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The eighth day of what? hehehehe bright guy Dim Timmjust why do you think the Lord God told Abraham to circumcise on the eighth day? 7+1 is 8 last I checked.
Is this about orthodox Christians not following the 10 commandments? Saturday is the Sabbath. 7th day of the week - God rested after creation. Can't argue for Sunday, 1st day of the week. Easy-peasy. For Christians, "Every day is the Sabbath".
Orthodox Christians have trouble with some scriptures:
The 7th day Sabbath was given to Israel. The 8th day Sabbath is given to the Church. And if anyone is not resting in Christ, the 7th day Sabbath means nothing. Christ is our eternal rest (shabbath)."But the seventh day is the Sabbath of the LORD thy God..."
So was the new covenant. But we don't mind borrowing that, now, do we?The 7th day Sabbath was given to Israel.
How could they if there isn't any except what is contrived by those who seek to deny God's claims upon them?Both the Feast of First Fruits as well as the Feast of Pentecost were on the FIRST DAY OF THE WEEK (the morrow after the Sabbath). People need to see the spiritual significance of that.
The 7th day Sabbath was given to Israel. The 8th day Sabbath is given to the Church. And if anyone is not resting in Christ, the 7th day Sabbath means nothing. Christ is our eternal rest (shabbath).
Both the Feast of First Fruits as well as the Feast of Pentecost were on the FIRST DAY OF THE WEEK (the morrow after the Sabbath). People need to see the spiritual significance of that.
It is a common mistake to assume that a word found nowhere else in the Bible means something special. Writers can have any number of reasons for doing this, or no reason at all.Notice that the Greek word "sabbatismos" here is used no where else in the Bible!
This website may be helpful to you. Sabbatismos Ministries - is-the-sabbath-still-required-for-christiansIt is a common mistake to assume that a word found nowhere else in the Bible means something special. Writers can have any number of reasons for doing this, or no reason at all.
Sabbatismos and sabbatizō are Greek renderings of the Hebrew noun shabbath and its related verb shabath, respectively, and the meaning of the latter may be expected to cast light on the meaning of the former. Shabbath occurs 101 times in the OT, where it generally means “Sabbath,”—the seventh day of the week—or “week,” a period of seven days marked off by successive Sabbaths. It is also used of the sabbatical year (Lev. 25:6; 26:34, 43; 2 Chron. 36:21). The verb shabath occurs 70 times, 7 times with reference to the Sabbath rest and 63 times with reference to other kinds of rest. For instances of the latter usage see Gen. 8:22; Joshua 5:12; Neh. 6:3; Lam. 5:14; Isa. 14:4; 24:8; 33:8. The root meaning of the verb shabath is “to cease,” “to rest.” The word sometimes denotes the weekly Sabbath rest. But the noun shabbath, derived from shabath, commonly denotes the weekly Sabbath rest, and also the space of time marked off by successive Sabbaths, the week (Lev. 23:15), and the sabbatical years (ch. 26:35; etc.). It may be noted also that shabbathon, which is simply shabbath with the ending –on, is used of the Day of Atonement (Lev. 16:31; 23:32), of the sabbatical year (Lev. 25:4, 5), of the Feast of Trumpets (Lev. 23:24), and of the first and last days of the Feast of Tabernacles (Lev. 23:39)—as well as of the seventh-day Sabbath.
Sabbatizō is used seven times in the LXX, once of the literal seventh-day Sabbath (Ex. 16:30), once of other sabbaths (Lev. 23:32), and five times of the land’s resting in the sabbatical year (Lev. 26:34, 35; 2 Chron. 36:21). In the LXX of Ex. 16:30; Lev. 23:32; 26:34, 35 sabbatizō is from the Hebrew shabath. Accordingly, the fundamental idea expressed by sabbatizo in the LXX is that of resting or ceasing from labor or other activity. Hence usage of the related Greek and Hebrew words implies that the noun sabbatismos may denote either the literal Sabbath “rest” or simply “rest” or “cessation” in a more general sense. Thus, a linguistic study of the word sabbatismos in Heb. 4:9 leaves it uncertain whether the weekly Sabbath “rest” is here referred to, or simply “rest” or “cessation” in a general sense. Context alone can decide the matter.
I see in Hebrews 7.12 that the law was changed. I don't see going back and imposing the law's Sabbath-keeping.This website may be helpful to you. Sabbatismos Ministries - is-the-sabbath-still-required-for-christians
Thanks. I try to avoid "ministries" that emphasize a certain subject, unless it is urgent.This website may be helpful to you. Sabbatismos Ministries - is-the-sabbath-still-required-for-christians
The liturgical law was changed, not the moral code.I see in Hebrews 7.12 that the law was changed. I don't see going back and imposing the law's Sabbath-keeping.
Not just 'liturgy'. The priesthood was changed, utterly changed.The liturgical law was changed, not the moral code.
Good question. But let us allow for an eighth day, just for the sake of argument. What did God do on the 'eighth' day after creation, the first day of the second week in other words?The eighth day of what? hehehehe bright guy Dim Timm
So why did God bless and sanctify the 7th day? Because He rested on that day. Therefore, it must have been after God had rested that God blessed and sanctified the day.