Sunday Law: Difference between revisions

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<!-- interlanguage:start -->[[ko:일요일 휴업령]][[vi:Lệnh nghỉ việc vào Chủ nhật]]<!-- interlanguage:end -->'''Sunday Law''' was an edict issued by Roman Emperor [[Constantine I]] in 321. It made Sunday, the day of the sun, the official day of rest. Before the Sunday law was declared, only the [[Church]] in Rome and some churches under its influence kept Sunday worship from the 2nd century. After 321, however, all churches came to keep Sunday worship. Sunday law issued by the emperor’s authority resulted in the establishment of [[Lord’s Day Worship (Sunday Worship)|Sunday worship]], abolishing the [[Sabbath]] worship, which [[Jesus Christ]] and the [[Apostle|apostles]] had kept.   
[[ko:일요일 휴업령]][[vi:Lệnh nghỉ việc vào Chủ nhật]]
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'''Sunday Law''' was an edict issued by Roman Emperor [[Constantine I]] in 321. It made Sunday, the day of the sun, the official day of rest. Before the Sunday law was declared, only the [[Church]] in Rome and some churches under its influence kept Sunday worship from the 2nd century. After 321, however, all churches came to keep Sunday worship. Sunday law issued by the emperor’s authority resulted in the establishment of [[Lord’s Day Worship (Sunday Worship)|Sunday worship]], abolishing the [[Sabbath]] worship, which [[Jesus Christ]] and the [[Apostle|apostles]] had kept.   


Constantine implemented preferential policies for Christianity, but it was not because he believed in Christianity purely but because of his political intention. Sunday law, too, was to combine the sun-god religion that regarded Sunday as sacred and Christianity (Western Churches) which had left the teachings of God and kept Sunday worship.
Constantine implemented preferential policies for Christianity, but it was not because he believed in Christianity purely but because of his political intention. Sunday law, too, was to combine the sun-god religion that regarded Sunday as sacred and Christianity (Western Churches) which had left the teachings of God and kept Sunday worship.