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| He enjoins the General Observance of the Lord's Day, and the Day of Preparation. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XVIII.—He enjoins the General
Observance of the Lord’s Day, and the Day of
Preparation.
He ordained, too, that one day should be regarded as a special
occasion for prayer: I mean that which is truly the first and chief of
all, the day of our Lord and Saviour. The entire care of his household
was entrusted to deacons and other ministers consecrated to the service
of God, and distinguished by gravity of life and every other virtue:
while his trusty body guard, strong in affection and fidelity to his
person, found in their emperor an instructor in the practice of piety,
and like him held the Lord’s salutary day in honor and performed
on that day the devotions which he loved. The same observance was
recommended by this blessed prince to all classes of his subjects: his
earnest desire being gradually to lead all mankind to the worship of
God. Accordingly he enjoined on all the subjects of the Roman empire to
observe the Lord’s day, as a day of rest, and also to honor the
day which precedes the Sabbath; in memory, I suppose, of what the
Saviour of mankind is recorded to have achieved on that day.3318
3318 [That is, Friday. The passage is not very intelligible. Does it
mean that Constantine ordered this day to be distinguished in some way
from others, as the day of the Lord’s
crucifixion?—Bag.] | And since his desire was to teach his
whole army zealously to honor the Saviour’s day (which derives
its name from light, and from the sun),3319
3319 [The decree of Constantine for the general observance of Sunday
appears to have been issued a.d. 321, before
which time both “the old and new sabbath” were observed by
Christians.
“Constantine (says
Gibbon, ch. 20, note 8) styles the Lord’s day Dies solis,
a name which could not offend the ears of his Pagan
subjects.”—Bag.] This has been urged as ground for
saying that Constantine did not commit himself to Christianity until
the end of life, but it only shows his tact and care in treating the
diverse elements of his empire. | he freely granted to those among them who were
partakers of the divine faith, leisure for attendance on the services
of the Church of God, in order that they might be able, without
impediment, to perform their religious worship.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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