The Complete Testimony of the Fathers of the First Three Centuries Concerning the Sabbath and First Day By Eld. J. N. Andrews Steam Press Seventh-day Adventist Publishing Assoc. 1873 TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE 3 ............................................... CHAPTER 1 5 ............................................. CHAPTER 2 13 ............................................ CHAPTER 3 21 ............................................ CHAPTER 4 33 ............................................ CHAPTER 5 44 ............................................ CHAPTER 6 54 ............................................ CHAPTER 7 63 ............................................ CHAPTER 8 82 ............................................ CHAPTER 9 91 ............................................ CHAPTER 10 100 .......................................... PREFACE THE testimony for first-day sacredness is very meager in the Scriptures, as even its own advocates must admit. But they have been wont to supply the deficiency by a plentiful array of testimonies from the early fathers of the church. Here, in time past, they have had the field all to themselves, and they have allowed their zeal for the change of the Sabbath to get the better of their honesty and their truthfulness. The first-day Sabbath was absolutely unknown before the time of Constantine. Nearly one hundred years elapsed after John was in vision on Patmos, before the term "Lord's day" was applied to the first day. During this time, it was called "the day of the sun," "the first day of the week," and "the eighth day." The first writers who give it the name of "Lord's day," state the remarkable fact that in their judgment the true Lord's day consists of every day of a Christian's life, a very convincing proof that they did not give this title to Sunday