Your question supposes there is still a sabbath that follows the old covenant pattern.
What changed were the covenants. The new covenant has no requirement to observe days. The new covenant is about the spirit of the law sans the letter (Rom. 7:6; II Cor. 3).
Old covenant points of law do not come forward into the new covenant. You cannot put the new wine (new covenant) into the old wineskin (old covenant structure). The two are totally different (Jer 31:31; Heb 8:9) and you can only be party to one or the other.
A long time after the Sabbath day was established it was on a Saturday now, due to some religious beliefs, it was changed to Sunday. A little history: The Greeks believed in many different Gods, the Sun God, The God of Love and Fertility and so on. Some scholars believe these Gods are what "named" the days of the week. Such as, on "Sun"day the Greeks worshiped the Sun God, on "Wednesday" they would marry or fornicate on the day of the God of Fertility. So, the Sabbath day was soon related (I'm pretty sure) to Saturday Ie: Sa(bbath)day. Moving a little farther ahead in time: The Protestants felt that some things in The Bible needed "altered" such as the sabbath day. They were firm believers in the Sabbath day but also felt that a "normal work week" was Monday through Friday, work a little Saturday rest Sunday and work again Monday. So you can kinda see how it changed. The Greeks "named" the days but the Protestant church "altered" the meaning of each day and declared them. The combination of the two show what the original Sabbath day was.. and how it was changed later for, I guess you could say, convienence. Hope it helped. Good luck to you and please feel free to correct me if you find otherwise. - Miranda
Days did not change; the covenants changed. The new covenant has no requirement to observe days. The sabbath, like all of the old covenant requirements, came to an end. Christians are not a party to the old covenant.
Answer:
Since there is no biblical authorization that changes the Sabbath Commandment... it has been, admittedly, commanded by the Roman Catholic church that the first day of the week to be observed.
The bible never mentions the sabbath day changing. Most Christian churches do not worship on the sabbath however because they feel it is simply a Jewish tradition that is no longer applicable with the new covenant of Christ.
The Jewish sabbath is on Saturday. Jesus Christ came back to life on a Sunday. This is why the Christian sabbath is on Sunday.
The Jewish sabbath is on Saturday. Jesus Christ came back to life on a Sunday. This is why the Christian sabbath is on Sunday.
The Resurrection, which took place on Sunday. Christians honour that as their sabbath.
The sabbath was changed to Sunday instead of Saturday, Due to saturday actually being the sabbath and Sunday is the first offical day of the week. You are to rest on the sabbath, So the churches made it where you gathered on Sunday instead of the sabbath itself.
Sabbath is the resting day in a week. Judaism holds Sabbath on Saturday. They don't do anything on that day. Christianity changed Sabbath to Sunday to remember Jesus' resurrection, and that's why they have church services on Sunday.
It is important to note that the sabbath day was never "changed". Christian Churches still recognise Saturday as the sabbath, they just choose not to worship on that day preferring Sunday instead because it was the day Jesus rose from the dead.
The Roman Emperor Constantine changed the Christian Sabbath from Saturday to Sunday in 321 CE.
Stuart Bryan has written: 'The taste of Sabbath' -- subject(s): Sunday, Sabbath 'The taste of Sabbath' -- subject(s): Sunday, Sabbath
Sunday is a day of sabbath for christians
Sunday
no
For the Jews, the Sabbath (or Shabbat) has never been changed.
It is true that Roman churches switch the Sabbath to Sunday. This day is for God.