Marymog
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- Mar 7, 2017
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Thanks Cadyzoe. You have articulated your thoughts very well! However you did not address the points I made on how for the first 80+ years after Christ died Christian writings suggest or flat out say Sunday worship. So, WHY were Christians, for the first 80 years of Christianity, gathering together/breaking bread/gathering money (Paul's instructions) on what Justin Martyr flat out said was SUNDAY and Scripture calls the 1st day of the week? Why would they do that on SUNDAY if, by your reckoning, He did not rise on Sunday? Why didn't they celebrate on Saturday? There are only 7 choices for the Lords day so which one of the 7 did John and the writer of the Didache (written around 65AD) mean as the Lords Day?So we agree that the Bible doesn't refer to the days of the week by name. And I have no problem with meeting on the first day of the week. And if Christians decided to adopt the Roman names for the days of the week, I have no problem with that either.
I disagree with Justin Martyr's view that Jesus rose on Sunday morning. His empty tomb was discovered Sunday morning but apparently he rose on Saturday night. By the time that the woman came to the tomb, the stone was already rolled away and the tomb was already empty.
But all of that is beside the point. The question posed in the video is NOT "on what day of the week do Christians worship?" The video assumes that Sunday is the first day of the week. The question posed in the video is "on what day of the week was Jesus crucified?" Since Jesus said that he would be in the tomb for three days and three nights, no thinking person would conclude that Jesus hung on the cross Friday afternoon and rose from the dead on Sunday morning.
Let's say for the sake of discussion that the angels rolled away the stone during the second or third watch of the night. How about 3:00 am Sunday Morning? That being the case, we shall count Saturday night as the third night Jesus spent in the tomb, because Jesus himself said that he would spend three nights in the tomb. Matthew 12:40 Counting backwards then, Friday night was the second night in the tomb; and Thursday night was the first night in the tomb.
Now, I don't agree with the scenario above because in order to harmonized all the gospel accounts, Jesus had to have spent the first night in the tomb on Wednesday night. But putting that aside for the moment, hopefully you can see that the official Catholic version of events can't possibly be true. Jesus said three nights, but Friday and Saturday night only amount to two nights.
Remember that the ancient Jews counted any part of a day as a whole day. So “three days and three nights” (which means the same as “three days” in modern usage) could be as little as twenty-four hours.
- Jesus died at around 3 p.m. (cf. Luke 23:44-46), which means the first day of his death was the remainder of the day of preparation, between 3 p.m. and sunset.
- The second day then began at sunset and lasted through the entire sabbath (i.e., it was Friday night and Saturday daytime).
- The third day then began at sundown on the sabbath and lasted until sunset on the first day of the week (i.e., it was Saturday night and Sunday daytime).
Respectfully, Mary
BTW.....Your statement that it is the "official Catholic version of events" is petty and dishonest. If you were to be honest you would not have made it sound like it is only a Catholic version since your own Protestants accept this "version of events" and the "version of events" has been taught/accepted MUCH longer than the version of events that your men have taught you. From whom did you get YOUR version of events?
Mary
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