In other words, it seems you are agreeing with the rest of the anti Sabbath movement, in order to disentangle themselves from the seemingly insurmountable burden of the Sabbath, Christians need to invent the premise that they
are no longer bound to obey any of God's commandments, not even the first 3 , let alone the last 6.
Must you be so insulting?
And you haven't refuted the historical fact that the Christian church observed the Sabbath in places like Scotland and Ireland for 1000 years after Christ,
So what. That doesn't prove places like Scotland and Ireland for 1000 years after Christ
never went to church on Sunday.
and the only reason any Sabbath keeping was halted came as a result of determined tyranny from Rome and/or her emissaries and agents. The removal of records from that church and the destruction of the writings of it's leaders has further given the appearance that Sabbath keeping didn't exist.
So what. I prefer to go to Mass on Saturday fulfilling my Sunday obligation; I'm not violating any laws. If I can't make it for Saturday or Sunday, I can go to Mass any day of the week. If I miss Mass for a good reason, there is no sin committed.
" tyranny from Rome" is stupid illogical paranoia.
"The removal of records from that church and the destruction of the writings of it's leaders" so how do you know they existed if they have been destroyed? Strange logic indeed.
There is no biblical mandate for observing Sunday. Despite arguments in it's defense, Sunday sacredness comes from pagan tradition adopted by catholicism and passed on to Protestantism as a holy relic.
The Resurrection is the whole point of Sunday worship, not paganism. The pagan influence fallacy has been refuted several times on this forum. But to you, a Saturday Sabbath is more important than the Resurrection. Maybe you should correct Jesus for rising a day late, since the Saturday Sabbath is more important than the Resurrection.
No personal attack upon you here, it's simple history. Even Catholic theologians and historians themselves admit as much, and in the council of Trent used that to prove the Protestants, despite their claims to the contrary, followed tradition as opposed to the Bible only.
The Protestant and the Catholic worlds both teach that the Holy Scriptures are of God. There is a difference, however, for the Protestants admit the Bible and the Bible only, while the Papacy places the church traditions on an equality with the Scriptures.
So did the Jews. So did the Apostles. You have no case against Tradition, so you are forced to re-define it so it fits a false narrative.
The Council of Trent, 1545, whose decisions are supreme authority on doctrine in the Roman Catholic Church, speaks as follows on written and unwritten tradition: The sacred and holy, oecumenical and general Synod of Trent,...following the examples of the orthodox fathers, receives and venerates with equal affection of piety, and reverence, all the books both of the Old and of the New Testament, — seeing that one God is the author of both, and also the said traditions, as well those appertaining to faith as to morals, as having been dictated, either by Christ’s own word of mouth, or by the Holy Ghost, and preserved by a continuous succession in the Catholic Church.
Buckley, Canons and Decrees of the Council of Trent, pp. 17, 18.
Your attack on Sacred Tradition is illogical (again). The authority of Scripture is also a Sacred Tradition. In fact, if one makes an honest inquiry about it, it will be discovered that the the canon of Scripture is also a Tradition as the Bible doesn't give a list of books that belong in it. You demonize what you know nothing about.
Jesus was with the Apostles for 3 years; do you really think all He said was NT quotes? His spoken WORD is life, as is the written word. And all His teachings and infallible preaching of ALL the Apostles have been preserved. They are not secrets.
That this principle still prevails in the Roman Catholic Church is shown by the words of the celebrated Cardinal Gibbons of Baltimore, who was long the leading exponent of his church in the United States. Thus he writes: A rule of faith, or a competent guide to heaven, must be able to instruct in all the truths necessary for salvation. Now the Scriptures alone do not contain all the truths which a Christian is bound to believe, nor do they explicitly enjoin all the duties which he is obliged to practice. Not to mention other examples, 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.9
Gibbons, The Faith of Our Fathers, pp. 111, 112, 63d ed.; p. 86, 76th ed.
James Cardinal Gibbons:
“If I were asked what is the underlying principle of the Gospel, what is the essential characteristic of the religion of Jesus Christ, I would say: it is love. Group together the ten Commandments, the evangelical precepts, and the exhortations of the Apostles. Group together all the admonitions of the Old and the New Testament. Analyze them all, and they are all summarized in one short word, and that word is Love.” ...
...The Pagan or Heathen worshiped his gods. He feared them, and prostrated himself before them. He offered sacrifice to them in order to propitiate them. But the thought never occurred to him of loving them. He was too far removed from them to entertain any sentiment of affection for them; for love presupposes some equality between the lover and the person beloved."
read more here
You'll never find that quote on any SDA source, it's too incriminating.
I'm not playing games here.
Yes, you are.
I'm not attempting to keep alive the OT sanctuary feast day cycle and the civil, and communal laws that applied to the nation. However, I absolutely will uphold God commandments as He wrote them on stone, nor do I lay claim as being the one who has separated those laws from those given to Moses at a later time.
You miss the whole single point of the Commandments and the Gospel with your
fear based anti-Catholic lies.
God Himself required that Moses keep the 2 separate. One placed inside the ark of the covenant/testimony, a type of God's throne in heaven, the other on a scroll, placed to the side of the ark. If God has wanted to demonstrate the impermanence of both, maybe He could have refrained from writing a second sample and left the first in pieces?
Do you circumcise your 8 day old infants according to the law, (no, you don't) or do you just dismiss that as civil and communal law?
All your SDA doctrines flow from E.G. White's
occult channeling, and here you are again, lying about the pagan influence fallacy with your standard false histories, invented in the 18th century. Here's a clue for the readers:
the occult is the worst form of paganism.
Pagan Influence Fallacy
Opponents of the Church often attempt to discredit Catholicism by attempting to show similarities between it and the beliefs or practices of ancient paganism.
This fallacy is frequently committed by Fundamentalists against Catholics; by Seventh-day Adventists, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Mormons, and others against both Protestants and Catholics; and by atheists and skeptics against both Christians and Jews.
The nineteenth century witnessed a flowering of this “pagan influence fallacy.” Publications such as
The Two Babylons by Alexander Hislop (the classic English text charging the Catholic Church with paganism) paved the way for generations of antagonism toward the Church. During this time, entire new sects were created (Seventh-day Adventists, Mormons, Jehovah’s Witnesses)—all considering traditional Catholicism
and Protestantism as polluted by paganism. This era also saw atheistic “freethinkers” such as Robert Ingersoll writing books attacking Christianity and Judaism as pagan.
The pagan influence fallacy has not gone away in the twentieth century, but newer archaeology and more mature scholarship have diminished its influence.
Yet there are still many committing it. In Protestant circles, numerous works
have continued to popularize the claims of Alexander Hislop, most notably the comic books of Jack Chick and the book
Babylon Mystery Religion by the young Ralph Woodrow (later Woodrow realized its flaws and wrote
The Babylon Connection? repudiating it and refuting Hislop). Other Christian and quasi-Christian sects have continued to charge mainstream Christianity with paganism, and many atheists have continued to repeat—unquestioned—the charges of paganism leveled by their forebears.
read more here
Borrowing arguments from atheists?
