Sunday, March 22, 2026

INVESTIGATING ADVENTISM LIVE Q&A PODCAST: MARCH 22, 2026 TOPIC OUTLINE!


SDA ARGUMENT UNDER EXAMINATION

"Remember! The ten commandments that carry His covenant seal His name, His title, His dominion are the ones singled out for erasure. And what do we do? We swap it out for another day, Sunday, a day never once blessed or sanctified as the Sabbath."

 

This argument carries emotional weight and rhetorical force, but weight is not the same as truth. Let us examine it, bone by bone, under the light of historico-grammatical exegesis and New Covenant theology.

ARGUMENT 1: "The Ten Commandments carry God's covenant seal."

The SDA Claim

The fourth commandment contains the so-called 'seal of God': His name (the LORD/YHWH), His title (Creator), and His dominion (heaven, earth, sea). Because of this seal, the Sabbath commandment is uniquely authoritative and eternally binding.

 

Exegetical Refutation

This argument requires a selective and imported definition of 'seal' that the biblical text never assigns. In the Ancient Near Eastern treaty tradition (the Suzerain-Vassal form), the 'seal' (Hebrew חוֹתָם, khotam) was an identifying mark of the issuer, yes. But the text of Exodus 20 nowhere uses that word for the fourth commandment.

Furthermore, the 'covenant' in view at Sinai was specifically and repeatedly identified in Scripture as a covenant made exclusively with Israel, not with all humanity. Consider:

 

SDA ASSERTION

WHAT SCRIPTURE ACTUALLY SAYS

The Sabbath seal makes it binding on all nations

Exodus 31:13,17 "It is a sign between me and the children of Israel forever." The sign was Israel-specific, not universal.

The Ten Commandments are the covenant

Deuteronomy 4:13 "He declared to you His covenant, the Ten Commandments." The Decalogue IS the Mosaic Covenant document, not a trans-covenantal law.

The Sabbath was blessed at creation, therefore perpetual

Genesis 2:2-3 says God rested and blessed the day but NO command to man is recorded there. The imperative first appears at Sinai (Exodus 16; 20).

 

The Logical Fallacy Exposed

FALLACY: Equivocation + False Premise

The SDA argument equivocates between 'seal' as a literary metaphor (imported from extra-biblical treaty form) and 'seal' as a divinely declared eternal marker. It then builds a chain of obligation on this invented foundation. This is circular reasoning: 'The Sabbath is binding because it has God's seal. It has God's seal because it is binding.'

 

Analogy: The Reductio ad Absurdum

If possessing God's name, title, and dominion in a text automatically makes that text eternally binding on all people of all time, then the rainbow covenant of Genesis 9 also contains God's name, His identity as Creator, and His sovereign authority over creation. Does that mean we are also obligated to ceremonially observe a rainbow each time it appears after rain? Of course not. The presence of divine attributes in a covenant text does not automatically transfer the covenant's specific obligations to all people across all eras.

Furthermore, if the Decalogue is uniquely binding because it is God's 'sealed' covenant, then it must also be binding in its entirety, including the mandate to kill Sabbath-breakers (Numbers 15:32-36). Does the SDA church administer capital punishment for Sabbath violation? If not, they have already conceded that the Mosaic Covenant's stipulations are not mechanically transferable to today.

 

VERDICT

SDA ARGUMENT REFUTED

The 'covenant seal' concept is eisegetically imported into Exodus 20. Scripture itself identifies the Sabbath sign as exclusive to Israel (Exodus 31:13,17). No New Covenant text reassigns this seal to the Church.

 

 

ARGUMENT 2 — "The Ten Commandments are being singled out for erasure."

The SDA Claim

Non-Sabbatarians are selectively eliminating the fourth commandment while keeping the other nine, thus practicing an inconsistent and hypocritical form of law-keeping.

 

Exegetical Refutation

This charge assumes that the New Covenant Christian's relationship to the Old Covenant law is one of selective retention, keeping some, erasing others. But this completely misrepresents the New Covenant theological framework.

The New Testament does not present believers as picking and choosing which Mosaic laws to keep. Rather, it presents Christ as the telos (τέλος, Romans 10:4), the fulfillment-goal of the Law. The question is not 'which commandments do we erase?' but 'how does the entire Law relate to us now that Christ has come?'

The New Covenant reissues the moral substance of the nine commandments through direct apostolic instruction, not because they are Mosaic law, but because they reflect the character of God written on the heart (Jeremiah 31:33; Romans 2:14-15; 2 Corinthians 3:3). The Sabbath, uniquely among the Ten, is:

 

Never repeated as a command in any New Testament epistle

Every other moral command of the Decalogue has a clear NT parallel. The weekly Saturday Sabbath does not.

Explicitly relativized by Paul in Colossians 2:16-17

"Let no one judge you in... a Sabbath day which are a shadow of things to come, but the substance (σῶμα, soma) belongs to Christ." The shadow has given way to the Reality.

Identified as a 'shadow' and 'weak and beggarly element' (Galatians 4:9-10)

The SDA framework treats the shadow as having more authority than the substance.

Fulfilled in Christ, who is our Sabbath rest (Hebrews 4:9-10)

Hebrews 4:3 says, 'we who believe enter the rest' present tense, ongoing reality in Christ.

 

The Logical Fallacy Exposed

FALLACY: Straw Man + False Dilemma

The SDA argument sets up a straw man: 'You are erasing a commandment.' In reality, the New Covenant Christian does not erase anything Christ fulfilled it (Matthew 5:17). The false dilemma is: 'Either you keep all Ten, or you are sinning.' But this ignores a third option: the Law as a whole was given to Israel under the Mosaic Covenant, and the New Covenant reappropriates its moral content through Christ and the Spirit, not through Sinai's obligation.

 

Analogy: The Reductio ad Absurdum

Does the SDA church observe the full covenant package? The Mosaic Covenant, of which the Ten Commandments are the core document (Deuteronomy 4:13), also includes the entire sacrificial system, the priesthood, the ceremonial calendar, and the civil penalties. If one 'erases' commandments by not keeping the Sabbath, is the SDA church not equally 'erasing' commandments by not building a tabernacle, not offering daily burnt offerings, and not stoning adulterers?

You cannot selectively argue that the Decalogue is 'the eternal moral law binding on all' and simultaneously treat the rest of the Mosaic legal corpus as 'ceremonial and therefore abolished.' That is not exegesis; that is ecclesiastical cafeteria theology.

 

VERDICT

SDA ARGUMENT REFUTED

Non-Sabbatarians do not 'erase' the fourth commandment. Christ fulfilled it. The New Covenant reissues moral law not by Mosaic obligation but through apostolic teaching and the Spirit-written law on the heart. The Sabbath uniquely stands as the one command with no New Testament reissuance pointing to its shadow-fulfillment in Christ.

 

 

ARGUMENT 3: "Sunday was never blessed or sanctified as the Sabbath."

The SDA Claim

Christians replaced the divinely blessed and sanctified Saturday with Sunday, a day that God never blessed or sanctified. This is human tradition overriding divine command.

 

Exegetical Refutation

This argument commits a category error: it demands that Sunday be 'blessed and sanctified as the Sabbath' to be a legitimate day of Christian worship. But this imposes the Mosaic Covenant's Sabbath categories onto the New Covenant's worship patterns, a hermeneutical mistake of the first order.

Let us examine the actual New Testament evidence for first-day worship:

 

NEW TESTAMENT FIRST-DAY EVIDENCE

SIGNIFICANCE

John 20:1,19,26: Jesus appeared to the disciples on the first day of the week, then again eight days later (another first day).

The Risen Christ inaugurated a new creation pattern by repeatedly appearing on the first day, the day of new creation and resurrection.

Acts 20:7: 'On the first day of the week, we came together to break bread.'

The breaking of bread (the Lord's Supper, Acts 2:42) was practiced on the first day. This is a covenantal gathering, not a casual meal.

1 Corinthians 16:2: 'On the first day of every week, each of you should set aside a sum of money...'

Paul regularizes first-day giving, implying a regular first-day assembly was already the norm.

Revelation 1:10: 'I was in the Spirit on the Lord's Day.'

The phrase 'Lord's Day' (Kyriake hemera) is a uniquely Christian designation. Early church writers (Ignatius, Didache, Justin Martyr) unanimously identify this as the first day — Sunday.

 

The SDA argument assumes that God cannot designate a new day for new covenant worship unless He repeats the exact formula of Genesis 2:2-3. But this is theologically indefensible. God designated the Sabbath day at Sinai without repeating the Genesis 2 blessing formula. He simply commanded it (Exodus 20:8-11). Likewise, the Lord's Day is inaugurated not by a Sinai-style pronouncement, but by the Resurrection itself, the greatest act of divine blessing in all of history.

Which is a greater sanctification: a spoken blessing at the end of creation week, or the bodily resurrection of the Son of God from the dead on the first day? If resurrection cannot sanctify a day, what can?

 

The Hebrew Word Study: Blessed and Sanctified

Genesis 2:3 'God blessed (וַיְבָרֶךְ, wayebarek) the seventh day and sanctified (וַיְקַדֵּשׁ, wayekaddesh) it.' The SDAs claim that only this day carries divine blessing and sanctification. But notice: Genesis 1:22, 1:28, and 9:1 also record God blessing birds, fish, humans, and Noah's family. Does the SDA apply equal 'covenant seal' logic to those blessings? Clearly not. 'Blessed' language does not automatically create eternal covenantal obligation.

 

The Logical Fallacy Exposed

FALLACY: Argument from Silence + Petitio Principii (Begging the Question)

The SDA says, 'Sunday was never blessed or sanctified.' This is an argument from silence; the absence of a specific blessing formula does not mean the day is religiously invalid. The SDA already assumes that only Sabbath categories can legitimize worship days (petitio principii). But Scripture does not teach this. New Covenant worship is not bound to Mosaic Sabbath taxonomy.

 

Analogy: The Reductio ad Absurdum

The SDA logic, if consistently applied, would also disqualify the annual Passover from being replaced by the Lord's Supper because no text ever says 'the Lord's Supper is now blessed and sanctified in place of Passover.' Yet SDAs do not insist on slaughtering a Passover lamb each year simply because Jesus never formally 'blessed' the bread and wine with the Genesis-type formula. The argument proves too much, and in doing so, it proves nothing.

Ask yourself: If Sunday is invalid because God 'never blessed it,' then why is the Passover's replacement by the Lord's Supper valid even though God never blessed bread and wine with the same formula He used for the Passover lamb? The SDA argument collapses under its own standard.

 

VERDICT

SDA ARGUMENT REFUTED

Sunday worship is not a human innovation; it is resurrection-grounded and apostolically attested. The demand that God must re-bless a day using Genesis 2 language is a foreign category imported into New Covenant worship. The Lord's Day is sanctified by the Resurrection, not by Sinai.

 

 

THREE MIC-DROP CROSS-EXAMINATION QUESTIONS

For the SDA Defender — Answer Without Evasion

 

CROSS-EXAMINATION Q1  If the Decalogue's 'covenant seal' makes all Ten Commandments eternally binding on all people, why does your church NOT execute Sabbath-breakers, as the same covenant explicitly commands in Numbers 15:35 and Exodus 31:14-15?

This exposes the selective application of the Mosaic Covenant obligation. The SDA cannot claim the Decalogue's full binding authority while simultaneously abandoning its covenant penalties. Either the Mosaic Covenant package is binding with penalties included, or the SDAs are themselves practicing the very 'erasure' they accuse others of.

 

CROSS-EXAMINATION Q2  You say Sunday was 'never once blessed or sanctified as the Sabbath.' Apply your own standard: Where in the New Testament did God explicitly bless and sanctify the Lord's Supper using the same language He used to sanctify the Passover, and if He did not, why do you observe it?

This reductio exposes the double standard. The SDA accepts the Lord's Supper as a valid New Covenant ordinance without requiring a Genesis-type blessing formula. They cannot demand that standard for the Lord's Day while waiving it for the Lord's Supper. The argument destroys itself.

 

CROSS-EXAMINATION Q3  Colossians 2:16-17 explicitly calls the Sabbath a 'shadow' (σκιά, skia) whose 'substance' (σῶμα, soma) is Christ. If the shadow is still binding after the Substance has come, then by the same logic, are the animal sacrifices, the new moon offerings, and the Levitical priesthood also still binding? If not, why do you apply shadow-logic selectively only to the Sabbath?

This is the hermeneutical kill shot. Colossians 2:16-17 lists Sabbaths in the same breath as food laws, festivals, and new moons, all shadows of Christ. The SDA cannot accept the abolition of the sacrificial system's shadows while defending the Sabbath shadow as uniquely permanent. Paul did not grant that exception.

 

 

SUMMARY VERDICT

The SDA 'covenant seal' argument fails at every level: exegetically the Bible never calls the Sabbath God's universal seal; theologically the Mosaic Covenant is Israel-specific and finds its fulfillment in Christ; hermeneutically the New Covenant does not transfer Old Covenant obligations mechanically; and logically the argument is riddled with equivocation, the straw man fallacy, argument from silence, begging the question, and reductio-level inconsistencies.

The Lord's Day is not man's invention it is Resurrection theology lived weekly. Christ IS our Sabbath rest. We do not observe a day to earn rest; we worship on the Lord's Day because He has already given us rest (Matthew 11:28-30; Hebrews 4:3).

"Come to Me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest."
Matthew 11:28

 

25 SDA OBJECTIONS ABOUT SUNDAY REFUTED! "#17: “Did Emperor Constantine make Sunday a rest day in 321 A.D.?”

 
                                             INVESTIGATING ADVENTISM'S

25 SDA OBJECTIONS ABOUT SUNDAY REFUTED!  

No. 17

 

SDA OBJECTION  UNDER EXAMINATION

“Did Emperor Constantine make Sunday a rest day in 321 A.D.?”

 

SHORT ANSWER

Yes, Constantine issued a civil decree in 321 A.D. recognizing Sunday as a day of rest throughout the Roman Empire. But the SDA use of this fact is a classic case of the genetic fallacy combined with a severe historical anachronism. Constantine did not invent Sunday worship. He did not change the Sabbath. He simply gave legal form to what the entire Christian church had already been practicing for nearly three centuries before he was ever born. The origin of Sunday worship is not Rome it is the empty tomb of Jesus Christ.

 

KEY LOGICAL FALLACY IDENTIFIED: The Genetic Fallacy. The SDA argument attempts to discredit Sunday worship by associating it with its alleged pagan or political origin (Constantine/Roman sun worship), while ignoring the actual biblical and apostolic evidence that established it. The origin of a practice does not determine its legitimacy; the Word of God does.

 

THE HISTORICAL RECORD: WHAT CONSTANTINE ACTUALLY DID

On March 7, 321 A.D., Constantine issued the following edict:

Constantine’s Edict, 321 A.D.  "On the venerable day of the Sun let the magistrates and people residing in cities rest, and let all workshops be closed."

This was a civil ordinance, not a theological decree. It did not create Sunday worship. It did not mandate church attendance. It did not redefine the Sabbath. It was a scheduling law for civil society the Roman equivalent of a national holiday declaration. Constantine was still a syncretist at this point in his reign, honoring both Christian and pagan (Sol Invictus) constituencies. This fact alone undermines any SDA claim that his edict had doctrinal authority over the church.

Furthermore, the edict explicitly used the Roman term dies Solis (“day of the Sun”) a civil-calendar term, not a theological statement. Christians, for their part, had long called this day Kyriake hemera (“The Lord’s Day”), a term rooted not in solar mythology but in the resurrection of Jesus Christ.

 

THE BIBLICAL FOUNDATION FOR THE LORD’S DAY


The First Day of the Week in the New Testament

The New Covenant pattern of first-day gathering is established in the New Testament itself, not in Roman imperial edicts:

Acts 20:7  “On the first day of the week we came together to break bread. Paul spoke to the people and, because he intended to leave the next day, kept on talking until midnight.”

1 Corinthians 16:2  “On the first day of every week, each one of you should set aside a sum of money in keeping with your income, saving it up, so that when I come no collections will have to be made.”

Revelation 1:10  “On the Lord’s Day I was in the Spirit, and I heard behind me a loud voice like a trumpet.”

The term Kyriake hemera (Lord’s Day) in Revelation 1:10 is the earliest occurrence of this exact phrase in Christian literature. John uses it without explanation or apology which means it was already an established and understood concept in Christian communities before the end of the first century, roughly 220 years before Constantine.

 

The Resurrection as the Anchor of New Covenant Worship

The Lord’s Day is anchored to the resurrection of Jesus Christ on the first day of the week (Matthew 28:1; Mark 16:2, 9; Luke 24:1; John 20:1). It is the eschatological Eighth Day the inauguration of the New Creation, not the continuation of the Old Covenant Sabbath. As the church father Justin Martyr explained c. 150 A.D., Christians gather on the first day because it is the day Christ rose and the day the Spirit came.

Additionally, Pentecost itself the day the Holy Spirit descended and the New Covenant church was inaugurated (Acts 2:1–4) fell on a Sunday. The birthday of the church was a first-day gathering. This was not coincidence; it was divine ordering.

 

PATRISTIC EVIDENCE: SUNDAY WORSHIP LONG BEFORE CONSTANTINE

The SDA narrative requires that Sunday worship was unknown until Constantine imposed it in 321 A.D. The historical record categorically demolishes this claim:

 

DATE

SOURCE

WHAT IT SAYS ABOUT SUNDAY WORSHIP

c. 50–67  A.D.

New Testament (Acts 20:7; 1 Cor. 16:2; Rev. 1:10)

First-day gathering, breaking of bread, and offerings established in apostolic practice.

c. 80–100 A.D.

The Didache (Teaching of the Twelve Apostles)

"On the Lord’s Day of the Lord come together, break bread and give thanks." (ch. 14) — 220+ years before Constantine.

c. 107 A.D.

Ignatius of Antioch (Letter to the Magnesians)

Contrasts the old Sabbath with living "according to the Lord’s Day" as the pattern of New Covenant life.

c. 150 A.D.

Justin Martyr (First Apology, ch. 67)

Gives the earliest full description of Sunday Christian worship: assembly, Scripture reading, Eucharist, offering — because Christ rose on the first day.

c. 190 A.D.

Barnabus Epistle (ch. 15)

Argues that the eighth day (Sunday) has replaced the Sabbath as the day of resurrection-celebration.

c. 200 A.D.

Tertullian (Apology, ch. 16)

Defends Christian Sunday worship against Roman pagan accusations — 171 years before Constantine.

c. 250 A.D.

Origen, Cyprian of Carthage

Both affirm Sunday as the standard day of Christian assembly. Still 70+ years before Constantine.

 

THE INESCAPABLE CONCLUSION: Sunday worship was universal across the Christian world from North Africa to Rome to Syria to Asia Minor for over 280 years before Constantine issued a single edict. The church did not receive Sunday from Constantine. Constantine received Sunday from the church.

 

 POINT-BY-POINT REFUTATION OF THE SDA CONSTANTINE ARGUMENT

SDA Claim #1: “Constantine changed the Sabbath to Sunday.”

REFUTATION:

Constantine changed nothing doctrinally. His 321 A.D. edict was a civil scheduling law not a theological decree, not a church council decision, not a modification of Scripture. He had no authority to change divine law, and he did not attempt to. The edict did not even mention the Sabbath, synagogue practice, or Christian theology. Constantine was responding to existing Christian practice, not creating new doctrine.

 

SDA Claim #2: “Sunday worship is a Roman Catholic corruption.”

REFUTATION:

The Roman Catholic Church did not invent Sunday worship either. Sunday worship predates the development of Roman Catholicism as an institutional structure. It is attested in documents from Syria (Ignatius), North Africa (Tertullian), Samaria (Justin Martyr), and Alexandria (Origen) all independent of Rome and representing diverse streams of early Christianity. Even the Didache, which predates the formal formation of Roman Catholic ecclesiology, commands first-day gathering.

 

SDA Claim #3: “The Bible never commands Sunday worship.”

REFUTATION:

This argument cuts both ways but it actually undermines the SDA position more than ours. First, the New Testament does record first-day worship patterns (Acts 20:7; 1 Cor. 16:2; Rev. 1:10). Second, under New Covenant Theology, the specific day is a matter of Christian liberty (Romans 14:5–6; Colossians 2:16–17) what the New Testament insists on is the regular assembly of believers (Hebrews 10:25), not a specific day calendar. Third, the SDA argument proves too much: if “no explicit command” equals invalid practice, then Adventists must also abandon their own worship practices, including their Tuesday-night prayer meetings, which are equally absent from an explicit biblical mandate.

 

SDA Claim #4: “The Sabbath was never changed God’s law is eternal.”

REFUTATION:

This assumes the very thing it needs to prove the question-begging fallacy. The New Covenant Theology position, grounded in Colossians 2:16–17, Hebrews 4, and Galatians 4:10–11, demonstrates that the weekly Sabbath belonged to the Mosaic ceremonial law, which served as a shadow pointing to the substance Christ. Paul explicitly includes the Sabbath among the ceremonial observances that are now fulfilled in Christ: “Therefore do not let anyone judge you by what you eat or drink, or with regard to a religious festival, a New Moon celebration or a Sabbath day. These are a shadow of the things that were to come; the reality, however, is found in Christ” (Col. 2:16–17). The eternal moral law what the Westminster Confession and Reformed theology identify as the moral law is written on the heart (Jer. 31:33; Rom. 2:15), not a specific calendar day. Christians do not disobey God’s law by gathering on Sunday; they honor the Lord of the Sabbath who said, ‘Come to me… and I will give you rest’ (Matt. 11:28–30).

 

 REDUCTIO AD ABSURDUM: FOLLOWING THE SDA LOGIC TO ITS END

If the SDA argument is true that Constantine’s civil recognition of Sunday made it pagan or unbiblical then the following conclusions must also be accepted:

 

    If a pagan emperor’s acknowledgment of a Christian practice corrupts it, then the edict of Cyrus the Great (a pagan!) authorizing the rebuilding of the Jerusalem Temple (Ezra 1:1–4) also corrupts Jewish temple worship. But Adventists do not make this argument.

  Constantine also legalized Christianity itself through the Edict of Milan (313 A.D.). If Constantine’s approval of Sunday worship invalidates Sunday worship, then his legalization of Christianity invalidates Christianity. Adventists would need to become illegal practitioners to be consistent.

   The SDA calendar uses a seven-day week itself standardized and codified through Roman civil and later papal calendars. If SDA logic holds, the very calendar they use to count to Saturday is “tainted” by pagan and Roman Catholic influence.

 

The SDA argument proves far too much and destroys itself under scrutiny. Civil recognition of a religious practice does not constitute divine endorsement or corruption what matters is whether the practice is grounded in Scripture.

 

THREE MIC-DROP CROSS-EXAMINATION QUESTIONS FOR SDA DEFENDERS

1

If Sunday worship originated with Constantine in 321 A.D., how do you explain Ignatius of Antioch urging believers around 107 A.D. to live “according to the Lord’s Day” over two centuries before Constantine was born? Can you name a single early church father, before Constantine, who observed Saturday Sabbath as Christian practice?

2

Constantine’s edict was a civil scheduling law, not a theological decree. If the civil recognition of a religious practice by a pagan emperor corrupts that practice, then does Cyrus the Great’s civil decree authorizing the Jewish temple rebuild (Ezra 1:1–4) also corrupt Old Testament temple worship? Why do you apply this standard selectively to Sunday worship but not to other practices endorsed by pagan rulers?

3

Paul writes in Colossians 2:16–17 that the Sabbath was “a shadow of the things to come” fulfilled in Christ. If the weekly Sabbath is part of the eternal moral law as SDAs claim, why does Paul list it among the ceremonial shadows alongside festivals and new moons rather than alongside the prohibitions on adultery, murder, and theft? How do you reconcile your classification of the Sabbath as eternal moral law with Paul’s classification of it as a fulfilled shadow?

 

 SUMMARY VERDICT GRID

SDA CLAIM

BIBLICAL/HISTORICAL VERDICT

STATUS

Constantine created Sunday worship

Sunday worship is documented 220+ years before Constantine

FALSE

Constantine changed the Sabbath to Sunday

His edict was civil law; no theological authority to change divine law was claimed or exercised

FALSE

Sunday worship is a Catholic invention

Predates Roman Catholic ecclesiology; attested across independent Christian communities

FALSE

Paul’s writings support mandatory Saturday Sabbath

Col. 2:16–17 explicitly classifies the Sabbath among fulfilled ceremonial shadows

FALSE

The Lord’s Day is rooted in the Resurrection

Matthew 28:1, Mark 16:9, John 20:1, Acts 20:7, Rev. 1:10 all confirm first-day resurrection worship

AFFIRMED

 

 FINAL VERDICT

Constantine did not give the church Sunday. The church gave Constantine Sunday.

The Lord’s Day was not born in the palace of Constantine in 321 A.D. It was born in the empty garden tomb of Joseph of Arimathea on the first day of the week, when Jesus Christ rose from the dead as the firstfruits of the New Creation. Every Sunday gathering of believers is not a compliance with imperial Roman law it is a weekly proclamation of the resurrection: “He is not here; He has risen” (Matthew 28:6). Sunday worship is not the product of papal conspiracy or Roman politics. It is the heartbeat of resurrection faith and it will keep beating long after every empire has crumbled.

 

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