Question · Question

Sunday as a Holy Day

Why do Christians worship on Sundays?

Is Sunday the "Day of the Lord"?

Did Jesus abolish the Sabbath?

And what does Lucifer have to do with the calendar?

1. God's time was set from the beginning

"So God blessed the seventh day and made it holy, because on it God rested from all his work."
, Genesis 2:3

Long before Moses, long before Israel, the seventh day, the Sabbath (Saturday), was blessed and set apart by God himself.

Not as a burden, but as a sign: rest in completion.

An eternal sign between God and man.

A picture of the coming peace in Christ. God does not count as people do, he has set times (Gen 1:14) that do not adapt to Rome or religion but to his order: evening and morning, day 1, day 2... day 7.

2. The attack on God's times, a Luciferian plan

In Daniel 7:25 there is a prophetic word about a rebellious, religious system: "And he shall think to change the times and the law." This power, historically and spiritually, attacks God's order. It changes calendars, festivals, commandments, and with them the center of worship.

Saturday is made into Sunday. The divine sign of completion is replaced by a Roman-paganized copy. Why? Because Lucifer does not want God to be worshiped the way God wants. He wants to be worshiped himself, even through subtle shifts.

3. How did Sunday worship come about?, A devilishly clever deception

Jesus and the first Christians continued to keep the biblical Sabbath (Saturday). In all of Acts there is no shifting of the holy day to Sunday. The change began not in the Bible, but in Roman power politics, with one man:

Emperor Constantine (around 306-337 AD)

Constantine was not a Christian, but a clever power strategist and sun worshiper.

Before he was baptized (allegedly on his deathbed), Constantine worshiped Sol Invictus throughout his life, the unconquerable sun god. This cult was the official Roman state cult from 274 AD under Emperor Aurelian, and Constantine carried the sun god on his coins even after his "conversion." The sun was his god. Then came the problem: Christianity grew too strong.

In Roman society Christianity became increasingly influential. But: it was fractured, persecuted, not fit for the state. The Christians held to the Sabbath, refused the sun-god festivities, and spoke of

one single king, Jesus

Constantine could not tolerate that. So a chess move was needed, a compromise between pagan emperor cult and growing Christendom.

The move of the father of lies: deceive through apparent unity. Constantine allegedly "confessed himself" to Christianity, but subtly changed it from within. In the year 321 AD he issued the famous Sunday Law:

"On the venerable day of the sun let the magistrates and people residing in cities rest...", Edict of Constantine, 321 AD

Not: "on the day of the Lord." Not: "on the seventh day." But: on the dies solis, the day of the sun.

With this he fused two fronts: pagan sun worship was preserved.

The Christians received a "new rest day", and were systemically reprogrammed. Thus a new religion arose:

No longer Christ-centered, but sun-centered. A religious-political hybrid entity that later passed itself off as "the Church", but had nothing more to do with the Gospel.

Who thought through this plan? Not Constantine alone. But the father of lies

(John 8:44): Lucifer himself.

His goal: change the time. Change the center of worship.

Change the God who is worshiped, subtly, without anyone noticing.

"He shall think to change the times and the law."
, Daniel 7:25

The introduction of Sunday is therefore not simply ecclesial error, it is a deliberate, historical attack on God's order of time and a seduction into the worship of a false light.

4. What is the spiritual problem with Sunday?

Not the day itself, but the system behind it:

Sunday was elevated to push aside God's seal (the Sabbath).

It was set as a sign of religious power over Scripture. It was introduced to redirect true worship, from God's order to a system invented by people.

"In vain do they worship me, teaching as doctrines the commandments of men."
, Matthew 15:9

Whoever considers "Sunday" the holy day because everyone does it, is not following Scripture, but a tradition introduced against God's order.

5. What did Jesus say about the Sabbath?

Jesus lived the Sabbath. He clarified it, against legalistic distortion. But he never abolished it.

"The Sabbath was made for man."
, Mark 2:27

Jesus did not say: "I have come to end the Sabbath," but: "I am Lord of the Sabbath." (verse 28) He is Lord over God's time, not over its abolition.

6. What about the resurrection on Sunday?

Yes, Jesus rose on the first day of the week, but he never sanctified, blessed or declared that day as a new day of worship. In Acts or the letters we find not a single instruction to celebrate on Sunday. The few references (e.g. 1 Cor 16:2) concern collections, not worship or the setting of a Sabbath.

7. Why is this so important today?

Because worship always has to do with authority.

Whom you honor, him you serve.

If you discard God's times and replace them with human ones, you can be outwardly pious, and yet inwardly deceived.

Sunday is a product of: Roman politics, religious claim to power, prophetically announced rebellion against God's times.

Conclusion:

Sunday was never sanctified by God. It was introduced to replace the divine schedule.

Not through love, but through control. God's holy day is and remains the seventh day, the Sabbath.

Whoever understands this sees:

It is not just about a weekday. It is about the sign of whom you really serve. Legalism is not the goal, but:

Back to God's times. Back to his order. Back to truth.

Share