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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: STE-SUS |
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SUNDAY , or the LORD'S DAY (1) Toil i)kiov a jApa, dies solis; ,) KupcaKil nipa, dies dominica, dies dominicus 1), in the Christian world, the first day of the week , celebrated in memory of the resurrection of Christ, as the principal day for public worship . An additional reason for the sanctity of the day may have been found in its association with Pentecost or Whitsun? There is no evidence that in the earliest years of Christianity there was any formal observance of Sunday as a day of rest or any general cessation of work. But it seems to have from the first been set apart for worship . Thus according to Acts xx. 7, the disciples in Troas met weekly on the first day of the week for exhortation and the breaking of bread; r Cor. xvi. 2 implies at least some observance of the day; and the solemn commemorative character it had very early acquired is strikingly indicated by an incidental expression of the writer of the Apocalypse (i. ro), who for the first time gives it that name (" the Lord's Day ") by which it is almost invariably referred to by all writers of the century immediately succeeding apostolic times? Indications' of the manner of its observance during this period are not wanting. Teaching of the Apostles (c. 14)1 The Teutonic and Scandinavian nations adopt the former designation (Sunday, Sonntag, Sbnclag, &c.), the Latin nations the latter (dimanche, domenica, domino, &c.). : From an expression in the Epistle of Barnabas (c. 15), it would almost seem as if the Ascension also was believed by some to have taken place on a Sunday. 6 In the Epistle of Barnabas already referred to (c.15) it is called "'the eighth day ": " We keep the eighth day with joyfulness, the day also in which Jesus rose again from the dead." Cf. Justin Martyr
letter of Dionysius of Corinth (A.D. 175) to Soter
letter to Trajan in which he speaks of the meetings of the Christians " on a stated day " need only be alluded to. The first writer who mentions the name of Sunday as applicable to the Lord's day is Justin Martyr
As long as the Jewish Christian element
is " hold your solemn assemblies and rejoice every Sabbath ta. day (excepting one), and every Lord's day." Thus the earliest observance of the day was confined to congregational worship, either in the early morning or late
series of imperial decrees had enjoined with increasing stringency an abstinence from labour on Sun-day, it was inevitable that the Christian conscience should be roused on the subject of the Sabbath rest also, and in many minds the tendency would be such as finds expression in the Apostolic Constitutions (viii. 33) : " Let the slaves work five days; but on the Sabbath day and the Lord's day let them have4 The longer recension runs: " But let every one of you keep the Sabbath after a spiritual manner . . , And after the observance of the Sabbath let every friend of Christ keep the Lord's day as a festival, the resurrection day, the queen and chief
leisure to go to church for instruction in piety." There is evidence of the same tendency in the opposite canon (29) of the council of Laodicea (363), which forbids Christians from Judaizing and resting on the Sabbath day, and actually enjoins them to work on that day, preferring the Lord's day and so far as possible resting as Christians. About this time accordingly we find traces of a disposition in Christian thinkers to distinguish between a temporary and a permanent element
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