The Christian Sabbath: Is It of Divine Origin?

audiobook

The Christian Sabbath: Is It of Divine Origin?

by John E. (John Eleazer) Remsburg

EN·~16 minutes·2 chapters

Chapters

2 total
1

THE CHRISTIAN SABBATH - IS IT OF DIVINE ORIGIN?

0:03
2

By J. B. Remsburg

16:11

Description

The work opens with a clear challenge: is the Christian Sabbath a command from God or a human invention? The author argues that Sunday has no special divine status, tracing its roots to ancient pagan celebrations of the sun and showing how early Christian writers repeatedly downplayed any obligation to set aside a particular day. By drawing on a wide range of sources—from the apostle Paul to Luther, Calvin, and the early church fathers—the book builds a case that the Sabbath was gradually reshaped by cultural and political forces rather than scripted by Scripture.

In a straightforward, scholarly style, the author lets the voices of historic figures speak for themselves, then connects their insights to modern debates over compulsory rest days and religious liberty. Listeners will encounter concise excerpts from Roman, patristic, and Reformation texts, each framed with brief commentary that highlights how attitudes toward the Sabbath have shifted over centuries. This investigation offers anyone interested in church history, biblical interpretation, or the origins of modern weekend customs a solid grounding for re‑examining a familiar tradition.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~16 minutes (15K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Widger

Release date

2011-12-22

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the author

John E. (John Eleazer) Remsburg

John E. (John Eleazer) Remsburg

1848–1919

A sharp, outspoken voice in America’s freethought movement, this Civil War veteran turned teacher, lecturer, and writer challenged religious orthodoxy with plain, argumentative prose. His books on skepticism, secularism, and figures like Thomas Paine and Abraham Lincoln made him a notable public controversialist of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

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