www.bible.ca
www.bible.ca is a web site operated by Steve Rudd, and contains a lot of
material that we would likely agree with. However, we are hesitant to
accept
his material at face value because of some pretty major discrepancies.
On other parts of our site, we deal with criticisms that www.bible.ca
levels
directly at Ellen White. For this analysis here, we'll instead take a look
at some information from www.bible.ca that touches on one of Mrs. White's
favorite topics, the seventh-day Sabbath. On one of his pages, Steve makes
the following claims:
The Historical Record!
1.. Christians always wor****pped on the first day (Sunday)
. . .
10.. While Sabbatarians will quote 20th century authors who guess
about what happened 1900 years earlier, we quote Christians whose writings
are 1900 years old and spoke what they saw!
The record of history, from the Resurrection of Christ, [sic]
Christians have always wor****pped on the first day of the week (Sunday)
and
never on the Sabbath (7th day).
Then to back up this rather bold claim, Steve gives a number of quotations
from the church "fathers."
Here are just a couple:
a.. 90AD DIDACHE: ...every Lord's day, hold your solemn
assemblies,
and rejoice: for he will be guilty of sin who fasts on the Lord's day,
being
the day of the resurrection... (Constitutions of the Holy Apostles,
Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. 7, pg. 449)
b.. 90AD DIDACHE: And on the day of our Lord's resurrection, which
is the Lord's day, meet more diligently, sending praise to God that made
the
universe by Jesus, and sent Him to us, and condescended to let Him suffer,
and raised Him from the dead. Otherwise what apology will he make to God
who
does not assemble on that day to hear the saving word concerning the
resurrection...? (Constitutions of the Holy Apostles, Ante-Nicene Fathers
Vol. 7, pg. 423)
Sound pretty good? Actually, these two quotes are neither from the Didache
nor from 90 AD. They're from the Apostolic Constitutions, a do***ent from
around 250 to 350 AD.
By that point in time, some Christians had started calling Sunday the
Lord's
Day, a practice dating from the second half of the second century AD.
While
most Christians were still wor****pping on the Sabbath, some were not, and
many were wor****pping on both the Sabbath and Sunday.
How do we know that? Why, the very do***ent that Steve Rudd quotes from on
www.bible.ca tells us so. Take a look at what Steve omitted from these two
quotes:
a.. [c. 250-300 AD Apostolic Constitutions:] . . . every
Sabbath-day
excepting one, and every Lord's day, hold your solemn assemblies, and
rejoice [without fasting] . . . .-bk. 5, sec. 3, xx.
b.. [c. 250-300 AD Apostolic Constitutions:] . . . but assemble
yourselves together every day, morning and evening, singing psalms and
praying in the Lord's house: . . . but principally on the Sabbath-day. And
on the day of our Lord's resurrection, which is the Lord's day, meet more
diligently . . . .-bk. 2, sec. 7, lix.
Of course you see the problem. You cannot ethically use a quotation that
commands Christians in 300 AD to meet "every Sabbath-day" and "principally
on the Sabbath-day" to prove that "Christians have . . . never
[wor****pped]
on the Sabbath."
We pointed out these and other discrepancies about these quotations to
Steve, and after emailing back and forth a number of times, he replied:
Ok Bob, you were very quite right. I fired the quote collector
guy!
That raises the question, Who was the quote collector? Did Steve tamper
with
these quotations himself, or did he "plagiarize" them from someone else?
(We
use the term "plagiarize" only because his site repeatedly accuses Ellen
White of plagiarism.) His page gives no credit whatsoever to any secondary
source from which he might have gotten these tampered quotations, but for
that matter, neither do the other web sites which copy these quotes
verbatim
without giving credit, even falsely stating that they come from "90AD
DIDACHE."
Well, Steve updated the page in question in November of 2003, though as of
June 2004, he has not updated three other pages that also refer to some of
these so-called Didache quotes. While the page in question still says,
"The
record of history, from the Resurrection of Christ, [sic] Christians have
always wor****pped on the first day of the week (Sunday) and never on the
Sabbath (7th day)," it also gives more context for these quotes so that
the
reader can see that his statement is false. All the more is this true
since
he included the following quote:
a.. 350 AD APOSTOLIC CONSTITUTIONS ". . . But keep the Sabbath,
and
the Lord's day festival; . . . ." (Constitutions of the Holy Apostles,
book
7)
Yes, it's absolutely true. The very do***ent that's supposed to prove that
"Christians . . . never [wor****pped] on the Sabbath" actually commands
Christians to not only wor****p on the Sabbath, but also to keep the
Sabbath,
around 300 AD.
And that's just part of why we feel that the information on www.bible.ca
is
unreliable, and why we are reluctant to accept any of it at face value.


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