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Which Day of the Week Is The Sabbath?

sooda

Veteran Member
Seventh Day Adventist.

How many Babylonians are keeping it now ?

Citation for your assertion re the Babylonian word, and meaning ?


Since the Jews were in Egyptian captivity for centuries, and the Egyptians were not sabbath keepers, it is irrelevant as to what the Babylonians were or were not doing.

The sabbath was given to them by God, period.

Link was already posted.. Babylonians and Persians and Assyrians all kept Sabbath before there were any Jews.

John’s account says that Jesus died before the Passover meal while Mark’s account places Jesus’ death after the Passover meal. It is claimed by these sites that these two accounts do not agree and must therefore be false. However, this apparent disagreement disappears once we understand what actually takes place during the Passover.

Bible Contradiction: Did Jesus Die Before or After the Passover?
 
Last edited:

sooda

Veteran Member
Believe me it is Saturday.

Take it from the 7th day Adventists and the Jews.

Next look at the calendar if you have one.
The days are arranged as S M T W T F S
The first day is Sunday, the last day of the week is Saturday

The etymology of Saturday is derived from Saturn - day
But in Portuguese and Spanish, Saturday is Sabado which came from Sabbath.

Sabbath is no longer practiced by the first century Church because of the new covenant of Christ.
Sabbath was practiced by the Israelites of the Old Covenant

And by many other cultures before there were any Jews.. Did you bother to read the lead article?

Bible Contradiction: Did Jesus Die Before or After the Passover?

What Day of the Week Was Christ Crucified?
 

Ellen Brown

Well-Known Member
Despite doctrinal differences on various other topics, most Christians agree that a day of rest is an integral part of the Christian life. But on which day are we to rest?

"By the seventh day God had finished the work he had been doing; so on the seventh day he rested from all his work.

And God blessed the seventh day and made it holy, because on it he rested from all the work of creating that he had done" (Genesis 2:2, 3).

The very word "sabbath" means rest, and to rest implies that you have labored. It's logical, then, for God to have designated the last day of the week a day of rest. "The seventh day is a Sabbath to the Lord your God" (Exodus 20:10).

Language reflects the customs of the culture that speaks it. Nearly every culture, from Babylon through modern times, rested on the seventh day. As languages developed, the name for the seventh day of the week remained "rest day." In the mid 19th century, Dr. William Meade Jones created this "Chart of the Week," listing the name for the seventh day in 160 languages, including some of the most ancient (shown below). Babylonian, in use hundreds of years before Abraham or the giving of the Ten Commandments at Sinai, calls the seventh day of the week sa-ba-tu, meaning "rest day."

Even today more than 100 languages worldwide, many of them unrelated to ancient Hebrew, use the word "Sabbath" for Saturday—and none of them designate any other day as a day of rest. Though the world's language groups have evolved so as to be unintelligible from each other, the word for the seventh day of the week has remained fairly recognizable.

The Sabbath predates Judaism

For the thousands of years since Judaism began, an entire nation of Jews has kept track of the weekly cycle and observed the seventh day Sabbath, sometimes even without a calendar. Nevertheless, many rationalize that it's impossible to verify which day of the week is actually the biblical Sabbath because Pope Gregory XIII changed the calendar. The Julian calendar, instituted by Julius Caesar around 46 B.C., calculated the length of the year as 365 ¼ days. In reality, the year is 11 minutes less than 365 ¼ days. So by the 1580s, the calendar and the solar cycle were ten days off. In 1582, Gregory changed the calendar so that Friday, October 5, became Friday, October 15, creating the Gregorian calendar we use today. But it did not confuse the days of the week; Friday still follows Thursday, Saturday still follows Friday, and so on and so forth.

Exodus 16 recounts a series of weekly Sabbath miracles over a period of forty years. God reiterated the Sabbath at Sinai (Exodus 20:8-11), and the Jews were still observing the seventh day when Jesus was born.

Jesus kept the Sabbath (Luke 4:16; 23:54, 56; 24:1) until his death, which Luke indicates occurred on the day before the Sabbath: "Going to Pilate, [Joseph of Arimathea] asked for Jesus' body. Then he took it down, wrapped it in linen cloth and placed it in a tomb cut in the rock, one in which no one had yet been laid.

It was Preparation Day, and the Sabbath was about to begin" (Luke 23:52-54). Luke goes on to describe the actions of the women who followed Jesus. "The women who had come with Jesus from Galilee followed Joseph and saw the tomb and how his body was laid in it.

"Then they went home and prepared spices and perfumes. But they rested on the Sabbath in obedience to the commandment. On the first day of the week, very early in the morning, the women took the spices they had prepared and went to the tomb" (Luke 23:55, 56; 24:1).

The women discovered that Jesus had risen on Sunday morning; Christians acknowledge this fact by celebrating Easter. The day on which the women rested between the preparation day (Friday) when Jesus died, and the first day of the week (Easter Sunday) when Jesus rose again, had to be Saturday.

Scripture clearly portrays God designating the seventh day of the week as the Sabbath, and throughout the centuries of history recounted in the Bible, His followers celebrated it as such. Unless it was changed, the seventh day is still the Sabbath. So why do so many people today honor Sunday, the first day of the week, instead of the seventh day? (Why do so many people worship on Sunday?)

SEE CHART AT LINK

The table above includes some of the oldest languages known to man. One of these, the Babylonian language, was in use hundreds of years before the Hebrew race was founded by Abraham. That language designated the seventh day of the week as "sa-ba-tu", meaning rest day -- another indisputable proof that the Bible "Sabbath" was not, and is not, exclusively Jewish.

Very few realize that the word "Sabbath" and the concept of resting from work on the seventh day of the week (Saturday) is common to most of the ancient and modern languages of the world.

This is evidence totally independent of the Scriptures that confirms the biblical teaching that God's seventh-day Sabbath predates Judaism. The concept of a Saturday holy day of rest was understood, accepted, and practiced by virtually every culture from Babylon through modern times.

In the study of the many languages of mankind, you will find two important facts:

  1. In the majority of the principal languages the last, or seventh, day of the week is designated as "Sabbath."
  2. There is not even one language that designates another day as the "day of rest."
From these facts we may conclude that not only those people who called the last day of the week "Sabbath," but all other peoples and races, as far as they recognized any day of the week as "Sabbath," rested on the seventh day. In fact, it was recorded by the great historian Sozomen that in his time the whole known world, with the exception of Rome and Alexandria, observed the seventh day of the week.

"The people of Constantinople, and almost everywhere, assemble together on the Sabbath, as well as on the first day of the week, which custom is never observed at Rome or at Alexandria" (Socrates, "Ecclesiastical History," Book 7, chap.19).

Another interesting fact is that the words in the original languages that are used to designate the seventh day of the week as the "Sabbath" have continued to be very similar while the other words have been so changed over time that they are unintelligible to people of other language groups.

This is another proof that the Sabbath and the words used to designate the seventh day of the week as the "Sabbath day" originated at Creation in complete harmony with the biblical record found in Genesis 2:1–3.

LANGUAGE LIST

Which Day of the Week Is The Sabbath? | Sabbath Truth

For me, it is not credible that anyone could go back to the day that the Creator rested and figure out what that would be "Today". Choose a day for Sabbath and try to be consistent. I can't take anyone who makes those demands seriously.
 

sooda

Veteran Member
For me, it is not credible that anyone could go back to the day that the Creator rested and figure out what that would be "Today". Choose a day for Sabbath and try to be consistent. I can't take anyone who makes those demands seriously.

I think the people who get most exercised about the "Sabbath" are groups like 7th Day Adventists and Jehovah's Witnesses.

I always went to church on Friday mornings myself.
 

shmogie

Well-Known Member
and a tv Evangelical....Garner Ted Armstrong
did a 30minute speech on this in relation to the Christian belief
Good Friday is a false belief
and Jesus died on Wednesday
and rose on Saturday morning
Ol Garner Ted has recanted on so much of what his pop believed, maybe this too. Any way, they were both wrong.
 

shmogie

Well-Known Member
Link was already posted.. Babylonians and Persians and Assyrians all kept Sabbath before there were any Jews.

John’s account says that Jesus died before the Passover meal while Mark’s account places Jesus’ death after the Passover meal. It is claimed by these sites that these two accounts do not agree and must therefore be false. However, this apparent disagreement disappears once we understand what actually takes place during the Passover.

Bible Contradiction: Did Jesus Die Before or After the Passover?
None of your links work. unfortunately.

The Passover was the foreshadow of Christ, spilled blood preventing death.

It is irrelevant whether His sacrifice was before or after the Passover.

If there are inconsistencies in the accounts on some minor points, critics say they are false because they don´t align exactly.

Yêt if they did, the critics would say, using the word of the day, collusion, was present which makes the accounts untrue.
 

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
Despite doctrinal differences on various other topics, most Christians agree that a day of rest is an integral part of the Christian life. But on which day are we to rest?

"By the seventh day God had finished the work he had been doing; so on the seventh day he rested from all his work.

And God blessed the seventh day and made it holy, because on it he rested from all the work of creating that he had done" (Genesis 2:2, 3).

The very word "sabbath" means rest, and to rest implies that you have labored. It's logical, then, for God to have designated the last day of the week a day of rest. "The seventh day is a Sabbath to the Lord your God" (Exodus 20:10).

Language reflects the customs of the culture that speaks it. Nearly every culture, from Babylon through modern times, rested on the seventh day. As languages developed, the name for the seventh day of the week remained "rest day." In the mid 19th century, Dr. William Meade Jones created this "Chart of the Week," listing the name for the seventh day in 160 languages, including some of the most ancient (shown below). Babylonian, in use hundreds of years before Abraham or the giving of the Ten Commandments at Sinai, calls the seventh day of the week sa-ba-tu, meaning "rest day."

Even today more than 100 languages worldwide, many of them unrelated to ancient Hebrew, use the word "Sabbath" for Saturday—and none of them designate any other day as a day of rest. Though the world's language groups have evolved so as to be unintelligible from each other, the word for the seventh day of the week has remained fairly recognizable.

The Sabbath predates Judaism

For the thousands of years since Judaism began, an entire nation of Jews has kept track of the weekly cycle and observed the seventh day Sabbath, sometimes even without a calendar. Nevertheless, many rationalize that it's impossible to verify which day of the week is actually the biblical Sabbath because Pope Gregory XIII changed the calendar. The Julian calendar, instituted by Julius Caesar around 46 B.C., calculated the length of the year as 365 ¼ days. In reality, the year is 11 minutes less than 365 ¼ days. So by the 1580s, the calendar and the solar cycle were ten days off. In 1582, Gregory changed the calendar so that Friday, October 5, became Friday, October 15, creating the Gregorian calendar we use today. But it did not confuse the days of the week; Friday still follows Thursday, Saturday still follows Friday, and so on and so forth.

Exodus 16 recounts a series of weekly Sabbath miracles over a period of forty years. God reiterated the Sabbath at Sinai (Exodus 20:8-11), and the Jews were still observing the seventh day when Jesus was born.

Jesus kept the Sabbath (Luke 4:16; 23:54, 56; 24:1) until his death, which Luke indicates occurred on the day before the Sabbath: "Going to Pilate, [Joseph of Arimathea] asked for Jesus' body. Then he took it down, wrapped it in linen cloth and placed it in a tomb cut in the rock, one in which no one had yet been laid.

It was Preparation Day, and the Sabbath was about to begin" (Luke 23:52-54). Luke goes on to describe the actions of the women who followed Jesus. "The women who had come with Jesus from Galilee followed Joseph and saw the tomb and how his body was laid in it.

"Then they went home and prepared spices and perfumes. But they rested on the Sabbath in obedience to the commandment. On the first day of the week, very early in the morning, the women took the spices they had prepared and went to the tomb" (Luke 23:55, 56; 24:1).

The women discovered that Jesus had risen on Sunday morning; Christians acknowledge this fact by celebrating Easter. The day on which the women rested between the preparation day (Friday) when Jesus died, and the first day of the week (Easter Sunday) when Jesus rose again, had to be Saturday.

Scripture clearly portrays God designating the seventh day of the week as the Sabbath, and throughout the centuries of history recounted in the Bible, His followers celebrated it as such. Unless it was changed, the seventh day is still the Sabbath. So why do so many people today honor Sunday, the first day of the week, instead of the seventh day? (Why do so many people worship on Sunday?)

SEE CHART AT LINK

The table above includes some of the oldest languages known to man. One of these, the Babylonian language, was in use hundreds of years before the Hebrew race was founded by Abraham. That language designated the seventh day of the week as "sa-ba-tu", meaning rest day -- another indisputable proof that the Bible "Sabbath" was not, and is not, exclusively Jewish.

Very few realize that the word "Sabbath" and the concept of resting from work on the seventh day of the week (Saturday) is common to most of the ancient and modern languages of the world.

This is evidence totally independent of the Scriptures that confirms the biblical teaching that God's seventh-day Sabbath predates Judaism. The concept of a Saturday holy day of rest was understood, accepted, and practiced by virtually every culture from Babylon through modern times.

In the study of the many languages of mankind, you will find two important facts:

  1. In the majority of the principal languages the last, or seventh, day of the week is designated as "Sabbath."
  2. There is not even one language that designates another day as the "day of rest."
From these facts we may conclude that not only those people who called the last day of the week "Sabbath," but all other peoples and races, as far as they recognized any day of the week as "Sabbath," rested on the seventh day. In fact, it was recorded by the great historian Sozomen that in his time the whole known world, with the exception of Rome and Alexandria, observed the seventh day of the week.

"The people of Constantinople, and almost everywhere, assemble together on the Sabbath, as well as on the first day of the week, which custom is never observed at Rome or at Alexandria" (Socrates, "Ecclesiastical History," Book 7, chap.19).

Another interesting fact is that the words in the original languages that are used to designate the seventh day of the week as the "Sabbath" have continued to be very similar while the other words have been so changed over time that they are unintelligible to people of other language groups.

This is another proof that the Sabbath and the words used to designate the seventh day of the week as the "Sabbath day" originated at Creation in complete harmony with the biblical record found in Genesis 2:1–3.

LANGUAGE LIST

Which Day of the Week Is The Sabbath? | Sabbath Truth


Actually it is Friday and though an evening meal of spaghetti and meatballs is traditional it is not mandatory. Any pasta based entree will do. As long as there is plenty of it. Oh, and beer. Did I forget to mention beer? Ramen.

Flying Spaghetti Monster | Description, History, & Facts
 

sooda

Veteran Member
None of your links work. unfortunately.

The Passover was the foreshadow of Christ, spilled blood preventing death.

It is irrelevant whether His sacrifice was before or after the Passover.

If there are inconsistencies in the accounts on some minor points, critics say they are false because they don´t align exactly.

Yêt if they did, the critics would say, using the word of the day, collusion, was present which makes the accounts untrue.

Passover is a story from the Exodus. They would not have a body hanging on a crucifix during a high holy day.
 

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
None of your links work. unfortunately.

The Passover was the foreshadow of Christ, spilled blood preventing death.

It is irrelevant whether His sacrifice was before or after the Passover.

If there are inconsistencies in the accounts on some minor points, critics say they are false because they don´t align exactly.

Yêt if they did, the critics would say, using the word of the day, collusion, was present which makes the accounts untrue.
They work fine for me. Perhaps your computer has a censor of some sort. Are you using any filtering software?
 

Ellen Brown

Well-Known Member
I think the people who get most exercised about the "Sabbath" are groups like 7th Day Adventists and Jehovah's Witnesses.

I always went to church on Friday mornings myself.

Muslims do Friday, Jews do Friday night and Saturday, SAs do Saturday, and Christians do Sunday. Maybe I'll start a religion and do Wednesday? :)
 

shmogie

Well-Known Member
Passover is a story from the Exodus. They would not have a body hanging on a crucifix during a high holy day.
The Exodus had not started at the time of the Passover. A crucifix? You mean a cross ? The first Passover was all about blood, and it wasn´t yet a high holy day. Do you think the celebration of the Passover after the first, they would have smeared blood all over their doorway´s ?
 

sooda

Veteran Member
The Exodus had not started at the time of the Passover. A crucifix? You mean a cross ? The first Passover was all about blood, and it wasn´t yet a high holy day. Do you think the celebration of the Passover after the first, they would have smeared blood all over their doorway´s ?

That's what the Passover commemorates.
 

QuestioningMind

Well-Known Member
Despite doctrinal differences on various other topics, most Christians agree that a day of rest is an integral part of the Christian life. But on which day are we to rest?

"By the seventh day God had finished the work he had been doing; so on the seventh day he rested from all his work.

And God blessed the seventh day and made it holy, because on it he rested from all the work of creating that he had done" (Genesis 2:2, 3).

The very word "sabbath" means rest, and to rest implies that you have labored. It's logical, then, for God to have designated the last day of the week a day of rest. "The seventh day is a Sabbath to the Lord your God" (Exodus 20:10).

Language reflects the customs of the culture that speaks it. Nearly every culture, from Babylon through modern times, rested on the seventh day. As languages developed, the name for the seventh day of the week remained "rest day." In the mid 19th century, Dr. William Meade Jones created this "Chart of the Week," listing the name for the seventh day in 160 languages, including some of the most ancient (shown below). Babylonian, in use hundreds of years before Abraham or the giving of the Ten Commandments at Sinai, calls the seventh day of the week sa-ba-tu, meaning "rest day."

Even today more than 100 languages worldwide, many of them unrelated to ancient Hebrew, use the word "Sabbath" for Saturday—and none of them designate any other day as a day of rest. Though the world's language groups have evolved so as to be unintelligible from each other, the word for the seventh day of the week has remained fairly recognizable.

The Sabbath predates Judaism

For the thousands of years since Judaism began, an entire nation of Jews has kept track of the weekly cycle and observed the seventh day Sabbath, sometimes even without a calendar. Nevertheless, many rationalize that it's impossible to verify which day of the week is actually the biblical Sabbath because Pope Gregory XIII changed the calendar. The Julian calendar, instituted by Julius Caesar around 46 B.C., calculated the length of the year as 365 ¼ days. In reality, the year is 11 minutes less than 365 ¼ days. So by the 1580s, the calendar and the solar cycle were ten days off. In 1582, Gregory changed the calendar so that Friday, October 5, became Friday, October 15, creating the Gregorian calendar we use today. But it did not confuse the days of the week; Friday still follows Thursday, Saturday still follows Friday, and so on and so forth.

Exodus 16 recounts a series of weekly Sabbath miracles over a period of forty years. God reiterated the Sabbath at Sinai (Exodus 20:8-11), and the Jews were still observing the seventh day when Jesus was born.

Jesus kept the Sabbath (Luke 4:16; 23:54, 56; 24:1) until his death, which Luke indicates occurred on the day before the Sabbath: "Going to Pilate, [Joseph of Arimathea] asked for Jesus' body. Then he took it down, wrapped it in linen cloth and placed it in a tomb cut in the rock, one in which no one had yet been laid.

It was Preparation Day, and the Sabbath was about to begin" (Luke 23:52-54). Luke goes on to describe the actions of the women who followed Jesus. "The women who had come with Jesus from Galilee followed Joseph and saw the tomb and how his body was laid in it.

"Then they went home and prepared spices and perfumes. But they rested on the Sabbath in obedience to the commandment. On the first day of the week, very early in the morning, the women took the spices they had prepared and went to the tomb" (Luke 23:55, 56; 24:1).

The women discovered that Jesus had risen on Sunday morning; Christians acknowledge this fact by celebrating Easter. The day on which the women rested between the preparation day (Friday) when Jesus died, and the first day of the week (Easter Sunday) when Jesus rose again, had to be Saturday.

Scripture clearly portrays God designating the seventh day of the week as the Sabbath, and throughout the centuries of history recounted in the Bible, His followers celebrated it as such. Unless it was changed, the seventh day is still the Sabbath. So why do so many people today honor Sunday, the first day of the week, instead of the seventh day? (Why do so many people worship on Sunday?)

SEE CHART AT LINK

The table above includes some of the oldest languages known to man. One of these, the Babylonian language, was in use hundreds of years before the Hebrew race was founded by Abraham. That language designated the seventh day of the week as "sa-ba-tu", meaning rest day -- another indisputable proof that the Bible "Sabbath" was not, and is not, exclusively Jewish.

Very few realize that the word "Sabbath" and the concept of resting from work on the seventh day of the week (Saturday) is common to most of the ancient and modern languages of the world.

This is evidence totally independent of the Scriptures that confirms the biblical teaching that God's seventh-day Sabbath predates Judaism. The concept of a Saturday holy day of rest was understood, accepted, and practiced by virtually every culture from Babylon through modern times.

In the study of the many languages of mankind, you will find two important facts:

  1. In the majority of the principal languages the last, or seventh, day of the week is designated as "Sabbath."
  2. There is not even one language that designates another day as the "day of rest."
From these facts we may conclude that not only those people who called the last day of the week "Sabbath," but all other peoples and races, as far as they recognized any day of the week as "Sabbath," rested on the seventh day. In fact, it was recorded by the great historian Sozomen that in his time the whole known world, with the exception of Rome and Alexandria, observed the seventh day of the week.

"The people of Constantinople, and almost everywhere, assemble together on the Sabbath, as well as on the first day of the week, which custom is never observed at Rome or at Alexandria" (Socrates, "Ecclesiastical History," Book 7, chap.19).

Another interesting fact is that the words in the original languages that are used to designate the seventh day of the week as the "Sabbath" have continued to be very similar while the other words have been so changed over time that they are unintelligible to people of other language groups.

This is another proof that the Sabbath and the words used to designate the seventh day of the week as the "Sabbath day" originated at Creation in complete harmony with the biblical record found in Genesis 2:1–3.

LANGUAGE LIST

Which Day of the Week Is The Sabbath? | Sabbath Truth

Yet ANOTHER example of what a horribly ineffective communicator this all-powerful all-knowing God happens to be. All of the believers agree that God wants them to rest at the end of the week, but SOMEHOW God failed to make it crystal clear exactly WHEN the week ends. Seems like a rather important detail, considering you have a God telling people they should kill those who sinfully work on the Sabbath.
 

rrobs

Well-Known Member
That God rested on the seventh day is certain. Equally certain is God commanded Israel to rest on the seventh day. But there is yet another certainty that is true since Christ rose from the dead: we are no longer under the law. We are no longer bound by the law of the Sabbath.

Rom 14:5,

One doth judge one day above another, and another doth judge every day [alike]; let each in his own mind be fully assured.​

Col 2:16,

Let no one, then, judge you in eating or in drinking, or in respect of a feast, or of a new moon, or of sabbaths,
Ultimately the entire OT was about Jesus (Luke 24:27, John 5:29). It was his assignment to follow it to the letter. That included the Sabbath. Israel was less than perfect in that regard and, as evidenced by this post, Christians are not even in agreement as to which day it is. But that's not all. Few, if any, actually follow the letter of the Sabbath law. I think it is assumed that going to church on whatever day one thinks is the Sabbath is enough. That falls as short of the requirement as the Jews fell short.

Bottom line, Jesus fulfilled that law to the letter as he did every other law. He never once sinned. Not bad for a man with free will and who was tempted just like the rest of us! But I digress. When Jesus uttered his last words, "it is finished" he entered into the true Sabbath rest that God intended all along.

Heb 4:10,

for he (Jesus) who did enter into his rest, he also rested from his works, as God from His own.
Hebrew 4:1-11 is a good read for those interested in the true Sabbath, which has nothing to day with a certain day of the week. At least that's the way it is in this age of grace.
 

InChrist

Free4ever
Despite doctrinal differences on various other topics, most Christians agree that a day of rest is an integral part of the Christian life. But on which day are we to rest?
Most Christians do not consider the Sabbath an integral part of the Christian life at all, but gather and worship on Sunday, the first day of the week when Jesus rose from the dead. Rest is found everyday, all the time for the believer in Jesus Christ. But the Jews know the Sabbath is the seventh day because it is a sign of the covenant between Israel and God.

Therefore the children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath, to observe the Sabbath throughout their generations as a perpetual covenant. It is a sign between Me and the children of Israel forever; for in six days the Lord made the heavens and the earth, and on the seventh day He rested and was refreshed. Ex. 31:16-17
 

sooda

Veteran Member
Every day if you are lazy enough.

For Egyptians the week was ten days long (tp ra mD in hieroglyphs, literally "upon 10 days") and every tenth day was a non-working day.

This only applied to the peasant classes, however, since every day was a non-working day for the nobility.
 

MJFlores

Well-Known Member
Tradition has it that Jesus rose on Sunday morning. Tradition has it that Saturday is the Sabbath for Jews and some Christian denominations.

Where in scripture does it say Monday morning or Tuesday?

John 19:31 New International Version (NIV)
Now it was the day of Preparation, and the next day was to be a special Sabbath. Because the Jewish leaders did not want the bodies left on the crosses during the Sabbath, they asked Pilate to have the legs broken and the bodies taken down.

Mark 15:34 New International Version (NIV)
And at three in the afternoon Jesus cried out in a loud voice, “Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachthani?” (which means “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”).

1st day Friday 3:00 pm to Saturday 3:00 pm

2nd day Saturday 3:00 pm to Sunday 3:00 pm

3rd day Sunday 3:00 pm to Monday 3:00 pm



Mark 9:31 New International Version (NIV)

because he was teaching his disciples. He said to them, “The Son of Man is going to be delivered into the hands of men. They will kill him, and after three days he will rise.”

Now that is in the Bible. Which should we follow? Tradition or the word of God?

Tradition has it that Jesus rose on Sunday morning. Tradition has it that Saturday is the Sabbath for Jews and some Christian denominations.

Where in scripture does it say Monday morning or Tuesday?

Mark 7:9 New International Version (NIV)
And he continued, “You have a fine way of setting aside the commands of God in order to observe your own traditions!
 

sooda

Veteran Member
John 19:31 New International Version (NIV)
Now it was the day of Preparation, and the next day was to be a special Sabbath. Because the Jewish leaders did not want the bodies left on the crosses during the Sabbath, they asked Pilate to have the legs broken and the bodies taken down.

Mark 15:34 New International Version (NIV)
And at three in the afternoon Jesus cried out in a loud voice, “Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachthani?” (which means “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”).

1st day Friday 3:00 pm to Saturday 3:00 pm

2nd day Saturday 3:00 pm to Sunday 3:00 pm

3rd day Sunday 3:00 pm to Monday 3:00 pm



Mark 9:31 New International Version (NIV)

because he was teaching his disciples. He said to them, “The Son of Man is going to be delivered into the hands of men. They will kill him, and after three days he will rise.”

Now that is in the Bible. Which should we follow? Tradition or the word of God?



Mark 7:9 New International Version (NIV)
And he continued, “You have a fine way of setting aside the commands of God in order to observe your own traditions!

Where is the contradiction? Jesus was taken down after 3 PM on Friday and before the start of the Sabbath. John was not writing to a Jewish audience.. He was probably referring to Roman time.
 
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