Monday, March 16, 2026

INVESTIGATING ADVENTISM Q&A: Colossians 2:16 and the Sabbath Debate!

 INVESTIGATING ADVENTISM PHILIPPINES

Q&A POLEMIC REFUTATION SERIES

Colossians 2:16 and the Sabbath Debate

A Point-by-Point Polemic Response to Solomon Palad's Defence of the Weekly Sabbath from Colossians 2:16

OVERVIEW OF THE ARGUMENT

 

Solomon Palad attempts to insulate the weekly (seventh-day) Sabbath from the clear statement of Colossians 2:16 by arguing that the 'sabbaths' in that verse refer exclusively to the ceremonial sabbaths of the Jewish festival calendar and not to the weekly Sabbath of the Ten Commandments. His argument rests on four lines of reasoning:

(1) the triadic pattern feast-new moon-sabbath points to the ceremonial calendar;
(2) the 'shadow' language of Col. 2:17 does not apply to the weekly Sabbath;
(3) the moral/ceremonial law distinction protects the weekly Sabbath; and
(4) Leviticus 23 supplies precedent for ceremonial 'sabbaths.'

 

Each of these arguments carries deep exegetical, logical, and hermeneutical weaknesses. We address each one in turn.

 

ARGUMENT 1: THE TRIADIC PATTERN (Feast → New Moon → Sabbath)

 

⚠  SDA CLAIM

The sequence 'feast days → new moon → sabbaths' in Colossians 2:16 matches the same pattern found in 1 Chronicles 23:31, 2 Chronicles 2:4, and Ezekiel 45:17 all of which refer to the ceremonial calendar. Therefore, the 'sabbath' here is ceremonial only, not the weekly Sabbath of the Decalogue.

 

✦  REFUTATION

1.1 — The Pattern Argument is a Non Sequitur

When a word appears within a familiar pattern, it does not follow that the word is semantically confined to that pattern's narrowest meaning. If we say 'taxes, bribes, and elections,' the word 'elections' is not stripped of its broader meaning simply because of the company it keeps. The Greek sabbaton in Colossians 2:16 is a general term fully capable of encompassing all categories of sabbath weekly and ceremonial alike. Palad's argument assumes what it needs to prove.

 

1.2 — The Old Testament Parallels He Cites Actually Confirm the Weekly Sabbath Is Included

In 1 Chronicles 23:31 and 2 Chronicles 8:13, the 'sabbaths' (shabbatot, שַׁבָּתוֹת) within the triadic formula demonstrably include the weekly Sabbath they are not restricted to ceremonial sabbaths. Second Chronicles 8:13 reads: 'day by day, for Sabbaths, for new moons, and for three annual feasts.' In other words, the Old Testament itself uses the identical formula to include the weekly Sabbath. This means that Palad's own cited evidence cuts against his claim. His textual witnesses testify for the prosecution.

 

1.3 — Reductio ad Absurdum: If the Sabbath in Colossians Is 'Ceremonial Only' Based on OT Parallels...

...then those same OT parallels show the weekly Sabbath was incorporated into that very formula. Palad is using Old Testament texts that prove the opposite of his thesis. This is a self-defeating argument the weapon he draws turns in his own hand and cuts him. If pattern = ceremonial only, then his OT citations prove that the weekly Sabbath was ceremonially regulated too which is precisely Paul's point in Colossians 2:16.

 

LOGICAL FALLACY

Non Sequitur / Appeal to Pattern Tradition

It does not follow that a word's appearance within a traditional triadic formula restricts its meaning exclusively to the ceremonial domain. The pattern establishes a connection, not a semantic ceiling. Palad's own OT parallels demonstrate that the weekly Sabbath belongs to the same formula.

 

2 Chronicles 8:13 (MT / LXX)

"...day by day, for the Sabbaths [shabbatot], for the new moons [chodashim], and for the three annual feasts..." The identical triadic formula explicitly includes the weekly Sabbath, directly contradicting Palad's restriction of the term to ceremonial sabbaths only.

 

ARGUMENT 2: THE 'SHADOW' (σκιά) ARGUMENT: THE WEEKLY SABBATH IS NOT A SHADOW

 

⚠  SDA CLAIM

Colossians 2:17 says these things are 'a shadow of things to come.' But the weekly Sabbath is not a shadow it is a memorial of creation (Exodus 20:11). Therefore, Colossians 2:16 cannot be referring to the weekly Sabbath.

 

✦  REFUTATION

2.1 — Hebrews 4:1-11 Applies Typological Significance Directly to the Weekly Sabbath

This argument collapses the moment we open Hebrews 4. The author of Hebrews explicitly employs the weekly Sabbath as a type of the eschatological rest found in Christ. Hebrews 4:9-10 declares: 'There remains, then, a Sabbath-rest [sabbatismos, σαββατισμός] for the people of God. For anyone who enters God's rest also rests from their works, just as God did from His.' The term sabbatismos derives exclusively from the weekly Sabbath vocabulary. The author uses it as a type pointing to the final rest in Christ. This means the New Testament itself treats the weekly Sabbath as having typological (shadow) significance dismantling Palad's premise at the source.

 

2.2 — The 'Memorial of Creation' Argument Does Not Cancel Typological Function

Let us press this with a simple analogy: Can something be a memorial and a type simultaneously? Absolutely. The Tabernacle was a memorial of God's dwelling presence and also a type (Hebrews 8:5). The Passover Lamb memorialised the Exodus and was also a type (1 Corinthians 5:7). The sacrificial system memorialised atonement and pointed typologically to Calvary. Memorial character and typological character are not mutually exclusive categories. Palad's dichotomy ('memorial = therefore not a type') is an assertion without a shred of exegetical support.

 

2.3 — Hebrews 4 Uses the Genesis 2 Creation Rest as the Typological Foundation

Notice that Hebrews 4:4 quotes Genesis 2:2 the creation "seventh day" rest itself as the typological foundation of Christian rest in Christ. The author is not merely using the Sinai Sabbath; he is using the creation rest as the type. If the creation rest carries typological weight in Hebrews 4, then Palad's claim that a 'memorial of creation' cannot be a shadow is a direct contradiction of New Testament exegesis. Hebrews 4 is the New Testament's own interpretation of the creation Sabbath and it interprets it typologically.

 

LOGICAL FALLACY

False Dichotomy / Petitio Principii (Begging the Question)

Palad assumes that 'memorial of creation' status removes the possibility of typological significance. But this is precisely what he needs to demonstrate  and Hebrews 4 demonstrates the opposite. He begs the question by assuming his conclusion ('the weekly Sabbath has no shadow-character') and then using that assumption as his argument.

 

Hebrews 4:9-10

"There remains, then, a Sabbath-rest [sabbatismos, σαββατισμός] for the people of God. For anyone who enters God's rest also rests from their works, just as God did from His." The weekly Sabbath vocabulary (sabbatismos) is used typologically to describe the ultimate rest found in Christ proving the weekly Sabbath is indeed a shadow with a Christological fulfilment.

 

ARGUMENT 3: MORAL LAW vs. CEREMONIAL LAW: THE SABBATH IS MORAL AND THEREFORE PERMANENT

 

⚠  SDA CLAIM

The Ten Commandments were written by God Himself on stone (Exodus 31:18), while the ceremonial laws were written by Moses in a book. This distinction demonstrates that the Sabbath, as part of the Decalogue (the moral law), is permanent and was not abrogated by the New Testament.

 

✦  REFUTATION

3.1 — The Moral Law / Ceremonial Law Dichotomy Is an Anachronism: It Is Not a New Testament Category


This two-tier distinction (moral vs. ceremonial) is a medieval scholastic framework borrowed from Thomas Aquinas it is not a category used by the New Testament authors themselves. Search the New Testament for the phrases 'moral law' or 'ceremonial law' you will find neither. The New Testament works with a more holistic category: the totality of the Mosaic Covenant (nomos) which has now been fulfilled and superseded in Christ (Romans 10:4; Galatians 3:24-25; 2 Corinthians 3:7-11). The SDA construct is built on a framework the apostles never employed. That is eisegesis masquerading as exegesis.

 

3.2 — 'Written on Stone' Is an Argument for the Mosaic Covenant, Not for Permanence


Consider 2 Corinthians 3:7-11 the Apostle Paul himself identifies 'the ministry that came engraved in letters on stone' as the Sinaitic Covenant that is being 'set aside' (katargoumenē, καταργουμένη) and 'fading away.' Paul does not say that inscription on stone confers permanence he says exactly the opposite! The stone-tablet ministry is the one that is being abolished. Palad's 'stone = permanent' argument is the precise argument Paul is dismantling in 2 Corinthians 3. Think about the irony: Palad reaches for the stone tablets to prove permanence, and Paul uses those same stone tablets to illustrate obsolescence.

 

3.3 — Reductio ad Absurdum: If Inscription on Stone Confers Permanence...

...then the entire Mosaic Sabbath in its Sinaitic legislative form is permanent including the death penalty for Sabbath-breakers (Numbers 15:32-36), including the strict prohibition on lighting a fire (Exodus 35:3), including Sabbath observance tied specifically to the land of Canaan and the Israelite community, including the requirement that servants and even animals refrain from work. Is Palad prepared to defend the entire legislative package of the Mosaic Sabbath? If he exempts any of those elements, his own 'stone = permanent' premise is inconsistent. You cannot selectively apply a principle to protect one provision while quietly abandoning all the other provisions it equally covers.

 

LOGICAL FALLACY

Anachronism / Genetic Fallacy

The moral-ceremonial distinction is a post-biblical, scholastic category imported into the text. Using an anachronistic framework to interpret the New Testament is a hermeneutical error. Furthermore, the 'written on stone' argument, far from establishing permanence, is the very language Paul employs in 2 Corinthians 3 to describe the covenant that is now obsolete. Palad's premise proves its own opposite.

 

2 Corinthians 3:7, 11

"Now if the ministry that brought death, which was engraved in letters on stone, came with glory... And if what was transitory [to katargoumenon, τὸ καταργούμενον] came with glory, how much greater is the glory of that which lasts!" Paul explicitly designates 'engraved in letters on stone' as the marker of the covenant that is being set aside, not preserved.

 

ARGUMENT 4: LEVITICUS 23: CEREMONIAL 'SABBATHS' IN THE FESTIVAL SYSTEM

 

⚠  SDA CLAIM

Leviticus 23 shows that there are festival days called 'sabbath' (such as the Day of Atonement) that do not fall on the seventh day of the week. Therefore, the 'sabbaths' in Colossians 2:16 refer to these ceremonial sabbaths not the weekly Sabbath.

 

✦  REFUTATION

4.1 — Leviticus 23 Undermines the Distinction Rather Than Protecting It


Note carefully: in Leviticus 23, God Himself places the weekly Sabbath (v.3) and the ceremonial sabbaths (vv.7-8, 21, 24-25, etc.) under the same instructional umbrella, in the same chapter, as part of a single, unified festal calendar. This means the ancient Israelite and the first-century Jewish mind did not surgically separate 'weekly Sabbath' from 'ceremonial sabbath' in the categorical way the SDA position requires. Leviticus 23 opens the entire sabbath calendar with the weekly Sabbath before moving to the ceremonials. The 'sabbaths' in Colossians 2:16 therefore naturally encompasses the full spectrum, weekly Sabbath included because Leviticus 23 itself positions the weekly Sabbath as the gateway to the entire sabbath system.

 

4.2 — The Grammatico-Historical Reading of Colossians 2:16-17


The Greek skia (σκιά, 'shadow') in verse 17 is the predicate of the entire triadic phrase of verse 16 'feast days, new moons, sabbaths.' All three are called a 'shadow.' The grammatical structure provides no exception clause for the weekly Sabbath. The Pauline antithesis 'shadow / body (soma, σῶμα) belonging to Christ' is comprehensive: all sabbath-observance as a regulatory system belongs to the shadow-category whose substance is Christ. The hermeneutical principle is non-negotiable: where the text provides no exception, the commentator has no authority to insert one.

 

4.3 — The Colossian Context: The Problem Is Sabbath Observance as a Soteriological Requirement


Colossians 2:16 sits within a broader polemical context targeting a syncretistic 'philosophy' (v.8) that imposed religious regulations as conditions of spiritual completeness. The imperative 'let no one judge you' (krinetō, κρινέτω) implies that people in Colossae were using Sabbath observance as a measure of spiritual standing. Paul's answer is not 'these are merely ceremonial sabbaths, so do not worry.' His answer is Christ the body to whom all shadows belong. The rhetorical and theological aim of the passage hermeneutically confirms that Christ is the fulfilment of all sabbath obligations, ceremonial and weekly alike.

 

LOGICAL FALLACY

Special Pleading / Fallacy of Exclusion

The SDA position inserts an exception for the weekly Sabbath that is simply absent from the text. If Colossians 2:17 declares 'these are a shadow' with no qualifying exception, the exegete has no textual warrant to append 'except the weekly Sabbath.' To do so is to practise eisegesis reading into the text what one wishes to find rather than exegesis, which reads out what the text actually says.

 

VERDICT TABLE

 

SDA Claim

Biblical Verdict

Exegetical Status

Col. 2:16 'sabbaths' = ceremonial sabbaths only

REFUTED

Context includes the weekly Sabbath within the triadic formula

Weekly Sabbath is not a shadow because it is a 'memorial of creation'

REFUTED

Hebrews 4:1-11 explicitly treats Sabbath rest as a Christological type

Moral/ceremonial law distinction shields the weekly Sabbath

REFUTED

The NT never uses this two-tier framework; it is an anachronistic imposition

Sabbath permanence is proven by its inscription on stone tablets

REFUTED

The stone-tablet covenant context is the Mosaic Covenant, which is now obsolete (2 Cor. 3:7-11)

 

THREE KNOCKOUT CROSS-EXAMINATION QUESTIONS

 

The following questions are direct, exegetically grounded, and designed to expose the internal contradictions of the SDA position. Each one is a one-way door there is no exit on the other side.

 

THREE KNOCKOUT CROSS-EXAMINATION QUESTIONS

Q1:  You argue that the Old Testament triadic pattern (feast → new moon → sabbaths in 1 Chronicles 23:31) proves that 'sabbaths' in Colossians 2:16 refers to ceremonial sabbaths only. But those same Old Testament texts you cited 1 Chronicles 23:31 and 2 Chronicles 8:13 use the plural shabbatot in ways that demonstrably include the weekly Sabbath within that very formula. Are you not, therefore, citing witnesses that testify against your own claim? And if your OT parallels actually show the weekly Sabbath is incorporated into the triadic formula, what textual basis remains for your categorical restriction?

────────────────────────────────────

Q2:  You defend the permanence of the weekly Sabbath by pointing to the fact that God wrote the Decalogue on stone tablets (Exodus 31:18). But Paul in 2 Corinthians 3:7-11 uses the phrase 'engraved in letters on stone' as the explicit marker of the Mosaic ministry that is being set aside (katargoumenē) the one that 'was fading away.' Paul does not say 'written on stone = permanent'; he says 'written on stone = the obsolescent covenant.' How can you use the stone-tablet argument to establish permanence when the Apostle Paul uses the stone-tablet language to illustrate obsolescence? Are you prepared to argue against Paul in order to save your premise?

────────────────────────────────────

Q3:  Hebrews 4:9-10 uses the term sabbatismos (σαββατισμός) a word derived exclusively from the weekly Sabbath and applies it typologically to the eschatological rest that remains for the people of God in Christ. Hebrews 4:4 further cites Genesis 2:2, the creation rest itself, as the typological foundation of that rest. If the weekly Sabbath is not a shadow but merely a 'memorial of creation' with no Christological fulfilment, why does the author of Hebrews employ weekly-Sabbath vocabulary to describe the rest we now have in Christ? And if the weekly Sabbath does have a typological fulfilment in Christ as Hebrews 4 demands does not Colossians 2:17 apply directly, since 'the body belongs to Christ,' and the shadow has given way to the substance?

 

CONCLUSION

 

Solomon Palad's argumentation fails on four critical fronts: 

(1) his OT pattern argument cites texts that actually include the weekly Sabbath in the triadic formula, proving the opposite of his claim; 

(2) his 'memorial ≠ type' distinction is a direct contradiction of Hebrews 4, which treats the creation Sabbath itself as a Christological type; 

(3) his moral-ceremonial law dichotomy is an anachronistic scholastic framework foreign to New Testament vocabulary; and 

(4) his 'stone = permanence' argument is the precise argument Paul dismantles in 2 Corinthians 3 to demonstrate the obsolescence of the Mosaic Covenant.

 

Colossians 2:16-17 is a clear, unqualified declaration: all sabbath-observance weekly and ceremonial belongs to the category of shadow. The body that casts the shadow is Christ Jesus. The believer's freedom from judgment based on Sabbath observance is not a secondary implication of this text it is its central pastoral purpose. No amount of SDA apologetic can re-inscribe a shadow obligation onto those who have grasped the substance, for the text is written, it is plain, and it does not require rescue.

 

"Let no one judge you... these are a shadow of things to come, but the body belongs to Christ."

— Colossians 2:16-17

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OFFICIAL DEBATE DISCLAIMER: To Any Seventh-day Adventist Defender Who Wishes to Engage Me in a Written Debate!



Before we proceed with any theological exchange, I am setting forth one non-negotiable precondition: you must identify yourself truthfully and completely.

I, Ronald V. Obidos II, engage in every discussion under my real name and with my real face. I do not hide behind anonymity. I stand fully accountable for every claim I make, every argument I present, and every position I defend. This is not a minor courtesy; it is a matter of integrity, credibility, and basic intellectual honesty.

If you are unwilling to reciprocate that same transparency, then your arguments, however elaborate, carry zero credibility from the outset. The truth does not need a mask. Anyone who conceals their true identity while claiming to defend the truth has already undermined their own case before a single word of theology is exchanged.

Let me be direct: I will not respond to anyone operating under a fake name, a fake profile photo, or a fabricated online persona. Not because I fear your arguments, but because engaging anonymous individuals is a waste of both our time. Anonymity is the refuge of those who are unwilling to be held accountable, and a person unwilling to be accountable for their identity gives me no reason to trust their accountability for truth.

The precondition is simple:

Engage me using your genuine, authenticated Facebook profile your real name and your real profile photo before presenting any defense of Seventh-day Adventist doctrine. A Facebook account with a fabricated name, a stock image, an avatar, or a profile that cannot be reasonably verified as belonging to a real, identifiable person will be disqualified immediately. Once you have met this standard, I will gladly engage you with the full rigor and respect the discussion deserves.

Until then, I will wait. And if that precondition is unacceptable to you, then I respectfully ask that you not waste my time or yours.

This is not an unreasonable demand. It is the same standard I hold myself to every single day. If you genuinely believe your doctrines are true, you should have no difficulty standing behind them with your real name and your real face.

Until then, I will wait. And if this precondition is unacceptable to you, then I respectfully ask that you not waste my time or yours. The coward debates in the shadows. The truth-seeker stands in the light.

The truth has nothing to hide, and neither do I.

Ronald V. Obidos, Founder, Investigating Adventism Pastor-Apologist.

Saturday, March 14, 2026

INVESTIGATING ADVENTISM Q&A: "Show Me a Verse That Says Sunday is the Lord's Day!"

 


This is actually a trap question, and you need to reframe it before answering it, or you'll lose the debate before it starts.

Step 1: Expose the Loaded Assumption

The SDA is assuming that "the Lord's Day" must refer to a specific day of weekly worship, and that if you can't produce a verse saying "Sunday is the Lord's Day," you have no case.

Respond:

"That's actually the wrong question and I'll show you why. The real question isn't what we call the day. The question is: what does the New Testament teach about the first day of the week, and how did the early church worship?"

 

Step 2: Address Revelation 1:10 Directly

Revelation 1:10 "I was in the Spirit on the Lord's Day" (κυριακῇ ἡμέρᾳ, kyriakē hēmera)

  • This is the only place in the NT where this exact phrase appears.
  • The SDA will claim it refers to the Sabbath. But there is zero biblical evidence for that. The word kyriakē (Lord's / belonging to the Lord) never refers to the Sabbath anywhere in the NT.
  • The Sabbath is consistently called σαββάτου (sabbatou) in the NT, never kyriakē hēmera.
  • The only other NT use of kyriakos is in 1 Corinthians 11:20, "the Lord's Supper," a distinctly new covenant, resurrection-centered observance.

Ask the SDA: "Can you show me any verse even one where the Sabbath is called 'the Lord's Day' using this Greek term?" They cannot.

 

Step 3: Build the First Day Pattern from the NT

You don't need one proof text. You have a convergence of evidence:

Passage What It Shows
Matthew 28:1; Mark 16:2; Luke 24:1; John 20:1 Resurrection on the first day
John 20:19 First post-resurrection gathering on the first day
John 20:26 Again, "after eight "days" the next first day
Acts 20:7 Breaking of bread (Lord's Supper) on the first day
1 Corinthians 16:2 Systematic giving set for the first day
Revelation 1:10 John's vision on "the Lord's Day"

The pattern is not accidental. The first day is consistently the day of resurrection, gathering, breaking bread, and giving the marks of Christian corporate worship.


Step 4: Romans 14:5 The Day Question Is Already Settled in the New Covenant

This is one of your most powerful texts, and it cuts directly against the SDA premise that Sabbath-keeping is binding on all Christians.

Romans 14:5: "One person esteems one day as better than another, while another esteems all days alike. Each one should be fully convinced in his own mind."

Key points to draw out:

a) Paul treats the day question as a matter of personal conviction, not divine command. If Saturday Sabbath-keeping were still a binding moral law as binding as "do not murder," Paul could never have written this. You don't write "each be fully convinced in his own mind" about the Ten Commandments. The very fact that Paul places the day question in the category of adiaphora (matters of indifference) demolishes the SDA claim that Sabbath observance is a universal, unchanging moral obligation.

b) This passage does not endorse Sunday as mandatory either. This is important for integrity as an apologist: Romans 14:5 actually means that no particular day, Saturday or Sunday, is required as a condition of faithfulness. The Christian is free. The Sabbath as a legal obligation has been fulfilled in Christ (Colossians 2:16-17, Hebrews 4:9-10). What the early church chose to do gather on the first day in honor of the resurrection was a Spirit-led, apostolically shaped practice, not a new legal requirement replacing the old one.

c) The SDA will say Paul is only talking about Jewish feast days, not the weekly Sabbath. 

Anticipate this. 

Respond:

"The Greek word is simply ἡμέραν (hēmeran) 'day.' Paul uses the most general term possible. There is no grammatical or contextual reason to exclude the weekly Sabbath. In fact, in Colossians 2:16 written by the same author in the same theological context Paul explicitly lists 'a festival, a new moon, or a Sabbath' together as shadows that have passed. The weekly Sabbath is named. If you want to exclude it from Romans 14:5, the burden of proof is entirely on you."

d) The liberating implication:

"Paul is telling us that in the New Covenant, the question of which day to observe has been relocated from the category of LAW to the category of LIBERTY. The Sabbath was a shadow; Colossians 2:17 says so plainly. The substance is Christ. Christians gather on the first day not because a law demands it, but because the resurrection happened on it. That's a completely different foundation." 

Step 5: The Lord's Supper Challenge: Turn the Burden of Proof Around Completely

This is a devastating counter-challenge that puts the SDA completely on the defensive. Frame it clearly and confidently:

"You're asking me for one verse that says Sunday is the Lord's Day. Fair enough. Now I have a question for you and I only need one verse to answer it. Can you show me a single verse in the entire New Testament where the early church, when they came together 'as a church' (1 Corinthians 11:18), celebrated the Lord's Supper (1 Corinthians 11:20) on a Saturday Sabbath, outside a Jewish synagogue?"

Why this question is so powerful:

a) It uses Paul's own language against the SDA position. The phrase "when you come together as a church" (1 Cor. 11:18) is Paul's specific term for the gathered, corporate Christian assembly not a synagogue visit, not a private home devotion, but the ekklēsia assembled for worship. The Lord's Supper in 1 Corinthians 11:20 is inseparably tied to this corporate gathering. So the question is precise: where is the church gathered as a church, eating the Lord's Supper, on the Sabbath?

b) The NT evidence runs entirely the other way.

  • Acts 20:7: "On the first day of the week, when we were gathered together to break bread..." This is the clearest NT snapshot of a church assembly for the Lord's Supper, and it is explicitly on the first day, not the Sabbath.

    Ellen G. White herself admits it from her own books.

    First witness: Sketches from the Life of Paul (1883), page 197:

    Commenting directly on Acts 20:7, Ellen G. White wrote:

    "They partook of the communion, and then Paul continued his discourse till the dawn of day."

    Second witness: The Acts of the Apostles (1911), page 391:

    In her later and more widely used volume, she repeats the same identification even more explicitly, placing it right in the narrative of Acts 20:

    "They partook of the Communion, and then Paul 'talked a long while, even till break of day.'"

    What makes this so devastating:

    a) Ellen White is not being vague or ambiguous. She does not say the believers shared a meal, had a fellowship dinner, or observed a common supper. She uses the precise theological term "the Communion," which in SDA usage unambiguously refers to the Lord's Supper ordinance. There is no wiggle room.

    b) This admission was so problematic for SDA apologists that the Ministry Magazine, the official journal for SDA ministers, had to publish a caution in April 1962 warning their own pastors to stop denying that Acts 20:7 refers to the Lord's Supper, precisely because such a denial directly contradicted their own prophetess. The Ministry Magazine stated plainly that standard SDA teaching had always been that Paul and the believers at Troas did partake of Communion on the occasion in Acts 20:7–11, and that denying this was not only untenable but could result in embarrassment to those who used such an argument.

    "For many years standard Seventh-day Adventist teaching has been that Paul and the believers at Troas did partake of the Communion on the occasion referred to in Acts 20:7-11. For example, the book Sketches From the Life of Paul, penned by Ellen G. White and printed by our publishing houses in 1883, says on page 197:

    "They partook of the communion, and then Paul continued his discourse till the dawn of day." 

    In The Acts of the Apostles, written by the same author and issued by our press in 1911, we are told on page 391:

    "They partook  of  the  communion, and then Paul 'talked a  long  while,  even  till break of day.'" 





    Their own Andrews Study Bible admits that Acts 20:7 is the only explicit first-day gathering in the NT. This is a landmark concession that must be handled carefully and quoted precisely, because it comes not from an opponent of Adventism but from Andrews University Press the official academic publishing arm of the Seventh-day Adventist Church's own flagship university.

    In the Andrews Study Bible Notes, edited by Jon L. Dybdahl (Andrews University Press, 2010), the commentary on Acts 20:7 states on page 1452:

    "This passage mentions the first day of the week, as do several others in the NT. Most of these simply identify the first day as the day of Christ's resurrection (Matt. 28:1; Mark 16:2, 9; Luke 24:1; John 20:1, 19; see note on 1 Cor. 16:2). This is the only explicit reference in the NT to Christians actually gathering on the first day of the week."

    Why this concession is so significant:

    a) They are admitting Acts 20:7 is unique. The Andrews Study Bible is not a hostile source it is written by Adventist scholars for Adventist readers. And yet, under academic pressure to be honest with the text, their own editors concede that Acts 20:7 stands alone as the one and only explicit NT text showing Christians gathered on the first day. No spin, no deflection a candid scholarly admission.

    b) They cannot then dismiss Acts 20:7 as incidental. This is the knife-edge of the argument: if SDAs try to minimize Acts 20:7 as just a casual travel stop or a coincidental meeting, their own scholars have already undermined that move. You cannot simultaneously say "this is the only explicit gathering on the first day" and "but it doesn't really count." If it doesn't count, then the SDA has zero NT evidence for first-day Christian assembly which only strengthens the case that first-day worship, not Sabbath worship, was the apostolic norm.

    c) The cross-references they list tell the full story. Notice that the Andrews Study Bible's own note lists Matthew 28:1; Mark 16:2, 9; Luke 24:1; John 20:1, 19 as passages that identify the first day as the day of Christ's resurrection. They are themselves connecting the first day with the resurrection across all four Gospels the very theological foundation for Lord's Day worship. Their footnote is building my argument against SDAs.

    d) Now turn it directly on the SDA:

    "Your own Andrews Study Bible published by Andrews University Press, your own denominational university admits on page 1452 that Acts 20:7 is 'the only explicit reference in the NT to Christians actually gathering on the first day of the week.' Notice what they did not write. They did not write, 'and here is the explicit reference to Christians gathering on the Sabbath as a church.' Because that verse does not exist. Your own scholars know it. Your own study Bible admits it. The one explicit first-day gathering in the NT is on the day of the Lord's Supper not the Sabbath."

    c) Now turn it directly on the SDA:

    "Your own prophetess, Ellen White, in both Sketches from the Life of Paul (p. 197) and The Acts of the Apostles (p. 391), explicitly calls what happened in Acts 20:7 'the Communion.' Not a common meal. Not a fellowship dinner. The Communion. And Acts 20:7 tells us plainly this happened on the first day of the week. So according to your own Spirit of Prophecy, the early church celebrated the Lord's Supper on Sunday and there is not a single verse in the entire NT showing them celebrating it on the Sabbath as a gathered church. If Ellen White is a true prophet, she has just confirmed our position."

    d) The SDA is now caught in a dilemma:

    • If they accept Ellen White's authority, they must concede that the NT records the Lord's Supper being observed on Sunday, not Saturday.
    • If they reject her identification of Acts 20:7 as Communion, they are repudiating their own prophetess on a point their own denominational magazine admitted was standard SDA teaching.

    Either way, the burden of proof has completely shifted back to them.

  • 1 Corinthians 16:2 Paul's instruction for the collection is also tied to the first day, reinforcing that this was the normal day of Christian assembly.
  • 1 Corinthians 11:20 The Lord's Supper is called kyriakon deipnon the Lord's Supper using the same root kyriakos as "the Lord's Day" in Revelation 1:10. The linguistic connection is not incidental: the Lord's Day is the day of the Lord's Supper.

c) When the early church appears in the synagogue on the Sabbath, they are evangelizing not worshiping as a church. The SDA often points to Paul attending synagogues on the Sabbath (Acts 13, 17, 18) as evidence that the church worshiped on Saturday. But this collapses an important distinction:

  • Paul went to the synagogue on the Sabbath because that's where the Jews were it was his missionary strategy ("to the Jew first," Romans 1:16), not his ecclesial practice.
  • Not once in these synagogue accounts do you find the Lord's Supper being observed, the collection being taken, or the assembly being described as "coming together as a church."
  • Paul himself drew a sharp line between synagogue visits and church gatherings. The synagogue was a mission field. The church assembly was something categorically different.

d) Press the SDA with this summary:

"The NT gives us exactly one clear picture of the church gathered for the Lord's Supper Acts 20:7 and it's on the first day of the week. It gives us no picture not one verse of the church assembled as church, celebrating the Lord's Supper, on Saturday. If Saturday Sabbath-keeping is the mark of the true church, why does the Lord's Supper the most sacred act of Christian corporate worship never appear on that day in your New Testament?"  

Step 6: Flip the Burden of Proof

This is crucial for apologetics:

"You're asking me to produce a verse saying 'Sunday is now the day of worship.' But I'd ask you: Where does the NT command Christians to observe the Saturday Sabbath? You'll find Sabbath-keeping commanded in the Old Covenant but never enjoined on the church in the New Covenant epistles. In fact, Colossians 2:16-17 explicitly says the Sabbath was a shadow that has found its substance in Christ."

Step 7: Invoke the Patristic Witness (as historical confirmation)

While not Scripture, it silences the SDA claim that Sunday worship was a 4th-century Constantinian invention:

  • Ignatius of Antioch (~107 AD): Distinguished Christians from those who "no longer observe the Sabbath but live according to the Lord's Day."
  • Didache (~late 1st/early 2nd c.): "On the Lord's own day, gather and break bread."
  • Justin Martyr (~155 AD): Describes Sunday worship in detail because it is the first day, on which God made light, and on which Jesus rose.

These are witnesses within living memory of the apostles. They unanimously understood "the Lord's Day" as Sunday, not Saturday.

Summary Comeback Line

"The burden isn't on me to find the phrase 'Sunday is the Lord's Day' any more than you need to find 'Saturday is the Sabbath' in the NT. What we have is a consistent New Testament pattern of first-day worship anchored in the resurrection, a Greek title (kyriakē hēmera) that never refers to the Sabbath, and universal early church witness. The shadow has passed. We now worship on the day the Lord rose."

The real issue underneath this debate is New Covenant hermeneutics, whether the Mosaic Sabbath command carries over unchanged into the new covenant era. That's where you ultimately want to steer the conversation: Colossians 2:16-17, Hebrews 4, Romans 14:5-6.

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