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Admissions, Concessions, and Confessions from Sunday Observers That Favor the Saturday Sabbath: A Consolidated Collection
James Cardinal Gibbons made a point of
challenging Protestants on this point, as this extract below demonstrates:
“Most Christians assume that Sunday is the
biblically approved day of worship. The Catholic Church protests that it
transferred Christian worship from the biblical Sabbath (Saturday) to Sunday,
and that to try to argue that the change was made in the Bible is both
dishonest and a denial of Catholic authority. If Protestantism wants to base
its teachings only on the Bible, it should worship on Saturday.” Rome’s Challenge
www.immaculateheart.com/maryonline Dec 2003
“Is not every Christian obliged to
sanctify Sunday and to abstain on that day from unnecessary servile work? Is
not the observance of this law among the most prominent of our sacred duties?
But you may read the Bible from Genesis to Revelation, and you will not find a
single line authorizing the sanctification of Sunday. The Scriptures enforce
the religious observance of Saturday, a day which we never sanctify.” James
Cardinal Gibbons, The Faith of Our Fathers (1917 edition), p. 72-73
(16th Edition, p 111; 88th Edition, p. 89).
“For example, nowhere in the Bible do we
find that Christ or the Apostles ordered that the Sabbath be changed from
Saturday to Sunday. We have the commandment of God given to Moses to keep holy
the Sabbath day, that is the 7th day of the week, Saturday. Today most
Christians keep Sunday because it has been revealed to us by the [Roman
Catholic] church outside the Bible.” Catholic Virginian, October 3,
1947, p. 9, article “To Tell You the Truth.”
Who Made Sunday Holy?
“Written by the finger of God on two tables of stone, this Divine code
(ten commandments) was received from the Almighty by Moses amid the thunders of
Mount Sinai...Christ resumed these Commandments in the double precept of
charity--love of God and of the neighbour; He proclaimed them as binding under
the New Law in Matthew 19 and in the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5)...The
(Catholic) Church, on the other hand, after changing the day of rest from the
Jewish Sabbath, or seventh day of the week, to the first, made the Third
Commandment refer to Sunday as the day to be kept holy as the Lord’s Day...He
(God) claims one day out of the seven as a memorial to Himself, and this must
be kept holy...”The Catholic Encyclopaedia, vol. 4, “The Ten
Commandments”, 1908 edition by Robert Appleton Company; and 1999 Online edition
by Kevin Knight, Imprimatur, John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York.
“Question: How prove you that the church
had power to command feasts and holydays?
“Answer: 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.
“Question: Have you any other way of proving that the church has power to
institute festivals of precept?
“Answer: Had she not such power, she could not a 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 of the week, a change for which there is no Scriptural authority.” Stephen
Keenan, A Doctrinal Catechism On the Obedience Due to the Church, 3rd
edition, Chapter 2, p. 174 (Imprimatur, John Cardinal McCloskey, Archbishop of
New York).
“Perhaps the boldest thing, the most
revolutionary change the Church ever did, happened in the first century. The
holy day, the Sabbath, was changed from Saturday to Sunday. ‘The day of the
Lord’ was chosen, not from any direction noted in the Scriptures, but from the
(Catholic) Church’s sense of its own power...People who think that the
Scriptures should be the sole authority, should logically become 7th Day
Adventists, and keep Saturday holy.” St. Catherine Church Sentinel,
Algonac, Michigan, May 21, 1995.
“Nowhere in the Bible is it stated that
worship should be changed from Saturday to Sunday...Now the
Church...instituted, by God’s authority, Sunday as the day of worship. This
same Church, by the same divine authority, taught the doctrine of Purgatory
long before the Bible was made. We have, therefore, the same authority for
Purgatory as we have for Sunday.” Martin J. Scott, Things Catholics Are
Asked About, 1927 edition, p. 136.
“Question - Which is the Sabbath day?
“Answer - Saturday is the Sabbath day.
“Question - Why do we observe Sunday instead of Saturday?
“Answer - We observe Sunday instead of Saturday because the Catholic Church, in
the Council of Laodicea (A.D. 364), transferred the solemnity from Saturday to
Sunday.” Peter Geiermann, C.S.S.R., The Convert’s Catechism of Catholic
Doctrine, p. 50, 3rd edition, 1957.
“Is Saturday the seventh day according to
the Bible and the Ten Commandments? I answer yes. Is Sunday the first day of
the week and did the Church change the seventh day - Saturday - for Sunday, the
first day? I answer yes. Did Christ change the day’? I answer no!”
“Faithfully yours, J. Card. Gibbons.” James Cardinal Gibbons, Archbishop of
Baltimore, Md. (1877-1921), in a signed letter.
“Question. - How prove you that the
Church hath power to command feasts and holy days?
“Answer. - By the very act of changing 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.
“Question. - How prove you that?
“Answer. - 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.” An Abridgment of the
Christian Doctrine, composed by Henry Tuberville, p. 58.
“Some theologians have held that God
likewise directly determined the Sunday as the day of worship in the New Law,
that He Himself has explicitly substituted the Sunday for the Sabbath. But this
theory is now entirely abandoned. It is now commonly held that God simply gave
His Church the power to set aside whatever day or days she would deem suitable
as Holy Days. The (Roman Catholic) Church chose Sunday, the first day of the
week, and in the course of time added other days as holy days.” John Laux, A
Course in Religion for Catholic High Schools and Academies, 1936 edition,
vol. 1, p. 51.
“Question. What warrant have you for
keeping Sunday preferably to the ancient sabbath which was Saturday?
“Answer. We have for it the authority of the Catholic church and apostolic
tradition.
“Question. Does the Scripture anywhere command the Sunday to be kept for the
Sabbath?
“Answer. The Scripture commands us to hear the church (St.Matt.18:17; St. Luke
10:16), and to hold fast the traditions of the apostles. 2 Thess 2:15. But the
Scripture does not in particular mention this change of the Sabbath.
“St John speaks of the Lord’s day (Rev
1:10) but he does not tell us what day of the week that was, much less does he
tell us what day was to take the place of the Sabbath ordained in the
commandments. St.Luke speaks of the disciples meeting together to break bread
on the first day of the week. Acts 20:7. And St. Paul (1 Cor.16:2) orders that
on the first day of the week the Corinthians should lay in store what they
designated to bestow in charity on the faithful in Judea: but neither the one
or the other tells us that this first day of the week was to be henceforth a
day of worship, and the Christian Sabbath; so that truly the best authority we
have for this ancient custom is the testimony of the church. And therefore
those who pretend to be such religious observers of Sunday, whilst they take no
notice of other festivals ordained by the same church authority, show that they
act more by humor, than by religion; since Sundays and holidays all stand upon
the same foundation, namely the ordinance of the (Roman Catholic) church.”
Catholic Christian Instructed, 17th edition, p. 272-273.
“Protestantism, in discarding the
authority of the (Roman Catholic) Church, has no good reasons for its Sunday
theory, and ought logically to keep Saturday as the Sabbath.” John Gilmary
Shea, American Catholic Quarterly Review, January 1883.
“The Catholic church for over one
thousand years before the existence of a Protestant, by virtue of her divine
mission, changed the day from Saturday to Sunday...The Protestant World at its
birth found the Christian Sabbath too strongly entrenched to run counter to its
existence; it was therefore placed under the necessity of acquiescing in the
arrangement, thus implying the (Catholic) Church’s right to change the day, for
over three hundred years. The Christian Sabbath is therefore to this day,
the acknowledged offspring of the Catholic Church as spouse of the Holy Ghost,
without a word of remonstrance from the Protestant World.” James Cardinal
Gibbons in the Catholic Mirror, September 23, 1983.
Whose Day of Worship is Sunday?
“They [the Protestants] deem it their duty to keep the Sunday holy. Why?
Because the Catholic Church tells them to do so. They have no other
reason...The observance of Sunday thus comes to be an ecclesiastical law
entirely distinct from the divine law of Sabbath observance...The author of the
Sunday law...is the Catholic Church.” Ecclesiastical Review, February 1914.
“The Sunday...is purely a creation of the
Catholic Church.”American Catholic Quarterly Review, January 1883.
“Sunday...is the law of the Catholic
Church alone...” American Sentinel (Catholic), June 1893.
“Sunday is a Catholic institution and its
claim to observance can be defended only on Catholic principles...From
beginning to end of Scripture there is not a single passage that warrants the
transfer of weekly public worship from the last day of the week to the first.” Catholic
Press, Sydney, Australia, August 1900.
“It is well to remind the Presbyterians,
Baptists, Methodists, and all other Christians, that the Bible does not support
them anywhere in their observance of Sunday. Sunday is an institution of the
Roman Catholic Church, and those who observe the day observe a commandment of
the Catholic Church.” Priest Brady, in an address reported in The News,
Elizabeth, New Jersey, March 18, 1903.
Whom Do We Reverence and Pay Homage to by
Keeping Sunday Holy?
“From this we may understand how great is the authority of the church in
interpreting or explaining to us the commandments of God - an authority which
is acknowledged by the universal practice of the whole Christian world, even of
those sects which profess to take the holy Scriptures as their sole rule of
faith, since they observe as the day of rest not the seventh day of the week
demanded by the Bible, but the first day. Which we know is to be kept holy, only
from the tradition and teaching of the Catholic church.” Henry Gibson, Catechism
Made Easy, #2, 9th edition, vol. 1, p. 341-342.
“It was the Catholic church which...has
transferred this rest to Sunday in remembrance of the resurrection of our Lord.
Therefore the observance of Sunday by the Protestants is an homage they pay, in
spite of themselves, to the authority of the (Catholic) church.” Monsignor
Louis Segur, Plain Talk About the Protestantism of Today, p. 213.
“Sunday is our mark or authority...the
church is above the Bible, and this transference of Sabbath observance is proof
of that fact.” Catholic Record of London, Ontario, September 1, 1923.
“Of course the Catholic Church claims
that the change (Saturday Sabbath to Sunday) was her act...And the act is a
mark of her ecclesiastical authority in religious things.” H.F. Thomas,
Chancellor of Cardinal Gibbons.
“I have repeatedly offered $1,000 to
anyone who can prove to me from the Bible alone that I am bound to keep Sunday
holy. There is no such law in the Bible. It is a law of the holy Catholic
Church alone. The Bible says, ‘Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy.’ The
Catholic Church says: ‘No. By my divine power I abolish the Sabbath day and
command you to keep holy the first day of the week.’ And lo! The entire
civilized world bows down in a reverent obedience to the command of the holy
Catholic Church.” father T. Enright, C.S.S.R. of the Redemptoral College,
Kansas City, in a lecture at Hartford, Kansas, February 18, 1884, printed in History
of the Sabbath, p. 802. Hover here
for a document clip or select for full original image.
“Protestants...accept Sunday rather than
Saturday as the day for public worship after the Catholic Church made the
change...But the Protestant mind does not seem to realize that...In observing
the Sunday, they are accepting the authority of the spokesman for the church,
the Pope.” Our Sunday Visitor, February 15, 1950.
Conclusion and the Challenge.
“The (Roman Catholic) Church changed the observance of the Sabbath to
Sunday by right of the divine, infallible authority given to her by her
founder, Jesus Christ. The Protestant claiming the Bible to be the only guide
of faith, has no warrant for observing Sunday.” The Catholic Universe
Bulletin, August 14, 1942, p. 4.
“Sunday is founded, not of scripture, but
on tradition, and is distinctly a Catholic institution. As there is no
scripture for the transfer of the day of rest from the last to the first day of
the week, Protestants ought to keep their Sabbath on Saturday and thus leave
Catholics in full possession of Sunday.” Catholic Record, September
17, 1893.
“Regarding the change from the observance
of the Jewish Sabbath to the Christian Sunday, I wish to draw your attention to
the facts:
“1) That Protestants, who accept the
Bible as the only rule of faith and religion, should by all means go back to
the observance of the Sabbath. The fact that they do not, but on the contrary
observe the Sunday, stultifies them in the eyes of every thinking man.
“2) We Catholics do not accept the Bible
as the only rule of faith. Besides the Bible we have the living Church, the
authority of the Church, as a rule to guide us. We say, this Church, instituted
by Christ to teach and guide man through life, has the right to change the
ceremonial laws of the Old Testament and hence, we accept her change of the
Sabbath to Sunday. We frankly say, yes, the Church made this change, made this
law, as she made many other laws, for instance, the Friday abstinence, the
unmarried priesthood, the laws concerning mixed marriages, the regulation of
Catholic marriages and a thousand other laws...
“It is always somewhat laughable, to see
the Protestant churches, in pulpit and legislation, demand the observance of
Sunday, of which there is nothing in their Bible.” Peter R. Kraemer, Catholic
Church Extension Magazine, USA (1975), Chicago, Illinois, “Under the
blessing of the Pope Pius XI”
“I am going to propose a very plain and
serious question to those who follow ‘the Bible and the Bible only’ to give
their most earnest attention. It is this: Why don’t you keep holy the Sabbath
day?...
“The command of the Almighty God stands
clearly written in the Bible in these words: ‘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.’ Exodus
20:8-10...
“You will answer me, perhaps, that you do
keep the Sabbath; for that you abstain from all worldly business and diligently
go to church, and say your prayers, and read your Bible at home every Sunday of
your lives...
“But Sunday is not the Sabbath day.
Sunday is the first day of the week: the Sabbath day is the seventh day of the
week. Almighty God did not give a commandment that men should keep holy one day
in seven; but He named His own day, and said distinctly: ‘Thou shalt keep holy
the seventh day’; and He assigned a reason for choosing this day rather than
any other - a reason which belongs only to the seventh day of the week, and
cannot be applied to the rest. He says, ‘For in six days the Lord made heaven
and earth, the sea and all that in them is, and rested on the seventh day:
wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and hallowed it’, Exodus 20:11,
Genesis 2:1-3. Almighty God ordered that all men should rest from their labor
on the seventh day, because He too had rested on that day: He did not rest on
Sunday, but on Saturday. On Sunday, which is the first day of the week, He
began the work of creation; He did not finish it. It was on Saturday that He
‘ended 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.’ Genesis 2:2-3...
“Nothing can be more plain and easy to
understand than all this; there is nobody who attempts to deny it. It is
acknowledged by everybody that the day which Almighty God appointed to be kept
holy was Saturday, not Sunday. Why do you then keep holy the Sunday and not
Saturday?
“You will tell me that Saturday was the
Jewish Sabbath, but that the Christian Sabbath has been changed to Sunday.
Changed! But by whom? Who has the authority to change an express commandment of
Almighty God? When God has spoken and said, ‘Thou shalt keep holy the seventh
day’, who shall dare to say, ‘Nay, thou mayest work and do all manner of
worldly business on the seventh day: but thou shalt keep holy the first day in
its stead?’ This is a most important question, which I know not how you
answer...
“You are a Protestant, and you profess to
go by the Bible and the Bible only; and yet, in so important a manner as the
observance of one day in seven as the holy day, you go against the plain letter
of the Bible, and put another day in the place of that day which the Bible has
commanded. The command to keep holy the seventh day is one of the Ten
Commandments; you believe that the other nine are still binding. Who gave you
authority to tamper with the fourth? If you are consistent with your own
principles, if you really follow the Bible, and the Bible only you ought to be
able to produce some portion of the New Testament in which this fourth
commandment is expressly altered.” Excerpts from “Why Don’t You Keep Holy the
Sabbath Day?”, pages 3-15 in The Clifton Tract, vol. 4, published by
the Roman Catholic Church 1869.
“The arguments...are firmly grounded on
the word of God, and having been closely studied with the Bible in hand, leave
no escape for the conscientious Protestant except the abandonment of Sunday
worship and the return to Saturday, commanded by their teacher, the Bible, or,
unwilling to abandon the tradition of the Catholic Church, which enjoins the
keeping of Sunday, and which they have accepted in direct opposition to their
teacher, the Bible, consistently accept her (the Catholic Church) in all her
teachings. Reason and common sense demand the acceptance of one or the other of
these alternatives: either Protestantism and the keeping holy of Saturday, or
Catholicism and the keeping holy of Sunday. Compromise is impossible.” James
Cardinal Gibbons, in Catholic Mirror, December 23, 1893.
The Catholic Mirror (September 23, 1893), which
was the mouth piece for James Cardinal Gibbons of Baltimore, once
proclaimed: "The Catholic Church for over one thousand years before
the existence of a Protestant, by virtue of her divine mission, changed
the day from Saturday to Sunday. The Protestant world at its birth found
the Christian Sabbath too strongly intrenched to run counter to its existence;
it was therefore placed under the necessity of acquiescing in the
arrangement, thus implying the Church's right to change the day, for over three
hundred years. The Christian Sabbath is therefore to this day the
acknowledged offspring of the Catholic Church as spouse of the Holy Ghost,
without a word of demonstrance from the Protestant world." It's
possible that this Baptist was Calvinist in his theology (most of them
seem to be, to one degree or another): “There was and is a command
to keep holy the Sabbath day, but that Sabbath was not Sunday. It will
however be readily said, and with some show of triumph, that the Sabbath was
transferred from the seventh to the first day of the week, with all its duties,
privileges and sanctions. Earnestly desiring information on this subject, which
I have studied for many years, I ask, where can the record of such a
transaction be found: Not in the New Testament– absolutely not. There is no
scriptural evidence of the change of the Sabbath institution from the seventh
to the first day of the week.” Dr. E. T. Hiscox, author of the ‘Baptist
Manual’.
"To me it seems unaccountable that Jesus, during three years' discussion
with His disciples, often conversing with them upon the Sabbath question,
discussing it in some of its various aspects, freeing it from its false [Jewish
traditional] glosses, never alluded to any transference of the day; also, that
during the forty days of His resurrection life, no such thing was intimated.
Nor, so far as we know, did the Spirit, which was given to bring to their
remembrance all things whatsoever that He had said unto them, deal with this
question. Nor yet did the inspired apostles, in preaching the gospel, founding
churches, counseling and instructing those founded, discuss or approach the
subject. Of course I quite well know that Sunday did come into use in
early Christian history as a religious day as we learn from the Christian
Fathers and other sources. But what a pity that it comes branded with the mark
of Paganism, and christened with the name of the sun-god, then adopted and
sanctified by the Papal apostasy, and bequeathed as a sacred legacy to
Protestantism." Dr. E. T. Hiscox, report of his sermon at the Baptist
Minister's Convention, in 'New York Examiner,' November 16, 1893.
Some candid Reformed or Presbyterian
sources that make similar concessions include the following:
"There is no word, no hint in the New
Testament about abstaining from work on Sunday. The observance of Ash
Wednesday, or Lent, stands exactly on the same footing as the observance of
Sunday. Into the rest of Sunday no Divine Law enters." Canon Eyton, in The
Ten Commandments.
"Some have tried to build the observance of Sunday upon Apostolic command,
whereas the Apostles gave no command on the matter at all.... The truth is, so
soon as we appeal to the litera scripta [literal writing] of the Bible, the
Sabbatarians have the best of the argument." The Christian at Work, April
19, 1883, and Jan. 1884.
"Sunday being the first day of which the
Gentiles solemnly adored that planet and called it Sunday, partly from its
influence on that day especially, and partly in respect to its divine body (as
they conceived it) the Christians thought fit to keep the same day and the same
name of it, that they might not appear carelessly peevish, and by that means
hinder the conversion of the Gentiles, and bring a greater prejudice that might
be otherwise taken against the gospel" T.M. Morer, Dialogues on the Lord's
Day.
"The observance of the seventh-day Sabbath
did not cease till it was abolished after the [Roman] empire became
Christian," American Presbyterian Board of Publication, Tract No. 118.
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