J
jschwartz
Guest
The Seventh Day Sabbath never changed, per se. However, Sunday is the Lord’s Day, the Day we associate with the Resurrection, and that’s why Christians eventually used the day for worship. The Sabbath is the operative sign of God’s covenant with the Jewish People, and rightfully is theirs, with the dual commandment of zachor v’ shamor, remembering it and guarding it. Many in the early church held both days as sacred, evidenced in Ignatius’s letter to the Magnesians ca. 110. Later, observance of the Sabbath was seen as a legalistic/Judaizing element, and it was uprooted from mainstream Christendom. In Rabbinic Judaism, the Sabbath is seen as such a special institution between God and His people that those heathens who do keep the Sabbath are chayav mitah, i.e. worthy of a capital punishment, because it is seen as a breach of the covenant. On the other hand, a resident alien (ger toshav) may not violate shabbat, because that is akin to idolatry, and according to many rabbinic scholars, Christians have the status of resident alien.