![]() ![]() īut, does this document support the observance of Sunday? The late French Cardinal Jean-Guenole-Marie Danielou is amongst those who have claimed that it supports Sunday observance by early Christians. Many consider it to contain the earliest indirect reference to Sunday worship by Christians. The Didache, also known as the Teaching of the Twelve, is an ancient letter that may have been written near the time of the Apostle John’s death. Many on the internet and elsewhere, have pointed to some basically 19 th century translations of certain ancient documents in an attempt to support their contention that Sunday was observed early on by the original Christians. This is the first part of a multi-part series explaining why certain early documents that are claimed against the seventh-day Sabbath are misunderstood and not actually against it. The Bible Sabbath Association, which is not a Church of God group (though it has members that are in the COGs, as well as members who are not), published a version of the following in an edition (March-April 2016) of its The Sabbath Sentinel magazine: ![]() ![]() While there are various opinions about this, some of those opinions are not based upon biblical or historical fact. Did early Christians keep Saturday or Sunday? ![]()
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