paul was giving a general rule to meet the condition of all classes. The
-poor comprised the larger portion of these classes, and a principle was
-laid down, therefore, which, while it was better for the rich than any
-other, was indispensable, for the purposes in question, to the men of
-moderate circumstances.
-
-Our interpretation, stated in brief, is simply this: The apostle
-instructed them on the first day of the week to lay by in store, at
-home, what they proposed to give to the saints at Jerusalem, hoarding it
-up until he should visit them, so that at his arrival they might put it
-into the common treasury; thus avoiding the possibility of being unable,
-on the one hand, to meet their pledges, and on the other, of being
-necessitated to have their minds occupied with temporal affairs, during
-his stay. This conception is free from embarrassments. Even were the
-gentleman’s translation of the passage correct, it cannot be shown to be
-unsound. He would read the scripture substantially as follows: “Let
-every one of you devote at home, treasuring up, that there be no
-gatherings when I come.” To our mind, there is no tautology, even in the
-declaration of the apostle thus expressed, which is worthy of mention;
-for should the term, “treasuring up,” be interpreted to mean the same as
-placing or devoting at home, it is explanatory, not of the command, but
-of the purpose of the command. A paraphrase, which is often employed
-with profit in the writings of Paul, will make it all clear: “Upon the
-first day of the week, let every one of you lay aside, or devote to the
-Lord, an amount commensurate with the prosperity which he has bestowed
-upon you, treasuring it up, so that there need be no gatherings when I
-come.”
-
-The only difference between the gentleman and myself, therefore, would
-be as to the _place where_ it was to be treasured up; he insisting that
-it was at the church, and we, at the house of the individual Christian.
-We have shown that his opinion is not only unnecessary, but that it is
-also absurd, since it divides a transaction which Paul does not divide;
-and, after admitting that a part of it transpired at the home of the
-individual, it represents the other part as having taken place at the
-church; whereas, neither the _church_, the _contribution box_, nor the
-_assembly_, are so much as mentioned. And besides, it presents Paul in
-an attitude which certainly does not compliment his sagacity. Mark you,
-it is “every one of you” that he instructs to “lay by at home.” It must
-therefore be, not the church collectively, but its individual members
-who are called upon to treasure up, or lay by in store. Just here we
-submit that the language employed is literal, and not figurative, and
-that, this being true, the moment that the saints at Corinth placed
-their funds in the common treasury, they violated the injunction of the
-apostle, which was that they should treasure it up, or lay it by in
-store, individually. By way of enforcing our logic, we inquire of the
-reader, who has doubtless contributed many times to church collections,
-Can you look upon money thus bestowed as in any proper sense of the term
-belonging to you individually? or as still treasured up or laid by in
-store? We think that your answer will not be equivocal. To lay by in
-store, as before stated, is to put in some safe and accessible place;
-but money once donated is not accessible to the individual contributor,
-since he has no longer any individual property in it.
-
-Here we must terminate our remarks on 1 Cor. 16:1, 2. As we do so, we
-have disposed of the last Bible text which will be cited in the support
-of a supposed practice of Sunday-keeping on the part of the early
-church. Error begets error. Having rejected the obvious teaching of Acts
-20:7, that Paul, after holding a meeting on the first day of the week,
-traveled nineteen and a half miles on foot, and having endeavored to
-explain away this journey by inferring that it took place on the second
-day of the week, which is not mentioned in the connection, our opponent
-comes to the consideration of 1 Cor. 16:1, 2, lugging along in his arms
-a precedent which God had clearly taught him was not designed to teach
-the lesson which he sought to extract from it. With this precedent, thus
-illegitimately obtained, he seeks to explain the language of Paul which
-we have been considering. By this means, he has been led to indorse
-error. But we need not recapitulate.
-
-In conclusion on this point, we remark: How admirable is the providence
-of God! He has instructed us in his word, in regard to duty, by clear
-precepts, and has never told as to study its requirements simply in the
-light of human example. How remarkable, therefore, that he should have
-condescended to so order, by his Spirit, the record which has been made
-in the case of every precedent brought forward, that the text and
-context would utterly overthrow every effort of him who should attempt
-to employ them in the interest of a false doctrine. On the day of the
-resurrection, as if to show that it was not holy time, two disciples are
-brought to view as traveling fifteen miles; a portion of the distance in
-company with their approving Lord, and the remainder of it after he had
-appeared to, walked and conversed with, them. In Acts 20:7, apparently
-perceiving the use which might be made of it, he places, in the
-foreground of the sacred record, the apostle, threading a weary journey
-on foot from Troas to Assos; and lastly, in 1 Cor. 16:1, 2, he framed
-the language so that it should inculcate, not the idea that the first
-day of the week was holy time, but, on the contrary, that it might be
-devoted to the secular work of casting up accounts and collecting funds.
-
-With the exposition offered of the words, “I was in the Spirit on the
-Lord’s day,” Rev. 1:10, we shall make short work. What we have
-previously said on that passage is not sufficiently disturbed to warrant
-extended remark. Be it remembered, then, that, as said above, the
-passage proves that God has a day in this dispensation. At this point
-commences our divergence. We say that the term, “Lord’s day,” refers to
-the seventh-day Sabbath. The writer says that it refers to the first day
-of the week. The declaration that Christ paid no attention to the
-seventh-day Sabbath after his resurrection, needs no reply here, except
-that he was under no obligation to do so, and there was no good reason
-why he should, since he regarded it strictly in his lifetime, and
-enjoined it upon his followers. Perhaps, however, it would be well to
-add that he at least never did anything after his resurrection which
-might be construed into a desecration of it; whereas, in the case of the
-only first-day on which it can be _proved_ that he ever met with his
-disciples, after his death, be devoted a portion of its hours to travel
-on the highway.
-
-To the objection of the writer that, if the term, “Lord’s day,” in the
-case before us, does apply to the seventh-day Sabbath, it is strange
-that it should have been called in every case but this “the Sabbath,” we
-reply that, were this true, this would simply prove a choice in titles,
-and implies no disrespect to the day itself, since the term “Sabbath,”
-equally with that of “Lord’s day,” was a sacred denomination. Not so,
-however, if he be right in the supposition that the term, “Lord’s day,”
-applies to the Sunday; for, if he be correct in this, then indeed we
-have something which is _passing strange_. For, in all the New
-Testament, that which he is pleased to style the “Christian Sabbath,”
-and to which, according to his theory, belonged the honorable name of
-“Lord’s day,” is not only so called but once; but, being spoken of nine
-times by inspired men, it is mentioned eight times out of the nine by
-them in an utter disregard of its hallowed nature, in the terms
-employed, since it is referred to by its secular name, first day of the
-week, in all these instances. The reader will recollect that, in our
-positive argument, we showed that the term, “Lord’s day,” was a fitting
-one for the last day of the week, provided the term translated “Lord”
-was applicable to God, the Father, as well as to Christ, the Son. 1.
-Because it was the day which he blessed and sanctified in Eden, thus
-claiming it as his own (Gen. 2:3). 2. Because, in the commandment, he
-calls it “the Sabbath of the Lord.” 3. Because, in Isa 58:13, 14, he
-makes mention of it in the use of the terms, “Sabbath,” “my holy day,”
-“the holy of the Lord,” &c.
-
-In addition, we might cite other honorable and distinguishing terms by
-which it is pointed out in the Bible as a day which belongs peculiarly
-to the Lord our God, but these are sufficient.
-
-If it be replied that the word translated “Lord” in Rev. 1:10, is
-necessarily limited to Christ, we answer: 1. As we have argued formerly,
-that he said he was Lord of the Sabbath. Mark 2:27, 28. 2. That the
-following texts show conclusively that the divine Son of God was
-engaged, equally with the Father, in the creation of this world; and,
-therefore, that he undoubtedly shared in the rest which furnished the
-foundation for the Edenic Sabbath, as well as in the act of blessing and
-sanctifying it, or setting it apart for religious purposes. “All things
-were made by him [Christ]: and without him was not anything made that
-was made.” John 1:3. “He was in the world, and the world was made by
-him, and the world knew him not.” John 1:10. “... Who [God] created all
-things by Jesus Christ.” Eph. 3:9. “For by him were all things created,
-that are in heaven, and that are in earth; ... all things were created
-by him, and for him.” Col. 1:16. “God ... hath in these last days spoken
-unto us by his Son, whom he hath appointed heir of all things, by whom
-also he made the worlds.” Heb. 1:1, 2. Even though we should grant,
-therefore, which we do not, that the term translated “Lord,” as above,
-applies exclusively to the Son of God, we cannot see why the seventh day
-might not, with all propriety, be called after him, the Lord’s day.
-
-In the concluding remarks on this branch of the subject, it will not be
-considered out of place for us to remind the reader of the protest which
-we offered, in the rejoinder to the second article of the gentleman of
-the _Statesman_, against his effort to obtain all the benefit which
-could be derived from his interpretation of Rev. 1:10, before he had
-struck a single blow, either in the direction of overturning our
-construction, or establishing, by fair argument, his own. The reason why
-this protest was offered is now apparent. The gentleman there, by
-anticipation, _assumed_ that John meant by the term, “Lord’s day,” the
-first day of the week. He _promised_ that in due time he would make good
-his assertion. But how has it proved, now that he has reached the very
-point where he should have fulfilled this engagement? Every one must see
-that he has utterly failed. _Proof_ was the very thing which was
-_promised_, and which was _needed_, right here. It is the very thing,
-also, which he has neglected to adduce. All that is said in reference to
-the theory of Wetstein, may have served to give respectability, in point
-of length, to the treatment of that which he has regarded a most
-important scripture in his line of evidence; but it was utterly
-irrelevant to anything which we had said; for the reader will remember
-that we emphatically planted ourselves on the position that it was the
-weekly Sabbath to which allusion is made.
-
-To the restatement of the scriptures employed in vindication of this
-last opinion, there can be no objection, but we inquire again, Where are
-the passages, where the deductions from Scripture teachings, by which
-the gentleman has proved that the Lord’s day is the first day of the
-week? He has not so much as cited one. He has not made even a
-respectable effort at argument; but, with a haste which is irreverent,
-if not indecent, he rushes away from the book of God, as if impelled by
-the conviction that his view will find no support there, and plunges
-headlong into the regions of patristic myth and moonshine. At this we
-are not surprised. It is just what we expected. Sabbatarians are as well
-acquainted with this device as they are with the emptiness of the
-so-called Bible argument for the Sunday. It simply serves to strengthen
-their conviction, so often expressed in these articles, that the
-stronghold of first-day observance will ever be found in writings which
-have been manipulated, retrenched, and interpolated, by the church of
-Rome. For, be it remembered, it is from the authorities to which the
-gentleman now appeals, that the papacy brings its stoutest testimonials
-for apostolic succession, papistic supremacy, and the other heresies
-which blacken the record of its apostasy.
-
-All it is necessary to say to the reader here is, therefore, that he
-should bear in mind that Sabbatarians are willing to leave the
-arbitrament of this whole question where it can be determined from the
-standpoint of Bible evidence. It is the opposition, and not we, who make
-it necessary, in the investigation of this subject, to go upon forbidden
-ground. “All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable
-for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in
-righteousness; that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished
-unto all good works.” 2 Tim. 3:16, 17. If, therefore, first-day sanctity
-has no warrant in the Bible, which we have seen to be the case, then it
-is not among those things which are _profitable_, or which, as Christian
-doctrines, are _necessary to furnish the man of God unto all good
-works_.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- This point is an important one; and as we are anxious to satisfy the
- reader that it is well taken, we append the following remarks of
- Albert Barnes, who—though agreeing with the writer in the _Statesman_
- that this passage furnishes proof for Sunday observance—nevertheless
- frankly concedes, as will be seen, that the construction of the
- original phrase for “treasuring up,” is such as to admit of the idea
- that the work was to be done at home. He says: “The phrase in Greek,
- ‘treasuring up,’ may mean that each one was to put the part which he
- had designated into the common _treasury_. This interpretation seems
- to be demanded by the latter part of the verse. They were to lay it
- by, and to put it into the common treasury, that there might be no
- trouble of collecting when he should come. Or, it may, perhaps, mean
- that they were individually to _treasure it up_, having designated in
- their own minds the sum which they could give, and have it in
- readiness when he should come.”
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- Instead of selecting a wealthy person, able to contribute ten dollars
- per week, as has been done above, let an individual be chosen from the
- poorer classes of Corinthians—say from among these who would be able
- to donate only twenty-five cents per week—and the reader will be more
- forcibly impressed with the unreasonableness of that construction
- which makes it necessary that so small a pittance should first be
- placed or devoted at home, and then carried to the church, and there
- deposited in the general collection.
-
-
-
-
- STATESMAN’S REPLY.
- ARTICLE SEVEN.
- TESTIMONY OF THE EARLY FATHERS TO THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.
-
-
-Besides the inspired records of the Scriptures, there have come down to
-us the writings of men who were contemporaneous with some of the
-apostles, and the writings of others who lived in the immediately
-succeeding generations. We shall quote from the writings of those who
-lived during the two centuries following the close of the canon of
-inspiration. These writers give evidence enough that they were not
-inspired, as were the penmen of the Divine Word. But it will be borne in
-mind that we appeal to them here simply as witnesses to a matter of
-fact. Many of their opinions and interpretations of Scripture may not be
-worthy of acceptance; but their testimony to the existence of the Lord’s
-day, an admitted fact, cannot be disputed. As there has been a great
-deal of loose citation from the early fathers on this question, we have
-been at considerable pains to translate carefully from the original in
-every case, and accompany each quotation with minute and accurate
-reference.
-
-The first writer from whom we shall quote is Ignatius. This father stood
-at the head of the church at Antioch at the close of the first century
-and the beginning of the second. After occupying that position for many
-years, he was condemned to death, as a Christian, by Trajan, transported
-in chains to Rome, and there thrown to lions in the Coliseum for the
-amusement of the populace, probably in the year 107. On his way to Rome,
-he wrote seven epistles to various churches. Eusebius and Jerome arrange
-these writings as follows (1) To the Ephesians; (2) to the Magnesians;
-(3) to the Trallians; (4) to the Romans; (5) to the Philadelphians; (6)
-to the Smyrneans; (7) to Polycarp, bishop, or presbyter, of Smyrna.
-These seven epistles, in connection with a number of others confessedly
-spurious, have come down to us in two Greek copies, a longer and a
-shorter. A Syriac version of three epistles has recently been found.
-Without entering into the controversy concerning these Ignatian
-Epistles, we give the conclusion reached by Dr. Schaff, which is very
-generally accepted: “The question lies between the shorter Greek copy
-and the Syriac version. The preponderance of testimony is for the
-former, in which the letters are no loose patch-work, but were produced,
-each under its one impulse, were well known to Eusebius, probably even
-to Polycarp, and agree also with the Armenian version of the fifth
-century.” (History of the Christian Church, vol. i. p. 466.) It is
-admitted, even by those who do not accept the Greek copy as genuine,
-that it is the work of the close of the second century, or a little
-later. In any event, then, it is important testimony. In the epistles to
-the Magnesians occurs the following language: “Be not deceived with
-false doctrines, nor old, unprofitable fables. For, if we still live in
-accordance with Judaism, we confess that we have not received grace. For
-even the most holy prophets lived according to Jesus Christ.... If,
-then, they who were brought up in ancient things arrived at a newness of
-hope, no longer keeping the Sabbath, but living according to the Lord’s
-life, ... how can we live without him?... Since we have been made his
-disciples, let us learn to live according to Christianity.”[9]—_Ad
-Magnes._ capp. 8, 9; Coteler’s Edition, vol. ii. pp. 19, 20. Amsterdam,
-1724.
-
-In this passage, it will be observed, the writer draws a contrast
-between Judaism and Christianity. To keep the seventh-day Sabbath was to
-live according to Judaism. To live according to the dominical life, or,
-as the thought is otherwise expressed, to live according to
-Christianity, was opposed to the keeping of the seventh-day Sabbath. The
-argument of Ignatius tells strongly in favor of the first-day Sabbath.
-If Jews, he argues, brought up in the old order of things, on turning
-Christians, no longer keep the seventh-day Sabbath, but live according
-to the dominical life, observing as part of that life, the dominical
-day, the day on which the Lord rose from the dead, surely those who
-never had been Jews should live according to Christianity, and not give
-heed to Judaizing teachers.
-
-Passing on, we come to a document called “The Epistle of Barnabas.” This
-letter, though not the composition of the Barnabas of the New Testament,
-was written in the early part of the second century. It cannot be
-determined who was the author, but _the early date_ of the letter is
-fully established; and that is the main point. Its language is: “We
-celebrate the eighth day with joy, on which Jesus rose from the
-dead.”—_Coteler’s Edition of the Apostolic Fathers_, vol. i. p. 47.
-
-The testimony of Justin Martyr is full and explicit. As an itinerant
-evangelist for many years during the first half of the second century,
-just after the time of the apostle John, he enjoyed an excellent
-opportunity of becoming, acquainted with the customs of the whole
-church. Writing in the year 139 to the Emperor Antoninus Pius, in
-vindication of his Christian brethren, he gives the following account of
-their stated religious services: “On the day called the day of the sun
-is an assembly of all who live either in cities or in the rural
-districts, and the memoirs of the apostles and the writings of the
-prophets are read;” _i. e._, the Old and New Testaments. Then he goes on
-to specify the various parts of their first-day services. Just as at the
-present day, in Christian congregations, there were preaching, prayer,
-the celebration of the Lord’s supper, and the contribution of alms. As
-reasons why Christians should observe the first day, he assigns the
-following: “Because it was the first day on which God dispelled the
-darkness and chaos, and formed the world, and because Jesus Christ, our
-Saviour, rose from the dead on it.”—_Robert Stephens’ edition of the
-works of Justin Martyr_, p. 162. Lutetiæ, 1551.
-
-In another of his works, the Dialogue with Trypho the Jew, written about
-the same time as the Apology, from which we have quoted, occurs this
-passage: “The command to circumcise infants on the eighth day was a type
-of the true circumcision by which we were circumcised from error and
-evil through our Lord Jesus Christ, who rose from the dead on the first
-day of the week; for the first day of the week remains the chief of all
-the days.” (Stephens’ Edition, p. 59. See also Trollope’s edition of the
-Dialogue with Trypho, pp. 85, 86.) The careful reader of Justin Martyr
-will observe that, in addressing Trypho the Jew, he uses different terms
-for the days of the week from those which he employs in addressing the
-Emperor Antoninus. Addressing a heathen emperor, he employs the heathen
-names for both the seventh and the first day of the week.
-
-Two important notices of the Lord’s day, all the more important because
-of their incidental character, are found in the History of Eusebius.
-Dionysius, bishop or presbyter of Corinth, A. D. 170, in a letter to the
-church at Rome, a fragment of which is preserved by Eusebius, says:
-“To-day we kept the Lord’s holy day, in which we read your letter.”
-(Hist. Eccles. iv. 23, Paris Ed. 1678, pp. 117, 118.) The other of these
-notices is in regard to a treatise on the Lord’s day, by Melito, bishop
-of Sardis, A. D. 170. This treatise, Eusebius remarks, along with others
-by the same writer, had come to the historian’s knowledge.—_Hist.
-Eccles._ iv. 26, Paris Ed. 1678, p. 119.
-
-Although the letter of Pliny to Trajan is so well known as hardly to
-need quotation, we shall close this article with its interesting
-testimony in confirmation, from a pagan quarter, of what has already
-been adduced from Christian writers: “They [the Christians] affirmed
-that the sum of their fault, or error, was that they were accustomed to
-assemble on a stated day—_Stato die_—before it was light, and sing
-praise alternately among themselves to Christ as God—_carmenque Christo,
-quasi Deo, dicere secum, invicem_.” (Plin. Epist. x., 97.) Here we have
-the fact that Christians in the early part of the second century met
-regularly on a stated day, and this stated day, as all the Christian
-authorities of the same date prove, was the first day of the week, the
-Lord’s day.
-
-Additional patristic evidence will be given in the next article.
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- Not a few eminent writers, such as Dwight, and Wilson, of Calcutta,
- who are followed by many lesser authors, quote Ignatius, as saying:
- “Let us no more Sabbatize, but keep the Lord’s day.” From the literal
- rendering of the original above given, it will be seen that these
- writers take an unwarrantable liberty with their author. The words of
- Ignatius are, ἀλλὰ κατὰ τὴν κυριακὴν ζωὴν ζῶντες. To separate the noun
- ζωὴν from the preceding adjective, and connect it with the following
- participle, so as to read, “Living a life according to the Lord’s
- day,” is an unnatural separation of the words of the original. To drop
- out the word ζωὴν is unwarranted. If this word were spurious, then the
- rendering would be, “Living according to the Lord’s day,” the
- adjective κυριακη without the noun for “day” being expressed occurring
- frequently for “the Lord’s day.” But there is no ground for rejecting
- the word “life.” To color the language of an author for the sake of
- giving it point in favor of one side of a question is unworthy of a
- seeker after truth. In the present case there is really nothing gained
- by departing from the precise language of the writer. Another passage,
- often quoted as from Ignatius, is part of the spurious epistle to the
- Galatians. It is as follows: “During the Sabbath, Christ continued
- under the earth, in the tomb in which Joseph of Arimathea had laid
- him. At the dawning of the lord’s day, he arose from the dead. The day
- of the preparation, then, comprises the passion; the Lord’s day
- contains the resurrection.” This certainly has some weight as the
- testimony of comparatively early writer, but it must not be ascribed
- to Ignatius.
-
-
-
-
- A REJOINDER.
- “TESTIMONY OF THE EARLY FATHERS TO THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.”
-
-
-There is one feature which has characterized this debate, hitherto,
-which has been a source of considerable satisfaction. The controversy,
-up to this point, has been urged purely with reference to the teaching
-of the Bible, as drawn from its sacred pages. Henceforth, however, this
-is not to be the case. We are now to have, not the “sure word of
-prophecy,” with the clear and forcible lines of textual evidence, drawn
-from its inspired utterances, but that “word of prophecy,” supplemented
-and explained by the apostolic fathers.
-
-It has been said, and well said, that history repeats itself. If there
-was one thing which marked the religious impulse that Protestantism gave
-to the world, it was an utter rejection, in the decision of religious
-opinions, of everything but Bible authority. The voice of Martin Luther
-even now seems to reverberate in our ears, as—when fighting the very
-battles which Sabbatarians am being called upon to fight over again—he
-retorted in sharp and stinging words upon his cowled and priestly
-opponents, who were ever citing patristic evidence, The Bible, and the
-Bible alone, is our rule of faith. Again, as we read the words addressed
-by him to those friends who were hopefully waiting the expected reply
-from the Romanists of his time, to a courageous assault which he had
-made upon them from the stand-point of the Bible, it seems as if they
-were designed to be prophetic of our time, rather than descriptive of
-his own. He said: “You are waiting for your adversaries’ answer; it is
-already written, and here it is: ‘The fathers, the fathers, the fathers;
-the church, the church, the church; usage, custom; but of the
-Scriptures—nothing!’”—_D’Aubirgne’s Hist. Ref._, vol. viii., p. 717.
-
-Wearisome as these repeated conflicts may be to the child of God, there
-is a satisfaction in the thought that we hold in our hands the same
-weapons, and bear aloft the same banners by which, under the blessing of
-God, victory, complete and universal, has been attained in the past. The
-opponents of Bible truth have never yet been able to stand before the
-thunder of its power, or to balance the ponderous weight of its
-influence, in the decision of religious questions. The homely phrase of
-the great reformer is just as potent and irresistible in the present
-contest as it was in that for which it was framed “When God’s word is by
-the fathers expounded, construed, and glossed, then, in my judgment, it
-is even like unto one that straineth milk through a coal-sack, which
-must needs spoil the milk, and make it black; even so, likewise, God’s
-word of itself is sufficiently pure, clean, bright, and clear; but
-through the doctrines, books, and writings, of the fathers, it is very
-surely darkened, falsified, and spoiled.”
-
-The elegant and convincing logic of Philip Melancthon, the greatest
-theologian of the sixteenth century—who, in the following brief lines,
-discussed and summed up the whole question—is just as sound and
-unanswerable now as it was when, under the blessing of God, it carried
-confusion and defeat into the ranks of the papacy, three hundred years
-ago. He says: “How often has not Jerome been mistaken! how often
-Augustine! how often Ambrose! How often do we not find them differing in
-judgment—how often do we not hear them retracting their errors! There is
-but one Scripture divinely inspired, and without mixture of error.”
-(_Idem._, p. 219.) In fine, we might prove from history that nearly
-every Protestant writer, for the last three centuries, has forged for us
-weapons which could be employed with the most telling effect in the
-controversy in which we are now engaged.
-
-This, however, we have not space to do, but must content ourselves with
-several brief citations, by which we will show that the authorities of
-our own times—equally with those of the past—are uniform in their
-expressions of contempt for testimony which is so largely relied upon by
-our reviewer in the present discussion. “To avoid being imposed upon, we
-ought to treat tradition as we do a notorious and known liar, to whom we
-give no credit, unless what he says is confirmed to us by some person of
-undoubted veracity.... False and lying traditions are of an early date,
-and the greatest men have, out of a pious credulity, suffered themselves
-to be imposed upon by them.—_Archibald Bower._
-
-“But of these, we may safely state that there is not a _truth_ of the
-most orthodox creed that cannot be proved by their authority; nor a
-_heresy_ that has disgraced the Romish church, that may not challenge
-them as it abettors. In point of _doctrine_, their authority is, _with
-me, nothing_. The WORD of God alone contains my creed. On a number of
-points, I can go to the Greek and Latin fathers of the church, to know
-what _they believed_, and what the people of their respective communions
-believed; but after all this, I must return to God’s word to know what
-he would have me to believe.” (A. Clark, Com. on Prov. 8.) “We should
-take heed how we quote the fathers in proof of the doctrines of the
-gospel; because he who knows them best, knows that on many of those
-subjects they blow hot and cold.” (Quoted in Hist. of Sab. from
-Autobiography of Adam Clarke.)
-
-“Most of the writings, bearing the name of the apostolic fathers, are
-regarded as spurious by various modern critics. The genuineness of all
-has been disputed; but the fragments that remain are curious as relics
-of an early age, and valuable as indicating the character of primitive
-Christianity.” (Am. Cyc., Art. Apostolic Fathers.) Thus much for the
-estimate which Protestants place upon the authorities which are brought
-forward by the gentleman in the _Statesman_. Assuredly, he would never
-have appealed to them, had he not felt that his cause was hopeless one,
-when left to the arbitrament of Scripture.
-
-Should it be pleaded in extenuation of his cause that they have not been
-advanced with a view to influencing the judgment of the reader in
-reference to the continuity of the old Sabbath, but were introduced
-simply to furnish, as suggested in the outset, a criticism showing the
-use of the term, “Lord’s day,” in the first three centuries, then, we
-inquire, why cite Ignatius at all? It will be perceived at a glance
-that, according to the rendering which he has given us—and for which,
-and his note thereon, he will receive our thanks, since it will save us
-much labor—there is not in it a single mention of the term, “Lord’s
-day.” If the passage conveys any meaning at all, it is either that the
-Sabbath should be observed in a manner differing from that in which it
-was kept by the Jews, or else that it should not be observed at all.
-
-But the last of these propositions, the writer will not admit to be
-sound, since he has fairly repudiated such a conception, and has, in so
-many words, stated that he heartily agrees with us in the perpetuity of
-the Edenic Sabbath. He has also stated that the fourth commandment—which
-it will be admitted commences with the words, “Remember the _Sabbath
-day_, to keep it holy”—is a Sabbath law which is still binding, and
-which, the words of Ignatius to the contrary notwithstanding, forever
-settles the question that this is not a Sabbathless dispensation.
-
-What shall be done, then, with the language of the venerable father? We
-are well acquainted with the office which it has performed hitherto, and
-are anxious to know where it is to throw its baleful shadow hereafter.
-In the past, hundreds of individuals whose consciences have been aroused
-by appeals to the Bible on the subject of the perpetuity of God’s holy
-day, have had their fears quieted, and have been lulled into security by
-the very extract with which we are here favored. Why, they have said,
-was not Ignatius a disciple of John, and did he not therefore know what
-John believed? Did he not also prove his integrity by becoming a martyr
-to the faith? Since, therefore, he was possessed of both knowledge and
-piety, and since he has called the first day of the week the Lord’s day,
-are we not justified in keeping the day which he kept, and rejecting the
-day which he rejected? Supported and encouraged in this position, as
-they have been by the brethren of the writer who—having either less
-candor, or less scholarship, than he—have insisted again and again that
-Ignatius did call the first day of the week the Lord’s day, it has been
-in many cases utterly impossible for Sabbatarians to disabuse their
-minds of this impression. With gratitude, therefore, we shall add the
-name of the gentleman to the rapidly increasing list of scholars who,
-headed by Kitto, and others of equal distinction, frankly concede that
-Sabbatarians have been in the right, and that Ignatius did not speak of
-the Lord’s day at all, but simply alluded to the Lord’s life.
-
-But what shall we say for those who have been deluded upon this point,
-and have thus been prevented from doing what they felt that duty
-required? There is a terrible responsibility somewhere. For the scholars
-who have abetted this deception, there can be no defense. For the
-unfortunate victims of the fraud, it may be said that their situation
-would be more hopeful had they not brought themselves into the
-difficulty by going upon forbidden ground. Should one be led astray by
-an incorrect translation of the Scriptures, God would undoubtedly pardon
-the mistake; for the person had done the best he could under the
-circumstances, and had sought for light where God had instructed him so
-to do. But to those who, having left the only true source of trustworthy
-knowledge, have allowed any class of persons, ancient or modern, to
-shape their belief differently from what it would have been had they
-relied wholly upon the Bible, we fear that Christ will say—as he did to
-those in like circumstances in his day, who, having followed the
-traditions of their ancestors, were found violating the law of God—“In
-vain do ye worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men.”
-
-Before closing on this point, and in order that the citation may not be
-employed in the interest of no-Sabbath views, let the reader consider,
-for a moment, another feature, and a very important one in this
-argument. Having seen that Ignatius—if he wrote the above—did not
-mention the Lord’s day, it is proper now to inquire whether it is
-certain that he ever penned the language in question, at all? To this it
-may be replied, that it is very far from being so. Nay, it is in the
-highest degree probable, as the following extracts will prove, that the
-venerable man either never wrote a word of those which are cited, or, if
-he did, what he said has been so manipulated that it is very far from
-conveying the impression which he intended. “From Smyrna, he (Ignatius)
-wrote to the churches at Ephesus, Magnesia, Trallia, Rome, and
-Philadelphia, and on his voyage, to Polycarp, and the church at Smyrna.
-These letters are still extant, though the genuineness of the first
-three is doubted by some learned men.” (_Cyc. Relig. Knowl. Art.
-Ignatius._)
-
-The distinguished historian and scholar, Kitto, speaks on this point in
-his Cyclopedia, Art. Lord’s Day, as follows: “We must notice one other
-passage as bearing on the subject of the Lord’s day, though it certainly
-contains no mention of it. It occurs in the epistle of Ignatius to the
-Magnesians (about A. D. 100). The whole passage is evidently obscure,
-and the text may be corrupt.” Originally, there were fifteen letters
-attributed to Ignatius. Centuries ago, however, eight of them were
-rejected as hopelessly spurious. The remaining seven have been also
-denounced as forgeries, by many writers, with John Calvin at their head.
-Others, while holding on to four of the seven, have condemned three, and
-among them the letter to the Magnesians, from which the citation which
-we are considering was taken. A poor stone, this, which purports to come
-from Antioch, for the head-stone of the corner of the temple of
-patristic testimonials to the Sunday.
-
-The way is now prepared for the consideration of the second extract,
-namely, that of Barnabas. Here, again, the confession of the gentleman
-is of service to us, by way of saving labor, since he unequivocally
-admits that the Barnabas who wrote the letter from which he quotes, was
-not the Barnabas of New-Testament fame. It becomes important, however,
-that we should know just who he was who wrote this epistle, before it
-should be received as authority in a grave religious discussion. Few
-persons would have the temerity to commit their spiritual interests to
-the hands of nameless individuals who lived 1700 years ego, unless they
-could feel some assurance that the men in whom they were thus confiding
-were persons whose judgment should have weight in the decision of
-matters of faith.
-
-It is not enough that it should be established, even beyond doubt, that
-the writer in question lived in the second century. For no one will
-insist that _all the men_ who lived at that time were proper exponents
-of the views held by Christians in that period. It is, therefore, but
-reasonable that, before any man is brought forward to testify in so
-important a matter, he should have either a name which will show that he
-was qualified, both morally and intellectually, to act the part of a
-public teacher of the opinions held in his time, or, at least, that what
-he has written must be of a nature to commend his utterances to our
-judgments. Neither of these requisitions, however, is met in the case of
-the Barnabas (if his name was really Barnabas) quoted above.[10]
-
-That his epistle has been employed in a gigantic fraud, no one will
-dispute. It is headed, “The general Epistle of Barnabas.” At its close,
-as given in the apocryphal New Testament, is the subscription,
-“Barnabas, the apostle, and companion of Paul.” Now, if he wrote these
-words himself, the gentleman will admit that he is unworthy of the
-slightest confidence, since he has told a deliberate falsehood. If, on
-the other hand, it be insisted that this was the work of subsequent
-generations, then we must move with extreme caution. In the region where
-this epistle lies, are the unmistakable footprints of men base enough to
-pervert the facts, and to employ its contents for an unworthy purpose.
-
-The only alternative left us, therefore, since the author of the
-document is unknown to history, is that of examining what he has said,
-with reference to its character. Before doing this, however, it will be
-well to state—by way of putting the reader on his guard—that the history
-of this epistle is of a nature to awaken the most serious suspicion. By
-consulting the Am. Cyc., Art. Epistle of Barnabas, he will find it there
-stated that this epistle was lost to the world for eight hundred years,
-namely, from the ninth to the seventeenth century, and that, when it
-came to the surface after its long disappearance, it was found in the
-hands of one Sigismond, a Jesuit of that age. The desperate character of
-the order to which this man belonged, and the recklessness with which
-its members treat documents of the most sacred character, when they can
-thereby serve a favorite purpose, need no comment here.
-
-Prof. Stowe, while arguing favorably to the epistle, in some respects,
-employs the following words, which have in them great significance, in
-view of what has been said above: “We admit that the epistle of Barnabas
-is strongly interpolated.”—_Hist. of Books of the Bible_, p. 423.
-
-It is now time to ponder, for a moment, the words of the nondescript
-writer quoted above. They are as follows: “We celebrate the eighth day
-with joy, on which Jesus rose from the dead.” In them is found not a
-single fact which, granting their authenticity, is at all decisive in
-the matter at issue. For, be it remembered, the controversy is not as to
-whether the ancients were in the habit of holding convocations for any
-purpose whatsoever, on the first day of the week, but, whether they
-called it the Lord’s day. It will, therefore, be admitted that the term,
-Lord’s Day, is not so much as mentioned; whereas, the day which it is
-supposed was entitled to the honor of being thus designated, is termed
-the “eighth day, the one on which Jesus rose from the dead.” Nor is it
-so much as intimated that the day in question was observed as a Sabbath,
-or esteemed as holy. The statement employed is that “they celebrated it
-with joy.” But this could be said with perfect propriety of any day of
-the week on which there regularly occurred a religious festival.
-
-As an illustration of this, it might be mentioned here that a
-historian of the present time, while mentioning the usages of this
-period, could not be charged with inaccuracy should he declare that
-the 25th of December, which is supposed by some to be the day of the
-Lord’s nativity, is regularly celebrated. Should he do so, and should
-coming generations infer therefrom that it is now regarded as holy,
-you will readily perceive the mistake into which they would fall. What
-we want, if we must have recourse to such _miserable material_ as that
-which we are handling over, is something positive and definite. This
-the text undeniably fails to give. We leave it, therefore, as
-worthless; 1st. Because we do not know _who_ wrote it. 2d. Because we
-do not know _when_ it was written. 3d. Because it is found in an
-epistle so corrupted by interpolations that it is not at all reliable
-as authority. 4th. Because it has no direct bearing upon the subject.
-5th. Because its author—by the absurd and ridiculous sentiments to
-which he gave expression—manifestly had a judgment too weak to allow
-us to suppose that, in the providence of God, in which nothing falls
-out by mistake, he should constitute a pillar in any way necessary to
-the establishment of sound religious doctrine.
-
-The third authority brought forward is Justin Martyr. From him we learn
-that, on the day of the sun, the church at Rome were in the habit of
-convening, partaking of the Lord’s supper, listening to preaching,
-engaging in prayer, and in the contribution of alms.
-
-It will be at once perceived that here is the nearest approach yet made
-to the accomplishment of the task which our reviewer assigned himself,
-and for which he has led the reader away from the oracles of God to the
-opinions and practices of men liable to error and mistake. Let it not be
-forgotten that the _prominent_ object to be gained by this departure,
-was the production of patristic authority for the use of the term,
-Lord’s day, in the first three centuries. That this purpose has not been
-accomplished, hitherto, all must admit. The next inquiry, therefore, is,
-should all points of dispute respecting the reliability of what has been
-quoted above, be waived, and should it be granted that Justin Martyr
-said what is attributed to him, Has the desired object been reached? The
-answer is emphatically in the negative. Justin Martyr avoids the
-application of Lord’s day to the day of the sun, as if prevented from
-using it by the same fatality which has withheld all the others from
-doing so, who have thus far been cited.
-
-Here we might pause, and insist that the gentleman has utterly failed,
-in the citation before us, to prove anything which is really relevant to
-the subject. It is in vain that he urges, in extenuation of the fact
-that Justin calls the first day of the week, the “day of the sun,” that
-he is addressing a heathen emperor. He was not afraid to speak to that
-emperor of the Old and New Testaments, of the preaching of the word, of
-the Lord’s supper, and of the resurrection of Christ; and why should he
-thus carefully avoid mention of the Lord’s day? Surely, he did not wish
-to convey the impression that Christians observed the day of the sun
-because of its heathen character, since he gives the reasons for their
-doing so.
-
-But, again, it is claimed that at this period the chosen and peculiar
-appellation which had been given by the Holy Spirit, was that of Lord’s
-day, and that the Lord’s day, or the Sunday, had become the holy Sabbath
-which God commanded. This being true, assuredly we might expect that, in
-the work of Justin entitled, “A Dialogue with Trypho, the Jew,” he would
-set forth, in the use of its peculiar title, the claims of that day
-which had been elevated, by divine command, to the position of the
-ancient Sabbath. But does he do this? The gentleman does not urge it. He
-does say that, in writing to the Jew, he drops the heathen titles of
-Sunday and Saturday, and speaks of the first, and the seventh, day of
-the week. But mark again; it is not urged that he anywhere calls the
-first day the Lord’s day. Once more, therefore, he has failed on this
-branch of the subject.
-
-Now it will be well to regard the matter from the other side of the
-question. It must be conceded, as remarked above, that what Justin
-Martyr says furnishes stronger support for the idea of worship on the
-Sunday than anything else which has been adduced. But here again, we
-protest that the Bible, alone and unexplained, is sufficient for the
-settlement of this point. Others, if they like, may form their religious
-faith upon the practice of uninspired men, handed down to us through the
-perilous transit of the ages, protected and shielded from corruption and
-innovation by no denunciation of divine wrath against those who change
-its phraseology; but we much prefer to stand under the covering ægis of
-these words: “If any man shall add unto these things, God shall add unto
-him the plagues which are written in this book.” (Rev. 22:18.) Nor do we
-think that the gentleman himself would seriously urge that this position
-is unsound. Let us test it. Justin Martyr is assumed to be a fair
-exponent of the religious sentiment of his time. Now, therefore, what he
-believed they believed; and what they believed, we ought to believe, if
-our position, taken above, is not correct. Proceeding a step farther, we
-inquire, what was the faith of Justin Martyr and his contemporaries,
-allowing his writings to be the criterion of judgment? To this it may
-replied:
-
-1st. That they believed in no Sabbath in this dispensation. Proof: “For
-if before Abraham there was no need of circumcision, nor of Sabbaths,
-nor of feasts, nor of offerings before Moses; so now in like manner
-there is no need of them, since Jesus Christ, the Son of God, was, by
-the determinate counsel of God, born of a virgin of the seed of Abraham,
-without sin.” (Dial. of Trypho.) Does the writer believe this? The
-reader well knows that he does not, for he has nobly repudiated it,
-again and again.
-
-2d. They believed that the Sabbath was imposed upon the Jews for their
-sins. Proof: “It was because of your (_i. e._, Jews) iniquities, and the
-iniquities of your fathers, that God appointed you to observe the
-Sabbath.” (_Idem._) But our reviewer holds—as must all who accept the
-words of Christ (Mark 2:27, 28)—that it was given to Adam in the garden
-of Eden, as their representative head, for the benefit of the whole
-race, more than two thousand years before there was a Jew in the world.
-
-3d. They believed that, in the administration of the Lord’s supper,
-water should be employed. Proof: “At the conclusion of this discourse,
-_i. e._, that of the Bishop on Sunday, we all rise up together and pray;
-and prayers being over, there is bread, and wine, and water offered.”
-(First Apol. Tras. by Reeves.) But modern Christendom look upon this as
-an innovation of popery.
-
-4th. They believed that the reasons why Christians should observe the
-first day of the week were found in the facts that God dispelled the
-darkness and chaos on the first day of the week, and that on that day,
-Christ rose from the dead. Proof: Extract given above by the writer in
-his article. But the first of these opinions, modern Christians will not
-admit at all, and the latter furnishes only one-half of the obligation,
-since it ignores all positive law upon the subject.
-
-So we might proceed, but enough has been said to show that Justin
-Martyr, as quoted above, is no criterion for the faith of those who have
-the Bible in their hands, from which they can learn, contrary to his
-views: 1st. That we have a Sabbath. 2d. That it was given to all mankind
-as a blessing, and not to the Jews for their sins. 3d. That both the
-bread and the wine belong to the laity, as well as to the priests. 4th.
-That the reasons for the observance of the Lord’s day do not rest upon
-the circumstance that God dispelled the darkness on the first day, but
-upon an explicit command of Heaven.
-
-If the reader would satisfy himself from other sources that the
-statements of Justin Martyr are to be taken with extreme caution, and
-that his judgment was so easily imposed upon as to render him an unsafe
-guide in the plainest matters of fact, he will read the following
-extract from a publication of the Am. Tract Society: “Justin Martyr
-appears indeed peculiarly unfitted to lay claim to authority. It is
-notorious that he supposed a pillar erected on the island of the Tiber
-to Semo Sanchus, an old Sabine Deity, to be a monument erected by the
-Roman people in honor of the impostor, Simon Magus. Were so gross a
-mistake to be made by a modern writer, in relating a historical fact,
-exposure would immediately take place, and his testimony would
-thenceforward be suspected. And, assuredly, the same measure should be
-meted to Justin Martyr, who so egregiously errs in reference to a fact
-alluded to by Livy, the historian.”—_Spirit of Popery_, pp. 44, 45.
-
-In concluding the remarks which will be offered here—in reference to
-those productions which are attributed to Justin Martyr, and which have
-been brought forward for the purpose of influencing the mind of the
-reader in favor of a cause which has found no support in the
-Scriptures—it is proper to state that their authenticity is by no means
-above suspicion; or, to speak more accurately, that some of them have
-been tampered with, is a matter which is settled beyond dispute. Already
-the reader has seen that by some means they have been made to contribute
-to the interests of the Romish doctrine of the use of water in the
-sacrament, as early as the first part of the second century. If it be
-granted that the statement in question is historically true, then the
-leaven of the papacy had begun to work so manifestly in the lifetime of
-Justin, that the opinions of his associates, as well as of himself,
-ought to have no weight with us who have repudiated the great apostasy.
-
-On the other hand, should it be denied that water was then employed, as
-stated by the venerable father, there remain but two conclusions between
-which the reader can take his choice; either, 1st. Justin did not
-correctly represent the faith of his time; or, 2d. What he did say
-originally has been molded and fashioned by the plastic hand of the man
-of sin, until it is made to support the heresies of the hierarchy. To
-our mind, the latter conclusion is undoubtedly the true one. Below will
-be found an extract from a distinguished historian of the church, which
-proves that what is said above respecting the treatment which the
-writings of Justin Martyr have received is correct: “Like many of the
-ancient fathers, he [Justin] appears to us under the greatest
-disadvantage. Works really his have been lost, and others have been
-ascribed to him, part of which are not his; and the rest, at least, of
-ambiguous authority.”—_Milner’s History of Church_, Book 2, Chap. 3.[11]
-
-The fourth historic mention of the Lord’s day, as brought forward, is in
-the following words of Dionysius. “To-day we kept the Lord’s holy day,
-in which we read your letter.” By turning to Eusebius, the curious
-reader will discover that the citation incidentally given occupies but
-little more space than is required for the words as quoted. Their
-importance in this discussion does not demand for them any more room
-than was assigned them by the historian from whom they are extracted.
-The dispute is not whether there is indeed a Lord’s day, for both
-parties are agreed respecting this question. What we wish to ascertain
-is, Which day of the week is entitled to this appellation? The reference
-before us in no way helps in the settlement of this point. It simply
-states that the letter was read on the Lord’s day. Whether that was the
-first or the seventh in the cycle of the week is not stated, so we pass
-the language as unworthy of further consideration.
-
-The allusion to the fifth authority is even more unsatisfactory than
-that of the fourth. It seems that Melito, bishop of Sardis, had written
-a discourse on the Lord’s day, which had been seen by Eusebius. As to
-its contents, the letter says not one word, neither shall we; for, as it
-is not now in existence, it is impossible that any person should be able
-to decide which view it would favor, provided it were in being.
-
-The sixth proof is brought from the writings of Pliny. It is couched in
-these words: “They [the Christians] affirmed that the sum of their
-fault, or error, was, that they were accustomed to assemble on a stated
-day, before it was light, and sing praise alternately among themselves,
-to Christ, as God.” Without debating the propriety of bringing forward a
-heathen writer to prove the practice of a Christian church, we proceed
-to examine the testimony itself. Its utter inability to fill the place
-assigned to it will be discerned by every intelligent person who
-examines its phraseology. In it is the declaration that Christians were
-in the habit of assembling on a stated day, at which time they sang
-praises alternately among themselves, to Christ, as God.
-
-Now that the statement of the facts is not incompatible with the idea
-that they were observers of the seventh day, all must admit. For surely,
-there is no incongruity in the notion that it would be in the highest
-degree proper for the observers of the ancient Sabbath of the Lord to
-devote its sacred hours to the delightful task of singing hymns of
-praise, and worshiping Christ, as God. That the language itself as
-completely harmonizes with this view, as with any other, will be felt
-when we remember that the writer does not say that they assembled on the
-first day of the week, or the Lord’s day, at all; but, simply, that it
-was on a stated day that they gathered themselves together for the
-purposes of worship. A stated day is one which recurs at fixed
-intervals. The Sabbath might have been the stated day; or, so far as
-anything to the contrary in the passage is concerned, the Sunday might
-have been the one. Pliny does not decide the point for us. His
-declarations, therefore, have not the slightest force in proving
-anything favorable to the opinions of the gentleman.
-
-Furthermore, if inference is to be taken at all, the preponderance would
-rather be in favor of the last day of the week, since, in devoting it to
-the worship of Christ, they would not only bring upon themselves the
-wrath of the heathen, because of their acknowledgment of our Lord’s
-divinity; but, also, in the sum of their fault would be found the fact,
-that they ignored the sacredness of the day of the sun, and celebrated
-another, as holy, by divine command.
-
-Thus much for the uninspired witnesses, brought forward from the first,
-and the early part of the second, century of the Christian era. Had they
-flatly contradicted what we have seen the teachings of the Bible to be,
-they would not have moved us one hair; for we remember that the great
-apostle has said, that, though “an angel from Heaven preach any other
-gospel unto you, let him be accursed.” But, strangely enough, their
-testimony is utterly worthless for the purpose for which it has been
-introduced. Not one of them has styled the Sunday the Lord’s day; not
-one of them has called it the Sabbath; not one of them has stated that
-it was regarded as holy, or that its hours might not, without sin, be
-devoted to secular pursuits. Here, then, we leave them, and wait for a
-fresh inundation of such as will answer the purpose for which they are
-called in a more satisfactory manner than the foregoing.
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- Did it not appear to be indispensable to the enlightening of the
- reader, as to the consummate folly of the author of the epistle of
- Barnabas, we should not append, as we do, his language in the
- following note, since it is hardly worthy of a place in a chaste and
- dignified discussion. For its citation we hold those, responsible who
- have made this action necessary, and who value the testimony of a man
- so utterly devoid of common-sense: “Neither shalt thou eat of the
- hyena; that is, again, be not an adulterer; nor a corrupter of others;
- neither be like to such. And wherefore so? Because that creature every
- year changes its kind, and is sometimes male and sometimes female.”
- Chap. 9:8.
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- Since, writing the above, the following interesting item in the
- _Christian Union_, for Feb. 19, has been brought to my notice, and
- will serve to show that continued investigation on the part of
- scholars is rendering the authenticity of the writings of Justin
- Martyr more and more doubtful:—“Dr. Franz Overbeck has lately
- examined, with great care, the ‘epistle to Diognetus,’ which has been
- regarded as one of the most precious relics of the age succeeding that
- of the apostles. He urges several reasons for coming to the conclusion
- that the work was written later than the era of Constantine, and was
- intended by its author to pass as a work Justin Martyr’s. Critics had
- already proved it no genuine work of Justin, and if Dr. Overbeck is
- right, it can no longer be assigned to the age of Justin.”
-
-
-
-
- STATESMAN’S REPLY.
- ARTICLE EIGHT.
- PATRISTIC TESTIMONY TO THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.
-
-
-The testimony already adduced from the early fathers in our last issue
-will be regarded by most of our readers as sufficient in itself. But for
-the sake of giving a complete view of the patristic testimony to the
-first-day Sabbath up to the close of the third century, we shall occupy
-some additional space with extracts, on the accuracy of which our
-readers may confidently rely.
-
-First among the witnesses now cited is Irenæus, bishop or presbyter of
-Lyons, A. D. 178. Let it be remembered that in the case of this witness
-we have the testimony of one who was brought up at the feet of Polycarp,
-the disciple and companion of the Apostle John. The first point to be
-noted in the testimony of Irenæus is the abrogation of the seventh-day
-Sabbath. As the rite of circumcision was no longer required, so the
-observance of the seventh-day Sabbath had ceased. Each was a sign or
-shadow of the substance to come. This thought is dwelt upon at great
-length. (See _Contra Hæreses_, book iv. ch. 30, Grabe’s Edition, Oxford,
-1702, pp. 318, 319; also Benedictine Edit., Paris, 1710, p. 246.)
-
-Lest his statements might be understood to be opposed to the authority
-of the ten commandments, Irenæus adds the following sentences: “The Lord
-spoke the words of the decalogue in like manner to all. They remain,
-therefore, permanently with us, receiving, through the Lord’s advent in
-the flesh, extension and increase, not abrogation.” (Book iv. ch. 31, p.
-320.) Thus the law of the Sabbath remains, though not binding to the
-observance of the seventh day.
-
-We now come to this writer’s clear and distinct testimony, in its more
-positive aspect, to the Lord’s day. Irenæus took a prominent part in
-what has been called the Quarta-Deciman controversy. The question at
-issue was—Should the anniversary of the Lord’s resurrection be in
-connection with the Jewish passover, on whatever day of the week that
-might occur, or on the Lord’s day invariably? This question first arose
-on a visit of Polycarp, bishop or presbyter of Smyrna, to Aniest, bishop
-of Rome, about 160, and was discussed for many years. Irenæus, acting as
-the representative of the Christians in Gaul, wrote to Victor, then
-bishop of Rome, in these terms: “The mystery of the Lord’s resurrection
-should be celebrated only on the Lord’s day.” (_Euseb. Hist. Eccles._
-book v. chap. 23, 24; Paris ed., 1678, pp. 155, 156.) It will be
-remarked here that while there was diversity of view in regard to the
-_yearly_ celebration of the Lord’s resurrection—a celebration of which
-we have no account whatever until the year 160, there was no question
-concerning the sacred observance of the first day as the _weekly_
-commemoration of the Lord’s rising from the dead.
-
-“We simply add a reference to one of the best known of the fragments of
-Irenæus in which there is further explicit testimony to the Lord’s
-day—testimony all the more important, because it occurs incidentally in
-a treatise concerning the passover, and in connection with a statement
-in regard to Pentecost.” (_Fragmentum lib. de Pascha_, Bened. ed.,
-Paris, 1742, p. 490.[12])
-
-For the sake of presenting a complete view of the testimony of the
-fathers for the first three centuries, we had thought of quoting from
-Clement of Alexandria, A. D. 194; Minucius Felix, 210; Commodian, about
-270; Victorinus, 290; and Peter, bishop of Alexandria, 300. But as the
-testimony will be perfectly conclusive without these witnessess, and as
-space is valuable, we shall cite only three more authorities—three
-well-known fathers, Tertullian, Origen, and Cyprian.
-
-At the close of the second century, Carthage, the metropolis of Northern
-Africa, was the center of numerous flourishing Christian congregations.
-Living in Carthage for many years, Tertullian knew well the practice of
-the African churches. And although he became, about 202, one of the
-errorists known as Montanists, his testimony, however unreliable as to
-doctrines, is still indisputable as to facts. From the frequent
-references to the Lord’s day in this author we select the following: “By
-us, to whom the [Jewish] Sabbaths are strange, and the new moons and
-festivals once pleasing to God, the Saturnalia, January, and mid-winter
-feasts, and Matronalia [of the heathen] are frequented. O better
-fidelity of the heathen to their own religion! They would not share with
-us the Lord’s day, nor Pentecost, even if they knew them, for they would
-fear lest they should seem to be Christians.” (_De Idolatria_, cap. xiv,
-Semler’s edit., Halæ Magdeburg, vol. iv., pp., 167, 168.) The testimony
-of this passage is decisive in three points: (1.) The Jewish, or
-seventh-day, Sabbath was not observed by Christians. (2.) They were
-enjoined not to observe heathen festivals. (3.) To the Lord’s day, as
-the proper day for Christian service, belonged the honor to which Jewish
-and heathen days had no claim.
-
-The exercises of the Lord’s day, when Christians assembled for public
-service, are described by Tertullian in a manner very similar to that of
-Justin Martyr, whose account has already been quoted. Prayer, reading
-the Scriptures, exhortation, and collections for benevolent purposes are
-all mentioned. (_Apol._, cap. xxxix, vol. v., pp. 92-94.) It is to be
-noted that Tertullian, like Justin Martyr, in addressing the heathen,
-calls the first day of the week “the day of the Sun,” as he also
-designates the Jewish Sabbath by its heathen name. (See _Apol._, cap.
-xvi.)
-
-We close these citations from Tertullian, with one which is of the
-greatest importance in proving that the early Christians observed the
-first day of the week, not as a mere holiday, but as a day of rest and
-worship—a holy Sabbath to the Lord. “On the Lord’s day, the day of the
-Resurrection, we should not only abstain from that,[13] [bending the
-knee,] but also from all anxiety of feeling, and from employments,
-setting aside all business, lest we should give place to the devil.”
-(_De Oratione_, cap. xxiii., vol. iv., p. 22.)
-
-Contemporary with Tertullian at the beginning of the third century was
-Origen of Alexandria, one of the most scholarly and learned of all the
-early fathers. This writer contrasts the Lord’s day with the Jewish
-Sabbath, and shows the superiority of the former. We may not agree with
-him when he maintains that the superiority was indicated by the giving
-of manna to the Israelites on the first day of the week, while it was
-withheld on the seventh. His testimony to the fact of the sacred
-observance of the Lord’s day instead of the seventh-day Sabbath is
-valid, though his reasons for the admitted superiority may not all be
-satisfactory. In the same connection he remarks: “On our Lord’s day the
-Lord always rains manna from heaven.” (_Comment on Exodus_, Delarue’s
-ed. of Works of Origen, Paris, 1733, vol. ii., p. 154.) In another of
-his works he contends that it is one of the evidences of a true
-Christian “always to keep the Lord’s day.” (_Contra Celsum_ lib. viii,
-vol. i., pp. 758, 759.)
-
-The most important passage in the writings of Origen is found in his
-Homilies on the Book of Numbers. Here we first meet with the name
-“Christian Sabbath” for the first day of the week, or the Lord’s day:
-“Leaving, then, the Jewish observance of the Sabbath, let us see what
-the observance of the Sabbath by the Christian ought to be. On the
-Sabbath should be performed no worldly acts. If, therefore, you desist
-from all secular works, and do nothing of a worldly nature, but occupy
-yourselves with spiritual duties, assembling at the church, listening to
-the sacred readings mad instructions, thinking of celestial things,
-concerned for the hopes of another life, keeping before your eyes the
-Judgment to come, and looking not at the things which are present and
-visible, but at those which are invisible and future—this is the
-observance of the Christian Sabbath.” (_Hom. xxiii in Numeros_, vol.
-ii., p. 358.)
-
-Cyprian, bishop of Carthage, about the third century, gives this
-explicit testimony to the Lord’s day: “Since in the Jewish circumcision
-of the flesh the eighth day was celebrated, the ordinance was
-foreshadowed in the future, but completed in truth at the coming of
-Christ. For inasmuch as the eighth day, that is, the first day after the
-Sabbath, was the day on which the Lord rose and gave us life and
-spiritual circumcision, this eighth day, that is the first after the
-Sabbath and the Lord’s day, preceded in an image, which image ceased
-when the truth afterwards came, and spiritual circumcision was given to
-us.” (_Epistle_ lxiv., Works of Cyprian, Bremæ, 1690, vol. ii., p. 161)
-The weight of this testimony is not a little augmented by the fact that
-the epistle, in which it is found is a synodical epistle, which was sent
-forth in the name and with the authority of the Third Council of
-Carthage, A. D. 253. The epistle bears this inscription at its head:
-“Cyprianus et ceteri Collegæ qui in concilio affuerant numero LXIV. Fido
-patri Salutem.”
-
-With this authoritative statement of Cyprian and his sixty-six
-colleagues, or co-presbyters, we close our citations from the fathers.
-The testimony of succeeding writers is equally clear, but it simply
-confirms what has already been fully proved. And now, with the facts of
-history in view, as we have learned them from inspired writers and their
-immediate successors, it remains for us to examine opposing theories of
-the institution of the Sabbath. We shall endeavor to dispose of this
-concluding, and perhaps most interesting part of our subject, in two or
-three articles.
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- The culpable carelessness of Dwight, Wilson, and other authors, in
- citing from the early fathers, is nowhere more noticeable than in the
- case of Irenæus. These writers quote him as saying: “On the Lord’s
- day, every one of us Christians, keeps the Sabbath, meditating on the
- law, and rejoicing in the works of God.” There is no reference given
- to the writings of Irenæus. And for good reason. After a most careful
- examination, we are persuaded no such passage is to be found in his
- writings. The mistake was probably first made by President Dwight,
- whose weakness of sight compelled him to depend upon an amanuensis.
- “For twenty years of his presidency,” we are informed by his
- biographer, “he was rarely able to read as much as a single chapter in
- the Bible in the twenty-four hours.” (_Dwight’s Theology_, London,
- 1821, vol. i. pp. 91, 95.) Others followed this high authority.
-
- In order to guard our readers against injuring the cause they would
- advance, we must mention another important instance of considerable
- negligence. In a number of works on the Sabbath, Dr. Justin Edwards’
- “Sabbath Manual,” for example, we find not only the blunders already
- noticed, but another quite as bad. The language—“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,” is ascribed to Theophilus, bishop of Antioch, about A. D.
- 162. The words quoted are in reality those of another Theophilus, who
- was bishop of Alexandria, at the close of the fourth century. We hand
- over these criticisms upon advocates of the first-day Sabbath to our
- seventh-day Sabbatarian friends, trusting to their honor and fairness
- not to separate them from the rest of this discussion. For our own
- part, whether it may be pleasant to the advocates of the seventh-day
- Sabbath, we desire to have for ourselves, and to aid others to have,
- the whole truth. It was in this spirit that we gave room in our
- columns for a full presentation of the arguments on the other side of
- this question.
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- As a matter of independent interest and importance, we would ask all
- who are interested in the question of the posture in prayer of
- worshipers in the early church, to compare with Tertullian’s
- statement, that of Peter, bishop of Alexandria, A. D. 300, who says:
- “We keep the Lord’s day as a day of joy, because of Him who rose on
- that day, on which we have learned not to bow the knee.” (_Bibl.
- Patrum, apud Gallard_, vol. iv., p. 107.) To the same effect is the
- decision of the Council of Nice, A. D. 325, requiring, as there were
- certain ones who bent the knee on the Lord’s day, that it should be
- the uniform practice to give thanks to God, standing. (_Canon_, xx.)
-
-
-
-
- A REJOINDER.
- “PATRISTIC EVIDENCE TO THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.”
-
-
-In the rejoinder to the previous article on patristic testimony, the
-attention of the reader was called to the fact that our opponent had
-utterly failed to find a single instance in which the first day of the
-week was called the Lord’s day, by the authorities which he cited, or in
-which it was stated by them that it was observed by divine command. Had
-we possessed the space necessary for the purpose, the significance of
-this failure would have been enlarged upon; for it must be borne in mind
-that in the one hundred and thirty-nine years which intervened between
-the death of Christ and the writing of the latest citation produced in
-his seventh article, lies the most important, and the most promising,
-field for such testimonials as would be of the highest value to the
-opposition. This is so, not only from the fact that the period in
-question was the one in which it is alleged that the transition from the
-old to the new Sabbath occurred; but, also, because it was one, which,
-from their premises, was the most likely to yield reliable evidence in
-regard to apostolic faith, since it lay the nearest to apostolic times.
-It is true that even then apostasy had begun its career; for Paul states
-that, in his time, “the mystery of iniquity had begun to work.”
-
-But all will agree that the farther we come this side of the
-fountain-head, the more natural it would be to find that the pure waters
-of the original stream should become steadily darker and more turbid,
-until they lost themselves in the sloughs of those corrupt teachings,
-which were so far to excel all others, that they were thought to be of a
-nature to demand especial attention in the prophecies. But here we are,
-as already remarked, seventy-five to eighty years this side of the
-cross, and the case of our reviewer in no-wise helped by his effort. In
-fact, not only has he failed to place his Sabbath upon the foundation of
-the successors of the apostles, but he has also greatly weakened his
-probabilities for the future, since in the territory over which we have
-passed, we have seen not only the utter unreliability of the fathers
-themselves, as teachers, but, also, that their sayings have been
-tampered with by the “man of sin,” who, reaching backward as well as
-forward, is reckless in his efforts to make everything contribute to the
-power and authority of the hierarchy.
-
-But we must proceed in the examination of those individuals who are now
-introduced as additional witnesses for the Christian Sabbath. The first
-in order is Irenæus, Bishop of Lyons, A. D. 178. It will not be
-necessary to consider the language of the gentleman, in which he states
-that Irenæus taught the abrogation of the seventh-day Sabbath, since we
-have not quoted that father in the defense of an institution which _God
-has commanded_. Nor shall we enlarge upon the fact that Irenæus
-inculcates the binding obligation of the ten commandments, since it is
-enough for us to know that this doctrine is plainly set forth in the
-Bible.
-
-The witness is the gentleman’s. He has brought him forward to prove
-that, in his time, the year of our Lord 178, the term, Lord’s day, was
-applied to the Sunday. Has he succeeded, at last, in the achievement of
-his purpose? If so, it is the first instance in which he has
-accomplished the desired object. Apparently, he has triumphed here. But
-let us proceed with caution. Has he produced the writings of Irenæus
-himself? No, he has not. The words quoted are these: “The mystery of the
-Lord’s resurrection should be celebrated only on the Lord’s day.” By
-turning to the Hist. of Eusebius, book v., chap. 23, the reader will
-find that the language employed does not purport to be that of Irenæus,
-as penned by himself, but that of Eusebius, who is giving an account of
-a decree passed by certain bishops, which decree was in harmony with a
-letter from Irenæus. We quote enough in the 23d chapter to verify our
-statement:—
-
-“Hence there were synods and convocations of the bishops, on this
-question; and all unanimously drew up an ecclesiastical decree, which
-they communicated to all the churches, in all places, 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. There is an epistle extant, even now, of those who
-were assembled at the time.... There is an epistle extant, on the same
-question, bearing the name of Victor. An epistle, also, of the bishops
-of Pontus, among whom Palmas, as the most ancient, presided; also of the
-churches of Gaul, over whom Irenæus presided, ... and epistles from many
-others, who, advancing one and the same doctrine, also passed the same
-vote, and this their unanimous determination was the one already
-mentioned.”
-
-It will be observed here that the historian does not quote the language
-of the decree as being the exact language of the bishops; also that he
-does not pretend to give the precise words of Irenæus, but that he
-simply recounts the fact that the epistle of Irenæus was in harmony with
-the decree which he had previously given. This it was legitimate for a
-historian to do. Eusebius died one hundred and fifty years after
-Irenæus, and in his time, we frankly admit that the term, Lord’s day,
-was frequently applied to the first day of the week. The historian,
-therefore, using the nomenclature of his own period, represents the
-bishop of Lyons as favoring the celebration of the Passover on the
-Lord’s day, simply because he had said it ought to be observed on the
-first day of the week. If we are right in this, then, of course, our
-opponents will throw up the whole passage as irrelevant to their present
-purpose—since they have not assumed to employ Eusebius, who lived in the
-fourth century, as a witness—but have cited his statement because it was
-supposed to contain the declaration of Irenæus, who lived at a much
-earlier period.
-
-For the purpose of clinching the argument, and showing that the historic
-fact is in harmony with what we have said, we quote the following on the
-point from Eld. J. N. Andrews, in which it will be seen that in the
-original, the term, first day of the week, and not the Lord’s day, as
-supposed, might have been employed:—
-
-“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; 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.”
-
-That which has been said above in reference to the testimony found in
-book v., chap. 23, of Eusebius, will largely apply, in principle, to the
-citation found in chap. 24, of the same book. In the latter, as in the
-former, case, the historian is not giving the exact utterance of
-Irenæus, but simply declares, in substance, his decision in regard to
-the proper time for the celebration of the passover festival.
-
-Before passing from Irenæus to the consideration of another case of the
-fathers, it would be proper to commend the candor of our opponent, as
-manifested in his hearty condemnation of the looseness of Dwight and
-others in their statements of historic facts. In making the concession
-which the gentleman has, he will doubtless bring upon himself the
-condemnation of those who exalt success above truth. He has taken from
-such one of their most potent weapons. The language of Irenæus, which is
-here admitted to be of spurious origin, has figured largely in the
-discussion of this question, in the past. It was pointed and decisive,
-and seemed to furnish just the material necessary to the satisfactory
-making out of a case, otherwise sadly deficient in the proofs which it
-needed. It will, therefore, be yielded up with reluctance. Nevertheless,
-we hope that the acknowledgment, made by our opponent in this article,
-will lead clergymen, for the future, to desist from the use of it, until
-they are able to refute what the writer in the _Statesman_ here asserts.
-
-In the meanwhile, the reader must not allow himself to suppose that the
-gentleman, by saying what he has, has really brought Sabbatarians under
-obligation to hint for new light, since what he here asserts is but a
-fact with which they have been familiar for years, and which they have
-iterated and re-iterated until they have almost despaired of bringing
-their opponents to an acknowledgment of the real state of things.
-Occasionally, others outside of their ranks have, as does the gentleman,
-borne testimony to the accuracy of their statements. If the reader would
-have an illustration of this, taken from the writings of an
-anti-Sabbatarian author, he will find it in the works of Domville, in
-which, substantially, the same conclusions are reached, Mr. Domville not
-only tracing the mistake to Dr. Dwight, but also allowing that the
-language cited was probably taken from the interpolated epistle of
-Ignatius to the Magnesians.
-
-Up to this point, we have carefully examined, one by one, the historic
-quotations from ancient writers, which have been presented for our
-consideration; henceforth, we shall pursue a different course. As we
-have now reached, in the person of Tertullian, the close of the second,
-and the opening of the third, century of the Christian era, we find
-ourselves in a period when it is so generally acknowledged that the work
-of apostasy was so manifest that the utterances of the men of those
-times—even though they were pointed and explicit in regard to the
-sanctity of the first day of the week, as looked upon by
-themselves—could furnish no reliable standard of Christian faith in our
-day.
-
-The gentleman himself is compelled to admit that his own witness,
-Tertullian, became, in the second year of the third century, an ardent
-advocate of the errors, follies, and heresies, of Montanus. Not only so,
-but the writings of that father are proverbial, among scholars, for the
-fanciful conceits and the false notions which are so conspicuous upon
-their pages. Tertullian was a fiery zealot and a bitter partisan,
-manifestly credulous beyond bounds, and more earnest for his sect than
-anxious for the reliability of the sources of his information. Zell, in
-his popular Encyclopedia, speaks of him as follows:—
-
-“After he was past middle age, he embraced the doctrines of Montanus, to
-which his ardent, sensuous imagination, and ascetic tendencies would
-incline him. He is said to have been determined to that course by the
-ill-treatment he received from the Roman clergy. Whether he remained a
-Montanist till his death, cannot be decided.... They [his works] are
-characterized by vast learning, profound and comprehensive thought,
-fiery imagination, and passionate partisanship, leading into
-exaggeration and sophistry. His style is frequently obscure.”
-
-Montanus was a false prophet of the second century, who believed himself
-to have received, from the Holy Ghost, revelations which were withheld
-from the apostles; he denied the doctrine of the trinity, the propriety
-of second marriage, and the forgiveness of certain sins. The disciple of
-such a man is surely a strange witness to be found in the employ of
-orthodoxy. Should his appearance, however, be excused, as it is above,
-by the statement that he was introduced, not because of the reliability
-of his own opinion, but simply to testify of the usage of his own times;
-it may be replied, first, that an ardent partisan, a person of strong
-imagination, and a notorious heretic, is hardly qualified to speak
-reliably, even in a matter of this nature, since, from the very
-constitution of his mind, he would almost of necessity allow what he
-said to be warped by prejudice, or biased by conceptions of interest;
-secondly, that in the quotation presented from his pen, it is not a
-little remarkable that, instead of asserting a general usage of
-Sunday-keeping, he is manifestly finding fault with a large class of his
-fellow-Christians for not regarding the day in the same light, and
-observing it with the same rigor, that he did; thirdly, that it is by no
-means impossible that the very men, whom in his fiery zeal he thus
-upbraids, were, after all, sounder than himself in the faith, and would,
-could they be fairly heard upon this subject, vindicate their supposed
-desecration of the first day, from the same grounds as do the
-Sabbatarians now, _i. e._, because they did not look upon it as holy
-time.
-
-If the above responses are not satisfactory, and if it be insisted that
-the testimony of the witness shall, after all, he received, then we
-propose that he be called to the stand once more, and be allowed to fill
-up the measure of what he has to say upon this subject. We have seen
-that, according to his opinion, many of his fellow-disciples were lax in
-their Sunday-keeping habits, and that to one who believed that no labor
-should be performed upon it, whatever, they treated it very much as men
-would treat a mere festival occasion. But where did Tertullian and his
-sympathizers obtain their notions of the manner in which Sunday should
-be kept? Was it from the Scriptures? We shall see; here is the witness;
-let him speak for himself:
-
-“As often as the anniversary comes around, 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 Whitsunday. We feel pained should any wine or bread, 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 leaving positive Scripture injunctions, 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 reader will at once observe that tradition is the foundation which
-is here laid for that kind of Sunday observance for which Tertullian was
-so great a stickler. Not only so, but the fact is brought to light,
-also, that the men whom he represented were in the habit of offering
-prayers for the dead; of signing themselves with the sign of the cross;
-and going through other ceremonies, which to us, at the present time,
-are not only ridiculous in the extreme, but bear upon their face the
-impress of the man of sin so unmistakably that none will be deceived.
-
-If Tertullian was indeed a fair specimen of the Christian men of his
-time; if his writings have not been tampered with; and if the opinions
-of the men of his day, as expressed by himself, should have weight with
-us in the decision of religious questions, where shall we stop in our
-acceptance of their creeds? If, because they believed with him in the
-change of the Sabbath from the seventh to the first day of the week,
-this fact should have weight with us in bringing us to the same
-conclusion, independently of Scripture proof, then how can we stop short
-of their faith in other particulars? such as the acceptance of tradition
-in doctrinal matters, prayers for the dead, the sign of the cross, etc.,
-etc. In fact, how can we avoid becoming papists ourselves, in the
-largest sense of the term, since, having gone as far as we have for the
-purpose of making out Sunday sanctity, we have surrendered nearly all
-the distinctive principles of Protestantism?
-
-Of course each individual is at liberty to use his own discretion as to
-the measure of confidence which he will give to the writings before us;
-so far as we are concerned, personally, we would not attach to them the
-slightest weight in the decision of a grave religious question. From the
-very nature of that which has been already cited, it is manifestly a
-serious slander upon the true church of the second, and the first part
-of the third century, to hold them responsible for the fanciful conceits
-and destructive errors of this reputed defender of the faith.
-
-Certain it is, that if Tertullian is correctly reported, his writings
-are not a safe criterion of the sentiments of the Christians of his age
-in very many points, and it may be fairly concluded, that among them is
-that concerning the Sabbath, since what he has said of it finds no
-warrant in the open Bible, which the men of this day hold in their
-hands. Not only is what he has written absurd and dangerous in the
-extreme, but his productions are characterized by the most glaring
-contradictions. Another has said of him: “It would be wiser for
-Christianity, retreating upon its genuine records in the New Testament,
-to disclaim this fierce African, than identify itself with his furious,
-invectives, by unsatisfactory apologies for their unchristian
-fanaticisms.” (Milman, in note on Gibbon’s Dec. and Fall of the Rom.
-Emp., chap. xv.)
-
-We leave him, therefore, with his follies and foibles, his errors and
-faults, his assertions and contradictions, with those who have a taste
-for this kind of literature.
-
-With the case of Origen it will not be necessary that much time should
-be consumed. Mr. Mosheim has well remarked of him, that had “the justice
-of his judgment been equal to the immensity of his genius, the fervor of
-his piety, his indefatigable patience, his extensive erudition, and his
-other eminent and superior talents, all encomium must have fallen short
-of his merits.” Unfortunately, however, with an erudition which was
-truly remarkable, he united a credulity almost without parallel. So
-numerous and so grave were the errors of his personal faith, that his
-individual opinions, unsupported by facts and arguments, are utterly
-worthless in the decision of any theological proposition. Having adopted
-the mystical system of interpreting the Scriptures, he reached
-conclusions utterly unsound and preposterous in many cases.
-
-That this is so, the orthodox reader will at once perceive, when we
-state, first, that he was a believer in the pre-existence of the human
-soul, and that souls were condemned to animate mortal bodies, because of
-sins committed in a pre-existent state; secondly, that he was a
-Restorationist, and believed in the final universal salvation of all
-men, after enduring long periods of punishment. Nor does the advocacy of
-such sentiments furnish the only difficulty in the way of his testimony,
-as drawn from his writings now extant. There would indeed be some
-satisfaction derived from the study of these documents, fanciful though
-they might appear to be in many respects, if we could only feel assured
-that they represented correctly the sentiments of the alleged author.
-
-Unhappily, this is not the case. Those who admire Origen most, while
-attributing much in what he is said to have written, to that weakness of
-discrimination which is everywhere so manifest in his productions, are
-compelled to go beyond this, in order to explain many of the grosser
-views therein contained, by admitting that they were not his own, but
-that they are the result of fraud and interpolation.
-
-On this point, another, with great candor and friendly charity, when
-speaking of the sect known as Origenists, after first stating that “he
-was a man of great talents, and a most indefatigable student, but having
-a strong attachment to the Platonic philosophy, and a natural turn to
-mystical and allegorical interpretations, which led him to corrupt
-greatly the simplicity of the gospel, declares that these circumstances
-render it very difficult to ascertain exactly what his real sentiments
-were.” He says, also, “1. Being a man of unquestionable talents and high
-character, his genuine works were interpolated, and others written under
-his name, in order to _forge_ his sanction to sentiments of which,
-possibly, he never heard.... 3. Origen had many enemies, who probably
-attributed to him many things which he did not believe, in order, either
-to injure his fame, or bring his character under censure.”—_Encyc. of
-Rel. Knowl._, Art. Origenists.
-
-Having said thus much in reference to the testimony before us, it would
-be possible to take up the writings of this distinguished father, and
-show from them that there is room for a difference of opinion as to
-whether he believed that the so-called Christian Sabbath was indeed to
-be regarded as of twenty-four hours’ duration, merely, or whether it
-covered alike all days of the week, and the whole of our dispensation.
-This, however, would be a tedious and unprofitable expenditure of time
-and labor. We leave the whole question, therefore, respecting the
-teaching of the works of Origen, as one of no significance in this
-controversy; first, because if we know anything about what he did
-believe, he was wholly unreliable, either as a teacher of sound
-doctrine, or as a representative of the better men of his own time; and,
-secondly, because what he has written has been so corrupted, that we
-have no guarantee that it truthfully expresses what he believed.
-
-As we presume the majority of our readers are not particularly
-interested in reference to which posture was assumed in prayer on the
-first day of the week, by the early church, and as Peter of Alexandria
-and the Council of Nice are quoted solely in reference to “this
-independent question,” we shall not discuss the note in which reference
-is made to them. There remains, therefore, only the case of Cyprian,
-bishop of Carthage, to occupy us longer. What this author says was
-written about A. D. 253. It will be observed, that in what is declared
-by him and the Council, the first day of the week is called the Lord’s
-day; beyond this, his testimony is of no value. It is neither stated
-that the title was applied by divine authority, nor is it affirmed that
-this day had superseded in Sabbatic honor the ancient Sabbath of the
-Lord.
-
-There is, however, in reference to circumcision as something which
-prefigured the Lord’s day, or eighth day, enough of mysticism to furnish
-us with a clue to the character of the men whose intellectual
-perceptions were so fine that they could discover in an institution
-which was administered on the eighth day after the birth of the male
-child, on whatever day of the week that eighth day might fall, a
-prefiguring of the distinction which was to be bestowed on the definite
-first day of the week, which had in it, not eight, but only seven, days,
-in all. Mr. Mosheim, in alluding to a period in close proximity to that
-in which Cyprian lived, mentions it as one in “which the greater part of
-the Christian doctors had been engaged in adopting those vain fictions
-of Platonic philosophy and popular opinions, which, after the time of
-Constantine, were confirmed, enlarged, and embellished in various ways,”
-and from which he declares “arose that extravagant veneration for
-departed saints, and those absurd notions of a certain fire destined to
-purify separate souls, that then prevailed, and of which the public
-marks were everywhere to be seen.”—_Eccles. Hist._, Fourth Century, part
-ii., chap. iii.
-
-It is now time to take a retrospective view of the territory over which
-we have been passing. Be it remembered that the reader was lured from
-the contemplation of the Scriptures, with this precious promise, that
-outside of them were to be found the most convincing proofs that the
-Lord’s day was and had been the proper title of the first day of the
-week since the resurrection of Christ; but what have we seen?
-Manifestly, not that which we had anticipated:
-
-First, we have discovered that Ignatius, the first witness introduced,
-does not mention the Lord’s day at all, but simply speaks of the Lord’s
-life.
-
-Secondly, that the epistle of Barnabas was a forgery, made up of the
-most absurd and ridiculous fancies, and written by an unknown character
-somewhere, perhaps in the second or third century, though purporting to
-be the work of the companion of Paul.
-
-Thirdly, that it is becoming more and more a matter of doubt whether
-that which is attributed to Justin Martyr was ever seen by him, and that
-he not only does not call the Sunday the Lord’s day, but also inculcates
-in what he says, the Romish heresy respecting the use of water in
-sacrament, &c., &c.
-
-Fourthly, that Dionysius, bishop of Corinth, and Melito, bishop of
-Sardis, while indeed they do speak of the Lord’s day, do not furnish any
-clue by which we can determine which day they regarded as such.
-
-Fifthly, that Pliny, a heathen writer, employs neither the term Lord’s
-day nor Sabbath, but simply speaks of a stated day, without
-identification.
-
-Sixthly, that Irenæus is not properly represented as speaking of the
-Sunday in the use of the title Lord’s day, since that expression, in
-both the instances alluded to, was the language of Eusebius, who lived
-in the fourth century, and not of Irenæus, who lived in the second.
-
-Seventhly, that Tertullian, who lived at the close of the second and the
-commencement of the third century, and who was a wild fanatic of the
-Montanist school, utterly unworthy to represent the sentiments of his
-times, is the first witness from whom the gentleman has succeeded in
-obtaining an unequivocal application of the term, Lord’s day, to the
-first day of the week; also, that he had connected with it, prayers for
-the dead, the sign of the cross, &c., &c.
-
-Eighthly, that Origen was a man of great learning; that it was
-questionable whether he believed in a septenary Sabbath, or in one that
-covered the whole dispensation; and that, in fact, it is admitted by his
-friends that his works have become so corrupt as to be utterly
-untrustworthy in the matter of deciding respecting his real opinions.
-
-Ninthly, that Cyprian and his colleagues addressed us from a point of
-time too far removed from the period of the alleged change of Sabbaths,
-and too fully within that of the great apostasy, to be of service in an
-exegesis of the Scriptures.
-
-Tenthly, that three of the most pointed and satisfactory of the
-testimonies heretofore employed by first-day writers, are now abandoned
-as having been the result of mistake in translation, or in the matter of
-attributing them to the proper persons. Summing, up, therefore, in a
-word we inquire again, What has been gained by this departure? We
-believe that all must see that it has been an entire failure; for, so
-far as the Sabbath is concerned, we think the reader will hesitate long
-before he will leave the Scriptures, in the matter of deciding upon its
-obligation, in order to build the structure of his faith from such
-material as we have been handling over.
-
-Also, as to the question of what day John referred to in Rev. 1:10, when
-he said, “I was in the Spirit on the Lord’s day,” he will deliberate
-very much before he will decide that it was the first day of the week,
-simply because an untrustworthy man, admitted to have been heretical on
-many points, called it such 200 years after the birth of Christ, while
-Jehovah himself has given to the seventh day that honor, styling it the
-“Sabbath of the Lord,” “the holy of the Lord, honorable,” &c., and while
-Christ himself has declared in so many words, that he was the Lord of
-the Sabbath day. Mark 2:27, 28.
-
-
-
-
- STATESMAN’S REPLY.
- ARTICLE NINE.
- THEORIES OF THE CHRISTIAN SABBATH.
-
-
-With the facts of history before us concerning sacred time for nearly
-three centuries after the resurrection of Christ—facts drawn from the
-inspired writers of the New Testament and their immediate successors, we
-are prepared to consider the different theories of the Christian
-Sabbath. These theories may be summed up in three. Of one or another of
-these, all the remaining theories are simply modifications.
-
-The first of these three leading theories is as follows: “The Sabbath
-was a Jewish institution, and expired with the Jewish dispensation. The
-Lord’s day is not in any proper sense a Sabbath. It has an origin, a
-reason, and an obligation, not drawn from the fourth commandment, but
-peculiarly its own, as an institution belonging specially to the
-New-Testament dispensation.”
-
-The second theory, in the order in which we notice these different
-views, maintains that the observance of the Sabbath, as required under
-the Old-Testament dispensation, knows no change in any particular. The
-observance of the seventh day of the week is essential to the proper
-observance of the Sabbath under the gospel dispensation. The observance
-of the first day of the week is without divine warrant—a departure from
-the law of God through the corruptions which crept into the church.
-
-The third theory agrees with the second in maintaining that the Sabbath
-existed from the beginning, and that it has never been abolished or
-superseded. It disagrees with the second theory in maintaining that the
-essential idea of the law of the Sabbath is not the holiness of a
-portion of time, but the _consecration of a specified proportion of
-time_, one day in seven; that, in accordance with this, a change of day
-was admissible; that a change was actually made by divine warrant from
-the resurrection of Christ; and that the first day of the week, the
-Lord’s day, is the true Christian Sabbath, having its moral sanction in
-the fourth commandment.
-
-By many of those who hold the first of these theories, the Lord’s day is
-made a purely ecclesiastical institution, without any other warrant for
-its observance than the action of the church, by whose authority and in
-whose wisdom, the day is set apart for divine service. By others who
-accept the same general theory, apostolic authority in the early church
-is admitted to afford a divine warrant for the observance of the day. In
-a complete treatise on the Lord’s day, a careful discussion of this
-theory would be required. Its want of any sufficient foundation could be
-satisfactorily shown by a presentation of the following points: (1.) The
-declaration of the Lord of the Sabbath is explicit—“The Sabbath was made
-for man.” It was not made for any portion of the human family, but for
-the race of mankind. (2.) Thus, from the design of its Lord, and the
-very nature of the institution, the Sabbath cannot be limited to any
-locality or dispensation. (3.) Accordingly, it was given to man at his
-creation. (Gen. 3:3.) (4.) For the same reason, the law of the Sabbath
-has its proper place, not among ceremonial, local, or positive
-enactments, but among the immutable moral precepts of the decalogue.
-(5.) This law is, therefore, of universal and perpetual obligation upon
-our race. These points would give room for many articles; but, inasmuch
-as on all of them there is entire agreement between our seventh-day
-Sabbatarian friends and ourselves, we pass to a consideration of the
-second theory, which they accept as correct.
-
-To make good their case, the advocates of the second theory must show
-that the seventh day continued to be the Sabbath observed by the church
-after the resurrection of Christ, just as before; and that, in the
-observance of the first day, a great departure took place from the
-original practice of the Christian church. They must not make _bare_
-statements, but they must furnish proof. Instead of appealing to the
-letter of the law, and insisting that fact must conform to their
-interpretation of it, they must accept the facts of history, and put
-their interpretations to the test. It is more reasonable to conclude
-that an interpretation of law is wrong, than to reject the attested
-facts of history, when the interpretation and the facts do not
-harmonize.
-
-Let us briefly sum up the facts already fully brought to view. Christ
-himself, after his resurrection, passed by the seventh day, and
-repeatedly put special honor on the first day of the week. This same day
-was honored by the Pentecostal gift of the Holy Spirit. Christian
-congregations met for regular weekly service, not on the seventh day,
-but on the first day of the week. The inspired apostle Paul pointedly
-condemned the Judaizing teachers who insisted on the observance by
-Christians of the seventh-day Sabbath. The early writers, companions of
-the apostles, and others of the succeeding generations, bear the
-clearest and most explicit testimony to the same facts—the
-non-observance of the seventh-day Sabbath, and the stated meetings of
-Christians for divine service on the first day of the week, the Lord’s
-day. Now, if their theory is correct, how will the seventh-day
-Sabbatarians explain the fact that Christ himself, the Holy Spirit,
-inspired apostles, and Christian congregations all through the early
-church, ignored the seventh day and honored the first? A general and
-vague statement to the effect that an unwarranted change was made from
-the original practice of the Christian church will not do here. Was not
-the practice of the apostles and first organized congregations of
-Christians the original practice of the Christian church? That practice
-was, as we have seen, to observe the first day of the week. We repeat
-what we have already proved at length, viz., that there is not an
-instance in the Scriptures of the observance of the seventh day by any
-Christian church, nor of any regard to that day, after Christ’s
-resurrection, by apostles or their fellow-laborers, except as they
-availed themselves, in their missionary work, of the meetings of Jewish
-assemblies in Jewish places of worship. “An unwarranted change!” Let
-those who take such language upon their lips consider that their charge
-lies at the door of Christ and his Spirit, and the inspired apostles.
-
-But now, for the sake of the argument, let us leave all the testimony of
-the inspired writers of the New Testament to the first-day Sabbath out
-of view. Again we have the vague charge of unwarranted change. Perhaps
-the most definite form of this charge is that which makes the change the
-work of the little horn in Daniel’s prophecy, chapter seven. But will
-the expounder of Daniel be a little more explicit, and tell us who the
-historical personage is, and give us the dates and names of history?
-Does the little horn represent Antiochus Epiphanes? if so, then, of
-course, his change of the law of the Sabbath must have been before the
-Christian era. Will our expositor give us some facts just here? If the
-little horn means the papacy, then, according to the prophecy itself, it
-did not arise until the Roman Empire, represented by the fourth beast,
-was broken into ten fragments, represented by the ten horns. The little
-horn sprang up after these, and its change of the law of the Sabbath
-must date after the fall of the old empire of Rome. But for centuries
-before this event, we have the testimony of numerous writers that the
-Christian churches everywhere observed, not the seventh, but the first,
-day of the week, the Lord’s day. Again we ask for facts, not mere
-statements and theories.
-
-Leaving this vague attempt to connect the assumed unwarranted change
-with Daniel’s prophesy, we come to what is, if possible, still more
-vague and indefinite. A change, it is asserted, was made by some
-particular officer or council of the church, as it became corrupt and
-began to depart from the practice of the original church of Christ. Who
-was this officer? or where did this council meet? But we will not make
-unreasonable demands for historical testimony. Let us grant that such an
-officer or such a council there was at some time or other. The question
-then arises, When did the change take place? In the days of Cyprian, A.
-D. 250? The answer is clear. The change most have been made before his
-day. Origen and Tertullian, fifty years earlier, knew only the first day
-of the week, the Lord’s day, as the Christian Sabbath. Was the change
-then made in their day? We might assume that it was, only for the clear
-testimony of Irenæus and Justin Martyr, carrying us back another half
-century, and the equally explicit testimony of still earlier writers,
-carrying us back to the apostles themselves.
-
-Notwithstanding all this dearth of historical testimony as to the
-existence of the supposed ruler or council, let it be further granted
-that by some such corrupting authority, at some time a decree changing
-the day for Sabbath observance was issued. How did the supposed
-legislators establish their decree? How did they make it effectual over
-all the different parts of the church? Must we we suppose that a change
-like this was effected in the church, and not a scrap of a record left
-concerning it? The attempt made by the church to establish a common day
-for the anniversary of Christ’s resurrection gave rise to long and
-bitter controversy, and led to division. And yet, as Prof F. D. Maurice
-has well said, “It is supposed that this far more important change,
-affecting all the daily relations and circumstances of life, took effect
-by the decree of some apostle or some ecclesiastical synod, of which no
-record, no legend, even is preserved! Or, perhaps, a half-heathen, more
-than half-heathen, statute of Constantine,[14] about the _Dies Solis_
-accomplished what the legislators of the church could not
-accomplish—succeeded not only in securing its adoption by Athanasians,
-Arians, Semi-Arians, whose controversies Constantine could never heal,
-but in securing the allegiance of all the barbarous tribes which
-accepted the gospel under such various conditions in later times. Can
-any suppositions make greater demands on our credulity than these?” A
-Procrustean bed indeed must be that interpretation of the law of the
-Sabbath which, to conform them to itself, must thus deal with the facts
-of history and the probabilities of historical evidence.
-
-Just here is the difficulty in the theory of Seventh-day Sabbatarians.
-They have somehow got lodged in their mind the idea that the last one of
-the seven days of the week is the sacred day, the observance of which is
-absolutely essential to the proper keeping of the Sabbath. What has
-already been proved from history, inspired and uninspired, is sufficient
-to show that this theory is unworthy of men who, like Christ and his
-apostles, would grasp the true significance of the law of the Sabbath.
-But as so much stress is laid upon the question of time, we shall devote
-our next article to this crucial and very practical point.
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- The attempt to attribute the change of day to Constantine’s decree is
- hardly worth noticing. It is enough to remember that it was issued in
- the beginning of the fourth century. No one who knows anything of the
- writings of Tertullian and Origen dating back more than a century
- before Constantine, to say nothing of still earlier writers, will
- venture to ascribe the change to Roman Emperor’s decree. Besides, the
- language of the very decree referred to recognizes the honorable
- diameter of the first day of the week. It recognizes that day as
- already “venerable.”—_The Christian._
-
-
-
-
- A REJOINDER.
- “THEORIES OF THE CHRISTIAN SABBATH.”
-
-
-The thoughtful reader need not be told that the article which he has
-just read, entitled, “Theories of the Christian Sabbath,” has advanced
-the discussion of the question before us in no material respect. The
-space devoted so generously to the consideration of theories, in regard
-to the unsoundness of which there is no difference of opinion between
-the gentleman and myself, is thrown away, so far as the present argument
-is concerned. While this is true, however, if it serves no other
-purpose, it has at least made it clear that, if the gentleman fails to
-make out his case in the end, it will not be because he has not had
-ample room for the presentation and elaboration of facts and arguments,
-since one who was crippled in his effort by a lack of space would hardly
-be willing to devote so much time and attention to subjects foreign to
-the present issue.
-
-That which is said with reference to these theories might also be
-repeated in reference to the statement and restatement of points which
-it is claimed have been proved. Of course, it is the prerogative of any
-writer to conduct his own argument in his own way. All that we would
-call attention to is the fact that the line of policy pursued, in these
-things, is of a nature to satisfy even the most casual observer, that
-one who felt that he had resources upon which to draw, without limit,
-would not compel us to pass again and again over the same ground. There
-is, however, an apology which might properly be offered in the case of
-the gentleman, for calling our attention to these trivial points so
-repeatedly, which is found in the fact that his articles were written
-before our rejoinders were in print. We believe that, were not this the
-case, and had he perused what has been said in reply to them, we should
-be spared the monotony of answering them again. However, lest we should
-seem to avoid them, it will only be necessary that we say enough,
-bearing upon each point, to revive, in the mind of one who has followed
-us thus far, the fuller consideration given to all of them heretofore.
-
-To the statement that Sabbatarians, in order to make good their case,
-must make their views harmonize with the facts of history, it is enough
-to say that, if it is meant by this, the facts of sacred history, as
-contained in the Bible, this we have already done; for before it can be
-urged that the opposite is true, as we have elsewhere seen, it must be
-shown that there is some transaction found in the sacred record which is
-in conflict with our interpretation of the law. This has not been done;
-for not only has it been made to appear that the Sabbath law is explicit
-in its requirement of the observance of the seventh day of the week, but
-also that there is not a single case of its violation, by a good man, to
-be found in the inspired pages.
-
-Nor is this all; we have gone beyond this, and proved, by the record,
-that the opposite was true of the Sunday, since upon it Christ and two
-of his disciples, on the day of his resurrection, as well as Paul and
-Luke and others at a subsequent period, did perform upon it labor, which
-the gentleman himself has not attempted, and will not undertake, to
-harmonize with any just conception of intelligent Sabbath-keeping. So
-far as it regards the absence of any mention of meetings of Christians
-on the Sabbath, it is sufficient to say, as we have already done, that,
-as in the history given, the account relates largely to missionary
-trips, where there was no church as yet developed, and, consequently, no
-possibility of separate meetings, such a record would be out of the
-question; also, that the argument is only a negative one, and really can
-have no force, until it can be demonstrated that God’s plan is first to
-command, and then show, in every instance what the commandment means, by
-practical illustrations furnished from the history of his people; a
-doctrine which is not only unsound and untrue, but absurd in the
-extreme.
-
-If, on the other hand, the gentleman means to be understood as insisting
-that the history of the church since the close of the canon of
-inspiration must be made to teach the faith which we hold as one which
-has always been entertained by the church, and therefore sound, we
-repudiate, in the name of Protestantism, this most pernicious view, and
-in all matters of practical duty, such as Sabbath-keeping, we decide
-according to the written word. To the first source (church history), the
-gentleman has appealed, and if every candid man and woman who has
-witnessed his effort has not been disgusted with the source to which he
-has applied, then we know of nothing which would be calculated to create
-in him this condition of mind.
-
-With the summary, in which it is claimed that Christ, and the apostles,
-and the Holy Spirit, and the early church, did repeatedly honor the
-first day of the week, we will not weary the reader here. We have
-disproved every one of these points, and we trust to the intelligence of
-those whom we are addressing, in the confident belief that what has been
-said, in the absence of even an attempt at refutation, needs not to be
-reproduced here.
-
-We had barely mentioned, in our original articles, that Seventh-day
-Adventists held to the opinion that the pope of Rome had been
-instrumental in bringing about the change of the Sabbath. No effort was
-made to develop the argument on that point, since we did not dare to
-presume that room would be granted for the perfecting of the work; in
-fact, what was said was uttered rather with a view to calling the
-attention of the curious to our published works upon that subject, than
-for any other purpose. Now, however, this point is made to assume a
-prominence which does not really belong to it, in an argument so largely
-doctrinal rather than historic.
-
-With this, nevertheless, we have no fault to find. Nothing is more
-satisfactory than the awakening of a spirit of investigation on all
-branches of this great subject; at the same time, we submit that the
-attitude of the gentleman must be very unsatisfactory to himself, since
-he will readily perceive that to an opponent, chafing under a denial of
-the privilege of answering him in the columns of his own paper, this
-whole affair wears the aspect of an empty bravado. “Tell us,” says the
-editor, and he repeats his invitation again and again, “Whom did this
-little horn represent? Was it Antiochus? or the pope? If the latter,
-then how, and when, and where, did he bring about the transition?”
-
-But we reply, Whom do you mean, sir, by the term, “us”? Truly, you would
-not require us to come to Philadelphia to enlighten you personally upon
-that point. Certainly, you are not particularly anxious that we should
-write a series of articles for the benefit of the readers of the
-_Review_, on a matter with which they are as familiar as they are with
-the history of their own country; but if, indeed, you had in your mind
-the readers of the _Statesman_, then it may be inquired again, How has
-it been possible for us to reach them, under the circumstances? since,
-throwing your forces behind the wall of your editorial prerogative, and
-closing against us the gate of possibility, you have shut us out from
-all access to them. Gladly would we have availed ourselves of the
-opportunity of doing that which we have been denied the privilege of
-attempting before the men, many of whom, we believe, would have been
-glad to follow this matter to the end; but as this cannot be done, a
-brief reply will be made here.
-
-The first inquiry, relating, as it does, to the point whether Antiochus
-Epiphanes or the pope, was meant by the “little horn,” in the seventh of
-Daniel, need not consume time. It has been urged by some that the
-“little horn,” of Dan. 8:9, applied to the former character. We believe
-the papists still insist upon this; but the gentleman, upon
-reflection—if in what he has said he has confounded the two—will not
-seriously argue against the almost universal admission of Protestant
-writers, that the power brought to view in the seventh chapter of
-Daniel’s prophecy, is that of the papacy. In fact, reasoning as he does
-himself, most satisfactorily, that it could not arise until after the
-appearance of the original ten, which represented the final breaking up
-of the Roman Empire into ten parts, he more than intimates his personal
-conviction that it could not represent Antiochus Epiphanes, who reigned
-one hundred and seventy-five years before Christ, since the Roman Empire
-was not partitioned among the barbarians who invaded it, until A. D.
-483, more than six hundred years after the death of the Syrian king.
-
-The following, from a standard authority, will serve to show an almost
-universal agreement on this subject; and with its presentation we pass
-to the investigation of questions more difficult, and more worthy of our
-reflection. “Among Protestant writers, this (‘the little horn,’ of Dan.
-7:8) is considered to be the popedom.”—_A. Clarke, Com. in loco._
-
-“To none can this (‘He shall speak great words againt the Most High’)
-apply so well, and so fully, as to the popes of Rome.”—_Idem_, v. 25.
-
-The real point of debate, as intimated above, is the question whether
-the Roman Catholic church has been instrumental in bringing about the
-change of the Sabbath. The gentleman errs in asserting that we have
-anywhere stated that such a change was brought about by any particular
-officer or council. This we have never urged, nor does it accord with
-the view held by us. The “little horn” represented, not one, merely, but
-a whole line of priest-kings, who were to extend from the time of their
-rise, to the Judgment, and the setting up of the kingdom of God. Of this
-line of rulers, it is stated—not that they should really succeed in
-bringing about an actual change in the requirements of the law of
-God—but that they should “_think_” to accomplish this end. It is also
-said that, for a time, times, and dividing of time (1260 years), the
-saints of God and the law of God should be delivered into their hands.
-Not, indeed, that God would forsake either his people or his law,
-utterly, but that, for the period in question, they should be permitted
-to pursue a course destructive to the one, and antagonistic to the
-other. In other words, that they should put to death the saints, and
-presume to alter the commandments of God.
-
-These specifications are simply introduced by way of identification. It
-is not said that the power indicated should spring into life suddenly,
-and without a previous stage of development; nor is it declared that the
-principles which were to characterize it in its mature life should be
-wholly peculiar to itself. Other powers, such as pagan Rome, might have
-persecuted the people of God before the rise of the papacy, as they
-unquestionably did. Other men might have begun the work of tampering
-with the law of God, long before the days of the hierarchy, and might
-have prepared to its hands the materials necessary to the accomplishment
-of the final blasphemous work of the man of sin.
-
-In the days of Paul, “the mystery of iniquity began to work,” and from
-that point, its history was one of gradual development. Some of the most
-destructive heresies afterward incorporated into the faith of papists,
-it is well understood, were fully fledged, and quite generally accepted,
-before the installation of the first pope. So, too, concerning the
-first-day Sabbath. There can be little doubt that before the bishop of
-Rome became the “Corrector of Heretics,” in A. D. 538, or entered the
-chair of St. Peter, the Sunday had come to be regarded, by many, as the
-rival, if not the superior, of the ancient Sabbath. Just how extensively
-the sentiment prevailed, however, it is hard to determine from church
-history, because, as has been shown in a previous article, the sources
-of our information have been so corrupted by unprincipled Romanists,
-that it is difficult to arrive at the facts in the case.
-
-One thing is certain; there was a mighty struggle on this question, the
-gentleman to the contrary, notwithstanding, which has left the marks of
-its existence in the records of the past. Clear down to the rise of
-Roman Catholicism, there were men who were strenuous for the observance
-of the seventh day, and rejecters of its rival. Doubtless the Sunday, by
-slow degrees, had worked itself into almost universal acceptance as a
-festival resting upon human, and not divine, authority; but the Sabbath
-of the Lord still continued in the faith of many, especially in the
-East, as a day to be sacredly devoted to the worship of God. On this
-point, Neander, the learned church historian, has given distinct and
-unequivocal utterance:—
-
-“The festival of Sunday, like all other festivals, was only a human
-ordinance, and it was far from the intention of the apostles to
-establish a divine command in this respect; far from them and from the
-early apostolic church to transfer the laws of the Sabbath to Sunday.
-Perhaps at the end of the second century, a false application of this
-kind had began to take place; for men appear, by that time, to have
-considered laboring on Sunday as a sin.”—_Rose’s Translation of
-Neander_, p. 186.[15]
-
-Giesler also remarks as follows: “While 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,
-though without the Jewish superstitions. Besides these, the Sunday as
-the day of our Saviour’s resurrection, was devoted to religious
-worship.”—_Church Hist., Apostolic Age to A. D. 70._
-
-Lyman Coleman, in his “Ancient Christianity Exemplified,” testifies as
-follows: “The observance of the Lord’s day as the first day of the week
-was at first introduced as a separate institution. Both this and the
-Jewish Sabbath were kept for some time; finally, the latter passed
-wholly over into the former, which now took the place of the ancient
-Sabbath of the Israelites. But their Sabbath, the last day of the week,
-was strictly kept in connection with that of the first day for a long
-time after the overthrow of the temple and its worship. Down even to the
-fifth century, the observance of the Jewish Sabbath was continued in the
-Christian church, but with a rigor and solemnity gradually diminishing,
-until it was wholly discontinued.... Both were observed in the Christian
-church down to the fifth century, with this difference, that in the
-eastern church, both days were regarded as joyful occasions; but in the
-western, the Jewish Sabbath was kept as a fast.” Chap. 26, sect. 2.
-
-Wm. Twisse, whose antique style comports with that of the period in
-which he wrote, most pointedly declares the same fact in a work
-entitled, “The Morality of the Fourth Commandment:” “Yet for some
-hundred years in the primitive church, not the Lord’s day only, but the
-seventh day also, was religiously observed, not by Ebion and Cerinthus
-only, but by pious Christians also, as Baronius writeth and Gomaius
-confesseth, and Rivut also.” Page 9, London, 1641.
-
-Morer, in speaking of the early Christians, remarks of them as follows:
-“The primitive Christians had a great veneration for the Sabbath, and
-spent the day in devotion and sermons, and it is not to be doubted but
-they derived the practice from the apostles themselves.”—_Morer’s Lord’s
-Day_, p. 189.
-
-Edward Brerewood, professor in Gresham College, London, writes: “The
-ancient Sabbath did remain, and was observed by the Christians of the
-east church above three hundred years after our Saviour’s death, and
-besides that, no other day, for more hundred years than I spoke of
-before, was known in the church by the name of the Sabbath.” Page 77,
-ed. 1631.
-
-Prof. Stuart, in speaking of the period between A. D. 321 and the
-council of Laodicea, A. D. 364, furnishes the following interesting
-statement, which discloses the historic fact concerning the ebb and flow
-of discussion on this subject in the early church: “The practice of it
-[the keeping of the Sabbath], was continued by Christians who were
-jealous for the honor of the Mosaic law, and finally became, as we have
-seen, predominant throughout Christendom. It was supposed at length that
-the fourth commandment did require the observance of the seventh-day
-Sabbath [not merely a seventh part of time], and reasoning as Christians
-of the present day are wont to do, viz., that _all_ which belongs to the
-ten commandments was immutable and perpetual, the churches in general
-came gradually to regard the seventh-day Sabbath as altogether
-sacred.”—_Appendix to Gurney’s Hist. of Sabbath_, pp. 115, 116.
-
-Concerning the same council, Prynne has made a similar historic record;
-“The seventh-day Sabbath was solemnized by Christ, the apostles, and
-primitive Christians, till the Laodicean Council did, in a manner, quite
-abolish the observance of it.... The Council of Laodicea, A. D. 364,
-first settled the observance of the Lord’s day, and prohibited keeping
-of the Jewish Sabbath, under an anathema.”—_Dissertation on the Lord’s
-Sabbath_, pp. 33, 44, ed. 1633.
-
-In alluding to the differences in practice between the eastern and the
-western churches, Neander distinctly sets forth the resolute animosity
-of the latter to the ancient Sabbath of the Lord, and the manner in
-which they sought to bring it into disrepute, while elevating the Sunday
-into favor. He says: “In the western churches, particularly the Roman,
-where opposition to Judaism was the prevailing tendency, this very
-opposition produced the custom of celebrating the Saturday as a fast
-day. This difference of customs would, of course, be striking, where
-members of the Oriental church spent their Sabbath day in the western
-church.”—_Hist. Chris. Rel. and Church, First Three Centuries. Rose’s
-trans._, p. 186.
-
-Peter Heylyn also marks the peculiar favor shown to the first day of the
-week in the western church; and while he declares at one time that it
-was near “nine hundred years from the Saviour’s birth before restraint
-of husbandry on this day [Sunday] had been first thought of in the
-east,” he elsewhere records the fact that in the fifth and sixth
-centuries general unanimity respecting the exaltation to divine honor
-was reached. He writes: “The faithful, being united more than ever
-before, became more uniform in matters of devotion, and in that
-uniformity did agree together to give the Lord’s day all the honors of a
-holy festival, yet this was not done all at once, but by degrees, the
-fifth and sixth centuries being fully spent before it came unto that
-hight which has since continued. The emperors and the prelates in these
-times had the same affections, both earnest to advance this day above
-all others; and to the edicts of the one, and to the ecclesiastical
-constitutions of the others, it stands indebted for many of those
-privileges and exemptions which it still enjoyeth.”—_Hist. Sab._, part
-2, chap. 4, sect. 1.
-
-Thus it has been proved, by citations from men who have possessed the
-resources, as well as the disposition, to make themselves acquainted
-with the history of the first centuries of the Christian church, first,
-that the first day of the week was looked upon for a long time as a
-merely human institution; secondly, that the Edenic Sabbath was for
-centuries after the crucifixion of Christ quite generally celebrated;
-thirdly, that prejudice against it seems to have been strongest and to
-have originated earliest at Rome, where, in order to bring it into
-odium, it was made a day of fasting, while the Sunday was treated as a
-festival; fourthly, that after a struggle, which extended through
-hundreds of years, the ancient Sabbath was finally quite generally
-repudiated, and the Sunday, through the united efforts of prelates,
-councils, and emperors, was enthroned and enforced upon all.
-
-Into the details of this long and varying conflict, in which victory
-seems first to have favored the one side and then the other, we are
-restricted by the limits of our communication from entering. The
-intelligent reader can readily fill in the outlines which have been
-given, and will not be slow to perceive that the contest, from the very
-nature of things, must have been one of intense interest and heated
-debate. If he would satisfy himself most fully that the gentleman is
-mistaken in saying that it has left no traces, we refer him for a more
-full discussion to the authorities quoted.
-
-Changing now the point of view, we will come to the present time. We
-return once more to the charge that the church of Rome, availing itself
-of the condition of things which preceded its rise, has consummated the
-terrible work which was begun with the great apostasy, long before the
-papacy proper was fully developed. In prosecuting the labor thus entered
-upon, the reader is invited to pause a moment and decide upon certain
-principles which ought to govern in the decision of the question. He
-will remember that if he has been educated in the observance of Sunday,
-he will be in danger of requiring more testimony than could reasonably
-be demanded, since his education, and personal interest, and standing,
-would all incline him to a conservatism which needs to be guarded with a
-jealous care, lest it should result in a bias which would terminate in
-the rejection of sufficient light.
-
-All that we ask him to do is to treat this subject the same as he would
-any other matter of fact. To illustrate: If the body of a murdered man
-were discovered upon the street, and if there should be found in the
-community one whose character was bad in every respect, concerning whom
-those who knew him best had given warning; if on the garments of this
-suspicious personage blood stains were found; if, in the meantime, a
-careful examination of the wounds should show that they had been
-inflicted by a weapon peculiar to the notorious individual; and if, in
-addition to the foregoing, he should step forward and frankly confess
-that he had done the deed, no court in the world would hesitate to
-inflict the penalty of the law, because of any doubt regarding the guilt
-of the offending party. Now applying the same principles to the case in
-hand, if every one can be shown to hold good in every particular, then
-consistency demands that they should produce a conviction equally clear
-and strong with that in the mind of the court, in determining in the
-case of the homicide upon the infliction of punishment.
-
-But is it true that the charge against the Roman Catholic church can be
-made out as conclusively as that against the individual mentioned above?
-Let us see. The first point there brought forward was the unquestionable
-fact that the man had been murdered. This was the starting point of the
-whole affair. That which answers to it in the case before us is the fact
-that the change of the Sabbath has been made out beyond reasonable
-doubt; for God commanded the observance of the seventh day, while,
-somehow, Christendom is generally observing the first, though utterly
-incapable of furnishing Scripture warrant for the change.
-
-The second point was that respecting the bad reputation of a certain
-character in the community—its parallel in the persons of the popes is
-found in the fact that, as we have seen, their rise and history were
-symbolized centuries before their appearance under the type of the
-“little horn” of the seventh of Daniel, by one who never errs in his
-analysis of character, and who declared of the “man of sin” that he
-should “think to change times and laws,” and that they should be given
-into his hands for “a time and times and the dividing of time,” thus
-proving that this blasphemous power who was to open his mouth in
-blasphemy against God is capable of attempting the transfer of God’s
-holy Sabbath to a day different from that pointed out in the
-commandment.
-
-The third point, which related to blood stains upon the garments of the
-suspected person, finds its counterpart in the teachings of Romanism,
-most clearly. We learn, in the writings of Moses, that the blood is the
-life of the individual. This, however, is not more true than it is that
-the fourth commandment is the life of the Sabbatic institution. If you
-mar that commandment, you mar the Sabbath in the same ratio. If you
-destroy that commandment, you destroy the Sabbath. But the assumed
-ability to alter this precept as well as others of the decalogue is one
-of the very crimes of which Rome has been guilty, by which she has
-blotched all over in the most loathsome manner the garments of a once
-spotless Christianity, and a profoundly reverent faith. That this is so
-will become manifest when we present a copy of the decalogue as it has
-been mutilated by the Romish church in the exercise of a pretended
-divine right to accomplish such a work. For this purpose we append the
-ten commandments as they stand in Butler’s catechism.[16]
-
-“1. I am the Lord thy God. Thou shalt not have strange gods before me,
-&c. 2. Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain. 3.
-Remember that thou keep holy the Sabbath day. 4. Honor thy father and
-thy mother. 5. Thou shalt not kill. 6. Thou shalt not commit adultery.
-7. Thou shalt not steal, 8. Thou shalt not bear false witness against
-thy neighbor. 9. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s wife. 10. Thou
-shalt not covet thy neighbor’s goods.”
-
-Hero it will be seen that the second commandment is dropped out
-altogether, and that the tenth is divided; a portion of it retaining its
-ancient number, and the remaining portion of it being numbered as the
-ninth commandment, thereby making the complement of the original ten,
-which would have been reduced to nine by ignoring the one against image
-worship. It will also be perceived that with the exception of the words,
-“Remember that thou keep holy the Sabbath day,” the fourth commandment
-is left out entirely. True, it may be that in the Douay Bible the
-original commandments are allowed to remain intact, but we shall see
-hereafter that the above arrangement is not accidental, and that the
-power to make these changes is unhesitatingly claimed.
-
-The fourth point was that concerning the form and nature of the wound,
-whereby it was discovered that it was made with a weapon precisely such
-as one possessed by the suspected party. The correspondence in this
-particular will be found in the boundary of the new Sabbath; in its
-beginning and ending, occurring as they do at twelve o’clock, midnight,
-are the unmistakable marks of the band of one who most assuredly did not
-live at Jerusalem, and who left upon the creature of his own power the
-badge of its origin at Rome.
-
-The Jews, as we have seen heretofore, by the agreement of commentators
-and scholars generally, as well as by the testimony of the Bible,
-commenced and ended their days with the setting of the sun. At Rome, on
-the other hand, as well as in other parts of the world, the day began as
-we now begin the Sunday—at midnight. In this, it is made apparent that
-some one has been tampering with a day which it is claimed was hallowed
-by Christ eighteen hundred years ago; since, if it had originated at
-that time and in that place, it would have conformed in its beginning
-and ending to the weekly Sabbath, the day of Pentecost, and the other
-days in the Jewish calendar. The presumption concerning whom this person
-is, is already made out. The certainty respecting it will be established
-under the next heading.
-
-The fifth point cited above was the confession of the culprit. Under
-ordinary circumstances, this alone would have made a conviction
-inevitable. Answering to it in the fullest degree are the oft-repeated
-declarations of Romanists, that they have changed the Sabbath from the
-seventh to the first day of the week, and that they had the ability and
-the right thus to do. Respecting these assumptions, we might introduce
-quotations almost without number, but we must content ourselves with a
-few brief but pointed ones.[17]
-
-“_Ques._ What are the days which the church commands to be kept holy?”
-
-“_Ans._ 1. The Sundays, or our Lord’s day, which we observe by
-apostolical tradition instead of the Sabbath. 2. The feasts of our
-Lord’s nativity, or Christmas day; his circumcision, or New Year’s day;
-the Epiphany, or twelfth day; Easter day, or the day of our Lord’s
-resurrection, with the Monday following,” &c.
-
-“_Ques._ What was the reason why the weekly Sabbath was changed from the
-Saturday to the Sunday?”
-
-“_Ans._ Because our Lord fully accomplished the work of our redemption
-by rising from the dead on Sunday and by sending down the Holy Ghost on
-Sunday; as therefore the work of our redemption was a greater work than
-that of our creation, the primitive _church_ thought the day in which
-this work was completely finished was more worthy her religious
-observation than that in which God rested from creation, and should be
-properly called the Lord’s day.”
-
-“_Ques._ But has the church power to make any alterations in the
-commandments of God?”
-
-“_Ans._ The commandments of God, as far as they contain his eternal law,
-are unalterable and indispensable, but as to whatever was only
-ceremonial they cease to oblige, since the Mosaic law was abrogated by
-Christ’s death; hence, as far as the commandment obliges us to set aside
-some part of our time for the worship and service of our Creator, it is
-an unalterable and unchangeable precept of the eternal law in which the
-church cannot dispense. But, forasmuch as it prescribes the seventh day
-in particular for this purpose, it is no more than a ceremonial precept
-of the old law which obligeth not Christians, and therefore, instead of
-the seventh day and other festivals appointed by the old law, the
-_church_ has prescribed the Sundays and holidays to be set apart for
-God’s worship, and these we are now obliged to keep in consequence of
-God’s commandment, instead of the ancient Sabbath.”
-
-“_Ques._ What warrant have you for keeping the Sunday preferable to the
-ancient Sabbath, which was the Saturday?”
-
-“_Ans._ We have for it the authority of the Catholic church and
-apostolic tradition.”
-
-“_Ques._ Does the Scripture anywhere command the Sunday to be kept for
-the Sabbath?”
-
-“_Ans._ The Scripture commands us to hear the church (Matt. 18:17, Luke
-10:16), and to hold fast the traditions of the apostles. 2 Thess. 2:15.
-But the Scriptures do not in particular mention this change of the
-Sabbath. John speaks of the Lord’s day (Rev. 1:10); but he does not tell
-us what day of the week this was, much less does he tell us that this
-day was to take the place of the Sabbath ordained in the commandment;
-... so that truly the best authority we have for this, is the testimony
-and ordinance of the church. And, therefore, those who pretend to be so
-religious of the Sunday, whilst they take no notice of the festivals
-ordained by the same church authority, show that they act by humor, and
-not by reason and religion, since Sundays and holy days all stand upon
-the same foundation, viz., the ordinance of the church.”—_Cath.
-Christian Instructed_, pp. 209-211.
-
-“_Ques._ Have you any other way of proving that the church has power to
-institute festivals of precept?”
-
-“_Ans._ Had she not such power, she could not have done that in which
-all modern religionists agree with her—she could not have substituted
-the observance of Sunday, the first day of the week, for the observance
-of Saturday, the seventh day, a change for which there is no scripture
-authority.”—_Doctrinal Catechism._
-
-“_Ques._ If keeping the Sunday be a church precept, why is it numbered
-in the decalogue, which are the commandments of God and the law of
-nature?”
-
-“_Ans._ Because the substance, or chief part of it, namely, that the day
-be set apart for the service of God, is of divine right and of the law
-of nature; though the determining this particular day, Sunday, rather
-than Saturday, be a church ordinance and precept.”—_Abridgment of Chris.
-Doc._, pp. 57, 59.
-
-Thus much for the connection of the papacy with the change of the
-Sabbath. The reader, repudiating the claim for apostolical tradition,
-which is of no value with Protestants, and rejecting as fallacious the
-assumed antiquity of the Roman Catholic church, will discover that there
-still remains the bold assumption of the ability on the part of that
-church to change the Sabbath, and also of the historic fact that it has
-done so. Mr. Gilfillan, while, of course, from his standpoint rejecting
-the notion that the pope has either in reality changed, or even
-possessed the ability to change, the divinely appointed day of rest,
-frankly acknowledges that he arrogates to himself the power so to do, in
-the following language:—
-
-“Rome, professing to retain, has yet corrupted every doctrine,
-institution, and law of Jesus Christ, recognizing for example, the
-mediator between God and man, but associating with him many other
-intercessors; avowing adherence to the Scripture, but the Scripture as
-supplemented and made void by the writings and traditions of men; and,
-in short, without discarding the Lord’s day, adding a number of
-encumbering holidays, giving them in many instances an honor equal and
-even superior to God’s own day, and claiming for the ‘Vicar of Christ’
-lordship even of the Sabbath.”—_The Sabbath_, p. 457.
-
-Into the details respecting the fasts; the decrees of councils; the
-bulls of popes: the myths concerning the calamities which have befallen
-those laboring on the Sunday; the forgery of an epistle in its
-interests, which it was claimed fell from Heaven; and the astounding
-miracles with which the hierarchy has accomplished the prodigious task
-of making the transfer, we are not permitted to enter here, nor will it
-be required that we should do so. Any person acquainted with the arts
-usually employed at Rome will readily perceive the methods which she has
-called to her assistance. All that a reasonable man could possibly ask
-is found in the transition from one day to another, in the fact that the
-law of God was to be tampered with by a persecuting power which was to
-continue its oppressions of the saints of God for twelve hundred and
-sixty years, and in the further consideration that no persecuting power
-except that of Rome has ever continued for that length of time.
-
-Concerning the decree of Constantine, the only place which we assign to
-it in the controversy between the friends of the Lord’s Sabbath and its
-rival, is that which it holds because of its having made the transition
-easy. The first day of the week being the one generally observed by the
-heathen and by this decree enforced by statute, had in its favor the
-practice and sympathy of the masses of men. This law, though passed by a
-heathen, and in the interest of the heathen religion, was, as would
-naturally have been the case, of great service to those who subsequently
-favored the change of day, since it gave to their effort not only the
-color, but also the material advantage, of legality; by it, men, under
-certain circumstances, were compelled to celebrate the day of the sun
-even though they had previously regarded that of the Lord. This, of
-course, was burdensome, and worked greatly to the advantage of the
-heathen festival.
-
-One of two views must be taken of the statute of Constantine: If it were
-Christian, then it proves that Sunday observance, at the time of its
-passage, was exceedingly lax, since by its terms only men in the cities
-and towns were prohibited from laboring upon it, while those in the
-country were by it allowed and encouraged to carry on the vocations of
-the farm. If, on the other hand, it were heathen in its origin, then the
-suggestion that it recognizes the venerableness of the day of the sun,
-even at so early a period as that of its promulgation, is entirely
-without force, since it thereby becomes manifest that it received this
-dignifying appellation, not because it had long been venerated by the
-disciples of our Lord, but because from time immemorial it had been
-honored by the heathen—a doubtful compliment to the Christian Sabbath.
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- For the extracts given in this connection, the reader is referred to
- “Sabbath and Sunday,” by A. H. Lewis, and to “The History of the
- Sabbath,” by J. N. Andrews.
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- The commandments as given above are supposed to be repeated by the
- individual Romanist in response to the injunction, “Say the ten
- commandments of God.”
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- The following citations will be found in a small tract published at
- the “_Review_ and _Herald_” Office, entitled, “Who Changed the
- Sabbath?”
-
-
-
-
- STATESMAN’S REPLY.
- ARTICLE TEN.
- THE PRINCIPLE AS TO TIME IN SABBATH OBSERVANCE.
-
-
-Our readers will recollect that the chief difference between the second
-and the third theories of the Christian Sabbath, as we stated them in
-our last issue, is in reference to the question of time. Seventh-day
-Sabbatarians, on the one hand, maintain that the last one of the seven
-days of the week is _the_ sacred day, and that the observance of this
-very day is absolutely essential to the proper observance of the Sabbath
-of the Lord, and the keeping of the fourth commandment. On the other
-hand, we set forth what we believe to be the true theory of the
-Christian Sabbath, according to which the essential idea of the law of
-the Sabbath is the consecration to God of an appointed proportion of
-time—one day in seven, and not the essential holiness of any particular
-day.
-
-We have already seen that the interpretation of the fourth commandment
-which insists on the essential holiness of the last day of the week
-would convict the risen Lord, and his inspired apostles, and the whole
-church of Christ, even in its purest days, of the violation of that
-precept of the divine law. But let us now examine a few practical points
-in connection with this second theory.
-
-1. If the seventh day of the week is to be rigidly adhered to, as the
-law of the fourth commandment, it must be the seventh from the creation,
-in regular weekly succession. Will any seventh-day Sabbatarian venture
-to affirm that, through all the changes of our race, through all the
-breaks of history, through the bondage in Egypt, and the repeated
-captivities of God’s ancient people, to say nothing of the miracles in
-connection with Joshua’s victory, and Hezekiah’s sickness, unbroken
-succession of the weekly divisions of time has been maintained? Does the
-last day of our week answer, in an exact numbering of days, to the
-seventh day on which God rested after completing the work of creation?
-The interpretation which we are now considering demands this conformity
-to the fourth commandment in its letter. He would be a bold man indeed,
-who would affirm that his seventh day in this nineteenth century is the
-exact day which his own view of the law of the Sabbath would require him
-to keep holy. Our present first day may correspond to the original
-seventh day. Who knows?
-
-2. But admit that these essentially holy twenty-four hours, at the close
-of each week, may be marked without doubt, how can all Christians in
-different parts of the world keep them? How can men in different
-longitudes and latitudes so mark off the week as to have it end with
-this intrinsically holy portion of time? The difference in local time in
-different parts of the earth is a fact familiar to every school-boy. The
-circumference of the earth, for the convenience of calculation, is
-divided into three hundred and sixty degrees. As the sun appears to make
-a circuit round the earth every time the earth rotates on its axis, that
-is, every twenty-four hours, the apparent motion of the sun from east to
-west will be fifteen degrees each hour. Let it be noon of the seventh
-day at any given point in our land, and it will be sunset ninety degrees
-east, and sunrise ninety degrees west. At what point of the earth’s
-surface shall men claim the right to have the seventh or holy day begin
-with their sunset or their midnight, and demand that all others east and
-west shall measure their holy day from so many hours before or after
-their own midnight or sunset, as their portion may require?
-
-Or, again, in extreme northern and southern latitudes, where perpetual
-day and constant night alternate with the annual revolution of the
-earth, how shall the seventh day be marked? How shall this essentially
-holy day of twenty-four hours be known? As God, in his infinite wisdom,
-has seen fit to make our earth, and ordain the laws of its diurnal
-revolution on its axis, and its annual orbit round the sun, it is simply
-impossible for the inhabitants of the world to keep holy the same
-identical period of time. The interpretation of the law of the Sabbath
-at which we are looking is in conflict, therefore, with the laws of the
-solar system.
-
-3. Our seventh-day friend, perhaps, retreats to his last refuge. There
-is no portion of absolute time essentially holy. That was never meant.
-Very well, then, what is meant? Why, that each one in his own longitude
-or latitude should observe the seventh day as it is measured by his own
-local time. We apprehend that, in some latitudes, the seventh day,
-measured by local time, running through some thousands of hours, would
-be a weariness to the strictest even of seventh-day Sabbatarians. But we
-will leave these extreme cases. They must keep holy the appointed
-proportion—one-seventh of their time. That must be the law of the
-Sabbath to them. But in the belt of the earth nearer the equator, local
-time, measured by the natural division of days, must be followed.
-
-Now, let it be said, we have no desire to treat a serious subject
-lightly. But our friends insist on an interpretation of the fourth
-commandment which can hardly be treated seriously. We can scarcely blame
-Dr. Geo. Junkin for employing this shaft of ridicule. He says,
-substantially, suppose all our seventh-day Sabbatarians (and their
-number is not an insuperable objection to the experiment), having
-labored six days, according to the commandment, come to the night of
-Friday. By an excusable artifice, sponges, saturated with a powerful
-anæsthetic agent, are held to their noses, and they are laid up, in
-perfect unconsciousness, for a whole day beyond the close of their usual
-time of sleep. They awake, supposing it to be the seventh day of the
-week, as to them, so conscious intelligent beings, and subjects of law,
-it certainly would be to all intents and purposes. But in fact, by the
-actual measurement of time, it is the first day of the week. Might there
-not be in this way a practical solution of the whole difficulty?
-
-But the actual rising and the setting of the sun may be insisted on
-whether our seventh-day advocates are conscious or not. Suppose, then,
-that one of them takes the now rather popular trip of a tour round the
-world. Going west at the rate of, say thirty degrees a week, starting
-from New York, he would lengthen each of his days from sunrise to
-sunrise—supposing the sun to rise at six o’clock, local time, all along
-the belt of his course—a little over seventeen minutes; and thus,
-keeping his own count of time, and observing every seventh solar day, on
-his return to New York at the end of twelve weeks, his seventh-day
-Sabbath would really be the first day of the week. Though he might not
-be _mentally_ converted to the first-day theory of the Christian
-Sabbath, he would at least be _physically_ converted, and would either
-be compelled to accept the change, or make a week of six solar days to
-harmonize in Sabbath observance with his seventh-day brethren at home,
-or take to his journeying again, and complete the circuit of the earth
-in the opposite direction, in order to maintain unbroken the succession
-of weeks of seven days each, and have his Sabbath fall on the one and
-only day which will suit his interpretation of the fourth commandment.
-
-If, instead of going by the west, our traveler should go by the east,
-journeying at the same rate of thirty degrees each week, he would
-diminish the length of each of his days a little over seventeen minutes,
-and on arriving once more at New York, at the end of twelve even weeks
-by the time of that city, but twelve weeks and one day by his own time,
-his seventh-day Sabbath would fall on the sixth day of the week, and we
-would have a new order of Sabbatarians.
-
-The reason of the diversity is obvious. The trip around the world,
-according to the supposed rate of travel, would occupy just twelve
-weeks, or eighty-four days of twenty-four hours each, measured by local
-time at New York. The total number of hours, reckoning each day
-twenty-four even hours, would be 2,016. The traveler, proceeding
-westward at the rate of thirty degrees a week, would add to each day’s
-length just seventeen and one-seventh minutes—making each day from
-sunrise to sunrise, reckoning this always at six o’clock, local time,
-twenty-four hours, seventeen and one-seventeenth minutes long. He would,
-therefore, in the whole number of hours of his trip, 2,016, see the sun
-rise only eighty-three instead of eighty-four times. Going east, he
-would shorten each day’s length, reducing it from sunrise to sunrise, to
-twenty-three hours and forty-two and six-seventh minutes. In this case,
-the whole number of hours, 2,016, would divide up into eighty-five solar
-days. To one remaining at New York, there would be eighty-four solar
-days; to the one going west around the world, the same absolute time
-would be summed up in eighty-three solar days; and to the one going
-east, it would extend itself to eighty-five solar days. Thus at the
-close of every trip round the world, the Christian traveler or sailor
-must readjust the reckoning of his days, in order to observe the Lord’s
-day with his brethren at home. When our Constitution shall have been
-amended, and a true Christian regard shall be shown to all citizens, if
-our seventh-day friends feel grievously oppressed by the Sabbath laws,
-which will then be no dead letter, we shall do our utmost to have the
-national government provide a number of comfortable vessels, and give
-our friends a gratuitous trip round the world. We shall take care that
-the officers are instructed not to sail by the east; for our seventh-day
-Sabbatarians would then go away only to come home and be sixth-day
-Sabbatarians. Due care will be taken to have them proceed in the right
-direction, and to induce them on their return to stay at home, and
-government’s oppression of them by Sabbath laws will then forevermore
-have ceased.
-
-In all seriousness, we ask, How can a thoughtful man, in view of the
-fact of the earth’s revolution round the sun, and its effect on the
-measurement of time, hold to the second theory of the Christian Sabbath?
-We have a matter of fact to record just here. In 1790, nine mutineers
-from the English vessel, the Bounty, along with six men and twelve women
-from Tahiti, landed on what is known as Pitcairn’s island in the Pacific
-Ocean. John Adams, one of the mutineers, after the violent death of the
-other men, was converted by reading a copy of the Bible, and became a
-true Christian. Keeping his own count of the days, he observed the
-weekly Sabbath, with the community which was growing up, and which he
-was at great pains to instruct in the Christian religion. Some time
-after, an English vessel visited the islands, keeping their count of the
-days. The officers and crew of this vessel landed at the island on
-Saturday, but, to their astonishment, found a Christian community
-keeping the Christian Sabbath. The original settlers and the visitors
-had gone to the island in different directions. Did the sailors, who
-kept one day, not observe the Sabbath? Or did the islanders, who kept
-another day, violate the fourth precept of the decalogue?
-
-Two colonies of seventh-day advocates might leave the same port, one
-going east and the other west, and might locate on islands on the same
-parallel of longitude, but on different parallels of latitude. Each,
-keeping its own record of time, would be found, on settling in their
-permanent home, to be observing a different day as the weekly Sabbath.
-Would either colony admit that it was in the wrong? If they were to live
-apart, each might properly observe its own day; if together, would it
-matter which day might be observed?
-
-Thus the principle as to time in Sabbath observance insists, not on the
-essential holiness of any twenty-four hours in themselves, but on the
-dedication to God of one day in seven, one seventh of the time as nearly
-as that proportion can be measured by the most convenient means
-available. This, the third theory does, while it accepts all the facts
-of history. With one more article, in favor of the third theory of the
-Christian Sabbath, we shall close this whole discussion.
-
-
-
-
- A REJOINDER.
- “THE PRINCIPLE AS TO TIME IN SABBATH OBSERVANCE.”
-
-
-Were it not true that we had long since ceased to be surprised at
-anything which an individual could say when opposing the claims of the
-Lord’s Sabbath, after having received the light concerning them, our
-astonishment at the position taken by the gentleman of the _Statesman_,
-in the foregoing article, would have no bounds.
-
-To one who has followed him thus far in an elaborate argument, running
-through a series of nine communications, all for the purpose of
-establishing, from both Scripture and history, the change of the Sabbath
-from the seventh to the first day of the week, and the obligation under
-which all men are now placed to observe the latter instead of the
-former, it will be extremely difficult to explain, on grounds honorable
-to himself, this sudden repudiation of all which he has said in the
-past, while endeavoring to defend the newly found theory of the
-observance of one day in seven, to the exclusion of any definite day
-whatever.
-
-In his second article, he says, “We are concerned here and now simply
-with the transfer of the Sabbath from the seventh to the first day of
-the week.” In the third article, when speaking of apostolic times, he
-remarks again, “It was also seen that while the observance of the
-seventh day was not continued, another day of the week, the first, took
-its place as the stated day for religious assemblies and services.”
-Farther on, he writes again, as follows: “On the last seventh day on
-which the disciples rested, according to the commandment, the Lord
-himself is lying in the tomb. The glory of the seventh day dies out with
-the fading light of that day, throughout the whole of which the grave
-claimed the body of the Redeemer. But the glory of the Sabbath of the
-Lord survives. It receives fresh luster from the added glories of the
-Lord of the Sabbath. ‘The Stone which the builders refused has become
-the head of the corner.’ It is very early in the morning, the first day
-of the week. Again, ‘God said, Let there be light; and there was light’
-The Sun of Righteousness has risen with healing in his wings. This is
-the day which the Lord has made; we will rejoice and be glad in it. The
-first day of the week has become the Lord’s day.”
-
-But we must cease from our quotations, for them is no limit to
-expressions synonymous with the above. Not only so, but were additional
-proof necessary, by more ample extracts, it could be made to appear that
-the whole theory of his defense, as already declared, has rested
-entirely upon the change of the day from the seventh, which was observed
-till the death of Christ, to the first, which was honored especially by
-our Lord, by his personal appearance to the disciples on the first and
-second Sundays following the resurrection, and by the outpouring of the
-Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost, with the especial view of teaching
-the disciples that it had become holy time; also, that they, grasping
-the moral of the lesson imparted by example, if not by positive precept,
-inculcated the doctrine of the change, and made it binding upon all.
-
-If we are right in this, and the reader who has followed the debate thus
-far will unhesitatingly admit that such are the facts, then, of course,
-the gentleman is arrayed against himself in a manner most distasteful,
-no doubt, to his personal feelings, as well as disastrous to his
-polished logic; for to the mind of the merest school-boy it must be
-apparent that a change of Sabbath from one day of the week to another,
-involves the definiteness of the day thus honored; _i. e._, if the first
-day of the week is now the Christian Sabbath because of the nature of
-events which transpired upon it in particular, then, of course, it
-occupies that position to the exclusion of all other days; but this
-utterly demolishes the seventh-part-of-time theory, which the gentleman
-has adopted, the very essence of which is, that there is now no
-superiority in days, and the individual is left free to choose any one
-which may best accord with his tastes or subserve his interests.
-
-Here, then, we come to a dead halt. Which shall we believe, the nine
-articles of the gentleman, or the tenth, which is in direct conflict
-with their teachings? Should we go by the bulk of the testimony, then we
-must decide that there is a definite day, according to the conviction of
-our opponent. But if he still holds to that doctrine, then that which he
-has said against the seventh-day Sabbath, on the ground that the earth
-is round, and, therefore, that the Edenic Sabbath could not be kept in
-all portions of it, is deprived of all its force. For, assuredly, if he
-believes that God now requires all men to honor the first day of the
-week, the world over, then he must admit that it is possible for them to
-do so.
-
-But if it is possible for men both to find and to celebrate the first
-day of the week, on a round world, then, beyond all dispute, the same
-process which will enable them to do this, will also qualify them to
-locate and to observe the seventh-day Sabbath. For it is just as certain
-as mathematical demonstration can make it, that in a week consisting of
-seven days, having found the first of the number, in order to discover
-the last, you have but to take the one which preceded the known day, or,
-if you please, count forward six days from the one already established,
-and you have the last day of the Week to which it belongs.
-
-So, too, with every objection urged in the communication. The one in
-regard to the difficulties which would be experienced in an attempt to
-keep the Sabbath of the commandment at the poles, is just as fatal to
-the first day as it is to the seventh. All this talk, also, in regard to
-the impossibility of preserving a correct count, and of the lengthening
-and shortening of the days, as the traveler passes from the east to the
-west, if it has any force at all, or even the semblance of force, must
-be met and answered equally by the observers of the so-called Christian
-Sabbath, with those of the Sabbath of the Lord. This being true, we
-might pause right here, and roll the burden onto the opposition. Having
-raised the dust which is blinding the eyes of the ignorant, yet
-conscientious, it would be but substantial justice for Sabbatarians to
-fall back and say to them, Take the field, gentlemen, and wrest from the
-hand of the infidel and the atheist the weapons with which you have
-armed them to be employed against you in the very work in which you are
-engaged; for, be it remembered that the children of this world are wiser
-in their generation than the children of light, and they will readily
-perceive the advantage which they have gained by such doctrines and
-difficulties as those to which the gentleman has called their attention.
-
-This, however, we shall not do, but shall ourselves, in due time, strike
-at the very root of the error, in the interest of a definite and
-universal day of holy rest. Before entering upon this work,
-nevertheless, there is a matter which concerns Sabbatarians most deeply,
-to which attention should be directed.
-
-The gentleman and his friends are pressing upon the nation the necessity
-of the Constitutional Amendment—contrary to his former declaration, in
-which he said there was no necessary connection between the Sabbath and
-the amendment. He now justifies our strictures upon the disingenuousness
-of his argument, by deliberately stating, in the article before us, with
-an air of triumphant exultation, that, the amendment once secured, the
-Sabbath laws in this country will then cease to be a dead letter. By
-this, he means, of course, that they will be carried into operation. But
-what are those Sabbath laws? They are laws enforcing the first day of
-the week, in nearly every State in the Union.
-
-Now, we believe that what the gentleman says will be fulfilled; but
-right here is the proper place to offer a solemn protest. Will the
-gentleman fine and imprison my brethren and myself for disregarding the
-first day of the week, after having conscientiously kept the seventh? If
-so, we ask for the logic by which such a course could be justified, on
-the ground that the seventh-part-of-time theory is correct? Now, mark
-it, the object of the amendment is to make the Bible the fountain of
-national law. All the enactments of the Congress and all the decisions
-of the judiciary are to be in harmony with it. If, therefore, Sabbath
-laws are passed, they must be such as the Scriptures would warrant; for
-the Sabbath, be it remembered, which this movement seeks to enforce, is
-the one which the Bible teaches.
-
-But, according to the last theory, the day which God now requires to be
-observed is not any one in particular, but simply one in seven, the
-individual being left to make the selection of the one which he prefers
-thus to honor. Now, therefore, it is submitted that if God has given to
-man this prerogative of choice, then be has done so because this course
-was the one which commended itself to infinite wisdom, and no person or
-set of persons has a right to come between the creature and the Creator,
-depriving the former of rights which the latter has guaranteed to him.
-If the Bible Sabbath is indeed an indefinite one, we say to these
-gentlemen, Hands off; in the name of religion and the Bible you shall
-not perform a work which twill do violence to a large class of
-conscientious citizens, and which, according to your own argument, is
-contrary to the doctrine of the Christian Sabbath, as laid down in the
-word of God. Be consistent with yourselves and your views of Scripture.
-
-If, indeed, you are sincere in believing that Sabbatarians violate no
-divine law in the keeping of the seventh day, then we say to you in the
-name of charity, Why not allow them, so long as they are Christian men
-and women, and obedient citizens, to carry out their convictions of
-duty, without compelling them, by the appliances of persecuting
-legislation, to keep the particular first-day Sabbath which indeed you
-have chosen for yourselves, but for which you have now ceased to claim
-any special divine honor? To form them, either to disregard their own
-convictions of duty, or to keep two days holy, would lie an act of
-despotism but one remove from that terrible bigotry which, in the
-Inquisition, resorted to the rack and the thumbscrew; not, indeed, to
-make men better Christians or better citizens, but to coerce them into
-the acceptance of institutions for which there was no divine authority.
-
-But we must pans to the consideration of other points. To the objection
-that the seventh day may have been lost since creation, and that he is a
-bold man who would affirm his ability to locate it now, it may be
-replied that, while Sabbatarians claim for themselves no unusual amount
-of courage, they do insist that it is an easy matter to demonstrate the
-succession of weeks, and the proper place of the original seventh day in
-the septenary cycle at the present time. The way in which this may be
-done is as follows: At the creation of the world, God blessed and
-sanctified the seventh day, because that on it he had rested. At the
-exodus from Egypt, he gave to the people a written law, enforcing the
-Sabbatic observance of the day on which he had originally ceased from
-his labors. On the sixth, Moses said to the people, “To-morrow is the
-rest of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord.” For forty years subsequent to
-this, God marked out this day from the others by causing that no manna
-should fall upon it whatever, whereas it fell upon every other one of
-the seven.
-
-Thus we have the authority of God himself, who assuredly could not
-mistake, that the people of Israel, in the outset, had committed to them
-the original seventh day, since God not only gave them a Sabbath, but
-also, according to the reason of the commandment, the Sabbath of the
-Lord. Descending the line of history to the days of Christ, we find him
-declaring that he had kept his Father’s commandments (John 15:10). But
-one of these commandments was that relating to the Sabbath; in order,
-therefore, to the proper observance of it, Christ must have been able to
-decide which day in the week it was. That this was the case, none will
-dispute. Thus the day is located in his time satisfactorily, since he
-kept the same one which the Jews regarded, and which preceded the day of
-his resurrection. From that time to this, we have the general agreement
-of Jews, Christians, and heathen, in regard to the precise place in the
-week of both the first and the seventh day. Surely, this is all which
-could be demanded in order to reach reasonable certainty.
-
-The difficulty which the gentleman finds in harmonizing the will of God,
-as expressed in the law of nature and that of a definite Sabbath for the
-people living near the poles, is apparently possessed of some force. It
-is, however, not peculiar to him. These barren wastes of ice and snow,
-though far removed from our civilization, are apparently destined to
-figure as largely in the spiritual world as they do in that of
-scientific research; not only on the Sabbath question, but also in that
-of baptism, it has a part to act. Think, says the advocate of
-sprinkling, as a shudder runs through his whole system, think of an
-immersion administered in the regions of eternal ice. Then having
-suitably impressed his auditors with the physical difficulties in the
-way of Bible baptism, he concludes that God never could have ordained
-immersion as the only method, since it is impracticable in the extreme
-north, and God surely would have commanded a form of ordinance which
-could be carried out in all parts of the world.
-
-In harmony with this line of deduction is the difficulty stated by our
-friend. Chiming in with the theory that the laws of nature and the law
-of God must run harmoniously together, it is shown that at the poles the
-days and nights are six months long; and, therefore, that a twenty-four
-hour Sabbath, definitely located upon the last day of the week, is out
-of the questions. The conclusion drawn is that, as the theory of the
-seventh-day Sabbatarians is in conflict with the ordinance of nature in
-these portions of the globe, it must be contrary to the original design
-of God.
-
-But pause a moment; suppose we should grant that in the region in
-question there are men who cannot keep the seventh-day Sabbath as
-originally ordained, does that prove of necessity that it ought not to
-be hallowed in those portions of the world where there is no difficulty
-in the way of its observance? We think not. To illustrate: Were a man to
-pass his life in a coal mine, hundreds of feet beneath the surface,
-laboring continually, and never seeing the sun at all, would he,
-therefore, be exempted from the definite Sabbath? You answer, No. But
-why is this reply returned? Manifestly, because the difficulty is not
-with God and Isis laws, or the sun, but with the individual who has
-voluntarily placed himself under abnormal circumstances. In other words,
-he has located himself where the God of nature never designed that he
-should, and, in so doing, he has himself created a difficulty which he
-himself can remove.
-
-So, too, with the Northman. If he finds it impossible to keep a Sabbath
-which is most perfectly adapted to the wants of mankind, it is simply
-because he has placed himself in a region which God has doctored waste
-and uninhabitable as emphatically as can be done by nature speaking
-through the language of eternal ice and snow, and the disappearance for
-six months in a year of that great luminary whose light and heat are so
-indispensable to the comfort and advancement of the race. But, if this
-is true, then the argument from the conflict between the law of the God
-of nature and that of revelation, concerning a definite day of rest,
-loses all of its force; for the whole trouble arises, not from any want
-of adaptation on the part of such a rest to the circumstances of those
-who are where God would have them located, but from a disregard, in the
-first place, on the part of the nations in question, of the manifest law
-of prohibition to the settlement of regions which were designed to
-remain unoccupied.
-
-Their relief can be found in one of two directions: They can, in the
-interest of their own progress, retrace their steps to localities where
-the more advanced portion of the race feel the genial influence of a
-diurnal sun; or, should they insist upon remaining in the bleak regions
-of their choice, it is possible for them, according to the accounts of
-travelers, to mark by the variations of the twilight, even in their six
-months’ night, the boundaries of the Sabbath and the week days as they
-come and go to those residing in more temperate regions.
-
-It is now time to grapple with the theory that it is impossible for
-those traveling around the world and those living in different portions
-of it to keep one and the same day. The first thing to be settled is the
-matter of what is meant by the expression, “the same day.” Upon this
-point, the gentleman has wasted many words. We have never insisted upon
-the identical hours. All that we demand is that the mine day should be
-observed throughout the habitable globe, _i. e._, each individual should
-celebrate in his own particular locality the seventh day of the week as
-it comes to him in its passage round the earth—to use the language of
-common parlance.
-
-Whether this can be done or not is a question which involves the wisdom
-of God; for, granting that he gave the fourth commandment as a Sabbath
-law, and the regulations concerning the Sabbath, as found in the books
-of Moses, there is no room for dispute that he understood the statute to
-enforce the keeping of a definite day, and not merely one-seventh part
-of time, In the sixteenth chapter of Exodus, where the Sabbath is first
-introduced, is found an excellent opportunity to test this matter. He
-there marks out the day which he had hallowed as the one which followed
-the sixth, and the only one on which no manna fell. For forty years,
-also, this practice of separating the day of his rest by a weekly
-miracle from all others was continued. But why should he have done this
-if there was no choice, and if the keeping of the seventh part of time
-was all that was necessary? Nay, more, why did he make it absolutely
-impossible for a man to celebrate any other day but the seventh day of
-the week? That he did so, we can prove in a few words.
-
-We will suppose that a person entertaining the sentiments of the
-gentleman should have attempted to carry them out in the forty years
-during which God led the people in the wilderness; also, that his first
-experiment was that of Sunday rest. In this he would have failed
-utterly. Do you ask, How? I answer that God had decreed that no manna
-should fall on the seventh day (Ex. 16:26), and that the manna which was
-to be eaten on the Sabbath should be gathered on the day before (Ex.
-16:5). It would therefore have been impossible for the individual in
-question to provide food for his Sunday rest. But, disgusted with this
-kind of Sabbath-keeping, suppose he should have tried, in order, Monday,
-Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, the result would not have
-varied materially. On Sunday, there was an utter absence of all food; on
-the other days, that which had been previously gathered, instead of
-being fit for use, would have been found corrupted and changed into
-loathsome worms, since God had told the people that only the manna which
-was gathered on the sixth day should be kept until the day following;
-and some of them, having made the experiment of disobeying in the
-particular in question, found the result as cited above (Ex. 16:19, 20).
-On the other hand, should the same individual have decided finally to
-consecrate the seventh day of the week, he would have found no
-difficulty whatever. Gathering his double portion of the manna on the
-sixth day, by a miracle of God it would have been preserved pure and
-wholesome through the last day of the week.
-
-But how can this be accounted for on the hypothesis that no particular
-day was chosen by the Lord? If, indeed, he had adopted the indefinite
-plan, and had left the people to choose for themselves, it is certain
-that he did this because it was the best method. But if it were the best
-method, and if it were in accordance with his view of the statute, then,
-assuredly, he would not have stultified himself and mocked the people by
-first granting them a privilege and then, by his providence, preventing
-them from carrying it out.
-
-Should it be suggested that this law was confined to the land of
-Palestine and to the Jews in its operation, I answer; first, that at the
-time spoken of the people were in Arabia, not in Judea, and that even
-should that be granted, which is not true, viz., that the fourth
-commandment related simply to the Hebrews, this does not affect the
-question at all, for no one will insist that Jews were only obliged by
-it when in Judea. Wherever they might be, they were required to keep the
-Sabbath, whether in bondage in Assyria, or traversing the known world in
-quest of gain. From Spain to India, from Scythia to Africa, this law was
-designed to apply and did apply for hundreds of years before it will be
-even claimed that it was abolished. This being true, it is established
-beyond question that God himself imposed upon men, traversing the whole
-of the eastern continent, a uniform day of worship.
-
-Do you inquire when they commenced it? I answer, At sunset, agreeably to
-the direction in Lev. 23:32. Did they go eastward to the Pacific, or
-westward to the Atlantic, they were required to commence their rest at
-that hour. Was it impossible for them to do so? He that says so charges
-God with folly. Were they capable of carrying out the requirement? Then,
-at least on the eastern continent, the definite day was a practicable
-thing. God knew how his people would be scattered; he gave them the
-institution of the Sabbath, adapted to whatever circumstances they might
-be placed in; he marked out that Sabbath from the rest of the week, and
-in the outset settled beyond controversy the question that it was not
-movable in its nature. Therefore, he who would accept the theory which
-we have been considering and repudiate the one which we indorse, must do
-it in the face of God’s explanatory providence, in the teeth of his
-written law, and against the practice of his people, Israel, who for
-centuries have had no difficulty in finding the Sabbath in every
-latitude.
-
-So much for the law and its history, making clear, as it does, that our
-opponents do not understand the possibilities of the case as God looks
-upon them. We will now proceed to the consideration of the difficulties
-which they discover in the realization of our theory.
-
-It is claimed that, in going around the world eastward, a day is gained;
-and in going around westward, a day is lost, to the traveler. From these
-premises it is argued that a definite day cannot be kept. Has it ever
-occurred to the gentleman that his own theory would be somewhat
-disturbed by the same trip? Mark it, it is exactly one-seventh part of
-time which is to be kept. It will hardly be urged that all the old
-watches in the land are reliable enough to be trusted in a journey of
-this length, and, besides, suppose we had lived in a period when such
-time-pieces were not known, then what? Oh! says the objector, we would
-have gone by the sun. Then you agree with us, after all, that the sun
-presents the most available method of marking the day; but remember,
-now, that you are on your journey round the earth, westward; you travel
-six days, each one considerably lengthened out by the fact that you are
-going with the sun; you stop and rest on the seventh day, which you call
-the Sabbath. Unfortunately, however, as you have been lying still, it is
-considerably shorter than your six days of work; by this means you have
-cheated the Lord out of one-seventh of the whole time which all of the
-six days had in excess over the one on which you rested. Traveling
-eastward, the opposite would be true, and your days of rest would be
-longer than your days of labor, and would not, therefore, represent
-one-seventh part of time.
-
-Again, we might show by argument the complete anarchy into which the
-community would be thrown by the realization of this doctrine, that each
-man for himself is at liberty to fix upon his weekly Sabbath. Nothing
-would be easier to prove than that it would seriously obstruct your
-courts of justice; that it would render stated worship impossible; in
-fine, that it would bring confusion into every walk in life.
-
-Do you reply that you will obviate the difficulty by legislative
-enactment, and that you will make this whole nation, from New York to
-San Francisco, regard the Sunday for the sake of uniformity and good
-order? I answer; first, have you then improved upon God’s great plan?
-Did he not know that a definite day would be the best, and would he not
-have been likely to give it to us? Secondly, then you admit that it is,
-after all, possible to keep one and the same day across the whole of
-this continent; for were this not true it would be idle for you to
-attempt to produce uniformity by legislation. But putting this
-concession of yours in regard to the western, alongside of God’s
-enforcement of a definite day for centuries, on the whole of the
-eastern, continent, the circuit of the globe is made, and the
-possibility of keeping a definite Sabbath on both hemispheres is
-established.
-
-Before me lies the draft of an electrical clock, which is styled, “The
-clock of all nations.” The design is an ingenious one, and serves to
-show at a glance the difference in time between prominent cities in all
-parts of the globe. For this purpose, a central dial is drafted,
-representing the meridian of New York. The hands on this dial indicate
-the precise hour of noon. Around this central figure are arranged twenty
-additional dials, on each one of which is marked by the hands the time
-of day as it will exist in the cities named, commencing on the east of
-New York with Pekin, and terminating to the west of it with San
-Francisco. By it, you perceive at a glance the precise variation of time
-in the different longitudes to which these cities belong.
-
-For example, while the clock of New York indicates twelve, noon, the one
-in Pekin indicates twenty minutes before one in the morning; the one in
-Rome, fifteen minutes to six P. M.; the one in London, five minutes of
-five P. M.; and so on until you reach New York, where it is twelve M.
-Then passing westward of that point, where the time is, of course,
-slower, the dial for Chicago marks seven minutes past eleven A. M.; that
-of St. Louis, five minutes of eleven A. M.; that in San Francisco,
-fifteen minutes before nine A. M. By this means, the variation between
-Pekin and San Francisco is shown to be about sixteen hours, or nearly
-two-thirds of one whole day. By the same method, the reader will at once
-discern that it is possible to locate the commencement of the day at any
-one of these points in its passage around the world.
-
-In order to do this, let it be supposed that the day begins when it did
-in Bible times, with the setting of the sun. It is, if you please,
-Sunday at Pekin, and those who keep that day commence to celebrate it at
-sunset. Now, if we would ascertain just when the citizens of Rome would
-enter upon a like service, it is only necessary to determine how long it
-would take the sunset to travel the distance separating these two
-cities. By consulting the draft in question, we find that the time at
-Rome is six hours and fifty-five minutes slower than that at Pekin. This
-being the case, the sunset would reach them, and they would enter upon
-the first day of the week just six hours and fifty-five minutes after
-those dwelling on the meridian of Pekin have done so.
-
-So we might go through the whole list. As the world revolves upon its
-axis, it would bring London to the same point where the people of Rome
-saw the sun sink in the west and entered upon the Sunday, just fifty
-minutes subsequent to that event. The citizens of New York would begin
-their Sunday, also, with the sunset, four hours and fifty-five minutes
-after those of London did so; and those of Chicago, fifty-five minutes
-later than those of New York; and those of San Francisco, two hours and
-twenty minutes subsequent to those of Chicago. All, however, would be
-hallowing the same day, though not, for a portion of the time, the same
-hours.[18] Each, in his own proper locality, would commence to keep the
-day when it reached him, and continue to keep it until by a complete
-revolution of the earth he is brought around to the commencement of
-another day, as indicated by another decline of the sun. This is as God
-would have it.
-
-In the passage from Egypt to Palestine there was a variation of some
-minutes; but there was no change in the time of commencing the Sabbath.
-From even to even shall you keep your Sabbaths, was the divine edict,
-and his people, in going eastward or westward, obeyed this injunction.
-In doing so they needed no time-piece; nor would the traveler at the
-present time. In every habitable region, according to God’s plan, the
-great luminary of heaven visibly marks the boundaries of sacred time.
-The day began in the east, and travels to the west. A complete
-revolution of the earth brings it, with its complement of light and
-darkness, to the home of every man, no matter as to the meridian of
-longitude in which he lives. It is the same day, in the Bible sense, as
-that kept by the Christian thousands of miles to the east of him, though
-it may not begin at exactly the same moment.
-
-Practically, this question has no real significance whatever. Though it
-may puzzle the brain of one who has not before him the facts, it has
-been settled forever in a most remarkable manner by the usage of
-mankind. The fact is beyond cavil that, from the extreme eastern
-boundary of the eastern continent to the extreme western verge of the
-western continent, there is such a perfect agreement upon this point
-that each day of the week, commencing on the western shore of the
-Pacific, continues its course across Asia, Europe, and America, until it
-arrives at the eastern shore of the same sea. So true is this that, were
-there a line of churches surmounted with bells, in hearing distance of
-each other, they could ring in the commencement of any day; say at
-Yokohama in Japan, and its march could be made known along the whole
-line from that place to San Francisco by a like practice in each of the
-churches, without a solitary break until the last bell on the Pacific
-coast had announced its arrival there. Whether it be admitted that it
-can be done or not, it is a fact that the Christians from China to
-California do observe the same Sabbath or Sunday all along the line
-between the two points.
-
-Should it be replied that, although there is a uniform reckoning of the
-days to those passing from San Francisco eastward to China, or from
-China westward to San Francisco, that, nevertheless, should they cross
-the Pacific Ocean from San Francisco westward to China, or from China
-eastward to San Francisco, it would be necessary for them in the first
-case to add a day, and in the last, to drop one, in order to make their
-time harmonize with that of the people in these two countries, the reply
-is, that this is very true. It does not, however, prove that there is no
-definite day which can be kept alike by the inhabitants of the two
-continents; for in order to the keeping of the same day on a round world
-there must somewhere be a day-line, in other words, there must be a
-point where the day begins. In crossing that line the same result would
-ensue as that claimed in the passage from California to China _via_ the
-Pacific, _i. e._, a day must be either dropped or added in the reckoning
-of the individual making the transit.
-
-We have already seen that God’s plan was to measure the days by the
-setting of the sun. This being the case, the fourth day, on which the
-sun was made, commenced at the precise point where at the time of its
-creation it would have appeared to a person to the east of it as sinking
-out of sight in the west. The day commencing at that point passed around
-the earth until every portion of it had in succession witnessed the
-setting of the sun on the fifth day. The only difficulty that remains in
-the case, consequently, is that of deciding where the day-line should be
-located. As already discovered, the practice of nations has fixed it in
-the Pacific Ocean. It is not a little remarkable that sailors change
-their reckoning while crossing that ocean backward or forward, and
-circumnavigate the globe at will without the slightest confusion. The
-only instance which has been cited in which any trouble has occurred, or
-any confusion of date has arisen, is that of Pitcairn’s Island, in which
-they failed to make the change under consideration.[19] Had they done
-this, they would have found themselves in harmony with the great mass of
-men living on the same meridian with their insignificant island.
-
-The only matter of debate which remains is that concerning the proper
-location of the day-line. Has there or has there not been a mistake made
-in fixing upon the place where it belongs? Certain it is that the
-providence of God seems to harmonize with the present arrangement. Man
-commenced his existence in the east. The progress of empire has been
-westward. Emigration has carried with it a harmonious system of counting
-the days, by which they have been recognized as beginning on the
-eastern, and traveling to the western, continent. Especially is this
-true of the Christian world.
-
-But, again, is there not, aside from this providential arrangement and
-from the universal opinion that the day does begin in the east, as well
-as the fact that scientific men have established the point of changing
-the reckoning somewhere in the Pacific Ocean, some additional reason for
-supposing that God would choose this locality for the beginning of the
-day? We answer, There is. Should the day-line run through any continent
-or large body of land, it will be readily perceived that it would
-produce great confusion, since, on the one side of it, though imaginary
-in its character, individuals would be keeping the seventh day of the
-week, while on the other, their neighbors in close proximity to them
-would not yet have made their exit from the sixth.
-
-To avoid this difficulty, therefore, the only remedy which could be
-found would consist in the employment of some great natural boundary,
-such as a range of mountains or an expanse of water, by which those on
-one side of the day-line would be so separated as to prevent the
-disorder which must arise from constant and uninterrupted
-intercommunication. That there is any range of mountains stretching
-northward and southward from pole to pole which would answer the purpose
-in question, no one will insist. The only resource left, consequently,
-is that of those vast bodies of water called seas or oceans.
-
-Turning now to the one which is known as the Atlantic Ocean, it is found
-that the day-line could not be run through it without intercepting some
-habitable portion of the globe. The only resource which remains is found
-in the Pacific Ocean, which, as has been seen, has been selected by the
-mass of mankind as a suitable place in which to make those changes that
-would be necessary in case the day-line was actually located therein.
-Happily, an examination of a large globe will prove that a line drawn
-from Behring’s Straits southward across the latitudes which are
-available for the homes of mankind will not touch any portions of land
-whatever, or at least if it strikes any they would be so insignificant
-in their character that they would not be worthy of mention.
-
-With these remarks, the subject of the day-line is dismissed with the
-conviction that the necessity of its existence, the fact that it must be
-found in the Pacific Ocean if anywhere, and the uniform recognition in
-practice, if not in theory, by all nations, of its location in that sea,
-unite in furnishing a combination of facts which render assurance
-justifiable in the mind of one who does not insist upon more testimony
-than he ought to demand.
-
-There remain now but two matters in the article of the gentleman which
-need to be disposed of. These are found in the contemptuous sneer at the
-insignificance of the numbers of Sabbatarians, and the witticisms, if
-such they may be called, which are indulged in in the employment of the
-suggestion concerning the use of the sponges saturated with stupefying
-chemicals and the gratuitous trip around the world, which it is proposed
-to give them.
-
-To answer these sallies to the satisfaction of some would be impossible,
-while with others, possessing the power of logical discrimination and
-knowing that the office of mere wit is most frequently that of diverting
-the attention from a course of reasoning which it is felt cannot be met,
-such an effort would be uncalled for. The paucity in numbers is the same
-old, threadbare objection which every great reform has been compelled to
-meet since the world began. While the administration of narcotics and
-the trip round the world would be just as fatal to the exact observer of
-the seventh part of time as it would to one celebrating a definite day,
-even though it were admitted that the consequences of such a journey
-would be as claimed by the writer.
-
-But besides all this, it will be discovered that the basis of the whole
-transaction, both in the case of the sponge and the vessel, is fraud,
-deceit, and force. Stupefy a man with narcotics for twenty-four hours;
-or nail him down under the hatches of a circumnavigating vessel; break
-the compass; send him round the world; let the whole community conspire
-to falsify the facts in the case; do not let him know where he has been;
-falsify the truth regarding the day observed by first-day keepers; and
-then, forsooth, you have changed the practice, if not convinced the
-judgment, of a little handful of conscientious, definite Sabbath-day
-keepers. Wonderful, gentlemen! Wonderful in the extreme! What results
-for such prodigious efforts! Alas, for truth, when it must pass such an
-ordeal as this! We blush, but not for ourselves. We would almost be
-willing to inhale the anæsthetic or run the hazard of the voyage at sea,
-taking our chances respecting the proper preservation of the
-Heaven-appointed day of rest, if, by so doing, we might prevent our
-brethren of the Amendment school, for whose welfare we have the most
-earnest desire, from making so sorry a show of the low estimate which
-they place upon the importance of employing in a controversy like this,
-arguments which appeal only to the Christian’s head and heart, instead
-of those which appeal to the baser faculties of the mind.
-
-A summary of the ground traveled in this rejoinder would run somewhat as
-follows:—
-
-1. That in adopting the seventh-part-of-time theory, the gentleman has
-abandoned the definite first day which he sought to establish in the
-first nine of his articles.
-
-2. That the seventh-part-of-time theory is just as fatal to the Sunday
-as it is to the Sabbath.
-
-3. That it overturns the practicability of the proposed Amendment, since
-it seeks to enforce a definite day, and since, according to it,
-Sabbatarians have a Bible right to observe the seventh day in the
-exercise of a divinely given choice of days.
-
-4. That it is possible to establish the identity of the last day of the
-week at the present time with that upon which God rested at the
-completion of the emotion; from the providential manner in which God
-pointed it out in the exodus from Egypt; the fact that Christ and his
-disciples kept the Sabbath according to the commandment; the general
-agreement among Jews, Christians, and heathen concerning its place in
-the week from that time to this.
-
-5. That the objection concerning the conflict between a definite Sabbath
-and the laws of nature at the poles does not array the God of nature
-against himself, or our version of his commandment, since the trouble
-does not imply any want of foresight on the part of the Deity, but
-rather a disregard of the plainest teachings of both providence and
-nature on the part of those who have placed themselves where it was
-never designed that men should locate.
-
-6. That if a definite day is impossible, then the wisdom of God is
-impeached, since, both by the letter of the commandment and by his
-providential interpretation of it for forty years, that is the very
-thing which it inculcates.
-
-7. That a definite day can be kept on the eastern continent, since this
-had been done for hundreds of years before the change of the law will be
-even claimed.
-
-8. That a definite day can be observed on the western continent, since
-this is the very object which the Amendment is designed to secure.
-
-9. That the trip around the world would render it as impossible to keep
-an exact seventh part of time as it would a definite seventh day.
-
-10. That the seventh-part-of-time theory would introduce into society
-the direst confusion, defeating even the administration of justice.
-
-11. That, practically, the whole world from the extreme east to the
-extreme west does keep a definite day.
-
-12. That the loss and gain of time creates no disturbance except in the
-crossing of the Pacific Ocean.
-
-13. That with a definite day, there must be a day-line.
-
-14. That that day-line is, by the uniform practice of nations, and the
-providence of God, which renders it impossible that it should exist
-anywhere else, drawn through the Pacific Ocean.
-
-15. That it only remains for us to do just what we are doing and have
-been doing for centuries in order to prove by actual demonstration that
-all the difficulties in the way of a definite Sabbath can be readily
-disposed of by those who are desirous of keeping the law of God as it
-reads.
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- By consulting the figures given above, the reader will be able to
- demonstrate, not only the fact that the inhabitants along the line
- from Pekin to San Francisco, can hallow the same day, but also that
- the day which they hallow will be identical in some of its hours. For
- example: It was shown that the people of Rome commence their day six
- hours and fifty-five minutes later than do those of Pekin. Deducting
- these six hours and fifty-five minutes from twenty-four hours we have
- left seventeen hours and five minutes as the period of time during
- which the citizens of these two cities would be celebrating the
- Sabbath in common. Applying the same principle to other cities, we
- find that London and Pekin would worship together for sixteen hours
- and fifteen minutes; New York and Pekin, eleven hours and twenty
- minutes; Chicago and Pekin, ten hours and twenty-five minutes; S.
- Francisco and Pekin, eight hours and five minutes.
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- The gentleman might have cited the case of Alaska, also, as a parallel
- to that of Pitcairn’s Island. The inhabitants of this region, like
- those of the island mentioned, sailed eastward to this continent
- across the Pacific Ocean, and failed to drop the required day in their
- reckoning. The result was, that when we purchased that territory, they
- were found to be keeping Saturday instead of Sunday. We believe,
- however, that the mistake is now rectified.
-
-
-
-
- STATESMAN’S REPLY.
- ARTICLE ELEVEN.
- THE TRUE THEORY OF THE CHRISTIAN SABBATH.
-
-
-The third theory of the Christian Sabbath, in the order in which we have
-been considering the different theories, affirms that the Sabbath was
-instituted at the creation of man, and that it has never been abolished
-or superseded. This theory further maintains that the essential idea of
-the law of the Sabbath is not the holiness of any particular portion of
-time, but the consecration of a specified proportion of time, viz., one
-day in seven; that, in accordance with this essential idea of the
-Sabbath, a change of day was admissible; that a change was actually made
-by divine warrant, on account of, and dating from, the resurrection of
-Christ; and that the first day of the week, the Lord’s day, is the true
-Christian Sabbath, having its moral sanction in the fourth commandment.
-
-Enough has already been written in these columns, in disproving the
-opposing theories, to show that this theory of the Sabbath is the true
-one. Two things being admitted, there appears to be no escape from this
-theory. Let it be admitted, first, that God instituted the Sabbath for
-all mankind, and that its law is of unchanging as well as universal
-application. This is readily conceded by those with whom we are now in
-discussion. Then, in the second place, let it be admitted that the
-inspired apostles, under the guidance of Christ and his Spirit, and with
-their manifest approbation, ceased to observe the seventh day, and
-actually observed the first day of the week. This our opponents are very
-loth to admit. But the testimony given by us at considerable length is
-simply overwhelming and incontrovertible. The third theory, and it
-alone, harmonizes the immutable law of the Sabbath with the actual
-change of day.
-
-In further confirmation of the correctness of this theory, it remains
-for us, in concluding this discussion, to show that this third theory
-accords with the fourth commandment, and meets every aspect of the
-design of the institution of the Sabbath.
-
-The principal feature of the design of the Sabbath is the setting forth
-of God’s sovereign control, as creator, of man and the time of man, as
-God’s creature. Called into being by the Creator, and made lord over the
-irrational and material creation, man was taught that his time was to be
-used for God’s honor. It was a trust from the Creator; and that man
-might not forget this, one-seventh of the time in regular recurrence was
-marked out to be consecrated specially to the Lord of all. This is the
-very idea in the commemoration of the work of creation. It is to keep
-alive the knowledge of God as the Creator and Sovereign Ruler of man. To
-commemorate the creation, is to keep before the mind, week by week, the
-duty of using our time for the honor of the Author and Upholder of our
-being.
-
-Nor is the example of God’s resting the seventh day made insignificant
-by this theory of the Christian Sabbath. “In six days God made the
-heavens and the earth, and rested the seventh day.” God’s people in
-different parts of the world do and must begin their work at different
-times, and yet in each locality they labor six days and rest the
-seventh. It is the proportion of time which is the law of the
-commandment, enforced by the divine example; and hence the Christian
-Sabbath, in the true import of the commandment, is as really the seventh
-day as the Jewish Sabbath. The Christian labors six days, and not the
-seventh, according to the divine example and the divine command.
-
-In this way, also, the true theory of the Christian Sabbath meets the
-design of the institution as it was intended to arrest the current of
-the outward life and lead up the soul to unseen and eternal verities.
-And here there is a most important argument for the change of the day
-for Sabbath observance. It is most reasonable to believe that, if there
-be any work which more gloriously manifests the perfections of God, and
-serves better to turn the thoughts of men to things above, than the work
-of creation, the day which commemorates such a work would be the
-appropriate time for Sabbath observance.
-
-So far as the essential idea of the Sabbath connects itself with a
-particular day, the argument is of great weight in favor of a change
-from the seventh to the first day of the week. The weekly division is
-the main thing, let the week begin when it may. It may begin on what we
-now call the third, or fourth, or any other, day. It will matter little.
-But as the first day, in our enumeration of the days, will always bring
-to mind the great work of redemption, accomplished by the Saviour, who
-on the first day of the week rose from the dead, the observance of this
-day as the Sabbath best answers one of the principal designs of that
-institution.
-
-And then, how fittingly does the observance of the first day, the day of
-the Lord’s resurrection, correspond to the design of the Sabbath as a
-foretaste of the heavenly rest—the _Sabbatismos_ or Sabbath-keeping that
-remains for the people of God. Rejoicing here on the Christian Sabbath
-in what our Redeemer has done for us, we look forward with joyful
-anticipations to the many mansions which he has gone before us to
-prepare, that we may be “forever with the Lord.”
-
- “Bright shadows of true rest; some shoots of bliss;
- Heaven once a week;
- The next world’s gladness prepossessed in this,
- A day to seek
-
- Eternity in time; the steps by which
- We climb above all ages; lamps that light
- Man through his heap of dark days; and the rich
- And full redemption of the whole week’s flight.
-
- ‘The milky way chalked out with suns; a clue
- That guides through evening hours; and in full story
- A taste of Heaven on earth; a pledge and cue
- Of a full feast; and the out-courts of glory.’”
-
-
-
-
- A REJOINDER.
- “THE TRUE THEORY OF THE CHRISTIAN SABBATH.”
-
-
-It is a peculiarity of this discussion that we are prevented, in our
-rejoinders, from anticipating the positions which our opponent has in
-store for us. Were it possible to proceed upon principles of
-consistency, in debate, and conclude that he, having adopted such and
-such views, would continue to maintain them steadily for the future,
-there would be a sort of satisfaction found in preparing material to be
-employed hereafter. But we have learned, by actual experience, that in
-this debate such anticipatory action would be labor lost. For example:
-In the last reply, which had to do with the seventh-part-of-time theory,
-we had intended to show that, were it true, and that, were the
-observance of one day in seven all that is now required, even then
-Sabbatarians stood upon a footing as safe as that of their opponents,
-since the observance of the seventh day answered to the keeping of
-one-seventh part of time, equally with that of the celebration of the
-first day of the week.
-
-Being prevented by want of space from indulging in these reflections, we
-laid them over for another week, supposing that they would come in play
-equally well at this time, Alas! what a mistake! We should have struck
-when the iron was hot. Unfortunately, we are not now confronting the
-no-day-in-particular doctrine, as we were then; but it is the “Lord’s
-day” again, the first day of an indefinite week, “a particular, definite
-day, enforced by the command and the example of Christ and the
-apostles,” which once more stands before us. How it is that we have been
-borne so rapidly over the space which separates these antagonistic
-positions, the reader will have to decide for himself; for we confess to
-a perfect want of ability, on our own part, to render him any
-assistance. Without the slightest attempt at logical deduction, we are
-first informed that the essential idea in Sabbath observance is not that
-of the keeping of a particular day, but the consecration of one day in
-the week, allowing the week to begin wherever it may. This, we are told,
-would suitably commemorate God’s rest at the creation of the world; and,
-also, that if, in addition, we make the day of our rest identical with
-the first day of the week, we can thereby celebrate both creation and
-redemption. For this very purpose, we are informed, the Sabbath
-commandment was changed, so as to admit of the introduction of a new
-day.
-
-But pause a moment. Has the gentleman told us just what change was made?
-Has he told us what words were stricken out? and how it now reads? The
-reader has not forgotten that this is the very thing the opposition were
-challenged to perform. He will perceive that this, also, is the very
-thing which the gentleman has failed to accomplish, and cannot hereafter
-do, since the reply under review is the last of his series. If it be
-said that he has cited us to the fourth commandment, as given in the
-twentieth of Exodus, as containing the law as it now reads, then he is
-self-condemned; for he admits that the phraseology of that commandment
-did enforce a definite day, and that, the last day of the week.
-
-But once more: Passing over the absurdity of claiming a change in the
-law, where there is no ability to produce the statute as amended, let us
-go back from Sinai to Eden, along with the gentleman, and see if we
-cannot find, independent of the commandment, evidence that the creation
-Sabbath was not a portable institution, to be trundled about at the
-caprice of any and every individual. Mark it, now, it is granted that
-what is called the Jewish Sabbath law enforced the keeping of the
-seventh day, and admitted of no other as a substitute. But whence is
-this conclusion drawn? Undeniably, from the words, “The seventh day is
-the Sabbath of the Lord thy God; in it thou shalt not do any work.”
-
-But where has the gentleman learned that the creation Sabbath was
-enjoined in the use of language less explicit and limited in its meaning
-than are the words of the decalogue? If he knows anything about the
-original decree of Jehovah, and the limitations with which he guarded
-the Sabbath in the outset, he, like ourselves, is compelled to go to the
-sacred record for information. If, in going there, he has been able to
-find anything which would prove that the Edenic Sabbath was less fixed
-in its character than that of Sinai, then he has made some progress. The
-only scripture which will throw any light upon the subject will be found
-in Gen. 2:1-3.
-
-Unhappily for the gentleman, however, it is fatal to his conception that
-the original Sabbath varied in any way from that of the Jews—so-called.
-In the account of its institution, the language employed is almost
-precisely the same with that subsequently traced upon the tables of
-stone. It is there declared that God sanctified (_i. e._, set apart to a
-holy use) the _seventh day_. The reason for this action is the fact that
-he had rested upon it. Now, it will be observed that it was the
-“_seventh day_” that God blessed and sanctified, and no other. It is
-submitted, therefore, as the gentleman concedes, that the same
-expression (_i. e._, the seventh day), when employed in the commandment
-given to Moses, did locate the Sabbath institution immovably upon the
-last day of the week, until the law was changed; that the same language,
-when employed originally, must have produced the same result; in other
-words, if the command to keep the seventh day, as given on Mount Sinai,
-held the people strictly to the observance of the last day of the week,
-so, too, Jehovah, in the beginning, restricted the whole race to a
-Sabbath which was, equally with the other, the seventh, and, therefore,
-the last day of the week.
-
-In order to avoid this conclusion, it will be required that, by some
-means, he should be able to show that the same terms which were employed
-by God, at one time, have a different meaning from that attached to
-them, as employed by him at another time. Not only so, the Sabbath in
-Genesis, like that in Exodus, is further limited and defined by two
-additional facts. First, it was the day on which God rested; secondly,
-it was the day which he blessed because He had rested upon it.
-Therefore, before any other day could be substituted for it, these two
-things must be true of it, as matter of history. This, however, can
-never be the case, as it regards any day of the week, save the last;
-consequently, he who celebrates any other is not celebrating the one
-which God imposed in the beginning. So much for the definiteness of the
-Sabbath which was given to Adam.
-
-Should it be replied that what has been remarked is correct, and that it
-is not argued that any one was at liberty to keep any other day than the
-seventh of the week, until Christ changed the law, and thereby
-authorized them so to do, we reply, Very good; that brings us back again
-to the original proposition, which is, Did he make such a change? If he
-did, then it is just as important that we should have clear and
-conclusive evidence that such an alteration was made by him, as it is
-that we should have the abundant testimony which we now possess that a
-definite Sabbath was originally given to mankind.
-
-All this speculation in regard to what might have been done with perfect
-consistency under a given state of facts is worse than idle. What we
-demand is this—What _has been_ done? Instead of concluding that Christ
-did a certain thing because it would have been right so to do, first
-show us, by actual Scripture quotation, that he really performed the
-work in question, and the consistency of his action will take care of
-itself. A theology which has no broader, firmer basis than individual
-conception of the propriety of certain occurrences which may never have
-taken place at all, is not worth the paper on which it is drawn out.
-This, nevertheless, is the very material with which we are dealing.
-
-Eleven articles, ostensibly written to afford divine authority for the
-change of days, are concluded; and, from beginning to end, there is not
-found in them a “Thus saith the Lord” for the transfer. Again and again
-it is inferred that such and such transactions meant so-and-so. Again
-and again it is concluded that such and such things are admissible, not
-because of any scriptural warrant, but because they seem good in the
-eyes of those with whose practice they best conform. The reason why this
-is so, the reader will readily perceive. It is found, not in the fact
-that the learned gentleman who represents the opposition is insensible
-to the superiority of positive Bible statements over individual surmise,
-but in the necessity under which he is placed, to employ the only
-material which he has at hand. Meeting him, therefore, where he is, let
-us prove the unreliability of such deductions as he is indulging in by
-actual test. The points which he is attempting to establish are these:
-1. The original idea of the Sabbath can be met by the observance of the
-first day of the week, as well as by that of the last. 2. That the
-commemoration of Christ’s resurrection can only be suitably carried out
-by hallowing the first day of every week.
-
-Now, as to the first of these propositions, it will only be safe to
-decide that it is correct after giving it mature reflection. We have
-already seen that God’s original plan for preserving the memory of
-creation week was that of setting apart the last day of each subsequent
-week for the imitation, on our part, of his rest thereon. To say,
-therefore, that it would have answered just as well to allow the
-individual to take any other day—say the first day of the week—for this
-purpose, is to argue that God acted without cause in making the
-selection which he did and enforcing it for four thousand years. If the
-question were one of indifference, why did he not leave the day unfixed?
-Why not allow them then to commemorate his rest on the first day, as the
-gentleman would have done now, arguing that the ends of the original
-Sabbath would, in this way, be fully met. Certain it is that no good
-reason can be assigned why it would now be more proper to commemorate
-the rest of Jehovah by a variable Sabbath than it has been heretofore.
-This being true, the gentleman’s logic is found to be unsound, or else
-the action of the Deity was inconsiderate.
-
-Turning, now, to the second proposition, the reader will be instantly
-struck with its unqualified antagonism to the first point which is
-sought to be made out.
-
-Remember, now, that the gentleman is arguing stoutly for first-day
-sanctity. He is not so particular when the week begins, but it must have
-just seven days, and the first of them must be devoted to the
-commemoration of the Lord’s resurrection, Should you ask him why he is
-thus particular in the selection of the first day of the week, he would
-reply, “Why, that is the day on which the Lord arose, and it is his
-resurrection, as the crowning act in the work of redemption, which we
-seek to honor.” But, reader, would it not occur to you, immediately,
-that this is a repudiation of all which he has said concerning the
-Edenic Sabbath? Nosy, mark it; what God demands, is, that we should
-honor the seventh day of the week, as the one which he rested upon,
-blessed, and sanctified. If, therefore, the rest, the blessing, and the
-sanctification of that day can be suitably remembered by the observance
-of another day differing from it, then the assumption that an event is
-most impressively handed down by the dedication, for this purpose, of
-the very day on which it transpired, is unsound.
-
-But if this assumption be unsound, then all of the gentleman’s talk in
-regard to the necessity for a change of days, in order to the suitable
-commemoration of the resurrection of Christ and the completion of the
-work of redemption, is without force. For, assuredly, if he is right in
-supposing that God’s rest in Eden, on the seventh day, can he
-commemorated as well on the first day as on the seventh, then the same
-principle will hold good in regard to the events which transpired on the
-first day of the week, _i. e._, they can be kept in remembrance by the
-hallowing of the seventh day as well as by that of the first. But this
-being true, his argument for the necessity of the change of Sabbaths is
-gone, and his philosophy of the change proved to be unsound. The only
-purpose which it has served in this controversy has been the revelation
-of that which is really the conviction of its author, as it is that of
-men generally, that there is no time in which great transactions can be
-so suitably commemorated as that of the day on which they took place.
-When the nation wishes to celebrate the anniversary of its independence,
-it sets apart for this purpose the fourth of July, which answers exactly
-to the day of the month on which the Declaration of Independence was
-made. Substitute for this another day, and you have marred the
-impressiveness of the occasion.
-
-So, too, with God’s rest on creation week; it must be so celebrated that
-all the associations connected with it will be calculated to lead the
-mind back to its origin and object. Turn it around, as the gentleman
-proposes to do, _i. e._, substitute the first day of the week in the
-place of the last, and you have precisely reversed God’s order. You have
-put the rest-day first, and cause the six laboring days to follow;
-whereas, God, knowing that rest was only needed _after_ labor, worked
-six days and then rested the seventh, not because he was weary, but
-because he desired to put on the record for us an example to be strictly
-followed. The gentleman, however, without the slightest warrant, has,
-with a rash hand, laid hold of the divine procedure, and now says that
-the order pursued was not necessary to the inculcation of the great
-lessons which God designed to impart.
-
-To this, I reply, 1. That God’s actions are never superfluous. 2. That,
-if we err at all, it is safer to err on the side of the divine example.
-3. That if the idea of God’s working six days is in any way connected
-with a proper Sabbath rest, then it is indispensable that the Sabbath
-should follow, and not precede, the working portion of the week. 4. That
-if the rest of God, merely, is the object which we should keep before
-our minds by a proper regard for the Sabbatic institution, the gentleman
-has himself shown, by the logic which he has employed, that the only
-suitable period for the keeping of that rest is found in that portion of
-the week on which God ceased from his labors.
-
-The remark of the gentleman that the work of redemption furnishes a
-subject worthy of being remembered by observance with Sabbatic honor of
-the day on which it was completed, is worthy of passing notice. The idea
-which he advances is one which is quite prevalent, and employed with
-great satisfaction by clergymen generally, when controverting the claims
-of God’s ancient rest-day. The strength of the position lies in the fact
-that it distinguishes between redemption and creation, assuming, perhaps
-correctly, that the latter is more exalted than the former. Having won
-the assent of the mind to this proposition, the reader is quietly
-carried over to conclusions much less obvious than the first. Almost
-unconsciously he is led to decide, with his instructor, that, since
-redemption is a greater work than creation, it ought, therefore, to be
-honored by a day of rest.
-
-Now we shall not enter into this matter largely, but we simply suggest
-that either this decision is the result of human, or else it is the
-product of divine, wisdom. If it is human wisdom, then its teachings
-should be followed with extreme caution. If it is divine wisdom, then
-they can be obeyed with the most implicit confidence. Just at this
-point, therefore, it is all-important that the test be applied. Has
-Jehovah ever said that the commemoration of creation week had become
-less desirable on account of the possible redemption of a fallen race,
-by the death of his Son? The most careful reader of the Bible has failed
-to find any such language; in fine, the intimation that such is really
-the fact is rather a reflection upon the Deity himself, since, from it,
-it might be inferred that the glory of his work had been dimmed by the
-fall of the race.
-
-But, again, if the Lord has not said that he would not have the memory
-of creation cherished still, has he ever said that he would have the
-work of redemption signalized by a weekly rest? Once more the student of
-the Scriptures unhesitatingly answers in the negative; but if God has
-failed to make this declaration, who shall presume to put words in his
-mouth, and read the thoughts of his mind, as those having authority so
-to do? The man who will undertake to do it is venturing upon ground
-which lies hard by that of blasphemy. God never neglects to say that
-which ought to be said; he never calls upon any man to go beyond his
-commandments, for in them, says Solomon (Eccl. 12:13), is found the
-whole duty of man.
-
-Furthermore, were we to reason upon this matter at all, every
-consideration would lead us to the conclusion that the inference of our
-opponents is not correct. In the first place, redemption is not yet
-fully completed in the case of any individual. In the second place, the
-Scripture says we have (are to have) redemption through his _blood_
-(Col. 1:14). But his blood, it is generally supposed, was shed upon
-Friday, and, therefore, it is not impossible that the hallowing of that
-day would more suitably commemorate redemption than that of any other
-day. In the third place, it was proved at length in a former article,
-that if creation was suitably commemorated by a day of rest, redemption,
-which is an event entirely opposite in its character, would naturally be
-celebrated by some institution of an entirely different nature. In other
-words, the Sabbath inculcates cessation from labor by the indulgence of
-inaction, while all the events connected with the resurrection of Christ
-rendered inactivity impossible.
-
-But finally, we are not left, in a matter of this significance, to the
-unreliable decisions of the human mind. Not only is it true that God has
-never appointed a day of septenary inactivity, as the Heaven-chosen
-memorial of the resurrection of the divine Son of God; but it is also
-true that God himself, in the exercise of a wisdom which will hardly be
-impugned by finite beings, has selected an institution entirely
-different from that under consideration for the illustration of that
-phase of the work of redemption which was seen in the resurrection of
-Christ.
-
-Says the great apostle to the Gentiles: “Therefore we are buried with
-him by baptism into death; that like as Christ was raised up from the
-dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness
-of life. For if we have been planted together in the likeness of his
-death, we shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection.” Rom. 6:4,
-5. “Buried with him in baptism, wherein also we are risen with him
-through the faith of the operation of God, who hath raised him from the
-dead.” Col. 2:12.
-
-Baptism, that is, Bible baptism, or the immersion of the individual
-beneath the water, most forcibly commemorates the death of our Lord. As
-the administrator lowers the body of the passive subject beneath the
-yielding wave, by the very necessity of the case, breathing is, for the
-time, suspended, and the person, as nearly as may be while in life, as
-he lies motionless in the hands of the individual to whom he has
-committed himself in the exercise of an act of faith, shadows forth the
-death and burial of his Lord in a most impressive manner. As he rises,
-also, from that position, and, proceeding to the shore, unites once more
-with the throng of living beings who surround him, he most forcibly
-illustrates the coming back again of our Lord from death and the grave
-to a life of infinite activity and glory.
-
-All, therefore, which is necessary in order to the remembering, by
-outward expression, of that most glorious event, which gave back to the
-disciples, from the nations of the dead, the body of the beloved Master,
-is that we go forward in the fulfillment of an ordinance which has been
-provided for that purpose, and which sets forth the events which are
-thought worthy of a memento in a manner as superior to that in which it
-could be done by mere inaction, as God’s conception of what would be
-suitable under such circumstances is higher than that of man. The wonder
-is that any one should have lost sight of the original design of an
-institution which is remarkably expressive of the purpose for which it
-was created. In fact, had not the same power which has changed the
-Sabbath also tampered with the ordinance of baptism by changing the
-original form into one less expressive of its historic associations, we
-believe that the view which is now passing under consideration never
-could have suggested itself to any mind.
-
-But, reader, it is now time that our labor should be drawn to a close.
-In the providence of God, we have walked together over the territory
-devoted to the great and important Sabbath question. With pleasure, we
-are about to lay down our pen for the last time, and submit the whole
-matter to you for the pronouncing of the final verdict of your
-individual judgment. As we do so, it is with feelings of most profound
-gratitude to God for a truth which, while there is underlying it a cross
-so heavy that it cannot be lifted by human strength unaided, is,
-nevertheless, so plain that its mere statement is its most complete
-demonstration. Were it not true that society is at present so organized
-that the keeping of the seventh day involves social, political, and
-pecuniary sacrifice, much greater than he is aware of who has not
-considered the matter, we would not hesitate to say that a complete and
-speedy revolution could be wrought upon this subject in a brief space of
-time. Never, in the history of any reformation which has heretofore
-occurred, were men covered with a more complete panoply of defense, and
-armed with more destructive weapons of offense, than are God’s
-commandment-keeping people at the present period. The only mystery
-connected with the subject is, that, being as plain as it is, the fact
-of the change should not have attracted universal attention before.
-
-Traversing again the ground over which we have come with the gentleman
-who has managed the opposition in this debate, the poverty of his
-resources is most striking. In all that he has said, he has proved
-nothing which has in any way relieved his case, nor can his failure be
-attributed to any lack of capacity on his part. In the handling of the
-material with which he has had to do, he has displayed not a little
-ingenuity. The arguments which he has employed and the positions which
-he has taken are those of the orthodox ministry generally at the present
-time. His failure is entirely attributable to the natural weakness of
-the position which he has sought to defend. His was indeed a hard task.
-He felt the moral necessity of a Sabbath, as a Christian man; and,
-finding the religious world keeping the first day of the week, he sought
-to defend this practice from the Bible stand-point. But, alas for his
-cause! The more he has appealed to this source, the more certain has it
-become that the Bible, and the usages of Christendom in this matter, can
-never he harmonized. In its pages we find the most ample authority for a
-day of rest, but none for the one which is generally honored as such.
-The record in brief stands as follows:—
-
-1. There is a Sabbath.
-
-2. That Sabbath is the seventh, and not the first, day of the week, for
-the following reasons:—
-
-(1.) In the beginning God rested on the seventh day, thereby laying the
-foundation for its Sabbatic honor (Gen. 2:3); whereas, he never rested
-upon the first day.
-
-(2.) He blessed the seventh day; whereas, he never blessed the first
-day.
-
-(3.) He sanctified the seventh day, or devoted it to a religious use;
-whereas, he never sanctified the first day.
-
-(4.) The day of his rest, his blessing, and his sanctification, he
-commanded to be kept holy, in a law of perpetual obligation; whereas, he
-never commanded the observance of the first day.
-
-(5.) The Lord Jesus Christ recognized the obligation of the seventh day
-by a life-long custom of observing it (Luke 4:16); whereas, the Lord
-Jesus Christ never rested upon the first day of the week; but always
-treated it as a secular day.
-
-(6.) He also recognized its perpetuity forty years after his death, when
-speaking of events connected with the destruction of Jerusalem, by
-instructing his disciples to pray that their flight might not occur
-thereon (Matt. 24:20); whereas, he never spoke of the first day as one
-to be honored in the future, nor, indeed, so far as we know, did he ever
-take it upon his lips at all.
-
-(7.) It is the day which the holy women kept, according to the
-commandment, after the crucifixion of our Lord (Luke 23:66); whereas,
-there is no account that any good man has ever rested upon the first day
-out of regard for its sanctity.
-
-(8.) It is the day on which Paul, as his manner was, taught in the
-synagogue (Acts 17:2); whereas, Paul never made the first day of the
-week, habitually, one of public teaching, a thing which he would have
-been sure to do had he looked upon it as sacred to the Lord.
-
-(9.) Being mentioned fifty-six times in the New Testament, it is in all
-these instances called the Sabbath; whereas, the first day is mentioned
-eight times in the New Testament, and in every case it is called,
-simply, the first day of the week.
-
-(10.) In the year of our Lord 95, it is spoken of by John as the Lord’s
-day (Rev. 1:10); whereas, the first day is in no case mentioned in the
-use of a sacred title.
-
-(11.) It is mentioned not only as the Sabbath, but it is also spoken of
-as the next Sabbath, and every Sabbath, thus proving that it had no
-rival (Acts 13:4; 15:21); whereas, the day before the first, and the
-sixth day after it, being spoken of as the Sabbath, it (_i. e._, the
-first day) is classed with the other days of the week.
-
-(12.) In the Acts of the Apostles, and, in fine, in the whole canon of
-the New Testament, there is not a single transaction which is related as
-having occurred upon the seventh day in the least incompatible with the
-notion that it continued to be regarded as holy time, while the law
-which enforces its observance is inculcated in the clearest and most
-emphatic terms (Matt. 5:17-19; Rom. 3:31; Jas. 2:8-12); whereas, the
-first day was one on which Christ indulged in travel on the highway in
-company with others, after his resurrection, without informing them of
-its character or rebuking them for sin. It is also a day on which two of
-the disciples walked the distance of fifteen miles on one occasion,
-while on another, Paul performed the journey of nineteen and one-half
-miles on foot, while Luke and seven companions worked the vessel around
-the headland for a much greater distance (Luke 24:13, 29; Acts 20:1-13.)
-
-In view of the above, the whole question of obligation may be summed up
-in the following words: Shall we keep a day which God has commanded,
-which Christ inculcated, and which holy men regarded from the opening
-until the close of the canon of Scripture? or shall we disregard that,
-putting in its place one which neither God, nor Christ, nor a holy
-angel, nor an inspired man, ever, anywhere, under any circumstances,
-enjoined, and which, in addition, God and Christ, and holy men and
-women, are everywhere in the sacred word brought to view as treating in
-a manner such as they would only treat a day of secular character?
-
-In fine, it is simply the same old test applied once more to human
-action, which has in all ages been the measure of moral character, _i.
-e._, Shall we obey God? or shall we not? Shall we gratify our own
-inclination and have our own way by pertinaciously persisting in a
-course of action for which we have no Scripture warrant? or shall we
-take the Bible in one hand and, accepting its doctrines as the words of
-life, follow them to their legitimate consequences in our daily walk?
-Says John, “This is the love of God, that ye keep his commandments.”
-Says James, “Show me your faith without works, and I will show you my
-faith by my works.”
-
-Sublime sentiments, indeed! In them is expressed the moving, controlling
-principle of every Christian heart. Oh! that all men in the ages of the
-past had held to the noble purpose of taking God at his word, believing
-that he meant just what he said, and walking out with a noble courage
-upon their confidence in his wisdom to legislate, and his right to
-command. Had they done so; had they been willing to be taught instead of
-going uninstructed; had they submitted to be led instead of insisting
-upon independent action, how much misery would have been spared our
-kind. Take, for example, the case of Eve—God exempted one tree in the
-garden from the rest, saying, “Thou shalt not eat of it; for in the day
-that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.” Unhappily, the mother
-of all living ventured to deviate from the command of God in what
-appeared to her an unimportant particular, and, as the result, a race
-was plunged into the terrible consequences of rebellion.
-
-It would seem as if this should have been enough to teach all, that it
-is only safe to do just what God requires in small, as well as great,
-things. Alas! however, this has not been the case. Nadab and Abihu, with
-the example of Eve before them, contrary to the directions of the Lord,
-ventured to substitute natural fire for the hallowed fire of the altar.
-To them, there was no apparent difference; but in a moment the curse of
-God fell upon them and they were borne lifeless, and without the honors
-of an ordinary funeral service, away from the camp of Israel. Uzzah,
-despising the commandment of the Lord, by which the Levites alone were
-to touch the ark, in an unguarded moment, reached out his hand to steady
-it, and God made a breach upon him in the presence of the people. Uzzah
-fell lifeless before the ark which contained the same law which is under
-consideration. It was not the ark that sanctified the law; but, rather,
-the law that sanctified the ark.
-
-If, therefore, God was so jealous of that which was merely the vehicle
-of the ten words spoken by his voice and written by his finger, how must
-he feel in regard to those words themselves? In them, is found the
-embodiment of the whole duty of man. With them, God now tests, as he has
-always tested, the characters of men. “Know ye not,” says Paul, “his
-servants ye are to whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death, or of
-obedience unto righteousness?”
-
-True, it may be, that we can transgress that law at the present time
-without suffering the _visible_ displeasure of God, as did those whom,
-in the past, he set forth as examples of his wrath. But let us not
-deceive ourselves on this account; God is no respecter of persons. Moral
-character is what he admires, exact obedience is what he demands. In his
-providence, at the present time, it is our fortune to live in an epoch
-when great light is shining upon the long dishonored and mutilated
-Sabbath commandment. A worldly church, having departed from the
-simplicity of gospel teaching and gospel method for the propagation of
-truth, has called to her aid the elements of force and the appliances of
-law. Closing their eyes to light, ample in itself for all the purposes
-of duty and doctrine, they have entered upon a crusade, determining to
-venture the experiment, so oft repeated, of enforcing, as doctrines, the
-commandments of men.
-
-The end of this matter God knows, and has pointed out in his word. With
-outward success they may meet; but it will be at the terrible cost of
-that vital godliness which is alone found where the arm of God is made
-the arm of our strength. For those who, in the past, have ignorantly
-broken the law of Jehovah, God has ample forgiveness; but for those who,
-in the face of God’s providential dealings, and in diametrical
-opposition to the plain teachings of his word, to which their attention
-is being called, shall still persist, not only in disobedience, but,
-also, in acts of oppression against those who prefer the narrow and
-rugged path of Bible fidelity, there can be nothing in reserve but the
-terrible displeasure of him whose right it is to command.
-
-Reader, whoever you may be, and whatever may have been your past
-convictions and life, we turn to you in a final appeal. As you revere
-God, as you love Christ and his precious word, we exhort you in this
-matter to seek wisdom from the only true source. Be not discouraged by
-the disparity in numbers, neither tremble before the hosts which may
-frown upon you in the coming contest. “The Lord, he is God.” Under the
-shadow of his wing we can safely abide. No nobler destiny was ever
-vouchsafed to the obedient among the children of men, than is prepared
-for those who shall prove their fealty to the God of Heaven by a noble
-testimony to their love for him, by the keeping of his holy Sabbath,
-under circumstances, in the near future, which shall indeed try the
-souls of men.
-
-May God grant that both reader and writer, nay more, also our opponent
-in this discussion—toward whom we entertain none but the kindliest
-feelings—also, all, everywhere, who are indeed the children of the
-living God and the brethren of our blessed Lord, may come to see eye to
-eye in this matter, so that, finally, we shall be brought safely through
-the perils of this last great conflict, which the true church is to
-endure, and stand victorious over all our enemies upon the Mount Zion of
-our God, there to sing the song of a deliverance complete and eternal,
-in a world where, from one new moon to another, and from one Sabbath to
-another, all flesh shall come to worship before the Lord. (Isa. 66:23.)
-
-
-
-
- INDEX OF POINTS DISCUSSED.
-
-
- PART FIRST:
-
- ELD. LITTLEJOHN’S ARTICLES IN THE STATESMAN.
-
- ARTICLE ONE.
- Tendency toward Sabbath Discussion, 5
- Various Views concerning Reform, 6
- Inquiry as to Proper Action, 13
-
-
- ARTICLE TWO.
- Religious View of Sabbath Reform, 16
- Sabbath Commandment, 19
- Has this Law been Changed? 22
-
-
- ARTICLE THREE.
- Reasons for Sunday Observance Examined, 28
- The Resurrection, 30
- Example of Christ, 32
-
-
- ARTICLE FOUR.
- Texts on First Day of the Week, 36
- They do Not Prove its Sacredness, 39
- The Meeting of John 20:19, Considered, 42
-
-
- ARTICLE FIVE.
- John 20:26, Examined, 48
- Act of Worship does Not Consecrate the Day, 50
- 1 Cor. 16:2, Examined, 54
-
-
- ARTICLE SIX.
- Acts 20:7, Examined, 57
- Acts 2:1, Considered, 63
- Pentecost Not First Day, but Fiftieth Day, 64
- Rev. 1:10, Examined, 66
- Proposed Amendment of the Constitution Not in Harmony with Bible
- Truth, 68
-
-
- ARTICLE SEVEN.
- Bible View of the Sabbath, 71
- The Law Changed by the Catholic Power, 76
- Position of Seventh-day Adventists, 79
- Proposed Amendment Dangerous to our Liberties, 83
-
-
-
-
- PART SECOND:
-
- REPLIES AND REJOINDERS.
-
-
- REPLY ONE.
- Seventh-day Sabbatarianism and the Christian Amendment, 87
- Supposed Action of Missionaries, 89
- The Proposed Amendment Expresses only Fundamental Principles, 91
-
-
- FIRST REJOINDER.
- Amendment Not Related merely to Principles, but to Sunday in
- Particular, 96
- Supposition of Missionary Action Examined, 103
-
-
- REPLY TWO.
- The Seventh Day Not Observed by the Early Christian Church, 107
- Examination of New-Testament Proofs, 108
-
-
- SECOND REJOINDER.
- Our Common Ground, 116
- The Seventh Day, only, the Sabbath in the New Testament, 119
- No Effort Has been Made to Place Sunday upon Precept, 124
- Consideration of Col. 2:14-17, 125
- Rom. 14:5, Examined, 129
- Survey of the Ground Passed Over, 131
-
-
- REPLY THREE.
- Testimony of the Gospels for the First-day Sabbath, 133
- Resurrection of Christ, 134
- John 20, 136
-
-
- THIRD REJOINDER.
- No Evidence of First-day Sacredness, 140
- The Gospels do Not Call First Day the Sabbath, 150
-
-
- REPLY FOUR.
- Argument for the First-day Sabbath from the Gift of the Holy Spirit
- on the Day of Pentecost, 154
- Authors Differing Concerning the Day of the week, 155
- Argument for the First Day, 156
-
-
- FOURTH REJOINDER.
- Value of Testimony—First-day Keepers Witnessing that Pentecost Fell
- on the Sabbath, 163
- No Reason Stated, nor Commandment Found, for First-day Sabbath, 172
-
-
- REPLY FIVE.
- First-day Sabbath at Troas, 177
- The Reckoning of Time Considered, 179
-
-
- FIFTH REJOINDER.
- No Custom Found in Acts 20, 183
- Argument for Change of Time Considered, 191
- Evidence of Acts 20 Favorable to the Sabbath, 201
-
-
- REPLY SIX.
- Testimony of Paul and John to the First-day Sabbath, 202
- Examination of 1 Cor. 16:2, 203
- Of Rev. 1:10, 205
-
-
- SIXTH REJOINDER.
- 1 Cor. 16:2, 207
- —Testimony of J. W. Morton, 207
- —Concession of Albert Barnes, 209
- —Paul’s Plan of Systematic Beneficence, 211
- —Devotion at Home, 214
- Rev. 1:10, 219
- —The Sabbath is the Lord’s Day, 220
- —Christ Lord of the Sabbath, 221
- —No Proof Given that First Day is the Lord’s Day, 222
-
-
- REPLY SEVEN.
- Testimony of the Early Fathers to the First-day Sabbath, 225
- Testimony of Ignatius, 225
- Errors of Dr. Dwight, etc., Corrected, 227
- Barnabas and Justin Martyr, 228
- Dionysius, 229
- Pliny, 230
-
-
- SEVENTH REJOINDER.
- Value of Traditional Testimony, 231
- Ignatius, 235
- Barnabas, 239
- Justin Martyr, 243
- What Justin Martyr Believed, 246
- Dionysius, Melito, Pliny, 250
- Deficiency of Testimony for First-day as a Sabbath, 253
-
-
- REPLY EIGHT.
- Patristic Testimony to the First-day Sabbath, 254
- Irenæus, 254
- Errors of Dr. Dwight and Others in Quoting this Father, 256
- Tertullian, Origen, Cyprian, 257
-
-
- EIGHTH REJOINDER.
- The Apostasy, 261
- Testimony of Irenæus, 262
- Of Tertullian, 267
- Of Origen, 273
- Of Cyprian, 276
- Summary View of the Case, 277
-
-
- REPLY NINE.
- Theories of the Christian Sabbath, 280
- Claim of an Unwarranted Change of the Sabbath Considered, 284
-
-
- NINTH REJOINDER.
- No Advance Ground Taken, 287
- Harmony of Sabbath Law and Sacred History, 289
- Roman Apostasy and Change of Sabbath, 293
- Seventh-day Sabbath in the Early Church, 296
- Testimony of Romanists, 304
-
-
- REPLY TEN.
- The Principle as to Time in Sabbath Observance, 313
- One Day in Seven, not the Seventh Day, Required, 313
- Difficulties of Keeping Definite Day, 314
-
-
- TENTH REJOINDER.
- Inconsistency of the _Statesman’s_ Positions, 321
- No-Definite-Day Argument Fatal to First Day, and to any Sabbath, 325
- Inconsistency of his Position on Necessity of Legislation, 326
- Difficulties of Sabbath-Keeping Considered, 329
- Absurdity of the Theory of an Indefinite Day, 333
- Definite Time Around the World, 339
- Summary, 348
-
-
- REPLY ELEVEN.
- The True Theory of the Christian Sabbath, 351
- First Day of the Week the True Christian Sabbath, 351
- A Memorial of Redemption, 353
-
-
- ELEVENTH REJOINDER.
- Inconsistency of the Replies, 355
- No Amendment of Sabbath Law Produced, 356
- A Gospel Memorial of the Resurrection, 367
- Sabbath Keeping Involves Sacrifice, 369
- Summary of Evidence for the Sabbath, 371
- The Commandment, or Tradition? 374
- Conclusion, 377
-
-
-
-
- CATALOGUE
-
-
-Of Books, Pamphlets, Tracts, &c., Issued by the Seventh-Day Adventist
-Publishing Association, Battle Creek, Mich.
-
-
-HYMNS AND TUNES; 320 pages of hymns, 96 pages of music; in plain
-morocco, $1.00.
-
-A COMPLETE HISTORY OF THE SABBATH AND FIRST DAY OF THE WEEK. By J. N.
-Andrews. $1.00.
-
-THE SPIRIT OF PROPHECY, Vols. 1 & 2. By Ellen G. White, Each $1.00.
-
-THE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT: Or The Sunday, The Sabbath, The Change,
-and The Restitution. A Discussion between W. H. Littlejohn and the
-Editor of the _Christian Statesman_. Bound, $1.00. Paper, 40 cts. First
-Part, 10 cts.
-
-THOUGHTS ON THE REVELATION, critical and practical. By U. Smith. 328
-pp., $1.00.
-
-THOUGHTS ON THE BOOK OF DANIEL, critical and practical. By U. Smith.
-Bound, $1.00; condensed edition, paper, 35 cts.
-
-THE NATURE AND DESTINY OF MAN. By U. Smith. 384 pp., bound, $1.00,
-paper, 40 cts.
-
-LIFE INCIDENTS, in connection with the great Advent movement. By Eld.
-James White. 373 pp., $1.00.
-
-AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF ELD. JOSEPH BATES, with portrait of the author. 318
-pp., $1.00.
-
-HOW TO LIVE: comprising a series of articles on Health, and how to
-preserve it, with various recipes for cooking healthful food, &c. 400
-pp., $1.00.
-
-SABBATH READINGS; or Moral and Religious Reading for Youth and Children.
-400 pp., 60 cts.; in five pamphlets, 50 cts.
-
-APPEAL TO YOUTH; Address at the Funeral of Henry N. White; also a brief
-narrative of his life, &c. 96 pp., muslin, 40 cts.; paper covers, 10
-cts.
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Constitutional Amendment: or, The
-Sunday, the Sabbath, the Change, and , by Wolcott H. Littlejohn
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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/license
-
-
-Title: The Constitutional Amendment: or, The Sunday, the Sabbath, the Change, and Restitution
- A discussion between W. H. Littlejohn, Seventh-day
- Adventist, and the editor of the Christian Statesman
-
-Author: Wolcott H. Littlejohn
-
-Release Date: January 1, 2020 [EBook #61071]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CONSTITUTIONAL ***
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-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net.
-(This file was produced from images generously made
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-
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_on'>on</span>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_i'>i</span>
- <h1 class='c001'>THE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT: OR, THE SUNDAY, THE SABBATH, THE CHANGE, AND RESTITUTION.</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='xxlarge'><b>THE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT:</b></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b>OR</b></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='xxlarge'><b>THE SUNDAY, THE SABBATH,</b></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b>THE</b></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='xxlarge'><b>CHANGE, AND RESTITUTION.</b></span></div>
- <div class='c003'>A DISCUSSION BETWEEN</div>
- <div class='c000'>W. H. LITTLEJOHN, SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST,</div>
- <div class='c000'>AND THE</div>
- <div class='c000'>EDITOR OF THE CHRISTIAN STATESMAN.</div>
- <div class='c003'>STEAM PRESS</div>
- <div>OF THE SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST PUBLISHING ASSOCIATION,</div>
- <div>BATTLE CREEK, MICH.:</div>
- <div class='c000'>1873.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_ii'>ii</span>Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1873, by the</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>S. D. A. P. ASSOCIATION,</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_iii'>iii</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>PREFACE.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>As it has been thought best that the following articles,
-which, with the exception of the Replies and Rejoinders,
-have already been published in the <i>Christian Statesman</i>, the
-<i>Sabbath Recorder</i>, and the <i>Advent Review</i>, should have a still
-wider circulation, it has been at last decided to present them
-to the public in the form of the present volume.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The occasion of their first appearance was as follows:
-Within the last few years, a party has been organized in
-this country, whose especial aims are the amendment of the
-Constitution, so that the names of God and Christ may appear
-in it; the recognition in the same instrument of the
-Bible as the fountain of national law; the securing of the
-reading of the Bible in the common schools; and the enforcement
-by law of the observance of Sunday, as the Christian
-Sabbath. Slowly, but steadily, the friends of this movement
-are bringing it to the public notice and enlarging the
-circle of its active supporters. A single glance at the existing
-state of affairs reveals the fact that, at no distant date,
-the issues which these men are making up will be the ones
-over which contending parties will wage fierce contest. Already
-the press of the country, by the drift of events which
-they find themselves incapable of controlling, are compelled,
-almost daily, to record transactions which are not only calling
-the attention of the people to a conflict which is both
-imminent and irrepressible, but which are also continually
-adding fuel to a flame which even now burns with a fierceness
-and volume indicative of its future scope and power.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In view of these facts, the writer of the subjoined articles,
-while taking no particular interest in party politics, merely
-as such, nevertheless felt a profound conviction that the
-time had come, in the providence of God, when Christian
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_iv'>iv</span>men should offer a solemn protest against a state of affairs
-which, while ostensibly inaugurated in the interest of the
-kingdom of Christ, will ultimately prove most destructive of
-religious liberty. This, he therefore attempted to do,
-purely from the stand-point of the Bible. Through the
-courtesy of the editor of the <i>Christian Statesman</i>, which paper
-is the organ of the amendment party, the first seven of
-the following communications were permitted to appear in
-the columns of that periodical. Subsequently, the editor of
-that paper felt it incumbent upon him to take issue with
-what was thus published, and to answer the same in a series
-of editorial articles. To these again, the author of the original
-communications published a series of rejoinders, in defense
-of the positions assumed by him in the outset, and in
-controversion of those of the reviewer. These articles, the
-replies of the editor, and the rejoinders thereto, having
-been grouped together in the present volume, are offered
-to a candid public for serious consideration.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The reader will readily perceive that the whole discussion
-turns upon the Sabbath question. Fortunately, also, he will
-discover that the ground covered in the debate by the respective
-disputants is that generally occupied by the classes
-of believers whom they represent. Leaving him, therefore,
-to decide for himself as to which of the views presented has
-the sanction of the divine mind, the writer of the present
-preface can do no more than to give expression to his
-earnest desire that the God of all truth will vouchsafe his
-Spirit for the illumination of every mind which comes to the
-consideration of this subject with an honest purpose to ascertain
-his will in the matter under consideration.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>W. H. L.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><i>Allegan, Mich.</i></p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c006'>TABLE OF CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>Article I. <a href='#article01'>5</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article II. <a href='#article02'>16</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article III. <a href='#article03'>28</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article IV. <a href='#article04'>36</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article V. <a href='#article05'>48</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article VI. <a href='#article06'>57</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article VII. <a href='#article07'>71</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Explanatory Remarks. <a href='#explanatory'>86</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Replies and Rejoiners. <a href='#replies'>87</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article I. <a href='#reply01'>87</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Rejoinder. <a href='#rejoinder01'>93</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article II. <a href='#reply02'>107</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Rejoinder. <a href='#rejoinder02'>116</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article III. <a href='#reply03'>133</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Rejoinder. <a href='#rejoinder03'>139</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article IV. <a href='#reply04'>154</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Rejoinder. <a href='#rejoinder04'>161</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article V. <a href='#reply05'>177</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Rejoinder. <a href='#rejoinder05'>182</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article VI. <a href='#reply06'>202</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Rejoinder. <a href='#rejoinder06'>207</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article VII. <a href='#reply07'>225</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Rejoinder. <a href='#rejoinder07'>231</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article VIII. <a href='#reply08'>254</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Rejoinder. <a href='#rejoinder08'>261</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article IX. <a href='#reply09'>280</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Rejoinder. <a href='#rejoinder09'>287</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article X. <a href='#reply10'>313</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Rejoinder. <a href='#rejoinder10'>321</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Article XI. <a href='#reply11'>351</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Rejoinder. <a href='#rejoinder11'>355</a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Index of Points Discussed. <a href='#index'>379</a></p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>
- <h2 id='article01' class='c006'>ARTICLE I.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>One of the marked features of our time is the
-tendency toward the discussion of the Sabbath
-question. Nor can this subject be treated with
-more indifference in the future than it is at the
-present. Agitation, ceaseless, unrelenting, excited,
-and finally severe, is rendered certain by the
-temper of all the parties to the controversy. On
-the one hand, the friends of Sunday observance
-are dissatisfied with the laxity of the regard
-which is paid it, and are loud in their demands
-for statutory relief; denouncing upon the nation
-the wrath of God, in unstinted measure, should
-their petition be set at naught. On the other
-hand, the enemies of the Sabbath institution, in
-all of its phases, are becoming bold in their protestations
-against a legalized Sabbath, as something
-extremely oppressive and inexpressibly intolerable
-in its very nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In all parts of the country, activity characterizes
-the camps of both these contending hosts.
-Everywhere the elements of strength—hitherto
-unorganized, and inefficient to the accomplishment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>of great results because of that fact—are being
-brought out and employed in effective service.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Cincinnati, Chicago, New York, Boston, San
-Francisco, in their turn, become the theaters
-where the skirmish lines of future combatants,
-on a larger scale, are brought into occasional collision.
-The ordinary appliances of dinners, processions,
-national and State conventions, city,
-town, and district societies, are rapidly becoming
-the order of the day, while those who are brought
-within the range of their influence are stimulated
-and aroused, on the one hand, by earnest appeals
-to the Bible and religion, and on the other, to
-natural rights and individual conscience. So far
-has the matter now proceeded, so much has already
-been said, so fully has the contest been
-opened, that retrogression means defeat to either
-the one or the other party. And as to compromise,
-this can never be attained, from the fact
-that the position from which both parties are
-now seeking to emerge is that of toleration.
-Why, says the ardent advocate of the Sunday
-law, it is not sufficient that I observe the day of
-rest with strictness and fidelity in my own family.
-I owe a duty to the public; I am a member
-of a great Commonwealth, which God treats as a
-personality, and if I do not see to it that the
-statute laws of the land are in harmony with,
-and enforce the requirements of, the law of God,
-this nation, like all others which have ignored
-their obligation to legalize and enforce his will in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>matters of this nature, will be devoted to a ruin
-for which I shall be accountable, and in which I
-shall be a sharer. Moved by such considerations
-as these, his purse is open and his labors untiring
-for the accomplishment of that which now
-appears to him to be in the line of both individual
-interest and religious duty.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Again, his neighbor across the way being, perhaps,
-of the free-thinking order, and an ardent
-admirer of the complete separation of Church and
-State, wonders that he has so long consented to
-that abridgment of his personal liberty which
-has been made by statutory provision, and which
-has hitherto compelled him to surrender much of
-what he calls natural right to the whims and caprices
-of those with whom he differs so widely
-on all questions bearing upon the relation of man
-to his God. Henceforth, says he, I pledge my
-means, my influence, and my untiring effort, to a
-revolution which, if need be, shall shake society to
-its very center, rather than to consent to the legalized
-perpetuation of an institution which requires
-on my part an acknowledgment of a faith which I
-have never held, and of doctrines which I detest.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Of course, all do not share alike, either in the
-enthusiasm or the animosity which characterizes
-certain individuals when entering upon a conflict
-like the one in question. In every party is found
-more or less of the aggressive and the conservative
-elements. Especially is this true in the incipient
-stages of its history. Some men are necessarily
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>more earnest than are others in everything
-which they undertake. Some are bold,
-headlong, defiant; others, cautious, slow, and timid.
-One class leaps to its conclusions first, and looks
-for its arguments afterward; the other moves
-circumspectly, and, while it gives a general assent
-to the desirability of results, finds a world
-of trouble in deciding upon what means ought to
-be employed in securing them. One is forever
-foaming because of delay, and fears defeat as the
-result of hesitation; while the other protests
-against too rapid and ill-considered action.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Such is, at present, the condition more especially
-of the positive side of the Sunday movement
-in this country. The strong men and the
-weak men, the resolute men and the undecided
-men, are struggling for the mastery of the policy
-in the camp. One sort discovers no difficulties
-in the way of immediate and complete success.
-Lead us to the front, say they, our cause is just,
-and all that is necessary to success is the courage
-and inspiration of battle. But hold, say the others,
-not too fast; public sentiment is not prepared
-for the issue. And besides, we are not so
-clear in our minds as are you respecting the
-lengths to which this controversy should be carried,
-and the line of argument which ought to be
-pursued. Why, say the first, what need can
-there be of more delay? Nothing is more manifest
-than the means which we ought to employ
-for the accomplishment of our purpose. Our
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>work is simply that of enforcement. Has not
-God said in so many words, in the decalogue,
-“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”? Is
-not this language explicit? Is it not a part of
-that law which nearly all Christians acknowledge
-to be binding? Do we not enforce the observance
-of the remaining commandments by statutory
-provision? And is it not equally clear that
-this should be treated in like manner? Why
-delay, then? Why not move upon the enemy’s
-works with the inspiring battle-cry of “God in
-the Constitution?” Why not at once clamor for
-the amendment of that instrument, and for the
-passage of statutes by which the better observance
-of the Christian Sabbath can be secured?
-Give us these, and our victory is won. Our
-Sunday mails, and trains, and travel, and public
-amusements of every name and nature, can be
-removed at a single stroke. As a result, the nation
-will stand higher in the estimation of God;
-and the people, having acknowledged his supremacy,
-will have taken a long step in the direction
-of final renovation and conversion.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But wait, says another, not too fast in matters
-of so great moment. Please bear in mind the
-fact that this contest is to be one of words and
-arguments. Your danger is that of underrating
-the capacity and intelligence of our opponents.
-If you expect to meet them successfully, it must
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>be by a logic which will bear criticism and examination.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As an individual, I am by no means certain
-that the Bible authority for our movement is so
-clear and abundant as you seem to imagine.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The law which you quote in justification of
-our course is truly a Sabbath law, and its import
-is unmistakable; but, unfortunately, instead of
-making for our cause, it is diametrically opposed
-to your efforts, and plainly declares that the <i>seventh
-day</i> of the week is the Sabbath of the Lord,
-whereas you are unmistakably occupying before
-the world a position no less awkward than that
-of insisting that the first, and not the seventh, is
-the one which should be enforced by legal enactment.
-While, therefore, I am in full sympathy
-with the general purposes of this movement, I am
-convinced that, before we shall succeed, we must
-rest it upon a different basis than the fourth commandment.
-So far as my individual preferences
-go—in order to avoid the difficulties which lie
-along the line of Scripture justification for our
-conduct—I suggest that we rest it upon the
-broad principle of social necessity, relying for
-our success upon the generally conceded fact that
-<i>rest</i> upon one day in seven is indispensable to the
-well-being of individuals and communities.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But, says a third party, while I agree with you
-in condemning the proposition that the fourth
-commandment, as originally given, furnishes us
-warrant for the observance of the first day of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>week, I can never consent to the idea of its unconditional
-repeal; for without it in some form
-we are entirely without a Sabbath law; a condition
-of things which would be deplorable indeed.
-I therefore conclude that that law has been
-brought over into our dispensation, and so far
-changed as to adapt it to the enforcement of the
-observance of the first day of the week, agreeably
-to the example of Christ and the apostles.
-With this view, I can safely predict power and
-triumph for the grand scheme upon which we
-have entered. Give us a Sabbath of divine appointment
-and backed by a sacred precept, and
-victory is certain. But so sure as we lower the
-controversy to one which is merely corporeal in
-its nature and results, and pecuniary in its considerations,
-defeat is written upon our banners,
-since you have taken from us all the inspiration
-of the contest, and dried up the very springs of
-our enthusiasm and courage.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>What the final result of such discussions will
-be, there is little room for doubt. That a revolution
-is fairly inaugurated in the minds of the
-people, it is now too late to question. What remains
-to be done, therefore, is simply to execute
-the grand purpose for which it has been instituted.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>That this cannot be accomplished by a merely
-negative policy, has been illustrated too many
-times in history to require further demonstration.
-Men, having once entered the field of conflict,
-universally become less and less scrupulous in regard
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>to the means employed to secure the desired
-object. In the primary meetings of a great
-movement, the voice of the conservative may be
-listened to with attention and respect; but should
-he give expression to the same prudent counsel
-upon the battle field, when the sword of the enemy
-is red with the blood of his compatriots, his
-utterances would be silenced in a storm of indignation
-such as would threaten his very existence,
-and consign his name to the list of those whose
-fidelity was at least questionable, and whose
-sympathy with the common foe was far from being
-impossible.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So, likewise, with the half-way men in this incipient
-struggle, which is about to throw open
-the gates of controversy upon one of those religious
-questions which, above all others, is sure
-to be characterized, first, by uncharitableness,
-and finally, by bitter hate and animosity. With
-each advancing month, their hold upon the confidence
-of their associates will grow less and less,
-and the counsels of their party will come more
-and more fully under the control of those positive,
-nervous spirits, who are swept along by
-convictions so deep and strong that they will bear
-down everything before them.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nevertheless, candid reader, it is by no means
-certain that there may not be much of truth in
-the positions assumed by the more moderate men
-in the existing issue. At all events—since we
-have not as yet entered into that impassioned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>state of the public mind from which calm deliberation
-is banished by the necessity of immediate
-action—let us pause here for a moment, and carefully
-weigh the correctness of the suggestions
-presented above.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Is it worth the while to enter the lists in the
-approaching struggle, in order to secure the results
-proposed?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I say proposed, because, of course, the result is
-as yet more or less uncertain; nevertheless, we
-incline to the opinion that the end desired will
-be substantially realized, so far as appearance is
-concerned. Yet this will not be brought about
-in a moment, nor will it be accomplished without
-a hard fight. It must, from the very necessity of
-the case, be a contest which will enter, divide,
-and distract families, and which will alienate a
-large portion of the community from the other.
-But, with a united and well-drilled ministry, on
-the one band, backed by the compact organization
-of their respective churches, and opposed by
-a heterogeneous mass of discordant elements,
-there can be little doubt as to final success.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>First, then, let us suppose that the policy inaugurated
-shall be that of the class represented
-above as desiring to strip the subject of its religious
-garb, and to array it in the habiliments of
-mere policy and temporal considerations. Are
-the benefits reasonably to be expected from such
-a course such as would warrant the enthusiasm
-now manifested by the advocates of the proposed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>reformation? We believe not. In fine, so certain
-are we of it, that we should not hesitate to
-predict immediate and perfect paralysis to their
-efforts, so soon as they should inscribe this doctrine
-upon their banners. How many of the
-gentlemen in question are really so profoundly
-interested in the social status of the working-man
-that their zeal in his behalf could be wrought up
-to the point of sacrificing time and money, and
-of devoting voice and pen to the mere work of
-giving him a septenary day of physical rest?
-What satisfaction would be afforded them by the
-reflection that, as the result of legal enactment,
-the carefully appointed police in our great cities
-should be able to meet each other on the boundary
-lines of their respective beats, on the morning of
-Sunday, with the accustomed salutation, All is
-quiet! and cessation from labor is complete in all
-parts of the great metropolis? Who would
-highly prize a coerced rest of this sort? What
-particular gratification would be afforded to the
-religious world, as they gather, in their costly
-churches, by the thought that the great mass of
-the people were quietly sleeping, or lazily lounging
-in the various places of their retirement?
-Certainly there is nothing in such a state of
-things which offers results sufficiently desirable
-either to reward them for the great sacrifices with
-which it would be necessary that they should be
-purchased, in the first instance, or to secure that
-patient continuance in vigilant perseverance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>which would be required to insure the perpetuity
-of an order of things at once so compulsory and
-so precarious. We say, therefore, that to rest
-the contest upon this issue would be simply to
-falsify the facts. It is not the physical consideration
-of rest, in any large degree, which animates
-the mind and strengthens the resolve of those
-engaged in the newly organized reform. No;
-there is something behind all this. The informing
-soul, that which electrifies, stimulates, and
-nerves to action, is the profound conviction that
-this is a religious movement; that which is
-sought is the honoring of God by the observance
-of a Sabbath such as is found in his word. If
-this be not so, if the higher idea of Christian
-worship as the primary one is not paramount in
-this matter, then the whole thing is a farce, from
-beginning to end. Not only so; if what is sought
-is merely the improvement of bodily condition,
-then the plan suggested is, in many cases, far
-from being the best which might be offered.
-Take, if you please, our over-populated cities,
-with the dense masses of human beings who are
-there crowded together, under most unfavorable
-circumstances, many of them perishing for lack
-of pure air, and others pale and sickly for want
-of exposure to the vivifying rays of the sun,
-which is continually shut out from their gaze by
-the massive piles of masonry by which they are
-inclosed; who will not say that, leaving the spiritual
-out of consideration, and setting aside the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>idea of the sanctity of the day, it would be a
-blessing incalculably greater for them, should
-provision be made whereby this should become
-to them a day of recreation, while wandering
-amid flowers, and over hills, and through groves,
-instead of one in which, either from necessity
-or choice, they should still perpetuate the confinement
-which has already nearly proved fatal
-in their cases?</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='article02' class='c006'>ARTICLE II.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>Turning from the secular phase of this subject,
-let us regard it for a moment from the religious
-stand-point.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Is there anything in the purpose itself which
-is worthy of the cost at which alone it can be
-realized? In other words, since the object aimed
-at is ostensibly that of bringing the nation up to
-the point of a general regard for the first day of
-the week as a Sabbath, would such a result be
-one which should be profoundly desired?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We reply that this will depend altogether upon
-circumstances. In this case, as in the first, mere
-cessation from labor on that day, which is not
-prompted by a regard for the will and approval
-of Jehovah, could afford no relief to a nation,
-which is seeking to avert divine displeasure
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>since there is no element in the act itself calculated
-to recommend it to the favor of Heaven.
-To illustrate: The individual sentenced to solitary
-confinement in the State’s Prison is precluded
-from the possibility of laboring on the
-Sunday; will any one therefore argue that there
-is any merit in his inaction on that day? Again:
-The heathen nations, in common with the majority
-of the Christian world, have many of them
-regarded the Sunday as a sacred day; should we
-presume, therefore, that they are looked upon by
-the Almighty more complacently on this account?
-You answer, No; and urge, as a reason for this
-reply, that they have been engaged in a false
-worship, and have not been actuated by any regard
-for the true God. Where, then, is the line?
-Manifestly, right here: The men who honor God
-by the keeping of any day must be prompted by
-the conviction that they are doing it in strict and
-cheerful obedience to a divine command.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Here, then, is the crucible in which we will
-try the metal of this modern movement. If,
-when their grand design shall be accomplished—as
-the result of many labors and toils—and, even
-though before their purpose is attained, it shall
-be found necessary for them to reach their object
-through a conflict intensely bitter and impassioned
-on the part of the opposition, we shall
-witness the spectacle of a nation bowing submissively
-to the <i>law</i> and <i>will</i> of <i>God</i> in the humble
-and fervent observance of a weekly rest of <i>divine
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>appointment</i>, it will be the grandest triumph
-which history has recorded. No treasure of gold—we
-were about to say no sacrifice of life—would
-be too great a price to pay for so glorious
-a victory. Let it be understood, however, that
-this must be a voluntary and intelligent worship
-on the part, at least, of the mass of the people.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But will this be true, should our friends compass
-the great object of their ambition? Let us
-inquire once more after their intentions. What
-is it they advocate? The answer is, A universal
-regard for the first day of the week, as the Sabbath
-of the Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But what is the authority upon which the
-majority of them rest their argument for the
-proposed observance? Is it merely pecuniary
-advantage? No, say they, it is out of a sincere
-regard for the God of Heaven, and a conscientious
-desire to fulfill his law. But this implies religious
-duty. So far, so good. It also clearly sets forth
-the fact that God has a law, and a Sabbath
-which it enforces. The appeal, therefore, must
-inevitably be to that law, as the proper instrument
-from which to instruct the people.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To that they must be brought, again and again.
-Its import must be patiently taught, its sacredness
-must be thoroughly inculcated. Let them
-but be satisfied by <i>sound logic</i> that the divine
-statute is explicit in its demands for a strict observance
-of the first day of the week, let them be
-thoroughly educated into the idea that they are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>under its jurisdiction, and let them be instructed
-that this whole movement proceeds upon this
-religious conviction, and you have laid a foundation
-which will uphold a structure of imposing
-dimensions and enduring character, the cornerstone
-whereof is the fear of God, and an acknowledgment
-of his presence in the affairs of men.
-But how is it in the case in question? Is the
-commandment of a nature such as to support, in
-every particular, the tenets presented by the
-reform under consideration? This is really the
-vital point. Let it speak for itself. It is the
-fourth of the decalogue which is urged: “Remember
-the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. 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, thou, nor
-thy son, nor thy daughter, thy man-servant, nor
-thy maid-servant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger
-that is within thy gates: for in six days the
-Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all
-that in them is, and rested the seventh day:
-wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and
-hallowed it.” If this is not a Sabbath law, then
-there is none in existence; for, <i>mark it</i>, this is
-the only instance in all the Scriptures in which
-it will be claimed by any one that we have a
-positive command for the observance of the Sabbath.
-So far, therefore, as the first day of the
-week is concerned, its friends have this advantage,
-that, if they but succeed in resting it upon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>this commandment, their labor is ended; for it—<i>i. e.</i>,
-the commandment—has no rival. All that
-is needed, consequently, is a clear, pointed exegesis
-showing that the day in question is the one,
-the observance of which the divine Lawgiver has
-required. But, unfortunately, such an exegesis
-would be beset with difficulties. To begin with,
-Who shall be able to harmonize the declaration
-which the commandment contains in these words,
-“The <i>seventh day</i> is the Sabbath of the Lord thy
-God: in it thou shalt not do any work,” with the
-utterance of those who, on the contrary, say that
-the <i>first day</i> is the Sabbath of the Lord, and
-must be observed as such? The divine Lawgiver—as
-if determined that there shall be no
-room for debate in regard to the day which he
-had in his mind—has identified it in a manner
-such as to leave no room for dispute. In the
-first place, he announces his willingness that six
-days of the week should be devoted to secular
-employment, “Six days shalt thou labor, and do
-all thy work:” then follows the disjunctive, “but—the
-seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy
-God: in it thou shalt not do any work.” Here
-it is made plain that it is the “Sabbath of the
-Lord” upon which we are to rest. Again, passing
-over the intermediate space, we come to the
-close of the commandment, in which he sets forth
-three important transactions by which that was
-constituted the Sabbath, and by which it may
-ever be recognized. He says, “For in six days
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all
-that in them is, and rested the seventh day:
-wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and
-hallowed it.” That is, the day which we are
-to keep as the Sabbath of the Lord is the one
-upon which he <i>rested</i>, which he <i>blessed</i>, and
-which he <i>hallowed</i>. Therefore, before the first
-day of the week can, with any show of reason,
-be kept in fulfillment of this commandment, <i>i. e.</i>,
-before it can be regarded as the “Sabbath of the
-Lord,” it must be shown that, at some time, God
-has rested upon it, blessed, and hallowed it. But
-this would be a difficult task; for not only are
-the Scriptures silent, so far as the affirmation of
-this fact is concerned with reference to the first
-day of the week, but, on the contrary, they positively
-declare that it was the very day upon
-which Jehovah <i>entered upon the stupendous
-undertaking of making a world</i>. Should additional
-evidence be required on this point, <i>i. e.</i>,
-that the last day of the week, and not the first, is
-the one which Jehovah intended to sanctify, we
-have but to cite the intelligent reader to the fact
-that Moses, the prophets, the Lord himself, the
-holy women after his death, and the whole Jewish
-nation—in whose language the decalogue was
-given—are, and have been, unanimous in placing
-this construction upon the Sabbatic law.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Should any, however, perceiving the dilemma
-into which they are thrown by the effort to enforce
-their view in the use of the law, as it was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>originally given, seek relief in the position that
-it was so far amended in the days of Christ as to
-admit of the substitution of the day of his resurrection
-for that of God’s rest at the end of creation
-week, we reply, If such a fact can be clearly
-made out, it would certainly furnish the very
-help which is needed just at this juncture, and
-without which confusion must inevitably characterize
-the movements of those who feel the
-necessity of a Sabbatic law for the keeping of
-Sunday.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Let us, therefore, carefully investigate this
-most important point. Is it true that the Son of
-God did so change the phraseology of the commandment
-of the Father that, from his time
-forward, its utterances have not only justified
-the secularizing of the last, but have also enforced,
-by the penalty of eternal death, a strictly
-religious regard for the first day of the week, on
-the part of both the Jewish and the Gentile
-world? Now this, if accomplished, was no trifling
-affair, and could not have been done in a
-corner; since it involved the guilt or innocence,
-the life or death, of countless millions of men and
-women, whose condemnation in the day of Judgment
-for the violation of Sunday sanctity would
-turn, of necessity, upon the words of one who
-both had the power to change, and had brought
-the knowledge of that change clearly before
-them. Certain it is, therefore—since God does
-not first judge, and legislate afterward—all the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>light which is necessary for the proper elucidation
-of this subject is now to be found in his
-written word. To this, then, we turn; and with
-a profound conviction that the language of Christ
-was true in its largest sense, “If any man will do
-his will he shall know of the doctrine,”—we inquire,
-Where is it stated, <i>in so many words</i>, that
-God made the amendment in question?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Should the response be returned, as it certainly
-must be, that such a statement is not to be found
-within the lids of the Bible, we answer that this
-is a concession which, most assuredly, will greatly
-embarrass our friends in the proposed reform.
-Sagacious men will not be slow in discovering its
-bearing upon the subject, and it will be very
-difficult to explain such an omission to the satisfaction
-of cautious and reflecting minds. Should
-it be suggested, however, that—notwithstanding
-the fact the change has not been set forth in so
-many words—it has nevertheless occurred, and
-is therefore binding, we answer: Although the
-transaction upon the face of it, to say the least,
-would be a singular one, if an alteration has really
-been made, the next thing to be ascertained
-is its precise nature. We have already seen that
-the first law was very explicit in its statements;
-and all are conversant with the fact that to it
-was given the greatest publicity, and that it was
-uttered by the voice, and written by the finger
-of God, under the most imposing circumstances.
-Now, if Christ—whose power to do so we shall
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>not question here—has really undertaken the
-task of adding to, or taking from, this most sacred
-precept, will some one furnish us with an <i>authentic
-copy</i> of the statute, as amended? Now
-this is a reasonable and just request. To declare
-simply that a change has occurred, without making
-known precisely what that change is, is but
-to bewilder and confuse. Conscious of this fact,
-the State is always extremely careful to give to
-its citizens—in the most public manner—every
-variation which is made in its enactments, lest
-the loyal man should be incapable of proving his
-fidelity by obedience, or the disloyal justify his
-violation upon the plea of necessary ignorance.
-Shall man be more just than his Maker? Shall
-Christ—who, in every other respect, has, in matters
-of duty, furnished us with line upon line,
-and precept upon precept—be found, at last, upon
-this most important point, to have been unmindful
-of the highest interests of his followers? Most
-assuredly not. He that never slumbereth nor
-sleepeth, He that knoweth the end from the beginning,
-He who hath said, “Where there is no
-law there is no transgression,” has certainly never
-required his people to occupy a position in the
-face of their enemies so extremely embarrassing
-as that in which they would be compelled to
-ignore the plainest dictates of reason and Scripture,
-by seeking to condemn in the world a practice
-which is not necessarily immoral in itself,
-and against which there is no explicit denunciation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>of the Bible. Who, then, we inquire again,
-will furnish us from the sacred page the precept
-so remodeled as to meet the exigences of this
-case? Is it <i>larger</i> or more <i>condensed</i> than before?
-Does the first clause read, “Remember
-the Sabbath day, to keep it holy?” If so, it is
-well. Is the second in order expressed in these
-words, “Six days shalt thou labor, and do all thy
-work?” This, again, is good. But how is it
-with the third, “The seventh day is the Sabbath
-of the Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do any
-work?” Here, unquestionably, the change must
-begin. Who among us, therefore, can produce
-the divine warrant for a reading of this passage
-which shall make it harmonize with the keeping
-of Sunday? Who dare declare, upon his veracity,
-that he has ever discovered in the sacred
-word an instance in which it has been so rewritten
-as to read, “But the <i>first</i> day is the Sabbath
-of the Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not
-do any work?”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Furthermore, passing over the instructions in
-regard to sons, daughters, servants, the stranger,
-etc., what has the pen of the divine remodeler
-done with the <i>reason</i> of the commandment as
-found in the words, “For in six days the Lord
-made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in
-them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore
-the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed
-it?” Has that been stricken out altogether? Or,
-is there a glaring inconsistency in the remodeled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>statute, by which it is made to state that the <i>first</i>
-day of the week, instead of the <i>seventh</i>, is now
-the Sabbath of the Lord our God, because of the
-fact that, in the creation of the world, God rested
-upon, blessed, and hallowed, the latter? These
-are weighty questions. Upon them, virtually,
-turns the issue of an amended law. For, to
-amend, is so to change or alter as to vary the
-duty of a subject; and if no one is capable of
-informing definitely and particularly in regard to
-the precise variations of the phraseology, then, of
-course, no one is able to decide just how far our
-course of action should deviate from what it has
-been hitherto, in order to meet the demands of
-the divine will as now expressed, in a rule which
-has never been seen, and which no hand would
-venture to trace with any claim to exactitude.
-Who, then, we inquire again, is sufficient for this
-task? Not one among the millions of Protestants
-who are so earnestly clamoring for the sanctity
-of the day in question will seriously lay claim to
-the ability to perform that which would at once
-elevate him to a position—in view of the relief
-which it would bring to thousands of troubled
-minds—more exalted than that of any saint or
-martyr who has ever lived.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nor is this all; behind all this pretentious
-claim for an amended law are very many indications
-of a wide-spread conviction—though undefined
-and hardly recognized by the individuals
-themselves—that the fact upon which they place
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>so much stress is, after all, one in regard to which
-there are serious doubts in their own minds. As
-an illustration of this, we have but to call attention
-to two things. First, on each Lord’s day,
-so-called, thousands of congregations—after devoutly
-listening to the reading of the fourth commandment
-of the decalogue, word for word, syllable
-for syllable, letter for letter, precisely as it
-was written upon the table of stone by the finger
-of God—are in the habit of responding with solemn
-cadence to the utterances of the preacher,
-“O Lord, incline our hearts to keep this law.”
-Now this prayer means something, or nothing.
-It is either an expression of desire, on the part of
-those employing it, for grace to enable them
-rightly to observe the commandment as it reads—seventh
-day and all—or else it is a solemn
-mockery, which must inevitably provoke the
-wrath of Heaven. These people, therefore, judging
-from the most charitable stand-point, are witnesses—unconscious
-though they may be of the
-fact—of a generally pervading opinion that the
-verbiage of the fourth commandment has not
-been changed, and that it is as a whole as binding
-as ever. Second, nor is it simply true that
-those only who have a liturgy have committed
-themselves to this idea. It is astonishing to
-what extent it has crept into creeds, confessions
-of faith, church disciplines, and documents of a
-like nature. But among the most striking of all
-evidences of its universality, when properly understood,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>is the practice of nearly all religious denominations
-of printing, for general distribution
-among the Sunday-school scholars, verbatim copies
-of the decalogue, as given in the twentieth
-chapter of Exodus. Yet this practice would be
-a pernicious one, and worthy of the most severe
-censure, as calculated to lead astray and deceive
-the minds of the young, if it were really true
-that this code, in at least one very important particular,
-failed to meet the facts in the case, as it
-regards present duty.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In view of these considerations, a change of the
-base of operations becomes indispensable. A
-commandment, altered in its expressions so as to
-vary its import, and yet no one acquainted with
-the exact terms in which it is at present couched—and
-all, in reality, being so skeptical upon
-the point that even its most ardent advocates
-reason as if it had never occurred—would certainly
-furnish a foundation altogether insufficient
-for the mighty superstructure of a great reform,
-which proposes, ere the accomplishment of its
-mission, to revolutionize the State.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='article03' class='c006'>ARTICLE III.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>Where, then, shall we turn for relief? There
-is one, and but one, more chance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Acknowledging that the law, as originally
-given, will not answer the purpose, and that its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>amendment cannot be made out with sufficient
-clearness to warrant the taking of a stand upon
-it, we turn, for the last time, to examine a position
-quite generally advanced; namely, that of
-Sunday observance inaugurated, justified, and
-enforced, by the resurrection and example of
-Christ. Is it true, then, that such is the fact?
-Have we, at last, found relief from all our difficulties
-in the life and career of no less a personage
-than the divine Son of God? Let us see.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The point of the argument is briefly this:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Our Lord—by rising from the dead, and by
-his practice of meeting with his disciples on that
-day—both introduced, and made obligatory upon
-his followers, the necessity of distinguishing between
-the first and the remaining days of the
-week, as we would between the sacred and the
-profane. Now, if this be a case which can be
-clearly made out, then we are immediately relieved
-in one particular; that is, we have found
-authority for the observance of the Sunday. But
-how is it as it regards the seventh day? This,
-we have seen, was commanded by God the
-Father. The obligation of that command is still
-recognized. Now, consequently, if Christ the
-Son has, upon his own authority, introduced
-another day immediately following the seventh,
-and clothed it with divine honors, is it a necessary
-inference that the former is therefore set
-aside? To our mind, it is far from being such.
-If God has a law for the observance of a given
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>day, and Christ has furnished us with an example
-for that of another also, then the necessary
-conclusion is, that the first must be kept out of
-respect for God the Father, and the last through
-reverence to Christ the Son. Three facts, therefore,
-must be clearly made out, or our situation
-is indeed one of perplexity.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>First, it must be shown, authoritatively, that
-the resurrection effected the change which is
-urged, and that the practice of Christ was what
-it is claimed to have been.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Second, that that practice was designed to be
-exemplary; in other words, that what he did in
-these particulars was of a nature such that we
-are required to imitate it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Third, it must also be shown that he not only
-sanctified the first, but, also, that he secularized
-the seventh day of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But can this be done? Let us see. First,
-then, we will consider the matter of the resurrection.
-Now, that it was an event of surpassing
-glory, and one ever to be held in grateful remembrance,
-there is no room for dispute among
-Christians. But shall we, therefore, decide that
-it must of necessity be commemorated by a day
-of rest? This would be assuming a great deal.
-It seems to us that it would be better, far better,
-to leave decisions of such importance as this
-entirely with the Holy Spirit. Protestants, at
-least, warned by the example of Roman Catholics,
-should avoid the danger of attempting to administer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>in the matter of designating holy days;
-since, manifestly, this is alone the province of
-God. Hence, we inquire, Has the Holy Ghost
-ever said that the resurrection of Christ imparted
-a holy character to the day upon which it occurred?
-The answer must, undeniably, be in the
-negative. No such declaration is found in the
-Holy Word. Nor is this all; even from the
-stand-point of human reason, every analogy is
-against it. It were fitting that, when God had
-closed the work of creation, and ceased to labor,
-he should appoint a day in commemoration of
-that rest. The propriety of such a course, all
-can see. But, on the contrary, is it not equally
-manifest that to have remained inactive on that
-glorious morning, when the Son of God had burst
-the bands of death, and the news was flying
-through all parts of the great city of Jerusalem,
-“Jesus has risen to life again,” would have
-been a condition of things wholly out of the
-question? Both the enemies and the friends of
-Christ—the one class stimulated by hate, and the
-other released by the mighty power of God from
-the overwhelming gloom and crushing despondency
-of three terrible days—were, by the very
-necessities of the case, moved to action by an energy
-which would cause them to overleap every
-barrier and to break away from every restraint.
-Everything, everywhere, animated by the new
-aspect which affairs had suddenly assumed,
-demanded immediate, ceaseless, and untiring
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>activity. And such it had. From the early
-morning, until far into the hours of the succeeding
-night, scribe and Pharisee, priest and Levite,
-believer and unbeliever, were hearing, gathering,
-and distributing, all that could be learned of this
-most mysterious event. We say, consequently,
-that so far is it from being true that the day of
-the resurrection is one which should be hallowed,
-either exactly or substantially as that of the
-decalogue, the very opposite is the fact; and, if
-it were to be celebrated at all, every consideration
-of fitness demands that it should be done by excessive
-demonstrations of outward and uncontrolled
-joy, rather than by quietude and restraint.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Passing now to the other branches of the subject,
-we inquire, finally, What was there in the
-<i>example</i> of Christ and the apostles which in any
-way affects the question? If they are to be
-quoted at all upon this subject, it is but reasonable
-that their history should be examined with
-reference both to the seventh and the first day;
-for, if precedent, and not positive enactment, is
-to be the rule by which our faith is to be decided,
-in a point of this significance, it is at least presumable
-that the historic transactions by which
-this question is to be determined will be ample
-in number, and of a nature to meet and explain
-all the phases of the subject. That is, the Gospels
-and the Acts of the Apostles—covering, as
-their history does, a period of about thirty years—will
-afford numerous and conclusive evidences
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>that both Christ and the apostles did actually
-dishonor the old, and invest with peculiar dignity
-and authority the new, Sabbath. First, we inquire
-then, Is there, in all the New Testament,
-the record of a single instance in which Jesus or
-his followers transacted, upon the seventh day of
-the week, matters incompatible with the notion
-of its original and continued sanctity? The
-answer is, of necessity, in the negative. The
-most careful and protracted search has failed to
-produce a single case in which the son of Joseph
-and Mary departed in this particular from the
-usages of his nation, or in which his immediate
-representatives, during the period of their canonical
-history, failed to follow, in the most scrupulous
-manner, the example of Him of whom it
-is said that, “as his custom was, he went into the
-synagogue on the Sabbath day, and stood up for
-to read.” (Luke 4:16.) Nor is this all; it is a
-remarkable fact, and one well calculated to stagger
-the investigator at the very threshold of his
-researches into the data for the modern view,
-that, whereas the Sabbath is mentioned fifty-six
-times in the New Testament, it is in every instance,
-save one (where it refers to the annual
-Sabbaths of the Jews), applied to the last day of
-the week. So far, therefore, as the negative argument
-is concerned, which was based upon the
-presumption that the claims of the old day were
-constructively annulled by the appointment of a
-new one, its force is entirely broken by the record,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>which, as we have seen, instead of proving
-such an abolition, is rather suggestive of the
-perpetuity of the old order of things. Hence, we
-turn to the positive side of the subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>How do we know that Christ ever designed
-that his example should produce in our minds
-the conviction that he had withdrawn his regard
-from the day of his Father’s rest, and placed it
-upon that of his own resurrection? Did he, in
-laying the foundation for the new institution—as
-in the case of the Lord’s supper—inaugurate
-the same by his own action, and then say to his
-disciples, As oft as ye do this, do it in remembrance
-of me? Did he ever explain to any individual
-that his especial object in meeting with
-his followers on the evenings of the first and
-second Sundays (?) after his return from the
-dead was designed to inspire in the minds of
-future believers the conviction that those hours,
-from that time forward, had been consecrated to
-a religious use? If so, the record is very imperfect,
-in that it failed to hand down to us a most
-significant fact. I say significant, because, without
-such a declaration, the minds of common
-men, such as made up the rank and file of the
-immediate followers of Christ, were hardly competent
-to the subtile task of drawing, unaided,
-such nice distinctions. How natural, how easy,
-by a single word, to have put all doubt to rest,
-and to have given to future ages a foundation,
-broad and deep, upon which to ground the argument
-for the change.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>But this, as we have already seen, was not
-done! and after the lapse of eighteen hundred
-years, men—in the stress of a situation which
-renders it necessary that they should obtain divine
-sanction, in order to the perpetuity of a
-favored institution—are ringing the changes of
-an endless variety of conjectures drawn from
-transactions, which, in the record itself, were
-mentioned as possessing no peculiar characteristics,
-which should in any way affect the <i>mere
-time</i> upon which they occurred.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Let us, therefore, with a proper sense of the
-modesty with which we should ever enter upon
-the task of deciding upon the institutions of the
-church, when there is no divine precept for the
-guidance of our judgment, examine for ourselves.
-As we do this, it will be well, also, to bear in
-mind the fact that our prejudices will be very
-likely to lie entirely upon the side of life-long
-practice and traditionary inheritance. In fact,
-nearly every consideration, political, financial,
-and social, will be found, if not guarded with the
-strictest care, wooing us to a decision which—though
-it might dishonor God, and do violence
-to the principles of a clear, natural logic—would
-exempt us, individually, from personal sacrifice
-and pecuniary loss.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>
- <h2 id='article04' class='c006'>ARTICLE IV.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>First, then, we suggest that it would be well
-to collate all the texts in the New Testament in
-which the first day of the week is mentioned.
-They are as follows: “In the end of the Sabbath,
-as it began to dawn toward the first day of the
-week, came Mary Magdalene and the other Mary
-to see the sepulcher.” Matt. 28:1.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“And when the Sabbath was past, Mary Magdalene,
-and Mary the mother of James, and Salome,
-had bought sweet spices, that they might
-come and anoint Him. And very early in the
-morning, the first day of the week, they came
-unto the sepulcher at the rising of the sun.”
-Mark 16:1, 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Now when Jesus was risen early the first
-day of the week, he appeared first to Mary Magdalene,
-out of whom he had cast seven devils.”
-Mark 16:9.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“And they returned, and prepared spices and
-ointments; and rested the Sabbath day, according
-to the commandment. Now upon the first
-day of the week, very early in the morning, they
-came unto the sepulcher, bringing the spices
-which they had prepared, and certain others with
-them.” Luke 23:56, and 24:1.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“The first day of the week cometh Mary Magdalene
-early, when it was yet dark, unto the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>sepulcher, and seeth the stone taken away from
-the sepulcher.” John 20:1.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Then the same day at evening, being the first
-day of the week, when the doors were shut
-where the disciples were assembled for fear of
-the Jews, came Jesus and stood in the midst, and
-saith unto them, Peace be unto you.” John 20:19.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Upon the first day of the week let every one
-of you lay by him in store, as God hath prospered
-him, that there be no gatherings when I
-come.” 1 Cor. 16:2.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“And upon the first day of the week, when the
-disciples came together to break bread, Paul
-preached unto them, ready to depart on the morrow;
-and continued his speech until midnight.”
-Acts 20:7.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Doubtless the reader is not a little surprised,
-provided he has never given his attention to
-the subject before, at discovering the meagerness,
-so far as numbers at least are concerned, of
-the passages alluded to above. Nevertheless, let
-us take the data, thus furnished, and from them
-endeavor to derive all the information which
-they can legitimately be made to afford. At first
-glance, it will be discovered that six of the passages
-of Scripture under consideration relate to
-one and the same day, which was that of the resurrection.
-Written as they were from five to
-sixty-two years this side of that occurrence, and
-penned by men who were profoundly interested
-in everything which was calculated to throw
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>light upon matters of duty and doctrine, we
-would naturally expect that they would seize
-these most favorable opportunities for instructing
-those whom they were endeavoring to enlighten
-in regard to the time of, and circumstances connected
-with, the change of the Sabbath. Let us
-observe, therefore, how they discharge this most
-important responsibility. It will not be urged
-by any that John 20:1, and Mark 16:9, furnish
-anything which in any way strengthens the
-Sunday argument. The statements which they
-contain are merely to the effect that Mary Magdalene
-was the one to whom Christ first presented
-himself, and that she visited the tomb very early
-in the morning. Neither will it be insisted that
-the declaration found in Matt. 28:1, and Mark
-16:1, 2, and Luke 23:56, and 24:1, afford any
-positive testimony for the sanctity of the first
-day of the week. On the contrary, we think
-that every candid person will concede that the
-bearing which they have upon the subject is
-rather against, than favorable to, the case which
-our friends are so anxious to make out. To illustrate:
-In Matt. 28:1, we read that “in the
-end of the Sabbath, as it began to dawn toward
-the first day of the week, came Mary Magdalene,
-and the other Mary, to see the sepulcher.” Again,
-in Mark 16:1, 2, the same general fact is stated,
-with the simple variation that, instead of the expression,
-“in the end of the Sabbath,” are substituted
-the words, “when the Sabbath was passed,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>while in Luke 23:56, and 24:1, it is declared
-that these things transpired on the first day of
-the week, the context carefully setting forth the
-fact that the women had “rested upon the Sabbath,
-according to the commandment,” and that
-it being past, they came to the sepulcher, bringing
-with them the spices which they had prepared.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now, putting all these things together, what
-have we learned? Manifestly, the following
-facts: First; when the events transpired which
-are set forth in these scriptures, there was a Sabbath;
-since it is stated, by way of locating them
-in point of time, that the Sabbath had ended
-before the affairs spoken of were transacted.
-Secondly; that the Sabbath, to which reference
-was made, was the seventh day of the week,
-since it preceded the first, and was that of the
-commandment. Thirdly; that, if the first day of
-the week was a Sabbath, as is now claimed, the
-women were ignorant of it, since it is clear that
-they did not go to the tomb on the seventh day
-to embalm the body, because of its being holy
-time; whereas, upon the first day of the week
-their scruples were gone, and they came to the
-sepulcher, bearing their spices with them, to accomplish
-a work which they would not have regarded
-as legitimate on the Sabbath. Fourthly;
-that the seventh day was not only the Sabbath
-at the time mentioned, but also that, according
-to the convictions of the historians, it was the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>Sabbath at the time of their writing—since they
-apply to it the definite article “<i>the</i>;” whereas,
-if there had been a change of Sabbaths, it would
-have been natural to distinguish between them
-in the use of explanatory words and phrases,
-such as are now applied, as, for instance, “the
-Jewish Sabbath,” “the Christian Sabbath,” &amp;c.,
-&amp;c. Fifthly; that, while Matthew, Mark, and Luke
-do, in every instance cited above, honor the seventh
-day of the week in the most scrupulous manner,
-by applying to it the Bible title of the Sabbath,
-they do, nevertheless, make mention of the day of
-the resurrection in each case, in the same connection,
-in the use of its secular name, “the first day
-of the week.” A slight which is utterly inexplicable,
-provided the latter had really put on a sacred
-character; since, that being true, it was
-much more important that its new claims should
-be recognized and inculcated by those who could
-speak with authority, than it was that they
-should perpetuate the distinction of a day whose
-honors had become obsolete. Having now examined
-five of the six texts under consideration,
-there remains but one more to occupy our attention.
-This reads as follows: “Then the same
-day at evening, being the first day of the week,
-when the doors were shut where the disciples
-were assembled for fear of the Jews, came Jesus
-and stood in the midst, and saith unto them,
-Peace be unto you.” John 20:19. Here, again,
-we are struck with the manifest disposition on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>the part of John, in common with the other
-evangelists, to avoid the application of any sacred
-title to the first day of the week. Twice, in this
-chapter, he makes mention of that which is now
-regarded as the “Queen of days,” but in both instances,
-he avoids, as if with studied care, attaching
-to it any denomination by which its superiority
-over other days should be indicated. How
-perfectly in keeping, for instance, it would have
-been with the facts as they are now claimed to
-have existed—as well as with the interests and
-desires of millions who have since lived—had he
-in the text before us so varied the phraseology of
-the first clause that it would read as follows:
-“And the same day at evening, being the <i>Christian
-Sabbath</i>, when the disciples were assembled,”
-&amp;c. This, however, he did not do, and we inquire
-of the reader, right here, concerning his
-<i>motive</i> in omitting that which now appears to us
-so desirable, and which would have been perfectly
-legitimate were the views of our friends correct.
-Did he intentionally omit an important fact?
-Was it left out because of an oversight on his
-part? Or, would it be safer to conclude that
-perhaps, after all, the difficulty lies, not with the
-apostle, or with the Holy Spirit, which dictated
-his language, but with the theory, which seems
-to be out of joint with his utterances?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nevertheless, as it is still urged that, in the
-absence of a positive declaration, this, the only
-remaining text, does furnish abundant evidence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>of the sacred regard in which the day of the resurrection
-was held—since it gives an account of
-a religious meeting held upon it, manifestly for
-the purpose of recognizing its heavenly character—let
-us examine more critically into the nature of
-the claims which are based upon its record. That
-those with whom we differ should be tenacious
-in their efforts to rest their cause very largely
-upon the account found in John 20:19, is not at
-all surprising. It is the only chance, as we have
-seen, which is left them of basing their argument
-upon a passage of Scripture which relates to the
-day of the resurrection. So far as 1 Cor. 16:2,
-and Acts 20:7, are concerned, it will not be disputed
-by any that their testimony is merely collateral
-evidence. If Sunday has become the Sabbath,
-it was by virtue of transactions which occurred
-immediately in connection with the rising
-of Christ. In other words, it was on the third
-day after the crucifixion that Christ, if at all, began
-to impress upon the minds of his disciples
-the Sabbatic character which had already attached
-to, and was henceforth to continue in, the
-day which saw him a conqueror over death and
-the grave.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nay, more; if the change occurred at all, it
-must have dated from the very moment that the
-angel descended, the guard was stricken down,
-and the Son of God, glorified, came forth. This
-being the case, from that time forward it would
-naturally be the effort of Christ to produce in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>the minds of his followers the conviction of this
-most momentous fact. Every action of his
-would necessarily be—if not directly for the purpose
-of imprinting the peculiar sacredness of the
-hours upon those by whom he was surrounded—at
-least of a character such as to impart no sanction
-either to a deliberate, or even an unintentional
-disregard, on the part of any, of their hallowed
-nature. Hence, our friends, seizing upon
-the fact that he met with them while assembled
-together in the after part of the day, have endeavored
-to clothe the incident with great interest,
-and have largely elaborated their arguments
-to show that this was not an accidental occurrence,
-but rather partook of the nature of a religious
-meeting, Christ himself honoring these
-instinctive efforts on the part of the disciples to
-act in harmony with the spirit of the hour, by
-his own personal presence.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Before we sanction this view of the subject,
-however, let us give our attention for a moment
-to the manner in which the previous portion of
-the day, then closing, had up to that point been
-spent. Certain it is, that Jesus had not, during
-its declining hours, been suddenly moved by a
-newly created impulse for the accomplishment of
-an object which had been just as desirable for
-twelve hours as it was at that moment. Sunday
-sanctity had already become a fixed fact, and its
-knowledge as essential to the well-being of the
-disciples in the morning, as at the evening. We
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>naturally conclude, therefore, that the very first
-opportunity for its disclosure would have been
-the one which Christ would embrace. This
-was afforded in his conversation with Mary.
-But, while there is no evidence that it was imparted,
-it is at least presumable that she was left
-entirely ignorant of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The second occasion was presented in that of
-the journey of the two disciples from Jerusalem
-to Emmaus, a distance of seven and a half miles.
-Jesus walked with them and talked with them
-by the way, reasoned with them about the resurrection,
-made as though he would have gone farther,
-discovered himself to them in the breaking
-of bread, and disappeared, leaving them to retrace
-the seven and a half miles to the city, with
-no word of caution against it on his part. Nay,
-more; his marked approval of the propriety of
-the act might properly have been inferred from
-the fact that he himself accompanied them in the
-first instance, in the garb of a wayfaring man;
-at the same time acting the part of one who was
-so far convinced of the rectitude of his own and
-of their action, that he was ready to continue his
-journey until night should render it impracticable.
-(Luke 24:28.) Following these men now,
-as they retrace their steps to the city from which
-they had departed, and to which they were now
-returning—manifestly all unconscious that they
-were trespassing upon time which had been rescued
-from that which might properly be devoted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>to secular pursuits—let us observe them, as they
-mingle once more with their former companions
-in grief. How does it happen that they are congregated
-at this precise point of time? Is it because
-they have at last discovered the fact that
-it has been made in the special sense a proper
-day for religious assemblies? If so, whence have
-they derived their conviction? Certainly not
-from Mary, or the two disciples just returning
-from Emmaus. Assuredly, also, not from Christ
-himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But, again, is it not really from an induction
-on their own part, by which they have themselves
-discovered the fitness of making the day of resurrection
-also that of worship? Listen a moment.
-Hear their excited remarks as, at this juncture,
-they are joined by the two. Do you catch these
-words, “The Lord is risen indeed, and hath appeared
-to Simon”? (Luke 24:34.) Does not
-this establish the fact of their confidence in the
-previous report? Unfortunately, the historian
-adds, “Neither believed they them.” Here they
-are, then, manifestly still doubting the very fact
-which some have thought they were convened to
-celebrate.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But, again, what is the <i>place</i> of their convocation?
-Unquestionably, neither the temple nor the
-synagogue. The record states that where they
-were assembled, “the doors were closed for fear
-of the Jews.” Evidently, they were in some
-place of retirement and comparative safety, hiding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>away from the fury of a people who, in their
-madness and cruel hate, had crucified even the
-Lord of glory. We ask again, Where were they?
-Let Mark explain. Certainly he is competent to
-the task. When describing the very transaction
-we are considering, he says: “Afterward he appeared
-to the eleven as they sat at meat, and upbraided
-them with their unbelief and hardness of
-heart, because they believed not them which had
-seen him after he was risen.” Mark 16:14.
-Here, then, is the clue to the whole matter. It
-was not a religious meeting, because they were
-in a frame of mind to be censured, rather than
-applauded, because of unbelief. It was merely
-the body of the apostles, gathered in their own
-quarters for the purpose of partaking of an evening
-meal, where they were in the habit of eating,
-and drinking, and sleeping—and where, at this
-time, they kept particularly close, because of the
-perils which surrounded them on every hand.
-That this is true, is further sustained by two additional
-considerations.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>First; it was a place where Christ expected to
-find meat, and where he requested such for his
-own use, and was supplied from their bounty
-with broiled fish and an honeycomb, which, the
-record states, “he took and did eat before them.”
-(Luke 24:41-43.)</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Secondly; that they were in possession of just
-such a rendezvous, is clearly stated in John 20:10,
-where, speaking of Peter and John when going
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>from the sepulcher, it says, “They went away
-unto their own home.” A few days later, Luke
-declares (Acts 1:13,) that when they came in
-from the ascension, they “went up into an upper
-room, where abode both Peter, and James, and
-John, and Andrew, Philip, and Thomas; Bartholomew,
-and Matthew, James the son of Alpheus,
-and Simon Zelotes, and Judas the brother
-of James.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thus, by a natural and easy combination of
-the facts brought to view by the inspired penman,
-the whole matter has been reduced to a
-simple transaction, such as might have been repeated
-many times during the forty days, and
-such as—in and of itself—fails to disclose any
-evidence that the occurrences narrated, either
-necessarily or presumptively, afford the slightest
-justification for the supposition that Christ himself
-either designed, or that the apostles might
-legitimately conclude that he intended, by joining
-them under these familiar circumstances, to
-authorize one of the mightiest innovations upon
-the practice of ages which the world has ever
-seen.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>
- <h2 id='article05' class='c006'>ARTICLE V.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>Nor is this matter at all relieved by the statement
-found in John 20:26, that after eight days,
-Thomas being present, he appeared unto them a
-second time under similar circumstances. For
-even should we grant that this was on the next
-Sunday evening—a matter in which there is, at
-least, room for a difference of opinion—the subject
-is merely complicated the more, so far as the view
-of our friends is concerned, since here a second
-opportunity, and that a most excellent one, for
-calling the attention of the disciples to the new
-character which a once secular day had assumed,
-was entirely neglected. In this also, as in the
-first instance, the conversation was of a nature to
-show that the object of the interview was to give
-additional evidence (because of the presence of
-Thomas) of the re-animation of the body of Christ,
-without any reference to its effect upon the character
-of the day upon which it occurred. But
-such silence, under <i>such</i> circumstances, in regard
-to so important a matter, is in itself conclusive
-evidence that the change claimed had not really
-taken place. Furthermore, it will not be urged
-that more than two out of the five first-days
-which occurred between the resurrection and the
-ascension were days of assembly. Had they
-been—as it had been decided, according to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>view of those urging the transition, that the
-Sunday should not be hallowed by positive declaration,
-but simply inaugurated by quiet precedent,
-then the presumption is, that this precedent,
-instead of being left upon the insufficient
-support of two Sabbaths out of five, would have
-been carefully placed upon the whole number.
-Nor would the precaution have ended here. In
-a matter vital in its nature, certain it is that the
-honest seeker after truth would not be left to
-grope his way through a metaphysical labyrinth
-of philosophic speculation in regard to the effect
-of certain transactions upon the character of the
-time upon which they occurred; or the bearing
-of certain meetings of Christ and the apostles
-upon the question as to whether Sunday had assumed
-a sacred character, when at the same time
-his perplexity was rendered insupportable by the
-fact, that the historian states, that like meetings
-occurred on days for which no one will claim any
-particular honor.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Take, for instance, the meeting of Jesus with
-the apostles at the sea of Galilee (John 21), while
-they were engaged in a fishing excursion. Assuredly,
-this did not take place on Sunday; else,
-according to the view of our friends, they would
-not have been engaged in such an employment.
-Just what day it was, no one is able to decide;
-but all agree that its character was in no way affected
-by the profoundly interesting interview
-which occurred upon it between the Master and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>his disciples. If it were, then there is at least
-one holy day in the week which we cannot place
-in the calendar, since no one can decide whether
-it was the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, or
-sixth.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If, however, you would have a still more forcible
-illustration of the fact that religious meetings,
-were they never so solemn, can in nowise alter
-the nature of the hours on which they occur, let
-me call your attention to the day of the ascension
-(Acts 1). Here is an occasion of transcendent
-glory. If the statements in the sacred narrative
-of events, which transpired during its hours, could
-only be predicated of either one or the other of
-the first-day meetings of Christ with his disciples,
-it would at least be with an increased show
-of reason that they could be woven into the tissue
-of a Sabbatic argument. Here are found
-many of the elements essential to the idea of religions
-services, of which the instances in question
-are so remarkably destitute.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the first place, those who followed our Lord
-to the place of meeting were intelligent believers
-in the fact of his resurrection.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the second place, the assembly was not confined
-to a mere handful of individuals, seeking for
-retiracy within an upper room where they were
-in the habit of eating, drinking, and sleeping;
-but it transpired in the open air, where Jesus
-was in the habit of meeting with his followers.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the third place, the congregation was made
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>up of persons whom the Holy Spirit had thus
-brought together for the purpose of becoming the
-honored witnesses of the resurrection and ascension
-of Christ.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the fourth place, it was graced by the visible
-forms of holy angels in glistering white, who
-participated in the services.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the fifth place, Jesus himself addressed them
-at length, lifted up his hands to heaven, and
-brought down its benediction upon them, and in
-the sight of the assembled multitude, steadily
-and majestically rising above them, he floated
-upward, until a cloud received him out of their
-sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the sixth place, it is said, in so many words,
-that the “<i>people worshiped</i> him there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now, suppose, for the sake of the argument,
-that some modern sect should endeavor to transform
-our unpretending Thursday, which was really
-the day of the ascension, since it was the
-fortieth after the resurrection, into one of peculiar
-dignity, claiming, in defense of their position, the
-example of Christ, and urging that the course
-which he pursued could only be satisfactorily explained
-on the ground that he was laying the
-foundation for its future Sabbatic observance,
-how would our friends meet them in such an
-emergency? Deny the facts, they could not, for
-the record is ample. There would, therefore, be
-but one alternative left.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If transactions of this character are of a nature
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>such that they <i>necessarily</i> exalt the days upon
-which they occur to the rank of holy days, then
-Thursday is one, and should be treated as such.
-No line of argument, however ingenious, could
-evade this conclusion, so long as the premises in
-question were adhered to. Planting himself
-squarely upon them, with the consent of modern
-Christendom, the advocate of the newly discovered
-holy day, finding the record perfectly free
-from embarrassments in the nature of transactions
-which would appear to be incompatible
-with the notion that everything which Christ
-and his apostles did was in harmony with his
-view, if possessed of that skill and ability which
-has marked the efforts of some modern theologians
-in such discussions, could weave a web of
-inference and conjecture almost interminable in
-its length.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>All the facts connected with the meeting could
-be expanded, and turned over and over, and exhibited
-from innumerable stand-points, so as to
-yield the largest amount of evidence possible.
-Having dwelt at large upon everything which
-was said and done at Bethany, he might return
-with the solemn procession to the great city.
-Having done this, he would not fail to call our
-attention to the fact that they did not conduct
-themselves in a manner such as men might have
-been expected to do under the circumstances on
-a common day, but that, on the contrary, impressed
-with the sacredness of the hours which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>had witnessed the glorious ascension of the Son
-of God, they immediately repaired to a place of
-assembly, manifestly for the purpose of continued
-worship. Again, scrutinizing with polemic eye
-every syllable of the history, in order to extract
-from it all the hidden testimony which it might
-contain, his attention would be arrested by these
-words, “A Sabbath day’s journey.” Immediately,
-he inquires, Why employ such an expression as
-this—one which occurs nowhere else in the sacred
-volume? Certainly it cannot be the result of
-accident. The Holy Spirit must have designed
-to signify <i>something</i> by such a use of the term
-in the connection under consideration. A Sabbath
-day’s journey! What importance could be
-attached to the fact that the particular point from
-which Christ ascended was no more than a Sabbath
-day’s journey from Jerusalem? The expression
-is not sufficiently definite to designate
-the precise spot, and must, therefore, have been
-employed to express some other idea. What was
-it? Undeniably, it was introduced into this connection
-because of the <i>nature</i> of the <i>time</i> on
-which the journey occurred. It was a <i>Sabbath
-day</i>, and, as such, it was important that succeeding
-generations should not be left to infer from
-the account given, that it was a matter of indifference
-to the Lord how far travel should be carried
-on such an occasion; but, on the contrary,
-that he was jealous on this point, and that the
-expression in question was employed to show
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>that the procession of Christ’s followers, and Christ,
-himself, bowed reverently to the national regulation
-respecting the distance to which it was
-proper for one to depart from his home during
-the continuance of holy time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But this line of argument, though plausible in
-itself, and superior in fact to that which is many
-times used to support the tottering fabric of first-day
-observance, would not, we fancy, persuade an
-intelligent public to introduce a new Sabbath into
-their calendar. The verdict which even those
-with whom we differ would be compelled to render
-would be that which both reason and piety
-would dictate; namely, that the fatal defect in
-the logic was the want of a thus saith the Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Passing now from the first six of the eight
-texts which relate to the first day of the week,
-let us give to 1 Cor. 16:2, and Acts 20:7, a consideration
-of sufficient length only to enable us
-to assign to them the proper place which they
-should occupy in this controversy. While it will
-be observed that they present the only mention
-of the first day of the week after leaving the gospels,
-and while it is remembered that they are
-separated from the occurrences there narrated by
-the space of twenty-six years, it is a remarkable
-fact that the first of them, if not in itself clearly
-against the conception of Sunday sanctity, at least,
-affords no strength for the argument in its favor.
-It reads as follows: “Upon the first day of the
-week let every one of you lay by him in store, as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>God hath prospered him, that there be no gatherings
-when I come.” 1 Cor. 16:2.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now, bear in mind that the inference here is,
-that the gatherings spoken of were to be made
-in the assemblies of the Corinthians, the presumption
-following that, as they must have been
-in the habit of convening on the first day of the
-week, the apostle took advantage of this fact in
-order to secure the desired collections for the
-saints at Jerusalem. You will observe, consequently,
-that the postulate, or assumed point in
-the discussion, is that the Corinthians were at the
-church, or place of meeting, when the “laying
-by,” which was ordered above, took place. If,
-therefore, this be not true, the whole logical superstructure
-which rests upon it necessarily falls
-to the ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Let us inquire after the facts. Does the apostle
-say, Let every one of you lay by himself at
-the church? or, does he command that his pro-rata
-donation should be placed in the contribution
-box of the assembly? We answer: There
-is not a word to this effect. Nor is this all; the
-very idea of the text is diametrically opposed to
-this notion. Before the contrary can be shown
-to be true, it will be necessary to demonstrate
-that which is absurd in itself; namely, the proposition
-that what an individual has voluntarily
-placed beyond his own reach and control by putting
-it in a common fund, can, at the same time,
-be said to be “laid by him in store.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>Furthermore, Mr. J. W. Morton, a gentleman
-who has given the subject mature reflection and
-careful investigation, by a comparison of the different
-versions and the original, has demonstrated
-the fact that, if properly translated, the idea of
-the passage is simply that, for the purpose of
-uniformity of action, and to prevent confusion
-from secular matters when the apostle himself
-should arrive, each person should lay by himself
-<i>at home</i> the amount of his charities according to
-his ability. We give the following from his pen:
-“The whole question turns upon the meaning of
-the expression, ‘by him;’ and I marvel greatly
-how you can imagine that it means, ‘in the collection
-box of the congregation.’ Greenfield, in
-his lexicon, translates the Greek term, ‘by one’s
-self; <i>i. e.</i>, at home.’ Two Latin versions—the
-Vulgate, and that of Castellio—render it, ‘<i>apud
-se</i>,’ with one’s self, at home. Three French translations,
-those of Martin, Osterwald, and De Sacy,
-‘<i>chez soi</i>,’ at his own house, at home. The German
-of Luther, ‘<i>bei sich selbst</i>,’ by himself, at
-home. The Dutch, ‘by hemselven;’ same as German.
-The Italian of Diodati, ‘<i>appressio di se</i>,’
-in his own presence, at home. The Spanish of
-Felipe Scio, ‘<i>en su casa</i>,’ in his own house. The
-Portuguese of Ferrara, ‘<i>para isso</i>,’ with himself.
-The Swedish, ‘<i>nær sig sielf</i>,’ near himself. I
-know not how much this list of authorities might
-be swelled, for I have not examined one translation
-that differs from those quoted above.”—<i>Vindication
-of the True Sabbath</i>, p. 61.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>The simple fact is, therefore, that while the text
-in question yields no proof that Sunday was then
-regarded as a day of convocation, it was one which
-might he encumbered with matters which would
-necessarily call attention to the pecuniary affairs
-of individual Christians, and so avoid the necessity
-of their giving thought to such things when
-Paul himself should arrive; thereby preventing
-delay on his part, and leaving them free to devote
-their whole time to the consideration of religious
-themes. Thus much for 1 Cor. 16:2.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='article06' class='c006'>ARTICLE VI.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>Advancing now to the remaining scripture,
-which is found in Acts 20:7, we append its words
-as follows: “And upon the first day of the week,
-when the disciples came together to break bread,
-Paul preached unto them, ready to depart on the
-morrow; and continued his speech until midnight.”
-By reading that which immediately follows
-the above, we shall learn the following facts:
-First, that here is indeed a record of a religious
-meeting upon the first day of the week (verse 7).
-Second, that it was held in that portion of the
-day when the darkness prevailed, since it was
-necessary to employ many lights (verse 8). Third,
-that Paul preached unto them, and that, while
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>he was speaking, Eutychus fell to the ground;
-and Paul, having restored him to life, returned to
-his labor (verses 7-11). Fourth, that he broke
-bread, or administered the Lord’s supper (verse
-11). Fifth, that he preached until break of day
-(verse 11). Sixth, that Luke, and the other disciples,
-preceding him, sailed the vessel to Assos
-(verse 13). Seventh, that Paul, having preached
-all night, until the dawning of the day, crossed
-the country on foot, stepped aboard of the vessel,
-and went on his journey toward Jerusalem (verses
-13, 14). Now let it be borne in mind, that Troas
-was a city on the west coast of Asia, located at
-the base of a peninsula, on the opposite side of
-which lay the city of Assos; distant about nineteen
-and a half miles in direct line from the
-former place. Let it also be remembered that
-the promontory in question, projecting as it did
-into the sea for some miles, made it necessary for
-a vessel, passing from Troas to Assos, to traverse
-a much greater distance, and to consume more
-time than one would be compelled to do in passing
-from one of these points to the other by the
-overland route. This explains the reason why
-Paul, who was exceedingly anxious to spend all
-the time he could with the brethren, consented to
-perform the journey on foot; thus being enabled
-to spend several additional hours with them,
-while Luke and his associates were toiling to
-bring the boat around the headland to the place
-of the apostle’s final embarkation.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>Returning now to the consideration of the
-meeting in question, it becomes important to know
-just when it was entered upon. Did it answer
-to what we would call a Sunday-evening meeting?
-If so, then Paul resumed his journey on
-Monday morning. But, before we give an affirmative
-response to this question, would it not
-be well to inquire in relation to the system for
-computing time which ought to be followed in
-this case? We moderns have generally adopted
-that of the Romans. With it, beginning the day,
-as it does, at midnight, we would naturally answer
-the interrogatory above in the affirmative.
-Should we do this, however, we should unquestionably
-fall into a grievous error. The days of
-the Bible commenced invariably with the setting
-of the sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>That this is so, the following quotation from
-the American Tract Society’s Bible Dictionary is
-sufficient to demonstrate: “The civil day is that,
-the beginning and end of which are determined
-by the custom of any nation. The Hebrews began
-their day in the evening (Lev. 23:32); the
-Babylonians at sunrise, and we begin at midnight.”
-Art. Day, p. 114.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Reasoning, therefore, upon this hypothesis, the
-bearing of the text is immediately reversed. As
-the meeting was held in that portion of the first
-day of the week in which it was necessary that
-lamps should be lighted, it follows that it commenced
-with the setting of the sun on Saturday
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>evening, and continued until daylight on what
-we call Sunday morning. It is consequently
-clear that we have at last found one first day in
-the Scriptures, the first half of which was observed
-in a manner compatible with the idea of
-its being regarded as a Sabbath. But, as a Sabbath
-day is twenty-four, and not merely twelve,
-hours long, it is indispensable that those who
-seek to avail themselves of the record before us,
-should be able to establish the point that there is
-nothing in it which would go to show that the remaining
-portion of the day was devoted to purposes,
-and employed in a manner, irreconcilable
-with the hypothesis of its sanctity. Can they do
-this? Let us see. Would it be legitimate for believers
-at the present time to traverse on foot a
-distance of nineteen and a half miles between
-the rising and the setting of the sun, on the first
-day of the week, in order to pursue a journey toward
-a point of destination hundreds of miles in
-the distance? Would it be admissible for others,
-prosecuting the same journey, to weigh anchor
-and hoist sail in a friendly port, and coast along
-the shore for a much greater distance?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Who, among the friends of Sunday observance
-at the present time, would venture to answer
-these questions in the affirmative, without putting
-on the record some qualifying or explanatory
-clause? We hazard the assertion that few of
-them, conscientious as we believe many of them
-are, would be willing, by such a response, to place
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>themselves on the category of those who, to say
-the least, may have very lax views in regard to
-what may be done upon holy time. And yet
-this is precisely the situation in which Luke has
-left Paul, himself, and his associates, before the
-generations of Christians who were to follow
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We ask, therefore, again, Can it be true that
-the great apostle to the Gentiles, standing as a
-representative man in the great work of transferring
-the religious world from the observance
-of the seventh, to that of the first, day of the
-week, and this not by positive precept, but, as it
-is claimed, simply by precedent and example,
-should have allowed himself to throw that example,
-as in the case before us, against the very work
-which he was seeking to accomplish? In other
-words, is not the obvious import of the text such
-that the average reader, with no favorite theory
-to make out, and a mind unbiased by the effect
-of education and early training, would naturally
-come to the conclusion that Paul and the disciples
-with him, and those from whom he parted
-at Troas, looked upon the day of that departure
-as but a common one?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We believe that if any other meaning can be
-drawn from the history before us, it will be
-reached through constraint, and not through the
-easy process of obvious reason. It is useless to
-talk about inability to control the vessel, and the
-urgent necessity of occupying every hour in order
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>to reach Jerusalem in time for the feast. So
-far as the first of these points is concerned, if it
-were well taken, is it not to be presumed that,
-for the vindication of the course pursued, and for
-the benefit of posterity, it would have found a
-place in the sacred record? And as to the matter
-of limited time, the question of twelve hours
-longer or shorter, was immaterial in a journey of
-the length of the one under consideration. Besides,
-upon following the account as given,
-we have from Luke himself that, before they
-reached their destination, they stopped at Tyre
-for seven days (chap. 21:4), and at Cesarea, many
-days (chap. 21:10), and yet had ample time to
-accomplish their object in reaching Jerusalem before
-the feast.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We say again, therefore, that these considerations,
-in the absence of any allusions to them in
-the context, are simply gratuitous, or, at least,
-are far-fetched. The narrative still remains.
-The great fact that Paul and his followers did
-travel upon the first day of the week is made
-conspicuous, and the only legitimate conclusion
-to be drawn therefrom is that which alone harmonizes
-with the consistency of Paul’s life and
-that of his brethren, as well as the wisdom and
-beneficence of the great God, namely: That he
-did so because of his conviction that it was a day
-which might properly be devoted to labor and
-travel. With this understanding, the story is
-relieved of all embarrassment, and becomes a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>simple and highly interesting account of a meeting
-convened on the first day of the week, because
-of the approaching departure of a beloved brother
-and apostle, and rendered also worthy of record
-by the miracle which was performed upon Eutychus.
-But with such a decision, our labor is
-ended, and with it the whole theory in regard to
-the Sabbatic character of Sunday is exploded;
-for, not only does the scripture which we have
-been investigating fail to yield the doctrine
-which it was supposed to contain, but, on the
-contrary, it presents Paul as standing emphatically
-against it. This being true, it belongs to a
-faith which he never proclaimed, and which,
-consequently, was associated in his mind with
-that which should not be received, though it were
-“preached by an angel from Heaven.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nevertheless, that we may not appear to have
-overlooked the two remaining texts, which are
-generally quoted as affording additional proof of
-the distinguished regard in which the first day
-of the week was held, we turn our attention for
-a moment to Acts 2:1, and Rev. 1:10.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As it regards the first of these scriptures, the
-claim is, that the outpouring of the Spirit occurred
-with reference to a divine disposition to
-honor the day of the resurrection. To this we
-reply, first, that if this were so, it is a remarkable
-fact that there is nothing in the connection to
-show it. The name of the day, even, is not so
-much as mentioned. The inspired annalist, were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>this supposition true, would most assuredly have
-given prominence to an idea which, it is claimed,
-was the governing one in the mind of the Spirit,
-in order to enable succeeding generations to
-extract from the facts narrated the true moral
-which they were intended to convey. But mark
-his words. Is the declaration, “When the first
-day of the week was fully come”? If so, we
-might say that this day was foremost in his own
-mind, and in that of the Spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But such was not his language. On the contrary,
-his statement is, “When the day of Pentecost
-was fully come.” Hence, it was the day of
-Pentecost, or the great Jewish feast, which is
-here made to stand out conspicuously upon the
-sacred page. If, therefore, we are to decide that
-the transaction in question was intended to hallow
-any particular twenty-four hours, undeniably
-they were those within which the Pentecost
-fell. But those did not occur regularly upon the
-first day of the week, nor was the institution one
-of weekly recurrence. It was annual in its return,
-transpiring one year upon the first, and
-perhaps the next year upon the second, and
-so on, through every day of the week. To
-reason, consequently, that, because it happened
-to take place at this time upon Sunday, the fact
-is necessarily significant of a change in the character
-of the day, is altogether inconclusive.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>That were a cheap logic indeed, which would
-argue that the Pentecost, which was mentioned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>expressly, and the return of which was waited
-for with patience, was in no-wise affected, illustrated,
-or perpetuated, by the outpouring of the
-Spirit upon it, whereas, a septenary division of
-time—not thought worthy of mention by its
-peculiar title—was thenceforth rendered glorious.
-Stand together, however, they cannot; for,
-if it were the Pentecost which was to be handed
-down in this way to those who should come
-after, then it would, of necessity, be celebrated
-annually, and not each week; but, if it were the
-first day of the week which alone was made the
-object of divine favor, then why wait until the
-arrival of the great annual Sabbath at the end of
-the fifty days? Why was not some other first
-day taken—say one of the six which had already
-occurred between the resurrection and that time—in
-this manner avoiding the possibility of confusion
-as to which event was thus honored?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Should it be replied that the Spirit could not
-be poured out until the great antitype of the
-fifty-day feast had been met in Heaven, we answer:
-Then it was <i>this</i> event, and not the resurrection,
-which furnishes the occasion for the
-remarkable demonstrations which were manifested
-before the people. We repeat again,
-therefore, that from whatever stand-point we
-look at the text, it is the <i>Pentecost</i>, and not the
-first day of the week, to which, if to anything, it
-attaches special importance. This is further
-demonstrated by the fact that it is to this hour
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>a matter of grave discussion between theologians
-whether the day of Pentecost, at the time under
-consideration, did really fall upon the first day
-of the week or upon some other. Leaving to
-them, therefore, the delicate and arduous task of
-adjusting questions of this nature—which are
-neither important in themselves, nor easy of decision—we
-hasten to glance at Rev. 1:10. It
-reads as follows: “I was in the Spirit on the
-Lord’s day, and heard behind me a great voice,
-as of a trumpet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Here is something which certainly has a bearing
-upon the subject. The language employed is
-of thrilling interest. Says the apostle, “I was in
-the Spirit on the Lord’s day.” This being uttered
-about <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 95, determines the point that
-God has a day in this dispensation, and also
-proves that he has but one; since the language
-would be very indefinite were there two or more
-days of such a nature. But by what system of
-reasoning is the conclusion reached that this must
-of necessity be the first day of the week? Assuredly,
-it can only be by inference. If it can
-first be proved that the day of the resurrection
-has, by divine authority, been anywhere styled
-the “Lord’s day,” then the point is unquestionably
-gained. When those words were penned,
-more than sixty years had passed since it is
-claimed that Sunday had been clothed with divine
-honor. The whole canon of the New Testament,
-save the gospel of John, had been written
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>within that time. Ample opportunity had been
-afforded for the work of placing upon record the
-sacred appellation which was to be given to that
-period of time, which, having been separated
-from everything of a secular nature, had been
-elevated to the dignity of a holy rest. But had
-this ever occurred? The facts are briefly these:
-The first day of the week, as we have seen, being
-mentioned eight times in the New Testament, is
-always spoken of as plain first day of the week;
-John himself, writing his gospel after the appearance
-of the Apocalypse, everywhere applies
-to it this unpretending title. Whenever the
-term Sabbath is used, on the other hand—as we
-have seen that it is fifty-six times in the New
-Testament—it is applied, with one exception, to
-the Sabbath of the commandment, or the seventh
-day of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In view of these facts, take a common man,
-without bias or predilection, one, if you please,
-who has never heard of the controversy in question,
-place in his hands the Bible without note
-or comment, let him read the following texts
-which confessedly refer to the seventh day of the
-week, and we think the verdict which he would
-render would be decidedly in favor of the venerable
-Sabbath of the Lord; of which it is true, as
-it is of no other day, that he has again and again
-claimed it as his own. The italics are our own.
-“If thou turn away thy foot from the <i>Sabbath</i>,
-from doing thy pleasure on <i>my holy day</i>; and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>call the Sabbath a delight, the <i>holy of the Lord</i>,
-honorable; and shalt honor him, not doing
-thine own ways, nor finding thine own pleasure,
-nor speaking thine own words; then shalt thou
-delight thyself in the Lord.” Isa. 58:13, 14.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“But the seventh day is the <i>Sabbath of the
-Lord thy God</i>: in it thou shalt not do any work:”
-“for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth,
-the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the
-seventh day; wherefore the Lord <i>blessed the Sabbath
-day, and hallowed it</i>.” Ex. 20:10, 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“And he said unto them, The Sabbath was made
-for man, and not man for the Sabbath; therefore
-the Son of man is Lord also of the Sabbath.”
-Mark 2:27, 28.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If such a decision be a just one, however, where
-are we in the matter under examination? What
-has become of the modern Sabbath reform for
-which we have been seeking justification in the
-word of God? First, we sought to place it upon
-the commandment; this, we found to be out of
-the question. Second, we investigated the claim
-of an amended law; that, we discovered to be entirely
-without authority, and against even the
-conviction and practice of the very men who
-urged it. Third, we turn, as a last resort, to the
-precedents of Bible history; these, we found, so
-far as they affect the question at all, to be overwhelmingly
-against a movement which, while it
-claims to be in the interest of the God of Heaven,
-is confronted by the following astounding facts:
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>First, the day whose observance it seeks to enforce
-by statute law is one, the keeping of which,
-God has never commanded. Second, Christ has
-never commanded it. Third, no inspired man
-has ever commanded it. Fourth, God himself
-never rested upon it. Fifth, Christ never rested
-upon it. Sixth, there is no record that either
-prophets or apostles ever rested upon it. Seventh,
-it is one upon which God himself worked.
-Eighth, it is one which, during his lifetime, Christ
-always treated as a day of labor. Ninth, it is
-one upon which, after his resurrection, he countenanced,
-by his own personal example, travel
-upon the highway. Tenth, it is one upon which
-the two disciples, in going to and returning from
-Emmaus, traveled a distance of fifteen miles.
-Eleventh, it was on that day that Paul walked
-from Troas to Assos, a distance of nineteen and
-one-half miles. Twelfth, it was on that day that
-Luke and his associates passed from one to the
-other of these places by a longer route, working
-their vessel round the promontory.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>That all these things could be true, and yet
-our friends be right in the supposition that they
-are engaged in a work which commands the approval
-of Heaven, is too absurd to require further
-discussion. A movement pushed forward in
-the face of these facts may succeed, so far as political
-success and legal enactment are concerned,
-but when the logic for its Scriptural character is
-scrutinized as closely as it will be before it shall
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>plant its banners upon the capitol of the nation,
-all conscientious convictions in regard to its heavenly
-birth will give place to an inspiration, the
-source of whose strength will be found in the superiority
-of party drill, and the overwhelming
-power of mere numbers. Who shall say that the
-God of Heaven has not permitted it to come to
-the surface for the very purpose of calling the attention
-of honest men and women, as it only
-could be done by the debate which will arise in
-controversy, to the scantiness of that Sunday
-wardrobe by which, as with it our friends attempt
-to clothe a favorite institution, we are so
-forcibly reminded of the bed and covering spoken
-of by the prophet Isaiah: The first of which was
-“too short to stretch one’s self upon,” and the last,
-“too narrow to wrap one’s self within?” So sure
-as investigation is provoked upon this subject, so
-certain is it that, sooner or later, thinking men
-and women will discover—as we have already
-done in this article—that there is indeed a crying
-demand for a Sabbath reform. Not one, however,
-which rests merely upon the power of Congressional
-enactment, and Presidential sanction, but
-one which shall find its authority in the highest
-of all laws, and which shall have the approval of
-the King of kings and Lord of lords.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>
- <h2 id='article07' class='c006'>ARTICLE VII.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>The conflict is finally open. The spirit of inquiry
-has lifted itself in the nation; and all eyes
-will be turned toward the Bible, as really the
-only source from which can be derived authority
-for a Sabbath reform which shall be worthy of
-the name.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Commencing with its opening pages, they will
-trace the Sabbatic narrative until they have been
-able to verify the following summary of history
-and doctrine:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>1. The Sabbath, as the last day of the week,
-originated in Eden, and was given to Adam, as
-the federal head of the race, while he yet retained
-his primal innocence. Proof: “And on the seventh
-day God ended his work which he had
-made; and he rested on the seventh day from
-all his work which he had made. And God
-blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it; because
-that in it he had rested from all his work which
-God created and made.” Gen. 2:2, 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>2. That, though the history of the period,
-stretching from the creation to the exodus, is
-extremely brief, it is manifest, even from that
-period, that the good of those ages had not lost
-sight of it; since the children of Israel were acquainted
-with its existence thirty days before
-reaching Mount Sinai. “And He said unto
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>them, This is that which the Lord hath said, Tomorrow
-is the rest of the holy Sabbath unto the
-Lord; bake that which ye will bake to-day, and
-seethe that ye will seethe; and that which remaineth
-over lay up for you to be kept until the
-morning.” Ex. 16:23. “Six days ye shall
-gather it; but on the seventh day, which is the
-Sabbath, in it there shall be none.” Ex. 16:26.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>3. That God, unwilling to commit the interest
-of so important an institution to the keeping of
-tradition, framed a command for its perpetuity,
-which he spoke with his own voice and wrote
-with his own finger, placing it in the bosom of
-the great moral law of the ten precepts: “Remember
-the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. 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, thou, nor
-thy son, nor thy daughter, thy man-servant, nor
-thy maid-servant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger
-that is within thy gates: for in six days the Lord
-made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in
-them is, and rested the seventh day; wherefore
-the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed
-it.” Ex. 20:8-11.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>That this law has been brought over into
-our dispensation, and every jot and tittle of it is
-binding now, and will continue to be, so long as
-the world stands. “Think not that I am come
-to destroy the law or the prophets; I am not
-come to destroy, but to fulfill. For verily I say
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or
-one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till
-all be fulfilled. Whosoever, therefore, shall break
-one of these least commandments, and shall teach
-men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom
-of Heaven; but whosoever shall do and
-teach them, the same shall be called great in the
-kingdom of Heaven.”—<span class='sc'>Jesus</span>, Matt. 5:17-19.
-“Do we then make void the law through faith?
-God forbid; yea, we establish the law.”—<span class='sc'>Paul</span>,
-Romans 3:31. “Wherefore the law is holy, and
-the commandment holy, and just, and good.”
-Romans 7:12. “If ye fulfill the royal law according
-to the scripture, Thou shalt love thy
-neighbor as thyself, ye do well; but if ye have
-respect to persons, ye commit sin, and are convinced
-of the law as transgressors. For whosoever
-shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in
-one point, he is guilty of all. For he that said,
-Do not commit adultery, said also, Do not kill.
-Now if thou commit no adultery, yet if thou kill,
-thou art become a transgressor of the law.”—<span class='sc'>James</span>,
-Jas. 2:8-11. “Whosoever committeth
-sin transgresseth also the law; for sin is the
-transgression of the law. And ye know that he
-was manifested to take away our sins; and in
-him is no sin. Whosoever abideth in him sinneth
-not; whosoever sinneth hath not seen him,
-neither known him.”—<span class='sc'>John</span>, 1 John 3:4-6.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>5. That, agreeably to this view, Christ—of
-whom it is said, “Thy law is within my heart”—was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>a habitual observer, during his lifetime, of
-the Sabbath of the decalogue. “And he came to
-Nazareth, where he had been brought up; and,
-<i>as his custom was</i>, he went into the synagogue
-on the Sabbath day, and stood up for to read.”
-Luke 4:16. “If ye keep my commandments, ye
-shall abide in my love; even as I have kept my
-Father’s commandments, and abide in his love.”
-John 15:10.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>6. That the women, whose religious conceptions
-had been formed under his teachings, carefully
-regarded it. “And they returned, and
-prepared spices and ointments; and rested the
-Sabbath day, according to the commandment.”
-Luke 23:56.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>7. The Lord instructed his disciples that it
-would exist at least forty years after his death,
-since he taught them to pray continually that
-their flight, at the destruction of Jerusalem,
-which occurred <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 70, might not take place on
-that day. “But pray ye that your flight be not
-in the winter, neither on the Sabbath day.”
-Matt. 24:20.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>8. That the great apostle to the Gentiles was
-in the habit of making it a day of public teaching.
-“And Paul, as his <i>manner was</i>, went in
-unto them, and three Sabbath days reasoned with
-them out of the Scriptures.” Acts 27:2. “And
-he reasoned in the synagogue every Sabbath, and
-persuaded the Jews and the Greeks.” Acts 18:4.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>9. That, in the year of our Lord 95, John still
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>recognized its existence. “I was in the Spirit
-on the Lord’s day, and heard behind me a great
-voice, as of a trumpet.” Rev. 1:10.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>10. That God has never removed the blessing
-which he placed upon it in the beginning, or
-annulled the sanctification by which it was at
-that time set apart to a holy use.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>11. That, in perfect keeping with the above
-propositions, it is, equally in the New with the
-Old Testament, scores of times denominated the
-Sabbath; and that, while God, and Christ, and
-prophets, and apostles, and inspired men, unite
-in applying to it this sacred title, they never, in
-any single instance, allow themselves to speak of
-any other day in the week in the use of this peculiar
-appellation.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>12. That it is not only to continue during the
-present order of things, but that, in the new
-earth, clothed in all the freshness and beauty of
-its Edenic glory, creation, more than ever before,
-will be the subject of devout gratitude, and
-weekly commemoration on the part of the immortal
-and sinless beings who shall worship God
-therein forever. “For as the new heavens and
-the new earth, which I will make shall remain
-before me, saith the Lord, so shall your seed and
-your name remain. And it shall come to pass,
-that from one new moon to another, and from
-one Sabbath to another, shall all flesh come to
-worship before me, saith the Lord.” Isa. 66:22, 23.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>Putting all these facts together—connected,
-consistent, and unanswerable as they are—men
-will discover that a great departure has taken
-place from the original practice of the church, and
-against the explicit command of God. Should
-they ask, as assuredly they will, when, and by
-whom, it was inaugurated, it will not be a fruitless
-effort on their part to obtain needed information.
-God has made ample provision for the
-instruction of those who would do his will, and
-for the condemnation of those who refuse so to
-do. Referring to prophecies given centuries ago,
-mapping out beforehand the history of the world,
-they will find the prophet Daniel—while describing
-the work of the “little horn,” which arose
-among the ten horns of the great and terrible
-beast, and which little horn nearly all Protestant
-commentators agree in applying to the papal
-church—stating of it, by way of prediction, that
-it should “wear out the saints of the Most High,
-and think to change times and laws,” and that
-they should “be given into his hand until a time
-and times and the dividing of time.” (Dan. 7:25.)
-Consulting history, they will discover that,
-so far as the saints are concerned, these terrible
-words have been so completely fulfilled that this
-power has actually put to death, in one way or
-other, at least fifty millions of the people of God.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Again, perceiving, as they will readily, that the
-“laws,” which this presumptuous power should
-blasphemously claim to be able to change, are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>the laws of God, what will be their astonishment
-at learning, from the representatives of this great
-oppressive system—which alone has extended
-through a period sufficiently long to cover the
-“time, times and half a time,” or the 1260
-years of Daniel’s prophecy—that it actually
-boasts that it has done the very work in question.
-Nay, more; what limit can be put to their
-surprise when they find these men absolutely
-pointing with exultation to the practice of the
-Christian world in the observance of Sunday, as
-an evidence of the ability of the Roman Catholic
-church to alter and amend the commands of God!
-That they do this, however, in the most unequivocal
-terms, will be abundantly proved by the
-following quotations from their own publications:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Question.</i> Is it then Saturday we should
-sanctify, in order to obey the ordinance of God?
-<i>Ans.</i> During the old law, Saturday was the day
-sanctified; but <i>the church</i>, instructed by Jesus
-Christ, and directed by the Spirit of God, has
-substituted Sunday for Saturday; so we now
-sanctify the first, not the seventh, day. Sunday
-means, and now is, the day of the Lord. <i>Ques.</i>
-Had the church power to make such a change?
-<i>Ans.</i> Certainly; since the Spirit of God is her
-guide, the change is inspired by the Holy Spirit.”—<i>Cath.
-Catechism of Christian Religion.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ques.</i> How prove you that the church has
-power to command feasts and holy days? <i>Ans.</i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>By the very act of changing the Sabbath into
-Sunday, which Protestants allow of; and therefore
-they fondly contradict themselves by keeping
-Sunday strictly, and breaking most other
-feasts commanded by the same church.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ques.</i> How prove you that? <i>Ans.</i> Because,
-by keeping Sunday, they acknowledge the church’s
-power to ordain feasts, and to command them under
-sin; and by not keeping the rest by her commanded,
-they again deny, in fact, the same power.—<i>Abridgment
-of Christian Doctrine.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“It is worth its while to remember that this
-observance of the Sabbath—in which, after all,
-the only Protestant worship consists—not only
-has no foundation in the Bible, but it is in flagrant
-contradiction with its letter, which commands
-rest on the Sabbath, which is Saturday.
-It was the <i>Catholic church</i> which, by the authority
-of Jesus Christ, has transferred this rest to
-the Sunday in remembrance of the resurrection
-of our Lord. Thus the observance of Sunday by
-the Protestants is an homage they pay, in spite
-of themselves, to the authority of the church.”—<i>Plain
-Talk about Protestantism of To-day</i>, p. 225.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Instinctively anticipating some providential
-mode of escape from the terrible consequences of
-that great apostasy, out of which the religious
-world has for centuries been endeavoring to work
-its way, conscientious men and women will catch
-the notes of warning which for twenty-five years
-have been sounding through the land, in these
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>words: “Here is the patience of the saints: here
-are they that keep the commandments of God,
-and the faith of Jesus.” Rev. 14:12.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Inquiring into the origin of the message which
-is thus being given to the world, they will find
-that, for a quarter of a century, God has been calling
-attention to the subject of his law and his Sabbath,
-and that a denomination of earnest men and
-women, but little known as yet among the learned
-and mighty of the land, have been devoting themselves
-with zeal and a spirit of self-sacrifice to
-the tremendous task of restoring God’s downtrodden
-Sabbath to the hearts and judgments of
-the people. They will find, also, that these persons
-have not entered upon this labor because
-they anticipated an easy and speedy victory; nor,
-indeed, because they ever believed that the great
-mass of mankind would so far shake off the trammels
-of tradition and the fear of reproach as to
-be able to venture an unreserved surrender to
-the teachings of the Bible; but simply because
-they saw in it that which was at once the path
-of duty, and that of fulfilling prophecy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Having accepted Dan. 7:25, in common with
-the religious world, as applying to the papacy,
-and learning, as the result of investigation, that
-the days of the great persecution were to reach
-from the decree of Justinian (<span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 538,) giving
-authority to the Bishop of Rome to become the
-corrector of heretics, to <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 1798—when the
-pope was carried into captivity, having received
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>a wound with the sword agreeably to Rev. 13:10—these
-students of God’s word at once perceived
-that the next thing in order would be the completion
-of the restitution, which had begun in the
-taking away of his ability to put the saints to
-death, by a work equally called for in the inspired
-prediction; namely, that of rescuing from
-his hands the “times and laws” which he thought
-to change. Or, in other words, that the effort of
-the pope to remove the Sabbath of the Lord from
-the seventh to the first day of the week should
-be made to appear in its true light; namely, as
-the work of a blasphemous power which had held
-the world in its grasp for centuries.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But, while they were clear in those convictions
-which led them in 1846, under the title of Seventh-day
-Adventists, to claim that they were fulfilling
-the prophecy of Rev. 14:9-12, they discerned
-that the same facts which brought them
-to this conclusion also compelled the conviction
-that theirs was to be the road of persecution:
-hardship, and privation. They read in Rev. 12:17,
-in these words, “The dragon was wroth with
-the woman, and went to make war with the remnant
-of her seed, which keep the commandments
-of God, and have the testimony of Jesus Christ,”
-the history of the last generation of Christians;
-and saw that, in God’s inscrutable providence, it
-was to be their fortune to be the object of diabolic
-hate, because of the commandments of God
-and the testimony of Jesus Christ, to which they
-cling with determined perseverance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>Once more: In studying the 11th to the 18th
-verses inclusive of the 13th chapter of the same
-book, they saw that—if their view of the work
-which was assigned them was correct—that portion
-of the Scriptures was applied to the United
-States of America, and indicated that this country
-was to be the theater of a mighty contest
-between those who “keep the commandments of
-God and the faith of Jesus,” and the government
-under which they live, from which they could
-only be delivered by the coming of Christ. This
-view they unhesitatingly proclaimed. For twenty
-years, they have announced it as a part of their
-faith. When they first declared it to be such,
-they brought upon themselves ridicule and contempt,
-for, humanly speaking, every probability
-was against them. The government was ostensibly
-republican in form, and professedly tolerant
-to the very extreme, in all matters of religious
-opinion. The Constitution had even provided
-that “Congress should make no law respecting
-an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
-free exercise thereof.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nevertheless, so firm were they in the conviction
-that they had the right application of the
-prophecy, that they unhesitatingly walked out
-upon their faith; and for a fifth of a century
-they have talked it, and published it everywhere,
-notwithstanding the odium it has brought upon
-them. Lest we might appear to be drawing upon
-our own imagination in a matter of such importance,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>we append the following extracts from their
-works. The words in parentheses are our own,
-and serve to explain that which a larger quotation
-from the context would make clear of itself:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“When the ‘beast’ (the papacy) had the dominion,
-all in authority must be Catholics. The
-popular sentiment then was that none should
-hold offices in the government, except they professed
-the Catholic faith. The popular religion
-at that period was Catholicism. They legislated
-upon religious subjects, and required all men to
-conform to the popular institutions and dogmas
-of the papacy, or suffer and die. The image
-must be made in the United States, where Protestantism
-is the prevailing religion. Image signifies
-<i>likeness</i>; therefore Protestantism and Republicanism
-will <i>unite</i>; or, in other words, the
-making of laws will go into the hands of Protestants,
-when all in authority will profess the
-popular sentiments of the day, and make laws
-binding certain religious institutions (<i>i. e.</i>, Sunday
-observance, &amp;c.), upon all, without distinction.”—<i>Advent
-Review and Sabbath Herald</i>, Vol.
-6, No. 6, 1854.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“It seems to me, even to look at the subject in
-the light of reason, that a conflict must in time
-come between commandment-keepers and the
-United States. This, of course, will lead those
-who find that they cannot sustain their Sunday
-institution by argument to resort to some other
-means.”—<i>Advent Review and Herald</i>, Vol. 10,
-No. 11, 1857.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>“When all concur upon this question (Sunday-keeping),
-except a few who conscientiously observe
-the fourth commandment, how long before
-their constancy would be attributed to obstinacy
-and bigotry? And how long before the sentence
-would go forth, as it did in the days of Pliny,
-‘that for this, if for nothing else, they deserved
-to be punished.’”—<i>Review and Herald</i>, Vol. 19,
-No. 15.<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c008'><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>How changed the political sky to-day from
-what it was when these words began to be spoken!
-Now, thoughtful men are pondering whether,
-after all, these things may not be so. They see
-a powerful organization looming up in the country,
-which appends to the call for their conventions
-the names of some of the most influential
-men in the land. They hear them declaring in
-so many words, that what they are determined
-to do is to sweep away the constitutional barrier
-between them and a coerced observance of Sunday,
-so that all may be compelled to regard it as
-sacred. What we want, say they, and what we
-are determined to have, is such an amendment of
-the Constitution, 1. That it shall recognize God
-and Christ; 2. That it shall enable us to secure
-the reading of the Bible in the common schools;
-3. That we may be enabled to enforce the better
-observance of the Christian Sabbath, <i>i. e.</i>, Sunday.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>These declarations, a few years since, would
-have appalled every lover of constitutional liberty.
-Every man and woman imbued with a
-proper sense of the genius of our institutions
-would have been struck with horror at the very
-thought of pursuing the course in question. But
-a change has come over the spirit of the land.
-Steadily, the advocates of a day which has no
-authority in the word of God are drifting where
-all before them have done who have sought to
-maintain a human institution upon the claim of
-divine authority. It is idle for them to say at
-this stage of the proceedings that they propose
-to regard the rights of those who have conscientious
-scruples on this subject. God has said that
-the matter will culminate in oppression; nay, even
-though this were not so, reason itself would prove
-that this would be the case. Without questioning
-the sincerity of the men who at the present
-make these statements, we appeal to that very
-sincerity for the evidence that this matter will
-end just where the Seventh-day Adventists have
-claimed that it would.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>They have convinced themselves that they are
-called of God to a mighty work. They believe
-that they have a noble mission. They are men
-of mind and nerve. But, when a few months
-shall have revealed the insufficiency of their
-logic, when Seventh-day Baptists and Seventh-day
-Adventists shall have confronted them with a
-plain “Thus saith the Lord,” against their favorite
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>scheme, they would be more than human if—refusing
-to yield to arguments which they cannot
-answer—they should continue to look with complacence
-upon the very men who, after all, will
-prove to be their most formidable antagonists in
-the great conflict. In fact, it would be a denial
-of both nature and history to say that they would
-not at last come to regard them in the light of
-enemies of God, really more worthy of condemnation
-and coercion than those who were simply
-unbelievers in any Sabbath at all, and so incapable
-of standing before the systematic effort which
-they have set in motion.<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c008'><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But, candid reader, the facts are before you,
-and between us and these events there will be
-ample time for calm reflection, and deliberate decision.
-Where do you choose to stand in this final
-conflict between the venerable Sabbath of the
-Lord and its modern papistic rival? Will you
-keep the commandments of God, as uttered by
-his voice and written by his finger? or will you
-henceforth pay intelligent homage to the man of
-sin, by the observance of a day which finds its
-authority alone in the mutilated form of the commandments,
-as they come from his hand? May
-God help you to make a wise choice.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>
- <h2 id='explanatory' class='c006'>EXPLANATORY REMARKS.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>Immediately on the publication of the foregoing articles
-in the <i>Christian Statesman</i>, the editor of that paper
-announced his purpose to review them in the columns of
-that periodical. This purpose he subsequently carried
-out in the publication of eleven communications, in which
-various strictures were offered upon the positions taken
-by me in my original contributions. I immediately requested
-the privilege of replying to these criticisms in the
-columns of the <i>Statesman</i>, so that those who had read my
-argument in the beginning, and the replies of the editor
-of the <i>Statesman</i> thereto, might have an opportunity to
-see the relative strength of the positions occupied by that
-gentleman and myself tested in fair and open debate. My
-petition, however, was denied, and I was compelled either
-to remain silent or seek elsewhere for an opportunity to
-make my defense. Fortunately, at this juncture, the columns
-of the <i>Advent Review</i>, which is the organ of the Seventh-day
-Adventists, were freely offered me for the purpose
-in question, and in them the Replies of the editor of
-the <i>Statesman</i>, and my Rejoinders thereto, have since been
-published. To these Replies and Rejoinders, as they appeared
-therein, the remainder of the present volume is devoted.
-To them, the reader is earnestly invited to give
-his most serious attention, since they present, side by side,
-the lines of argument usually employed for and against
-the Sabbath of the Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>W. H. L.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>
- <h2 id='replies' class='c006'>REPLIES AND REJOINDERS.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='reply01' class='c006'>Reply of the Editor of the Christian Statesman. <br /> ARTICLE ONE. <br /> SEVENTH-DAY SABBATARIANS AND THE CHRISTIAN AMENDMENT.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>We have given not a little space to the argument
-against the Christian Amendment of our
-National Constitution from the stand-point of
-the advocates of the seventh-day Sabbath. This
-argument, in brief, is this: The proposed amendment,
-in its practical working, is intended to secure
-the better observance of the first day of the
-week, as the civil Sabbath. But the Bible, the
-revealed law of God, it is affirmed, contains no
-warrant either for individual or national observance
-of the first day of the week. The amendment,
-therefore, it is maintained, should not be
-favored, but earnestly opposed, by those who acknowledge
-the supreme authority of the law of
-the Bible.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This, it will be seen at a glance, is no argument
-against the principle of the proposed amendment.
-On the other hand, it bases itself on that very
-principle, viz., that it is the bounden duty of the
-nation to acknowledge the authority of God, and
-take his revealed word as the supreme rule of its
-conduct. The argument, therefore, instead of being
-directed against the amendment itself, is directed
-almost entirely against that interpretation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>of the divine law of the Scriptures which fixes
-the Christian Sabbath on the first day of the
-week. We consented to admit to our columns a
-short series of brief articles presenting an argument
-against the amendment. Pressing the lines
-of courtesy and fairness far beyond the limits of
-our agreement, we have, in fact, admitted many
-long articles, the burden of which has been to
-show that there is no warrant in the word of God
-for the observance of the first day of the week as
-the Sabbath of divine appointment. We shall
-expect equal generosity from the journals of our
-seventh-day Sabbatarian friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The amendment proposed is in substance as
-follows: An acknowledgment of God as the ultimate
-source of all power and authority in civil
-government; of Jesus Christ as ruler of nations;
-and of the Bible as the fountain of law, and the
-supreme rule of national conduct. Let this be
-distinctly borne in mind. We have here a clear
-assertion of the very principles for which the seventh-day
-Sabbatarian most strenuously contends.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Just here, we would take occasion to say that
-even if the proposed amendment contained an express
-acknowledgment, in so many words, of the
-first-day Sabbath, and if the argument for the
-seventh-day Sabbath were a perfect demonstration,
-there would still be, on that account, as
-matters actually stand in our land at present, no
-valid objection against such explicit Constitutional
-acknowledgment of the first day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Suppose a company of the advocates of the
-seventh-day Sabbath, going forth as missionaries,
-should discover, in a distant sea, an island inhabited
-by a people in many respects highly civilized,
-possessing a portion of the Bible, and observing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>one day in seven, say the fourth day of
-the week, as a day of rest and worship of the
-true God, and acknowledging it as such in their
-Constitution of government. Suppose that in
-the same island should be found a large and active
-minority, thoroughly infidel and atheistic,
-striving in every way to overturn the Sabbath.
-The missionaries, perceiving much room and opportunity
-for doing good to the people, settle
-among them, and seek, among many things, to
-change the Sabbath to what they regard as the
-proper day. In what way would they attempt
-to accomplish this? Would they permit themselves
-for a moment to be classed with the infidel
-and atheistic opponents of the Sabbath? Would
-they not stand side by side with those who defended
-the Sabbath observances of the country
-against the attacks of immoral and unbelieving
-enemies of all Christian institutions?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If these missionaries were advocates of the
-first-day Sabbath, and we were of the number,
-for our part, this is what we would do: We
-would practice for ourselves the observance of
-what we are persuaded is the Christian Sabbath.
-We would multiply and scatter abroad copies of
-the entire Bible, and seek to convince the people
-and the nation that God’s law requires the observance
-of the first day. In the meantime, confident
-that, by the blessing of the Head of the
-church, the circulation of the divine word and
-the proclamation of its truths would at length
-change the conviction of the islanders, we should
-say to them: “Do not cease to observe a day of
-rest and worship. To have one such a day in
-every seven is right. Do not blot out its acknowledgment
-from the Constitution. You need
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>its legal safe-guards. True, there is no divine
-warrant for the observance of the fourth day of
-the week instead of the first. But a fourth-day
-Sabbath is better than no Sabbath at all. We
-will help you to preserve from the assaults of our
-common enemies the observances of the Sabbath,
-that you may have them to transfer, as we urge
-you to do, to the first day of the week.” Would
-the advocates of the seventh-day Sabbath do
-otherwise, except in substituting the seventh day
-for the first? And now let us take the actual,
-corresponding case in our own land. The great
-mass of Christians here, as elsewhere, regard the
-first day of the week as the Sabbath of the Lord.
-Admit, for the sake of the illustration, that they
-have no better ground for their opinion than the
-islanders mentioned above. Is it not right for
-them to have a day of rest and worship? Is it
-not right for them to observe one such a day in
-seven? Is it maintained that, because the day
-is not the proper one, there is and can be nothing
-right about these Sabbath observances? Then,
-if all is wrong, it must be better to have no Sabbath
-at all, and utterly secularize the week. This,
-our seventh-day friends cannot and will not admit.
-They gladly testify that our first-day Sabbath,
-poorly as it may be observed, is infinitely
-to be preferred to the unbroken current of the
-worldliness of the week. A Sabbathless week;
-successive rounds of equally secularized days,
-marked, if marked at all, by the recurrence of
-unusual worldly gayety and dissipation; this is
-what infidelity and atheism would give us for
-the existing Sabbath. Do the friends of the seventh-day
-Sabbath desire any such substitution?
-Their argument against the proposed amendment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>on the ground that it expressly or impliedly contains
-an acknowledgment of the first-day Sabbath,
-is, that it will enforce existing Sabbath
-laws, and strengthen first-day Sabbath observances.
-But is it not better to do this than
-accept the dread alternative? Even from this
-point of view, then, we claim for the proposed
-amendment, what in some cases it has actually,
-and, we believe, most consistently, received, the approval
-and support of seventh-day Sabbatarians.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But we return to the form of the proposed
-amendment. It expresses, as it should, only the
-most fundamental principles. It asserts the duty
-of the nation to acknowledge God in Christian
-relations. It recognizes the Bible as the fountain
-of the nation’s laws, and the supreme rule of its
-conduct. Now, if we were among either the first-day
-or the seventh-day missionaries, in the case
-of the islanders already referred to, such a national
-acknowledgment of the authority of the
-Bible is just exactly what we would desire. If
-the islanders had this principle, as has been supposed,
-incorporated into their written Constitution,
-we could ask for nothing more advantageous
-for our missionary work. If they had it not, and
-certain citizens were laboring to secure its insertion
-by an amendment of the instrument, we
-would most assuredly accord these laborers our
-heartiest encouragement and support. We should
-suspect ourselves of prejudice, or rather of a deficiency
-in good common sense, if we found ourselves
-inclined to pursue an opposite course. Believing
-that God’s law requires the observance of
-another day than the fourth, how could we reasonably
-do anything else than co-operate and rejoice
-in the work of leading such a people to acknowledge
-the supreme authority of that law,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>and to register their purpose in the fundamental
-instrument of their government, to adjust all national
-affairs according to its requirements?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>And now, what can be said of our seventh-day
-Sabbatarian brethren? Are they not inconsistent?
-They proclaim the duty of the nation to
-acknowledge “the highest of all laws.” So far,
-we are agreed. They maintain that the Bible is
-that law. Here, too, we are at one. And yet
-they—not all of them, we are happy to state—oppose
-a movement which aims to secure in the
-organic law and life of the nation a sincere, reverent,
-and obedient acknowledgment of the authority
-of the Bible—an acknowledgment which
-forecloses discussion on no question on which
-Christians or others may differ, but which brings
-the final appeal in all national controversies to
-the tribunal of the unerring word of God.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The inconsistency of this attitude of opposition
-to the Christian Amendment cannot but create
-unfavorable presumptions in regard to the
-soundness of judgment of any who may occupy
-it. An attack from so weak a point, upon the
-Constitutional acknowledgment of the Christian
-Scriptures, it will be generally felt, does not betoken
-a very formidable assault upon the Sabbath
-of the Christian church. And yet, notwithstanding
-this, to our mind, exceedingly unfortunate
-connection, we would bear cheerful testimony to
-the fact that the articles we have inserted, so far
-as they are an argument against the first-day
-Sabbath, and this is manifestly the point which
-the writer had principally in view, contain a clear,
-calm, courteous, and attractively written presentation
-of one side of a very important subject.
-We shall present the other side of the question
-in succeeding issues of this journal.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>
- <h2 id='rejoinder01' class='c006'>REJOINDER, BY W. H. LITTLEJOHN. <br /> “SEVENTH-DAY SABBATARIANS AND THE CHRISTIAN AMENDMENT.”</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>We have debated for some time in our own
-mind the propriety of attempting an answer to
-the strictures, if such they may be called, upon
-our articles on the Constitutional Amendment.
-Having decided, however, that they contain a
-show of logic which might deceive the careless
-reader, we have at last determined to give them a
-notice commensurate with the importance they assume,
-if not from their intrinsic merit, at least from
-the distinguished source whence they emanate.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Before doing this, we take pleasure in acknowledging
-the generosity of their author in allowing
-us to discuss in the columns of his paper the
-subject from a stand-point of a nature calculated
-to dampen rather than stimulate the ardor of his
-readers in the work in which, with him, they are
-engaged. From the outset, we have discovered no
-disposition to take any advantage by which the
-full effect of what we had to say might in any
-way be lessened. On the contrary, attention has
-several times been called to our communications,
-as being worthy of perusal by all.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Having said thus much in reference to the
-treatment we received at the hands of the editor
-of the <i>Statesman</i> up to the time of the completion
-of the publication of our articles, we shall be pardoned
-for expressing our surprise at finding ourselves,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>in his first reply, standing somewhat in
-the attitude of one who had taken advantage of
-indulgence shown him to present a line of argument
-different from that proposed at the beginning.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is possible that we have mistaken the design
-of the statements to which we allude. This we
-hope may prove to be the case; for, so far as we
-are concerned, individually, we have covered the
-precise ground which we designed to at the first.
-If the editor of the <i>Statesman</i> has found himself
-disappointed, either in the nature or the length
-of the argument, he is to blame, and not we.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>1. Because, so far as the matter of length is
-concerned, we stated to him that we should leave
-that entirely “with his magnanimity, convinced
-that he would not cut us short in our work so
-long as what we had to say was pointed, gentlemanly,
-and of such a nature as to bear forcibly
-upon the question at issue between us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>2. As it regards the scope of the articles, we
-stated, unqualifiedly, that we should treat the
-subject from the stand-point of an observer of
-the seventh day, appealing to the Bible for our
-authority. Nor were we content with declaring
-our plan of opposition by <i>letter</i>, but we went so
-far as to give, in the caption of our articles themselves,
-an outline of the order in which we should
-treat the subject. It was as follows: “The Constitutional
-Amendment; <i>or</i>, the Sunday, the Sabbath,
-the Change, and the Restitution.” In it, as
-will be observed, is exactly set forth the manner
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>in which we discussed the propriety of the amendment;
-(1) Showing the emptiness of the claims
-of the Sunday. (2) The force and obligation of
-those of the seventh day. (3) The manner in
-which the change of days occurred, and (4) The
-work which God has inaugurated for the purpose
-of bringing about the Restitution.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thus much by way of personal acknowledgment
-and explanation.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We turn now to the criticism proper upon our
-argument.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>First, there is an attempt to state the positions
-which we assumed to prove.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In reply, it is sufficient to say that it is deficient
-in one very important particular. That
-particular relates to our proposition that God
-himself has inaugurated a movement <i>entirely
-outside of, and opposed to</i>, the Constitutional
-Amendment party, for the purpose of bringing
-about a Sabbath reform in his own way. For
-proof of this, we appeal to our last article in full.
-It is, to say the least, not a little remarkable that
-the editor of the <i>Statesman</i> should have overlooked
-this point in our communications, since a
-perception of it would have saved him the perpetration
-of the great mistake which he has made,
-as we shall see hereafter.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Secondly, It is intimated that the proposed
-amendment is not necessarily connected with the
-Sabbath question; and that, therefore, observers
-of the seventh day should unite with those of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>first in securing its passage, which, being done,
-the differences between them could be settled at
-leisure.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now we confess to not a little surprise that
-such a position should be taken by a gentleman
-of so much candor and penetration as the editor
-of the <i>Statesman</i>. Have we then been deceived
-up to this point? Is it true that Sunday observance
-has not heretofore been represented as something
-of vital importance to the nation, to be secured,
-and only secured, by the alteration of the
-Constitution as proposed? Have these gentlemen
-not been really in earnest when they have
-appealed to the strong love of the people for the
-strict observance of what they have been pleased
-to call the Sabbath, in their endeavors to arouse
-them to the significance of their movement? If
-they have not, then they are unworthy of public
-confidence, and should henceforth be cast down
-from the leadership of a great party, which
-boasts, not only its morality, but also its Christianity.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Let us see, then, whether the amendment,
-which is now in their hands, is, or is not, by their
-own confession, to be employed in the interest of
-Sunday observance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>That the <i>Christian Statesman</i> is a fair exponent
-of the opinions and intentions of the leading
-spirits in the movement for the amendment, we
-think no one will have the hardihood to deny.
-What it advocates and favors, then, is destined
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>to stand or fall with the triumph or defeat of the
-men who speak through it. Turning to the
-prospectus of the identical copy of the <i>Statesman</i>
-which contains the criticism which we are reviewing,
-we find the following statement: “The
-design of this paper, as its name suggests, is the
-discussion of the principles of civil government
-in the light of Christianity. It has been established
-to advocate the proposed Religious
-Amendment to the Constitution of the United
-States. At the same time, it will aid in maintaining
-all existing Christian features in our civil
-institutions, in particular, laws against the desecration
-of the Christian Sabbath,” &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We might pause here, but, in a matter of this
-importance, let us make certainty doubly certain.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It was <i>strange</i> that the writer should have
-made the assertion which he did, with the prospectus
-from which we have quoted before him.
-It is <i>passing strange</i> that—as if guided by a Providence
-which had doomed him to make a complete
-exposure of his real sentiments, although in so
-doing his own consistency should be involved—he
-should, within two weeks from the penning
-of the above assertion, go back upon the files of
-his periodical for two years, and reprint, by way
-of <i>emphasis</i>, according to his own statement, the
-following editorial, which forever settles the
-point that he believes and knows that the
-amendment and Sunday-keeping are destined to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>be joined together in a common victory. As the
-reader peruses this editorial, let him bear in mind
-the fact that it is not the effusion of an excited
-and exasperated man, but the expression of a deep
-and settled conviction which has once found utterance,
-and which so perfectly expresses the real
-sentiments of its author that, after years of deliberate
-reflection, he felt the truth of what he
-had said so forcibly that he was constrained to
-give it fresh utterance. Let him also note the
-fact that the italics are not our own, but those of
-the editor. We regret that we have not space to
-give it in full, and invite those who can do so, by
-all means to turn to the copy of the <i>Statesman</i>
-which contains it, and read it for themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Time for the meeting of Congress, ...
-Two years ago we printed the following telegram,
-dated at Washington, on Sabbath, Dec. 4, and
-commented on it in the following terms, which
-we now emphatically repeat: ‘The trains yesterday
-and <i>to-day</i> brought large accessions to the
-number of Congressmen and visitors already here,
-and <i>by to-morrow morning</i> it is expected that
-nearly every Senator and member will have arrived.’
-Thus the fact is heralded over the whole
-country that a large number of the members of
-the National Congress openly and wantonly indulge
-in common travel on the Sabbath....
-And there are other reflections suggested
-by their conduct.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“1. <i>Not one of those men who thus violated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>the Sabbath is fit to hold any official position in
-a Christian nation....</i> The interests of
-a nation can never be safe in the hands of Sabbath-breakers,
-and every one of these Congressmen
-has done that for which, if our laws were
-right, he ought to be impeached and removed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“2. <i>The sin of these Congressmen is a national
-sin</i>, because the nation has not said to
-them in the Constitution, the supreme rule for
-our public servants, ‘We charge you to serve us
-in accordance with the higher law of God.’ These
-Sabbath-breaking railroads, moreover, are corporations
-created by the State, and amenable to it.
-The State is responsible to God for the conduct
-of these creatures which it calls into being. It
-is bound, therefore, to restrain them from this, as
-from other crimes; and any violation of the Sabbath,
-by any corporation, should work immediate
-forfeiture of its charter. And the Constitution
-of the United States, with which all State legislation
-is required to be in harmony, should be of
-such character as to prevent any State from tolerating
-such infractions of fundamental moral
-law.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“3. Give us in the National Constitution the
-simple acknowledgment of the law of God as the
-supreme law of nations, <i>and all the results indicated
-in this note will ultimately be secured</i>.
-Let no one say that the movement does not contemplate
-sufficiently practical ends.”—<i>Christian
-Statesman</i>, Vol. 6, No. 15.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>Now let it be borne in mind that the question
-at issue is one of <i>practical bearing</i>, and not of
-mere technical distinction. We are not splitting
-hairs as to what <i>consistency would demand</i> under
-certain circumstances; but the matter in
-dispute is, Is it not in the highest degree probable
-that a party, represented by men who express,
-beforehand, sentiments like those contained in the
-above editorial, would, when having vaulted into
-the seat of power, attempt the coercion of all into
-a strict observance of the Sunday? Is not the
-line of argument employed above that which
-would <i>compel them to this action</i>, since it is
-there insisted that God holds the nation and the
-State responsible for any dereliction in duty in
-this direction? Furthermore, is it not <i>promised</i>,
-in so many words, that if the amendment is carried,
-the end desired shall be secured by statutes
-so relentless that all offending corporations shall
-have their charters taken away, and by a public
-opinion so uncompromising that no man who
-presumes to violate the Sabbath law shall be
-thought worthy of any position of trust?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thirdly, Waiving, for the time being, the point
-that the Sunday and the amendment stand together,
-it is urged that, though they do, this
-should not prevent seventh-day observers from
-supporting the latter, since it is better to submit
-to Sunday laws than to have the nation pass into
-the hands of atheists.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Before debating this proposition at length, it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>will be well to bear in mind that what I have
-said in the <i>Statesman</i>, as well as what I now
-say, is spoken simply with reference to one
-occupying the position of a Seventh-day Adventist.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So far as our Seventh-day Baptist friends are
-concerned, we have no disposition to hold them
-responsible for the views which we, as Adventists,
-hold. But so far as it regards our relation
-to this subject, it is materially affected by these
-considerations. A failure to discern this has led
-the gentleman into very absurd positions. When
-he attempts to make a <i>Seventh-day Adventist
-conscience</i>, he must form it upon a <i>Seventh-day
-Adventist model</i>. Before he can do this, all his
-bright visions of a temporal millennium and
-good days to come, must vanish into thin air.
-To say, as he does, that common sense would
-teach him to pursue a certain line of conduct, is
-one thing; to say that, did he occupy the position
-which we hold, common sense would teach him to
-do the same thing, is another, and entirely different,
-thing. Let it be borne in mind, therefore,
-that we are not now discussing the proposition
-whether we <i>ought to be Seventh-day Adventists</i>,
-but, taking the ground which he has <i>chosen</i>,
-whether, <i>as Adventists</i>, we ought to support the
-proposed amendment. This being done, we are
-ready to inquire, What is the peculiar faith of
-the people in question?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We answer, 1. They believe that Jesus Christ
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>is about to come in the clouds of heaven. 2.
-That they represent a body of believers which
-the Lord is raising up in order that they may
-lift the standard of his downtrodden law and
-Sabbath, as one around which those who will be
-ready to hail him at his appearing, though few
-in numbers, will ultimately be gathered. 3.
-That, in the light of prophecy, those who thus
-break away from the errors of the papacy are in
-danger of persecution, not from infidels and
-atheists, bad as they may be, but from those
-who, in the guise of religion, shall, without warrant
-from God, endeavor to enforce by statute
-law the observance of a day which finds no
-authority in the word of God, but has for its
-support simply the <i>dictum</i> of the man of sin. 4.
-That the very body of men whose appearance in
-this country they have for twenty years so confidently
-predicted, as being the ones who should
-do the work in question, have actually appeared,
-and are inaugurating the campaign which is very
-soon to be waged with unrelenting fury against
-those who keep the commandments of God and
-the faith of Jesus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>All these features of their faith were shadowed
-forth in our communications in the <i>Statesman</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>With this understanding, how utterly empty
-and infelicitous is the logic of our friend. Take,
-for example, his chosen illustration of the islanders.
-There is in it hardly a single point <i>appropos</i>
-to the case in hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>1. The island to which the missionaries are
-supposed to go is one in which, according to his
-statement, the fourth-day Sabbath is already
-acknowledged as such in their Constitution of
-government, and therefore carries with it the
-sanction and authority of statute law; whereas,
-with us there is no such Constitutional acknowledgment.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>2. In the case of the islanders, their mistake
-in the selection of the day is evidently attributed
-wholly to ignorance, since they were in
-possession of only a <i>part</i> of the Bible, and their
-remedy was to be found in furnishing them with
-copies of the complete work; but our opponents,
-on the contrary, are in possession, and have been
-from childhood, of the Scriptures in full. Nor
-can the ministry, who are leading the movement
-in question, plead ignorance of the line of argument
-by which the seventh-day Sabbath is supported,
-since, for at least two hundred years, it
-has been iterated and reiterated, until their familiarity
-with it and their complete rejection of
-it is proved, not only by what they say, but also
-by what they do. Instance the fining and imprisonment,
-at sundry times, even in this country,
-of men who, having conscientiously observed
-the seventh day, have attempted to enjoy the
-privilege which God has given them, both by
-precept and example, of working on the first day
-of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>3. In the case cited, the infidel minority is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>supposed to be on the point of mounting the
-throne of power, and of sweeping away every
-vestige of the Sabbath institution; whereas, in
-our case, as seen above, the danger which threatens
-the people of God in these last days, is not
-to be apprehended alone from those who scoff at
-God and the Bible, but from those who, according
-to Paul, having “a form of godliness,” shall
-“deny the power thereof.” In other words, who,
-while accepting the Scriptures, if you please,
-shall disregard their explicit statements, as in
-the case of the commandments, substituting in
-the place of the seventh day, which God has
-styled his Sabbath, the first, which he has never
-claimed as his own, nor enjoined on any man.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>With this statement of our views, further remark
-is uncalled for. We think that even our
-reviewer will now perceive that, before he could
-bring us to accept as logical the proposition
-numbered three, above, it would be necessary for
-him to overturn the very foundations of the system
-of truth which we now hold. This, however,
-we fancy is a task which our opponent
-judging from the line of argument which he has
-thus far pursued, would not undertake with
-much prospect of success, until he has become
-more thoroughly conversant with the scope and
-nature of the work in which we are engaged.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Fourthly. It is suggested that we are in danger
-of being classed with infidels and atheists.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So far as this peril is concerned, we simply
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>remark that it is generally found to be best in
-the long run to do right for the sake of right,
-regardless of what men may say concerning you,
-leaving the result with God. The individual
-who would desert sound principles because some
-wicked man or set of men might, for the time
-being, be confounded with him, is destitute of
-true morality. Besides, in the matter in question,
-who is it from whom Seventh-day Adventists
-need apprehend that such an erroneous impression
-will receive publicity? We trust not from
-our friend, because, in the article in question, he
-frankly acknowledges their devotion to the Bible
-in its strict construction.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Is it, then, from the infidels themselves? Well,
-if it should be, we think we can undeceive them.
-I will tell you what we will do. Whenever they
-attempt to “fawn upon us overmuch,” we will
-preach to them the <i>law of God, Sabbath and all</i>,
-and my word for it, they will themselves shortly
-draw a line of demarkation between them and
-us, so broad and distinct that all who are not
-willfully blind will have no difficulty in discerning
-it; for it is a remarkable fact that it is as
-true now as it formerly was, that the “carnal
-mind is not subject to the law of God, neither
-indeed can be.” The infidel of the present day
-hates that law with a hatred, the intensity of
-which is only equalled by that of the large body
-of first-day observers—we are happy to say not
-of the <i>Statesman</i> school—who have abolished the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>ten commandments in order to dispose of one of
-them, and whose special delight seems to consist
-in berating the law which David pronounced
-“perfect,” and Paul declared to be “holy, just,
-and good.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Finally, we submit that when it can be shown,
-1. That God would be better pleased with a nation
-having a Constitution which contained his printed
-name, while wielding the whole power of that
-Constitution against the only Sabbath which he
-has ever commanded, than he would be with one
-which—while his name would fail to appear in
-its fundamental law—was nevertheless administered
-in the interests of civil and religious liberty;
-and 2. That the best method of converting
-atheists is one by which they would be exasperated
-by fines and imprisonments inflicted in the
-name of the God of the Bible for the desecration
-of a day which they know that it nowhere commands;
-and 3. That it would be reasonable to
-expect that men should, by their votes, elevate
-to place and authority those who are destined to
-put manacles upon their wrists, and padlocks
-upon their tongues; then, and not till then, can
-Seventh-day Adventists be expected to support
-an amendment which, though in many respects
-desirable, will inevitably be employed against
-God, his people, and his law.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>
- <h2 id='reply02' class='c006'>STATESMAN’S REPLY. <br /> ARTICLE TWO. <br /> THE SEVENTH DAY NOT OBSERVED BY THE EARLY CHRISTIAN CHURCH.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>Having shown in our last article that seventh-day
-Sabbatarians, to be consistent with themselves
-in appealing to the Bible as of supreme authority,
-should be among the earnest friends of the Religious
-Amendment, we come now to consider their
-argument against the first-day Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>On many points dwelt upon in the articles we
-have published, there is no difference of view.
-We believe that the Sabbath was instituted, not
-in the wilderness, for Israel; but in Eden, for
-mankind. We maintain, also, that the law of the
-Sabbath is an essential part of the great moral
-code of the ten commandments, spoken by God’s
-voice amid the awful manifestations of Sinai, and
-written by the finger of God on tables of stone as
-a law of perpetual obligation for the whole human
-family. These, and other points admitted
-on both sides, need not occupy time and space in
-this discussion. We are concerned here, and now,
-simply with the transfer of the Sabbath from the
-seventh to the first day of the week. Our readers
-have had before them an argument, of considerable
-length, to show that God never authorized
-a change of day. We proceed to prove that the
-transfer was made by divine authority and approval.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In doing this, we shall first have to inquire
-into the facts of history. We shall have to ask,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>Was the observance of the seventh-day Sabbath,
-acknowledged as binding up to the resurrection
-of Christ, continued by the apostles and the early
-church after that event? Was any other day
-substituted by them in its place? For an answer
-to these questions, we must appeal to <i>facts</i>. We
-make our appeal to the records of the New Testament.
-A careful and thorough examination of
-these authoritative records shows conclusively
-that <i>the seventh day was not observed as the
-Sabbath after the resurrection of Christ by the
-apostles and the early church</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is admitted on all hands that Christ himself,
-before his death, and his disciples, up to the time
-of his resurrection, kept the seventh day holy.
-It is also admitted on both sides that after the
-resurrection the apostles and other followers of
-Christ kept holy one day in seven. While they
-abounded daily in the work of the Lord, the
-seventh-day Sabbatarians will concede with us
-that there was still one day marked out from the
-rest of the week as sacred time. What day was
-thus distinguished? Was it the seventh, otherwise
-known as the Sabbath? Let us see.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The word Sabbath occurs in the New Testament,
-after the close of the gospel history, twelve
-times. In two of these instances, viz., Acts 20:7,
-and 1 Cor. 16:2, the word means “week,” and
-not the seventh day, as also in a number of instances
-in the gospels. In Acts 1:12, the word
-is used to indicate a certain distance. The term
-is employed in two other places, viz., Acts 13:27,
-and 15:21, in incidental reference to the service
-of the Jewish synagogues. In Colossians 2:16,
-Paul mentions the seventh-day Sabbath only to
-deny the obligation of its observance. This important
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>passage will be considered farther on.
-There remain, then, six instances, two of them in
-regard to one and the same day and meeting, in
-which the word is found in accounts of gatherings
-for religious purposes on that day, the seventh
-of the week. These meetings were as follows:
-1. At Antioch, in Pisidia, Acts 13:14; 2.
-At the same place, the next seventh day, Acts
-13:42, 44; 3. At Philippi, Acts 16:13; 4. At
-Thessalonica, Acts 17:2; and 5. At Corinth,
-Acts 18:4. At Thessalonica, there were three
-Sabbaths, and at Corinth, every Sabbath, it may
-be inferred, for several weeks, thus marked by
-religious meetings. We are informed that Paul
-went into the synagogue at Thessalonica on the
-Sabbath, or seventh day, “as his manner was.”
-And, accordingly, particularly during his first
-and second, or his more properly termed, missionary
-tours, as distinguished from his journeys in
-revisiting churches already organized, we may
-unhesitatingly infer that there were other similar
-meetings on the seventh day, as at Salamis, Acts
-13:15; at Iconium, Acts 14:1; and at Ephesus,
-Acts 18:19, and 19:8.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>And here we note the fact that <i>in not a single
-one of these instances was the meeting a gathering
-of Christians</i>. In no case was it the assembly
-of the members of a Christian church for
-worship. In every case, these meetings on the
-seventh day were in Jewish places of worship,
-all in synagogues regularly occupied by Jewish
-assemblies, except that at Philippi, which was at
-a <i>proseucha</i>, a Jewish place of prayer out of the
-city by the river’s side. In every instance, it was
-a gathering of Jews and Jewish proselytes, with
-the addition of a greater or lesser number of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>Gentiles, the sight of a crowd of whom at Antioch,
-the second day of meeting in their synagogue,
-excited the jealousy and rage of the Jews. And
-in these gatherings, in every case, Paul labored
-<i>as a missionary</i>, glad to avail himself of every
-opportunity to proclaim the saving truths of the
-gospel of Christ.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Can any intelligent and candid reader of the
-inspired records fail to understand the narrative
-of Paul’s missionary work? He was sent forth
-“to turn sinners from darkness to light.” As he
-himself states at Antioch, addressing the Jews:
-“It was necessary that the word of God should
-first have been spoken to you.” His “heart’s
-desire and prayer to God for Israel was that they
-might be saved.” Accordingly, wherever he
-went, he was found going to them on the seventh
-day in <i>their</i> places of worship, not in Christian
-houses of prayer; meeting with them in
-<i>their</i> assemblies, not in assemblies of professed
-followers of Christ. Just as a Christian missionary,
-in modern times, going to a heathen land,
-would avail himself, if possible, of the customary
-assemblies of the residents, whatever day they
-might keep holy, so Paul and his fellow-missionaries
-availed themselves of the seventh-day assemblies
-of the Jews, that from among them, as
-well as from among the Gentiles, they might gather
-out an <i>ecclesia</i>—a body of followers of the Lord
-Jesus, in whom Jew and Gentile should be one.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The question, therefore, still remains to be answered:
-Which day of the week did the church
-at Jerusalem, existing at the time of Christ’s
-ascension, which day did the apostles in their
-relations with this church, which day did the
-churches, organized and established by the apostles,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>and under their example and divine authority,
-observe as a holy day, a Sabbath to the
-Lord? In all the references to the seventh day,
-or Jewish Sabbath, there is not, as we have seen,
-a particle of evidence that that day was thus observed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>On the other hand, there is positive testimony
-that the very congregations or churches of
-Christians, organized at the places where Paul
-performed missionary labor on the seventh day,
-ignored that day, and in its stead observed another
-day of the week as holy time. For example,
-at Corinth, “as his manner was,” Paul went
-first to the Jews and preached to them in their
-synagogue, the word of God, <i>reasoning with them</i>,
-and persuading them and the Greeks to accept
-of Christ. Then, when the Jews opposed themselves
-and blasphemed, he shook his raiment, and
-said unto them, “Your blood be upon your own
-heads; I am clean: from henceforth I will go
-unto the Gentiles.” So he left the synagogue
-and the Jews, not the city, and entering into the
-house of Justus, received Crispus, the chief ruler
-of the synagogue, with all his house, and many
-of the Corinthians, as converts into the Christian
-church. Here we have the church of Corinth.
-Which day of the week did it observe as the
-Sabbath of the Lord? the seventh? Though
-Paul “continued there a year and six months,
-teaching the word of God among them,” there is
-not a word more about seventh-day services.
-This, it is true, would be merely negative, if it
-were all. But this is not all. In Paul’s direction
-to this same church, a few years later, he
-makes clear and certain, what before was probable,
-that their stated day for religious services
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>was not the seventh, but the first, day of the
-week. 1 Cor. 16:2. The plain and most explicit
-teaching of this passage will be fully considered
-hereafter.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Again, when Paul entered into the synagogue
-at Ephesus, and reasoned with the Jews (Acts
-18:19), and, because he could not tarry long at
-this time, soon returned again, and met the objections
-of disputatious Jews for the space of
-three months (Acts 19:8), his labors as a missionary
-are said to have been in the synagogue,
-no doubt on the Sabbath of the Jews, or the
-seventh day. But once more separating the
-Christian converts from the unbelieving and
-blaspheming Jews, and forming the Christian
-church of Ephesus, he continued there in incessant
-labors for two years. And now we hear no
-more of seventh-day assemblies. This, again,
-may be said to be merely negative, as we hear of
-no special honor put upon any day. But we
-have not done with this. Passing the last years
-of his life in this city of Ephesus, the apostle
-John writes of “the Lord’s day,” known and
-observed by the Christians among whom he
-dwelt. That this holy day of the early church,
-called the Lord’s day, was not the seventh, but
-the first, is shown by the most satisfactory historical
-testimony, which will be adduced in full
-in its proper connection.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Once more. When Paul came to Troas to
-preach Christ’s gospel, and a door was opened to
-him of the Lord (2 Cor. 2:12), whether it was
-on his first very brief visit (Acts 16:8), or more
-probably in going over “those parts,” on his way
-from Ephesus to Macedonia (Acts 20:2), he no
-doubt, “as his manner was,” went into the synagogue
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>and reasoned with the Jews. A congregation
-of Christian disciples was formed, and the
-apostle departed for Greece. After an absence of
-some months, Paul returns to Troas, and with his
-companions remains there seven days, departing
-again on the second day of the week. Whether
-he departed on the first or second, however, the
-fact remains that, during his abode of seven days
-at Troas, there was one seventh day. Do we
-hear of any religious meeting on that day? Did
-the disciples then assemble for divine service?
-Let us hear the record: “We abode seven days.
-And upon the first day of the week, when the
-disciples came together to break bread, Paul
-preached unto them, ready to depart on the
-morrow.” The seventh day is passed by. The
-day for the assembling of the Christian disciples
-is not the Sabbath of the Jews. Another day
-has taken its place. This most explicit instance
-at Troas of ignoring the seventh day, and honoring
-another in its place, as the stated day for the
-religious services of Christians, abundantly confirms,
-if confirmation were needed, the conclusions
-already reached in the instances at Corinth
-and Ephesus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thus the <i>facts</i> of the records of inspired history
-conclusively prove that the seventh day was not
-observed by the apostles and early Christians as
-their sacred day of divine worship, or the Sabbath
-of the Lord. We might add here that the
-testimony of all the earliest Christian writers,
-who received from the apostles and the companions
-of the apostles the institutions of the
-Christian church, is full and explicit to the same
-effect. But we shall hear their evidence for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>first day, and thus also against the seventh, in
-good time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It will now be in place to consider how apostolic
-precept corresponds with apostolic example,
-and that of the churches, in regard to the seventh
-day. Colossians 2:16, a most important passage,
-making particular mention of the seventh-day
-Sabbath, yet singularly overlooked by seventh-day
-Sabbatarians, now claims our attention for a
-moment. Judaizing teachers, so busy everywhere
-throughout the early church, had been at
-work among the Christian disciples at Colosse.
-They had been insisting upon the observance of
-the seventh day as the Sabbath of the Lord.
-One would think that some of these men had
-come down to our time and learned to use very
-good English. We refer these representatives of
-an ancient, but not honorably mentioned, class
-for instruction to the apostle’s words to the
-Colossians: “Let no man judge you in meat or
-in drink, or in respect of a holy day [literally, <i>of
-a feast</i>], or of the new moon, or of the Sabbath
-days;” <i>i. e.</i>, of yearly, monthly, or weekly
-Jewish celebrations. We do not wait to examine
-the parallel passages in Gal. 4:10, and Rom. 14:5,
-where the obligation of Jewish observances,
-including the seventh-day Sabbath, is denied, and
-where, in the latter case, to make the argument
-even stronger, the toleration of these observances
-as a weakness is considerately advised. Surely,
-it is no wonder that seventh-day Sabbatarians
-seem not to be aware of the existence of these
-portions of the divine word! It cannot be
-pleasant to be made to feel that, like the Judaizers
-of old, they bring themselves under the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>sharp rebuke of the inspired apostle by judging
-Christians in respect of the seventh-day Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We will now sum up this part of the discussion:
-Admitting that the Sabbath was instituted
-in Eden for mankind; that it is of perpetual
-obligation; that it was observed by Christ himself
-before his death, and by his disciples until
-his resurrection, as by the Jews of old, on the
-seventh day of the week; we have gone on to
-see that the apostles and the early church, still
-having one stated day each week as a holy day,
-did <i>not</i> continue the observance of the seventh
-day. We have seen that the seventh day, after
-the resurrection, is mentioned only in connection
-with assemblies, in Jewish places of worship, of
-Jews, Jewish proselytes, and, in some instances,
-a larger or smaller addition of Gentiles, among
-all of whom the apostle labored as a missionary
-for the conversion of souls, and the formation of
-Christian congregations, or churches. We have
-found that no instance can be adduced of the
-apostles in their relations to Christian churches,
-nor of assemblies of Christian disciples, meeting
-to observe the seventh day as the Sabbath of the
-Lord. On the other hand, we have found them
-ignoring the seventh day and honoring another,
-in perfect harmony with the apostle Paul’s rebuke
-of Judaizing teachers who insisted on having
-Christian disciples observe the seventh
-day, and his condescending toleration of their
-weakness.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>
- <h2 id='rejoinder02' class='c006'>A REJOINDER. <br /> “THE SEVENTH DAY NOT OBSERVED BY THE EARLY CHRISTIAN CHURCH.”</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>It is, we confess, with some degree of embarrassment,
-that we attempt the answering of the
-second article from the pen of the editor of the
-<i>Statesman</i>, in reply to the argument which we
-presented in the columns of that paper. Our
-difficulty does not arise from any confusion into
-which we have been thrown by the superior logic
-of our opponent; it consists, rather, in knowing
-just where and how to commence the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So far as statements are concerned, they are
-numerous and repeated again and again, in substance.
-But we have no disposition, nor have
-we the space, to take them up singly, in their
-numerical and repetitious order, for consideration.
-And, besides, the fallacy of nearly every one of
-them has been demonstrated in what we have
-already written. This being the case, we have
-determined to take the general scope of the criticism,
-and thus, as briefly as may be, make suggestions
-which, if carried out, will answer its
-assumptions, as well as its attempted efforts at
-deduction.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We remark, then, in the outset, that we are
-happy to meet the writer upon the common
-ground of a Sabbath having originated in Eden,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>and inserted in a law of perpetual obligation on
-both Jews and Gentiles.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Let the reader keep these mutual concessions
-continually before his eyes. They are of great
-significance in this debate. 1. They prove that
-the Sabbath is not Jewish in its origin, but was
-given to Adam, as their representative head, for
-the benefit of the whole race, more than two
-thousand years before there was a Jew in existence.
-2. They also prove that the Sabbath institution
-was rendered obligatory upon all men
-by a divine precept, with the phraseology of
-which we are all acquainted. 3. That that precept
-is explicit in its declaration that the last
-and not the first day of the week was the Sabbath.
-4. That before any other day can be
-substituted in the place of the one designated,
-the Power which originated it must authorize the
-change.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So much for the important results which necessarily
-flow from the principles which we hold
-in common, if indeed we are right in supposing
-that the writer <i>really</i> means what he <i>actually</i>
-says; namely, that he holds to the perpetuity of
-the fourth commandment of the decalogue. We
-shall see, hereafter, whether or not his statements
-are to be taken for all which they express.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We advance, now, in our examination of the
-criticism before us.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>What direction, then, does the effort take in
-the main? It will be granted that the plan of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>defense adopted is that of attempting to prove
-that the early church did violate the seventh, and
-did honor the first, day of the week. But with
-what success has the effort been attended? We
-know that it is stated several times that the
-apostles disregarded what the author is pleased
-to call the <i>Jewish</i> Sabbath—after he had conceded
-the principle that that of the commandment
-was <i>Edenic</i> in its origin—but did he make
-out his case? So far from it, in every instance
-where he has found them connected in the record
-with the Sabbath day, it has ever been in the
-performance of duties <i>religious in their nature</i>.
-For should we concede that he is right in supposing
-that Paul went into the synagogues to
-teach on the Sabbath day, simply because he
-would find hearers there, this, assuredly, would
-not prove that Paul was a Sabbath-breaker.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Let me take the gentleman’s favorite illustration
-of a missionary in a foreign land, at the
-present time. Now suppose that his lot were
-cast in a country where the first day of the week,
-or the day of the sun, was regarded as holy by
-the natives, and he should be found on that day
-regularly teaching them in their places of assembly,
-would <i>that</i> decide the question that he was
-necessarily a violator of the first-day Sabbath?
-You answer immediately in the negative. So,
-too, in the case of Paul. The fact that it can be
-shown that it was his custom to teach in the
-synagogues on the seventh day of the week, if it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>has no power to prove that he was a conscientious
-<i>observer</i> of that day, cannot at least be
-cited as furnishing evidence that he <i>disregarded</i>
-it. We ask, then, again, Has a scintilla of positive
-testimony been given that Paul ever broke
-a single Sabbath of the Lord, as contained in
-the divine precept? Once more it must be conceded
-that there has not. But is it not a little
-singular that in a history of thirty years, where
-the Sabbath is so often mentioned, not one single
-action has ever been discovered in the least incompatible
-with Paul’s veneration of the seventh
-day? We let the reader answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Furthermore, we have from the pen of our opponent
-himself the frank admission that, in the
-historic territory over which he has been passing,
-it has been uniformly true that both Luke and
-Paul have ever, when speaking of the seventh
-day, called it “the Sabbath.” Now let the
-reader remember that this confession is full and
-sweeping in its character. Then let him ask
-himself whether it is natural to suppose that
-men, having repudiated an old Sabbath, and
-zealous for the establishment of a new one,
-would be likely to make up the record in question
-in such a form that the old Sabbath, whenever
-spoken of, should always be styled “the
-Sabbath,” and the new one be mentioned merely
-as the “first day of the week?” In order to impress
-the fallacy of such an idea, we have but to
-call attention to the fact that men, at the present
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>time, possessing the same natures and dispositions
-as formerly, would avoid such a course with the
-most scrupulous care. Instance the fact that seventh-day
-observers never allude to the Sunday as
-<i>the Sabbath</i>, but avoid such a reference under all
-circumstances; while the devotees of the Sunday,
-when speaking of the last day of the week, almost
-uniformly speak of it as the <i>Jewish Sabbath</i>,
-if Sabbath they will allow themselves to call it
-at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But again. We are told, very candidly, that
-by the word Sabbath, in Acts 13:44, where it is
-said that the “next Sabbath day came almost
-the whole city together” to hear the word of
-God, is meant the next seventh day succeeding
-the first seventh day on which Paul addressed
-the Jews at Antioch. This being true, it is settled
-beyond dispute that, in the mind of Luke,
-there was no Sabbath day occurring between the
-one on which Paul spoke to the people, and the
-seventh day of the next week when he addressed
-them the second time; for, if there had been,
-then it would not have been proper to call the
-last Sabbath mentioned the “<i>next</i>” one, since
-another Sabbath would have intervened between
-the two in question. In other words, according
-to the view of our friend, the Sunday, which was
-the next day after the first discourse of Paul,
-was really the next Sabbath which followed it;
-whereas, the inspired penman ignores it altogether,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>and, passing over it with silence, calls the
-last day of that same week “the Sabbath.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Again, it is stated in Acts 15:21, that the
-“Scriptures are read in the synagogues <i>every</i>
-Sabbath day.” Here, again, it is conceded that
-the reference is to the seventh day of the week.
-If this be true, however, then James, as well as
-Luke, had, in his lexicon of terms, the “Sabbath
-day” as the one which answered to the seventh
-day and not to the first; for no one will insist
-that the Scriptures were read in the synagogues
-of the Jews regularly on the first day of the
-week; but James says that they were read there
-<i>every</i> Sabbath day; therefore, in his mind—as
-we have already remarked—the first day was
-not the Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Once more: It is stated of Paul that he reasoned
-in the synagogues <i>every</i> Sabbath, and persuaded
-the Jews and the Greeks. Here also it
-is urged—admitting that the reference is to the
-seventh day—that Paul went into the synagogue
-in order to get a hearing. But this he could not
-do on the first day, since he would have found
-the synagogue closed, and no audience. Nevertheless,
-the statement stands unqualified that
-Paul preached “<i>every Sabbath</i>.” Now if this be
-true, and the first as well as the seventh day
-might, according to the view of the historian, be
-called a Sabbath, then we have him stating that
-Paul preached in the place in question on both
-the first and seventh days. On the other hand,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>if he regarded the first day as alone the Sabbath,
-then he meant to teach that Paul preached in
-the synagogue on that day, and that day only.
-But my opponent will not insist upon either of
-these positions. The only conclusion that is left
-us, therefore, is that the Holy Ghost, who inspired
-Luke in the selection of terms, employed the appellation
-of Sabbath as applying only to the day
-which had been sanctified in Eden, and had always
-been known by that title.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now let us give our attention for a moment to
-the objection so strongly urged that in the book
-of the Acts, and in the epistles, there is no well-authenticated
-instance in which the apostles held
-meetings, with Christians exclusively, on the
-seventh day. The point of the proposition might
-be thus stated: If the early Christians did hold
-meetings on the seventh day, the record would
-have shown it: this it fails to do; therefore, the
-presumption is that they did not regard it as holy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This is a sword that cuts <i>both</i> ways, if it cuts
-at all. We do not wonder that, when our friend
-laid hold of its hilt, he said, tremblingly, This is
-a <i>negative weapon</i>; so that, when we should
-attempt to borrow it of him, we might find the
-edge, which was designed for his <i>own neck,
-dulled by his own concession</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But let us proceed. Is it true, so far as the
-ancient Sabbath of the Lord is concerned, that,
-unless we can find historic accounts of its observance
-in the New Testament, we must therefore
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>conclude that it was not regarded? We answer,
-No; simply because its observance is not alone
-taught by precedent. It rests upon a positive
-command of God, incorporated in a law which
-was brought over into this dispensation, as we
-have seen, and made obligatory upon Christians.
-It was not, therefore, necessary that a detailed
-account of its observance should be placed upon
-the record, in order to prove that it was regarded
-by the early church; since the very fact that
-they acknowledged the law of God, is in itself
-proof that they sanctified the Sabbath which it
-ordained. Until, therefore, the gentleman can
-shake the pillars of that law—as we shall show
-he has not yet succeeded in doing—it is of itself
-a guarantee that every seventh day was regarded
-with solemnity by those who were endeavoring
-to keep its precepts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In proof of this, we have but to mention the
-fact that from Moses to David—a space covering
-five hundred years—the term Sabbath is not
-employed once in the sacred history, and yet the
-gentleman will agree with me that the good men
-of those ages hallowed it, simply because he
-agrees with me that they had a precept requiring
-them to do so.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But, again, we must be allowed to insist that
-the very silence of which the gentleman complains
-does indirectly prove, independent of the
-commandment, that the first generation of Christians
-were Sabbatarians. What we mean to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>understood as saying is, that they at least did
-not violate the regulations concerning the strict
-observance of the Sabbath, as enforced among
-the Jews; for had they done so, a record of
-thirty years could not have failed to bring to
-light numerous collisions, which would have been
-inevitable between Jews and Christians, the one
-class despising and trampling down the Sabbath
-of the law, and the other following them with
-that vulture glance of inquisition, by which—as
-in the case of our Lord—they were in the habit
-of watching their antagonists, with a view to
-condemning them before the law. And, besides,
-with what show of consistency could Paul have
-stood up before them, announcing himself as one
-who had never violated the customs of the fathers
-(Acts 28:17), if he had been seen weekly
-transgressing the law of one of the dearest institutions
-handed down to them from the remotest
-antiquity?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thus much for one side of the logic of our opponent.
-Now let us apply it to the Sunday.
-As we do so, it will be recollected that there has
-been no effort made, as yet, to place it upon a
-positive precept. Its existence, therefore, if such
-it has at all, must be attributable to precedent.
-Thus far, such precedent has not been cited, except
-by way of anticipation. When it comes up,
-we will consider it in order. In the meantime,
-let it be remembered that our friend has voluntarily
-taken a position which will compel him to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>admit that, unless he can find at least one clear
-and unquestionable case in which the Sunday
-was from beginning to end devoutly celebrated,
-his cause is a hopeless one. Nay, more, to
-make out his point, every candid mind will
-demand that, in the absence of positive command,
-he shall be able to show numerous instances in
-which the day, whose claims he seeks to vindicate,
-was intelligently honored; for, be it remembered,
-that, according to his own declaration, the
-apostle was traveling from point to point, writing
-and preaching, and Luke was keeping a diary
-of his labors, for the purpose of instructing that
-generation of Christians, as well as this, concerning
-duty and doctrine. If, therefore, Sunday
-sanctity came under the head of those doctrines,
-it was important, overwhelmingly so, that such a
-fact should be set forth clearly, since an habitual
-disregard on the part of any, of the new Sabbath,
-would bring upon them the condemnation of
-Heaven. Furthermore, the line of demarkation,
-which the new day would have drawn between
-the disciples and the Hebrews, would have been
-so broad, and the discussions upon those points
-would have been so numerous and so full, while
-the transition was taking place, that its existence
-could not have failed to become discernible in the
-writings of that period.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Here we must change our line of argument,
-and turn to the consideration of Col. 2:14-17,
-and of Rom. 14:5. Our opponent intimates that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>Sabbatarians are in the habit of evading these
-texts. In this remark, he does us great injustice.
-The statement is so far from being true that I
-make no doubt that, within the last twenty years,
-Seventh-day Adventist preachers alone have, by
-voice and pen, commented upon them at least a
-thousand times. But the best method of showing
-the charge to be untrue will be found in an
-examination of the texts themselves. The first
-is as follows: “Blotting out the handwriting of
-ordinances that was against us, which was contrary
-to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it
-to his cross; ... Let no man therefore
-judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of an
-holy day, or of the new moon, or of the sabbath
-days: which are a shadow of things to come; but
-the body is of Christ.” Col. 2:14, 16, 17. Now
-be it remembered that he affirms that these scriptures
-teach the abolition of the creation Sabbath;
-also, that, while we concede the point that there
-are here mentioned sabbaths which were abolished
-at the crucifixion of Christ, we deny that
-the seventh-day Sabbath was among them, and
-insist that they were simply the ceremonial sabbaths
-of the Jews to which reference is made.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In proof of our position, we offer the following
-considerations: 1. That which was repealed
-is represented as having been “blotted
-out.” Now the Scriptures are remarkable for
-the force and propriety of the illustrations which
-they employ. But who will say that the terms
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>“blotting out” could properly be applied to
-writing engraved in stone, as was the Sabbath
-law in its original copy? 2. That which was
-blotted out was the “handwriting of ordinances;”
-but the commandments were the finger-writing
-of God. 3. That which was blotted out was
-found among ordinances that were “<i>against</i> us,
-and <i>contrary</i> to us.” But Jesus says, “The
-Sabbath was made <i>for</i> man.” Mark 2:27, 28.
-4. That which was blotted out and taken out of
-the way “was nailed to his cross.” But it is inconceivable
-that such language could be spoken
-of the tables of stone, since they are not of a
-nature such that the work spoken of could be
-readily accomplished, and therefore the figure
-will not apply to them except when forced. 5.
-It must be admitted that these things concerning
-which we are not to allow men to judge us were
-either all of them shadows of Christ, or that if
-the <i>others</i> were not, the <i>sabbath days</i> were. If
-they were all shadows, then the sabbaths undeniably
-were such; for the expression, “which
-were a shadow of things to come,” stands immediately
-connected with the term “sabbath days.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But this decides the point in controversy;
-for our friend has already voluntarily declared
-that the seventh-day Sabbath originated in
-Eden. This being true, it cannot be regarded as
-a “shadow” or type of Christ, since it was in
-being before man had ever fallen, and, consequently,
-before a Saviour was either needed or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>promised. It is commemorative in its character,
-and was calculated to carry the mind back to the
-creation, to the rest of Jehovah, rather than forward
-to the crucifixion of his Son. Do you inquire,
-then, what sabbaths the apostle had in
-view? We answer: He locates them among
-“commandments written in ordinances.” In
-other words, in the Mosaic ceremonies. Now
-take your Bible and turn to the twenty-third
-chapter of Leviticus, and you will find that the
-Jews had three annual feasts—the passover, the
-Pentecost, and the feast of tabernacles—besides
-the new moons, and the seven annual sabbaths.
-The sabbaths were as follows, to wit: 1. The
-first day of unleavened bread. 2. The seventh
-day of that feast. 3. The day of Pentecost. 4.
-The first day of the seventh month. 5. The
-tenth day of that month. 6. The fifteenth day
-of that month. 7. The twenty-second day of
-the same. These are the ones, beyond all question,
-to which reference is here made.<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c008'><sup>[3]</sup></a> 1. Because
-they were in the handwriting of Moses,
-and could be blotted out. 2. Because they were
-found in handwriting of ordinances. 3. They
-were among ceremonies that were against us, and
-contrary to us (Acts 15:10). 4. The law in
-which they originated might have been nailed to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>the cross. 5. That law was also one which shadowed
-forth Christ (Heb, 10:1).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To the second text we shall give but little
-space. In the presentation of it, our friend attempts
-to be <i>facetious</i>. Nor are we disposed to
-find fault with him for this. It is sometimes admissible,
-even in the discussion of the <i>gravest</i>
-questions, to indulge in <i>harmless</i> humor. That
-the effort in question partakes of <i>this character</i>,
-<i>i. e.</i>, that it is <i>harmless</i>, we shall not dispute.
-At all events, when we read it, it amused rather
-than offended us. A second thought, however,
-suggests the possibility that if <i>we</i> were not damaged
-by the sally, it might have been <i>pernicious</i>,
-nevertheless, since it is possible for it to <i>react
-upon its author</i>. Certain it is, that it will damage
-either him or Paul, because he represents the
-great apostle as making a special effort, in his
-general labors, to teach men that they must under
-<i>all</i> circumstances keep <i>one</i> day holy, and
-that under <i>some</i> they might be allowed to regard
-a <i>second</i> also in the same light. But, unfortunately,
-if this exegesis is correct, and if the language
-of Rom. 14:5, applies to the weekly Sabbath
-at all, Paul blundered egregiously in communicating
-his intentions; since he virtually told
-them whom he was addressing that, of the days
-of which <i>he was speaking</i>, they <i>need not</i> keep
-them at all, or they <i>might</i>, at will. Here follows
-the text “One man esteemeth one day above another:
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>another esteemeth every day alike. Let
-every man be fully persuaded in his own mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now we have heard men Who believed in no
-Sabbath employ this text again and again to
-prove that there is now no holy time; we have
-also heard conscientious first-day observers argue
-forcibly and conclusively that this text proved
-no such thing, simply because it referred to days
-that were connected with meats and drinks, and
-not to the weekly Sabbath at all. But we confess
-that the position of our friend is somewhat
-novel. Nevertheless, we feel sure that the reputation
-of the great apostle for perspicuity will
-not suffer by this attempt, and we think that, so
-far as he is concerned himself, reflection will prevent
-him from ever seriously urging it. In conclusion
-on this point, we append a brief comment
-from the pen of Adam Clarke, whose reputation,
-and the fact that he was an observer of Sunday,
-will give him no little authority with our opponent.
-He says: “Reference is here made to the
-<i>Jewish</i> institutions, and especially their festivals;
-such as the passover, pentecost, feast of tabernacles,
-new moons, jubilee, &amp;c. The converted <i>Jew</i>
-still thought these of moral obligation; the <i>Gentile</i>
-Christian, not having been bred up in this
-way, had no such prejudices.”—<i>Com. in loco.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The only remaining text cited is that of Gal.
-4:10. After what has been said, no further
-comment from us will be required. The reader,
-desirous of satisfying himself that this text also
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>has no reference to the weekly Sabbath, and of
-necessity refers either to heathen festivals or
-Jewish ceremonial days, can read the context,
-and consult standard authorities, such as Clarke
-or Barnes.<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c008'><sup>[4]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Let us now survey the ground over which we
-have passed. So far as we have gone, what has
-been done toward proving a practice of first-day
-observance on the part of the early church?
-We answer, Nothing, absolutely nothing. The
-only texts which have been cited for this purpose
-are 1 Cor. 16:2, Rev. 1:10, and Acts 20:7.
-So far as they are concerned, we have previously
-shown that the first of them does not in
-any way affect the question of Sunday observance;
-that the second relates to the seventh day
-of the week and not to the first; and that the
-third proves that Paul traveled nineteen and one-half
-miles on the Sunday. When our reviewer
-shall attempt to stir a single stone in the structure
-of argument which we reared in our former
-articles on these points, we shall be by his side, to
-see that he does it fairly. Until then, the intelligent
-reader need not be told that it is vain for him
-to try to make capital by quoting them as above.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thus much for the first day. We inquire next,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>What has been conceded or proved, which is favorable
-to the seventh-day Sabbath? 1. That
-it originated in Eden. 2. That it was enforced
-by the fourth commandment. 3. That that commandment
-is still binding. 4. That the effort to
-show a change in its phraseology from Col. 2:16,
-Rom. 14:5, and Gal. 4:10, was a complete
-failure; and therefore that it reads as it did formerly,
-that “the seventh day is the Sabbath of
-the Lord.” 5. That there is a Sabbath in this
-dispensation. 6. That, being enforced by positive
-command, it stands in need of no precedent.
-7. That, while the apostles did many times preach
-on that day, there is not one instance in which
-they violated it. 8. That had they desecrated
-it, the conflicts which would have been thus created,
-must have found a place in the history of
-those times. 9. That in the book of Acts it is
-always called “the Sabbath.” 10. That it was
-the only Sabbath known to the apostles, since
-they speak of it not only as “<i>the</i> Sabbath,” but
-as “the <i>next</i> Sabbath,” and “<i>every</i> Sabbath.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In concluding, we suggest that we leave our
-reviewer in a situation which, to a man of his
-clearness of perception, must be a very unsatisfactory
-one. Having insisted upon the perpetuity
-of the fourth commandment, he is compelled
-to take one of two positions. Either, 1. That it
-reads the same as it did when it enforced the
-seventh day; or, 2. That its phraseology has been
-changed. We confess that we have been unable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>to decide which of these positions he prefers.
-Nor is it material here. If he adopts the first, the
-thoughtful reader will agree with me that it is
-simply absurd to argue that a statute, while
-reading the same, means differently from what it
-did formerly. On the other hand, should he
-adopt the latter, then we inquire why he has not
-given it to us as it reads since it has been
-changed, and thus ended the controversy by
-gratifying our most reasonable request.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='reply03' class='c006'>STATESMAN’S REPLY. <br /> ARTICLE THREE. <br /> TESTIMONY FROM THE GOSPELS FOR THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>In a previous article it was seen that from the
-resurrection of Christ there is no instance recorded
-in Scripture of the observance of the seventh day
-as the Sabbath of the Lord by any assembly of
-Christians. On the contrary, it was seen that
-the Judaizing spirit, which in some instances insisted
-on such observance by Christians, was rebuked
-by the inspired apostle. In connection
-with this was noted the fact that in the case of
-Jews converted to Christianity, yet inclined still
-to regard the seventh day with other Jewish celebrations,
-Christians were directed to bear with
-such observance as a weakness in their brethren.
-It was also seen that while the observance of the
-seventh day was not continued, another day of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>the week, the first, took its place as the stated
-day for religious assemblies and services. Let us
-now examine the testimony from the Gospels for
-this day, reserving the remainder of scriptural
-proof for another article.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The manner in which the first day of the week
-is pointed out in the Gospels as the day of the
-Lord’s resurrection, is itself striking and significant.
-All four of the evangelists concur in making
-prominent the fact that it was on this day
-that Christ rose from the dead. This fact is
-stated by Matthew, 28:1-6; twice by Mark, 16:1-6,
-and again in verse 9; by Luke, 24:1-6; by
-John, 20:1, 2. This concurrent, particular mention
-of the first day of the week as the day of
-the resurrection, in four independent historical
-accounts, the earliest of which was written probably
-about twenty years after that event, has a
-significance readily overlooked, but well worth
-noting.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To appreciate this fully, we must distinguish
-between the words of the historians and the
-words of the persons whose sayings they record—a
-most important point in the study of any history.
-Observing this distinction, then, we note
-that the promise of Christ, as recorded by the
-historians, was, that he would rise from the dead
-on the third day, dating from and including the
-day of his crucifixion and burial. The chief
-priests and Pharisees, asking Pilate to have the
-sepulcher guarded; the angels at the sepulcher
-the morning of the resurrection; the two disciples,
-conversing with the risen Lord on the way
-to Emmaus, and the Lord himself, speak of it as
-the <i>third</i> day. In no other way does any one
-whose language is recorded by the historians refer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>to the day of the resurrection. Now, had the
-historians themselves, writing after an interval of
-from nearly twenty to over sixty years, simply
-desired to state the fact of the Lord’s resurrection,
-it would have been sufficient for them to
-say that, according to His promise, he rose on
-the <i>third</i> day. But instead of this, they all concur
-in pointing out particularly the <i>first</i> day of
-the week as the resurrection day. On the supposition
-that, when the historians wrote, the first
-day was regarded precisely like the second and
-third days of the week, as it was at the time of
-the resurrection, this change of statement is singular
-and inexplicable. On the other hand, on
-the supposition that the first day had become an
-honored and noted day among Christians, this
-mention of it by all the evangelists, and that, too,
-in a uniform and somewhat formal phrase, and
-the difference between the language of the historians
-and that of the persons of whom they
-write, are naturally and satisfactorily explained.
-In this change of language, then, on the part of
-the inspired historians, and in their concurrent
-and prominent mention of the first day, we have
-strong presumptive evidence in favor of the
-marked character of that day at the time when
-the Gospel histories were written. Testimony of
-this kind, in the form of unstudied allusion or undesigned
-coincidence, though easily passed without
-notice, is acknowledged on all hands to be of
-great weight.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After showing himself probably four times to
-one or more of his disciples during the day of his
-resurrection, Christ appeared late in the evening
-to the disciples collectively, Thomas alone being
-absent. “Then the same day at evening (<i>opsia</i>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span><i>late evening</i>, from <i>opse</i>, <i>late</i>), being the first day
-of the week, when the doors were shut where
-the disciples were assembled for fear of the Jews,
-came Jesus and stood in the midst, and saith unto
-them, Peace be unto you.” (John 20:19.) Let
-the facts be noted. 1. It was the evening of the
-first day of the week. 2. The disciples were met
-together, manifestly, <i>not</i> to commemorate the
-resurrection, but for what purpose, or where, it
-does not matter. 3. The Lord came and blessed
-them, and, as we learn from the following verses,
-imparted to them spiritual instruction, and
-breathed on them the Holy Ghost. These facts
-should be borne in mind as we proceed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We come now to the record of the first day of
-the following week; “And after eight days again
-his disciples were within, and Thomas with them.
-Then came Jesus, the doors being shut, and stood
-in the midst, and said, Peace be unto you.”
-(John 20:26.) This interval of eight days, from
-and including the resurrection day, brings us, according
-to the common mode of reckoning, and
-as no one is disposed to dispute, to the first day
-of the next week. The preceding first day, the
-disciples were met collectively. Again, this first
-day, they are met, and Thomas with them. It
-has been said that very probably the disciples
-met every day during the interval, and, therefore,
-they put no special honor upon the first day.
-But the question is not just here whether the
-disciples meant to honor the first day or not.
-Did the Lord himself single it out from the days
-of the week and honor it? This is the question
-at present. It may be admitted that the disciples
-met every day during the interval. This is
-exceedingly probable. The fact remains clear
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>that the Lord did not meet with them. And
-this very passing by of these supposed meetings
-of the disciples by the Lord, during six days, the
-last of which was the seventh-day Sabbath, renders
-his actual meeting with them, as recorded,
-on the first day again, all the more significant.
-The disciples may not have designed to honor
-the day, but the Lord himself, passing by the
-seventh day along with the other five intervening,
-selects and homes the first day by once
-more meeting on it with his disciples.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nor is it to be admitted that the disciples were
-destitute of all regard to the returning first day of
-the week as the day of the Lord’s resurrection.
-The very circumstances in which, by the ordering
-of the Master, they were placed, could not fail to
-teach them to look upon it with special regard.
-They had been assembled on the evening of the
-preceding first day. The Lord had met with
-them and blessed them, and breathed on them
-the Holy Ghost. Earnestly longing to enjoy his
-comforting and slivering presence again, we may
-suppose they met on the second day. But the
-Lord does not come. More deeply feeling their
-need, they assemble again the third day. Still
-the desired presence is withheld. So on, with
-ever-increasing desires, they meet, day after day.
-How natural would it be for them to think of the
-seventh day, on which they had so often enjoyed
-sweet counsel with the Master, going to the house
-of God. “Surely,” their thought might well be,
-“He will meet with us in our assembly to-day.”
-But no. The time for the special manifestation
-of himself to his worshiping disciples in their
-collective gathering had not come. Would not
-the disciples then remember, if they had ever
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>forgotten it, that it was on the first day of the
-week the Lord rose from the dead, and on that
-day he had stood in the midst of them and said,
-Peace be unto you? And remembering this,
-they would meet on the return of the first day
-with earnest expectation of the return of the
-Master. Nor are they disappointed. Once more
-he comes, and stands in the midst, and grants his
-benediction.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Here then are the facts concerning sacred time,
-as recorded in the Gospel history, subsequent to
-the resurrection of Christ. The seventh day is
-not mentioned. If the disciples met on that day,
-as they probably did, the inspired penmen take
-no notice of the fact. There is no meeting of the
-risen Lord with his disciples. The seventh day
-is passed by. On the other hand, the first day is
-mentioned in a particular manner, in changed and
-special language, by all the evangelists, as a noted
-day would naturally be mentioned and marked
-out as the resurrection day. On it the Lord repeatedly
-met with his disciples, blessed them,
-taught them important spiritual lessons, and
-breathed on them the Holy Ghost, the earnest of
-the abundant outpouring of the Spirit. How
-fell of meaning these facts! On the last seventh
-day on which the disciples rested according to
-the commandment, the Lord himself is lying in
-the tomb. The glory of the seventh day dies
-out with the fading light of that day throughout
-the whole of which the grave claimed the body
-of the Redeemer. But the glory of the Sabbath
-of the Lord survives. It receives fresh luster
-from the added glories of the Lord of the Sabbath.
-“The stone which the builders refused is
-become the head-stone of the corner.” It is very
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>early in the morning the first day of the week.
-Again God said, Let there be light, and there was
-light. The Sun of righteousness has risen with
-healing in his wings. This is the day which the
-Lord hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in
-it. The first day of the week has become the
-Lord’s day.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='rejoinder03' class='c006'>A REJOINDER. <br /> “TESTIMONY FROM THE GOSPELS FOR THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.”</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>Without prolonged preliminary remarks, we
-shall endeavor to consider the points of argument
-presented by our reviewer in the article
-entitled, “Testimony from the Gospels for the
-first-day Sabbath.” In entering upon our task,
-we feel almost as if we were doing a work of
-supererogation, from the fact that what we are
-called upon to answer is so far from being a refutation
-of what we had said in our positive argument,
-that it appears to be little more than a
-re-statement of positions which we believe we
-have once fairly met and conclusively answered.
-Nevertheless, we express our satisfaction at the
-concessions apparently made by the writer. The
-common plea that the disciples were assembled
-on the day of the resurrection in order to honor
-the resuscitation of the body of Christ, is seemingly
-ignored. The points now urged seem to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>be those of a disposition on the part of the Lord
-himself to honor the first day of the week, and
-of such a use of language on the part of the historians
-as it would be natural for them to make,
-provided it had become a settled thing with them
-to regard the Sunday as a day which Christ had
-set apart for holy uses.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So far as it regards the position assumed, that
-there is peculiar significance in the manner in
-which the first day is pointed out, with it we are
-ready most heartily to agree. But so far as the
-assertion is concerned, that, in the <i>manner</i> of
-the pointing out, there is found strong presumptive
-evidence that they design to teach succeeding
-generation that they looked upon the first day
-of the week as <i>holy time</i>, we can by no means
-admit that it is correct. On the contrary, we
-believe that their language establishes, beyond
-controversy, the opposite position. Matthew,
-Mark, Luke, and John, were blunt, straightforward,
-direct men in all that they said. They
-had nothing to disguise, nor could anything be
-gained by indirection in statement.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Furthermore, every motive of esteem for
-Christ, as well as that which would actuate them
-in their desire to instruct subsequent generations
-in regard to the estimation in which they should
-hold the day of Christ’s resurrection, demanded
-that their language should be full and explicit,
-and that it should state, in so many words, that
-it was sacred to holy uses. But have they done
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>this? No; the gentleman does not so much as
-urge that they have. All his emphasis is placed
-upon the fact that, in speaking of it, they call it
-the “first day of the week,” instead of the “third
-after his crucifixion.” He may well say that the
-distinction between these two forms of expression
-would be readily “passed over.” Has it
-come to this, then, that the Holy Spirit, in enforcing
-important duties upon Christians, is compelled
-to depart from the natural, clear, and positive
-statement of facts, and to employ polemical
-niceties which, we believe, if they have any force
-at all, can only be discerned by minds whose susceptibilities
-for refinement are infinitely superior
-to those of common men and women, and the
-poor and ignorant to whom the gospel was
-preached.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If the <i>Sunday</i> had become the “<i>Christian
-Sabbath</i>,” why not <i>say so</i>? If, indeed, it was on
-the “Lord’s day” that Jesus arose, why was not
-this asserted? Or, if the first day of the
-week was regarded as the Christian Sabbath,
-why such a studied avoidance of the application
-of this term to that day? Will the gentleman
-insist that if the evangelists had stated, in so
-many words, that the Lord appeared among them
-after his resurrection on the first “<i>Lord’s day</i>,”
-or the first “<i>Christian Sabbath</i>,” that it would
-not have been just what the facts would have
-warranted, if his theory be correct, and that
-thereby all dispute, as to which day is the Lord’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>day, or Christian Sabbath, would have been forever
-terminated? Then why endeavor to impress
-the reader with the thought that there is
-really any peculiar significance in the form of
-expression employed, or that it furnishes a strong
-presumptive argument in favor of first-day sanctity?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The language of the historians is just that which
-men would use when speaking of a secular day, and
-not that which they would naturally employ when
-alluding to a consecrated one. The expression,
-“first day of the week,” was not only the briefer—as
-compared to the other, that is, the “third
-days the crucifixion”—but was definite in
-every particular. Once more, therefore, we insist
-that the fact that the inspired evangelists
-persisted, twenty years after the occurrence
-of the events recorded, in calling the Sunday
-“the first day of the week”—as they have done
-in the six times in which they have mentioned
-it—if guided at all in the selection of this term
-by the usage and opinions of the times in which
-they wrote, have furnished us with a commentary
-which, if it proves anything at all, proves
-that the day now regarded as holy was not so
-esteemed at that time by the disciples generally,
-else those among them who, as historians, would
-have been glad to have conferred upon it this
-honor, would have referred to it in the use of its
-sacred title, “Sabbath,” or the “Lord’s day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As it regards the <i>design of Christ</i>, we take issue
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>with our friend, and offer the following reasons
-for our confident assertion that he is wrong:
-1. His conclusion is not one which is either necessary
-or obvious. God has shown us his method
-of making a holy day. That method he has set
-forth in clear and positive statement, and the observance
-of such a day he has enforced by explicit
-command. This being the case, we must
-infer that he chose that manner because it was
-the best. Hence we should naturally conclude
-that when he wished to change the day of his
-choice, once enforced by a law still binding, he
-would make known his mind in a manner so
-clear and impressive that there could be no room
-for doubt. This, however, in the action of Christ
-alluded to, is far from being the case, because the
-meeting of the Lord with the apostles did not
-necessarily affect the nature of the time on
-which it occurred. Instance the fact heretofore
-cited, that he met with them on a fishing day
-(John chap. 21), and again on Thursday, the day
-of the ascension, without in any way changing the
-character of those days, as all will admit. Now,
-if this could be true of those two days, might it
-not also be true of the first day of the week?
-2. Because, as we have seen, there is not the
-slightest evidence that the <i>apostles inferred</i> that
-it was the intention of Christ to produce the impression
-claimed. For, had this been the case,
-their convictions must have found expression for
-our benefit. 3. Because, manifestly, the conversation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>of Christ is given, so far as it inculcated
-any duty not elsewhere expressed; and in his
-words there is no allusion to any design on his
-part to teach them that the time on which they
-were assembled was holy. 4. Because there is a
-sufficient reason found for the meeting of Christ
-with the apostles on these two occasions, in his
-desire to establish them in the conviction of his
-resurrection, and to instruct them in regard to
-future action.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Before passing from this branch of the subject,
-we must be allowed to express our surprise that,
-in the anxiety of our friend to make out his case,
-he has made a declaration which we think he
-would not have done had he been more deliberate
-in his selection of facts. He says, in speaking
-of John 20:26—the second and only additional
-instance in which, after the first, he claims
-that Christ met with the apostles on the first
-day of the week—as follows: “This interval of
-eight days, from and including the resurrection
-day, brings us, according to the common mode of
-reckoning, and as no one is disposed to dispute,
-to the first day of the next week.” To this we
-reply that, if he means to be understood, by this
-statement, that there is no dispute as to whether
-the second gathering under consideration did occur
-just one week after the first, he mistakes
-greatly. It is by no means true that this is a
-matter about which there is no difference of opinion.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>In order to show the reader that we are
-right in this, we quote the following from many
-testimonies which might be introduced: “‘After
-eight days’ from this meeting, if made to signify
-only one week, necessarily carries us to the second
-day of the week. But a different expression
-is used by the Spirit of inspiration when simply
-one week is intended. ‘After seven days,’ is the
-chosen term of the Holy Spirit when designating
-just one week. ‘After eight days,’ most naturally
-implies the ninth or tenth day; but allowing
-it to mean the eighth day, it fails to prove
-that this appearance of the Saviour was upon
-the first day of the week.” In a note on the
-above remarks, the same author says “Those
-who were to come before God from Sabbath to
-Sabbath to minister in his temple, were said to
-come ‘after seven days.’ 1 Chron. 9:25; 2 Kings
-11:5.”—<i>Hist. of Sabbath, by J. H. Andrews</i>, p.
-148.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Right here, also, is the proper place to give attention
-to the elaborate argument which is made
-to produce upon the mind of the reader the impression
-that the presence of Christ, in the two
-instances mentioned, was expressly designed for
-the purpose of distinguishing the two first-days
-(?) upon which he manifested himself to his disciples.
-We should not do justice to our opponent,
-should we refuse to grant him credit for making
-a doubtful circumstance go as far in his favor as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>it were possible for any man to do. What he
-has said is both poetic and pathetic. Poetic, because
-it is purely a figment of his own imagination.
-Pathetic, because the spectacle here brought
-to view is one which appeals most forcibly to the
-sympathies of the generous reader. Who would
-not commiserate the condition of men who, for
-six weary days, sat in public assembly, waiting
-the momentary expected advent of their Lord?
-Who would not rejoice when finally he appeared
-in their midst, even if it were on the first day of
-the week? How natural, too, it would be for
-the reader, having his sympathies thus aroused,
-to follow him who has shown an art, at least dramatic,
-in playing upon their feelings, to the conclusion
-to which he springs—not by the route of
-logical deduction—but by that of a more fascinating
-sentimentalism.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But before he does this, let us descend for a
-moment from the hights of fancy to the lower
-grounds of prosaic fact. It strikes us that the
-gentleman will discover that he has paid too
-high a price for what he has obtained. Where
-did he learn that they assembled on the six days
-in question? Assuredly not from the record, for
-that is silent upon this point. Nay, more; he
-does not himself claim that he has any written
-authority for it, but simply says that he “believes”
-so and so, and then proceeds to his deductions.
-Well, with this understanding of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>matter, and knowing that it is merely an inference
-of the writer, let us follow his conclusions
-to their legitimate consequences. Having done
-this, we perceive, 1. That at last we have reached
-a whole week, every day of which was one of religious
-meetings, and yet not one word recorded
-in regard to the gatherings which occurred on six
-out of the seven days of the week. This being
-true by his own concession, what has become of
-that argument in which he indulged so largely in
-his effort to prove that because there was no account
-of a meeting of Christians on the Sabbath,
-they were consequently not in the habit of meeting
-on that day? Does it not fall to the ground,
-utterly emptied of all its force, if it ever had any?
-2. Where, now, is his oft-repeated declaration that
-there is no account of the meeting of any of the
-apostles with a Christian church on the Sabbath,
-and the conclusion therefrom, that they therefore
-held none? Here is the admission of the writer
-himself, that the apostles and the church at Jerusalem
-did meet on at least one seventh day
-after the resurrection of Christ. 3. What has
-become of the instructive lesson which Christ imparted
-to his followers on the evening of the day
-of his resurrection? Has it not been insisted
-that that visit was made for the <i>especial purpose</i>
-of teaching, them, by example, and by meeting
-with them, that the day on which it occurred
-was <i>holy time</i>? If we have rightly apprehended
-the logic of our opponent, this was the precise
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>moral which our Lord designed to convey by his
-manifestation on that occasion. How clear it is
-that such a conviction has rested upon the mind
-of the writer, and how often he has repeated it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But how was it with the apostles? Now, certainly,
-they were not <i>more obtuse</i> than <i>we</i> are.
-Assuredly, they knew as much about the will
-and purpose of Christ in meeting with them the
-first time, as we do now. Did <i>they</i> then infer
-that Christ met with them expressly for the purpose,
-not of honoring by positive precept, but by
-the fact of his assembling with them, the day on
-which that assembly occurred? If so, why should
-they, according to the view we are considering,
-have gathered themselves together every day for
-the whole subsequent week, expecting his presence?
-Would they not have discovered that
-<i>such presence</i>, under <i>such circumstances</i>, would
-have utterly <i>nullified</i> the moral lesson of the
-<i>first visit</i>, since it would not afterwards be true
-that the first day of the week was the <i>only one</i>
-which he had thus distinguished, thereby marking
-it out from the rest of the week?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So much for the consequences which would
-necessarily follow, had that occurred which the
-writer says he “believes” took place. But, fortunately,
-or unfortunately for him, the whole
-thing is a myth from beginning to end. The only
-force which it posseses lies in the assumed fact
-that it brings together eight meetings on consecutive
-days, on two of which, and two only, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>Lord met with his followers, those two being first
-days of the weeks to which they belonged. Therefore,
-before the statement can possess any argumentative
-power, we must first grant him the
-privilege of assuming that six of these meetings
-occurred when there is not a scintilla of evidence
-in the sacred narrative to favor his view.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>That must be a desperate cause indeed which
-compels its advocates to such a resort to make
-out their case. Nevertheless, if the conception
-has accomplished nothing more, it has furnished
-us a key by which we have been able to unlock
-the secret conviction of the writer, and by that
-means, we learn that he does not himself believe
-either that Christ <i>told</i> his disciples on the day
-of the resurrection that that was holy time; or
-that they had decided <i>in their own minds</i> that
-his visit necessarily pointed out this fact; or that
-the meeting of a Christian church on a secular
-day proves that they regarded that day as sacred;
-or that it is necessary to suppose that any church
-<i>disregarded the Sabbath</i>, simply because there is
-no <i>historic mention</i> of their observance of it.
-This being true, we hope from this time forward
-that we shall see a line of argument pursued
-which will be consistent with the admissions inadvertently
-made above.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Finally—as we have the concession of the
-writer, that the mention of the term, “first day
-of the week,” in the texts under consideration,
-accorded with the use of language as employed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>twenty years after the crucifixion—let us glance
-at his proof-texts for ourselves. In doing so, the
-reader will bear in mind that these texts furnish
-all the gospel testimony in reference to the supposed
-repudiation of God’s ancient Sabbath and
-the substitution of a new one in its place, and
-also that the terms employed, as stated above,
-were used with reference to their meaning at the
-time they were penned.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The first is found in Matt. 28:1-6. In Matt. 28:1,
-the apostle says: “In the end of the Sabbath,
-as it began to dawn toward the first day of
-the week, came Mary Magdalene and the other
-Mary to see the sepulcher.” Now which day, in
-the parlance of the disciples of our Lord, twenty
-years after his death, was styled the Sabbath?
-Which was mentioned by the use of a secular
-title, whereas, custom, reason, and religion, all
-warranted and would have seemed to demand the
-application to it of a religious title, such as Sabbath,
-or Lord’s day? We leave the reader to answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The next scripture is found in Mark 16:1, 2.
-Here, again, the same distinction is preserved between
-the holy and the profane. “When the
-Sabbath was past,” the women who had bought
-sweet spices came to the sepulcher very early in
-the morning, the first day of the week. The next
-passage is in verse 9 of the same chapter, where
-it is barely stated that Jesus, having risen on the
-first day of the week, appeared first to Mary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>Magdalene. Did the historian, Mark, ruthlessly
-wound the feelings of his Christian brethren, by
-neglecting two splendid opportunities for settling
-the matter of a change of days for all future generations,
-or did he not believe in such a change?
-Which view is the more consistent, under the circumstances,
-with the manner in which he speaks?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The next test in order, with the context, will
-be found in Luke 23:54-56, and 24:1. Let the
-reader turn to these passages in his Bible and examine
-them carefully. In Luke 23:56, it is stated
-that the women “rested the Sabbath day, according
-to the commandment;” and in the first
-verse of the following chapter, it is said that “upon
-the first day of the week, very early in the
-morning, they came unto the sepulcher.” Here,
-again, Luke—than whom there is no sacred
-writer who uses terms more frequently with reference
-to their technical meaning—furnishes
-us a comment in perfect harmony with that of
-the others. Mark him; he is very specific. He
-says the women “rested the Sabbath day, according
-to the commandment.” Observe, it is not the
-“<i>old</i> commandment,” but “<i>the</i> commandment.”
-But again, What day was it upon which they
-rested? It was the Sabbath day. How did it
-stand related in the order of the week to the
-first day? It was the day before it. Did the
-women, according to his statement, observe the
-first day? No; for they came to do that upon
-it which they would not do on the Sabbath, <i>i. e.</i>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>to embalm the body of Christ. But were they
-deceived, and was the day on which they came
-to the tomb, after all, sacred to the Lord, because
-of the resurrection of Christ, which had occurred
-early in the morning? Was this indeed the
-Lord’s day, the Christian Sabbath? And had
-the old Sabbath expired at the cross (Col. 2:16)
-before the deluded women rested upon it? Then
-we inquire again, Why should an inspired apostle
-pass by unimproved this magnificent opportunity
-for recognizing the new order of things by
-dropping that plain, unpretending “first day of
-the week,” and stating for the benefit of posterity
-that the day on which they repaired to the sepulcher
-was the Sabbath of the commandment, as
-changed by the authority of Christ?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The remaining passages are those of John 20:1, 19.
-Here, once more, it is stated that “the
-first day of the week cometh Mary Magdalene
-early to the sepulcher,” and also in the 19th
-verse, that Jesus met with his disciples in the
-evening of the first day of the week. In these
-words, John, the beloved disciple, like all before
-him, alludes to the day as though it were a common
-one.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thus we have seen that the four gospel historians
-all unite in ignoring the sacred title of Sunday,
-if it had any, and merely designate it by
-its proper numeral; while three of them call the
-seventh day the Sabbath, and locate it in the
-week as the day which precedes the first.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>Now we appeal to the candid reader in view
-of these facts, and ask him to decide which day
-of the week was looked upon as peculiarly sacred
-at the time the gospels were written, provided
-the gentleman is <i>right</i> in supposing that the historians
-used language with reference to its acceptance
-when they wrote, instead of what it
-meant when the events, which they record, transpired.
-We believe the verdict will not be long
-delayed. They call the seventh day “the Sabbath
-of the commandment.” That commandment,
-it is conceded, is still binding. If it reads
-the same now that it did then, the day which
-was the Sabbath at that time, according to that
-commandment, is still the Sabbath according to
-the same commandment. But if that commandment
-has been changed, we once more challenge
-the religious world to furnish us a copy of it as
-it now reads. Until they do so, we shall continue
-to observe the Sabbath upon which the devout
-women rested; on which our Lord himself rested
-in the tomb from his labors; and which four inspired
-men, twenty years later, more or less, still
-persisted in calling “<i>the</i> Sabbath.”</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>
- <h2 id='reply04' class='c006'>STATESMAN’S REPLY. <br /> ARTICLE FOUR. <br /> ARGUMENT FOR THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH FROM THE GIFT OF THE HOLY SPIRIT ON THE DAY OF PENTECOST.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>The testimony brought forward in our last
-number from the Gospels for the first-day Sabbath
-finds abundant confirmation in other portions
-of the New-Testament Scriptures. We
-shall confine ourselves in this article to the argument
-drawn from the beginning of the second
-chapter of the Acts: “And when the day of
-Pentecost was fully come, they were all with one
-accord in one place.” There has been so much
-discussion of this passage that a somewhat careful
-consideration of it may be of interest in itself,
-as well as from its important connection with the
-subject now specially in hand. In regard to it,
-we note:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>1. The day of the outpouring of the Spirit
-was the day of Pentecost—not some day preceding
-or following. The correct rendering of the
-original words is not, as Lightfoot gives it, “when
-the day of Pentecost had passed,” nor as Hitzig
-would have it, “as the day of Pentecost was approaching
-its fulfillment;” but, “while the day
-of Pentecost was being fulfilled;” that is, during
-the progress of that particular day, or, as our
-authorized English version has it, “when the
-day of Pentecost was fully come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>2. This day of Pentecost, on which the Holy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>Spirit was given, was the first day of the week.
-A number of eminent authorities, chief among
-whom is the chronologist Wieseler, compute it to
-have been the seventh. This question hinges
-upon that of the day of the Lord’s death. It is
-almost universally admitted that Christ was crucified
-on Friday. But it is disputed whether
-that Friday was the fourteenth or the fifteenth of
-Nisan. From Leviticus 23:15, 16, we learn that
-Pentecost, signifying literally the fiftieth, was
-counted from the second day of unleavened bread.
-The paschal lamb was killed at the close of the
-fourteenth day of the month Abib or Nisan, and
-the next day, the fifteenth, was the first day of
-unleavened bread. This day was regarded as a
-holy Sabbath; and from the morrow following,
-that is, from the sixteenth of Nisan, fifty days
-were to be reckoned to determine the day of Pentecost.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Wieseler contends that the Lord was crucified
-on the fifteenth of Nisan—the first day of unleavened
-bread. The sixteenth of the month
-would therefore fall on the seventh day of the
-week, and fifty days, reckoned from and including
-this, according to the manner of the Jews,
-would fix the day of Pentecost on the Jewish
-Sabbath. It is interesting to observe that many
-who agree with Wieseler in regarding the Friday
-of Christ’s crucifixion as the fifteenth of Nisan,
-still reckon the fifty days so as to make Pentecost
-fall on the first day of the week. Prominent
-among these chronologists is Canon Wordsworth.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In all frankness, we would admit that Wordsworth’s
-reckoning will not hold. If the Friday
-on which the Lord was crucified was the fifteenth
-of Nisan, and if that day was observed as the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>first day of unleavened bread so that the specified
-fifty days would be reckoned from the following
-day, then Pentecost must have occurred on
-the seventh day of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Others of our ablest scholars, such as Greswell,
-Elliott, and Schaff, maintain that the day on
-which our Lord was crucified was the fourteenth
-of Nisan. An exhaustive discussion of this whole
-question would be out of place in these columns.
-We give a brief, and we think conclusive, argument
-in favor of the view that the Friday of our
-Lord’s death was the fourteenth of Nisan, and
-that therefore the fifteenth Nisan, or first day of
-unleavened bread, coincided with the Jewish Sabbath.
-The reasons in favor of this view are the
-following:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(1.) The language of John, chap. 18:28, intimates
-clearly that the Jews had not, on the
-morning of Friday, yet partaken of the passover.
-Friday could not therefore have been the fifteenth
-of Nisan.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2.) The same day, Friday, John states that
-“it was the preparation of the passover.” (Chap.
-19:14.) It seems next to impossible to understand
-this expression in any other way than as
-referring to that day, Friday, as the day of preparation
-for Passover observance, or, in other
-words, as the day preceding the fifteenth Nisan.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(3.) John’s statement, in chap. 19:31, that the
-Sabbath following the day of crucifixion was “a
-high day,” admits of no easy or natural explanation
-except that of the coincidence of the first
-day of unleavened bread, or the fifteenth Nisan,
-with the seventh-day Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(4.) The anti-typical character of Christ, as
-the Paschal Lamb of God and the true Passover
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>Sacrifice (John 1:29, 36; 1 Cor. 5:7), would
-lead us to expect that the very day and hour of
-his death would correspond with the time of the
-killing of the typical Passover lamb. If it be
-urged that Christ himself, with his disciples, in
-obeying the requirements of the law, killed the
-Passover on the evening of the fourteenth, and
-that the Synoptical Gospels intimate this, it may
-be replied that such an interpretation of Matthew,
-Mark, and Luke, is not required, and that
-the exceeding difficulty, not to say impossibility,
-of harmonizing it with the statements already
-quoted from John, is quite decisive against it. It
-is much easier to interpret the Synoptists in the
-light of John’s Gospel. In this chapter, 13:1, we
-are informed of a supper <i>before</i> the passover.
-That this was the same supper spoken of by the
-Synoptists, though one day before the usual time,
-in order that the true Passover lamb might be put
-to death at the time appointed, appears from the
-peculiar nature of the message sent by chosen
-apostle, to the “good man of the house”—a
-message of special direction, pointing out something
-of an unusual character. (See Matthew
-28:18; Mark 14:14; and Luke 22:11.) There
-are also in the Synoptical Gospels a number of
-statements showing that the Friday on which
-our Lord was crucified was not marked by the
-Sabbatic sacredness belonging to the first day of
-unleavened bread. (See Matthew 27:59; Mark
-15:42, 46; Luke 23:56.) This seems to be the
-easiest and most natural way of harmonizing the
-apparent discrepancies between the Synoptists
-and John.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(5.) Wieseler’s own chronological tables may
-be used against him to show that the Friday of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>our Lord’s crucifixion was the fourteenth of Nisan.
-We would speak with becoming diffidence,
-in any attempt to make out a system of chronology
-for the events recorded in Scripture. There
-are, however, in Wieseler’s elaborate book, tables
-independently proved to be accurate. By them,
-admitting the year of our Lord’s crucifixion to
-have been <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 30, which is regarded by most
-chronologists as highly probable, and admitting
-also that the day was Friday, which will not be
-disputed, it is shown, beyond all doubt, that
-Christ died on the fourteenth of Nisan, and must
-have eaten the passover with his disciples on the
-first hours of that day, the preceding evening.
-The tables referred to show, by the most minute
-and accurate calculations, that in the year, <span class='fss'>A. D.</span>
-30, the new moon for the month Nisan appeared
-on Wednesday, the next to the last day of the
-preceding month, corresponding to March 22, at
-eight minutes past eight o’clock in the evening.
-Hence, it would follow that the first day of Nisan
-commenced on Friday evening, March 24,
-corresponding, as to daylight, with Saturday,
-March 25; of course, the Friday of the next week,
-would be the seventh Nisan, and the same day,
-the following week, the fourteenth. Thus, according
-to Wieseler’s own tables, Friday of the
-week of our Lord’s passion is made out to be the
-fourteenth of Nisan. The fifteenth of Nisan,
-then, or the first day of unleavened bread, coincided
-at that time with the seventh day of the
-week, or the Jewish Sabbath; and reckoning
-fifty days from the morrow, that day included,
-we find Pentecost falling on the first day of the
-eighth week following our Lord’s crucifixion.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So clear and emphatic is the testimony of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>primitive church to this fact that many who
-hold that the Friday of Christ’s death was the
-fifteenth Nisan still do so in cordial indorsement
-of that fact. They reconcile the apparent difference
-between John and the Synoptists by supposing
-that the Jewish authorities, probably because
-of the crucifixion, or for some other reason,
-did not observe the Passover at the usual time,
-but, passing by the fifteenth Nisan, in reality
-kept the sixteenth in its place; and thus counting
-the fifty days from the seventeenth of the
-month, instead of the sixteenth, Pentecost would
-fall on the first day of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is worth mentioning, before we pass on, that
-the Karaite Jews, like the Sadducces before them,
-understand the word “Sabbath” in Leviticus 23:11,
-15, 16, to mean, not the first day of unleavened
-bread, which was kept as a Sabbath, on
-whatever day of the week it might fall, but the
-seventh day of the week, the regular weekly
-Sabbath of the Jews. According to this understanding,
-the fifty days would always be reckoned
-from the morrow after the seventh day, and Pentecost
-would always fall on the first day of the
-week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Having thus been at some pains to establish
-the fundamental position in this argument
-a position to which scholars generally are coming
-with constantly increasing unanimity, we
-need not dwell long upon the manifest application
-of what has been proven. The facts
-here, after Christ’s ascension, are full of significance,
-as we have seen the facts to be concerning
-the days just succeeding his resurrection.
-After the Lord’s ascension, his disciples abode in
-Jerusalem, awaiting the promised gift of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>Spirit. Many days passed by, including two
-seventh days, and still no fulfillment of the promise.
-On the first day of the second week after the
-ascension, the disciples were all with one accord in
-one place. Once more, the day which the Lord
-had singled out and honored is specially honored
-by the plentiful effusion of the Spirit of God. And
-thus the day which Christ taught his disciples to
-regard with special sacredness, by repeatedly appearing
-to them in their collective gatherings,
-and blessing them, is even more clearly and significantly
-marked out from the other days of the
-week by this most marvelous outpouring of the
-Holy Spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If it be objected that it was the Jewish festival,
-and not the first day of the week, that was
-honored, it is readily replied that there is no
-trace of the services of the Jewish festival on
-that blessed day. The Holy Ghost was given,
-not to persons observing Jewish ordinances and
-keeping the Pentecost of the old dispensation
-with a new meat-offering and first-fruits. He
-was given to Christian disciples met on the
-Christian’s honored day; and the disciples who
-on that day had received important spiritual instructions
-from the Lord just after his resurrection,
-and who now, on the same day, received the
-promised Spirit, begin the true work of the
-Christian Sabbath by preaching the gospel of
-salvation, and three thousand souls are added to
-the church of Christ.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The objection, on the score that Pentecost only
-happened to fall on the first day that year, is unworthy
-of any one who believes that “not a sparrow
-falls to the ground, without our Heavenly
-Father’s notice.” It has been admitted that if
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>the view of the Karaite Jews were true, and Pentecost
-occurred every year on the first day of the
-week, then would there be a strong argument for
-the first-day Sabbath in the pre-arrangements of
-God’s providence. But to our mind, the argument
-from the pre-arrangement of providence is
-stronger on the other and better interpretation of
-Leviticus 23:11, 15, 16. He who in infinite wisdom
-arranged everything from the beginning,
-so ordered all events connected with Christ’s
-death, as to make the day of Pentecost coincide
-with the Christian Sabbath, and then gathered to
-himself, not the first-fruits of the fields of grain,
-but three thousand immortal souls, the first-fruits
-of the ingathering of the spiritual fields white to
-the harvest—the harvest of all the Gentile nations
-yet to be brought into the church of Christ,
-with the restoration of the covenant people of
-old. This is a Pentecost worthy of the church of
-Him who died for sinners of every race, and of
-the honored day which commemorates his rising
-from the dead.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='rejoinder04' class='c006'>A REJOINDER. <br /> “ARGUMENT FOR THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH FROM THE GIFT OF THE HOLY SPIRIT ON THE DAY OF PENTECOST.”</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>It is always a source of satisfaction to one, in
-examining opinions from which he is compelled
-to differ, to feel that the presentation of them
-which he is considering is the best which could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>be made under the circumstances. With pleasure,
-therefore, we recognize the manifest tokens
-of research and erudition on the part of the author
-of the views presented in the columns of the
-<i>Statesman</i>, in the communication entitled, “Argument
-for the first-day Sabbath from the gift of
-the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost.” We
-do not flatter ourselves, however, that all which
-has been said in that article was for our benefit.
-It is not a little remarkable that three-fourths of
-its contents are devoted to the settlement of a
-point, which—while indeed it affects the question
-at issue—is not one upon which we bestowed
-many words, having preferred to consider, for the
-sake of argument, that the Pentecost did, on the
-year of our Lord’s crucifixion, fall upon the first
-day of the week; and then, having done this, to
-prove that this coincidence in no way affected,
-necessarily, the nature of that day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nevertheless, we must beg leave here to express
-our gratitude that, notwithstanding the
-concession in question, the readers of the <i>Statesman</i>
-are at last instructed by an abler pen than
-our own in reference to the diversity of opinion
-which exists among the learned as to whether,
-indeed, it is safe to conclude that the Sunday, to
-the exclusion of the Sabbath, was the day upon
-which the Holy Spirit descended upon the apostles.
-Be it remembered, also, that the learned
-men who stand as the advocates of the seventh
-day as the one which God thus honored were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>not observers of that day as the Sabbath. All
-the authorities quoted are men who, if they regarded
-any Sabbath at all, gave their preference
-to the first, and not to the last, day of the week.
-This being the case, they certainly cannot be
-charged with any bias in favor of the creation
-Sabbath. Not only so, but all their predilections
-were doubtless against that day, and favorable
-to its rival. Hence we see that when, under
-these circumstances, it is admitted that such distinguished
-men as Lightfoot, Weiseler, and Hitzig,
-have agreed that the last day of the week
-was the one on which the Pentecost occurred at
-the time in question, they did so—not in the interest
-of preconceived notions, nor for the purpose
-of bolstering up a theory which was in desperate
-need of help—but because there was, to
-their minds, at least, much which compelled a
-conclusion they would gladly have avoided.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Right here, also, in order to widen the breach
-in the wall of evidence, we beg leave to act in
-harmony with the plan pursued by the writer,
-and to present a note from the pen of one no less
-distinguished than Professor Hackett, which will
-make it manifest beyond dispute that the scholars
-who at the present time sympathize with
-those cited above, who regard the seventh day of
-the week and not the first as having been the
-day of the Pentecost, are both numerous and celebrated:
-“It is generally supposed that this Pentecost,
-signalized by the outpouring of the Spirit,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>fell on the Jewish Sabbath, our Saturday.” Quoted
-in “Hist. of Sab.,” by J. N. A., page 150.
-Let the reader bear in mind that we are not
-assuming to decide between these long lines
-of doctors who differ so widely upon a very important
-point, as regarded by some; but that our
-purpose is simply to call attention to the fact of
-this discrepancy, and to show its bearing upon
-the subject under discussion.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The first query which should be propounded,
-therefore, is this: Has God ever declared that
-the day of the Pentecost, which we are trying
-to locate, was identical with the first day of the
-week? The answer is in the negative. There
-is not one word in the text (Acts 2:1, 2), or in
-the Testament, in regard to the day of the week
-on which these events occurred. It is simply
-stated that they took place “when the day of
-Pentecost was fully come,” How remarkable, if
-the object was not to honor a feast which occurred
-annually, but especially for the purpose
-of distinguishing the first day of the week! Before,
-however, that day could be illustrated by
-the outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon it, it
-must first he decided—and that, too, from Bible
-evidence—that such outpouring did occur on the
-day specified. Can this be done? We appeal
-for a response to the average Christian men and
-women of this time. Tell me, after having read
-the three-column argument of the gentleman, has
-not the effect of what he has said been to unsettle,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>rather than to establish, your convictions
-upon the point before our minds? If never before,
-is it not now true that you feel somewhat
-shaken in regard to the identity of the Sunday
-with the Pentecost, on the year of the crucifixion?
-In view of what has been written, would
-you undertake to establish your faith from any
-deduction which you yourself could make from
-plain Scripture declarations? Is it not true that
-your opinion in the promises depends entirely
-upon the faith of the one or the other class of
-scholars who have ranged themselves on both
-sides of this subject? Has the religion of Jesus
-Christ then changed? Is it no longer true that
-its great and important practical truths are withheld
-“from the wise and prudent, and revealed
-unto babes”? Has God left the important question
-of first-day sanctity, not upon the solid basis
-of explicit command, but upon the doubtful inference
-which is to be derived from certain transactions
-which occurred on a certain day, and then
-left the day of their occurrence to occupy a position
-in the week so doubtful that the most learned
-of those who had a desire to keep it should
-be honestly divided in opinion as to which day
-it was? We believe not. To our mind, it is
-simple presumption to intimate that God—who
-is not willing that any should perish, and who
-has said that he will do nothing but he will reveal
-it to his servants the prophets—should deal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>with his creatures in a manner at once so indirect
-and so obscure.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Having seen that there is a wide divergence of
-views among the very men who are the observers
-of the modern Sunday, in regard to its claims to
-distinction on the score of its having been first
-honored by the outpouring of the Spirit on the
-fiftieth day after the resurrection, let us look for
-a moment at the situation with reference to the
-possible effect upon the seventh day, of the logic
-employed. Taking it for granted that our friends
-would not fly from their favorite deduction provided
-it should prove to be true that they are
-mistaken in regard to the time of the Pentecost,
-let us concede, for the time being, that the long line
-of celebrities, headed by such men as Lightfoot,
-Weiseler, and Hitzig, were right in arguing that
-Saturday, and not Sunday, was the day on which
-the great Jewish festival occurred; then, beyond
-all dispute, it must be conceded by our opponents
-that this was but another effort on the part of
-Jehovah to illustrate, for the benefit of succeeding
-generations, the day which he had previously
-made memorable by his resting, his blessing, and
-his sanctification. In other words, with this view
-of the design of the outpouring of the Spirit,
-the effect upon the ancient Sabbath would be the
-same as it is now claimed to have been upon the
-first day of the week. The point, therefore, of
-the identity of the days is to <i>them</i> a <i>vital</i> one.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>If they are wrong in this, they are wrong in all.
-We appeal to them, therefore, in view of the infinite
-consequences which hang upon the proper
-celebration of the right Sabbath, to at least make
-their logic so plain that it will be accepted by
-men of their own faith, before they speak of its
-strength with great assumption of confidence.
-Before any person has a right to employ the
-events which transpired at the time of the Pentecostal
-outpouring of the Spirit in the interest
-of Sunday sanctity, he must be able to solve, at
-least to the satisfaction of his own mind, all the
-difficulties which complicate this question. As
-God has never seen fit to say that the Jewish
-feast, at the time under consideration, transpired
-on the first day of the week, he must be able to
-establish that proposition independently of an
-explicit <i>thus saith the Lord</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There are two ways by which this may be attempted.
-(1.) By proving that the Pentecost always
-took place on the first day of the week;
-or, (2.) By demonstrating that Christ was crucified
-on Friday, the fourteenth day of Nisan, and
-that consequently the Pentecost must have fallen
-upon a Sunday following, and separated from
-that day by about fifty days. But, so far as the
-first proposition is concerned, which would be by
-far the easier of demonstration, if it were true—should
-the reader be inclined to favor it—he
-must convince himself that he could establish it
-against the conviction and the learning of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>writer in question; for he rejects it as being untenable.
-Should he therefore turn to the second,
-then, as remarked above, he must be able to prove,
-not merely that Christ died on the fourteenth
-day of the Jewish month Nisan, but that likewise
-that fourteenth day of the month was also the
-sixth day of the week. When we say that this
-will be a task which few minds are capable of
-performing, and from which those who are best
-informed will the most readily turn away, We
-but assert what the writer in question has very
-distinctly shadowed forth in the facile manner in
-which he disposes of the obscurity of the statements
-in the three Synoptical Gospels by arbitrarily
-deciding that they must be interpreted by
-that of John.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>What the real object of the writer was in making
-the statement that the Karaites and the Sadducees
-hold to the first theory stated above, we
-are at a loss to decide, since he himself concludes
-that they were wrong in their hypothesis. But
-let us suppose for a moment that they were right,
-and that the Pentecost always followed the weekly
-Sabbath; would that prove that it occurred
-on Sunday? We answer, Yes. But would it
-prove that Sunday was therefore holy time? We
-answer, No; it would not so much as touch this
-independent question. Or rather, it should be
-said, if it affected it at all, it would increase the
-strength of the seventh-day Sabbath argument.
-Do you ask, How? We answer that, according to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>their theory, you must first have a weekly Sabbath
-before you could decide when you had
-reached the Pentecost Sunday. The direction in
-Leviticus was, that they should count to themselves
-seven Sabbaths from the day that they
-brought the sheaf of the wave-offering, which
-would bring them to the feast in question.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now let it be supposed that the crucifixion answered
-to the ancient Passover, and that the
-apostles proceeded to the determination of the
-time when the Pentecost would be reached, according
-to the theory of the Karaites. The first
-thing which would have been necessary was, the
-weekly Sabbath, which immediately followed the
-crucifixion of Christ. Having found it, they
-would have numbered seven Sabbaths, and have
-decided that the day immediately following the
-last of these answered to the feast. But unfortunately
-for them they would have discovered—had
-they believed in the modern doctrine that
-the law of the Sabbath was nailed to the cross,
-Col. 2:16(?)—that they were deprived of a starting
-point; for the Sabbath institution is a thing
-of commandment. Take away the commandment,
-and the institution is gone. Therefore, as
-the cross had accomplished its work, and had
-been taken down on Friday, God had removed
-the landmark from which they were commanded
-to measure the time which should bring them to
-the Pentecost at the very period when they
-needed it most. In reality, there was left them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>no Sabbath which answered to the one in Leviticus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Should it be replied, however, that the Sabbath,
-though gone in fact, existed nevertheless in
-name, it might be responded that this would indeed
-be an anomalous condition of things. Mark
-it: it is not the incidental mention, by its proper
-name, of an institution which had ceased to be,
-which we are considering; but it is the deliberate
-action of that God who knows the end from
-the beginning, in compelling the disciples to treat
-the seventh day of the week as the Sabbath, in
-order to the decision of an important fact; for
-eight weeks after, as is claimed, it had lost its
-Sabbatic character.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Again; should it be urged, as a means of escape
-from the embarrassments of the situation,
-that God did not actually require them to count
-the seventh day as the Sabbath, since there was
-really no day of Pentecost which they were
-obliged to keep on the year of our Lord’s crucifixion,
-we answer, Very good. Then, of course, we
-shall hear nothing hereafter from the argument
-for Sunday sanctity which is based upon the hypothesis
-that the day of Pentecost fell on the
-first day of the week in the year in question,
-since it will have been admitted that there was
-no Pentecost that year, and consequently that it
-could not properly be said to have fallen upon
-any day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Once more; should it be insisted that though
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>the Pentecostal feast was not binding in the year
-of our Lord 30, or thereabout, but that the antitype
-of the feast was the thing of importance,
-then, in reply, it may be said that God rendered
-it necessary for them, in order to locate that antitype
-according to the Karaite view, to count
-the Sabbath which followed the crucifixion as the
-Sabbath of emotion, a thing which certainly will
-be very difficult of explanation by those who
-can speak as becomingly of the providence of
-God as did the gentleman in the article which is
-passing under review.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Finally, we repeat, therefore, that, if indeed
-there were a legal Pentecost this side of the death
-of our Lord, and if the Karaite system for locating
-it were the right one, then the seventh day
-which followed the death of Christ was distinguished
-by three very significant facts. 1. It
-was honored by the women (and therefore by the
-disciples) by their resting upon it. 2. Luke, in
-speaking of it thirty years subsequent to its occurrence,
-mentions it as the Sabbath, “according
-to the commandment.” 3. God made it necessary
-that the whole Jewish nation should keep the
-Pentecostal feast fifty days after the crucifixion
-of the Lord; and, in doing so, that they should
-count the seventh day of the week as still continuing
-to be the Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In passing to the last branch of the subject,
-which will be treated in this article, we invite
-the reader to note the following facts, as we shall
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>have occasion to employ them hereafter: 1. That
-the writer proceeds with his reasoning upon the
-hypothesis that the months at the time of the
-crucifixion were Jewish months, commencing
-with the new moon. 2. That the days were
-Jewish days, commencing and ending with the
-setting of the sun. These points we have previously
-urged, and are happy to see that they are
-conceded as being correct.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In conclusion, we turn our attention to the remaining
-feature of the communication in the
-<i>Statesman</i>, <i>i. e.</i>, that portion of the article which
-relates to the real matter in dispute, namely—granting,
-for the sake of argument, that the first
-day of the week was the one on which the Pentecost
-fell in the year under consideration—whether
-that fact necessarily affected the character
-of that day so as to mark it out as one which
-God had chosen as peculiarly his own. For, be it
-remembered, that—though the whole argument
-which has been made respecting the identity of
-those two days should be conceded—we should
-then simply be prepared to decide whether the
-facts agreed upon would prove what is claimed,
-or not.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We ask, therefore, the candid attention of all
-to the use which has been made of the elaborate
-argument which we have been carefully considering,
-point by point. We would naturally have
-expected—if the gentleman felt that he had
-proved what he desired to, namely, that the Pentecost
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>fell upon the first day of the week—that
-the real sinews of a masterly logic would have
-been discovered in an effort to show that it followed
-of necessity that it must therefore have
-been holy time. But has he done this? Or, in
-other words, if he has, in what manner has he
-brought it about? Has it been by fair logical
-deduction? We believe that there are very few
-who will insist that he has attempted such a deduction,
-with any measure of success, at the very
-point where it should have been expected most.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>What he has said in the connection is very
-<i>pretty</i>. Yes, pretty is the word which precisely
-expresses it. How handsomely he alludes to the
-analogy between the natural harvest and the in-gathering
-of souls. But who does not know that
-such analogies are cheap things, and that one
-gifted with a prolific fancy can multiply them
-indefinitely? What was expected, and what we
-had a right to demand, was something which partook
-of the nature of certainty. How great was
-our disappointment at learning that the writer
-did not even <i>pretend to have any authority from
-the Lord</i>, so far as written statements are concerned.
-The whole thing he thought was fairly
-<i>deducible</i> from the coincidence of days, since nothing
-ever merely “happens” to occur in the providence
-of God.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>What has been gained, then? Manifestly,
-simply the point that God had some object in
-view in having the Pentecost fall on the first
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>day of the week in the year of our Lord 30, or
-thereabout. The next question to be decided is,
-What was that object? Right here is where we
-<i>need help</i>. <i>God could have given</i> it to us, had
-he <i>seen fit</i> so to do. He has not done so, therefore
-it is safe to conclude that it was not important
-that we should know what his purpose was.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But if any gentleman can be found who is <i>wise
-above what is written</i>, and who is able to decide
-with unerring certainty as to the motives of God
-at all times, and under all circumstances, we
-should like to propound a few questions to him.
-First, what did God mean when, in his providence,
-he allowed the Pentecost to fall upon Monday,
-Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, or
-Saturday? It is said that God <i>had a purpose</i> in
-it; but can any one tell us <i>what</i> that purpose
-was? When he has answered this, then we have
-a list of similar interrogatories, to the solution of
-which his wisdom will be invited. In the meantime,
-we shall adopt the suggestions of men in
-regard to plans of Deity with great caution, for,
-if it should fall out in the day of Judgment that
-we had followed their fallacious inferences, to the
-disregard of a positive, written law of God, we
-know not what defense could be made for our
-course of conduct, since we had been previously
-informed that “his judgments are <i>unsearchable</i>,”
-“and his ways <i>past finding out</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now let us look at the proposition concerning
-the outpouring of the Spirit. It is agreed on all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>hands that the manifestation occurred as written.
-It is inferred by the writer in question that it
-was done with reference especially to the honoring
-as sacred of the day of the resurrection.
-Here, again, is the assumption of knowledge
-which has never been imparted by divine authority.
-God has never <i>said</i> that he meant any such
-thing. Not only so, but it cannot even be fairly
-inferred that such was his purpose. First. Because
-he does not so much as mention, in the record,
-the first day of the week by name, an omission
-which can never be explained satisfactorily by
-those who insist that the events which occurred
-on the day of Pentecost transpired with especial
-reference to the honoring above all others, on the
-part of Jehovah, of the first day of the week.
-Secondly. Because, were we to judge at all in the
-matter, as he passed over six first-days, waiting
-for the arrival of the Pentecost, we must conclude
-that there was something in connection with that
-feast which induced him to act when he did, and
-as he did. Thirdly. Because the Pentecost furnished
-an opportunity for the display of the
-power of the ascended Christ before thousands of
-Jews and proselytes from all parts of the habitable
-globe, more advantageously than could be
-done at any other time; thus rendering it unnecessary
-that any other reason should be sought in
-explanation of its selection from among the other
-days of the year for the great outpouring of the
-Spirit. Fourthly. Because, in apostolic times, it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>was not an uncommon thing for the Holy Ghost
-to fall upon men on all days of the week; thus
-proving that God is not restricted in the outpouring
-of his Spirit to holy times and places,
-and that it is not safe to conclude that any display
-of his power in this direction was made at
-any one time because of a special regard for the
-particular hours on which it took place.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In conclusion, as the fabric of Sunday sanctity,
-in so far as it is based upon the transactions of
-the day of Pentecost, is seen to rest, purely upon
-the opinions of men, and since those who observe
-the day are divided in sentiment as to whether
-the Pentecost did indeed really fall upon it at
-all, we close this article, as we did the last, by
-stating that we have a <i>positive commandment</i>
-which is admitted to be binding, and which, as
-given in the Bible, says that the “seventh day
-is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God; in it thou
-shalt not do any work.” Also, that our advice to
-those who are weary with threading the interminable
-labyrinth of conjecture and hypothesis
-is, Place your feet upon the rock of the written
-word; there, and there only, you are safe.
-Should any one seek to lure you from this position
-by the assertion that the law upon which
-you have planted yourself has been amended, it
-will be safe to follow them only when they are
-able to tell you when and where the commandment,
-as given in Exodus, was changed, and exactly
-how it reads since the change has occurred.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>
- <h2 id='reply05' class='c006'>STATESMAN’S REPLY. <br /> ARTICLE FIVE. <br /> THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH AT TROAS.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>The day on which the Saviour rose from the
-dead, the day which the risen Saviour singled
-out and blessed repeatedly with his presence, the
-day on which the Holy Ghost was given to the
-church,—this honored day certainly could not
-pass without stated observance by the disciples
-of the risen and ascended Lord. It is but reasonable
-to expect that the day which Christ and
-the Holy Spirit honored would be honored by
-the early church.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Passing on in the sacred narrative, we come to
-the account of first-day Sabbath observance some
-twenty-six or twenty-eight years after the Pentecostal
-gift of the Spirit. In just such a matter-of-course
-way as that in which a well known
-and established custom would be noted, is the
-observance of the first day at Troas mentioned
-in Acts 20:6, 7: “We sailed away from Philippi
-after the days of unleavened bread, and came ...
-to Troas in five days, where we abode
-seven days. And upon the first day of the week,
-when the disciples came together to break bread,
-Paul preached unto them, ready to depart on the
-morrow, and continued his speech until midnight.”
-Several important points should here be
-noted:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>1. Paul and his companions remained at Troas
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>seven days—from the third day of one week until
-the second day of the next week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>2. At this time, there was at Troas a company
-or church of Christian disciples, who would, of
-course, hold regular religious services.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>3. Besides the Trojan Christians, there were at
-Troas, during these “seven days,” at least nine
-others, including Paul and Luke (see verse 4),
-who would not let a week pass without observing
-a stated day of worship. And yet,</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>4. Neither the disciples resident at Troas, nor
-Paul and his companions, pay any regard to the
-seventh day. The whole narrative plainly intimates
-that Paul held himself in readiness to depart
-waiting only for the stated weekly day of
-public service. And the seventh day has no
-more sacredness assigned to it than the fifth or
-sixth. Had it been the customary day of meeting,
-the disciples would have assembled on it,
-and Paul would have been ready to depart <i>on the
-morrow</i>, the first day of the week. On the other
-hand,</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>5. The first day of the week was observed as
-the stated, customary weekly day of divine
-service by the Christians at Troas. The word,
-rendered “came together,” indicates this. It is
-most intimately related to the word in Hebrews
-10:25, rendered “assembling together.” The
-latter is the noun, with an added preposition
-from the former word, the verb. These two
-terms, and another kindred word, are the common
-terms for regular church meetings in the
-New Testament. (See Hebrews 10:25; 1 Cor.
-11:17, 18; 14:23, 26.) Again, it will be noticed
-that the meeting of the disciples on this first day
-was for regular public services of the Christian
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>church. They came together to “break bread,”
-or observe the Lord’s supper, and to hear the
-preaching of the gospel. Besides, let it be noticed,
-it is not said that Paul summoned the
-disciples together; but it is said that they “came
-together.” Or, if we follow the reading of the
-oldest manuscripts, the customary character of
-this Christian first-day assemblage will be made
-even more manifest. This reading is as follows:
-“And upon the first day of the week, when <i>we</i>
-came together.” Whether this is the correct
-reading or not, it expresses undoubtedly the fact.
-Paul, Luke, and their companions, as well as the
-Trojan Christians, met for divine service, according
-to the usual practice of Christians generally,
-on the first day of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It remains for us to consider the mode of reckoning
-time which would fix Paul’s departure
-from Troas on the morning of the first day of
-the week. Frankness and justice require us to
-state that even so authoritative a writer as Mr.
-Howson, in that able and scholarly work, “The
-Life and Epistles of St. Paul,” adopts this mode
-of reckoning, and, in accordance with it, pictures
-out Paul’s solitary journey from Troas to Assos
-on the hallowed hours of the Christian Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>No one will dispute for a moment that, according
-to the Jewish mode of reckoning, the day
-would begin at sundown, and in this way the
-evening of the meeting at Troas would be the
-evening succeeding the seventh day, and Paul’s
-journey of nearly twenty miles would be on the
-first day of the week. But it is perfectly clear
-from the Scriptures that the Roman method of
-reckoning the commencement of the day had already,
-to some extent, supplanted the Jewish
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>mode. Nor is it any wonder that the method of
-the Romans, who were at the time in authority
-in Palestine, should have obtained some recognition,
-even among the Jews.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>John, in a passage quoted in a former article,
-uses the following language: “The same day at
-evening, being the first day of the week.” (John
-20:19) The meeting at Troas, in the evening
-of the first day, may not have been without reference
-to the meeting of the Lord with his disciples
-late in the evening of the same day he arose
-from the dead. But whether there is any reference
-in the meeting at Troas to the meeting
-recorded by John or not, the passage above
-quoted clearly proves that the late evening succeeding
-the first day of the week was reckoned a
-part of the first day, and not a part of the day
-following—“The <i>same</i> day at evening [<i>opsia</i>,
-late evening, after dark, it would appear], being
-the first day of the week.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Matthew, writing particularly for Jewish Christians,
-adopts the Roman method in chap. 28:1,
-in the expression: “In the end of the Sabbath
-[literally, late of the Sabbath, <i>opse</i>, late, away on
-after dark], as it began to dawn toward the first
-day of the week.” Here, manifestly, the seventh
-day is reckoned as continuing during a number
-of hours, which, according to the Jewish mode,
-belonged to the following day. If Matthew,
-writing for Jewish Christians, employs the Roman
-mode of reckoning, is it not altogether
-probable that Luke, writing especially for Gentiles,
-would adopt the same mode?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But we need only look carefully at Luke’s
-own language to settle this point. His statement
-is that Paul preached, “ready to depart <i>on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>morrow</i>.” It is agreed on all hands that the
-Christian disciples at Troas came together on the
-first day of the week, and that Paul preached to
-them on that day. Now, if the time of meeting
-was the evening succeeding the seventh day, according
-to the Jewish mode of reckoning, could
-it be said that Paul, taking his leave at a later
-hour that same day, departed <i>on the morrow</i>?
-The original term, <i>epaurion</i>, is an adverb, literally
-signifying “upon the morrow.” But connected
-with it is the feminine article, agreeing
-with the word, “day,” understood. This makes
-the expression, if possible, still more explicit—“the
-day which is the morrow,” the next day.
-Can there remain the slightest doubt as to Luke’s
-meaning? The Christian congregation at Troas
-met on one day of the week. Paul preached to
-them on that day. It was the first day. <i>On the
-morrow</i>, not the same day, but another, the following,
-the second day of the week, Paul departed,
-as he had held himself for some days in
-readiness to do, on his way to Assos. Thus, as
-we have a right to expect, there is no violation
-by the apostle and his fellow-Christians of the
-law of the Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We have not dwelt upon this question of different
-modes of reckoning because of any importance
-which may be claimed for it in connection
-with the main inquiry before us. It is
-entirely immaterial to the point at issue in this
-discussion whether Luke employs the Jewish or
-the Roman mode. Even if it could be made to
-appear that he makes use of the former, there
-could be found nothing in his narrative in favor
-of the seventh-day Sabbath. The argument for
-the first-day Sabbath would still remain in its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>integrity, leaving for consideration simply the
-question as to the consistency of certain acts, in
-a certain case, with the law of a holy day of rest
-and worship. For the sake of giving a pretty
-full exposition of a passage important in itself,
-and because a wrong interpretation has been
-given by high authority in countenance of a
-mischievous theory of the Sabbath, we have
-occupied much of our space for this issue in
-showing that the evening or night of the first
-day of the week was the end of the Christian
-Sabbath, and that Paul and his companions, like
-good, Sabbath-keeping Christians, waited, though
-ready to depart, until Monday morning, before
-starting on their journey to Assos.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We propose to conclude the argument from
-Scripture in our next number. After this, we
-shall give the testimony of the standard authorities
-of the first three centuries of the Christian
-era. And then, with the facts concerning sacred
-time before us, we shall inquire what theory of
-the Sabbath harmonizes all the authenticated
-facts into one consistent whole.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='rejoinder05' class='c006'>A REJOINDER. <br /> “THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH AT TROAS.”</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>In entering upon an examination of the propositions
-laid down in the article entitled, “The
-First-day Sabbath at Troas,” it will be well for
-us first to inquire into the object which the
-writer had in view in presenting them for our
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>consideration. In doing so, we shall find that he
-does not claim that the test or context of Acts
-20:7, furnishes any positive precept for Sunday
-observance. His effort is merely to establish a
-custom. Suppose, therefore, that we should grant
-all that he asks, so far as the church of Troas is
-concerned, would that prove that Christians universally
-are under obligation to follow a like custom?
-We think not, unless it can be shown
-that God has adopted this mode of inculcating
-religious duty. But this he has never done. If
-the writer had first established a positive law,
-then he might, with some show of reason, appeal
-to custom to show that that law was interpreted
-as he understands it; but when he reverses the
-order, and endeavors to prove the law by the
-custom, then he has reversed God’s great plan,
-which is that of teaching by explicit statute.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Furthermore, even should a custom be established,
-the writer must be able to show that such
-a custom was kept up, not as a matter of convenience
-or taste, but because of a conviction of religious
-duty. In other words, it is possible, to
-say the least, that the church at Troas were in
-the habit of meeting on the first day of the week,
-not because they looked upon it as holy time,
-but for certain utilitarian purposes, best known
-to themselves. Let us furnish an illustration
-precisely in point:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Should some person, eighteen hundred years
-hence—provided time should last so long—write
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>a history of the present period, as he cast his eye
-over the literature of our day, he would find that,
-in all parts of this country, Christians were in
-the habit of assembling on Wednesday evening,
-for the purposes of worship. Would he, therefore,
-be justified in concluding that Wednesday
-is regarded by us as peculiarly sacred to the
-Lord? You answer, No, and most properly, for
-you know that our motives are entirely different
-from what he would understand them to be. So,
-too, with Troas. Granted, for the sake of the argument,
-that, as the writer claims, they were in
-the habit of assembling on the late Sunday evening;
-it by no means follows that they did so because
-they regarded it as devoted to the Lord.
-Does he say that they partook of the sacrament
-on that day? Grant that, for the sake of the argument.
-But does not every student of the Bible
-know, and is it not the conviction of the world
-to-day, that the Lord’s supper can be partaken
-of with as much propriety at one time as at another?
-Is it not a fact that the time of its institution
-did not coincide with Sunday? Is it not
-true that originally they partook of it on all days
-of the week? (Acts 2:42, 46.) If so, it would
-manifestly be unsafe to attach any special significance
-to the fact that, at this time, it was celebrated
-on the Sunday, So much for the hypothesis
-of the <i>custom</i>, in question.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now that we have said what we have with reference
-to a custom made out, it will be well to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>inquire in the next place, Has the writer established
-the usage which he sought to prove? If so,
-we have failed to discover the process by which it
-has been done. Has he found an explicit statement
-that the church at Troas was in the habit
-of meeting on the first day of the week? Very
-far from it. Having traced the sacred narrative
-for twenty-six years—mark it, reader, over one-fourth
-of a century—he has found a solitary assembly
-of Christians convened on the first day of
-the week. But what were the facts in the case?
-Was this an ordinary occasion? Were they by
-themselves alone? No; it was a time of unusual
-interest. The great apostle to the Gentiles was
-there, paying them a flying visit. He was about
-to depart on the morrow. It was perhaps the
-last time they would ever see him. They wanted
-to partake of the emblems of the Lord’s body
-from his venerated hand. They wanted to shake
-that hand in a final farewell, and to plant the
-kiss of love upon his careworn face. The circumstances,
-then, were unusual. The same combination
-of facts might never exist again. There
-is, therefore, so far as the general view is concerned,
-nothing which would justify the decision
-that they had ever convened for like reasons, previously,
-at the same time of the week, or that
-they ever would thereafter. The writer evidently
-felt this, and, with an acuteness of intellectual
-perception which to the common mind is almost
-incredible, he has discovered overwhelming support
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>for his theory, where the ordinary reader
-would have discerned none.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>How strange it is that, again and again, we find
-that the strongholds of Sunday sanctity are located
-just beyond the boundary where the man of
-average ability and learning is permitted to go.
-The Greek, he is told, has a significance which, if
-lightly expressed, would establish a custom beyond
-all doubt. Well, we have seen above what
-the value of a custom is, unless explained. But we
-ask—and we ask it in the behalf of the millions
-who have never so much as seen even the Greek
-alphabet, and yet to whom eternal life is as precious
-as to the man of letters—can it be possible
-that God has suspended the terrible realities of
-Heaven and hell upon the discharge of a duty
-vailed from their eyes by the obscurity of a language
-whose mysteries they can never hope to
-penetrate? For, mark it, this is not one of those
-points which can be settled without difficulty,
-even by those familiar with the tongue in question.
-Were our learning equal to that of the
-gentleman who has penned the criticism under
-consideration, we might flatly contradict the
-statements which he makes; but this would simply
-serve to produce a dead-lock in the mind of
-the reader, while he remained as far from a satisfactory
-solution of the difficulty as ever. The
-only reply which we shall make, therefore, is as
-follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The distinction drawn between the present
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>text and the original is either obscure, or it
-is obvious. If it is obscure, it is unimportant;
-if obvious, then it could be seen by scholars, and
-is so important that it would have attracted universal
-attention and comment by first-day writers
-and translators. What, therefore, are the
-facts in the case? Certain it is that, if it exists
-at all, it escaped the notice of the translators of
-our common version. That they would have
-given a rendering as favorable to the first day as
-the facts would warrant, no man will dispute.
-The suggestion that the text would bear the
-translation, “<i>we</i> having come together to break
-bread,” &amp;c.,<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c008'><sup>[5]</sup></a> while it does not materially alter
-the sense, so far as the practice of the church at
-Troas is concerned, if admissible, renders it highly
-probable that Luke and his associates were there
-until the breaking of the bread; a point which
-we shall use hereafter. In the meantime, we
-give the following translations in order to show
-the conviction of their authors, respecting the
-meaning of the original:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“And on the first day of the week, when we
-assembled,” &amp;c.—<i>Syriac.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“On the first day of the week, when we were
-met together.”—<i>Wesley, N. T., with Notes.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“And upon the first day of the week, when
-the disciples were got together.”—<i>Wakefield.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>“And on the first day of the week, the disciples
-being assembled.”—<i>Whiting.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“And on the first day of the week, we, having
-come together to break bread.”—<i>Am. Bible Union.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“And on the first day of the week, we being
-assembled to break bread.”—<i>Sawyer.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“And on the first day of the week, when the
-disciples met together.”—<i>Doddridge in Campbell
-and Macknight’s Trans.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“And on the first day of the week, we having
-assembled.”—<i>Emphatic Diaglott.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We think the reader is now ready to admit
-that the traces of a custom which relies for its
-existence upon an original text, rendered as given
-above by so many different persons, none of
-whom can be charged with favoring the seventh-day
-Sabbath, are, to say the least, too faint to be
-of practical argumentative utility. To our mind,
-the inference is simply this: Paul, about to depart
-on his journey to Jerusalem, appointed, for
-himself and his companions and the disciples at
-Troas, a final meeting, at which it was announced
-that the Eucharist would be celebrated. At this
-meeting, all the parties came together, agreeably
-to the announcement previously made, and partook
-of the Lord’s supper. A fitting close of a
-week of apostolic labor in an Asiatic city.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The next item worthy of our attention is found
-in the hypothesis, that, during the time Paul was
-at Troas, the seventh day of the week was passed
-by without any religious meeting occurring thereupon;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>and that Paul waited until the arrival of
-the first day, because that was the one on which
-the meetings of the church were regularly held.
-How a writer so intimately acquainted with the
-character and labors of St. Paul, the individual
-in question undoubtedly is, could draw the inference
-which he has, is more than we can fathom.
-Who, that has read the history of a man whose
-nervous activity drove him to dispute daily in
-the school of Tyrannus (Acts 19:9), and to seek
-every opportunity for the presentation of his
-gospel to the Jews in their synagogues, and the
-Greeks in their places of public gathering, could
-be induced to believe that he could remain for
-seven long days in the city of Troas without a
-solitary religious assembly, until the expiration of
-that time? And yet this is the very decision
-which we are called upon to indorse. Before we
-can do this, however, we ask for the proof. The
-answer is, it must be so, because the record contains
-no account of the holding of such meetings
-until the first day of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But is this satisfactory? Do not all the circumstances
-of the case, as well as the temperament
-and character of Paul, render certain the
-act that such meetings were held, even, though
-it is not stated in so many words? Paul with a
-Christian church at Troas for one week, and
-not preach to them! Impossible. To show the
-writer that the mention of religions meetings in
-brief history is not necessary in order to prove
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>that they occurred on a given day, or on stated
-days, let me call his attention to the fact, that,
-between the day of Pentecost and the meeting at
-Troas, according, to his own showing, there were
-at least twenty-six intervening years; that during
-those years, agreeably to his view, there were
-thirteen hundred and fifty-two first-days, all of
-which were holy time, and nearly all of which
-must have been honored by stated meetings on
-the part of the apostles; and yet, out of that
-whole number, he only claims to produce the
-record of one solitary day on which such meeting
-occurred. What are the facts, then? Paul
-probably preached every day of the seven, while
-he was at Troas. Do you ask why the account
-is not given of such meetings in the book of the
-Acts? I answer that the Holy Spirit was giving,
-through Luke, a succinct history of the more
-striking occurrences which transpired in their
-travels. The story of the first-day meeting at
-Troas found its way into the sacred narrative,
-because its importance to after generations was
-enhanced by the accidental fall, and the miraculous
-restoration to life of Eutychus, and perhaps
-by other facts connected with that event, of equal
-interest. I think that one of them was a disposition
-on the part of God to provide his commandment-keeping
-servants in succeeding generations
-with a passage in the life of Paul, which
-should forever silence the cavils of men who
-should undertake to belittle his ancient Sabbath,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>and to foist into its place a day which He never
-commanded. This we will further consider in
-our next point.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Having endeavored to establish the point that
-the seventh-day Sabbath was not observed at
-Troas, an effort is made to show that a change of
-time had occurred, so that Luke, in giving his account
-of the transactions mentioned above, treated
-the day as commencing and ending, not according
-to the Jewish method, with the setting
-of the sun, but after the Roman fashion, with
-midnight. The reader will readily discover the
-object to be gained by this maneuver, if such I
-may be allowed to call it. We had insisted that
-the first day of the week commenced at sunset;
-that Paul met with the disciples in the dark portion
-of that day (verse 8), preached to them during
-that night, and on the next morning commenced
-a journey of nineteen and a half miles
-on foot, on that which answered to the daylight
-portion of our Sunday. This, if true, with the
-majority of readers, would have forever settled
-the question that Paul did not believe in first-day
-sanctity. A remedy, therefore, must be had.
-The gentleman thinks he has found one. That
-he has made a desperate effort to obtain it, we
-are compelled to admit. No man, it seems to us
-would ever resort to an experiment so hazardous,
-who did not find himself in the stress of a situation
-which otherwise would be utterly insupportable.
-With the most deliberate calculation, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>in the face of authority which he himself highly
-honors, he has decided that the journey in question
-occurred on the second day of the week, instead
-of the first, which ended at twelve o’clock
-the previous night. Well, suppose we admit, for
-a moment, that this was true; what then? The
-Sunday is thereby rescued from profanation by
-Paul; but it is also true that the second day of
-the week is thereby honored with the meeting of
-a Christian church, and that it was it, and not
-the first, after all, which was honored by the
-breaking of bread during its hours.<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c008'><sup>[6]</sup></a> So much
-for some of the consequences of the position, if
-well taken.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But now let us turn to the argument for the
-change. Is it really true that Roman, and not
-Jewish, time, is employed in a portion of the
-New Testament? If so, the perplexities of the
-situation are very great. How shall we know
-when to apply the one, and when the other?
-How can we tell precisely where the dividing
-line should be drawn? We hope, in all conscience,
-independently of the question at issue,
-that the writer is not correct. He seems to find
-the first intimation of a change in the gospels.
-Matt. 28:1, and John 20:19, are referred to in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>support of his view. Now suppose we concede
-for a time the point which he desires, and admit
-that these passages prove the use in them of Roman
-time; also that, as he claims, the meeting
-spoken of in John 20:19, occurred in the evening
-(Roman time), and after the coming on of
-darkness. This done, we inquire, Was it a Jewish
-day or a Roman day that was sanctified by
-the resurrection of Christ, and his appearance to
-his assembled disciples? We think that few will
-dispute that it was a Jewish day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But when did the Jewish day commence? The
-undeniable answer is, At sunset. But when did
-Christ appear to the disciples, according to Roman
-time, as argued? We answer, In the darkness
-of the evening, and, therefore, after the ending
-of the Jewish first day. What is the necessary
-conclusion? We reply, One of two things.
-1. Either that the visit of Christ had no reference
-to the sanctity of the day on which it occurred;
-or 2. That it was designed to honor the
-second day of the Jewish week. We leave the
-writer in question to take whichever horn of this
-dilemma he pleases. If he should insist that
-John employed Roman time, then all which he
-has said in reference to the effect of the visit of
-Christ upon the first day of the Jewish week is
-emptied of all force. Never was self-stultification
-more complete. In his effort to escape from
-the paws of the Trojan bear (secular travel on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>Sunday), the writer has thrown himself into the
-jaws of the lion (no Scripture precedent for Sunday-keeping).
-For, if he is right in supposing
-that the meeting in John 20:19, occurred on the
-Roman evening of that day—that is, after sunset,
-and the coming on of darkness—then, of course,
-it did not transpire on the Jewish first day of the
-week, which had previously ended, according to
-his own admission, at the going down of the sun;
-but it actually took place after the commencement
-of the second day of the Jewish week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Not only so, but the second meeting, of Christ
-with his disciples (after eight days), according to
-his own reasoning, must have fallen on the second
-Jewish day of the next week. And, finally, accepting
-his logic that the meeting of Acts 20:7,
-also fell on the Roman evening of the first day of
-the week, that precedent, so long cherished, and
-so often cited, is now forever disposed of, since it,
-too, illustrates the second Jewish day of the
-week, and not the first, if, indeed, it adds luster
-to any. But, reader, it would be neither Christian
-nor manly to adopt an exegesis of Scripture
-presented by an opponent, simply because such
-an exegesis would prove his overthrow. Truth
-is worth more than mere victory. The gentleman
-has made a mistake in deciding that Roman
-time is employed in the Bible, and that mistake
-has brought him to confusion. But now we propose
-to show that Roman time is not employed,
-even though in so doing we shall assist him out
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>of his trouble for the time being. Let no one
-suppose, however, that the relief which we shall
-afford him will be permanent, for, unfortunately
-for him, we shall rescue him from one death simply
-to deliver him to another.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The whole question turns upon the commencement
-and end of the Bible day. If it can be
-shown that it began and terminated with the
-setting of the sun, then, beyond all dispute, the
-meeting in Troas occurred at the commencement
-of the first day of the week, at the coming on of
-darkness, the only period in that day when lights
-could be employed to advantage (verse 8). We
-proceed, therefore, to our task. We have heretofore
-quoted from the Tract Society’s Bible Dictionary,
-under the article, day, to prove a general
-agreement that the Hebrews commenced and
-ended their day with the setting of the sun. In
-addition to this, we might refer the reader to
-Smith’s Comprehensive Dictionary of the Bible
-on the same subject. In fact, we might multiply
-authorities without end; but this is not necessary
-here. By turning to Genesis, chapter 1, the reader
-will find that God measured the day by “the
-evening and the morning” (darkness and light).
-He will here observe that with the ancient Hebrews
-the whole night preceded the day to which
-it belonged. Advancing to Leviticus 23:32, he
-will there read the command of God, that the
-people should keep their Sabbaths “from even
-to even.” But as the Sabbath was the last day
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>of the week, and was to commence and end with
-the evening, he will discover that it will be necessary
-that all the other days should commence
-and end in the same manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Passing now to the New Testament, he will
-find the same custom prevailing in the days of
-our Lord. Nay, more; he will there obtain the
-authority of Luke himself, who wrote the book
-of Acts, for believing that Christ and the Jews
-followed that system of beginning and ending
-the day which God had inaugurated in the outset.
-We read in Luke 4:40: “Now when the
-sun was setting, all they that had any sick with
-divers diseases, brought them unto him; and he
-laid his hands on every one of them, and healed
-them.” By tracing back the event, as given by
-Luke, in its parallel, as found in Mark 1, we find
-that Christ was healing in the synagogue on the
-Sabbath day, and that he subsequently repaired
-to the house of Peter, and healed his wife’s mother;
-and that, “at even, when the sun did set,”
-the Jews brought to him all those that were diseased,
-and possessed with devils, for the purpose
-of having him heal them. This, however, they
-could not have done on the Sabbath day, according
-to their views; therefore they prove that the
-custom was still prevalent among them of ending
-the days with the setting of the sun. But,
-furthermore, has it not been argued by the writer
-himself, that the day of Pentecost was coincident
-with the first day of the week? We think
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>this will hardly be disputed. If it be true, however,
-and if the logic be sound, that the Spirit
-which was poured out on the day of Pentecost
-was designed to indicate that it corresponded
-with the Christian Sabbath, then we need not argue
-further, for no man will deny that that day
-was emphatically Jewish in its beginning and
-ending.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This army of Scripture testimony, gleaned from
-a history of 4000 years, if met at all, it will be
-necessary that it should be done by clear and
-emphatic statements emanating from the same
-source from which the authorities in question are
-drawn. Has the gentleman furnished any such
-evidence? The reader will readily discover that
-he has not. The only texts brought forward in
-support of the change upon which he insists are
-John 20:19, and Matt. 28:1. In reference to
-the first of these, it will only be required that
-attention should be called to the fact that, with
-the Hebrews, each day had two evenings. (Exodus
-12:6, margin; and Numbers 9:3, and 28:4,
-margin.) On this point, the Bible Dictionary
-says: “The Hebrews reckoned two evenings in
-each day.... According to the Karaites,
-this time between the evenings is the interval
-from sunset to complete darkness, that is, the
-evening twilight. According to the Pharisees
-and the Rabbins, the first evening began when
-the sun inclined to descend more rapidly; that is,
-at the ninth hour; while the second or real evening
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>commenced at sunset.” (Art. Evening.) Now
-let it be supposed that Christ met with his disciples
-somewhere between three o’clock and sunset,
-on the day of the resurrection, and the
-statement that he met with them the “same day
-at evening,” is at once verified, and the necessity
-for the supposition of a change of time disappears.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In explanation of Matt. 28:1, we cannot do
-better, perhaps, than to append the following
-comment from Albert Barnes: “The word <i>end</i>,
-here means the same as <i>after</i> the Sabbath; <i>i. e.</i>,
-after the Sabbath was fully completed, or finished,
-and may be expressed in the following
-manner: ‘In the night following the Sabbath;
-for the Sabbath closed at sunset, as it began to
-dawn toward the first day of the week.’” That
-Mr. Barnes is right in his criticism, will become
-apparent when we compare Matt. 28:1, with
-the parallel passage in Mark 16:1, 2, where the
-same historic fact is introduced with these words:
-“When the Sabbath was past.” A complete harmony
-is thus preserved between the two evangelists,
-and all requisition for the extreme resort
-to the hypothesis of a sudden and unprecedented
-employment of the Roman system for the computation
-of time is dispensed with.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As it regards the objection, which is based
-upon the use made in Acts 20:7, of the words,
-“on the morrow,” we reply that it is not well
-taken. That it was perfectly compatible with a
-Jewish custom, when speaking of the daylight
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>portion of any day from the stand-point of the
-previous evening, to allude to it as “the morrow,”
-we cite the following passages: “Then the soldiers,
-as it was commanded them, took Paul, and
-brought him by night to Antipatris. <i>On the
-morrow</i> they left the horsemen to go with him,
-and returned to the castle.” Acts 23:31, 32.
-“Saul also sent messengers unto David’s house,
-to watch him, and to slay him in the morning;
-and Michal, David’s wife, told him, saying, If thou
-save not thy life to-night, <i>to-morrow</i> thou shalt
-be slain.” 1 Samuel 19:11.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In addition to the above texts, we might quote
-the authority of Mr. Howson, who is so justly
-complimented for his scholarship by the writer.
-He cannot be charged with leaning toward our
-views of the Sabbath, and, therefore, if he had
-any bias in the case, it would be against, and not
-in favor of, the position which we are trying to
-maintain. If there was really any force in the
-criticism which is offered respecting the use of
-the preposition and the term with which it is
-connected, assuredly the discriminating eye of
-this gentleman would not have allowed it to escape
-detection. Nevertheless, he, as the writer
-admits, deliberately decides, while examining at
-length the very passages now before us, that the
-events there spoken of, journey and all, did transpire
-on the Sunday. In doing so, it follows, as a
-matter of course, that he did not regard the difficulty
-which is urged concerning the words, “on
-the morrow,” as one at all formidable.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>Thus much by way of a brief refutation of the
-diversity theory for the commencing of the days
-of the Bible. We have seen heretofore, that, if
-the advocate of this theory were right and we
-wrong, he has lost to his cause the three precedental
-meetings of John 20:19, John 20:26, and
-Acts 20:7, since they occurred on the second,
-and not the first, Jewish day of the week. Let
-us now view the situation from the stand-point
-of one who believes that the sacred, instead of
-the heathen, method is followed consistently
-throughout the Scriptures. In Acts 20:7, the
-text which is passing under review, it is said that
-there was a meeting held upon the first day of
-the week, and that Paul preached until midnight.
-It now becomes important to know on what portion
-of the first day of the week this meeting
-fell. By examining the record, we find the statement
-that there were many lights employed in
-the chamber where they were gathered. We
-know, therefore, that the meeting must have
-taken place during the dark portion of the first
-day of the week. But as we have seen that the
-Jewish day commenced with sunset, the only
-hours of darkness which belong to it were to be
-found between that time and the next morning.
-Advancing, we learn that, having spent the night
-in preaching, breaking of bread, &amp;c., the apostle
-devoted the daylight portion of the first day of
-the week to the accomplishment of a journey of
-nineteen and a half miles, while his companions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>sailed the vessel a greater distance round the
-headland to Assos. Here, then, is apostolic example
-for travel upon the first day of the week.
-The writer endeavored to escape this conclusion,
-by asserting that the meeting in question and
-the travel took place on the second day of the
-week. This view, we have met, and successfully
-answered. The record states that it was upon
-the first day of the week when they came together.
-It then proceeds to give a connected account
-of what transpired on that day, and among
-other things, is found the story of Paul and his
-companions starting for Jerusalem. Now, if the
-events related did really transpire on two days,
-instead of on one merely, as would naturally be
-inferred from the context, the burden of the
-proof is with our opponent. We rest the matter,
-therefore, right here. The only attempt
-which he has made has been a complete failure.
-That he thought it was the best he could do under
-the circumstances, we doubt not.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There remains now no item of difference between
-ourselves and the writer in the <i>Statesman</i>
-which should occupy us longer. For, between
-him and myself there is no room for dispute respecting
-the morality of traveling on the Sabbath,
-since, according to his own confession, the
-object which Paul had in remaining at Troas was
-that of a good “<i>Sabbath-keeping Christian</i>,” who
-was unwilling to violate the sacredness of holy
-time by the performance of secular labor. Here,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>then, we pause. As we do so, we appeal to the
-judgment of the candid men and women who
-have read the criticism of our friend and our reply
-thereto. Did Paul conscientiously regard
-the first day of the week, while traveling on foot
-nineteen and a half miles upon it, and did Luke
-and his six companions, in sailing a much greater
-distance on the same hours, transgress the law of
-God, and ignore the example of Christ; or, did
-they look upon the first day of the week as one
-which God had given to man for the purposes of
-labor and travel? If you still decide that it was
-holy time, you must be able to reconcile their action
-with this theory. This, however, you can
-never do. If, on the contrary, you shall determine
-that they treated it as a secular day, then it
-remains so still, for its character has not changed
-from that day to this.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='reply06' class='c006'>STATESMAN’S REPLY. <br /> ARTICLE SIX <br /> TESTIMONY OF PAUL AND JOHN TO THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>Two important portions of the inspired records
-remain to be considered. The first of these reads
-as follows: “Now concerning the collection for
-the saints, as I have given order to the churches
-of Galatia, even so do ye. Upon the first day of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>the week let every one of you lay by him in
-store, as God hath prospered him, that there be
-no gatherings when I come.” (1 Cor. 16:1, 2.)</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>From this passage it is clear that the churches
-of Galatia, as well as the church at Corinth, or
-that Christians generally, were required to set
-apart a proportion of their worldly goods, as
-God prospered them, for benevolent purposes. It
-is also clear that the act of setting apart the required
-proportion of means was to be performed
-statedly, every week, on the first day of the
-week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Whatever may be the correct interpretation of
-the words, “lay by him in store,” enough is beyond
-all doubt and agreed upon by all, to show
-that the first day of the week was regarded by
-the apostle and the Christian churches as a special
-day, and one more fitting than others for the
-benevolent and religious duty enjoined.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The phrase rendered in our version “by him,”
-is unquestionably an idiomatic Greek expression
-for “at home.” (Compare Luke 24:12, and John
-20:10.) And even if we understand this phrase
-to be connected with the word rendered, “in
-store,” which is a participle signifying “treasure
-up,” the proof of first-day sacred observance
-is still clear and strong. But the true connection
-of the words, “at home,” is with what precedes.
-“Let every one place or devote at home.” Place
-what? The answer is not hard to find—a proportion
-of the weekly earnings; a suitable part
-of what God in his bounty had given. When
-this proportion was separated by each Christian
-at home, from the rest of his weekly earnings, it
-was to be treasured up. But where? This is
-the important question. Where was the money
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>each Christian set apart at home on the first day
-of the week, from his weekly receipts, to be kept
-in store? It appears that this treasuring up was
-not at each Christian’s home:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>1. Because the phrase, “at home,” grammatically
-connects, not with the word “treasuring,”
-but with the preceding verb. This verb does
-not mean “lay by,” but “lay,” or “place.” The
-preposition rendered “by” is part of the phrase,
-“at home.” If it is insisted that the idea of
-treasuring in store is in the word rendered “lay,”
-then we have this tautology: “Let every one
-place in store or lay by at home, placing in
-store.” Paul did not write in this way.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>2. The first day of the week must have offered
-a special facility for doing what was required.
-True, if nothing more is meant than
-laying by at home, even that marks the first day
-with distinguishing honor. But the placing or
-putting of God’s portion by itself; separated from
-the remainder of the receipts of the past week, on
-each first-day, in each Christian’s home, was in
-order to something else, for which the first day
-alone gave opportunity. On that day, as we
-have learned from Acts 20:7, and other portions
-of Scripture, Christians were accustomed to meet
-for public religious services, and at these public
-gatherings, each Christian put into the treasury
-of the church what he had set apart at home
-from the rest of the gains of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>3. The most conclusive argument, however, is
-drawn from the end that Paul desired to accomplish.
-He states expressly that his aim in giving
-his directions was to avoid the necessity of
-gatherings or collections when he should come.
-The force of this consideration is evaded by explaining
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>the apostle’s words as meaning “small
-collections.” But if every Christian had his
-money laid by at home, whether it were much or
-little, the “collections” would still have to be
-made. Each Christian, it is true, would have his
-sum already made up, and would need to make
-no personal gathering. But the apostle’s word
-is much more naturally and fittingly applied to
-collections on a larger and wider scale. And to
-effect the apostle’s end, and avoid such collections
-at his coming, the Corinthians, like the
-Galatians, were to make a collection every Lord’s
-day, of what each one at home had set apart or
-placed aside from the proceeds of his business
-during the preceding week. In no other way
-would the moneys needed be in perfect readiness
-for the apostle. If left in the hands of individuals
-scattered around, there would be uncertainty
-about the apostle’s receipt of them, and there
-would still be trouble in connection with collections
-on his arrival. But with the moneys already
-gathered, at the regular weekly meetings,
-into the common treasury of the church, and
-there waiting his coming, his aim is satisfactorily
-accomplished.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The only remaining passage is Rev. 1:10:
-“I was in the Spirit on the Lord’s day.” It
-has been admitted by opponents of the first-day
-Sabbath, that if, by the Lord’s day in this passage,
-the first day of the week is meant, their
-cause is lost. And lost it is; for no other day
-can be meant. Three interpretations have been
-given of John’s words:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>1. By the Lord’s day is meant the day of
-Judgment. Wetstein, in his elaborate edition of
-the Greek New Testament, in the year 1752, first
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>advanced this view. His comment is; “Hunc
-diem judicii vidit in spiritu; <i>i. e.</i>, prævidit representatum.”
-“John saw in Spirit the day of
-Judgment; that is, he foresaw it represented.”
-The phrase, “the day of the Lord,” does mean in
-the Scriptures the day of Judgment. But that
-phrase is different from the one here employed.
-The literal rendering of the former is, “the day of
-the Lord.” The literal rendering of the other is,
-“the dominical day.” This was not a day foreseen,
-but a day on which John was in the
-Spirit—a day of weekly recurrence which the
-Lord claims as his own, as he claims the dominical
-supper.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>2. By the Lord’s day, it is maintained again,
-is meant the seventh-day Sabbath. In support of
-this view it is said that the phrase employed by
-John corresponds with such Old-Testament expressions
-as “a Sabbath to the Lord,” and with
-the Saviour’s language: “The Son of man is
-Lord even of the Sabbath.” But the very fact
-that the seventh day had a well-known and distinctive
-name by which it was always designated,
-is strong presumptive proof that this new
-and unusual phrase used by John cannot apply
-to it. It would be most natural to suppose that
-some other day is meant, and this is clearly
-proved to be the fact.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>3. The phrase, the Lord’s day, was the common
-expression for designating the first-day Sabbath
-from John’s time onward. As the meal
-which the Lord hallowed as his own was called
-the Lord’s supper, so the day hallowed by the
-Lord’s resurrection, by his repeated meeting
-with his disciples after rising from the dead, by
-the descent of his Spirit, by the weekly religious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>assemblies of his people with their communions,
-preaching and hearing the word, prayers and
-almsgiving, was properly termed the Lord’s day.
-It has been argued on the other side of the
-question that the Lord had a day, and but one
-in the week, called specially his own. But as
-has been shown, Jesus himself, after his resurrection,
-paid no regard to the seventh day. His disciples
-did not observe it. It could not, therefore,
-have been the Lord’s day. On the other hand,
-Jesus did honor the first day, and the Christian
-churches everywhere did the same; and
-thus this honored day is the only one of which
-John could speak when he said he was “in the
-Spirit on the Lord’s day.” By this name, as will
-be seen in our next article, the first day of the
-week was known in the early church.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='rejoinder06' class='c006'>A REJOINDER. <br /> “TESTIMONY OF PAUL AND JOHN TO THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.”</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>With no small degree of interest we have perused
-the article entitled, “Testimony of Paul
-and John to the First-day Sabbath,” The two
-texts which it brings forward in defense of the
-theory of a changed Sabbath, are regarded by
-the friends of that theory, generally, as among
-the strongest of its supports. The first of them
-(1 Cor. 16:1, 2), we had assailed, and adduced a
-criticism, from the pen of Mr. J. W. Morton,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>which was of great importance. In it, the very
-stronghold of the Sunday argument had been
-fearlessly attacked, and, to our mind, carried beyond
-all question. The writer whom we quoted
-presented twelve versions and translations, all of
-which clearly sustained the position that the expression,
-“by him,” was equivalent to the term,
-“at home” If this were true, then beyond all
-dispute the Sunday argument had been denuded
-of all its strength, provided it ever had any; for
-the support of its logic was the assumption that
-the transaction brought to view in this text was
-to take place in the respective assemblies of the
-saints.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is, therefore, with the most profound satisfaction
-that—if we rightly apprehend the remarks
-of our reviewer—we accept his concession of the
-point that the words, “by him,” do indeed answer
-to a Greek idiom, of which the original terms are
-equivalent to the expression, “at home.” This
-being true, we are agreed that at least a <i>portion</i>
-of the duty which Paul commanded was to be
-performed, not at the house of assembly, but at
-the <i>dwelling</i> of <i>the individual Christian</i>. In
-other words, he admits that the money which
-they were to “place or devote” to charitable purposes,
-was first to be estimated and separated
-while yet they were in their own houses. Having
-conceded thus much, he reasons that the money
-was to be carried to the place of worship, and
-laid up in store, or deposited among the collections
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>regularly made on the first day of the
-week. In order to sustain this view, he offers a
-grammatical criticism to which it cannot be objected
-that it is not drawn finely enough to meet
-the taste of the most fastidious. But the writer
-does not seem to plant himself so squarely upon
-it as we would naturally expect one would who
-feels that he is standing upon solid ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The <i>force of his logic</i> seems to be drawn from
-the <i>object</i> which Paul had in view, in ordering
-beforehand this weekly laying aside of money
-for the poor saints at Jerusalem. The writer
-thinks that the evident reference of Paul, in the
-words, “that there be no gatherings when I
-come,” is to contributions to be taken up in the
-congregation when he should have reached the
-place. If he is wrong in this, he is wrong in all;
-for no one will dispute that money <i>could</i><a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c008'><sup>[7]</sup></a> be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>“laid by in store” <i>at home</i>, as well as in the
-church, since to lay by in store, is to put in some
-safe and accessible place.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Right here, then, we inquire, What were the
-“gatherings” which Paul sought to avoid on his
-arrival? They could refer to but one of two
-things; either, first, the collection of moneys in
-the church; or, secondly, the collecting of them
-by individuals from those who were indebted to
-them. That the first was not the sense in which
-Paul employed the word, we submit is apparent,
-from the fact that the end to be gained by writing
-months beforehand, in order to prevent the
-taking up of a collection in the church, was not
-commensurate with the dignity which is given
-to it by so prominent a place in the sacred epistle.
-So far as the collection itself was concerned,
-it could have been brought about, unquestionably,
-within the space of fifteen minutes. The
-amount of time, therefore, which it would consume,
-is too insignificant to be worthy of mention.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Again, as it regards the moral complexion of
-the act, it will not be objected by our reviewer
-that it was to be avoided from any scruples in that
-direction, since he believes that such collections
-were taken up on every first day of the week.
-On the other hand, taking the second view as
-being the one which properly expresses the facts,
-we find that it is in perfect harmony with the
-circumstances of the case, and consistent with the
-notion that Paul had a sufficient motive for writing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>before hand, as he did, concerning the collections.
-He was about to make a brief visit to
-Corinth. How long he should remain, he could
-not tell. While there, he wanted the undivided
-attention of the people to be given to religious
-purposes, and also that the money which he expected,
-should be in readiness, so that no delay
-might be necessary.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This, however, could not be, since, not knowing
-the exact time of his arrival, they would not
-be likely to have it on hand when he should
-come, unless they laid it by, weekly, at their
-homes. Should he, therefore, drop in upon them
-suddenly, they would be thrown into a confusion
-of mind illy compatible with the purposes of daily
-worship during his visit, since they would be annoyed
-and distracted by the necessity of gathering
-from this direction and that, the amounts of
-the weekly contribution which they had agreed
-to make for the benefit of the suffering saints at
-Jerusalem.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But once more: Having settled the point that
-the explanation claimed does not satisfactorily
-account for the mention of the subject in an epistle,
-while the one which we present meets the
-requirements of the case in every particular—since
-it both supplies the money, and furnishes
-the apostle with a body of Christians ready to
-listen to the preaching of the word—let us look
-at the matter from another stand-point.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The plan proposed by Paul could have been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>arrived at in but one of two ways. Every Christian
-was expected, either, first, to give a fixed
-sum, every week, of an amount equal to that
-which the general valuation of his property
-would require; or, secondly, he was, as the writer
-supposes, to pay in a fluctuating amount weekly,
-that amount to be determined by the gains or
-losses of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We will suppose, for a moment, that the first
-theory is correct, and will test the plan in question
-thereby. While doing so, for convenience’
-sake, we will employ the currency of our own
-time. Here is a Corinthian Christian who is
-worth, say $10,000. He decides that he will
-give, for the purposes mentioned, ten dollars per
-week. He has money in his purse, and nothing
-to prevent his doing it at any time. Being
-anxious to obey the injunction of Paul, he proceeds
-as the writer suggests. On Sunday morning
-he is at home, knowing just what he must
-contribute on that day, when he goes to church,
-having previously decided this point. The
-amount, as we have seen, is precisely ten dollars.
-But Paul says he must do something with it “at
-home,” before going to church. What was he to
-do with it? The writer says, “to place or devote
-it.” Well, he takes out his purse; from it
-he extracts just ten dollars. He holds it in his
-fingers. Now, what shall he do with it? The
-writer says he must “<i>place</i> or <i>devote</i> it.” Yes,
-but we inquire. What does <i>place</i> or <i>devote mean</i>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>in such a connection as this? In other words,
-What shall he do with the money at home?
-Shall he take it out, and turn it over, and look
-at it, and put it back into his purse again, and
-then go to church and place it in the contribution
-box? We answer that this would be a
-solemn farce. To say, also, that having taken it
-out of his purse he must not put it back again,
-but must place it in some other pocket, and then
-carry it to church, is simply ridiculous. So far,
-therefore, as the men were concerned whose
-property was fixed, and whose contributions
-were the same, weekly, all that was said by Paul
-about “devoting or placing” at home was pure
-nonsense, in the light of the exposition offered.<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c008'><sup>[8]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now for the other class, or the men of fluctuating
-resources. How shall they proceed? Were
-they to estimate the amount of their weekly gains,
-and to collect in the sum, on the last day, which
-they were to give on the first day of the week?
-If so, then in their cases, as well as in those of the
-first order, the whole process was a mere sham, an
-empty and meaningless form. For they also, at
-their homes, would simply have to take out their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>money and look at it, and then put it back and
-go to the church for the purpose of donating it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But again; as we have seen, that unless the
-work of deciding how much they ought to give,
-and separating the amount for that purpose while
-at home on the first day of the week, was a part
-of the plan of the apostle, the whole suggestion
-had in it neither rhyme nor reason, we now turn
-to the only alternative left our opponent; which
-is the conclusion that the work indicated by the
-term, “place or devote at home,” was that of <i>deciding
-upon</i>, and <i>separating</i> the sum which they
-could spare to the weekly contribution.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>What are the consequences of such a position?
-We reply, It overturns and utterly uproots the
-whole theory of Sunday sanctity; for the lesson
-taught by 1 Cor. 16:1, 2, instead of being favorable
-to the conception that Paul held to such a
-theory, shows that he regarded the first day of
-the week as secular time. Do you ask, How do
-you reach such a conclusion? I answer, It is inevitable,
-since the men who were acting under
-the instruction of Paul could not carry out the
-work prescribed by him without devoting at
-least the morning of the first day of the week to
-worldly business, such as that of figuring up and
-deciding upon the losses and profits of the preceding
-week, and, perhaps, collecting from outstanding
-matters the pro-rata amount necessary
-for the stated collection at the church.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Should it be objected that our suggestion is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>open to the criticism that the well-to-do class of
-Christians could have furnished their means at
-any time, we answer, Very true; but that, should
-week after week elapse without the separation,
-on the part of the wealthy, of the stipulated
-sum, it might, before the arrival of the apostle,
-reach figures which it would be difficult even for
-them to meet without perplexity. And besides,
-the better, easier, more natural, and we think,
-spiritually, the more profitable method, even for
-them, would be found in doing it weekly. We
-might offer many reasons for this conviction, had
-we space. Paul was giving a general rule to
-meet the condition of all classes. The poor comprised
-the larger portion of these classes, and a
-principle was laid down, therefore, which, while
-it was better for the rich than any other, was indispensable,
-for the purposes in question, to the
-men of moderate circumstances.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Our interpretation, stated in brief, is simply
-this: The apostle instructed them on the first
-day of the week to lay by in store, at home,
-what they proposed to give to the saints at Jerusalem,
-hoarding it up until he should visit
-them, so that at his arrival they might put it into
-the common treasury; thus avoiding the possibility
-of being unable, on the one hand, to meet
-their pledges, and on the other, of being necessitated
-to have their minds occupied with temporal
-affairs, during his stay. This conception is
-free from embarrassments. Even were the gentleman’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>translation of the passage correct, it
-cannot be shown to be unsound. He would read
-the scripture substantially as follows: “Let
-every one of you devote at home, treasuring up,
-that there be no gatherings when I come.” To
-our mind, there is no tautology, even in the declaration
-of the apostle thus expressed, which is
-worthy of mention; for should the term, “treasuring
-up,” be interpreted to mean the same as
-placing or devoting at home, it is explanatory,
-not of the command, but of the purpose of the
-command. A paraphrase, which is often employed
-with profit in the writings of Paul, will
-make it all clear: “Upon the first day of the
-week, let every one of you lay aside, or devote to
-the Lord, an amount commensurate with the
-prosperity which he has bestowed upon you,
-treasuring it up, so that there need be no gatherings
-when I come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The only difference between the gentleman
-and myself, therefore, would be as to the <i>place
-where</i> it was to be treasured up; he insisting that
-it was at the church, and we, at the house of the
-individual Christian. We have shown that his
-opinion is not only unnecessary, but that it is
-also absurd, since it divides a transaction which
-Paul does not divide; and, after admitting that
-a part of it transpired at the home of the individual,
-it represents the other part as having
-taken place at the church; whereas, neither the
-<i>church</i>, the <i>contribution box</i>, nor the <i>assembly</i>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>are so much as mentioned. And besides, it presents
-Paul in an attitude which certainly does
-not compliment his sagacity. Mark you, it is
-“every one of you” that he instructs to “lay by
-at home.” It must therefore be, not the church
-collectively, but its individual members who are
-called upon to treasure up, or lay by in store.
-Just here we submit that the language employed
-is literal, and not figurative, and that, this being
-true, the moment that the saints at Corinth
-placed their funds in the common treasury, they
-violated the injunction of the apostle, which was
-that they should treasure it up, or lay it by in
-store, individually. By way of enforcing our
-logic, we inquire of the reader, who has doubtless
-contributed many times to church collections,
-Can you look upon money thus bestowed as in
-any proper sense of the term belonging to you
-individually? or as still treasured up or laid by
-in store? We think that your answer will not
-be equivocal. To lay by in store, as before stated,
-is to put in some safe and accessible place;
-but money once donated is not accessible to the
-individual contributor, since he has no longer
-any individual property in it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Here we must terminate our remarks on 1 Cor.
-16:1, 2. As we do so, we have disposed of the
-last Bible text which will be cited in the support
-of a supposed practice of Sunday-keeping on the
-part of the early church. Error begets error.
-Having rejected the obvious teaching of Acts 20:7,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>that Paul, after holding a meeting on the first
-day of the week, traveled nineteen and a half
-miles on foot, and having endeavored to explain
-away this journey by inferring that it took place
-on the second day of the week, which is not
-mentioned in the connection, our opponent comes
-to the consideration of 1 Cor. 16:1, 2, lugging
-along in his arms a precedent which God had
-clearly taught him was not designed to teach
-the lesson which he sought to extract from it.
-With this precedent, thus illegitimately obtained,
-he seeks to explain the language of Paul which
-we have been considering. By this means, he
-has been led to indorse error. But we need not
-recapitulate.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In conclusion on this point, we remark: How
-admirable is the providence of God! He has instructed
-us in his word, in regard to duty, by
-clear precepts, and has never told as to study
-its requirements simply in the light of human
-example. How remarkable, therefore, that he
-should have condescended to so order, by his
-Spirit, the record which has been made in the
-case of every precedent brought forward, that
-the text and context would utterly overthrow
-every effort of him who should attempt to employ
-them in the interest of a false doctrine.
-On the day of the resurrection, as if to show
-that it was not holy time, two disciples are
-brought to view as traveling fifteen miles; a
-portion of the distance in company with their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>approving Lord, and the remainder of it after he
-had appeared to, walked and conversed with,
-them. In Acts 20:7, apparently perceiving the
-use which might be made of it, he places, in the
-foreground of the sacred record, the apostle,
-threading a weary journey on foot from Troas to
-Assos; and lastly, in 1 Cor. 16:1, 2, he framed
-the language so that it should inculcate, not the
-idea that the first day of the week was holy
-time, but, on the contrary, that it might be devoted
-to the secular work of casting up accounts
-and collecting funds.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>With the exposition offered of the words, “I
-was in the Spirit on the Lord’s day,” Rev. 1:10,
-we shall make short work. What we have
-previously said on that passage is not sufficiently
-disturbed to warrant extended remark. Be it
-remembered, then, that, as said above, the passage
-proves that God has a day in this dispensation.
-At this point commences our divergence.
-We say that the term, “Lord’s day,” refers to the
-seventh-day Sabbath. The writer says that it
-refers to the first day of the week. The declaration
-that Christ paid no attention to the seventh-day
-Sabbath after his resurrection, needs
-no reply here, except that he was under no obligation
-to do so, and there was no good reason
-why he should, since he regarded it strictly in
-his lifetime, and enjoined it upon his followers.
-Perhaps, however, it would be well to add that
-he at least never did anything after his resurrection
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>which might be construed into a desecration
-of it; whereas, in the case of the only first-day
-on which it can be <i>proved</i> that he ever met
-with his disciples, after his death, be devoted a
-portion of its hours to travel on the highway.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To the objection of the writer that, if the term,
-“Lord’s day,” in the case before us, does apply to
-the seventh-day Sabbath, it is strange that it
-should have been called in every case but this
-“the Sabbath,” we reply that, were this true, this
-would simply prove a choice in titles, and implies
-no disrespect to the day itself, since the term
-“Sabbath,” equally with that of “Lord’s day,” was
-a sacred denomination. Not so, however, if he
-be right in the supposition that the term, “Lord’s
-day,” applies to the Sunday; for, if he be correct
-in this, then indeed we have something which is
-<i>passing strange</i>. For, in all the New Testament,
-that which he is pleased to style the “Christian
-Sabbath,” and to which, according to his theory,
-belonged the honorable name of “Lord’s day,” is
-not only so called but once; but, being spoken of
-nine times by inspired men, it is mentioned eight
-times out of the nine by them in an utter disregard
-of its hallowed nature, in the terms employed,
-since it is referred to by its secular name,
-first day of the week, in all these instances. The
-reader will recollect that, in our positive argument,
-we showed that the term, “Lord’s day,”
-was a fitting one for the last day of the week,
-provided the term translated “Lord” was applicable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>to God, the Father, as well as to Christ, the
-Son. 1. Because it was the day which he blessed
-and sanctified in Eden, thus claiming it as his
-own (Gen. 2:3). 2. Because, in the commandment,
-he calls it “the Sabbath of the Lord.” 3.
-Because, in Isa 58:13, 14, he makes mention of
-it in the use of the terms, “Sabbath,” “my holy
-day,” “the holy of the Lord,” &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In addition, we might cite other honorable and
-distinguishing terms by which it is pointed out
-in the Bible as a day which belongs peculiarly
-to the Lord our God, but these are sufficient.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If it be replied that the word translated
-“Lord” in Rev. 1:10, is necessarily limited to
-Christ, we answer: 1. As we have argued formerly,
-that he said he was Lord of the Sabbath.
-Mark 2:27, 28. 2. That the following texts
-show conclusively that the divine Son of God
-was engaged, equally with the Father, in the
-creation of this world; and, therefore, that he
-undoubtedly shared in the rest which furnished
-the foundation for the Edenic Sabbath, as well as
-in the act of blessing and sanctifying it, or setting
-it apart for religious purposes. “All things were
-made by him [Christ]: and without him was not
-anything made that was made.” John 1:3. “He
-was in the world, and the world was made by
-him, and the world knew him not.” John 1:10.
-“... Who [God] created all things by Jesus
-Christ.” Eph. 3:9. “For by him were all
-things created, that are in heaven, and that are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>in earth; ... all things were created by him,
-and for him.” Col. 1:16. “God ... hath in
-these last days spoken unto us by his Son, whom
-he hath appointed heir of all things, by whom
-also he made the worlds.” Heb. 1:1, 2. Even
-though we should grant, therefore, which we do
-not, that the term translated “Lord,” as above,
-applies exclusively to the Son of God, we cannot
-see why the seventh day might not, with all
-propriety, be called after him, the Lord’s day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the concluding remarks on this branch of
-the subject, it will not be considered out of place
-for us to remind the reader of the protest which
-we offered, in the rejoinder to the second article
-of the gentleman of the <i>Statesman</i>, against his
-effort to obtain all the benefit which could be derived
-from his interpretation of Rev. 1:10, before
-he had struck a single blow, either in the direction
-of overturning our construction, or establishing,
-by fair argument, his own. The reason
-why this protest was offered is now apparent.
-The gentleman there, by anticipation, <i>assumed</i>
-that John meant by the term, “Lord’s day,” the
-first day of the week. He <i>promised</i> that in due
-time he would make good his assertion. But
-how has it proved, now that he has reached the
-very point where he should have fulfilled this
-engagement? Every one must see that he has
-utterly failed. <i>Proof</i> was the very thing which
-was <i>promised</i>, and which was <i>needed</i>, right here.
-It is the very thing, also, which he has neglected
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>to adduce. All that is said in reference to the
-theory of Wetstein, may have served to give
-respectability, in point of length, to the treatment
-of that which he has regarded a most important
-scripture in his line of evidence; but it was utterly
-irrelevant to anything which we had said;
-for the reader will remember that we emphatically
-planted ourselves on the position that it was
-the weekly Sabbath to which allusion is made.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To the restatement of the scriptures employed
-in vindication of this last opinion, there can be
-no objection, but we inquire again, Where are the
-passages, where the deductions from Scripture
-teachings, by which the gentleman has proved
-that the Lord’s day is the first day of the week?
-He has not so much as cited one. He has not
-made even a respectable effort at argument; but,
-with a haste which is irreverent, if not indecent,
-he rushes away from the book of God, as if impelled
-by the conviction that his view will find
-no support there, and plunges headlong into the
-regions of patristic myth and moonshine. At
-this we are not surprised. It is just what we
-expected. Sabbatarians are as well acquainted
-with this device as they are with the emptiness
-of the so-called Bible argument for the Sunday.
-It simply serves to strengthen their conviction,
-so often expressed in these articles, that the
-stronghold of first-day observance will ever be
-found in writings which have been manipulated,
-retrenched, and interpolated, by the church of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>Rome. For, be it remembered, it is from the
-authorities to which the gentleman now appeals,
-that the papacy brings its stoutest testimonials
-for apostolic succession, papistic supremacy, and
-the other heresies which blacken the record of
-its apostasy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>All it is necessary to say to the reader here is,
-therefore, that he should bear in mind that Sabbatarians
-are willing to leave the arbitrament of
-this whole question where it can be determined
-from the standpoint of Bible evidence. It is the
-opposition, and not we, who make it necessary,
-in the investigation of this subject, to go upon
-forbidden ground. “All Scripture is given by
-inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine,
-for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness;
-that the man of God may be perfect,
-thoroughly furnished unto all good works.” 2
-Tim. 3:16, 17. If, therefore, first-day sanctity
-has no warrant in the Bible, which we have seen
-to be the case, then it is not among those things
-which are <i>profitable</i>, or which, as Christian doctrines,
-are <i>necessary to furnish the man of God
-unto all good works</i>.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>
- <h2 id='reply07' class='c006'>STATESMAN’S REPLY. <br /> ARTICLE SEVEN. <br /> TESTIMONY OF THE EARLY FATHERS TO THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>Besides the inspired records of the Scriptures,
-there have come down to us the writings of men
-who were contemporaneous with some of the
-apostles, and the writings of others who lived in
-the immediately succeeding generations. We
-shall quote from the writings of those who lived
-during the two centuries following the close of
-the canon of inspiration. These writers give
-evidence enough that they were not inspired, as
-were the penmen of the Divine Word. But it
-will be borne in mind that we appeal to them
-here simply as witnesses to a matter of fact.
-Many of their opinions and interpretations of
-Scripture may not be worthy of acceptance; but
-their testimony to the existence of the Lord’s
-day, an admitted fact, cannot be disputed. As
-there has been a great deal of loose citation from
-the early fathers on this question, we have been
-at considerable pains to translate carefully from
-the original in every case, and accompany each
-quotation with minute and accurate reference.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The first writer from whom we shall quote is
-Ignatius. This father stood at the head of the
-church at Antioch at the close of the first century
-and the beginning of the second. After occupying
-that position for many years, he was condemned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>to death, as a Christian, by Trajan,
-transported in chains to Rome, and there thrown
-to lions in the Coliseum for the amusement of the
-populace, probably in the year 107. On his
-way to Rome, he wrote seven epistles to various
-churches. Eusebius and Jerome arrange these
-writings as follows (1) To the Ephesians; (2)
-to the Magnesians; (3) to the Trallians; (4) to
-the Romans; (5) to the Philadelphians; (6) to
-the Smyrneans; (7) to Polycarp, bishop, or presbyter,
-of Smyrna. These seven epistles, in connection
-with a number of others confessedly
-spurious, have come down to us in two Greek
-copies, a longer and a shorter. A Syriac version
-of three epistles has recently been found. Without
-entering into the controversy concerning
-these Ignatian Epistles, we give the conclusion
-reached by Dr. Schaff, which is very generally
-accepted: “The question lies between the shorter
-Greek copy and the Syriac version. The preponderance
-of testimony is for the former, in
-which the letters are no loose patch-work, but
-were produced, each under its one impulse, were
-well known to Eusebius, probably even to Polycarp,
-and agree also with the Armenian version
-of the fifth century.” (History of the Christian
-Church, vol. i. p. 466.) It is admitted, even by
-those who do not accept the Greek copy as genuine,
-that it is the work of the close of the second
-century, or a little later. In any event, then,
-it is important testimony. In the epistles to the
-Magnesians occurs the following language: “Be
-not deceived with false doctrines, nor old, unprofitable
-fables. For, if we still live in accordance
-with Judaism, we confess that we have not received
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>grace. For even the most holy prophets
-lived according to Jesus Christ.... If, then,
-they who were brought up in ancient things arrived
-at a newness of hope, no longer keeping
-the Sabbath, but living according to the Lord’s
-life, ... how can we live without him?...
-Since we have been made his disciples,
-let us learn to live according to Christianity.”<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c008'><sup>[9]</sup></a>—<i>Ad
-Magnes.</i> capp. 8, 9; Coteler’s Edition, vol.
-ii. pp. 19, 20. Amsterdam, 1724.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In this passage, it will be observed, the writer
-draws a contrast between Judaism and Christianity.
-To keep the seventh-day Sabbath was to
-live according to Judaism. To live according to
-the dominical life, or, as the thought is otherwise
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>expressed, to live according to Christianity, was
-opposed to the keeping of the seventh-day Sabbath.
-The argument of Ignatius tells strongly
-in favor of the first-day Sabbath. If Jews, he
-argues, brought up in the old order of things, on
-turning Christians, no longer keep the seventh-day
-Sabbath, but live according to the dominical
-life, observing as part of that life, the dominical
-day, the day on which the Lord rose from the
-dead, surely those who never had been Jews
-should live according to Christianity, and not
-give heed to Judaizing teachers.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Passing on, we come to a document called “The
-Epistle of Barnabas.” This letter, though not
-the composition of the Barnabas of the New
-Testament, was written in the early part of the
-second century. It cannot be determined who
-was the author, but <i>the early date</i> of the letter
-is fully established; and that is the main point.
-Its language is: “We celebrate the eighth day
-with joy, on which Jesus rose from the dead.”—<i>Coteler’s
-Edition of the Apostolic Fathers</i>, vol. i.
-p. 47.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The testimony of Justin Martyr is full and explicit.
-As an itinerant evangelist for many years
-during the first half of the second century, just
-after the time of the apostle John, he enjoyed an
-excellent opportunity of becoming, acquainted
-with the customs of the whole church. Writing
-in the year 139 to the Emperor Antoninus Pius,
-in vindication of his Christian brethren, he gives
-the following account of their stated religious
-services: “On the day called the day of the sun
-is an assembly of all who live either in cities or
-in the rural districts, and the memoirs of the
-apostles and the writings of the prophets are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>read;” <i>i. e.</i>, the Old and New Testaments. Then
-he goes on to specify the various parts of their
-first-day services. Just as at the present day, in
-Christian congregations, there were preaching,
-prayer, the celebration of the Lord’s supper, and
-the contribution of alms. As reasons why Christians
-should observe the first day, he assigns the
-following: “Because it was the first day on
-which God dispelled the darkness and chaos, and
-formed the world, and because Jesus Christ, our
-Saviour, rose from the dead on it.”—<i>Robert
-Stephens’ edition of the works of Justin Martyr</i>,
-p. 162. Lutetiæ, 1551.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In another of his works, the Dialogue with
-Trypho the Jew, written about the same time as
-the Apology, from which we have quoted, occurs
-this passage: “The command to circumcise infants
-on the eighth day was a type of the true
-circumcision by which we were circumcised from
-error and evil through our Lord Jesus Christ,
-who rose from the dead on the first day of the
-week; for the first day of the week remains the
-chief of all the days.” (Stephens’ Edition, p. 59.
-See also Trollope’s edition of the Dialogue with
-Trypho, pp. 85, 86.) The careful reader of Justin
-Martyr will observe that, in addressing Trypho
-the Jew, he uses different terms for the days
-of the week from those which he employs in
-addressing the Emperor Antoninus. Addressing
-a heathen emperor, he employs the heathen
-names for both the seventh and the first day of
-the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Two important notices of the Lord’s day, all
-the more important because of their incidental
-character, are found in the History of Eusebius.
-Dionysius, bishop or presbyter of Corinth, <span class='fss'>A. D.</span>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>170, in a letter to the church at Rome, a fragment
-of which is preserved by Eusebius, says: “To-day
-we kept the Lord’s holy day, in which we
-read your letter.” (Hist. Eccles. iv. 23, Paris Ed.
-1678, pp. 117, 118.) The other of these notices
-is in regard to a treatise on the Lord’s day, by
-Melito, bishop of Sardis, <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 170. This treatise,
-Eusebius remarks, along with others by the same
-writer, had come to the historian’s knowledge.—<i>Hist.
-Eccles.</i> iv. 26, Paris Ed. 1678, p. 119.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Although the letter of Pliny to Trajan is so
-well known as hardly to need quotation, we shall
-close this article with its interesting testimony
-in confirmation, from a pagan quarter, of what
-has already been adduced from Christian writers:
-“They [the Christians] affirmed that the sum of
-their fault, or error, was that they were accustomed
-to assemble on a stated day—<i>Stato die</i>—before
-it was light, and sing praise alternately
-among themselves to Christ as God—<i>carmenque
-Christo, quasi Deo, dicere secum, invicem</i>.” (Plin.
-Epist. x., 97.) Here we have the fact that Christians
-in the early part of the second century met
-regularly on a stated day, and this stated day, as
-all the Christian authorities of the same date
-prove, was the first day of the week, the Lord’s
-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Additional patristic evidence will be given in
-the next article.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>
- <h2 id='rejoinder07' class='c006'>A REJOINDER. <br /> “TESTIMONY OF THE EARLY FATHERS TO THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.”</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>There is one feature which has characterized
-this debate, hitherto, which has been a source of
-considerable satisfaction. The controversy, up to
-this point, has been urged purely with reference
-to the teaching of the Bible, as drawn from its
-sacred pages. Henceforth, however, this is not
-to be the case. We are now to have, not the
-“sure word of prophecy,” with the clear and
-forcible lines of textual evidence, drawn from
-its inspired utterances, but that “word of prophecy,”
-supplemented and explained by the apostolic
-fathers.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It has been said, and well said, that history repeats
-itself. If there was one thing which
-marked the religious impulse that Protestantism
-gave to the world, it was an utter rejection, in
-the decision of religious opinions, of everything
-but Bible authority. The voice of Martin Luther
-even now seems to reverberate in our ears, as—when
-fighting the very battles which Sabbatarians
-am being called upon to fight over again—he
-retorted in sharp and stinging words upon
-his cowled and priestly opponents, who were
-ever citing patristic evidence, The Bible, and the
-Bible alone, is our rule of faith. Again, as we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>read the words addressed by him to those friends
-who were hopefully waiting the expected reply
-from the Romanists of his time, to a courageous
-assault which he had made upon them from the
-stand-point of the Bible, it seems as if they were
-designed to be prophetic of our time, rather
-than descriptive of his own. He said: “You are
-waiting for your adversaries’ answer; it is already
-written, and here it is: ‘The fathers, the
-fathers, the fathers; the church, the church, the
-church; usage, custom; but of the Scriptures—nothing!’”—<i>D’Aubirgne’s
-Hist. Ref.</i>, vol. viii., p. 717.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Wearisome as these repeated conflicts may be
-to the child of God, there is a satisfaction in the
-thought that we hold in our hands the same
-weapons, and bear aloft the same banners by
-which, under the blessing of God, victory, complete
-and universal, has been attained in the
-past. The opponents of Bible truth have never
-yet been able to stand before the thunder of its
-power, or to balance the ponderous weight of its
-influence, in the decision of religious questions.
-The homely phrase of the great reformer is just
-as potent and irresistible in the present contest as
-it was in that for which it was framed “When
-God’s word is by the fathers expounded, construed,
-and glossed, then, in my judgment, it is
-even like unto one that straineth milk through a
-coal-sack, which must needs spoil the milk, and
-make it black; even so, likewise, God’s word of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>itself is sufficiently pure, clean, bright, and clear;
-but through the doctrines, books, and writings, of
-the fathers, it is very surely darkened, falsified,
-and spoiled.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The elegant and convincing logic of Philip
-Melancthon, the greatest theologian of the sixteenth
-century—who, in the following brief lines,
-discussed and summed up the whole question—is
-just as sound and unanswerable now as it was
-when, under the blessing of God, it carried confusion
-and defeat into the ranks of the papacy,
-three hundred years ago. He says: “How often
-has not Jerome been mistaken! how often Augustine!
-how often Ambrose! How often do we
-not find them differing in judgment—how often
-do we not hear them retracting their errors!
-There is but one Scripture divinely inspired, and
-without mixture of error.” (<i>Idem.</i>, p. 219.) In
-fine, we might prove from history that nearly
-every Protestant writer, for the last three centuries,
-has forged for us weapons which could be
-employed with the most telling effect in the controversy
-in which we are now engaged.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This, however, we have not space to do, but
-must content ourselves with several brief citations,
-by which we will show that the authorities
-of our own times—equally with those of the
-past—are uniform in their expressions of contempt
-for testimony which is so largely relied
-upon by our reviewer in the present discussion.
-“To avoid being imposed upon, we ought to treat
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>tradition as we do a notorious and known liar, to
-whom we give no credit, unless what he says is
-confirmed to us by some person of undoubted
-veracity.... False and lying traditions are
-of an early date, and the greatest men have, out
-of a pious credulity, suffered themselves to be
-imposed upon by them.—<i>Archibald Bower.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“But of these, we may safely state that there
-is not a <i>truth</i> of the most orthodox creed that
-cannot be proved by their authority; nor a <i>heresy</i>
-that has disgraced the Romish church, that
-may not challenge them as it abettors. In point
-of <i>doctrine</i>, their authority is, <i>with me, nothing</i>.
-The <span class='fss'>WORD</span> of God alone contains my creed. On
-a number of points, I can go to the Greek and
-Latin fathers of the church, to know what <i>they
-believed</i>, and what the people of their respective
-communions believed; but after all this, I must
-return to God’s word to know what he would
-have me to believe.” (A. Clark, Com. on Prov.
-8.) “We should take heed how we quote the fathers
-in proof of the doctrines of the gospel; because
-he who knows them best, knows that on
-many of those subjects they blow hot and cold.”
-(Quoted in Hist. of Sab. from Autobiography of
-Adam Clarke.)</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Most of the writings, bearing the name of
-the apostolic fathers, are regarded as spurious by
-various modern critics. The genuineness of all
-has been disputed; but the fragments that remain
-are curious as relics of an early age, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>valuable as indicating the character of primitive
-Christianity.” (Am. Cyc., Art. Apostolic
-Fathers.) Thus much for the estimate which
-Protestants place upon the authorities which are
-brought forward by the gentleman in the <i>Statesman</i>.
-Assuredly, he would never have appealed
-to them, had he not felt that his cause was
-hopeless one, when left to the arbitrament of
-Scripture.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Should it be pleaded in extenuation of his
-cause that they have not been advanced with a
-view to influencing the judgment of the reader
-in reference to the continuity of the old Sabbath,
-but were introduced simply to furnish, as suggested
-in the outset, a criticism showing the use
-of the term, “Lord’s day,” in the first three centuries,
-then, we inquire, why cite Ignatius at all?
-It will be perceived at a glance that, according
-to the rendering which he has given us—and for
-which, and his note thereon, he will receive our
-thanks, since it will save us much labor—there is
-not in it a single mention of the term, “Lord’s
-day.” If the passage conveys any meaning at
-all, it is either that the Sabbath should be observed
-in a manner differing from that in which
-it was kept by the Jews, or else that it should
-not be observed at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But the last of these propositions, the writer
-will not admit to be sound, since he has fairly
-repudiated such a conception, and has, in so many
-words, stated that he heartily agrees with us in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>the perpetuity of the Edenic Sabbath. He has
-also stated that the fourth commandment—which
-it will be admitted commences with the words,
-“Remember the <i>Sabbath day</i>, to keep it holy”—is
-a Sabbath law which is still binding, and
-which, the words of Ignatius to the contrary notwithstanding,
-forever settles the question that this
-is not a Sabbathless dispensation.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>What shall be done, then, with the language of
-the venerable father? We are well acquainted
-with the office which it has performed hitherto,
-and are anxious to know where it is to throw its
-baleful shadow hereafter. In the past, hundreds
-of individuals whose consciences have been
-aroused by appeals to the Bible on the subject
-of the perpetuity of God’s holy day, have had
-their fears quieted, and have been lulled into security
-by the very extract with which we are
-here favored. Why, they have said, was not Ignatius
-a disciple of John, and did he not therefore
-know what John believed? Did he not also
-prove his integrity by becoming a martyr to the
-faith? Since, therefore, he was possessed of
-both knowledge and piety, and since he has called
-the first day of the week the Lord’s day, are we
-not justified in keeping the day which he kept,
-and rejecting the day which he rejected? Supported
-and encouraged in this position, as they
-have been by the brethren of the writer who—having
-either less candor, or less scholarship,
-than he—have insisted again and again that Ignatius
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>did call the first day of the week the
-Lord’s day, it has been in many cases utterly impossible
-for Sabbatarians to disabuse their minds
-of this impression. With gratitude, therefore,
-we shall add the name of the gentleman to the
-rapidly increasing list of scholars who, headed by
-Kitto, and others of equal distinction, frankly
-concede that Sabbatarians have been in the right,
-and that Ignatius did not speak of the Lord’s day
-at all, but simply alluded to the Lord’s life.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But what shall we say for those who have
-been deluded upon this point, and have thus
-been prevented from doing what they felt that
-duty required? There is a terrible responsibility
-somewhere. For the scholars who have abetted
-this deception, there can be no defense. For the
-unfortunate victims of the fraud, it may be said
-that their situation would be more hopeful had
-they not brought themselves into the difficulty
-by going upon forbidden ground. Should one be
-led astray by an incorrect translation of the
-Scriptures, God would undoubtedly pardon the
-mistake; for the person had done the best he
-could under the circumstances, and had sought
-for light where God had instructed him so to do.
-But to those who, having left the only true
-source of trustworthy knowledge, have allowed
-any class of persons, ancient or modern, to shape
-their belief differently from what it would have
-been had they relied wholly upon the Bible, we
-fear that Christ will say—as he did to those in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>like circumstances in his day, who, having followed
-the traditions of their ancestors, were
-found violating the law of God—“In vain do
-ye worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments
-of men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Before closing on this point, and in order that
-the citation may not be employed in the interest
-of no-Sabbath views, let the reader consider, for
-a moment, another feature, and a very important
-one in this argument. Having seen that Ignatius—if
-he wrote the above—did not mention the
-Lord’s day, it is proper now to inquire whether
-it is certain that he ever penned the language in
-question, at all? To this it may be replied, that
-it is very far from being so. Nay, it is in the highest
-degree probable, as the following extracts
-will prove, that the venerable man either never
-wrote a word of those which are cited, or, if he
-did, what he said has been so manipulated that
-it is very far from conveying the impression
-which he intended. “From Smyrna, he (Ignatius)
-wrote to the churches at Ephesus, Magnesia,
-Trallia, Rome, and Philadelphia, and on his voyage,
-to Polycarp, and the church at Smyrna.
-These letters are still extant, though the genuineness
-of the first three is doubted by some
-learned men.” (<i>Cyc. Relig. Knowl. Art. Ignatius.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The distinguished historian and scholar, Kitto,
-speaks on this point in his Cyclopedia, Art.
-Lord’s Day, as follows: “We must notice one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>other passage as bearing on the subject of the
-Lord’s day, though it certainly contains no mention
-of it. It occurs in the epistle of Ignatius to
-the Magnesians (about <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 100). The whole
-passage is evidently obscure, and the text may
-be corrupt.” Originally, there were fifteen letters
-attributed to Ignatius. Centuries ago, however,
-eight of them were rejected as hopelessly
-spurious. The remaining seven have been also
-denounced as forgeries, by many writers, with
-John Calvin at their head. Others, while holding
-on to four of the seven, have condemned
-three, and among them the letter to the Magnesians,
-from which the citation which we are considering
-was taken. A poor stone, this, which
-purports to come from Antioch, for the head-stone
-of the corner of the temple of patristic
-testimonials to the Sunday.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The way is now prepared for the consideration
-of the second extract, namely, that of Barnabas.
-Here, again, the confession of the gentleman is
-of service to us, by way of saving labor, since
-he unequivocally admits that the Barnabas who
-wrote the letter from which he quotes, was
-not the Barnabas of New-Testament fame. It
-becomes important, however, that we should
-know just who he was who wrote this epistle,
-before it should be received as authority in a
-grave religious discussion. Few persons would
-have the temerity to commit their spiritual interests
-to the hands of nameless individuals who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>lived 1700 years ego, unless they could feel some
-assurance that the men in whom they were thus
-confiding were persons whose judgment should
-have weight in the decision of matters of faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is not enough that it should be established,
-even beyond doubt, that the writer in question
-lived in the second century. For no one will insist
-that <i>all the men</i> who lived at that time were
-proper exponents of the views held by Christians
-in that period. It is, therefore, but reasonable
-that, before any man is brought forward to testify
-in so important a matter, he should have
-either a name which will show that he was
-qualified, both morally and intellectually, to act
-the part of a public teacher of the opinions held
-in his time, or, at least, that what he has written
-must be of a nature to commend his utterances
-to our judgments. Neither of these requisitions,
-however, is met in the case of the Barnabas (if
-his name was really Barnabas) quoted above.<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c008'><sup>[10]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>That his epistle has been employed in a
-gigantic fraud, no one will dispute. It is headed,
-“The general Epistle of Barnabas.” At its
-close, as given in the apocryphal New Testament,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>is the subscription, “Barnabas, the apostle, and
-companion of Paul.” Now, if he wrote these
-words himself, the gentleman will admit that he
-is unworthy of the slightest confidence, since he
-has told a deliberate falsehood. If, on the other
-hand, it be insisted that this was the work of
-subsequent generations, then we must move with
-extreme caution. In the region where this
-epistle lies, are the unmistakable footprints of
-men base enough to pervert the facts, and to employ
-its contents for an unworthy purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The only alternative left us, therefore, since
-the author of the document is unknown to history,
-is that of examining what he has said, with
-reference to its character. Before doing this,
-however, it will be well to state—by way of putting
-the reader on his guard—that the history of
-this epistle is of a nature to awaken the most
-serious suspicion. By consulting the Am. Cyc.,
-Art. Epistle of Barnabas, he will find it there
-stated that this epistle was lost to the world for
-eight hundred years, namely, from the ninth to
-the seventeenth century, and that, when it came
-to the surface after its long disappearance, it was
-found in the hands of one Sigismond, a Jesuit of
-that age. The desperate character of the order
-to which this man belonged, and the recklessness
-with which its members treat documents of the
-most sacred character, when they can thereby
-serve a favorite purpose, need no comment here.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>Prof. Stowe, while arguing favorably to the
-epistle, in some respects, employs the following
-words, which have in them great significance, in
-view of what has been said above: “We admit
-that the epistle of Barnabas is strongly interpolated.”—<i>Hist.
-of Books of the Bible</i>, p. 423.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is now time to ponder, for a moment, the
-words of the nondescript writer quoted above.
-They are as follows: “We celebrate the eighth
-day with joy, on which Jesus rose from the dead.”
-In them is found not a single fact which, granting
-their authenticity, is at all decisive in the
-matter at issue. For, be it remembered, the controversy
-is not as to whether the ancients were
-in the habit of holding convocations for any
-purpose whatsoever, on the first day of the week,
-but, whether they called it the Lord’s day. It
-will, therefore, be admitted that the term, Lord’s
-Day, is not so much as mentioned; whereas, the
-day which it is supposed was entitled to the
-honor of being thus designated, is termed the
-“eighth day, the one on which Jesus rose from
-the dead.” Nor is it so much as intimated that
-the day in question was observed as a Sabbath,
-or esteemed as holy. The statement employed
-is that “they celebrated it with joy.” But this
-could be said with perfect propriety of any day
-of the week on which there regularly occurred a
-religious festival.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As an illustration of this, it might be mentioned
-here that a historian of the present time,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>while mentioning the usages of this period, could
-not be charged with inaccuracy should he declare
-that the 25th of December, which is supposed by
-some to be the day of the Lord’s nativity, is regularly
-celebrated. Should he do so, and should
-coming generations infer therefrom that it is now
-regarded as holy, you will readily perceive the
-mistake into which they would fall. What we
-want, if we must have recourse to such <i>miserable
-material</i> as that which we are handling over, is
-something positive and definite. This the text
-undeniably fails to give. We leave it, therefore,
-as worthless; 1st. Because we do not know <i>who</i>
-wrote it. 2d. Because we do not know <i>when</i> it
-was written. 3d. Because it is found in an
-epistle so corrupted by interpolations that it is
-not at all reliable as authority. 4th. Because it
-has no direct bearing upon the subject. 5th. Because
-its author—by the absurd and ridiculous
-sentiments to which he gave expression—manifestly
-had a judgment too weak to allow us to
-suppose that, in the providence of God, in which
-nothing falls out by mistake, he should constitute
-a pillar in any way necessary to the establishment
-of sound religious doctrine.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The third authority brought forward is Justin
-Martyr. From him we learn that, on the day of
-the sun, the church at Rome were in the habit of
-convening, partaking of the Lord’s supper, listening
-to preaching, engaging in prayer, and in the
-contribution of alms.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>It will be at once perceived that here is the
-nearest approach yet made to the accomplishment
-of the task which our reviewer assigned
-himself, and for which he has led the reader
-away from the oracles of God to the opinions and
-practices of men liable to error and mistake.
-Let it not be forgotten that the <i>prominent</i> object
-to be gained by this departure, was the production
-of patristic authority for the use of the
-term, Lord’s day, in the first three centuries.
-That this purpose has not been accomplished,
-hitherto, all must admit. The next inquiry, therefore,
-is, should all points of dispute respecting
-the reliability of what has been quoted above,
-be waived, and should it be granted that Justin
-Martyr said what is attributed to him, Has the
-desired object been reached? The answer is
-emphatically in the negative. Justin Martyr
-avoids the application of Lord’s day to the day
-of the sun, as if prevented from using it by the
-same fatality which has withheld all the others
-from doing so, who have thus far been cited.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Here we might pause, and insist that the
-gentleman has utterly failed, in the citation before
-us, to prove anything which is really relevant
-to the subject. It is in vain that he urges,
-in extenuation of the fact that Justin calls the
-first day of the week, the “day of the sun,” that
-he is addressing a heathen emperor. He was not
-afraid to speak to that emperor of the Old and
-New Testaments, of the preaching of the word,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>of the Lord’s supper, and of the resurrection of
-Christ; and why should he thus carefully avoid
-mention of the Lord’s day? Surely, he did not
-wish to convey the impression that Christians
-observed the day of the sun because of its
-heathen character, since he gives the reasons for
-their doing so.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But, again, it is claimed that at this period
-the chosen and peculiar appellation which had
-been given by the Holy Spirit, was that of Lord’s
-day, and that the Lord’s day, or the Sunday, had
-become the holy Sabbath which God commanded.
-This being true, assuredly we might expect
-that, in the work of Justin entitled, “A Dialogue
-with Trypho, the Jew,” he would set forth, in the
-use of its peculiar title, the claims of that day
-which had been elevated, by divine command, to
-the position of the ancient Sabbath. But does
-he do this? The gentleman does not urge it. He
-does say that, in writing to the Jew, he drops
-the heathen titles of Sunday and Saturday, and
-speaks of the first, and the seventh, day of the
-week. But mark again; it is not urged that he
-anywhere calls the first day the Lord’s day.
-Once more, therefore, he has failed on this branch
-of the subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now it will be well to regard the matter from
-the other side of the question. It must be conceded,
-as remarked above, that what Justin Martyr
-says furnishes stronger support for the idea
-of worship on the Sunday than anything else
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>which has been adduced. But here again, we
-protest that the Bible, alone and unexplained, is
-sufficient for the settlement of this point. Others,
-if they like, may form their religious faith
-upon the practice of uninspired men, handed down
-to us through the perilous transit of the ages,
-protected and shielded from corruption and innovation
-by no denunciation of divine wrath
-against those who change its phraseology; but
-we much prefer to stand under the covering ægis
-of these words: “If any man shall add unto
-these things, God shall add unto him the plagues
-which are written in this book.” (Rev. 22:18.)
-Nor do we think that the gentleman himself
-would seriously urge that this position is unsound.
-Let us test it. Justin Martyr is assumed
-to be a fair exponent of the religious sentiment
-of his time. Now, therefore, what he believed
-they believed; and what they believed, we ought
-to believe, if our position, taken above, is not
-correct. Proceeding a step farther, we inquire,
-what was the faith of Justin Martyr and his
-contemporaries, allowing his writings to be the
-criterion of judgment? To this it may replied:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>1st. That they believed in no Sabbath in this
-dispensation. Proof: “For if before Abraham
-there was no need of circumcision, nor of Sabbaths,
-nor of feasts, nor of offerings before Moses;
-so now in like manner there is no need of them,
-since Jesus Christ, the Son of God, was, by the
-determinate counsel of God, born of a virgin of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>the seed of Abraham, without sin.” (Dial. of
-Trypho.) Does the writer believe this? The
-reader well knows that he does not, for he has
-nobly repudiated it, again and again.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>2d. They believed that the Sabbath was imposed
-upon the Jews for their sins. Proof: “It
-was because of your (<i>i. e.</i>, Jews) iniquities, and
-the iniquities of your fathers, that God appointed
-you to observe the Sabbath.” (<i>Idem.</i>) But
-our reviewer holds—as must all who accept the
-words of Christ (Mark 2:27, 28)—that it was
-given to Adam in the garden of Eden, as their
-representative head, for the benefit of the whole
-race, more than two thousand years before there
-was a Jew in the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>3d. They believed that, in the administration of
-the Lord’s supper, water should be employed.
-Proof: “At the conclusion of this discourse, <i>i. e.</i>,
-that of the Bishop on Sunday, we all rise up together
-and pray; and prayers being over, there
-is bread, and wine, and water offered.” (First
-Apol. Tras. by Reeves.) But modern Christendom
-look upon this as an innovation of popery.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>4th. They believed that the reasons why Christians
-should observe the first day of the week
-were found in the facts that God dispelled the
-darkness and chaos on the first day of the week,
-and that on that day, Christ rose from the dead.
-Proof: Extract given above by the writer in his
-article. But the first of these opinions, modern
-Christians will not admit at all, and the latter
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>furnishes only one-half of the obligation, since
-it ignores all positive law upon the subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So we might proceed, but enough has been
-said to show that Justin Martyr, as quoted above,
-is no criterion for the faith of those who have
-the Bible in their hands, from which they can
-learn, contrary to his views: 1st. That we have
-a Sabbath. 2d. That it was given to all mankind
-as a blessing, and not to the Jews for their
-sins. 3d. That both the bread and the wine belong
-to the laity, as well as to the priests. 4th.
-That the reasons for the observance of the Lord’s
-day do not rest upon the circumstance that God
-dispelled the darkness on the first day, but upon
-an explicit command of Heaven.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If the reader would satisfy himself from other
-sources that the statements of Justin Martyr are
-to be taken with extreme caution, and that his
-judgment was so easily imposed upon as to render
-him an unsafe guide in the plainest matters
-of fact, he will read the following extract from a
-publication of the Am. Tract Society: “Justin
-Martyr appears indeed peculiarly unfitted to lay
-claim to authority. It is notorious that he supposed
-a pillar erected on the island of the Tiber to
-Semo Sanchus, an old Sabine Deity, to be a monument
-erected by the Roman people in honor of
-the impostor, Simon Magus. Were so gross a
-mistake to be made by a modern writer, in relating
-a historical fact, exposure would immediately
-take place, and his testimony would thenceforward
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>be suspected. And, assuredly, the same
-measure should be meted to Justin Martyr, who
-so egregiously errs in reference to a fact alluded
-to by Livy, the historian.”—<i>Spirit of Popery</i>,
-pp. 44, 45.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In concluding the remarks which will be offered
-here—in reference to those productions
-which are attributed to Justin Martyr, and which
-have been brought forward for the purpose of influencing
-the mind of the reader in favor of a
-cause which has found no support in the Scriptures—it
-is proper to state that their authenticity
-is by no means above suspicion; or, to speak
-more accurately, that some of them have been
-tampered with, is a matter which is settled beyond
-dispute. Already the reader has seen that
-by some means they have been made to contribute
-to the interests of the Romish doctrine of the use
-of water in the sacrament, as early as the first
-part of the second century. If it be granted
-that the statement in question is historically true,
-then the leaven of the papacy had begun to work
-so manifestly in the lifetime of Justin, that the
-opinions of his associates, as well as of himself,
-ought to have no weight with us who have repudiated
-the great apostasy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>On the other hand, should it be denied that
-water was then employed, as stated by the venerable
-father, there remain but two conclusions between
-which the reader can take his choice;
-either, 1st. Justin did not correctly represent the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>faith of his time; or, 2d. What he did say originally
-has been molded and fashioned by the plastic
-hand of the man of sin, until it is made to
-support the heresies of the hierarchy. To our
-mind, the latter conclusion is undoubtedly the
-true one. Below will be found an extract from
-a distinguished historian of the church, which
-proves that what is said above respecting the
-treatment which the writings of Justin Martyr
-have received is correct: “Like many of the
-ancient fathers, he [Justin] appears to us under
-the greatest disadvantage. Works really his
-have been lost, and others have been ascribed
-to him, part of which are not his; and the rest,
-at least, of ambiguous authority.”—<i>Milner’s
-History of Church</i>, Book 2, Chap. 3.<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c008'><sup>[11]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The fourth historic mention of the Lord’s day,
-as brought forward, is in the following words of
-Dionysius. “To-day we kept the Lord’s holy day,
-in which we read your letter.” By turning to
-Eusebius, the curious reader will discover that
-the citation incidentally given occupies but little
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>more space than is required for the words as quoted.
-Their importance in this discussion does not
-demand for them any more room than was assigned
-them by the historian from whom they
-are extracted. The dispute is not whether there
-is indeed a Lord’s day, for both parties are agreed
-respecting this question. What we wish to ascertain
-is, Which day of the week is entitled to
-this appellation? The reference before us in no
-way helps in the settlement of this point. It
-simply states that the letter was read on the
-Lord’s day. Whether that was the first or the
-seventh in the cycle of the week is not stated,
-so we pass the language as unworthy of further
-consideration.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The allusion to the fifth authority is even more
-unsatisfactory than that of the fourth. It seems
-that Melito, bishop of Sardis, had written a discourse
-on the Lord’s day, which had been seen by
-Eusebius. As to its contents, the letter says not
-one word, neither shall we; for, as it is not now
-in existence, it is impossible that any person should
-be able to decide which view it would favor, provided
-it were in being.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The sixth proof is brought from the writings
-of Pliny. It is couched in these words: “They
-[the Christians] affirmed that the sum of their
-fault, or error, was, that they were accustomed to
-assemble on a stated day, before it was light, and
-sing praise alternately among themselves, to
-Christ, as God.” Without debating the propriety
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>of bringing forward a heathen writer to prove
-the practice of a Christian church, we proceed to
-examine the testimony itself. Its utter inability
-to fill the place assigned to it will be discerned by
-every intelligent person who examines its phraseology.
-In it is the declaration that Christians
-were in the habit of assembling on a stated day,
-at which time they sang praises alternately
-among themselves, to Christ, as God.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now that the statement of the facts is not incompatible
-with the idea that they were observers
-of the seventh day, all must admit. For surely,
-there is no incongruity in the notion that it
-would be in the highest degree proper for the observers
-of the ancient Sabbath of the Lord to devote
-its sacred hours to the delightful task of
-singing hymns of praise, and worshiping Christ,
-as God. That the language itself as completely
-harmonizes with this view, as with any other, will
-be felt when we remember that the writer does
-not say that they assembled on the first day of
-the week, or the Lord’s day, at all; but, simply,
-that it was on a stated day that they gathered
-themselves together for the purposes of worship.
-A stated day is one which recurs at fixed intervals.
-The Sabbath might have been the stated
-day; or, so far as anything to the contrary in the
-passage is concerned, the Sunday might have been
-the one. Pliny does not decide the point for us.
-His declarations, therefore, have not the slightest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>force in proving anything favorable to the opinions
-of the gentleman.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Furthermore, if inference is to be taken at all,
-the preponderance would rather be in favor of
-the last day of the week, since, in devoting it to
-the worship of Christ, they would not only bring
-upon themselves the wrath of the heathen, because
-of their acknowledgment of our Lord’s divinity;
-but, also, in the sum of their fault would
-be found the fact, that they ignored the sacredness
-of the day of the sun, and celebrated another,
-as holy, by divine command.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thus much for the uninspired witnesses, brought
-forward from the first, and the early part of the
-second, century of the Christian era. Had they
-flatly contradicted what we have seen the teachings
-of the Bible to be, they would not have
-moved us one hair; for we remember that the
-great apostle has said, that, though “an angel
-from Heaven preach any other gospel unto you,
-let him be accursed.” But, strangely enough,
-their testimony is utterly worthless for the purpose
-for which it has been introduced. Not one
-of them has styled the Sunday the Lord’s day;
-not one of them has called it the Sabbath; not
-one of them has stated that it was regarded as
-holy, or that its hours might not, without sin, be
-devoted to secular pursuits. Here, then, we leave
-them, and wait for a fresh inundation of such as
-will answer the purpose for which they are called
-in a more satisfactory manner than the foregoing.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>
- <h2 id='reply08' class='c006'>STATESMAN’S REPLY. <br /> ARTICLE EIGHT. <br /> PATRISTIC TESTIMONY TO THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>The testimony already adduced from the early
-fathers in our last issue will be regarded by most
-of our readers as sufficient in itself. But for the
-sake of giving a complete view of the patristic
-testimony to the first-day Sabbath up to the close
-of the third century, we shall occupy some additional
-space with extracts, on the accuracy of
-which our readers may confidently rely.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>First among the witnesses now cited is Irenæus,
-bishop or presbyter of Lyons, <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 178. Let
-it be remembered that in the case of this witness
-we have the testimony of one who was brought
-up at the feet of Polycarp, the disciple and companion
-of the Apostle John. The first point to
-be noted in the testimony of Irenæus is the abrogation
-of the seventh-day Sabbath. As the
-rite of circumcision was no longer required, so
-the observance of the seventh-day Sabbath had
-ceased. Each was a sign or shadow of the substance
-to come. This thought is dwelt upon at
-great length. (See <i>Contra Hæreses</i>, book iv. ch.
-30, Grabe’s Edition, Oxford, 1702, pp. 318, 319;
-also Benedictine Edit., Paris, 1710, p. 246.)</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Lest his statements might be understood to be
-opposed to the authority of the ten commandments,
-Irenæus adds the following sentences:
-“The Lord spoke the words of the decalogue in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>like manner to all. They remain, therefore,
-permanently with us, receiving, through the
-Lord’s advent in the flesh, extension and increase,
-not abrogation.” (Book iv. ch. 31, p. 320.)
-Thus the law of the Sabbath remains, though not
-binding to the observance of the seventh day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We now come to this writer’s clear and distinct
-testimony, in its more positive aspect, to the
-Lord’s day. Irenæus took a prominent part in
-what has been called the Quarta-Deciman controversy.
-The question at issue was—Should the
-anniversary of the Lord’s resurrection be in connection
-with the Jewish passover, on whatever
-day of the week that might occur, or on the Lord’s
-day invariably? This question first arose on a
-visit of Polycarp, bishop or presbyter of Smyrna,
-to Aniest, bishop of Rome, about 160, and was
-discussed for many years. Irenæus, acting as the
-representative of the Christians in Gaul, wrote
-to Victor, then bishop of Rome, in these terms:
-“The mystery of the Lord’s resurrection should
-be celebrated only on the Lord’s day.” (<i>Euseb.
-Hist. Eccles.</i> book v. chap. 23, 24; Paris ed., 1678,
-pp. 155, 156.) It will be remarked here that
-while there was diversity of view in regard to
-the <i>yearly</i> celebration of the Lord’s resurrection—a
-celebration of which we have no account
-whatever until the year 160, there was no question
-concerning the sacred observance of the first
-day as the <i>weekly</i> commemoration of the Lord’s
-rising from the dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“We simply add a reference to one of the best
-known of the fragments of Irenæus in which
-there is further explicit testimony to the Lord’s
-day—testimony all the more important, because
-it occurs incidentally in a treatise concerning the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>passover, and in connection with a statement in
-regard to Pentecost.” (<i>Fragmentum lib. de Pascha</i>,
-Bened. ed., Paris, 1742, p. 490.<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c008'><sup>[12]</sup></a>)</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>For the sake of presenting a complete view of
-the testimony of the fathers for the first three
-centuries, we had thought of quoting from Clement
-of Alexandria, <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 194; Minucius Felix, 210;
-Commodian, about 270; Victorinus, 290; and
-Peter, bishop of Alexandria, 300. But as the
-testimony will be perfectly conclusive without
-these witnessess, and as space is valuable, we
-shall cite only three more authorities—three
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>well-known fathers, Tertullian, Origen, and Cyprian.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At the close of the second century, Carthage,
-the metropolis of Northern Africa, was the center
-of numerous flourishing Christian congregations.
-Living in Carthage for many years, Tertullian
-knew well the practice of the African
-churches. And although he became, about 202,
-one of the errorists known as Montanists, his
-testimony, however unreliable as to doctrines, is
-still indisputable as to facts. From the frequent
-references to the Lord’s day in this author we select
-the following: “By us, to whom the [Jewish]
-Sabbaths are strange, and the new moons
-and festivals once pleasing to God, the Saturnalia,
-January, and mid-winter feasts, and Matronalia
-[of the heathen] are frequented. O better
-fidelity of the heathen to their own religion!
-They would not share with us the Lord’s day,
-nor Pentecost, even if they knew them, for they
-would fear lest they should seem to be Christians.”
-(<i>De Idolatria</i>, cap. xiv, Semler’s edit.,
-Halæ Magdeburg, vol. iv., pp., 167, 168.) The
-testimony of this passage is decisive in three
-points: (1.) The Jewish, or seventh-day, Sabbath
-was not observed by Christians. (2.) They were
-enjoined not to observe heathen festivals. (3.) To
-the Lord’s day, as the proper day for Christian
-service, belonged the honor to which Jewish and
-heathen days had no claim.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The exercises of the Lord’s day, when Christians
-assembled for public service, are described
-by Tertullian in a manner very similar to that of
-Justin Martyr, whose account has already been
-quoted. Prayer, reading the Scriptures, exhortation,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>and collections for benevolent purposes
-are all mentioned. (<i>Apol.</i>, cap. xxxix, vol. v.,
-pp. 92-94.) It is to be noted that Tertullian, like
-Justin Martyr, in addressing the heathen, calls
-the first day of the week “the day of the Sun,”
-as he also designates the Jewish Sabbath by its
-heathen name. (See <i>Apol.</i>, cap. xvi.)</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We close these citations from Tertullian, with
-one which is of the greatest importance in proving
-that the early Christians observed the first
-day of the week, not as a mere holiday, but as a
-day of rest and worship—a holy Sabbath to the
-Lord. “On the Lord’s day, the day of the Resurrection,
-we should not only abstain from that,<a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c008'><sup>[13]</sup></a>
-[bending the knee,] but also from all anxiety of
-feeling, and from employments, setting aside all
-business, lest we should give place to the devil.”
-(<i>De Oratione</i>, cap. xxiii., vol. iv., p. 22.)</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Contemporary with Tertullian at the beginning
-of the third century was Origen of Alexandria,
-one of the most scholarly and learned
-of all the early fathers. This writer contrasts
-the Lord’s day with the Jewish Sabbath, and
-shows the superiority of the former. We may
-not agree with him when he maintains that the
-superiority was indicated by the giving of manna
-to the Israelites on the first day of the week,
-while it was withheld on the seventh. His testimony
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>to the fact of the sacred observance of the
-Lord’s day instead of the seventh-day Sabbath
-is valid, though his reasons for the admitted superiority
-may not all be satisfactory. In the
-same connection he remarks: “On our Lord’s
-day the Lord always rains manna from heaven.”
-(<i>Comment on Exodus</i>, Delarue’s ed. of Works of
-Origen, Paris, 1733, vol. ii., p. 154.) In another
-of his works he contends that it is one of the evidences
-of a true Christian “always to keep the
-Lord’s day.” (<i>Contra Celsum</i> lib. viii, vol. i.,
-pp. 758, 759.)</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The most important passage in the writings of
-Origen is found in his Homilies on the Book of
-Numbers. Here we first meet with the name
-“Christian Sabbath” for the first day of the
-week, or the Lord’s day: “Leaving, then, the
-Jewish observance of the Sabbath, let us see
-what the observance of the Sabbath by the
-Christian ought to be. On the Sabbath should
-be performed no worldly acts. If, therefore, you
-desist from all secular works, and do nothing of
-a worldly nature, but occupy yourselves with spiritual
-duties, assembling at the church, listening
-to the sacred readings mad instructions, thinking
-of celestial things, concerned for the hopes of another
-life, keeping before your eyes the Judgment
-to come, and looking not at the things which are
-present and visible, but at those which are invisible
-and future—this is the observance of the
-Christian Sabbath.” (<i>Hom. xxiii in Numeros</i>,
-vol. ii., p. 358.)</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Cyprian, bishop of Carthage, about the third
-century, gives this explicit testimony to the
-Lord’s day: “Since in the Jewish circumcision of
-the flesh the eighth day was celebrated, the ordinance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>was foreshadowed in the future, but completed
-in truth at the coming of Christ. For inasmuch
-as the eighth day, that is, the first day
-after the Sabbath, was the day on which the
-Lord rose and gave us life and spiritual circumcision,
-this eighth day, that is the first after the
-Sabbath and the Lord’s day, preceded in an image,
-which image ceased when the truth afterwards
-came, and spiritual circumcision was given
-to us.” (<i>Epistle</i> lxiv., Works of Cyprian, Bremæ,
-1690, vol. ii., p. 161) The weight of this
-testimony is not a little augmented by the fact
-that the epistle, in which it is found is a synodical
-epistle, which was sent forth in the name
-and with the authority of the Third Council of
-Carthage, <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 253. The epistle bears this inscription
-at its head: “Cyprianus et ceteri Collegæ
-qui in concilio affuerant numero LXIV. Fido
-patri Salutem.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>With this authoritative statement of Cyprian
-and his sixty-six colleagues, or co-presbyters, we
-close our citations from the fathers. The testimony
-of succeeding writers is equally clear, but
-it simply confirms what has already been fully
-proved. And now, with the facts of history in
-view, as we have learned them from inspired
-writers and their immediate successors, it remains
-for us to examine opposing theories of the institution
-of the Sabbath. We shall endeavor to
-dispose of this concluding, and perhaps most interesting
-part of our subject, in two or three articles.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>
- <h2 id='rejoinder08' class='c006'>A REJOINDER. <br /> “PATRISTIC EVIDENCE TO THE FIRST-DAY SABBATH.”</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>In the rejoinder to the previous article on patristic
-testimony, the attention of the reader was
-called to the fact that our opponent had utterly
-failed to find a single instance in which the first
-day of the week was called the Lord’s day, by
-the authorities which he cited, or in which it was
-stated by them that it was observed by divine
-command. Had we possessed the space necessary
-for the purpose, the significance of this failure
-would have been enlarged upon; for it must be
-borne in mind that in the one hundred and thirty-nine
-years which intervened between the death
-of Christ and the writing of the latest citation
-produced in his seventh article, lies the most
-important, and the most promising, field for such
-testimonials as would be of the highest value to
-the opposition. This is so, not only from the fact
-that the period in question was the one in which
-it is alleged that the transition from the old to
-the new Sabbath occurred; but, also, because it
-was one, which, from their premises, was the
-most likely to yield reliable evidence in regard
-to apostolic faith, since it lay the nearest to apostolic
-times. It is true that even then apostasy
-had begun its career; for Paul states that, in his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>time, “the mystery of iniquity had begun to
-work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But all will agree that the farther we come
-this side of the fountain-head, the more natural it
-would be to find that the pure waters of the original
-stream should become steadily darker and
-more turbid, until they lost themselves in the
-sloughs of those corrupt teachings, which were so
-far to excel all others, that they were thought to
-be of a nature to demand especial attention in
-the prophecies. But here we are, as already remarked,
-seventy-five to eighty years this side
-of the cross, and the case of our reviewer in no-wise
-helped by his effort. In fact, not only has
-he failed to place his Sabbath upon the foundation
-of the successors of the apostles, but he has also
-greatly weakened his probabilities for the future,
-since in the territory over which we have passed,
-we have seen not only the utter unreliability of
-the fathers themselves, as teachers, but, also, that
-their sayings have been tampered with by the
-“man of sin,” who, reaching backward as well as
-forward, is reckless in his efforts to make everything
-contribute to the power and authority of
-the hierarchy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But we must proceed in the examination of
-those individuals who are now introduced as additional
-witnesses for the Christian Sabbath.
-The first in order is Irenæus, Bishop of Lyons,
-<span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 178. It will not be necessary to consider
-the language of the gentleman, in which he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>states that Irenæus taught the abrogation of the
-seventh-day Sabbath, since we have not quoted
-that father in the defense of an institution which
-<i>God has commanded</i>. Nor shall we enlarge
-upon the fact that Irenæus inculcates the binding
-obligation of the ten commandments, since it
-is enough for us to know that this doctrine is
-plainly set forth in the Bible.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The witness is the gentleman’s. He has
-brought him forward to prove that, in his time,
-the year of our Lord 178, the term, Lord’s day,
-was applied to the Sunday. Has he succeeded,
-at last, in the achievement of his purpose? If
-so, it is the first instance in which he has accomplished
-the desired object. Apparently, he has
-triumphed here. But let us proceed with caution.
-Has he produced the writings of Irenæus himself?
-No, he has not. The words quoted are
-these: “The mystery of the Lord’s resurrection
-should be celebrated only on the Lord’s day.”
-By turning to the Hist. of Eusebius, book v.,
-chap. 23, the reader will find that the language
-employed does not purport to be that of Irenæus,
-as penned by himself, but that of Eusebius, who
-is giving an account of a decree passed by certain
-bishops, which decree was in harmony with
-a letter from Irenæus. We quote enough in the
-23d chapter to verify our statement:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Hence there were synods and convocations of
-the bishops, on this question; and all unanimously
-drew up an ecclesiastical decree, which they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>communicated to all the churches, in all places,
-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. There is
-an epistle extant, even now, of those who were
-assembled at the time.... There is an epistle
-extant, on the same question, bearing the
-name of Victor. An epistle, also, of the bishops
-of Pontus, among whom Palmas, as the most ancient,
-presided; also of the churches of Gaul,
-over whom Irenæus presided, ... and epistles
-from many others, who, advancing one and the
-same doctrine, also passed the same vote, and this
-their unanimous determination was the one already
-mentioned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It will be observed here that the historian does
-not quote the language of the decree as being
-the exact language of the bishops; also that he
-does not pretend to give the precise words of
-Irenæus, but that he simply recounts the fact
-that the epistle of Irenæus was in harmony with
-the decree which he had previously given. This
-it was legitimate for a historian to do. Eusebius
-died one hundred and fifty years after Irenæus,
-and in his time, we frankly admit that the term,
-Lord’s day, was frequently applied to the first
-day of the week. The historian, therefore, using
-the nomenclature of his own period, represents
-the bishop of Lyons as favoring the celebration of
-the Passover on the Lord’s day, simply because
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>he had said it ought to be observed on the first
-day of the week. If we are right in this, then,
-of course, our opponents will throw up the
-whole passage as irrelevant to their present purpose—since
-they have not assumed to employ
-Eusebius, who lived in the fourth century, as a
-witness—but have cited his statement because it
-was supposed to contain the declaration of Irenæus,
-who lived at a much earlier period.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>For the purpose of clinching the argument,
-and showing that the historic fact is in harmony
-with what we have said, we quote the following
-on the point from Eld. J. N. Andrews, in which
-it will be seen that in the original, the term, first
-day of the week, and not the Lord’s day, as supposed,
-might have been employed:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“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; 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.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>That which has been said above in reference
-to the testimony found in book v., chap. 23, of
-Eusebius, will largely apply, in principle, to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>citation found in chap. 24, of the same book. In
-the latter, as in the former, case, the historian is
-not giving the exact utterance of Irenæus, but
-simply declares, in substance, his decision in regard
-to the proper time for the celebration of the
-passover festival.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Before passing from Irenæus to the consideration
-of another case of the fathers, it would be
-proper to commend the candor of our opponent,
-as manifested in his hearty condemnation of the
-looseness of Dwight and others in their statements
-of historic facts. In making the concession
-which the gentleman has, he will doubtless
-bring upon himself the condemnation of those
-who exalt success above truth. He has taken
-from such one of their most potent weapons.
-The language of Irenæus, which is here admitted
-to be of spurious origin, has figured largely in
-the discussion of this question, in the past. It
-was pointed and decisive, and seemed to furnish
-just the material necessary to the satisfactory
-making out of a case, otherwise sadly deficient
-in the proofs which it needed. It will, therefore,
-be yielded up with reluctance. Nevertheless, we
-hope that the acknowledgment, made by our opponent
-in this article, will lead clergymen, for the
-future, to desist from the use of it, until they are
-able to refute what the writer in the <i>Statesman</i>
-here asserts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the meanwhile, the reader must not allow
-himself to suppose that the gentleman, by saying
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>what he has, has really brought Sabbatarians under
-obligation to hint for new light, since what
-he here asserts is but a fact with which they have
-been familiar for years, and which they have iterated
-and re-iterated until they have almost despaired
-of bringing their opponents to an acknowledgment
-of the real state of things. Occasionally,
-others outside of their ranks have, as
-does the gentleman, borne testimony to the accuracy
-of their statements. If the reader would
-have an illustration of this, taken from the writings
-of an anti-Sabbatarian author, he will find it
-in the works of Domville, in which, substantially,
-the same conclusions are reached, Mr. Domville
-not only tracing the mistake to Dr. Dwight, but
-also allowing that the language cited was probably
-taken from the interpolated epistle of Ignatius
-to the Magnesians.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Up to this point, we have carefully examined,
-one by one, the historic quotations from ancient
-writers, which have been presented for our consideration;
-henceforth, we shall pursue a different
-course. As we have now reached, in the
-person of Tertullian, the close of the second, and
-the opening of the third, century of the Christian
-era, we find ourselves in a period when it is so generally
-acknowledged that the work of apostasy
-was so manifest that the utterances of the men of
-those times—even though they were pointed and
-explicit in regard to the sanctity of the first day
-of the week, as looked upon by themselves—could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>furnish no reliable standard of Christian
-faith in our day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The gentleman himself is compelled to admit
-that his own witness, Tertullian, became, in the
-second year of the third century, an ardent advocate
-of the errors, follies, and heresies, of Montanus.
-Not only so, but the writings of that father are
-proverbial, among scholars, for the fanciful conceits
-and the false notions which are so conspicuous
-upon their pages. Tertullian was a fiery
-zealot and a bitter partisan, manifestly credulous
-beyond bounds, and more earnest for his sect than
-anxious for the reliability of the sources of his
-information. Zell, in his popular Encyclopedia,
-speaks of him as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“After he was past middle age, he embraced
-the doctrines of Montanus, to which his ardent,
-sensuous imagination, and ascetic tendencies
-would incline him. He is said to have been determined
-to that course by the ill-treatment he
-received from the Roman clergy. Whether he
-remained a Montanist till his death, cannot be
-decided.... They [his works] are characterized
-by vast learning, profound and comprehensive
-thought, fiery imagination, and passionate
-partisanship, leading into exaggeration and
-sophistry. His style is frequently obscure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Montanus was a false prophet of the second
-century, who believed himself to have received,
-from the Holy Ghost, revelations which were
-withheld from the apostles; he denied the doctrine
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>of the trinity, the propriety of second marriage,
-and the forgiveness of certain sins. The
-disciple of such a man is surely a strange witness
-to be found in the employ of orthodoxy. Should
-his appearance, however, be excused, as it is above,
-by the statement that he was introduced, not because
-of the reliability of his own opinion, but
-simply to testify of the usage of his own times;
-it may be replied, first, that an ardent partisan,
-a person of strong imagination, and a notorious
-heretic, is hardly qualified to speak reliably, even
-in a matter of this nature, since, from the very
-constitution of his mind, he would almost of necessity
-allow what he said to be warped by prejudice,
-or biased by conceptions of interest; secondly,
-that in the quotation presented from his
-pen, it is not a little remarkable that, instead of
-asserting a general usage of Sunday-keeping, he
-is manifestly finding fault with a large class of
-his fellow-Christians for not regarding the day
-in the same light, and observing it with the same
-rigor, that he did; thirdly, that it is by no means
-impossible that the very men, whom in his fiery
-zeal he thus upbraids, were, after all, sounder than
-himself in the faith, and would, could they be
-fairly heard upon this subject, vindicate their
-supposed desecration of the first day, from the
-same grounds as do the Sabbatarians now, <i>i. e.</i>,
-because they did not look upon it as holy time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If the above responses are not satisfactory, and
-if it be insisted that the testimony of the witness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>shall, after all, he received, then we propose that
-he be called to the stand once more, and be allowed
-to fill up the measure of what he has to
-say upon this subject. We have seen that, according
-to his opinion, many of his fellow-disciples
-were lax in their Sunday-keeping habits,
-and that to one who believed that no labor should
-be performed upon it, whatever, they treated
-it very much as men would treat a mere festival
-occasion. But where did Tertullian and his sympathizers
-obtain their notions of the manner in
-which Sunday should be kept? Was it from the
-Scriptures? We shall see; here is the witness;
-let him speak for himself:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“As often as the anniversary comes around, 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 Whitsunday.
-We feel pained should any wine or bread, 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 leaving positive
-Scripture injunctions, you will find none. Tradition
-will be held forth to you as the originator
-of them, custom, as their strengthener, and faith,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>as their observer. That reason will support tradition,
-and custom, and faith, you will either
-yourself perceive, or learn from some one who
-has.”—<i>De Corona</i>, sects. 3 and 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The reader will at once observe that tradition
-is the foundation which is here laid for that kind
-of Sunday observance for which Tertullian was
-so great a stickler. Not only so, but the fact is
-brought to light, also, that the men whom he
-represented were in the habit of offering prayers
-for the dead; of signing themselves with the sign
-of the cross; and going through other ceremonies,
-which to us, at the present time, are not only ridiculous
-in the extreme, but bear upon their face
-the impress of the man of sin so unmistakably
-that none will be deceived.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If Tertullian was indeed a fair specimen of the
-Christian men of his time; if his writings have
-not been tampered with; and if the opinions of
-the men of his day, as expressed by himself,
-should have weight with us in the decision of
-religious questions, where shall we stop in our acceptance
-of their creeds? If, because they believed
-with him in the change of the Sabbath from
-the seventh to the first day of the week, this fact
-should have weight with us in bringing us to the
-same conclusion, independently of Scripture proof,
-then how can we stop short of their faith in other
-particulars? such as the acceptance of tradition
-in doctrinal matters, prayers for the dead,
-the sign of the cross, etc., etc. In fact, how can
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>we avoid becoming papists ourselves, in the largest
-sense of the term, since, having gone as far as
-we have for the purpose of making out Sunday
-sanctity, we have surrendered nearly all the distinctive
-principles of Protestantism?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Of course each individual is at liberty to use
-his own discretion as to the measure of confidence
-which he will give to the writings before us; so
-far as we are concerned, personally, we would not
-attach to them the slightest weight in the decision
-of a grave religious question. From the very
-nature of that which has been already cited, it is
-manifestly a serious slander upon the true church
-of the second, and the first part of the third century,
-to hold them responsible for the fanciful
-conceits and destructive errors of this reputed defender
-of the faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Certain it is, that if Tertullian is correctly reported,
-his writings are not a safe criterion of the
-sentiments of the Christians of his age in very
-many points, and it may be fairly concluded, that
-among them is that concerning the Sabbath, since
-what he has said of it finds no warrant in the
-open Bible, which the men of this day hold in
-their hands. Not only is what he has written
-absurd and dangerous in the extreme, but his
-productions are characterized by the most glaring
-contradictions. Another has said of him:
-“It would be wiser for Christianity, retreating
-upon its genuine records in the New Testament,
-to disclaim this fierce African, than identify itself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>with his furious, invectives, by unsatisfactory
-apologies for their unchristian fanaticisms.” (Milman,
-in note on Gibbon’s Dec. and Fall of the
-Rom. Emp., chap. xv.)</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We leave him, therefore, with his follies and
-foibles, his errors and faults, his assertions and
-contradictions, with those who have a taste for
-this kind of literature.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>With the case of Origen it will not be necessary
-that much time should be consumed. Mr.
-Mosheim has well remarked of him, that had
-“the justice of his judgment been equal to the
-immensity of his genius, the fervor of his piety,
-his indefatigable patience, his extensive erudition,
-and his other eminent and superior talents, all
-encomium must have fallen short of his merits.”
-Unfortunately, however, with an erudition which
-was truly remarkable, he united a credulity almost
-without parallel. So numerous and so grave
-were the errors of his personal faith, that his individual
-opinions, unsupported by facts and arguments,
-are utterly worthless in the decision of
-any theological proposition. Having adopted the
-mystical system of interpreting the Scriptures, he
-reached conclusions utterly unsound and preposterous
-in many cases.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>That this is so, the orthodox reader will at
-once perceive, when we state, first, that he was a
-believer in the pre-existence of the human soul,
-and that souls were condemned to animate mortal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>bodies, because of sins committed in a pre-existent
-state; secondly, that he was a Restorationist,
-and believed in the final universal salvation
-of all men, after enduring long periods of
-punishment. Nor does the advocacy of such sentiments
-furnish the only difficulty in the way of
-his testimony, as drawn from his writings now
-extant. There would indeed be some satisfaction
-derived from the study of these documents, fanciful
-though they might appear to be in many
-respects, if we could only feel assured that they
-represented correctly the sentiments of the alleged
-author.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Unhappily, this is not the case. Those who
-admire Origen most, while attributing much in
-what he is said to have written, to that weakness
-of discrimination which is everywhere so
-manifest in his productions, are compelled to go
-beyond this, in order to explain many of the
-grosser views therein contained, by admitting
-that they were not his own, but that they are
-the result of fraud and interpolation.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>On this point, another, with great candor and
-friendly charity, when speaking of the sect
-known as Origenists, after first stating that “he
-was a man of great talents, and a most indefatigable
-student, but having a strong attachment to
-the Platonic philosophy, and a natural turn to
-mystical and allegorical interpretations, which
-led him to corrupt greatly the simplicity of the
-gospel, declares that these circumstances render
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>it very difficult to ascertain exactly what his real
-sentiments were.” He says, also, “1. Being a
-man of unquestionable talents and high character,
-his genuine works were interpolated, and others
-written under his name, in order to <i>forge</i> his
-sanction to sentiments of which, possibly, he never
-heard.... 3. Origen had many enemies,
-who probably attributed to him many things
-which he did not believe, in order, either to injure
-his fame, or bring his character under censure.”—<i>Encyc.
-of Rel. Knowl.</i>, Art. Origenists.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Having said thus much in reference to the testimony
-before us, it would be possible to take up
-the writings of this distinguished father, and
-show from them that there is room for a difference
-of opinion as to whether he believed that
-the so-called Christian Sabbath was indeed to be
-regarded as of twenty-four hours’ duration, merely,
-or whether it covered alike all days of the
-week, and the whole of our dispensation. This,
-however, would be a tedious and unprofitable expenditure
-of time and labor. We leave the whole
-question, therefore, respecting the teaching of
-the works of Origen, as one of no significance in
-this controversy; first, because if we know anything
-about what he did believe, he was wholly
-unreliable, either as a teacher of sound doctrine,
-or as a representative of the better men of his
-own time; and, secondly, because what he has
-written has been so corrupted, that we have no
-guarantee that it truthfully expresses what he
-believed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>As we presume the majority of our readers
-are not particularly interested in reference to
-which posture was assumed in prayer on the first
-day of the week, by the early church, and as Peter
-of Alexandria and the Council of Nice are
-quoted solely in reference to “this independent
-question,” we shall not discuss the note in which
-reference is made to them. There remains, therefore,
-only the case of Cyprian, bishop of Carthage,
-to occupy us longer. What this author says was
-written about <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 253. It will be observed, that
-in what is declared by him and the Council, the
-first day of the week is called the Lord’s day;
-beyond this, his testimony is of no value. It is
-neither stated that the title was applied by divine
-authority, nor is it affirmed that this day
-had superseded in Sabbatic honor the ancient
-Sabbath of the Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is, however, in reference to circumcision
-as something which prefigured the Lord’s day, or
-eighth day, enough of mysticism to furnish us
-with a clue to the character of the men whose intellectual
-perceptions were so fine that they could
-discover in an institution which was administered
-on the eighth day after the birth of the
-male child, on whatever day of the week that
-eighth day might fall, a prefiguring of the distinction
-which was to be bestowed on the definite
-first day of the week, which had in it, not eight,
-but only seven, days, in all. Mr. Mosheim, in alluding
-to a period in close proximity to that in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>which Cyprian lived, mentions it as one in “which
-the greater part of the Christian doctors had been
-engaged in adopting those vain fictions of Platonic
-philosophy and popular opinions, which, after
-the time of Constantine, were confirmed, enlarged,
-and embellished in various ways,” and
-from which he declares “arose that extravagant
-veneration for departed saints, and those absurd
-notions of a certain fire destined to purify separate
-souls, that then prevailed, and of which the
-public marks were everywhere to be seen.”—<i>Eccles.
-Hist.</i>, Fourth Century, part ii., chap. iii.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is now time to take a retrospective view of
-the territory over which we have been passing.
-Be it remembered that the reader was lured
-from the contemplation of the Scriptures, with
-this precious promise, that outside of them were
-to be found the most convincing proofs that the
-Lord’s day was and had been the proper title of
-the first day of the week since the resurrection
-of Christ; but what have we seen? Manifestly,
-not that which we had anticipated:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>First, we have discovered that Ignatius, the first
-witness introduced, does not mention the Lord’s
-day at all, but simply speaks of the Lord’s life.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Secondly, that the epistle of Barnabas was a
-forgery, made up of the most absurd and ridiculous
-fancies, and written by an unknown
-character somewhere, perhaps in the second or
-third century, though purporting to be the work
-of the companion of Paul.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>Thirdly, that it is becoming more and more a
-matter of doubt whether that which is attributed
-to Justin Martyr was ever seen by him, and
-that he not only does not call the Sunday the
-Lord’s day, but also inculcates in what he says,
-the Romish heresy respecting the use of water
-in sacrament, &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Fourthly, that Dionysius, bishop of Corinth,
-and Melito, bishop of Sardis, while indeed they
-do speak of the Lord’s day, do not furnish any
-clue by which we can determine which day they
-regarded as such.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Fifthly, that Pliny, a heathen writer, employs
-neither the term Lord’s day nor Sabbath, but
-simply speaks of a stated day, without identification.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Sixthly, that Irenæus is not properly represented
-as speaking of the Sunday in the use of the
-title Lord’s day, since that expression, in both the
-instances alluded to, was the language of Eusebius,
-who lived in the fourth century, and not of
-Irenæus, who lived in the second.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Seventhly, that Tertullian, who lived at the
-close of the second and the commencement of
-the third century, and who was a wild fanatic of
-the Montanist school, utterly unworthy to represent
-the sentiments of his times, is the first witness
-from whom the gentleman has succeeded in
-obtaining an unequivocal application of the
-term, Lord’s day, to the first day of the week;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>also, that he had connected with it, prayers for
-the dead, the sign of the cross, &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Eighthly, that Origen was a man of great
-learning; that it was questionable whether he believed
-in a septenary Sabbath, or in one that
-covered the whole dispensation; and that, in fact,
-it is admitted by his friends that his works have
-become so corrupt as to be utterly untrustworthy
-in the matter of deciding respecting his real
-opinions.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Ninthly, that Cyprian and his colleagues addressed
-us from a point of time too far removed
-from the period of the alleged change of Sabbaths,
-and too fully within that of the great apostasy,
-to be of service in an exegesis of the Scriptures.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Tenthly, that three of the most pointed and satisfactory
-of the testimonies heretofore employed
-by first-day writers, are now abandoned as having
-been the result of mistake in translation, or
-in the matter of attributing them to the proper
-persons. Summing, up, therefore, in a word we
-inquire again, What has been gained by this departure?
-We believe that all must see that it
-has been an entire failure; for, so far as the Sabbath
-is concerned, we think the reader will hesitate
-long before he will leave the Scriptures, in
-the matter of deciding upon its obligation, in
-order to build the structure of his faith from
-such material as we have been handling over.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Also, as to the question of what day John referred
-to in Rev. 1:10, when he said, “I was in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>the Spirit on the Lord’s day,” he will deliberate
-very much before he will decide that it was the
-first day of the week, simply because an untrustworthy
-man, admitted to have been heretical on
-many points, called it such 200 years after the
-birth of Christ, while Jehovah himself has given
-to the seventh day that honor, styling it the
-“Sabbath of the Lord,” “the holy of the Lord,
-honorable,” &amp;c., and while Christ himself has
-declared in so many words, that he was the Lord
-of the Sabbath day. Mark 2:27, 28.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='reply09' class='c006'>STATESMAN’S REPLY. <br /> ARTICLE NINE. <br /> THEORIES OF THE CHRISTIAN SABBATH.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>With the facts of history before us concerning
-sacred time for nearly three centuries after the
-resurrection of Christ—facts drawn from the inspired
-writers of the New Testament and their
-immediate successors, we are prepared to consider
-the different theories of the Christian Sabbath.
-These theories may be summed up in three. Of
-one or another of these, all the remaining theories
-are simply modifications.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The first of these three leading theories is as follows:
-“The Sabbath was a Jewish institution, and
-expired with the Jewish dispensation. The Lord’s
-day is not in any proper sense a Sabbath. It
-has an origin, a reason, and an obligation, not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>drawn from the fourth commandment, but peculiarly
-its own, as an institution belonging
-specially to the New-Testament dispensation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The second theory, in the order in which we
-notice these different views, maintains that the
-observance of the Sabbath, as required under the
-Old-Testament dispensation, knows no change in
-any particular. The observance of the seventh
-day of the week is essential to the proper observance
-of the Sabbath under the gospel dispensation.
-The observance of the first day of the
-week is without divine warrant—a departure
-from the law of God through the corruptions
-which crept into the church.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The third theory agrees with the second in
-maintaining that the Sabbath existed from the
-beginning, and that it has never been abolished
-or superseded. It disagrees with the second theory
-in maintaining that the essential idea of the
-law of the Sabbath is not the holiness of a portion
-of time, but the <i>consecration of a specified proportion
-of time</i>, one day in seven; that, in accordance
-with this, a change of day was admissible;
-that a change was actually made by divine
-warrant from the resurrection of Christ; and
-that the first day of the week, the Lord’s day, is
-the true Christian Sabbath, having its moral
-sanction in the fourth commandment.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>By many of those who hold the first of these
-theories, the Lord’s day is made a purely ecclesiastical
-institution, without any other warrant for
-its observance than the action of the church, by
-whose authority and in whose wisdom, the day
-is set apart for divine service. By others who
-accept the same general theory, apostolic authority
-in the early church is admitted to afford a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>divine warrant for the observance of the day.
-In a complete treatise on the Lord’s day, a careful
-discussion of this theory would be required.
-Its want of any sufficient foundation could be
-satisfactorily shown by a presentation of the following
-points: (1.) The declaration of the Lord
-of the Sabbath is explicit—“The Sabbath was
-made for man.” It was not made for any portion
-of the human family, but for the race of mankind.
-(2.) Thus, from the design of its Lord, and the
-very nature of the institution, the Sabbath cannot
-be limited to any locality or dispensation.
-(3.) Accordingly, it was given to man at his creation.
-(Gen. 3:3.) (4.) For the same reason,
-the law of the Sabbath has its proper place, not
-among ceremonial, local, or positive enactments,
-but among the immutable moral precepts of the
-decalogue. (5.) This law is, therefore, of universal
-and perpetual obligation upon our race. These
-points would give room for many articles; but,
-inasmuch as on all of them there is entire agreement
-between our seventh-day Sabbatarian
-friends and ourselves, we pass to a consideration
-of the second theory, which they accept as correct.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To make good their case, the advocates of the
-second theory must show that the seventh day
-continued to be the Sabbath observed by the
-church after the resurrection of Christ, just as
-before; and that, in the observance of the first
-day, a great departure took place from the original
-practice of the Christian church. They
-must not make <i>bare</i> statements, but they must
-furnish proof. Instead of appealing to the letter
-of the law, and insisting that fact must conform
-to their interpretation of it, they must accept the
-facts of history, and put their interpretations to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>the test. It is more reasonable to conclude that
-an interpretation of law is wrong, than to reject
-the attested facts of history, when the interpretation
-and the facts do not harmonize.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Let us briefly sum up the facts already fully
-brought to view. Christ himself, after his resurrection,
-passed by the seventh day, and repeatedly
-put special honor on the first day of the
-week. This same day was honored by the Pentecostal
-gift of the Holy Spirit. Christian congregations
-met for regular weekly service, not on
-the seventh day, but on the first day of the week.
-The inspired apostle Paul pointedly condemned
-the Judaizing teachers who insisted on the observance
-by Christians of the seventh-day Sabbath.
-The early writers, companions of the
-apostles, and others of the succeeding generations,
-bear the clearest and most explicit testimony
-to the same facts—the non-observance of
-the seventh-day Sabbath, and the stated meetings
-of Christians for divine service on the first
-day of the week, the Lord’s day. Now, if their
-theory is correct, how will the seventh-day Sabbatarians
-explain the fact that Christ himself,
-the Holy Spirit, inspired apostles, and Christian
-congregations all through the early church, ignored
-the seventh day and honored the first? A
-general and vague statement to the effect that an
-unwarranted change was made from the original
-practice of the Christian church will not do here.
-Was not the practice of the apostles and first
-organized congregations of Christians the original
-practice of the Christian church? That
-practice was, as we have seen, to observe the
-first day of the week. We repeat what we have
-already proved at length, viz., that there is not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>an instance in the Scriptures of the observance
-of the seventh day by any Christian church, nor
-of any regard to that day, after Christ’s resurrection,
-by apostles or their fellow-laborers, except
-as they availed themselves, in their missionary
-work, of the meetings of Jewish assemblies in
-Jewish places of worship. “An unwarranted
-change!” Let those who take such language
-upon their lips consider that their charge lies at
-the door of Christ and his Spirit, and the inspired
-apostles.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But now, for the sake of the argument, let us
-leave all the testimony of the inspired writers of
-the New Testament to the first-day Sabbath out of
-view. Again we have the vague charge of unwarranted
-change. Perhaps the most definite
-form of this charge is that which makes the
-change the work of the little horn in Daniel’s
-prophecy, chapter seven. But will the expounder
-of Daniel be a little more explicit, and tell us
-who the historical personage is, and give us the
-dates and names of history? Does the little
-horn represent Antiochus Epiphanes? if so,
-then, of course, his change of the law of the Sabbath
-must have been before the Christian era.
-Will our expositor give us some facts just here?
-If the little horn means the papacy, then, according
-to the prophecy itself, it did not arise until
-the Roman Empire, represented by the fourth
-beast, was broken into ten fragments, represented
-by the ten horns. The little horn sprang up
-after these, and its change of the law of the Sabbath
-must date after the fall of the old empire of
-Rome. But for centuries before this event, we
-have the testimony of numerous writers that the
-Christian churches everywhere observed, not the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>seventh, but the first, day of the week, the Lord’s
-day. Again we ask for facts, not mere statements
-and theories.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Leaving this vague attempt to connect the assumed
-unwarranted change with Daniel’s prophesy,
-we come to what is, if possible, still more
-vague and indefinite. A change, it is asserted,
-was made by some particular officer or council of
-the church, as it became corrupt and began to
-depart from the practice of the original church of
-Christ. Who was this officer? or where did this
-council meet? But we will not make unreasonable
-demands for historical testimony. Let us
-grant that such an officer or such a council there
-was at some time or other. The question then
-arises, When did the change take place? In the
-days of Cyprian, <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 250? The answer is clear.
-The change most have been made before his day.
-Origen and Tertullian, fifty years earlier, knew
-only the first day of the week, the Lord’s day, as
-the Christian Sabbath. Was the change then
-made in their day? We might assume that it
-was, only for the clear testimony of Irenæus and
-Justin Martyr, carrying us back another half century,
-and the equally explicit testimony of still
-earlier writers, carrying us back to the apostles
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Notwithstanding all this dearth of historical
-testimony as to the existence of the supposed ruler
-or council, let it be further granted that by
-some such corrupting authority, at some time a
-decree changing the day for Sabbath observance
-was issued. How did the supposed legislators
-establish their decree? How did they make it
-effectual over all the different parts of the church?
-Must we we suppose that a change like this was effected
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>in the church, and not a scrap of a record
-left concerning it? The attempt made by
-the church to establish a common day for the anniversary
-of Christ’s resurrection gave rise to long
-and bitter controversy, and led to division. And
-yet, as Prof F. D. Maurice has well said, “It is
-supposed that this far more important change, affecting
-all the daily relations and circumstances
-of life, took effect by the decree of some apostle
-or some ecclesiastical synod, of which no record,
-no legend, even is preserved! Or, perhaps, a
-half-heathen, more than half-heathen, statute of
-Constantine,<a id='r14' /><a href='#f14' class='c008'><sup>[14]</sup></a> about the <i>Dies Solis</i> accomplished
-what the legislators of the church could not accomplish—succeeded
-not only in securing its
-adoption by Athanasians, Arians, Semi-Arians,
-whose controversies Constantine could never heal,
-but in securing the allegiance of all the barbarous
-tribes which accepted the gospel under such
-various conditions in later times. Can any suppositions
-make greater demands on our credulity
-than these?” A Procrustean bed indeed must
-be that interpretation of the law of the Sabbath
-which, to conform them to itself, must thus deal
-with the facts of history and the probabilities of
-historical evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Just here is the difficulty in the theory of
-Seventh-day Sabbatarians. They have somehow
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>got lodged in their mind the idea that the last one
-of the seven days of the week is the sacred day,
-the observance of which is absolutely essential to
-the proper keeping of the Sabbath. What has
-already been proved from history, inspired and
-uninspired, is sufficient to show that this theory
-is unworthy of men who, like Christ and his
-apostles, would grasp the true significance of the
-law of the Sabbath. But as so much stress is
-laid upon the question of time, we shall devote
-our next article to this crucial and very practical
-point.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='rejoinder09' class='c006'>A REJOINDER. <br /> “THEORIES OF THE CHRISTIAN SABBATH.”</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>The thoughtful reader need not be told that
-the article which he has just read, entitled,
-“Theories of the Christian Sabbath,” has advanced
-the discussion of the question before us
-in no material respect. The space devoted so
-generously to the consideration of theories, in
-regard to the unsoundness of which there is no
-difference of opinion between the gentleman and
-myself, is thrown away, so far as the present
-argument is concerned. While this is true, however,
-if it serves no other purpose, it has at least
-made it clear that, if the gentleman fails to make
-out his case in the end, it will not be because he
-has not had ample room for the presentation and
-elaboration of facts and arguments, since one who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>was crippled in his effort by a lack of space
-would hardly be willing to devote so much time
-and attention to subjects foreign to the present
-issue.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>That which is said with reference to these
-theories might also be repeated in reference to
-the statement and restatement of points which it
-is claimed have been proved. Of course, it is
-the prerogative of any writer to conduct his own
-argument in his own way. All that we would
-call attention to is the fact that the line of policy
-pursued, in these things, is of a nature to satisfy
-even the most casual observer, that one who felt
-that he had resources upon which to draw, without
-limit, would not compel us to pass again
-and again over the same ground. There is, however,
-an apology which might properly be offered
-in the case of the gentleman, for calling
-our attention to these trivial points so repeatedly,
-which is found in the fact that his articles
-were written before our rejoinders were in print.
-We believe that, were not this the case, and had
-he perused what has been said in reply to them,
-we should be spared the monotony of answering
-them again. However, lest we should seem to
-avoid them, it will only be necessary that we say
-enough, bearing upon each point, to revive, in
-the mind of one who has followed us thus far,
-the fuller consideration given to all of them heretofore.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To the statement that Sabbatarians, in order
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>to make good their case, must make their views
-harmonize with the facts of history, it is enough
-to say that, if it is meant by this, the facts of
-sacred history, as contained in the Bible, this we
-have already done; for before it can be urged
-that the opposite is true, as we have elsewhere
-seen, it must be shown that there is some transaction
-found in the sacred record which is in conflict
-with our interpretation of the law. This
-has not been done; for not only has it been made
-to appear that the Sabbath law is explicit in its
-requirement of the observance of the seventh
-day of the week, but also that there is not a
-single case of its violation, by a good man, to be
-found in the inspired pages.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nor is this all; we have gone beyond this, and
-proved, by the record, that the opposite was true
-of the Sunday, since upon it Christ and two of
-his disciples, on the day of his resurrection, as
-well as Paul and Luke and others at a subsequent
-period, did perform upon it labor, which
-the gentleman himself has not attempted, and
-will not undertake, to harmonize with any just
-conception of intelligent Sabbath-keeping. So
-far as it regards the absence of any mention of
-meetings of Christians on the Sabbath, it is sufficient
-to say, as we have already done, that, as
-in the history given, the account relates largely
-to missionary trips, where there was no church
-as yet developed, and, consequently, no possibility
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>of separate meetings, such a record would be
-out of the question; also, that the argument is
-only a negative one, and really can have no force,
-until it can be demonstrated that God’s plan is
-first to command, and then show, in every instance
-what the commandment means, by practical
-illustrations furnished from the history of
-his people; a doctrine which is not only unsound
-and untrue, but absurd in the extreme.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If, on the other hand, the gentleman means to
-be understood as insisting that the history of the
-church since the close of the canon of inspiration
-must be made to teach the faith which we hold
-as one which has always been entertained by the
-church, and therefore sound, we repudiate, in the
-name of Protestantism, this most pernicious view,
-and in all matters of practical duty, such as Sabbath-keeping,
-we decide according to the written
-word. To the first source (church history), the
-gentleman has appealed, and if every candid man
-and woman who has witnessed his effort has not
-been disgusted with the source to which he has
-applied, then we know of nothing which would
-be calculated to create in him this condition of
-mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>With the summary, in which it is claimed that
-Christ, and the apostles, and the Holy Spirit, and
-the early church, did repeatedly honor the first
-day of the week, we will not weary the reader
-here. We have disproved every one of these
-points, and we trust to the intelligence of those
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>whom we are addressing, in the confident belief
-that what has been said, in the absence of even
-an attempt at refutation, needs not to be reproduced
-here.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We had barely mentioned, in our original articles,
-that Seventh-day Adventists held to the
-opinion that the pope of Rome had been instrumental
-in bringing about the change of the Sabbath.
-No effort was made to develop the argument
-on that point, since we did not dare to presume
-that room would be granted for the perfecting of
-the work; in fact, what was said was uttered
-rather with a view to calling the attention of
-the curious to our published works upon that
-subject, than for any other purpose. Now, however,
-this point is made to assume a prominence
-which does not really belong to it, in an argument
-so largely doctrinal rather than historic.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>With this, nevertheless, we have no fault to
-find. Nothing is more satisfactory than the
-awakening of a spirit of investigation on all
-branches of this great subject; at the same time,
-we submit that the attitude of the gentleman
-must be very unsatisfactory to himself, since he
-will readily perceive that to an opponent, chafing
-under a denial of the privilege of answering him
-in the columns of his own paper, this whole affair
-wears the aspect of an empty bravado. “Tell
-us,” says the editor, and he repeats his invitation
-again and again, “Whom did this little horn represent?
-Was it Antiochus? or the pope? If the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>latter, then how, and when, and where, did he
-bring about the transition?”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But we reply, Whom do you mean, sir, by the
-term, “us”? Truly, you would not require us
-to come to Philadelphia to enlighten you personally
-upon that point. Certainly, you are not
-particularly anxious that we should write a
-series of articles for the benefit of the readers of
-the <i>Review</i>, on a matter with which they are as
-familiar as they are with the history of their own
-country; but if, indeed, you had in your mind
-the readers of the <i>Statesman</i>, then it may be
-inquired again, How has it been possible for us
-to reach them, under the circumstances? since,
-throwing your forces behind the wall of your
-editorial prerogative, and closing against us the
-gate of possibility, you have shut us out from all
-access to them. Gladly would we have availed
-ourselves of the opportunity of doing that which
-we have been denied the privilege of attempting
-before the men, many of whom, we believe,
-would have been glad to follow this matter
-to the end; but as this cannot be done, a brief
-reply will be made here.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The first inquiry, relating, as it does, to the
-point whether Antiochus Epiphanes or the pope,
-was meant by the “little horn,” in the seventh
-of Daniel, need not consume time. It has been
-urged by some that the “little horn,” of Dan. 8:9,
-applied to the former character. We believe
-the papists still insist upon this; but the gentleman,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>upon reflection—if in what he has said he
-has confounded the two—will not seriously argue
-against the almost universal admission of Protestant
-writers, that the power brought to view in
-the seventh chapter of Daniel’s prophecy, is that
-of the papacy. In fact, reasoning as he does
-himself, most satisfactorily, that it could not arise
-until after the appearance of the original ten,
-which represented the final breaking up of the
-Roman Empire into ten parts, he more than intimates
-his personal conviction that it could not
-represent Antiochus Epiphanes, who reigned one
-hundred and seventy-five years before Christ,
-since the Roman Empire was not partitioned
-among the barbarians who invaded it, until <span class='fss'>A. D.</span>
-483, more than six hundred years after the death
-of the Syrian king.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The following, from a standard authority, will
-serve to show an almost universal agreement on
-this subject; and with its presentation we pass
-to the investigation of questions more difficult,
-and more worthy of our reflection. “Among
-Protestant writers, this (‘the little horn,’ of Dan.
-7:8) is considered to be the popedom.”—<i>A. Clarke,
-Com. in loco.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“To none can this (‘He shall speak great
-words againt the Most High’) apply so well, and
-so fully, as to the popes of Rome.”—<i>Idem</i>, v. 25.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The real point of debate, as intimated above,
-is the question whether the Roman Catholic
-church has been instrumental in bringing about
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>the change of the Sabbath. The gentleman errs
-in asserting that we have anywhere stated that
-such a change was brought about by any particular
-officer or council. This we have never urged,
-nor does it accord with the view held by us. The
-“little horn” represented, not one, merely, but a
-whole line of priest-kings, who were to extend
-from the time of their rise, to the Judgment, and
-the setting up of the kingdom of God. Of this line
-of rulers, it is stated—not that they should really
-succeed in bringing about an actual change in
-the requirements of the law of God—but that
-they should “<i>think</i>” to accomplish this end. It
-is also said that, for a time, times, and dividing
-of time (1260 years), the saints of God and the
-law of God should be delivered into their hands.
-Not, indeed, that God would forsake either his
-people or his law, utterly, but that, for the period
-in question, they should be permitted to pursue
-a course destructive to the one, and antagonistic
-to the other. In other words, that they should
-put to death the saints, and presume to alter the
-commandments of God.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>These specifications are simply introduced by
-way of identification. It is not said that the
-power indicated should spring into life suddenly,
-and without a previous stage of development;
-nor is it declared that the principles which were
-to characterize it in its mature life should be
-wholly peculiar to itself. Other powers, such as
-pagan Rome, might have persecuted the people
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>of God before the rise of the papacy, as they unquestionably
-did. Other men might have begun
-the work of tampering with the law of God, long
-before the days of the hierarchy, and might have
-prepared to its hands the materials necessary to
-the accomplishment of the final blasphemous
-work of the man of sin.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the days of Paul, “the mystery of iniquity
-began to work,” and from that point, its history
-was one of gradual development. Some of the
-most destructive heresies afterward incorporated
-into the faith of papists, it is well understood,
-were fully fledged, and quite generally accepted,
-before the installation of the first pope. So, too,
-concerning the first-day Sabbath. There can be
-little doubt that before the bishop of Rome became
-the “Corrector of Heretics,” in <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 538, or
-entered the chair of St. Peter, the Sunday had
-come to be regarded, by many, as the rival, if not
-the superior, of the ancient Sabbath. Just how
-extensively the sentiment prevailed, however, it
-is hard to determine from church history, because,
-as has been shown in a previous article, the
-sources of our information have been so corrupted
-by unprincipled Romanists, that it is difficult
-to arrive at the facts in the case.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>One thing is certain; there was a mighty struggle
-on this question, the gentleman to the contrary,
-notwithstanding, which has left the marks
-of its existence in the records of the past. Clear
-down to the rise of Roman Catholicism, there
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>were men who were strenuous for the observance
-of the seventh day, and rejecters of its rival.
-Doubtless the Sunday, by slow degrees, had
-worked itself into almost universal acceptance as
-a festival resting upon human, and not divine,
-authority; but the Sabbath of the Lord still
-continued in the faith of many, especially in the
-East, as a day to be sacredly devoted to the worship
-of God. On this point, Neander, the learned
-church historian, has given distinct and unequivocal
-utterance:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“The festival of Sunday, like all other festivals,
-was only a human ordinance, and it was far
-from the intention of the apostles to establish a
-divine command in this respect; far from them
-and from the early apostolic church to transfer
-the laws of the Sabbath to Sunday. Perhaps at
-the end of the second century, a false application
-of this kind had began to take place; for men
-appear, by that time, to have considered laboring
-on Sunday as a sin.”—<i>Rose’s Translation of Neander</i>,
-p. 186.<a id='r15' /><a href='#f15' class='c008'><sup>[15]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Giesler also remarks as follows: “While 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, though
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>without the Jewish superstitions. Besides these,
-the Sunday as the day of our Saviour’s resurrection,
-was devoted to religious worship.”—<i>Church
-Hist., Apostolic Age to A. D. 70.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Lyman Coleman, in his “Ancient Christianity
-Exemplified,” testifies as follows: “The observance
-of the Lord’s day as the first day of the week
-was at first introduced as a separate institution.
-Both this and the Jewish Sabbath were kept for
-some time; finally, the latter passed wholly over
-into the former, which now took the place of the
-ancient Sabbath of the Israelites. But their Sabbath,
-the last day of the week, was strictly kept
-in connection with that of the first day for a long
-time after the overthrow of the temple and its
-worship. Down even to the fifth century, the
-observance of the Jewish Sabbath was continued
-in the Christian church, but with a rigor and solemnity
-gradually diminishing, until it was wholly
-discontinued.... Both were observed in
-the Christian church down to the fifth century,
-with this difference, that in the eastern church,
-both days were regarded as joyful occasions; but
-in the western, the Jewish Sabbath was kept as
-a fast.” Chap. 26, sect. 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Wm. Twisse, whose antique style comports
-with that of the period in which he wrote, most
-pointedly declares the same fact in a work entitled,
-“The Morality of the Fourth Commandment:”
-“Yet for some hundred years in the primitive
-church, not the Lord’s day only, but the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>seventh day also, was religiously observed, not
-by Ebion and Cerinthus only, but by pious Christians
-also, as Baronius writeth and Gomaius confesseth,
-and Rivut also.” Page 9, London, 1641.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Morer, in speaking of the early Christians, remarks
-of them as follows: “The primitive Christians
-had a great veneration for the Sabbath, and
-spent the day in devotion and sermons, and it is
-not to be doubted but they derived the practice
-from the apostles themselves.”—<i>Morer’s Lord’s
-Day</i>, p. 189.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Edward Brerewood, professor in Gresham College,
-London, writes: “The ancient Sabbath did
-remain, and was observed by the Christians of the
-east church above three hundred years after our
-Saviour’s death, and besides that, no other day,
-for more hundred years than I spoke of before,
-was known in the church by the name of the
-Sabbath.” Page 77, ed. 1631.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Prof. Stuart, in speaking of the period between
-<span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 321 and the council of Laodicea, <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 364,
-furnishes the following interesting statement,
-which discloses the historic fact concerning the
-ebb and flow of discussion on this subject in the
-early church: “The practice of it [the keeping of
-the Sabbath], was continued by Christians who
-were jealous for the honor of the Mosaic law,
-and finally became, as we have seen, predominant
-throughout Christendom. It was supposed at
-length that the fourth commandment did require
-the observance of the seventh-day Sabbath [not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>merely a seventh part of time], and reasoning as
-Christians of the present day are wont to do, viz.,
-that <i>all</i> which belongs to the ten commandments
-was immutable and perpetual, the churches in
-general came gradually to regard the seventh-day
-Sabbath as altogether sacred.”—<i>Appendix to
-Gurney’s Hist. of Sabbath</i>, pp. 115, 116.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Concerning the same council, Prynne has made
-a similar historic record; “The seventh-day Sabbath
-was solemnized by Christ, the apostles, and
-primitive Christians, till the Laodicean Council
-did, in a manner, quite abolish the observance
-of it.... The Council of Laodicea, <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 364,
-first settled the observance of the Lord’s day,
-and prohibited keeping of the Jewish Sabbath,
-under an anathema.”—<i>Dissertation on the Lord’s
-Sabbath</i>, pp. 33, 44, ed. 1633.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In alluding to the differences in practice between
-the eastern and the western churches, Neander
-distinctly sets forth the resolute animosity
-of the latter to the ancient Sabbath of the Lord,
-and the manner in which they sought to bring it
-into disrepute, while elevating the Sunday into
-favor. He says: “In the western churches, particularly
-the Roman, where opposition to Judaism
-was the prevailing tendency, this very opposition
-produced the custom of celebrating the
-Saturday as a fast day. This difference of customs
-would, of course, be striking, where members
-of the Oriental church spent their Sabbath
-day in the western church.”—<i>Hist. Chris. Rel.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>and Church, First Three Centuries. Rose’s trans.</i>,
-p. 186.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Peter Heylyn also marks the peculiar favor
-shown to the first day of the week in the western
-church; and while he declares at one time
-that it was near “nine hundred years from the
-Saviour’s birth before restraint of husbandry on
-this day [Sunday] had been first thought of in
-the east,” he elsewhere records the fact that in
-the fifth and sixth centuries general unanimity
-respecting the exaltation to divine honor was
-reached. He writes: “The faithful, being united
-more than ever before, became more uniform in
-matters of devotion, and in that uniformity did
-agree together to give the Lord’s day all the honors
-of a holy festival, yet this was not done all at
-once, but by degrees, the fifth and sixth centuries
-being fully spent before it came unto that
-hight which has since continued. The emperors
-and the prelates in these times had the same affections,
-both earnest to advance this day above
-all others; and to the edicts of the one, and to
-the ecclesiastical constitutions of the others, it
-stands indebted for many of those privileges and
-exemptions which it still enjoyeth.”—<i>Hist. Sab.</i>,
-part 2, chap. 4, sect. 1.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thus it has been proved, by citations from men
-who have possessed the resources, as well as the
-disposition, to make themselves acquainted with
-the history of the first centuries of the Christian
-church, first, that the first day of the week was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>looked upon for a long time as a merely human
-institution; secondly, that the Edenic Sabbath
-was for centuries after the crucifixion of Christ
-quite generally celebrated; thirdly, that prejudice
-against it seems to have been strongest and to
-have originated earliest at Rome, where, in order
-to bring it into odium, it was made a day of fasting,
-while the Sunday was treated as a festival;
-fourthly, that after a struggle, which extended
-through hundreds of years, the ancient Sabbath
-was finally quite generally repudiated, and the
-Sunday, through the united efforts of prelates,
-councils, and emperors, was enthroned and enforced
-upon all.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Into the details of this long and varying conflict,
-in which victory seems first to have favored
-the one side and then the other, we are restricted
-by the limits of our communication from entering.
-The intelligent reader can readily fill in the
-outlines which have been given, and will not be
-slow to perceive that the contest, from the very
-nature of things, must have been one of intense
-interest and heated debate. If he would satisfy
-himself most fully that the gentleman is mistaken
-in saying that it has left no traces, we refer
-him for a more full discussion to the authorities
-quoted.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Changing now the point of view, we will come
-to the present time. We return once more to the
-charge that the church of Rome, availing itself
-of the condition of things which preceded its rise,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>has consummated the terrible work which was
-begun with the great apostasy, long before the
-papacy proper was fully developed. In prosecuting
-the labor thus entered upon, the reader is
-invited to pause a moment and decide upon
-certain principles which ought to govern in the
-decision of the question. He will remember
-that if he has been educated in the observance of
-Sunday, he will be in danger of requiring more
-testimony than could reasonably be demanded,
-since his education, and personal interest, and
-standing, would all incline him to a conservatism
-which needs to be guarded with a jealous care,
-lest it should result in a bias which would terminate
-in the rejection of sufficient light.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>All that we ask him to do is to treat this subject
-the same as he would any other matter of
-fact. To illustrate: If the body of a murdered
-man were discovered upon the street, and if there
-should be found in the community one whose
-character was bad in every respect, concerning
-whom those who knew him best had given warning;
-if on the garments of this suspicious personage
-blood stains were found; if, in the meantime,
-a careful examination of the wounds should show
-that they had been inflicted by a weapon peculiar
-to the notorious individual; and if, in addition to
-the foregoing, he should step forward and frankly
-confess that he had done the deed, no court in
-the world would hesitate to inflict the penalty
-of the law, because of any doubt regarding the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>guilt of the offending party. Now applying the
-same principles to the case in hand, if every one
-can be shown to hold good in every particular,
-then consistency demands that they should produce
-a conviction equally clear and strong with
-that in the mind of the court, in determining in
-the case of the homicide upon the infliction of
-punishment.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But is it true that the charge against the Roman
-Catholic church can be made out as conclusively
-as that against the individual mentioned
-above? Let us see. The first point there
-brought forward was the unquestionable fact that
-the man had been murdered. This was the starting
-point of the whole affair. That which answers
-to it in the case before us is the fact that
-the change of the Sabbath has been made out
-beyond reasonable doubt; for God commanded
-the observance of the seventh day, while, somehow,
-Christendom is generally observing the first,
-though utterly incapable of furnishing Scripture
-warrant for the change.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The second point was that respecting the bad
-reputation of a certain character in the community—its
-parallel in the persons of the popes
-is found in the fact that, as we have seen, their
-rise and history were symbolized centuries before
-their appearance under the type of the “little
-horn” of the seventh of Daniel, by one who
-never errs in his analysis of character, and who
-declared of the “man of sin” that he should
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>“think to change times and laws,” and that they
-should be given into his hands for “a time and
-times and the dividing of time,” thus proving
-that this blasphemous power who was to open
-his mouth in blasphemy against God is capable
-of attempting the transfer of God’s holy Sabbath
-to a day different from that pointed out in the
-commandment.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The third point, which related to blood stains
-upon the garments of the suspected person, finds
-its counterpart in the teachings of Romanism,
-most clearly. We learn, in the writings of Moses,
-that the blood is the life of the individual. This,
-however, is not more true than it is that the
-fourth commandment is the life of the Sabbatic
-institution. If you mar that commandment, you
-mar the Sabbath in the same ratio. If you destroy
-that commandment, you destroy the Sabbath.
-But the assumed ability to alter this precept
-as well as others of the decalogue is one of
-the very crimes of which Rome has been guilty,
-by which she has blotched all over in the most
-loathsome manner the garments of a once spotless
-Christianity, and a profoundly reverent faith.
-That this is so will become manifest when we
-present a copy of the decalogue as it has been
-mutilated by the Romish church in the exercise
-of a pretended divine right to accomplish such a
-work. For this purpose we append the ten commandments
-as they stand in Butler’s catechism.<a id='r16' /><a href='#f16' class='c008'><sup>[16]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>“1. I am the Lord thy God. Thou shalt not have
-strange gods before me, &amp;c. 2. Thou shalt not
-take the name of the Lord thy God in vain. 3.
-Remember that thou keep holy the Sabbath day.
-4. Honor thy father and thy mother. 5. Thou
-shalt not kill. 6. Thou shalt not commit adultery.
-7. Thou shalt not steal, 8. Thou shalt
-not bear false witness against thy neighbor. 9.
-Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s wife. 10.
-Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s goods.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Hero it will be seen that the second commandment
-is dropped out altogether, and that the
-tenth is divided; a portion of it retaining its
-ancient number, and the remaining portion of it
-being numbered as the ninth commandment,
-thereby making the complement of the original
-ten, which would have been reduced to nine by
-ignoring the one against image worship. It will
-also be perceived that with the exception of the
-words, “Remember that thou keep holy the Sabbath
-day,” the fourth commandment is left out entirely.
-True, it may be that in the Douay Bible
-the original commandments are allowed to remain
-intact, but we shall see hereafter that the
-above arrangement is not accidental, and that the
-power to make these changes is unhesitatingly
-claimed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The fourth point was that concerning the form
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>and nature of the wound, whereby it was discovered
-that it was made with a weapon precisely
-such as one possessed by the suspected party.
-The correspondence in this particular will be
-found in the boundary of the new Sabbath; in
-its beginning and ending, occurring as they do
-at twelve o’clock, midnight, are the unmistakable
-marks of the band of one who most assuredly
-did not live at Jerusalem, and who left upon
-the creature of his own power the badge of its
-origin at Rome.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Jews, as we have seen heretofore, by the
-agreement of commentators and scholars generally,
-as well as by the testimony of the Bible,
-commenced and ended their days with the setting
-of the sun. At Rome, on the other hand, as well
-as in other parts of the world, the day began as
-we now begin the Sunday—at midnight. In
-this, it is made apparent that some one has been
-tampering with a day which it is claimed was
-hallowed by Christ eighteen hundred years ago;
-since, if it had originated at that time and in
-that place, it would have conformed in its beginning
-and ending to the weekly Sabbath, the day
-of Pentecost, and the other days in the Jewish
-calendar. The presumption concerning whom
-this person is, is already made out. The certainty
-respecting it will be established under the
-next heading.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The fifth point cited above was the confession
-of the culprit. Under ordinary circumstances,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>this alone would have made a conviction inevitable.
-Answering to it in the fullest degree are
-the oft-repeated declarations of Romanists, that
-they have changed the Sabbath from the seventh
-to the first day of the week, and that they had
-the ability and the right thus to do. Respecting
-these assumptions, we might introduce quotations
-almost without number, but we must content
-ourselves with a few brief but pointed ones.<a id='r17' /><a href='#f17' class='c008'><sup>[17]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ques.</i> What are the days which the church
-commands to be kept holy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ans.</i> 1. The Sundays, or our Lord’s day,
-which we observe by apostolical tradition instead
-of the Sabbath. 2. The feasts of our
-Lord’s nativity, or Christmas day; his circumcision,
-or New Year’s day; the Epiphany, or twelfth
-day; Easter day, or the day of our Lord’s resurrection,
-with the Monday following,” &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ques.</i> What was the reason why the weekly
-Sabbath was changed from the Saturday to the
-Sunday?”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ans.</i> Because our Lord fully accomplished
-the work of our redemption by rising from the
-dead on Sunday and by sending down the Holy
-Ghost on Sunday; as therefore the work of our
-redemption was a greater work than that of our
-creation, the primitive <i>church</i> thought the day
-in which this work was completely finished was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>more worthy her religious observation than that
-in which God rested from creation, and should
-be properly called the Lord’s day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ques.</i> But has the church power to make
-any alterations in the commandments of God?”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ans.</i> The commandments of God, as far as
-they contain his eternal law, are unalterable and
-indispensable, but as to whatever was only
-ceremonial they cease to oblige, since the Mosaic
-law was abrogated by Christ’s death; hence, as far
-as the commandment obliges us to set aside some
-part of our time for the worship and service of our
-Creator, it is an unalterable and unchangeable
-precept of the eternal law in which the church
-cannot dispense. But, forasmuch as it prescribes
-the seventh day in particular for this purpose,
-it is no more than a ceremonial precept of the
-old law which obligeth not Christians, and therefore,
-instead of the seventh day and other festivals
-appointed by the old law, the <i>church</i> has
-prescribed the Sundays and holidays to be set
-apart for God’s worship, and these we are now
-obliged to keep in consequence of God’s commandment,
-instead of the ancient Sabbath.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ques.</i> What warrant have you for keeping
-the Sunday preferable to the ancient Sabbath,
-which was the Saturday?”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ans.</i> We have for it the authority of the
-Catholic church and apostolic tradition.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ques.</i> Does the Scripture anywhere command
-the Sunday to be kept for the Sabbath?”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>“<i>Ans.</i> The Scripture commands us to hear
-the church (Matt. 18:17, Luke 10:16), and to
-hold fast the traditions of the apostles. 2 Thess.
-2:15. But the Scriptures do not in particular
-mention this change of the Sabbath. John
-speaks of the Lord’s day (Rev. 1:10); but he
-does not tell us what day of the week this was,
-much less does he tell us that this day was to
-take the place of the Sabbath ordained in the
-commandment; ... so that truly the
-best authority we have for this, is the testimony
-and ordinance of the church. And, therefore,
-those who pretend to be so religious of the
-Sunday, whilst they take no notice of the festivals
-ordained by the same church authority,
-show that they act by humor, and not by reason
-and religion, since Sundays and holy days all
-stand upon the same foundation, viz., the ordinance
-of the church.”—<i>Cath. Christian Instructed</i>,
-pp. 209-211.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ques.</i> Have you any other way of proving
-that the church has power to institute festivals
-of precept?”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ans.</i> Had she not such power, she could not
-have done that in which all modern religionists
-agree with her—she could not have substituted
-the observance of Sunday, the first day of the
-week, for the observance of Saturday, the seventh
-day, a change for which there is no scripture
-authority.”—<i>Doctrinal Catechism.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ques.</i> If keeping the Sunday be a church
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>precept, why is it numbered in the decalogue,
-which are the commandments of God and the
-law of nature?”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<i>Ans.</i> Because the substance, or chief part
-of it, namely, that the day be set apart for the
-service of God, is of divine right and of the law
-of nature; though the determining this particular
-day, Sunday, rather than Saturday, be a
-church ordinance and precept.”—<i>Abridgment of
-Chris. Doc.</i>, pp. 57, 59.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thus much for the connection of the papacy
-with the change of the Sabbath. The reader,
-repudiating the claim for apostolical tradition,
-which is of no value with Protestants, and rejecting
-as fallacious the assumed antiquity of the
-Roman Catholic church, will discover that there
-still remains the bold assumption of the ability
-on the part of that church to change the Sabbath,
-and also of the historic fact that it has done so.
-Mr. Gilfillan, while, of course, from his standpoint
-rejecting the notion that the pope has
-either in reality changed, or even possessed the
-ability to change, the divinely appointed day of
-rest, frankly acknowledges that he arrogates to
-himself the power so to do, in the following
-language:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Rome, professing to retain, has yet corrupted
-every doctrine, institution, and law of Jesus Christ,
-recognizing for example, the mediator between God
-and man, but associating with him many other intercessors;
-avowing adherence to the Scripture,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>but the Scripture as supplemented and made void
-by the writings and traditions of men; and, in
-short, without discarding the Lord’s day, adding a
-number of encumbering holidays, giving them in
-many instances an honor equal and even superior
-to God’s own day, and claiming for the ‘Vicar of
-Christ’ lordship even of the Sabbath.”—<i>The
-Sabbath</i>, p. 457.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Into the details respecting the fasts; the decrees
-of councils; the bulls of popes: the myths
-concerning the calamities which have befallen
-those laboring on the Sunday; the forgery of an
-epistle in its interests, which it was claimed fell
-from Heaven; and the astounding miracles with
-which the hierarchy has accomplished the prodigious
-task of making the transfer, we are not
-permitted to enter here, nor will it be required
-that we should do so. Any person acquainted
-with the arts usually employed at Rome will
-readily perceive the methods which she has called
-to her assistance. All that a reasonable man
-could possibly ask is found in the transition
-from one day to another, in the fact that the
-law of God was to be tampered with by a persecuting
-power which was to continue its oppressions
-of the saints of God for twelve hundred
-and sixty years, and in the further consideration
-that no persecuting power except that of Rome
-has ever continued for that length of time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Concerning the decree of Constantine, the
-only place which we assign to it in the controversy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>between the friends of the Lord’s Sabbath
-and its rival, is that which it holds because of its
-having made the transition easy. The first day
-of the week being the one generally observed by
-the heathen and by this decree enforced by statute,
-had in its favor the practice and sympathy
-of the masses of men. This law, though passed
-by a heathen, and in the interest of the heathen
-religion, was, as would naturally have been the
-case, of great service to those who subsequently
-favored the change of day, since it gave to their
-effort not only the color, but also the material
-advantage, of legality; by it, men, under certain
-circumstances, were compelled to celebrate the
-day of the sun even though they had previously
-regarded that of the Lord. This, of course, was
-burdensome, and worked greatly to the advantage
-of the heathen festival.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>One of two views must be taken of the statute
-of Constantine: If it were Christian, then it
-proves that Sunday observance, at the time of its
-passage, was exceedingly lax, since by its terms
-only men in the cities and towns were prohibited
-from laboring upon it, while those in the country
-were by it allowed and encouraged to carry on
-the vocations of the farm. If, on the other hand,
-it were heathen in its origin, then the suggestion
-that it recognizes the venerableness of the day
-of the sun, even at so early a period as that of
-its promulgation, is entirely without force, since
-it thereby becomes manifest that it received this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>dignifying appellation, not because it had long
-been venerated by the disciples of our Lord, but
-because from time immemorial it had been
-honored by the heathen—a doubtful compliment
-to the Christian Sabbath.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='reply10' class='c006'>STATESMAN’S REPLY. <br /> ARTICLE TEN. <br /> THE PRINCIPLE AS TO TIME IN SABBATH OBSERVANCE.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>Our readers will recollect that the chief difference
-between the second and the third theories
-of the Christian Sabbath, as we stated them in
-our last issue, is in reference to the question of
-time. Seventh-day Sabbatarians, on the one
-hand, maintain that the last one of the seven
-days of the week is <i>the</i> sacred day, and that the
-observance of this very day is absolutely essential
-to the proper observance of the Sabbath of the
-Lord, and the keeping of the fourth commandment.
-On the other hand, we set forth what we
-believe to be the true theory of the Christian
-Sabbath, according to which the essential idea of
-the law of the Sabbath is the consecration to
-God of an appointed proportion of time—one
-day in seven, and not the essential holiness of
-any particular day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We have already seen that the interpretation
-of the fourth commandment which insists on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>essential holiness of the last day of the week
-would convict the risen Lord, and his inspired
-apostles, and the whole church of Christ, even in
-its purest days, of the violation of that precept
-of the divine law. But let us now examine a
-few practical points in connection with this
-second theory.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>1. If the seventh day of the week is to be rigidly
-adhered to, as the law of the fourth commandment,
-it must be the seventh from the
-creation, in regular weekly succession. Will any
-seventh-day Sabbatarian venture to affirm that,
-through all the changes of our race, through all
-the breaks of history, through the bondage in
-Egypt, and the repeated captivities of God’s ancient
-people, to say nothing of the miracles in
-connection with Joshua’s victory, and Hezekiah’s
-sickness, unbroken succession of the weekly
-divisions of time has been maintained? Does
-the last day of our week answer, in an exact
-numbering of days, to the seventh day on which
-God rested after completing the work of creation?
-The interpretation which we are now considering
-demands this conformity to the fourth commandment
-in its letter. He would be a bold man indeed,
-who would affirm that his seventh day in
-this nineteenth century is the exact day which
-his own view of the law of the Sabbath would
-require him to keep holy. Our present first day
-may correspond to the original seventh day.
-Who knows?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>2. But admit that these essentially holy twenty-four
-hours, at the close of each week, may be
-marked without doubt, how can all Christians in
-different parts of the world keep them? How
-can men in different longitudes and latitudes so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>mark off the week as to have it end with this
-intrinsically holy portion of time? The difference
-in local time in different parts of the earth
-is a fact familiar to every school-boy. The circumference
-of the earth, for the convenience of
-calculation, is divided into three hundred and
-sixty degrees. As the sun appears to make a
-circuit round the earth every time the earth rotates
-on its axis, that is, every twenty-four hours,
-the apparent motion of the sun from east to west
-will be fifteen degrees each hour. Let it be noon
-of the seventh day at any given point in our
-land, and it will be sunset ninety degrees east,
-and sunrise ninety degrees west. At what point
-of the earth’s surface shall men claim the right
-to have the seventh or holy day begin with
-their sunset or their midnight, and demand that
-all others east and west shall measure their holy
-day from so many hours before or after their
-own midnight or sunset, as their portion may
-require?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Or, again, in extreme northern and southern
-latitudes, where perpetual day and constant
-night alternate with the annual revolution of the
-earth, how shall the seventh day be marked?
-How shall this essentially holy day of twenty-four
-hours be known? As God, in his infinite
-wisdom, has seen fit to make our earth, and ordain
-the laws of its diurnal revolution on its
-axis, and its annual orbit round the sun, it is
-simply impossible for the inhabitants of the
-world to keep holy the same identical period of
-time. The interpretation of the law of the Sabbath
-at which we are looking is in conflict, therefore,
-with the laws of the solar system.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>3. Our seventh-day friend, perhaps, retreats to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>his last refuge. There is no portion of absolute
-time essentially holy. That was never meant.
-Very well, then, what is meant? Why, that
-each one in his own longitude or latitude should
-observe the seventh day as it is measured by his
-own local time. We apprehend that, in some
-latitudes, the seventh day, measured by local time,
-running through some thousands of hours, would
-be a weariness to the strictest even of seventh-day
-Sabbatarians. But we will leave these extreme
-cases. They must keep holy the appointed
-proportion—one-seventh of their time. That
-must be the law of the Sabbath to them. But
-in the belt of the earth nearer the equator, local
-time, measured by the natural division of days,
-must be followed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now, let it be said, we have no desire to treat
-a serious subject lightly. But our friends insist
-on an interpretation of the fourth commandment
-which can hardly be treated seriously. We can
-scarcely blame Dr. Geo. Junkin for employing
-this shaft of ridicule. He says, substantially,
-suppose all our seventh-day Sabbatarians (and
-their number is not an insuperable objection to
-the experiment), having labored six days, according
-to the commandment, come to the night of
-Friday. By an excusable artifice, sponges, saturated
-with a powerful anæsthetic agent, are held
-to their noses, and they are laid up, in perfect
-unconsciousness, for a whole day beyond the close
-of their usual time of sleep. They awake, supposing
-it to be the seventh day of the week, as
-to them, so conscious intelligent beings, and subjects
-of law, it certainly would be to all intents
-and purposes. But in fact, by the actual measurement
-of time, it is the first day of the week.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>Might there not be in this way a practical solution
-of the whole difficulty?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But the actual rising and the setting of the
-sun may be insisted on whether our seventh-day
-advocates are conscious or not. Suppose, then,
-that one of them takes the now rather popular
-trip of a tour round the world. Going west at
-the rate of, say thirty degrees a week, starting
-from New York, he would lengthen each of his
-days from sunrise to sunrise—supposing the sun
-to rise at six o’clock, local time, all along the belt
-of his course—a little over seventeen minutes;
-and thus, keeping his own count of time, and observing
-every seventh solar day, on his return to
-New York at the end of twelve weeks, his seventh-day
-Sabbath would really be the first day
-of the week. Though he might not be <i>mentally</i>
-converted to the first-day theory of the Christian
-Sabbath, he would at least be <i>physically</i> converted,
-and would either be compelled to accept
-the change, or make a week of six solar days to
-harmonize in Sabbath observance with his seventh-day
-brethren at home, or take to his journeying
-again, and complete the circuit of the
-earth in the opposite direction, in order to maintain
-unbroken the succession of weeks of seven
-days each, and have his Sabbath fall on the one
-and only day which will suit his interpretation of
-the fourth commandment.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If, instead of going by the west, our traveler
-should go by the east, journeying at the same
-rate of thirty degrees each week, he would diminish
-the length of each of his days a little
-over seventeen minutes, and on arriving once
-more at New York, at the end of twelve even
-weeks by the time of that city, but twelve weeks
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>and one day by his own time, his seventh-day
-Sabbath would fall on the sixth day of the week,
-and we would have a new order of Sabbatarians.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The reason of the diversity is obvious. The
-trip around the world, according to the supposed
-rate of travel, would occupy just twelve weeks,
-or eighty-four days of twenty-four hours each,
-measured by local time at New York. The total
-number of hours, reckoning each day twenty-four
-even hours, would be 2,016. The traveler,
-proceeding westward at the rate of thirty degrees
-a week, would add to each day’s length just seventeen
-and one-seventh minutes—making each
-day from sunrise to sunrise, reckoning this always
-at six o’clock, local time, twenty-four hours, seventeen
-and one-seventeenth minutes long. He
-would, therefore, in the whole number of hours
-of his trip, 2,016, see the sun rise only eighty-three
-instead of eighty-four times. Going east, he
-would shorten each day’s length, reducing it
-from sunrise to sunrise, to twenty-three hours
-and forty-two and six-seventh minutes. In this
-case, the whole number of hours, 2,016, would
-divide up into eighty-five solar days. To one
-remaining at New York, there would be eighty-four
-solar days; to the one going west around the
-world, the same absolute time would be summed
-up in eighty-three solar days; and to the one going
-east, it would extend itself to eighty-five solar
-days. Thus at the close of every trip round the
-world, the Christian traveler or sailor must readjust
-the reckoning of his days, in order to observe
-the Lord’s day with his brethren at home.
-When our Constitution shall have been amended,
-and a true Christian regard shall be shown to all
-citizens, if our seventh-day friends feel grievously
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>oppressed by the Sabbath laws, which will then
-be no dead letter, we shall do our utmost to have
-the national government provide a number of
-comfortable vessels, and give our friends a gratuitous
-trip round the world. We shall take care
-that the officers are instructed not to sail by the
-east; for our seventh-day Sabbatarians would
-then go away only to come home and be sixth-day
-Sabbatarians. Due care will be taken to
-have them proceed in the right direction, and to
-induce them on their return to stay at home, and
-government’s oppression of them by Sabbath
-laws will then forevermore have ceased.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In all seriousness, we ask, How can a thoughtful
-man, in view of the fact of the earth’s revolution
-round the sun, and its effect on the measurement
-of time, hold to the second theory of the
-Christian Sabbath? We have a matter of fact to
-record just here. In 1790, nine mutineers from
-the English vessel, the Bounty, along with six
-men and twelve women from Tahiti, landed on
-what is known as Pitcairn’s island in the Pacific
-Ocean. John Adams, one of the mutineers, after
-the violent death of the other men, was converted
-by reading a copy of the Bible, and became a
-true Christian. Keeping his own count of the
-days, he observed the weekly Sabbath, with the
-community which was growing up, and which
-he was at great pains to instruct in the Christian
-religion. Some time after, an English vessel
-visited the islands, keeping their count of the
-days. The officers and crew of this vessel landed
-at the island on Saturday, but, to their astonishment,
-found a Christian community keeping the
-Christian Sabbath. The original settlers and the
-visitors had gone to the island in different directions.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>Did the sailors, who kept one day, not
-observe the Sabbath? Or did the islanders, who
-kept another day, violate the fourth precept of
-the decalogue?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Two colonies of seventh-day advocates might
-leave the same port, one going east and the other
-west, and might locate on islands on the same
-parallel of longitude, but on different parallels of
-latitude. Each, keeping its own record of time,
-would be found, on settling in their permanent
-home, to be observing a different day as the
-weekly Sabbath. Would either colony admit
-that it was in the wrong? If they were to live
-apart, each might properly observe its own day;
-if together, would it matter which day might be
-observed?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thus the principle as to time in Sabbath observance
-insists, not on the essential holiness of
-any twenty-four hours in themselves, but on the
-dedication to God of one day in seven, one seventh
-of the time as nearly as that proportion can
-be measured by the most convenient means available.
-This, the third theory does, while it accepts
-all the facts of history. With one more article,
-in favor of the third theory of the Christian Sabbath,
-we shall close this whole discussion.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>
- <h2 id='rejoinder10' class='c006'>A REJOINDER. <br /> “THE PRINCIPLE AS TO TIME IN SABBATH OBSERVANCE.”</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>Were it not true that we had long since ceased
-to be surprised at anything which an individual
-could say when opposing the claims of the Lord’s
-Sabbath, after having received the light concerning
-them, our astonishment at the position taken
-by the gentleman of the <i>Statesman</i>, in the foregoing
-article, would have no bounds.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To one who has followed him thus far in an
-elaborate argument, running through a series of
-nine communications, all for the purpose of establishing,
-from both Scripture and history, the
-change of the Sabbath from the seventh to the
-first day of the week, and the obligation under
-which all men are now placed to observe the latter
-instead of the former, it will be extremely
-difficult to explain, on grounds honorable to himself,
-this sudden repudiation of all which he has
-said in the past, while endeavoring to defend the
-newly found theory of the observance of one day
-in seven, to the exclusion of any definite day
-whatever.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In his second article, he says, “We are concerned
-here and now simply with the transfer of
-the Sabbath from the seventh to the first day of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>the week.” In the third article, when speaking
-of apostolic times, he remarks again, “It was also
-seen that while the observance of the seventh
-day was not continued, another day of the week,
-the first, took its place as the stated day for religious
-assemblies and services.” Farther on, he
-writes again, as follows: “On the last seventh
-day on which the disciples rested, according to
-the commandment, the Lord himself is lying in
-the tomb. The glory of the seventh day dies
-out with the fading light of that day, throughout
-the whole of which the grave claimed the body
-of the Redeemer. But the glory of the Sabbath
-of the Lord survives. It receives fresh luster
-from the added glories of the Lord of the Sabbath.
-‘The Stone which the builders refused
-has become the head of the corner.’ It is very
-early in the morning, the first day of the week.
-Again, ‘God said, Let there be light; and there
-was light’ The Sun of Righteousness has risen
-with healing in his wings. This is the day which
-the Lord has made; we will rejoice and be glad
-in it. The first day of the week has become the
-Lord’s day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But we must cease from our quotations, for
-them is no limit to expressions synonymous with
-the above. Not only so, but were additional
-proof necessary, by more ample extracts, it could
-be made to appear that the whole theory of his
-defense, as already declared, has rested entirely
-upon the change of the day from the seventh,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>which was observed till the death of Christ, to
-the first, which was honored especially by our
-Lord, by his personal appearance to the disciples
-on the first and second Sundays following the
-resurrection, and by the outpouring of the Holy
-Spirit on the day of Pentecost, with the especial
-view of teaching the disciples that it had become
-holy time; also, that they, grasping the moral
-of the lesson imparted by example, if not by
-positive precept, inculcated the doctrine of the
-change, and made it binding upon all.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If we are right in this, and the reader who has
-followed the debate thus far will unhesitatingly
-admit that such are the facts, then, of course, the
-gentleman is arrayed against himself in a manner
-most distasteful, no doubt, to his personal feelings,
-as well as disastrous to his polished logic;
-for to the mind of the merest school-boy it must
-be apparent that a change of Sabbath from
-one day of the week to another, involves the
-definiteness of the day thus honored; <i>i. e.</i>, if the
-first day of the week is now the Christian Sabbath
-because of the nature of events which transpired
-upon it in particular, then, of course, it occupies
-that position to the exclusion of all other
-days; but this utterly demolishes the seventh-part-of-time
-theory, which the gentleman has
-adopted, the very essence of which is, that there
-is now no superiority in days, and the individual
-is left free to choose any one which may best accord
-with his tastes or subserve his interests.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>Here, then, we come to a dead halt. Which
-shall we believe, the nine articles of the gentleman,
-or the tenth, which is in direct conflict with
-their teachings? Should we go by the bulk of
-the testimony, then we must decide that there
-is a definite day, according to the conviction of
-our opponent. But if he still holds to that doctrine,
-then that which he has said against the
-seventh-day Sabbath, on the ground that the
-earth is round, and, therefore, that the Edenic
-Sabbath could not be kept in all portions of it,
-is deprived of all its force. For, assuredly, if he
-believes that God now requires all men to honor
-the first day of the week, the world over, then he
-must admit that it is possible for them to do so.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But if it is possible for men both to find and
-to celebrate the first day of the week, on a round
-world, then, beyond all dispute, the same process
-which will enable them to do this, will also qualify
-them to locate and to observe the seventh-day
-Sabbath. For it is just as certain as mathematical
-demonstration can make it, that in a
-week consisting of seven days, having found the
-first of the number, in order to discover the last,
-you have but to take the one which preceded the
-known day, or, if you please, count forward six
-days from the one already established, and you
-have the last day of the Week to which it belongs.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So, too, with every objection urged in the communication.
-The one in regard to the difficulties
-which would be experienced in an attempt to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>keep the Sabbath of the commandment at the
-poles, is just as fatal to the first day as it is to
-the seventh. All this talk, also, in regard to the
-impossibility of preserving a correct count, and
-of the lengthening and shortening of the days,
-as the traveler passes from the east to the west,
-if it has any force at all, or even the semblance
-of force, must be met and answered equally by
-the observers of the so-called Christian Sabbath,
-with those of the Sabbath of the Lord. This
-being true, we might pause right here, and roll
-the burden onto the opposition. Having raised
-the dust which is blinding the eyes of the ignorant,
-yet conscientious, it would be but substantial
-justice for Sabbatarians to fall back and say
-to them, Take the field, gentlemen, and wrest
-from the hand of the infidel and the atheist the
-weapons with which you have armed them to be
-employed against you in the very work in which
-you are engaged; for, be it remembered that the
-children of this world are wiser in their generation
-than the children of light, and they will
-readily perceive the advantage which they have
-gained by such doctrines and difficulties as those
-to which the gentleman has called their attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This, however, we shall not do, but shall ourselves,
-in due time, strike at the very root of the
-error, in the interest of a definite and universal
-day of holy rest. Before entering upon this
-work, nevertheless, there is a matter which concerns
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>Sabbatarians most deeply, to which attention
-should be directed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The gentleman and his friends are pressing
-upon the nation the necessity of the Constitutional
-Amendment—contrary to his former declaration,
-in which he said there was no necessary
-connection between the Sabbath and the amendment.
-He now justifies our strictures upon the
-disingenuousness of his argument, by deliberately
-stating, in the article before us, with an air of
-triumphant exultation, that, the amendment once
-secured, the Sabbath laws in this country will then
-cease to be a dead letter. By this, he means, of
-course, that they will be carried into operation.
-But what are those Sabbath laws? They are
-laws enforcing the first day of the week, in nearly
-every State in the Union.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now, we believe that what the gentleman says
-will be fulfilled; but right here is the proper place
-to offer a solemn protest. Will the gentleman fine
-and imprison my brethren and myself for disregarding
-the first day of the week, after having conscientiously
-kept the seventh? If so, we ask for
-the logic by which such a course could be justified,
-on the ground that the seventh-part-of-time
-theory is correct? Now, mark it, the object of
-the amendment is to make the Bible the fountain
-of national law. All the enactments of the
-Congress and all the decisions of the judiciary
-are to be in harmony with it. If, therefore, Sabbath
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>laws are passed, they must be such as the
-Scriptures would warrant; for the Sabbath, be
-it remembered, which this movement seeks to
-enforce, is the one which the Bible teaches.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But, according to the last theory, the day which
-God now requires to be observed is not any one
-in particular, but simply one in seven, the individual
-being left to make the selection of the one
-which he prefers thus to honor. Now, therefore, it
-is submitted that if God has given to man this prerogative
-of choice, then be has done so because
-this course was the one which commended itself
-to infinite wisdom, and no person or set of persons
-has a right to come between the creature and the
-Creator, depriving the former of rights which the
-latter has guaranteed to him. If the Bible Sabbath
-is indeed an indefinite one, we say to these
-gentlemen, Hands off; in the name of religion
-and the Bible you shall not perform a work
-which twill do violence to a large class of conscientious
-citizens, and which, according to your
-own argument, is contrary to the doctrine of the
-Christian Sabbath, as laid down in the word of
-God. Be consistent with yourselves and your
-views of Scripture.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If, indeed, you are sincere in believing that
-Sabbatarians violate no divine law in the keeping
-of the seventh day, then we say to you in
-the name of charity, Why not allow them, so long
-as they are Christian men and women, and obedient
-citizens, to carry out their convictions of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>duty, without compelling them, by the appliances
-of persecuting legislation, to keep the particular
-first-day Sabbath which indeed you have chosen
-for yourselves, but for which you have now
-ceased to claim any special divine honor? To
-form them, either to disregard their own convictions
-of duty, or to keep two days holy, would
-lie an act of despotism but one remove from that
-terrible bigotry which, in the Inquisition, resorted
-to the rack and the thumbscrew; not, indeed, to
-make men better Christians or better citizens,
-but to coerce them into the acceptance of institutions
-for which there was no divine authority.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But we must pans to the consideration of other
-points. To the objection that the seventh day
-may have been lost since creation, and that he is
-a bold man who would affirm his ability to locate
-it now, it may be replied that, while Sabbatarians
-claim for themselves no unusual amount of courage,
-they do insist that it is an easy matter to
-demonstrate the succession of weeks, and the
-proper place of the original seventh day in the
-septenary cycle at the present time. The way in
-which this may be done is as follows: At the
-creation of the world, God blessed and sanctified
-the seventh day, because that on it he had rested.
-At the exodus from Egypt, he gave to the people
-a written law, enforcing the Sabbatic observance
-of the day on which he had originally ceased
-from his labors. On the sixth, Moses said to the
-people, “To-morrow is the rest of the holy Sabbath
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>unto the Lord.” For forty years subsequent
-to this, God marked out this day from the others
-by causing that no manna should fall upon it
-whatever, whereas it fell upon every other one
-of the seven.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thus we have the authority of God himself,
-who assuredly could not mistake, that the people
-of Israel, in the outset, had committed to them
-the original seventh day, since God not only
-gave them a Sabbath, but also, according to the
-reason of the commandment, the Sabbath of the
-Lord. Descending the line of history to the days
-of Christ, we find him declaring that he had kept
-his Father’s commandments (John 15:10). But
-one of these commandments was that relating to
-the Sabbath; in order, therefore, to the proper
-observance of it, Christ must have been able to
-decide which day in the week it was. That this
-was the case, none will dispute. Thus the day
-is located in his time satisfactorily, since he kept
-the same one which the Jews regarded, and
-which preceded the day of his resurrection.
-From that time to this, we have the general
-agreement of Jews, Christians, and heathen, in
-regard to the precise place in the week of both
-the first and the seventh day. Surely, this is all
-which could be demanded in order to reach reasonable
-certainty.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The difficulty which the gentleman finds in
-harmonizing the will of God, as expressed in the
-law of nature and that of a definite Sabbath for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>the people living near the poles, is apparently
-possessed of some force. It is, however, not peculiar
-to him. These barren wastes of ice and
-snow, though far removed from our civilization,
-are apparently destined to figure as largely in
-the spiritual world as they do in that of scientific
-research; not only on the Sabbath question, but
-also in that of baptism, it has a part to act.
-Think, says the advocate of sprinkling, as a
-shudder runs through his whole system, think of
-an immersion administered in the regions of
-eternal ice. Then having suitably impressed his
-auditors with the physical difficulties in the way
-of Bible baptism, he concludes that God never
-could have ordained immersion as the only
-method, since it is impracticable in the extreme
-north, and God surely would have commanded a
-form of ordinance which could be carried out in
-all parts of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In harmony with this line of deduction is the
-difficulty stated by our friend. Chiming in with
-the theory that the laws of nature and the law
-of God must run harmoniously together, it is
-shown that at the poles the days and nights are
-six months long; and, therefore, that a twenty-four
-hour Sabbath, definitely located upon the
-last day of the week, is out of the questions. The
-conclusion drawn is that, as the theory of the
-seventh-day Sabbatarians is in conflict with the
-ordinance of nature in these portions of the globe,
-it must be contrary to the original design of God.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>But pause a moment; suppose we should grant
-that in the region in question there are men who
-cannot keep the seventh-day Sabbath as originally
-ordained, does that prove of necessity that
-it ought not to be hallowed in those portions of
-the world where there is no difficulty in the way
-of its observance? We think not. To illustrate:
-Were a man to pass his life in a coal mine, hundreds
-of feet beneath the surface, laboring continually,
-and never seeing the sun at all, would
-he, therefore, be exempted from the definite Sabbath?
-You answer, No. But why is this reply returned?
-Manifestly, because the difficulty is not
-with God and Isis laws, or the sun, but with the individual
-who has voluntarily placed himself under
-abnormal circumstances. In other words, he has
-located himself where the God of nature never
-designed that he should, and, in so doing, he has
-himself created a difficulty which he himself can
-remove.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So, too, with the Northman. If he finds it
-impossible to keep a Sabbath which is most perfectly
-adapted to the wants of mankind, it is
-simply because he has placed himself in a region
-which God has doctored waste and uninhabitable
-as emphatically as can be done by nature speaking
-through the language of eternal ice and snow,
-and the disappearance for six months in a year
-of that great luminary whose light and heat are
-so indispensable to the comfort and advancement
-of the race. But, if this is true, then the argument
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>from the conflict between the law of the
-God of nature and that of revelation, concerning
-a definite day of rest, loses all of its force; for the
-whole trouble arises, not from any want of adaptation
-on the part of such a rest to the circumstances
-of those who are where God would have
-them located, but from a disregard, in the first
-place, on the part of the nations in question, of
-the manifest law of prohibition to the settlement
-of regions which were designed to remain unoccupied.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Their relief can be found in one of two directions:
-They can, in the interest of their own
-progress, retrace their steps to localities where
-the more advanced portion of the race feel the
-genial influence of a diurnal sun; or, should they
-insist upon remaining in the bleak regions of
-their choice, it is possible for them, according to
-the accounts of travelers, to mark by the variations
-of the twilight, even in their six months’
-night, the boundaries of the Sabbath and the
-week days as they come and go to those residing
-in more temperate regions.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is now time to grapple with the theory that
-it is impossible for those traveling around the
-world and those living in different portions of it
-to keep one and the same day. The first thing
-to be settled is the matter of what is meant by
-the expression, “the same day.” Upon this
-point, the gentleman has wasted many words.
-We have never insisted upon the identical hours.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>All that we demand is that the mine day should
-be observed throughout the habitable globe, <i>i. e.</i>,
-each individual should celebrate in his own particular
-locality the seventh day of the week as it
-comes to him in its passage round the earth—to
-use the language of common parlance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Whether this can be done or not is a question
-which involves the wisdom of God; for, granting
-that he gave the fourth commandment as a Sabbath
-law, and the regulations concerning the
-Sabbath, as found in the books of Moses, there is
-no room for dispute that he understood the statute
-to enforce the keeping of a definite day, and
-not merely one-seventh part of time, In the
-sixteenth chapter of Exodus, where the Sabbath
-is first introduced, is found an excellent opportunity
-to test this matter. He there marks out
-the day which he had hallowed as the one which
-followed the sixth, and the only one on which no
-manna fell. For forty years, also, this practice
-of separating the day of his rest by a weekly
-miracle from all others was continued. But
-why should he have done this if there was no
-choice, and if the keeping of the seventh part of
-time was all that was necessary? Nay, more,
-why did he make it absolutely impossible for a
-man to celebrate any other day but the seventh
-day of the week? That he did so, we can prove
-in a few words.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We will suppose that a person entertaining
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>the sentiments of the gentleman should have attempted
-to carry them out in the forty years
-during which God led the people in the wilderness;
-also, that his first experiment was that of
-Sunday rest. In this he would have failed utterly.
-Do you ask, How? I answer that God
-had decreed that no manna should fall on the
-seventh day (Ex. 16:26), and that the manna
-which was to be eaten on the Sabbath should be
-gathered on the day before (Ex. 16:5). It would
-therefore have been impossible for the individual
-in question to provide food for his Sunday rest.
-But, disgusted with this kind of Sabbath-keeping,
-suppose he should have tried, in order, Monday,
-Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, the
-result would not have varied materially. On
-Sunday, there was an utter absence of all food;
-on the other days, that which had been previously
-gathered, instead of being fit for use, would
-have been found corrupted and changed into
-loathsome worms, since God had told the people
-that only the manna which was gathered on the
-sixth day should be kept until the day following;
-and some of them, having made the experiment
-of disobeying in the particular in question, found
-the result as cited above (Ex. 16:19, 20). On
-the other hand, should the same individual have
-decided finally to consecrate the seventh day of
-the week, he would have found no difficulty
-whatever. Gathering his double portion of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>manna on the sixth day, by a miracle of God it
-would have been preserved pure and wholesome
-through the last day of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But how can this be accounted for on the hypothesis
-that no particular day was chosen by the
-Lord? If, indeed, he had adopted the indefinite
-plan, and had left the people to choose for themselves,
-it is certain that he did this because it was
-the best method. But if it were the best method,
-and if it were in accordance with his view of
-the statute, then, assuredly, he would not have
-stultified himself and mocked the people by first
-granting them a privilege and then, by his providence,
-preventing them from carrying it out.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Should it be suggested that this law was confined
-to the land of Palestine and to the Jews in
-its operation, I answer; first, that at the time
-spoken of the people were in Arabia, not in Judea,
-and that even should that be granted, which
-is not true, viz., that the fourth commandment
-related simply to the Hebrews, this does not affect
-the question at all, for no one will insist that
-Jews were only obliged by it when in Judea.
-Wherever they might be, they were required to
-keep the Sabbath, whether in bondage in Assyria,
-or traversing the known world in quest of gain.
-From Spain to India, from Scythia to Africa, this
-law was designed to apply and did apply for
-hundreds of years before it will be even claimed
-that it was abolished. This being true, it is established
-beyond question that God himself imposed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>upon men, traversing the whole of the
-eastern continent, a uniform day of worship.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Do you inquire when they commenced it? I
-answer, At sunset, agreeably to the direction in
-Lev. 23:32. Did they go eastward to the Pacific,
-or westward to the Atlantic, they were required
-to commence their rest at that hour. Was
-it impossible for them to do so? He that says so
-charges God with folly. Were they capable of
-carrying out the requirement? Then, at least
-on the eastern continent, the definite day was a
-practicable thing. God knew how his people
-would be scattered; he gave them the institution
-of the Sabbath, adapted to whatever circumstances
-they might be placed in; he marked out
-that Sabbath from the rest of the week, and in
-the outset settled beyond controversy the question
-that it was not movable in its nature.
-Therefore, he who would accept the theory which
-we have been considering and repudiate the one
-which we indorse, must do it in the face of God’s
-explanatory providence, in the teeth of his written
-law, and against the practice of his people,
-Israel, who for centuries have had no difficulty
-in finding the Sabbath in every latitude.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So much for the law and its history, making
-clear, as it does, that our opponents do not understand
-the possibilities of the case as God looks
-upon them. We will now proceed to the consideration
-of the difficulties which they discover in
-the realization of our theory.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>It is claimed that, in going around the world
-eastward, a day is gained; and in going around
-westward, a day is lost, to the traveler. From
-these premises it is argued that a definite day
-cannot be kept. Has it ever occurred to the
-gentleman that his own theory would be somewhat
-disturbed by the same trip? Mark it, it is
-exactly one-seventh part of time which is to be
-kept. It will hardly be urged that all the old
-watches in the land are reliable enough to be
-trusted in a journey of this length, and, besides,
-suppose we had lived in a period when such time-pieces
-were not known, then what? Oh! says
-the objector, we would have gone by the sun.
-Then you agree with us, after all, that the sun
-presents the most available method of marking
-the day; but remember, now, that you are on
-your journey round the earth, westward; you
-travel six days, each one considerably lengthened
-out by the fact that you are going with the sun;
-you stop and rest on the seventh day, which you
-call the Sabbath. Unfortunately, however, as
-you have been lying still, it is considerably shorter
-than your six days of work; by this means
-you have cheated the Lord out of one-seventh of
-the whole time which all of the six days had in
-excess over the one on which you rested. Traveling
-eastward, the opposite would be true, and
-your days of rest would be longer than your days
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>of labor, and would not, therefore, represent one-seventh
-part of time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Again, we might show by argument the complete
-anarchy into which the community would
-be thrown by the realization of this doctrine, that
-each man for himself is at liberty to fix upon his
-weekly Sabbath. Nothing would be easier to
-prove than that it would seriously obstruct your
-courts of justice; that it would render stated
-worship impossible; in fine, that it would bring
-confusion into every walk in life.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Do you reply that you will obviate the difficulty
-by legislative enactment, and that you will
-make this whole nation, from New York to San
-Francisco, regard the Sunday for the sake of uniformity
-and good order? I answer; first, have
-you then improved upon God’s great plan? Did
-he not know that a definite day would be the
-best, and would he not have been likely to give
-it to us? Secondly, then you admit that it is,
-after all, possible to keep one and the same day
-across the whole of this continent; for were this
-not true it would be idle for you to attempt to produce
-uniformity by legislation. But putting this
-concession of yours in regard to the western, alongside
-of God’s enforcement of a definite day for
-centuries, on the whole of the eastern, continent,
-the circuit of the globe is made, and the possibility
-of keeping a definite Sabbath on both hemispheres
-is established.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Before me lies the draft of an electrical clock,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>which is styled, “The clock of all nations.” The
-design is an ingenious one, and serves to show at
-a glance the difference in time between prominent
-cities in all parts of the globe. For this
-purpose, a central dial is drafted, representing the
-meridian of New York. The hands on this dial
-indicate the precise hour of noon. Around this
-central figure are arranged twenty additional dials,
-on each one of which is marked by the hands
-the time of day as it will exist in the cities
-named, commencing on the east of New York
-with Pekin, and terminating to the west of it
-with San Francisco. By it, you perceive at a
-glance the precise variation of time in the different
-longitudes to which these cities belong.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>For example, while the clock of New York indicates
-twelve, noon, the one in Pekin indicates
-twenty minutes before one in the morning; the
-one in Rome, fifteen minutes to six <span class='fss'>P. M.</span>; the
-one in London, five minutes of five <span class='fss'>P. M.</span>; and
-so on until you reach New York, where it is
-twelve <span class='fss'>M.</span> Then passing westward of that point,
-where the time is, of course, slower, the dial for
-Chicago marks seven minutes past eleven <span class='fss'>A. M.</span>;
-that of St. Louis, five minutes of eleven <span class='fss'>A. M.</span>;
-that in San Francisco, fifteen minutes before nine
-<span class='fss'>A. M.</span> By this means, the variation between Pekin
-and San Francisco is shown to be about sixteen
-hours, or nearly two-thirds of one whole day.
-By the same method, the reader will at once discern
-that it is possible to locate the commencement
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>of the day at any one of these points in its
-passage around the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In order to do this, let it be supposed that the
-day begins when it did in Bible times, with the
-setting of the sun. It is, if you please, Sunday
-at Pekin, and those who keep that day commence
-to celebrate it at sunset. Now, if we would ascertain
-just when the citizens of Rome would enter
-upon a like service, it is only necessary to determine
-how long it would take the sunset to
-travel the distance separating these two cities.
-By consulting the draft in question, we find that
-the time at Rome is six hours and fifty-five minutes
-slower than that at Pekin. This being the
-case, the sunset would reach them, and they would
-enter upon the first day of the week just six hours
-and fifty-five minutes after those dwelling on the
-meridian of Pekin have done so.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So we might go through the whole list. As
-the world revolves upon its axis, it would bring
-London to the same point where the people of
-Rome saw the sun sink in the west and entered
-upon the Sunday, just fifty minutes subsequent
-to that event. The citizens of New York
-would begin their Sunday, also, with the sunset,
-four hours and fifty-five minutes after those of
-London did so; and those of Chicago, fifty-five
-minutes later than those of New York; and those
-of San Francisco, two hours and twenty minutes
-subsequent to those of Chicago. All, however,
-would be hallowing the same day, though not,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>for a portion of the time, the same hours.<a id='r18' /><a href='#f18' class='c008'><sup>[18]</sup></a> Each,
-in his own proper locality, would commence to
-keep the day when it reached him, and continue
-to keep it until by a complete revolution of the
-earth he is brought around to the commencement
-of another day, as indicated by another decline of
-the sun. This is as God would have it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the passage from Egypt to Palestine there
-was a variation of some minutes; but there was
-no change in the time of commencing the Sabbath.
-From even to even shall you keep your
-Sabbaths, was the divine edict, and his people, in
-going eastward or westward, obeyed this injunction.
-In doing so they needed no time-piece;
-nor would the traveler at the present time. In
-every habitable region, according to God’s plan,
-the great luminary of heaven visibly marks the
-boundaries of sacred time. The day began in
-the east, and travels to the west. A complete
-revolution of the earth brings it, with its complement
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>of light and darkness, to the home of
-every man, no matter as to the meridian of longitude
-in which he lives. It is the same day, in
-the Bible sense, as that kept by the Christian
-thousands of miles to the east of him, though it
-may not begin at exactly the same moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Practically, this question has no real significance
-whatever. Though it may puzzle the brain of
-one who has not before him the facts, it has been
-settled forever in a most remarkable manner by
-the usage of mankind. The fact is beyond cavil
-that, from the extreme eastern boundary of the
-eastern continent to the extreme western verge
-of the western continent, there is such a perfect
-agreement upon this point that each day of the
-week, commencing on the western shore of the
-Pacific, continues its course across Asia, Europe,
-and America, until it arrives at the eastern shore
-of the same sea. So true is this that, were there
-a line of churches surmounted with bells, in hearing
-distance of each other, they could ring in the
-commencement of any day; say at Yokohama in
-Japan, and its march could be made known along
-the whole line from that place to San Francisco
-by a like practice in each of the churches, without
-a solitary break until the last bell on the
-Pacific coast had announced its arrival there.
-Whether it be admitted that it can be done or
-not, it is a fact that the Christians from China to
-California do observe the same Sabbath or Sunday
-all along the line between the two points.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>Should it be replied that, although there is a
-uniform reckoning of the days to those passing
-from San Francisco eastward to China, or from
-China westward to San Francisco, that, nevertheless,
-should they cross the Pacific Ocean from
-San Francisco westward to China, or from China
-eastward to San Francisco, it would be necessary
-for them in the first case to add a day, and in the
-last, to drop one, in order to make their time harmonize
-with that of the people in these two
-countries, the reply is, that this is very true. It
-does not, however, prove that there is no definite
-day which can be kept alike by the inhabitants
-of the two continents; for in order to the keeping
-of the same day on a round world there must
-somewhere be a day-line, in other words, there
-must be a point where the day begins. In crossing
-that line the same result would ensue as that
-claimed in the passage from California to China
-<i>via</i> the Pacific, <i>i. e.</i>, a day must be either dropped
-or added in the reckoning of the individual making
-the transit.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We have already seen that God’s plan was to
-measure the days by the setting of the sun.
-This being the case, the fourth day, on which the
-sun was made, commenced at the precise point
-where at the time of its creation it would have
-appeared to a person to the east of it as sinking
-out of sight in the west. The day commencing
-at that point passed around the earth until every
-portion of it had in succession witnessed the setting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>of the sun on the fifth day. The only difficulty
-that remains in the case, consequently, is
-that of deciding where the day-line should be located.
-As already discovered, the practice of nations
-has fixed it in the Pacific Ocean. It is not
-a little remarkable that sailors change their reckoning
-while crossing that ocean backward or forward,
-and circumnavigate the globe at will without
-the slightest confusion. The only instance
-which has been cited in which any trouble has
-occurred, or any confusion of date has arisen, is
-that of Pitcairn’s Island, in which they failed to
-make the change under consideration.<a id='r19' /><a href='#f19' class='c008'><sup>[19]</sup></a> Had they
-done this, they would have found themselves in
-harmony with the great mass of men living on
-the same meridian with their insignificant island.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The only matter of debate which remains is
-that concerning the proper location of the day-line.
-Has there or has there not been a mistake
-made in fixing upon the place where it belongs?
-Certain it is that the providence of God seems to
-harmonize with the present arrangement. Man
-commenced his existence in the east. The progress
-of empire has been westward. Emigration
-has carried with it a harmonious system of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>counting the days, by which they have been recognized
-as beginning on the eastern, and traveling
-to the western, continent. Especially is this
-true of the Christian world.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But, again, is there not, aside from this providential
-arrangement and from the universal opinion
-that the day does begin in the east, as well
-as the fact that scientific men have established
-the point of changing the reckoning somewhere
-in the Pacific Ocean, some additional reason for
-supposing that God would choose this locality
-for the beginning of the day? We answer,
-There is. Should the day-line run through any
-continent or large body of land, it will be readily
-perceived that it would produce great confusion,
-since, on the one side of it, though imaginary in
-its character, individuals would be keeping the
-seventh day of the week, while on the other,
-their neighbors in close proximity to them would
-not yet have made their exit from the sixth.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To avoid this difficulty, therefore, the only
-remedy which could be found would consist in
-the employment of some great natural boundary,
-such as a range of mountains or an expanse of
-water, by which those on one side of the day-line
-would be so separated as to prevent the disorder
-which must arise from constant and uninterrupted
-intercommunication. That there is any range of
-mountains stretching northward and southward
-from pole to pole which would answer the purpose
-in question, no one will insist. The only
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>resource left, consequently, is that of those vast
-bodies of water called seas or oceans.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Turning now to the one which is known as
-the Atlantic Ocean, it is found that the day-line
-could not be run through it without intercepting
-some habitable portion of the globe. The only
-resource which remains is found in the Pacific
-Ocean, which, as has been seen, has been selected
-by the mass of mankind as a suitable place in
-which to make those changes that would be necessary
-in case the day-line was actually located
-therein. Happily, an examination of a large
-globe will prove that a line drawn from Behring’s
-Straits southward across the latitudes which are
-available for the homes of mankind will not
-touch any portions of land whatever, or at least
-if it strikes any they would be so insignificant in
-their character that they would not be worthy of
-mention.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>With these remarks, the subject of the day-line
-is dismissed with the conviction that the necessity
-of its existence, the fact that it must be found
-in the Pacific Ocean if anywhere, and the uniform
-recognition in practice, if not in theory, by
-all nations, of its location in that sea, unite in
-furnishing a combination of facts which render
-assurance justifiable in the mind of one who does
-not insist upon more testimony than he ought to
-demand.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There remain now but two matters in the article
-of the gentleman which need to be disposed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>of. These are found in the contemptuous sneer
-at the insignificance of the numbers of Sabbatarians,
-and the witticisms, if such they may be
-called, which are indulged in in the employment of
-the suggestion concerning the use of the sponges
-saturated with stupefying chemicals and the gratuitous
-trip around the world, which it is proposed
-to give them.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To answer these sallies to the satisfaction of
-some would be impossible, while with others, possessing
-the power of logical discrimination and
-knowing that the office of mere wit is most frequently
-that of diverting the attention from a
-course of reasoning which it is felt cannot be met,
-such an effort would be uncalled for. The paucity
-in numbers is the same old, threadbare objection
-which every great reform has been compelled
-to meet since the world began. While the administration
-of narcotics and the trip round the
-world would be just as fatal to the exact observer
-of the seventh part of time as it would to one
-celebrating a definite day, even though it were
-admitted that the consequences of such a journey
-would be as claimed by the writer.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But besides all this, it will be discovered that
-the basis of the whole transaction, both in the
-case of the sponge and the vessel, is fraud, deceit,
-and force. Stupefy a man with narcotics for
-twenty-four hours; or nail him down under the
-hatches of a circumnavigating vessel; break the
-compass; send him round the world; let the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>whole community conspire to falsify the facts in
-the case; do not let him know where he has been;
-falsify the truth regarding the day observed by
-first-day keepers; and then, forsooth, you have
-changed the practice, if not convinced the judgment,
-of a little handful of conscientious, definite
-Sabbath-day keepers. Wonderful, gentlemen!
-Wonderful in the extreme! What results
-for such prodigious efforts! Alas, for truth,
-when it must pass such an ordeal as this! We
-blush, but not for ourselves. We would almost
-be willing to inhale the anæsthetic or run the
-hazard of the voyage at sea, taking our chances
-respecting the proper preservation of the Heaven-appointed
-day of rest, if, by so doing, we might
-prevent our brethren of the Amendment school,
-for whose welfare we have the most earnest desire,
-from making so sorry a show of the low estimate
-which they place upon the importance of
-employing in a controversy like this, arguments
-which appeal only to the Christian’s head and
-heart, instead of those which appeal to the baser
-faculties of the mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A summary of the ground traveled in this rejoinder
-would run somewhat as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>1. That in adopting the seventh-part-of-time
-theory, the gentleman has abandoned the definite
-first day which he sought to establish in
-the first nine of his articles.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>2. That the seventh-part-of-time theory is just
-as fatal to the Sunday as it is to the Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>3. That it overturns the practicability of the
-proposed Amendment, since it seeks to enforce a
-definite day, and since, according to it, Sabbatarians
-have a Bible right to observe the seventh day
-in the exercise of a divinely given choice of days.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>4. That it is possible to establish the identity
-of the last day of the week at the present time
-with that upon which God rested at the completion
-of the emotion; from the providential manner
-in which God pointed it out in the exodus
-from Egypt; the fact that Christ and his disciples
-kept the Sabbath according to the commandment;
-the general agreement among Jews, Christians,
-and heathen concerning its place in the
-week from that time to this.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>5. That the objection concerning the conflict between
-a definite Sabbath and the laws of nature at
-the poles does not array the God of nature against
-himself, or our version of his commandment, since
-the trouble does not imply any want of foresight on
-the part of the Deity, but rather a disregard of
-the plainest teachings of both providence and
-nature on the part of those who have placed
-themselves where it was never designed that
-men should locate.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>6. That if a definite day is impossible, then
-the wisdom of God is impeached, since, both by
-the letter of the commandment and by his providential
-interpretation of it for forty years, that
-is the very thing which it inculcates.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>7. That a definite day can be kept on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>eastern continent, since this had been done for
-hundreds of years before the change of the law
-will be even claimed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>8. That a definite day can be observed on the
-western continent, since this is the very object
-which the Amendment is designed to secure.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>9. That the trip around the world would render
-it as impossible to keep an exact seventh part
-of time as it would a definite seventh day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>10. That the seventh-part-of-time theory would
-introduce into society the direst confusion, defeating
-even the administration of justice.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>11. That, practically, the whole world from the
-extreme east to the extreme west does keep a
-definite day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>12. That the loss and gain of time creates no
-disturbance except in the crossing of the Pacific
-Ocean.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>13. That with a definite day, there must be a
-day-line.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>14. That that day-line is, by the uniform practice
-of nations, and the providence of God, which
-renders it impossible that it should exist anywhere
-else, drawn through the Pacific Ocean.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>15. That it only remains for us to do just
-what we are doing and have been doing for centuries
-in order to prove by actual demonstration
-that all the difficulties in the way of a definite
-Sabbath can be readily disposed of by those who
-are desirous of keeping the law of God as it
-reads.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>
- <h2 id='reply11' class='c006'>STATESMAN’S REPLY. <br /> ARTICLE ELEVEN. <br /> THE TRUE THEORY OF THE CHRISTIAN SABBATH.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>The third theory of the Christian Sabbath, in
-the order in which we have been considering the
-different theories, affirms that the Sabbath was
-instituted at the creation of man, and that it has
-never been abolished or superseded. This theory
-further maintains that the essential idea of the
-law of the Sabbath is not the holiness of any particular
-portion of time, but the consecration of
-a specified proportion of time, viz., one day in
-seven; that, in accordance with this essential
-idea of the Sabbath, a change of day was admissible;
-that a change was actually made by divine
-warrant, on account of, and dating from, the
-resurrection of Christ; and that the first day of
-the week, the Lord’s day, is the true Christian
-Sabbath, having its moral sanction in the fourth
-commandment.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Enough has already been written in these columns,
-in disproving the opposing theories, to
-show that this theory of the Sabbath is the true
-one. Two things being admitted, there appears
-to be no escape from this theory. Let it be admitted,
-first, that God instituted the Sabbath for
-all mankind, and that its law is of unchanging
-as well as universal application. This is readily
-conceded by those with whom we are now in
-discussion. Then, in the second place, let it be
-admitted that the inspired apostles, under the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>guidance of Christ and his Spirit, and with their
-manifest approbation, ceased to observe the seventh
-day, and actually observed the first day of
-the week. This our opponents are very loth to
-admit. But the testimony given by us at considerable
-length is simply overwhelming and incontrovertible.
-The third theory, and it alone,
-harmonizes the immutable law of the Sabbath
-with the actual change of day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In further confirmation of the correctness of
-this theory, it remains for us, in concluding this
-discussion, to show that this third theory accords
-with the fourth commandment, and meets every
-aspect of the design of the institution of the Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The principal feature of the design of the Sabbath
-is the setting forth of God’s sovereign control,
-as creator, of man and the time of man, as
-God’s creature. Called into being by the Creator,
-and made lord over the irrational and material
-creation, man was taught that his time was to be
-used for God’s honor. It was a trust from the
-Creator; and that man might not forget this, one-seventh
-of the time in regular recurrence was
-marked out to be consecrated specially to the
-Lord of all. This is the very idea in the commemoration
-of the work of creation. It is to keep
-alive the knowledge of God as the Creator and
-Sovereign Ruler of man. To commemorate the
-creation, is to keep before the mind, week by
-week, the duty of using our time for the honor of
-the Author and Upholder of our being.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nor is the example of God’s resting the seventh
-day made insignificant by this theory of the
-Christian Sabbath. “In six days God made the
-heavens and the earth, and rested the seventh
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>day.” God’s people in different parts of the
-world do and must begin their work at different
-times, and yet in each locality they labor six
-days and rest the seventh. It is the proportion
-of time which is the law of the commandment,
-enforced by the divine example; and hence the
-Christian Sabbath, in the true import of the commandment,
-is as really the seventh day as the
-Jewish Sabbath. The Christian labors six days,
-and not the seventh, according to the divine example
-and the divine command.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In this way, also, the true theory of the Christian
-Sabbath meets the design of the institution
-as it was intended to arrest the current of the
-outward life and lead up the soul to unseen and
-eternal verities. And here there is a most important
-argument for the change of the day for
-Sabbath observance. It is most reasonable to believe
-that, if there be any work which more gloriously
-manifests the perfections of God, and
-serves better to turn the thoughts of men to
-things above, than the work of creation, the day
-which commemorates such a work would be the
-appropriate time for Sabbath observance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So far as the essential idea of the Sabbath connects
-itself with a particular day, the argument
-is of great weight in favor of a change from the
-seventh to the first day of the week. The weekly
-division is the main thing, let the week begin
-when it may. It may begin on what we now
-call the third, or fourth, or any other, day. It will
-matter little. But as the first day, in our enumeration
-of the days, will always bring to mind
-the great work of redemption, accomplished by
-the Saviour, who on the first day of the week
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>rose from the dead, the observance of this day
-as the Sabbath best answers one of the principal
-designs of that institution.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>And then, how fittingly does the observance of
-the first day, the day of the Lord’s resurrection,
-correspond to the design of the Sabbath as a foretaste
-of the heavenly rest—the <i>Sabbatismos</i> or
-Sabbath-keeping that remains for the people of
-God. Rejoicing here on the Christian Sabbath
-in what our Redeemer has done for us, we look
-forward with joyful anticipations to the many
-mansions which he has gone before us to prepare,
-that we may be “forever with the Lord.”</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c009'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Bright shadows of true rest; some shoots of bliss;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Heaven once a week;</div>
- <div class='line'>The next world’s gladness prepossessed in this,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>A day to seek</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Eternity in time; the steps by which</div>
- <div class='line in2'>We climb above all ages; lamps that light</div>
- <div class='line'>Man through his heap of dark days; and the rich</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And full redemption of the whole week’s flight.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘The milky way chalked out with suns; a clue</div>
- <div class='line in2'>That guides through evening hours; and in full story</div>
- <div class='line'>A taste of Heaven on earth; a pledge and cue</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Of a full feast; and the out-courts of glory.’”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>
- <h2 id='rejoinder11' class='c006'>A REJOINDER. <br /> “THE TRUE THEORY OF THE CHRISTIAN SABBATH.”</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>It is a peculiarity of this discussion that we
-are prevented, in our rejoinders, from anticipating
-the positions which our opponent has in store for
-us. Were it possible to proceed upon principles
-of consistency, in debate, and conclude that he,
-having adopted such and such views, would continue
-to maintain them steadily for the future,
-there would be a sort of satisfaction found in
-preparing material to be employed hereafter.
-But we have learned, by actual experience, that
-in this debate such anticipatory action would be
-labor lost. For example: In the last reply,
-which had to do with the seventh-part-of-time
-theory, we had intended to show that, were it
-true, and that, were the observance of one day in
-seven all that is now required, even then Sabbatarians
-stood upon a footing as safe as that of
-their opponents, since the observance of the seventh
-day answered to the keeping of one-seventh
-part of time, equally with that of the celebration
-of the first day of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Being prevented by want of space from indulging
-in these reflections, we laid them over for
-another week, supposing that they would come
-in play equally well at this time, Alas! what a
-mistake! We should have struck when the iron
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>was hot. Unfortunately, we are not now confronting
-the no-day-in-particular doctrine, as we
-were then; but it is the “Lord’s day” again, the
-first day of an indefinite week, “a particular, definite
-day, enforced by the command and the example
-of Christ and the apostles,” which once
-more stands before us. How it is that we have
-been borne so rapidly over the space which separates
-these antagonistic positions, the reader
-will have to decide for himself; for we confess
-to a perfect want of ability, on our own part, to
-render him any assistance. Without the slightest
-attempt at logical deduction, we are first informed
-that the essential idea in Sabbath observance
-is not that of the keeping of a particular
-day, but the consecration of one day in the week,
-allowing the week to begin wherever it may.
-This, we are told, would suitably commemorate
-God’s rest at the creation of the world; and, also,
-that if, in addition, we make the day of our rest
-identical with the first day of the week, we can
-thereby celebrate both creation and redemption.
-For this very purpose, we are informed, the
-Sabbath commandment was changed, so as to
-admit of the introduction of a new day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But pause a moment. Has the gentleman told
-us just what change was made? Has he told
-us what words were stricken out? and how it
-now reads? The reader has not forgotten that
-this is the very thing the opposition were challenged
-to perform. He will perceive that this,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>also, is the very thing which the gentleman has
-failed to accomplish, and cannot hereafter do,
-since the reply under review is the last of his
-series. If it be said that he has cited us to the
-fourth commandment, as given in the twentieth
-of Exodus, as containing the law as it now reads,
-then he is self-condemned; for he admits that
-the phraseology of that commandment did enforce
-a definite day, and that, the last day of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But once more: Passing over the absurdity of
-claiming a change in the law, where there is no
-ability to produce the statute as amended, let us
-go back from Sinai to Eden, along with the gentleman,
-and see if we cannot find, independent of
-the commandment, evidence that the creation
-Sabbath was not a portable institution, to be
-trundled about at the caprice of any and every
-individual. Mark it, now, it is granted that
-what is called the Jewish Sabbath law enforced
-the keeping of the seventh day, and admitted of
-no other as a substitute. But whence is this
-conclusion drawn? Undeniably, from the words,
-“The seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy
-God; in it thou shalt not do any work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But where has the gentleman learned that the
-creation Sabbath was enjoined in the use of language
-less explicit and limited in its meaning
-than are the words of the decalogue? If he
-knows anything about the original decree of
-Jehovah, and the limitations with which he
-guarded the Sabbath in the outset, he, like ourselves,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>is compelled to go to the sacred record for
-information. If, in going there, he has been able
-to find anything which would prove that the
-Edenic Sabbath was less fixed in its character
-than that of Sinai, then he has made some progress.
-The only scripture which will throw any
-light upon the subject will be found in Gen.
-2:1-3.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Unhappily for the gentleman, however, it is
-fatal to his conception that the original Sabbath
-varied in any way from that of the Jews—so-called.
-In the account of its institution, the language
-employed is almost precisely the same
-with that subsequently traced upon the tables of
-stone. It is there declared that God sanctified
-(<i>i. e.</i>, set apart to a holy use) the <i>seventh day</i>.
-The reason for this action is the fact that he had
-rested upon it. Now, it will be observed that it
-was the “<i>seventh day</i>” that God blessed and
-sanctified, and no other. It is submitted, therefore,
-as the gentleman concedes, that the same
-expression (<i>i. e.</i>, the seventh day), when employed
-in the commandment given to Moses, did
-locate the Sabbath institution immovably upon
-the last day of the week, until the law was
-changed; that the same language, when employed
-originally, must have produced the same result;
-in other words, if the command to keep the seventh
-day, as given on Mount Sinai, held the
-people strictly to the observance of the last day
-of the week, so, too, Jehovah, in the beginning,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>restricted the whole race to a Sabbath which was,
-equally with the other, the seventh, and, therefore,
-the last day of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In order to avoid this conclusion, it will be required
-that, by some means, he should be able to
-show that the same terms which were employed
-by God, at one time, have a different meaning
-from that attached to them, as employed by him
-at another time. Not only so, the Sabbath in
-Genesis, like that in Exodus, is further limited
-and defined by two additional facts. First, it
-was the day on which God rested; secondly, it
-was the day which he blessed because He had
-rested upon it. Therefore, before any other day
-could be substituted for it, these two things must
-be true of it, as matter of history. This, however,
-can never be the case, as it regards any day
-of the week, save the last; consequently, he who
-celebrates any other is not celebrating the one
-which God imposed in the beginning. So much
-for the definiteness of the Sabbath which was
-given to Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Should it be replied that what has been remarked
-is correct, and that it is not argued that
-any one was at liberty to keep any other day
-than the seventh of the week, until Christ
-changed the law, and thereby authorized them
-so to do, we reply, Very good; that brings us
-back again to the original proposition, which is,
-Did he make such a change? If he did, then it
-is just as important that we should have clear
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>and conclusive evidence that such an alteration
-was made by him, as it is that we should have
-the abundant testimony which we now possess
-that a definite Sabbath was originally given to
-mankind.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>All this speculation in regard to what might
-have been done with perfect consistency under a
-given state of facts is worse than idle. What we
-demand is this—What <i>has been</i> done? Instead
-of concluding that Christ did a certain thing
-because it would have been right so to do, first
-show us, by actual Scripture quotation, that he
-really performed the work in question, and the
-consistency of his action will take care of itself.
-A theology which has no broader, firmer basis
-than individual conception of the propriety of
-certain occurrences which may never have taken
-place at all, is not worth the paper on which it is
-drawn out. This, nevertheless, is the very material
-with which we are dealing.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Eleven articles, ostensibly written to afford divine
-authority for the change of days, are concluded;
-and, from beginning to end, there is not
-found in them a “Thus saith the Lord” for the
-transfer. Again and again it is inferred that such
-and such transactions meant so-and-so. Again
-and again it is concluded that such and such
-things are admissible, not because of any scriptural
-warrant, but because they seem good in the
-eyes of those with whose practice they best conform.
-The reason why this is so, the reader will
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>readily perceive. It is found, not in the fact that
-the learned gentleman who represents the opposition
-is insensible to the superiority of positive
-Bible statements over individual surmise, but in
-the necessity under which he is placed, to employ
-the only material which he has at hand.
-Meeting him, therefore, where he is, let us prove
-the unreliability of such deductions as he is indulging
-in by actual test. The points which he
-is attempting to establish are these: 1. The original
-idea of the Sabbath can be met by the observance
-of the first day of the week, as well as
-by that of the last. 2. That the commemoration
-of Christ’s resurrection can only be suitably carried
-out by hallowing the first day of every week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now, as to the first of these propositions, it
-will only be safe to decide that it is correct after
-giving it mature reflection. We have already
-seen that God’s original plan for preserving the
-memory of creation week was that of setting
-apart the last day of each subsequent week for
-the imitation, on our part, of his rest thereon.
-To say, therefore, that it would have answered
-just as well to allow the individual to take any
-other day—say the first day of the week—for
-this purpose, is to argue that God acted without
-cause in making the selection which he did and
-enforcing it for four thousand years. If the question
-were one of indifference, why did he not
-leave the day unfixed? Why not allow them
-then to commemorate his rest on the first day,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>as the gentleman would have done now, arguing
-that the ends of the original Sabbath would, in
-this way, be fully met. Certain it is that no
-good reason can be assigned why it would now
-be more proper to commemorate the rest of Jehovah
-by a variable Sabbath than it has been
-heretofore. This being true, the gentleman’s
-logic is found to be unsound, or else the action of
-the Deity was inconsiderate.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Turning, now, to the second proposition, the
-reader will be instantly struck with its unqualified
-antagonism to the first point which is sought
-to be made out.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Remember, now, that the gentleman is arguing
-stoutly for first-day sanctity. He is not so particular
-when the week begins, but it must have
-just seven days, and the first of them must be
-devoted to the commemoration of the Lord’s resurrection,
-Should you ask him why he is thus
-particular in the selection of the first day of the
-week, he would reply, “Why, that is the day on
-which the Lord arose, and it is his resurrection,
-as the crowning act in the work of redemption,
-which we seek to honor.” But, reader, would it
-not occur to you, immediately, that this is a repudiation
-of all which he has said concerning the
-Edenic Sabbath? Nosy, mark it; what God demands,
-is, that we should honor the seventh day
-of the week, as the one which he rested upon,
-blessed, and sanctified. If, therefore, the rest,
-the blessing, and the sanctification of that day
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>can be suitably remembered by the observance
-of another day differing from it, then the assumption
-that an event is most impressively
-handed down by the dedication, for this purpose,
-of the very day on which it transpired, is unsound.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But if this assumption be unsound, then all of
-the gentleman’s talk in regard to the necessity
-for a change of days, in order to the suitable
-commemoration of the resurrection of Christ and
-the completion of the work of redemption, is
-without force. For, assuredly, if he is right in
-supposing that God’s rest in Eden, on the seventh
-day, can he commemorated as well on the
-first day as on the seventh, then the same principle
-will hold good in regard to the events which
-transpired on the first day of the week, <i>i. e.</i>, they
-can be kept in remembrance by the hallowing of
-the seventh day as well as by that of the first.
-But this being true, his argument for the necessity
-of the change of Sabbaths is gone, and his
-philosophy of the change proved to be unsound.
-The only purpose which it has served in this
-controversy has been the revelation of that which
-is really the conviction of its author, as it is that
-of men generally, that there is no time in which
-great transactions can be so suitably commemorated
-as that of the day on which they took place.
-When the nation wishes to celebrate the anniversary
-of its independence, it sets apart for this
-purpose the fourth of July, which answers exactly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>to the day of the month on which the Declaration
-of Independence was made. Substitute
-for this another day, and you have marred the
-impressiveness of the occasion.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So, too, with God’s rest on creation week; it
-must be so celebrated that all the associations
-connected with it will be calculated to lead the
-mind back to its origin and object. Turn it
-around, as the gentleman proposes to do, <i>i. e.</i>,
-substitute the first day of the week in the place
-of the last, and you have precisely reversed God’s
-order. You have put the rest-day first, and
-cause the six laboring days to follow; whereas,
-God, knowing that rest was only needed <i>after</i>
-labor, worked six days and then rested the seventh,
-not because he was weary, but because he
-desired to put on the record for us an example to
-be strictly followed. The gentleman, however,
-without the slightest warrant, has, with a rash
-hand, laid hold of the divine procedure, and now
-says that the order pursued was not necessary to
-the inculcation of the great lessons which God
-designed to impart.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To this, I reply, 1. That God’s actions are never
-superfluous. 2. That, if we err at all, it is safer
-to err on the side of the divine example. 3.
-That if the idea of God’s working six days is in
-any way connected with a proper Sabbath rest,
-then it is indispensable that the Sabbath should
-follow, and not precede, the working portion of
-the week. 4. That if the rest of God, merely, is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>the object which we should keep before our minds
-by a proper regard for the Sabbatic institution,
-the gentleman has himself shown, by the logic
-which he has employed, that the only suitable
-period for the keeping of that rest is found in
-that portion of the week on which God ceased
-from his labors.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The remark of the gentleman that the work of
-redemption furnishes a subject worthy of being
-remembered by observance with Sabbatic honor
-of the day on which it was completed, is worthy
-of passing notice. The idea which he advances
-is one which is quite prevalent, and employed
-with great satisfaction by clergymen generally,
-when controverting the claims of God’s ancient
-rest-day. The strength of the position lies in
-the fact that it distinguishes between redemption
-and creation, assuming, perhaps correctly, that
-the latter is more exalted than the former. Having
-won the assent of the mind to this proposition,
-the reader is quietly carried over to conclusions
-much less obvious than the first. Almost
-unconsciously he is led to decide, with his instructor,
-that, since redemption is a greater work
-than creation, it ought, therefore, to be honored
-by a day of rest.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now we shall not enter into this matter largely,
-but we simply suggest that either this decision is
-the result of human, or else it is the product of
-divine, wisdom. If it is human wisdom, then its
-teachings should be followed with extreme caution.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>If it is divine wisdom, then they can be
-obeyed with the most implicit confidence. Just
-at this point, therefore, it is all-important that
-the test be applied. Has Jehovah ever said that
-the commemoration of creation week had become
-less desirable on account of the possible redemption
-of a fallen race, by the death of his Son?
-The most careful reader of the Bible has failed to
-find any such language; in fine, the intimation
-that such is really the fact is rather a reflection
-upon the Deity himself, since, from it, it might
-be inferred that the glory of his work had been
-dimmed by the fall of the race.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But, again, if the Lord has not said that he
-would not have the memory of creation cherished
-still, has he ever said that he would have the
-work of redemption signalized by a weekly rest?
-Once more the student of the Scriptures unhesitatingly
-answers in the negative; but if God has
-failed to make this declaration, who shall presume
-to put words in his mouth, and read the thoughts
-of his mind, as those having authority so to do?
-The man who will undertake to do it is venturing
-upon ground which lies hard by that of blasphemy.
-God never neglects to say that which ought to be
-said; he never calls upon any man to go beyond
-his commandments, for in them, says Solomon
-(Eccl. 12:13), is found the whole duty of man.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Furthermore, were we to reason upon this
-matter at all, every consideration would lead us
-to the conclusion that the inference of our opponents
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>is not correct. In the first place, redemption
-is not yet fully completed in the case of any
-individual. In the second place, the Scripture
-says we have (are to have) redemption through
-his <i>blood</i> (Col. 1:14). But his blood, it is generally
-supposed, was shed upon Friday, and, therefore,
-it is not impossible that the hallowing of
-that day would more suitably commemorate redemption
-than that of any other day. In the
-third place, it was proved at length in a former
-article, that if creation was suitably commemorated
-by a day of rest, redemption, which is an
-event entirely opposite in its character, would
-naturally be celebrated by some institution of an
-entirely different nature. In other words, the
-Sabbath inculcates cessation from labor by the
-indulgence of inaction, while all the events connected
-with the resurrection of Christ rendered
-inactivity impossible.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But finally, we are not left, in a matter of this
-significance, to the unreliable decisions of the human
-mind. Not only is it true that God has
-never appointed a day of septenary inactivity, as
-the Heaven-chosen memorial of the resurrection
-of the divine Son of God; but it is also true that
-God himself, in the exercise of a wisdom which
-will hardly be impugned by finite beings, has selected
-an institution entirely different from that
-under consideration for the illustration of that
-phase of the work of redemption which was seen
-in the resurrection of Christ.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>Says the great apostle to the Gentiles: “Therefore
-we are buried with him by baptism into
-death; that like as Christ was raised up from the
-dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also
-should walk in newness of life. For if we have
-been planted together in the likeness of his death,
-we shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection.”
-Rom. 6:4, 5. “Buried with him in baptism,
-wherein also we are risen with him through
-the faith of the operation of God, who hath raised
-him from the dead.” Col. 2:12.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Baptism, that is, Bible baptism, or the immersion
-of the individual beneath the water, most
-forcibly commemorates the death of our Lord.
-As the administrator lowers the body of the passive
-subject beneath the yielding wave, by the
-very necessity of the case, breathing is, for the
-time, suspended, and the person, as nearly as may
-be while in life, as he lies motionless in the hands
-of the individual to whom he has committed himself
-in the exercise of an act of faith, shadows
-forth the death and burial of his Lord in a most
-impressive manner. As he rises, also, from that
-position, and, proceeding to the shore, unites once
-more with the throng of living beings who surround
-him, he most forcibly illustrates the coming
-back again of our Lord from death and the
-grave to a life of infinite activity and glory.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>All, therefore, which is necessary in order to
-the remembering, by outward expression, of that
-most glorious event, which gave back to the disciples,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>from the nations of the dead, the body of
-the beloved Master, is that we go forward in the
-fulfillment of an ordinance which has been provided
-for that purpose, and which sets forth the
-events which are thought worthy of a memento
-in a manner as superior to that in which it could
-be done by mere inaction, as God’s conception of
-what would be suitable under such circumstances
-is higher than that of man. The wonder is that
-any one should have lost sight of the original design
-of an institution which is remarkably expressive
-of the purpose for which it was created.
-In fact, had not the same power which has changed
-the Sabbath also tampered with the ordinance of
-baptism by changing the original form into one
-less expressive of its historic associations, we believe
-that the view which is now passing under
-consideration never could have suggested itself
-to any mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But, reader, it is now time that our labor
-should be drawn to a close. In the providence
-of God, we have walked together over the territory
-devoted to the great and important Sabbath
-question. With pleasure, we are about to lay
-down our pen for the last time, and submit the
-whole matter to you for the pronouncing of the
-final verdict of your individual judgment. As we
-do so, it is with feelings of most profound gratitude
-to God for a truth which, while there is underlying
-it a cross so heavy that it cannot be lifted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>by human strength unaided, is, nevertheless, so
-plain that its mere statement is its most complete
-demonstration. Were it not true that society is
-at present so organized that the keeping of the
-seventh day involves social, political, and pecuniary
-sacrifice, much greater than he is aware of
-who has not considered the matter, we would
-not hesitate to say that a complete and speedy
-revolution could be wrought upon this subject in
-a brief space of time. Never, in the history of
-any reformation which has heretofore occurred,
-were men covered with a more complete panoply
-of defense, and armed with more destructive weapons
-of offense, than are God’s commandment-keeping
-people at the present period. The only
-mystery connected with the subject is, that, being
-as plain as it is, the fact of the change should not
-have attracted universal attention before.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Traversing again the ground over which we
-have come with the gentleman who has managed
-the opposition in this debate, the poverty of his resources
-is most striking. In all that he has said,
-he has proved nothing which has in any way relieved
-his case, nor can his failure be attributed
-to any lack of capacity on his part. In the handling
-of the material with which he has had to do,
-he has displayed not a little ingenuity. The arguments
-which he has employed and the positions
-which he has taken are those of the orthodox
-ministry generally at the present time. His
-failure is entirely attributable to the natural weakness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>of the position which he has sought to defend.
-His was indeed a hard task. He felt the
-moral necessity of a Sabbath, as a Christian man;
-and, finding the religious world keeping the first
-day of the week, he sought to defend this practice
-from the Bible stand-point. But, alas for his
-cause! The more he has appealed to this source,
-the more certain has it become that the Bible, and
-the usages of Christendom in this matter, can never
-he harmonized. In its pages we find the most
-ample authority for a day of rest, but none for the
-one which is generally honored as such. The
-record in brief stands as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>1. There is a Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>2. That Sabbath is the seventh, and not the
-first, day of the week, for the following reasons:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(1.) In the beginning God rested on the seventh
-day, thereby laying the foundation for its
-Sabbatic honor (Gen. 2:3); whereas, he never
-rested upon the first day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2.) He blessed the seventh day; whereas, he
-never blessed the first day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(3.) He sanctified the seventh day, or devoted
-it to a religious use; whereas, he never sanctified
-the first day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(4.) The day of his rest, his blessing, and his
-sanctification, he commanded to be kept holy, in
-a law of perpetual obligation; whereas, he never
-commanded the observance of the first day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(5.) The Lord Jesus Christ recognized the obligation
-of the seventh day by a life-long custom
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>of observing it (Luke 4:16); whereas, the Lord
-Jesus Christ never rested upon the first day of
-the week; but always treated it as a secular day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(6.) He also recognized its perpetuity forty
-years after his death, when speaking of events
-connected with the destruction of Jerusalem, by
-instructing his disciples to pray that their flight
-might not occur thereon (Matt. 24:20); whereas,
-he never spoke of the first day as one to be honored
-in the future, nor, indeed, so far as we know,
-did he ever take it upon his lips at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(7.) It is the day which the holy women kept,
-according to the commandment, after the crucifixion
-of our Lord (Luke 23:66); whereas, there
-is no account that any good man has ever rested
-upon the first day out of regard for its sanctity.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(8.) It is the day on which Paul, as his manner
-was, taught in the synagogue (Acts 17:2); whereas,
-Paul never made the first day of the week,
-habitually, one of public teaching, a thing which
-he would have been sure to do had he looked upon
-it as sacred to the Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(9.) Being mentioned fifty-six times in the
-New Testament, it is in all these instances called
-the Sabbath; whereas, the first day is mentioned
-eight times in the New Testament, and in every
-case it is called, simply, the first day of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(10.) In the year of our Lord 95, it is spoken
-of by John as the Lord’s day (Rev. 1:10); whereas,
-the first day is in no case mentioned in the
-use of a sacred title.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>(11.) It is mentioned not only as the Sabbath,
-but it is also spoken of as the next Sabbath, and
-every Sabbath, thus proving that it had no rival
-(Acts 13:4; 15:21); whereas, the day before the
-first, and the sixth day after it, being spoken of
-as the Sabbath, it (<i>i. e.</i>, the first day) is classed
-with the other days of the week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(12.) In the Acts of the Apostles, and, in fine,
-in the whole canon of the New Testament, there
-is not a single transaction which is related as
-having occurred upon the seventh day in the
-least incompatible with the notion that it continued
-to be regarded as holy time, while the law
-which enforces its observance is inculcated in the
-clearest and most emphatic terms (Matt. 5:17-19;
-Rom. 3:31; Jas. 2:8-12); whereas, the first
-day was one on which Christ indulged in travel
-on the highway in company with others, after
-his resurrection, without informing them of its
-character or rebuking them for sin. It is also a
-day on which two of the disciples walked the
-distance of fifteen miles on one occasion, while on
-another, Paul performed the journey of nineteen
-and one-half miles on foot, while Luke and seven
-companions worked the vessel around the headland
-for a much greater distance (Luke 24:13,
-29; Acts 20:1-13.)</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In view of the above, the whole question of
-obligation may be summed up in the following
-words: Shall we keep a day which God has commanded,
-which Christ inculcated, and which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>holy men regarded from the opening until the
-close of the canon of Scripture? or shall we disregard
-that, putting in its place one which neither
-God, nor Christ, nor a holy angel, nor an inspired
-man, ever, anywhere, under any circumstances,
-enjoined, and which, in addition, God and Christ,
-and holy men and women, are everywhere in the
-sacred word brought to view as treating in a
-manner such as they would only treat a day of
-secular character?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In fine, it is simply the same old test applied
-once more to human action, which has in all ages
-been the measure of moral character, <i>i. e.</i>, Shall
-we obey God? or shall we not? Shall we gratify
-our own inclination and have our own way
-by pertinaciously persisting in a course of action
-for which we have no Scripture warrant? or
-shall we take the Bible in one hand and, accepting
-its doctrines as the words of life, follow them
-to their legitimate consequences in our daily
-walk? Says John, “This is the love of God,
-that ye keep his commandments.” Says James,
-“Show me your faith without works, and I will
-show you my faith by my works.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Sublime sentiments, indeed! In them is expressed
-the moving, controlling principle of every
-Christian heart. Oh! that all men in the ages
-of the past had held to the noble purpose of taking
-God at his word, believing that he meant
-just what he said, and walking out with a noble
-courage upon their confidence in his wisdom to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>legislate, and his right to command. Had they
-done so; had they been willing to be taught instead
-of going uninstructed; had they submitted
-to be led instead of insisting upon independent
-action, how much misery would have been spared
-our kind. Take, for example, the case of Eve—God
-exempted one tree in the garden from the
-rest, saying, “Thou shalt not eat of it; for in the
-day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely
-die.” Unhappily, the mother of all living ventured
-to deviate from the command of God in
-what appeared to her an unimportant particular,
-and, as the result, a race was plunged into the
-terrible consequences of rebellion.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It would seem as if this should have been
-enough to teach all, that it is only safe to do just
-what God requires in small, as well as great,
-things. Alas! however, this has not been the
-case. Nadab and Abihu, with the example of
-Eve before them, contrary to the directions of the
-Lord, ventured to substitute natural fire for the
-hallowed fire of the altar. To them, there was
-no apparent difference; but in a moment the
-curse of God fell upon them and they were borne
-lifeless, and without the honors of an ordinary
-funeral service, away from the camp of Israel.
-Uzzah, despising the commandment of the Lord,
-by which the Levites alone were to touch the
-ark, in an unguarded moment, reached out his
-hand to steady it, and God made a breach upon
-him in the presence of the people. Uzzah fell
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>lifeless before the ark which contained the same
-law which is under consideration. It was not
-the ark that sanctified the law; but, rather, the
-law that sanctified the ark.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If, therefore, God was so jealous of that which
-was merely the vehicle of the ten words spoken
-by his voice and written by his finger, how must
-he feel in regard to those words themselves? In
-them, is found the embodiment of the whole duty
-of man. With them, God now tests, as he has
-always tested, the characters of men. “Know
-ye not,” says Paul, “his servants ye are to whom
-ye obey; whether of sin unto death, or of obedience
-unto righteousness?”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>True, it may be, that we can transgress that
-law at the present time without suffering the
-<i>visible</i> displeasure of God, as did those whom, in
-the past, he set forth as examples of his wrath.
-But let us not deceive ourselves on this account;
-God is no respecter of persons. Moral character
-is what he admires, exact obedience is what he
-demands. In his providence, at the present
-time, it is our fortune to live in an epoch when
-great light is shining upon the long dishonored
-and mutilated Sabbath commandment. A
-worldly church, having departed from the simplicity
-of gospel teaching and gospel method for
-the propagation of truth, has called to her aid
-the elements of force and the appliances of law.
-Closing their eyes to light, ample in itself for all
-the purposes of duty and doctrine, they have entered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>upon a crusade, determining to venture the
-experiment, so oft repeated, of enforcing, as doctrines,
-the commandments of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The end of this matter God knows, and has
-pointed out in his word. With outward success
-they may meet; but it will be at the terrible
-cost of that vital godliness which is alone found
-where the arm of God is made the arm of our
-strength. For those who, in the past, have ignorantly
-broken the law of Jehovah, God has
-ample forgiveness; but for those who, in the face
-of God’s providential dealings, and in diametrical
-opposition to the plain teachings of his word, to
-which their attention is being called, shall still
-persist, not only in disobedience, but, also, in acts
-of oppression against those who prefer the narrow
-and rugged path of Bible fidelity, there can
-be nothing in reserve but the terrible displeasure
-of him whose right it is to command.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Reader, whoever you may be, and whatever
-may have been your past convictions and life,
-we turn to you in a final appeal. As you revere
-God, as you love Christ and his precious word,
-we exhort you in this matter to seek wisdom
-from the only true source. Be not discouraged
-by the disparity in numbers, neither tremble before
-the hosts which may frown upon you in the
-coming contest. “The Lord, he is God.” Under
-the shadow of his wing we can safely abide. No
-nobler destiny was ever vouchsafed to the obedient
-among the children of men, than is prepared
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>for those who shall prove their fealty to the God
-of Heaven by a noble testimony to their love for
-him, by the keeping of his holy Sabbath, under
-circumstances, in the near future, which shall indeed
-try the souls of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>May God grant that both reader and writer,
-nay more, also our opponent in this discussion—toward
-whom we entertain none but the kindliest
-feelings—also, all, everywhere, who are indeed
-the children of the living God and the
-brethren of our blessed Lord, may come to see
-eye to eye in this matter, so that, finally, we shall
-be brought safely through the perils of this last
-great conflict, which the true church is to endure,
-and stand victorious over all our enemies upon
-the Mount Zion of our God, there to sing the
-song of a deliverance complete and eternal, in
-a world where, from one new moon to another,
-and from one Sabbath to another, all flesh shall
-come to worship before the Lord. (Isa. 66:23.)</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>
- <h2 id='index' class='c006'>INDEX OF POINTS DISCUSSED.</h2>
-</div>
-<ul class='index c003'>
- <li class='c010'>PART FIRST:</li>
- <li class='c010'>ELD. LITTLEJOHN’S ARTICLES IN THE STATESMAN.</li>
- <li class='c010'><a href='#article01'>ARTICLE ONE.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Tendency toward Sabbath Discussion, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
- <li>Various Views concerning Reform, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a></li>
- <li>Inquiry as to Proper Action, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#article02'>ARTICLE TWO.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Religious View of Sabbath Reform, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a></li>
- <li>Sabbath Commandment, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a></li>
- <li>Has this Law been Changed? <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#article03'>ARTICLE THREE.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Reasons for Sunday Observance Examined, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a></li>
- <li>The Resurrection, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></li>
- <li>Example of Christ, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#article04'>ARTICLE FOUR.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Texts on First Day of the Week, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></li>
- <li>They do Not Prove its Sacredness, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a></li>
- <li>The Meeting of John 20:19, Considered, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#article05'>ARTICLE FIVE.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>John 20:26, Examined, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a></li>
- <li>Act of Worship does Not Consecrate the Day, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></li>
- <li>1 Cor. 16:2, Examined, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span><a href='#article06'>ARTICLE SIX.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Acts 20:7, Examined, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></li>
- <li>Acts 2:1, Considered, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></li>
- <li>Pentecost Not First Day, but Fiftieth Day, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></li>
- <li>Rev. 1:10, Examined, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a></li>
- <li>Proposed Amendment of the Constitution Not in Harmony with Bible Truth, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#article07'>ARTICLE SEVEN.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Bible View of the Sabbath, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></li>
- <li>The Law Changed by the Catholic Power, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a></li>
- <li>Position of Seventh-day Adventists, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
- <li>Proposed Amendment Dangerous to our Liberties, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c002'>PART SECOND:</li>
- <li class='c010'><a href='#replies'>REPLIES AND REJOINDERS.</a></li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#reply01'>REPLY ONE.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Seventh-day Sabbatarianism and the Christian Amendment, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a></li>
- <li>Supposed Action of Missionaries, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a></li>
- <li>The Proposed Amendment Expresses only Fundamental Principles, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#rejoinder01'>FIRST REJOINDER.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Amendment Not Related merely to Principles, but to Sunday in Particular, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a></li>
- <li>Supposition of Missionary Action Examined, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span><a href='#reply02'>REPLY TWO.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>The Seventh Day Not Observed by the Early Christian Church, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></li>
- <li>Examination of New-Testament Proofs, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#rejoinder02'>SECOND REJOINDER.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Our Common Ground, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
- <li>The Seventh Day, only, the Sabbath in the New Testament, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></li>
- <li>No Effort Has been Made to Place Sunday upon Precept, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></li>
- <li>Consideration of Col. 2:14-17, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></li>
- <li>Rom. 14:5, Examined, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
- <li>Survey of the Ground Passed Over, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#reply03'>REPLY THREE.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Testimony of the Gospels for the First-day Sabbath, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
- <li>Resurrection of Christ, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
- <li>John 20, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#rejoinder03'>THIRD REJOINDER.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>No Evidence of First-day Sacredness, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
- <li>The Gospels do Not Call First Day the Sabbath, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#reply04'>REPLY FOUR.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Argument for the First-day Sabbath from the Gift of the Holy Spirit on the Day of Pentecost, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a></li>
- <li>Authors Differing Concerning the Day of the week, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a></li>
- <li>Argument for the First Day, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#rejoinder04'>FOURTH REJOINDER.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Value of Testimony—First-day Keepers Witnessing that Pentecost Fell on the Sabbath, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></li>
- <li>No Reason Stated, nor Commandment Found, for First-day Sabbath, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span><a href='#reply05'>REPLY FIVE.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>First-day Sabbath at Troas, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
- <li>The Reckoning of Time Considered, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#rejoinder05'>FIFTH REJOINDER.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>No Custom Found in Acts 20, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></li>
- <li>Argument for Change of Time Considered, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a></li>
- <li>Evidence of Acts 20 Favorable to the Sabbath, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#reply06'>REPLY SIX.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Testimony of Paul and John to the First-day Sabbath, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></li>
- <li>Examination of 1 Cor. 16:2, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a></li>
- <li>Of Rev. 1:10, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#rejoinder06'>SIXTH REJOINDER.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>1 Cor. 16:2, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></li>
- <li>—Testimony of J. W. Morton, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></li>
- <li>—Concession of Albert Barnes, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a></li>
- <li>—Paul’s Plan of Systematic Beneficence, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></li>
- <li>—Devotion at Home, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
- <li>Rev. 1:10, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a></li>
- <li>—The Sabbath is the Lord’s Day, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a></li>
- <li>—Christ Lord of the Sabbath, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></li>
- <li>—No Proof Given that First Day is the Lord’s Day, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#reply07'>REPLY SEVEN.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Testimony of the Early Fathers to the First-day Sabbath, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a></li>
- <li>Testimony of Ignatius, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a></li>
- <li>Errors of Dr. Dwight, etc., Corrected, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></li>
- <li>Barnabas and Justin Martyr, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a></li>
- <li>Dionysius, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a></li>
- <li>Pliny, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span><a href='#rejoinder07'>SEVENTH REJOINDER.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Value of Traditional Testimony, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></li>
- <li>Ignatius, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a></li>
- <li>Barnabas, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a></li>
- <li>Justin Martyr, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a></li>
- <li>What Justin Martyr Believed, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a></li>
- <li>Dionysius, Melito, Pliny, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a></li>
- <li>Deficiency of Testimony for First-day as a Sabbath, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#reply08'>REPLY EIGHT.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Patristic Testimony to the First-day Sabbath, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a></li>
- <li>Irenæus, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a></li>
- <li>Errors of Dr. Dwight and Others in Quoting this Father, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a></li>
- <li>Tertullian, Origen, Cyprian, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#rejoinder08'>EIGHTH REJOINDER.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>The Apostasy, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a></li>
- <li>Testimony of Irenæus, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a></li>
- <li>Of Tertullian, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a></li>
- <li>Of Origen, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></li>
- <li>Of Cyprian, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a></li>
- <li>Summary View of the Case, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#reply09'>REPLY NINE.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Theories of the Christian Sabbath, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a></li>
- <li>Claim of an Unwarranted Change of the Sabbath Considered, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#rejoinder09'>NINTH REJOINDER.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>No Advance Ground Taken, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a></li>
- <li>Harmony of Sabbath Law and Sacred History, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a></li>
- <li>Roman Apostasy and Change of Sabbath, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a></li>
- <li>Seventh-day Sabbath in the Early Church, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></li>
- <li>Testimony of Romanists, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span><a href='#reply10'>REPLY TEN.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>The Principle as to Time in Sabbath Observance, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a></li>
- <li>One Day in Seven, not the Seventh Day, Required, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a></li>
- <li>Difficulties of Keeping Definite Day, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#rejoinder10'>TENTH REJOINDER.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Inconsistency of the <i>Statesman’s</i> Positions, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a></li>
- <li>No-Definite-Day Argument Fatal to First Day, and to any Sabbath, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a></li>
- <li>Inconsistency of his Position on Necessity of Legislation, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a></li>
- <li>Difficulties of Sabbath-Keeping Considered, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a></li>
- <li>Absurdity of the Theory of an Indefinite Day, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a></li>
- <li>Definite Time Around the World, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
- <li>Summary, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#reply11'>REPLY ELEVEN.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>The True Theory of the Christian Sabbath, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a></li>
- <li>First Day of the Week the True Christian Sabbath, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a></li>
- <li>A Memorial of Redemption, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c003'><a href='#rejoinder11'>ELEVENTH REJOINDER.</a>
- <ul>
- <li>Inconsistency of the Replies, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a></li>
- <li>No Amendment of Sabbath Law Produced, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></li>
- <li>A Gospel Memorial of the Resurrection, <a href='#Page_367'>367</a></li>
- <li>Sabbath Keeping Involves Sacrifice, <a href='#Page_369'>369</a></li>
- <li>Summary of Evidence for the Sabbath, <a href='#Page_371'>371</a></li>
- <li>The Commandment, or Tradition? <a href='#Page_374'>374</a></li>
- <li>Conclusion, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
-</ul>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CATALOGUE</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>Of Books, Pamphlets, Tracts, &amp;c., Issued by the Seventh-Day
-Adventist Publishing Association,
-Battle Creek, Mich.</p>
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Hymns and Tunes</span>; 320 pages of hymns, 96 pages of
-music; in plain morocco, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>A Complete History of the Sabbath and First Day
-of the Week.</span> By J. N. Andrews. $1.00.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Spirit of Prophecy</span>, Vols. 1 &amp; 2. By Ellen G. White,
-Each $1.00.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Constitutional Amendment</span>: Or The Sunday, The
-Sabbath, The Change, and The Restitution. A Discussion
-between W. H. Littlejohn and the Editor of the <i>Christian
-Statesman</i>. Bound, $1.00. Paper, 40 cts. First Part, 10 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Thoughts on the Revelation</span>, critical and practical.
-By U. Smith. 328 pp., $1.00.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Thoughts on the Book of Daniel</span>, critical and practical.
-By U. Smith. Bound, $1.00; condensed edition, paper, 35 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Nature and Destiny of Man.</span> By U. Smith. 384
-pp., bound, $1.00, paper, 40 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Life Incidents</span>, in connection with the great Advent
-movement. By Eld. James White. 373 pp., $1.00.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Autobiography of Eld. Joseph Bates</span>, with portrait
-of the author. 318 pp., $1.00.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>How To Live</span>: comprising a series of articles on Health,
-and how to preserve it, with various recipes for cooking healthful
-food, &amp;c. 400 pp., $1.00.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Sabbath Readings</span>; or Moral and Religious Reading for
-Youth and Children. 400 pp., 60 cts.; in five pamphlets, 50 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Appeal To Youth</span>; Address at the Funeral of Henry N.
-White; also a brief narrative of his life, &amp;c. 96 pp., muslin, 40
-cts.; paper covers, 10 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Game of Life</span>, with notes. Three illustrations 5x6
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>inches each, representing Satan playing with man for his soul.
-In board, 50 cts., in paper, 30 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The United States in Prophecy.</span> By U. Smith. Bound.
-40 cts.; paper, 20 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Hymns and Spiritual Songs</span> for Camp-meetings and other
-Religious Gatherings. Compiled by Eld. James White. 196
-pp. Bound, 50 cts., paper, 25 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Refutation of the Age To Come.</span> By J. H. Waggoner.
-Price 20 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Progressive Bible Lessons for Children</span>; for Sabbath
-Schools and Families. G. H. Bell. Bound, 35 cts., paper, 25 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Advent Keepsake</span>; comprising a text of Scripture
-for each day of the year, on the subjects of the Second Advent,
-the Resurrection, &amp;c. Plain muslin, 25 cts.; gilt. 40 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>A Solemn Appeal</span> relative to Solitary Vice, and the
-Abuses and Excesses of the Marriage Relation. Edited by Eld.
-James White. Muslin, 50 cts.; paper, 30 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>An Appeal</span> to the Working Men and Women, in the Ranks
-of Seventh-day Adventists. By James White. 172 pp., bound,
-40 cts.; paper covers, 25 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Sermons on the Sabbath and Law</span>; embracing an outline
-of the Biblical and Secular History of the Sabbath for 6000
-years. By J. N. Andrews. 25 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The State of the Dead.</span> By U. Smith. 224 pp., 25 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>History</span> of the Doctrine of the Immortality of the Soul.
-By D. M. Canright. 25 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Discussion on the Sabbath Question</span>, between Elds.
-Lane and Barnaby. 25 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Atonement</span>; an Examination of a Remedial System
-in the light of Nature and Revelation. By J. H. Waggoner. 20 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Our Faith and Hope</span>, Nos. 1 &amp; 2—Sermons on the Advent,
-&amp;c. By James White. Each 20 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Nature and Tendency of Modern Spiritualism.</span>
-By J. H. Waggoner. 20 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Bible From Heaven</span>; or, a dissertation on the Evidences
-of Christianity. 20 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span><span class='sc'>Discussion on the Sabbath Question</span>, between Elds.
-Grant and Cornell. 20 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Review of Objections to the Visions.</span> U. Smith, 20 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Complete Testimony of the Fathers</span>, concerning the
-Sabbath and First Day of the Week. By J. N. Andrews. 15 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Destiny of the Wicked.</span> By U. Smith. 15 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Ministration of Angels</span>; and the Origin, History,
-and Destiny of Satan. By D. M. Canright. 15 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Messages of Rev. 14</span>, particularly the Third Angel’s
-Message and Two-Horned Beast. By J. N. Andrews. 15 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Resurrection of the Unjust</span>; a Vindication of the
-Doctrine. By J. H. Waggoner. 15 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Sanctuary and Twenty-three Hundred Days.</span> By
-J. N. Andrews. 10 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Saints’ Inheritance</span>, or, The Earth made New. By
-J. N. Loughborough. 10 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Seventh Part of Time</span>; a sermon on the Sabbath
-Question. By W. H. Littlejohn. 10 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Review of Gilfillan</span>, and other authors, on the Sabbath.
-By T. B. Brown. 10 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Seven Trumpets</span>; an Exposition of Rev. 8 and 9. 10 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Date of the Seventy Weeks of Dan. 9</span> established.
-By J. N. Andrews. 10 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Truth Found</span>; the Nature and Obligation of the Sabbath
-of the Fourth Commandment. By J. H. Waggoner. 10 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Vindication of the True Sabbath.</span> By J. W. Morton. 10 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Sunday Seventh-day Examined.</span> A Refutation of the
-Teachings of Mede, Jennings, Akers, and Fuller. By J. N. Andrews.
-10 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Matthew Twenty-Four</span>; a full Exposition of the chapter.
-By James White. 10 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Position and Work of the True People of God</span>
-under the Third Angel’s Message. By W. H. Littlejohn. 10 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>An Appeal to the Baptists</span>, from the Seventh-day Baptists,
-for the Restoration of the Bible Sabbath. 10 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Milton on the State of the Dead.</span> 5 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>FOUR-CENT TRACTS: The Two Covenants—The Law
-and the Gospel—The Seventh Part of Time—Who Changed the
-Sabbath—Celestial Railroad—Samuel and the Witch of Endor—The
-Ten Commandments not Abolished—Address to the Baptists.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>THREE-CENT TRACTS: The Kingdom—Scripture References—Much
-in Little—The End of the Wicked—Infidel Cavils
-Considered—Spiritualism a Satanic Delusion—The Lost Time
-Question.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>TWO-CENT TRACTS: The Sufferings of Christ—Seven
-Reasons for Sunday-Keeping Examined—Sabbath by Elihu—The
-Rich Man and Lazarus—The Second Advent—Definite Seventh
-Day—Argument on Sabbaton—Clerical Slander—Departing and
-Being with Christ—Fundamental Principles of S. D. Adventists—The
-Millennium.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>ONE-CENT TRACTS: Appeal on Immortality—Brief
-Thoughts on Immortality—Thoughts for the Candid—Sign of the
-Day of God—The Two Laws—Geology and the Bible—The Perfection
-of the Ten Commandments—The Coming of the Lord—Without
-Excuse.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>CHARTS: <span class='sc'>The Prophetic, and Law of God, Charts</span>,
-painted and mounted, such as are used by our preachers, each
-$1.50. The two charts, on cloth, unpainted, by mail, with key,
-without rollers, $2.50.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>The Way of Life.</b> This is an Allegorical Picture, showing
-the way of Life and Salvation through Jesus Christ from
-Paradise Lost to Paradise Restored. By Eld. M. G. Kellogg.
-The size of this instructive and beautiful picture is 19x24 inches.
-Price, post-paid, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Works in Other Languages.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Association also publishes the <i>Advent Tidende</i>, Danish
-monthly, at $1.00 per year, and works on some of the above-named
-subjects in the German, French, Danish, and Holland
-languages.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Any of the foregoing works will be sent by mail to any
-part of the United States, post-paid, on receipt of the prices
-above stated. A Full Catalogue of our various Publications
-will be furnished <span class='fss'>GRATIS</span>, on application.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Address, REVIEW &amp; HERALD,<br />
- <span class='sc'>Battle Creek, Mich.</span></p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>PERIODICALS.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Advent Review &amp; Herald of the Sabbath</span>, weekly.
-This sheet is an earnest exponent of the Prophecies, and treats
-largely upon the Signs of the Times, Second Advent of Christ,
-Harmony of the Law and the Gospel, the Sabbath of the Lord,
-and, What we Must do to be Saved. Terms, $2.00 a year in
-advance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Youth’s Instructor</span>, monthly. This is a high-toned,
-practical sheet, devoted to moral and religious instruction,
-adapted to the wants of youth and children. It is the largest and
-the best youth’s paper published in America. Terms, 50 cts.
-a year, in advance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Health Reformer.</span> This is a live Journal, devoted
-to an Exposition of the Laws of Human Life, and the application
-of those laws in the Preservation of Health, and the Treatment of
-Disease. The <i>Reformer</i> will contain, each issue, thirty-two pages
-of reading matter, from able earnest pens, devoted to real,
-practical life, to physical, moral, and mental improvement. Its
-publishers are determined that it shall be the best Health Journal
-in the land.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Terms, $1.00 a year, in advance. Address. <span class='sc'>Health Reformer</span>,
-Battle Creek, Mich.</p>
-<p class='c007'>BOOKS FROM OTHER PUBLISHERS.</p>
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Future Punishment</span>, by H. H. Dobney, Baptist minister
-of England. The Scriptural Doctrine of Future Punishment,
-with an Appendix, containing the “State of the Dead,” by John
-Milton, author of “Paradise Lost,” extracted from his “Treatise
-on Christian Doctrine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This is a very able and critical work. It should be read by every
-one who is interested in the immortality subject. It is also
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>one of the best works upon the subject to put into the hands of
-candid ministers, and other persons of mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Price, post-paid, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>The Voice of the Church</span>, on the Coming and Kingdom
-of the Redeemer; or, a History of the Doctrine of the Reign of
-Christ on Earth. By D. T. Taylor. A very valuable work, highly
-indorsed on both sides of the Atlantic.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Price, post-paid, $1.00.</p>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='89%' />
-<col width='10%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>The Great Reformation, by Martin, 5 Vols.,</td>
- <td class='c012'>$ 7.00</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>D’Aubigne’s History of the Reformation, 5 Vols.,</td>
- <td class='c012'>4.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Scripture Biography,</td>
- <td class='c012'>4.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Cruden’s Concordance, sheep,</td>
- <td class='c012'>2.00</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>“ ” muslin,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Bible Dictionary, sheep,</td>
- <td class='c012'>2.00</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>“ ” muslin,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Cole’s Concordance,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Prince of the House of David,</td>
- <td class='c012'>2.00</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Pillar of Fire,</td>
- <td class='c012'>2.00</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Throne of David,</td>
- <td class='c012'>2.00</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>The Court and Camp of David,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>The Old Red House,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Higher Christian Life,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Pilgrim’s Progress, large type,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.25</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>“ ” small “</td>
- <td class='c012'>.60</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Biography of George Whitefield,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.25</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>History of English Puritans,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.25</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Story of a Pocket Bible,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.25</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Captain Russell’s Watchword,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.25</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>The Upward Path,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.25</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Ellen Dacre,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.25</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>The Brother’s Choice,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.15</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Climbing the Mountain,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.15</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>The Two Books,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.15</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Awakening of Italy,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.00</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>White Foreigners,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.00</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Lady Huntington,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.00</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Young Man’s Counselor,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.00</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Young Lady’s Counselor,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.00</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Paul Venner,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.00</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Among the Alps,</td>
- <td class='c012'>1.00</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Poems of Home Life,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.80</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Edith Somers,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.80</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Nuts for Boys to Crack,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.80</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Anecdotes for the Family,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.75</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Pictorial Narratives,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.60</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Bertie’s Birthday Present,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.60</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Songs for Little Ones,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.60</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Memoir of Dr. Payson,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.60</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Mirage of Life,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.60</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Huguenots of France,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>The Boy Patriot,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Springtime of Life,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>May Coverly,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Glen Cabin,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>The Old, Old Story, cloth, gilt,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Poems by Rebekah Smith,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Charlotte Elizabeth,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.40</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Save the Erring,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.40</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Blanche Gamond,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.40</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>My Brother Ben,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.40</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Hannah’s Path,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.35</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Star of Bethlehem,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.30</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Father’s Letters to a Daughter,</td>
- <td class='c012'>.30</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c005'>A more full Catalogue of books of this nature, for
-sale at this Office, can be had on application.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>HEALTH REFORM PUBLICATIONS.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'><b>Good Health</b>, and How to Preserve It. A brief treatise on
-the various hygienic agents and conditions which are essential
-for the preservation of health. Just the thing for a person
-who wishes to learn how to avoid disease. Pamphlet,
-price, post paid, 10 cents.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Disease and Drugs.</b> Nature and Cause of Disease and So-called
-“Action” of Drugs. This is a clear and comprehensive
-exposition of the nature and true cause of disease, and
-also exposes the absurdity and falsity of drug medication.
-Pamphlet. Price, 10 cents.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>The Bath</b>: Its Use and Application. A full description of
-the various baths employed in the hygienic treatment of disease,
-together with the manner of applying them, and the
-diseases to which they are severally adapted. Pamphlet.
-Price, post-paid, 15 cents.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Hydropathic Encyclopedia.</b> Trall. Price, post-paid, $4.50.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Uterine Diseases and Displacements.</b> Trall. Price, post-paid,
-$3.00.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Science of Human Life.</b> By Sylvester Graham, M. D.
-Price, post-paid, $3.00.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Domestic Practice.</b> Johnson. Price, post-paid, $1.75.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Hand Book of Health</b>—Physiology and Hygiene. Price,
-post-paid, 75 cents; paper cover, 40 cents</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Water Cure in Chronic Diseases.</b> By J. M. Gully, M. D.
-Price, post-paid, $1.75.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cure of Consumption.</b> Dr. Work. Price, post-paid. 30 cents.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>The Hygienic System.</b> By R. T. Trall, M. D. Recently
-published at the Office of the <span class='sc'>Health Reformer</span>. It is
-just the work for the time, and should be read by the million.
-Price, post-paid, 15 cents.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>The Health and Diseases of Women.</b> By R. T. Trall, M. D.
-A work of great value. Price, post-paid, 15 cents.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Tobacco-Using.</b> A philosophical exposition of the Effects
-of Tobacco on the Human System. By R. T. Trall, M. D.
-Price, post-paid, 15 cents.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Valuable Pamphlet.</b> Containing three of the most important
-of Graham’s twenty-five Lectures on the Science of Human
-Life—eighth, the Organs and their Uses; thirteenth, Man’s
-Physical Nature and the Structure of His Teeth; fourteenth,
-the Dietetic Character of Man. Price, post-paid. 35 cts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Address, <b>Health Reformer</b>, <i>Battle Creek, Mich.</i></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='large'>Footnotes</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r1'>1</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>For further information upon this subject, the reader is referred
-to “The Three Angels’ Messages” and the “United States
-in Prophecy,” published at the <i>Review and Herald</i> Office, Battle
-Creek, Mich.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r2'>2</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Persons desiring to investigate this question still further,
-by addressing the author of these articles, will receive by mail,
-without charge, a tract in which he has discussed at length a
-branch of this subject merely alluded to in this communication.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r3'>3</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“It is not clear that the apostle refers at all to the <i>Sabbath</i> in
-this place [Col. 2:16], whether Jewish or Christian; his σαββατων,
-<i>of sabbaths, or weeks</i>, most probably refers to their feasts
-of weeks.”—<i>A. Clarke, in loco.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r4'>4</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“The days here referred to are doubtless the days of the Jewish
-festivals.... It is not a fair interpretation of this to
-suppose that the apostle refers to the <i>Sabbath</i>, properly so called,
-for this was a part of the decalogue, and was observed by the
-Saviour himself, and by the apostles also. It <i>is</i> a fair interpretation
-to apply it to all those days which are not commanded to be
-kept holy in the Scriptures.”—<i>A. Barnes, in loco.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r5'>5</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>As it is not insisted that this translation is a correct one, I
-shall not turn aside for the purpose of showing, as might easily
-be done, from the original, that it is not admissible where the
-rule of strict construction is followed.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r6'>6</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The honoring of the second day here alluded to rests upon
-the hypothesis that the breaking of bread spoken of in Acts 20:11,
-answers to the Lord’s supper. It is, however, by no means
-certain that this was the case, since scholars differ widely in opinion
-respecting the matter; some holding to the opinion that reference
-was made to the Lord’s supper, and others to the view that
-the breaking of bread referred merely to a common meal.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r7'>7</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>This point is an important one; and as we are anxious to satisfy
-the reader that it is well taken, we append the following remarks
-of Albert Barnes, who—though agreeing with the writer
-in the <i>Statesman</i> that this passage furnishes proof for Sunday
-observance—nevertheless frankly concedes, as will be seen, that
-the construction of the original phrase for “treasuring up,” is
-such as to admit of the idea that the work was to be done at
-home. He says: “The phrase in Greek, ‘treasuring up,’ may
-mean that each one was to put the part which he had designated
-into the common <i>treasury</i>. This interpretation seems to be demanded
-by the latter part of the verse. They were to lay it by,
-and to put it into the common treasury, that there might be no
-trouble of collecting when he should come. Or, it may, perhaps,
-mean that they were individually to <i>treasure it up</i>, having designated
-in their own minds the sum which they could give, and
-have it in readiness when he should come.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r8'>8</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Instead of selecting a wealthy person, able to contribute ten
-dollars per week, as has been done above, let an individual be
-chosen from the poorer classes of Corinthians—say from among
-these who would be able to donate only twenty-five cents per
-week—and the reader will be more forcibly impressed with the
-unreasonableness of that construction which makes it necessary
-that so small a pittance should first be placed or devoted at home,
-and then carried to the church, and there deposited in the general
-collection.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r9'>9</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Not a few eminent writers, such as Dwight, and Wilson, of
-Calcutta, who are followed by many lesser authors, quote Ignatius,
-as saying: “Let us no more Sabbatize, but keep the Lord’s
-day.” From the literal rendering of the original above given, it
-will be seen that these writers take an unwarrantable liberty with
-their author. The words of Ignatius are, ἀλλὰ κατὰ τὴν κυριακὴν
-ζωὴν ζῶντες. To separate the noun ζωὴν from the preceding adjective,
-and connect it with the following participle, so as to read,
-“Living a life according to the Lord’s day,” is an unnatural separation
-of the words of the original. To drop out the word
-ζωὴν is unwarranted. If this word were spurious, then the rendering
-would be, “Living according to the Lord’s day,” the
-adjective κυριακη without the noun for “day” being expressed
-occurring frequently for “the Lord’s day.” But there is no
-ground for rejecting the word “life.” To color the language of
-an author for the sake of giving it point in favor of one side of a
-question is unworthy of a seeker after truth. In the present case
-there is really nothing gained by departing from the precise language
-of the writer. Another passage, often quoted as from
-Ignatius, is part of the spurious epistle to the Galatians. It is as
-follows: “During the Sabbath, Christ continued under the earth,
-in the tomb in which Joseph of Arimathea had laid him. At the
-dawning of the lord’s day, he arose from the dead. The day of
-the preparation, then, comprises the passion; the Lord’s day
-contains the resurrection.” This certainly has some weight as
-the testimony of comparatively early writer, but it must not be
-ascribed to Ignatius.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r10'>10</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Did it not appear to be indispensable to the enlightening of
-the reader, as to the consummate folly of the author of the epistle
-of Barnabas, we should not append, as we do, his language in
-the following note, since it is hardly worthy of a place in a chaste
-and dignified discussion. For its citation we hold those, responsible
-who have made this action necessary, and who value the
-testimony of a man so utterly devoid of common-sense: “Neither
-shalt thou eat of the hyena; that is, again, be not an adulterer;
-nor a corrupter of others; neither be like to such. And
-wherefore so? Because that creature every year changes its
-kind, and is sometimes male and sometimes female.” Chap. 9:8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r11'>11</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Since, writing the above, the following interesting item in the
-<i>Christian Union</i>, for Feb. 19, has been brought to my notice,
-and will serve to show that continued investigation on the part of
-scholars is rendering the authenticity of the writings of Justin
-Martyr more and more doubtful:—“Dr. Franz Overbeck has
-lately examined, with great care, the ‘epistle to Diognetus,’
-which has been regarded as one of the most precious relics of
-the age succeeding that of the apostles. He urges several
-reasons for coming to the conclusion that the work was written
-later than the era of Constantine, and was intended by its author
-to pass as a work Justin Martyr’s. Critics had already proved
-it no genuine work of Justin, and if Dr. Overbeck is right, it
-can no longer be assigned to the age of Justin.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r12'>12</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The culpable carelessness of Dwight, Wilson, and other authors,
-in citing from the early fathers, is nowhere more noticeable
-than in the case of Irenæus. These writers quote him as
-saying: “On the Lord’s day, every one of us Christians, keeps
-the Sabbath, meditating on the law, and rejoicing in the works
-of God.” There is no reference given to the writings of Irenæus.
-And for good reason. After a most careful examination, we
-are persuaded no such passage is to be found in his writings.
-The mistake was probably first made by President Dwight, whose
-weakness of sight compelled him to depend upon an amanuensis.
-“For twenty years of his presidency,” we are informed by his biographer,
-“he was rarely able to read as much as a single chapter
-in the Bible in the twenty-four hours.” (<i>Dwight’s Theology</i>,
-London, 1821, vol. i. pp. 91, 95.) Others followed this high authority.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In order to guard our readers against injuring the cause they
-would advance, we must mention another important instance of
-considerable negligence. In a number of works on the Sabbath,
-Dr. Justin Edwards’ “Sabbath Manual,” for example, we find not
-only the blunders already noticed, but another quite as bad. The
-language—“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,” is ascribed
-to Theophilus, bishop of Antioch, about <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 162. The
-words quoted are in reality those of another Theophilus, who was
-bishop of Alexandria, at the close of the fourth century. We
-hand over these criticisms upon advocates of the first-day Sabbath
-to our seventh-day Sabbatarian friends, trusting to their
-honor and fairness not to separate them from the rest of this discussion.
-For our own part, whether it may be pleasant to the
-advocates of the seventh-day Sabbath, we desire to have for ourselves,
-and to aid others to have, the whole truth. It was in this
-spirit that we gave room in our columns for a full presentation of
-the arguments on the other side of this question.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r13'>13</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>As a matter of independent interest and importance, we would
-ask all who are interested in the question of the posture in prayer
-of worshipers in the early church, to compare with Tertullian’s
-statement, that of Peter, bishop of Alexandria, <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 300, who
-says: “We keep the Lord’s day as a day of joy, because of Him
-who rose on that day, on which we have learned not to bow the
-knee.” (<i>Bibl. Patrum, apud Gallard</i>, vol. iv., p. 107.) To the
-same effect is the decision of the Council of Nice, <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 325, requiring,
-as there were certain ones who bent the knee on the
-Lord’s day, that it should be the uniform practice to give thanks
-to God, standing. (<i>Canon</i>, xx.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r14'>14</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The attempt to attribute the change of day to Constantine’s
-decree is hardly worth noticing. It is enough to remember that
-it was issued in the beginning of the fourth century. No one
-who knows anything of the writings of Tertullian and Origen dating
-back more than a century before Constantine, to say nothing
-of still earlier writers, will venture to ascribe the change to
-Roman Emperor’s decree. Besides, the language of the very
-decree referred to recognizes the honorable diameter of the first
-day of the week. It recognizes that day as already “venerable.”—<i>The
-Christian.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r15'>15</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>For the extracts given in this connection, the reader is referred
-to “Sabbath and Sunday,” by A. H. Lewis, and to “The
-History of the Sabbath,” by J. N. Andrews.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r16'>16</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The commandments as given above are supposed to be repeated
-by the individual Romanist in response to the injunction,
-“Say the ten commandments of God.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r17'>17</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The following citations will be found in a small tract published
-at the “<i>Review</i> and <i>Herald</i>” Office, entitled, “Who Changed the
-Sabbath?”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r18'>18</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>By consulting the figures given above, the reader will be able
-to demonstrate, not only the fact that the inhabitants along the
-line from Pekin to San Francisco, can hallow the same day, but
-also that the day which they hallow will be identical in some of its
-hours. For example: It was shown that the people of Rome
-commence their day six hours and fifty-five minutes later than do
-those of Pekin. Deducting these six hours and fifty-five minutes
-from twenty-four hours we have left seventeen hours and five
-minutes as the period of time during which the citizens of these
-two cities would be celebrating the Sabbath in common. Applying
-the same principle to other cities, we find that London and
-Pekin would worship together for sixteen hours and fifteen minutes;
-New York and Pekin, eleven hours and twenty minutes;
-Chicago and Pekin, ten hours and twenty-five minutes; S. Francisco
-and Pekin, eight hours and five minutes.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r19'>19</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The gentleman might have cited the case of Alaska, also, as a
-parallel to that of Pitcairn’s Island. The inhabitants of this region,
-like those of the island mentioned, sailed eastward to this
-continent across the Pacific Ocean, and failed to drop the required
-day in their reckoning. The result was, that when we purchased
-that territory, they were found to be keeping Saturday instead of
-Sunday. We believe, however, that the mistake is now rectified.</p>
-</div>
-<div>
-
- <ul class='ul_1 c002'>
- <li>Transcriber’s Notes:
- <ul class='ul_2'>
- <li>Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant
- form was found in this book.
- </li>
- <li>Footnotes have been collected at the end of the text, and are linked for ease of
- reference.
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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