I agree with the above...
But what about verse 16?
Doesn't it specifically say that we are not to be told what day to celebrate?
Will you return to the 10 commandments reasoning for the answer?
Is this the most important answer?
What about this:
The Sabbath was a ceremonial law.
Ceremonial law HAS been abolished by Jesus.
The reason we say the ceremonial law is abolished by Jesus is because of Hebrews 10:4-12 telling us that all sacrifices and offerings ended at the cross "He takes away the first to establish the second".
But the weekly Sabbath given in Genesis 2:1-3 was not based on animal sacrifice or offering liturgy - it is purely rest and worship. This is also true in the "ten" - see Exodus 20:8-11 no sacrifice or offering as the basis for the observance ... you only have Exodus 20:11 for the basis and it says to go back to creation week statement in Genesis 2:1-3. That's why I keep bringing up the Catechism, and the Baptist Confession of Faith, and Westminster Confession of Faith and a bunch of other references - because they all admit that unlike the ceremonial laws the TEN Commandment Sabbath is a moral law - applicable to "all mankind" -- not "just Jews".
Col 2:16 says the food, drink and "sabbaths" (of which we find a number of annual Sabbaths in Lev 23 - the annual feast days... ceremonial Sabbaths) are the topic. It does not single out the weekly Sabbath - and in any case Col 2:16 is not 'deleting food, drink," nor deleting Sabbaths" rather it is keeping in the theme of the entire chapter (Col 2) which is about "not making stuff up". (As I was trying to highlight in that post of mine). It is also not a case of Paul saying "pay no attention to what scripture says on these subjects" -- rather he is talking about what "man says" and specifically points to "the commandments of men" and the "teaching of man" -- where those men "judge you".
Heb 10:4-12 is actually about deleting or taking away something -- it is specifically removing "sacrifices and offerings"
In 1 Cor 7:19 Paul contrasts ceremonial law (circumcision) with moral law (the Commandments of God) and says "
what matters is keeping the Commandments of God".
The TEN Commands are given in scripture as a "unit" of TEN. And nowhere do we see a new unit "of nine". This particular point is not even debated by the Catholic Catechism, Dies Domini, The Baptist Confession of Faith, or the Westminster Confession of Faith. It is the part of the discussion where both sides of the Sabbath debate - agree.