Lord's Day

Lord's Day
   The first day of the week is not the Sabbath, but the Lord's Day, and as such has been observed since the Resurrection of our Lord, of which it is the weekly commemoration. From the New Testament itself we learn that the first day of the week, commonly called Sunday, has always been the day which Christians have consecrated to God's service. The Rt. Rev. F. W. Taylor, D.D., has given us the following clear statement concerning the first day of the week observed as the Lord's Day: "Our Saviour Jesus Christ, in the exercise of this His Lordship over the day, has first of all abolished the ordinance of the Seventh Day, and substituted, by the Holy Spirit guiding His Church into all Truth, the ordinance of the First Day, as that one day in seven which the Fourth Commandment enjoins to be kept sacred to God as a moral obligation. Then our Lord has made this day one of the highest spiritual privilege, by uniting it to His own Person and work as the Day of His Resurrection, the weekly recurrence of the Christian Passover, a perpetual Easter; and also as the weekly memorial of His supreme Gift of the Holy Ghost upon the Feast of Pentecost, to abide with His Church forever. It is preeminently a day of joy and gladness before the Lord, and should first of all be observed to the Lord, in the assembling of the Church together for worship and communion with God and for spiritual instruction and profit. Hence the Prayer Book prescribes a Collect, Epistle and Gospel for every Sunday in the year, and its rubrics plainly teach us that according to the mind of the Church the principal service of every Lord's Day should be the celebration of the Holy Eucharist. Our Lord has also taught us by His example as well as by precept, that works of mercy, both spiritual and corporal, are lawful to be done on this day, and are peculiarly appropriate to it."

American Church Dictionary and Cyclopedia. — New York, Thomas Whittaker. . 1901.

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  • Lord's day — Lord s′ day (or Day ) n. the, Sunday • Etymology: 1175–1225 …   From formal English to slang

  • Lord's Day — n. [transl. of LL(Ec) dies Dominica < Gr(Ec) hē kyriakē hēmera (see Rev. 1:10): from being the day of the resurrection of Christ] [sometimes L d ] Sunday: with the …   English World dictionary

  • Lord's Day — See also: Sabbath in Christianity Contents 1 Textual tradition 1.1 Ambiguous references 1.2 U …   Wikipedia

  • Lord's Day — Sabbath Sab bath, n. [OE. sabat, sabbat, F. sabbat, L. sabbatum, Gr. sa bbaton, fr. Heb. shabb[=a]th, fr. sh[=a]bath to rest from labor. Cf. {Sabbat}.] 1. A season or day of rest; one day in seven appointed for rest or worship, the observance of… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Lord's Day, the — Sunday, considered as a holy day by Christians …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • Lord's Day Alliance of the United States — The Lord’s Day Alliance of the United States exists to encourage Christians to observe Sunday, as the Lord s Day.They say that, The LDA has been the one national organization whose sole purpose is to maintain and cultivate the first day of the… …   Wikipedia

  • Lord's day —    Only once, in Rev. 1:10, was in the early Christian ages used to denote the first day of the week, which commemorated the Lord s resurrection. There is every reason to conclude that John thus used the name. (See Sabbath.) …   Easton's Bible Dictionary

  • Lord's Day — noun first day of the week; observed as a day of rest and worship by most Christians • Syn: ↑Sunday, ↑Dominicus, ↑Sun • Hypernyms: ↑rest day, ↑day of rest • Part Holonyms: ↑weekend …   Useful english dictionary

  • Lord's Day — Sunday, the first day of the week, commemorating the Resurrection of Christ; not the Jewish Sabbath, which is the seventh day …   Dictionary of church terms

  • lord's-day — n. Sunday, the Christian Sabbath, first day of the week, the day of rest …   New dictionary of synonyms

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