BobRyan said:AT "best" you have a Saturday EVENING service that would correspond to the evening of "Week-day-one". That would mean that instead of a Roman system-SUNDAY service what you really have is a Roman-system SATURDAY service! And in that case we have "planned travel" for "week-day-one" rather than "planned rest and a reserved holy day of worship".
I can hardly wait to see the entire Christian church switch to Saturday evening using Acts 20:7 a it's argument!.
However what we do NOT see in Acts 20 is any reference at all to "week-day-one" being called "The Lord's Day" or a holy day of any kind.
in Christ,
Bob
GE
No Bob, that is not what I 'have' or want to have. The text - the Participle 'synehgmenohn' - wants a Holy-Communion-Service through the Infinitive of Noun-Force, 'klasai arton'. The verb of Acts 20:7, 'dealt' ('handel' Statevertaling) is determined by the adjectival time-phrase "on the evening of the First Day" --- and nowhere whatsoever will you find an indication of a 'Service' during this evening or the remainder of the night for that matter. The only IMPLIED as well as REFERRED 'Service' was the Holy Communion, indicated by the Participle and Infinitive combined. : Deduction of something not mentioned but real on and of the day before The First Day, which was the Sabbath Day.
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