Brakelite
Well-Known Member
Everything you said about shadows I agree with. And I also agree that there are Sabbath days that are shadows, the thing is though that Paul qualifies those things on verse 16 by the word shadows. He is talking about the sabbaths that are shadows, along with meats and drinks and holy days and new moons, and there are other things that could be added such as the ritual sacrifices etc, all of which pointed forward to the ministry of Jesus. All of them were intimately associated with the yearly process of atonement for the Israelite nation. What you f fail to establish is whether the weekly Sabbath is a part of that. I could cure numerous quotes from your own church theologians and writers , including the Archbishop of Reggio who is quoted above, who disagree with you. The weekly Sabbath is not a shadow. It was never established as a part of the process of atonement fulfilled by Jesus. It was eatables established at creation, before sin entered this world, before man needed atonement.I have already shown you where Paul explains this in his Epistle to the Colossians:
Col. M2:16-17
Therefore let no one pass judgment on you in questions of food and drink, or with regard to a festival or a new moon or a Sabbath. These are a shadow of the things to come, but the substance belongs to Christ.
We see the same language used in Hebrews when speaking of “shadows” - the things that were fulfilled in Christ.
Heb, 10:1
For the law, having but a shadow (Gr.—skian) of the good things to come, and not the exact image (Gr.—eikona) of the objects, is never able by the sacrifices which they offer continually, year after year the same, to perfect those who draw near.
The shadow presupposes a fulfillment.
The fulfillment supersedes the shadow.
Sunday observance came about for many reasons. Not one of them was because Jesus or any of the apostles taught it. Nor practised it. It took the church in Rome 400 years to the council of Laodicea to create a law concerning it, and at that time Rome and Alexandria were the only 2 cities observing it. Everywhere else Christians were still observing the seventh day. Your doctrine is based on tradition yes. But tradition alone. And that tradition completely nullifies a sprightly commandment of God. Which is why all the world should be astonished at the arrogance of a church that "thinks to change times and laws", which pertain to God's holy law.And you are once again arguing from the man-made Protestant invention of Sola Scriptura, which is a Scripturally-untenable position.
This is what I LOVE about anti-Catholics – it’s your hypocrisy.
You drone on and condemn those “Catholic Traditions” - while clinging to the CATHOLIC Canon of Scripture.
Sunday observance, thew fulfillment of the Sabbath, is BOTH am Oran - AND a written Tradition (Acts 20:7, 1 Cor. 16:2).
"To the law and to the testimony. If they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them. " Isaiah 8:20