10. The Papacy and The Lord’s Day
“The Papacy changed the Sabbath.” (Replies to Canright, p. 119) This is a leading tenet in the Seventh-day Adventist faith, strongly urged in all their teachings. Here is a sample […]
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“The Papacy changed the Sabbath.” (Replies to Canright, p. 119) This is a leading tenet in the Seventh-day Adventist faith, strongly urged in all their teachings. Here is a sample […]
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This world-renowned council was held at Nice in Grecian territory near Constantinople, A.D. 325. It was the first general council of the Christian Church. Dean Stanley, in his History of […]
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Constantine, the first Christian emperor of Rome, issued the following edict in A.D. 32: “Let all the judges and town people, and the occupation of all trades, rest on the […]
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This is a very important fact bearing on the Sunday question. Adventists are constantly pointing to “Rome,”to the “Pope of Rome,” to the “Roman Church,” to the “Roman Papacy,” to […]
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We will now present historical evidence, proving that the observance of the first day of the week, as a day of worship, was universal among Christians in the days immediately […]
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One of the chief arguments which Seventh-Day Adventists make against Sunday observance is this: They say that the pagan nations, especially the Romans, regarded Sunday as a holiday, or festival […]
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The above [title] is the universally accepted doctrine of the Roman Catholic Church. It is so taught in all her doctrinal works. I have examined a large number of her […]
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Adventists repeat this assertion, in various ways, so constantly that their people believe it to be absolutely true. Their children are taught this as thoroughly as they are the Bible. […]
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As early as 1847, in their very first printed publication, A Word to the Little Flock, published at Brunswick, Maine, May 30, 1846, Elder White argued from Rev. 13:11-18, that […]
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Note: In this chapter I deign to give only such a brief outline of Seventh-day Adventism as will enable the reader to comprehend why this book is written. For a […]
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