Chapter 16: The Witnesses That Cannot Be Silenced
Seven witnesses testify for the Sabbath, witnesses that cannot be bribed, intimidated, or silenced. Each stands alone; together, they form a cumulative case that no council can dismiss.
I. The Stone
God wrote the Fourth Commandment with His own finger.
"And he gave unto Moses, when he had made an end of communing with him upon mount Sinai, two tables of testimony, tables of stone, written with the finger of God."
These words were written not by Moses, a prophet, or an angel, but by God Himself.
Of all the ways God could have delivered His law, He chose stone, making it permanent and unchangeable.1 Ancient Near Eastern covenant treaties were written on stone precisely because stone represented permanence. The Hittite suzerainty treaties, Egyptian boundary stelae, and Mesopotamian law codes (including Hammurabi’s) all employed stone to signify binding, unchangeable obligation. God used the cultural medium His audience would understand: what is carved in stone stands forever. See Kenneth A. Kitchen, On the Reliability of the Old Testament (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003), 283–294. What is carved in stone cannot be erased by papal decree.
Every other commandment (do not murder, do not steal, do not commit adultery, etc.) Christians accept as binding. Only the Fourth Commandment, the one God specifically wrote in stone, do they claim was "changed" or "fulfilled."
The stone testifies: What God wrote, man cannot unwrite.
II. The Word
Only one commandment begins with "Remember."
"Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy."
The word "Remember" appears because God knew His people would be pressured to abandon it.
Before the pressure came, God embedded the warning in the commandment itself. Not "observe," not "keep"; "Remember."
For 1,700 years, the Roman Catholic Church has worked to make Christians forget.2 Constantine’s 321 AD decree was the first civil Sunday law: "On the venerable Day of the Sun let the magistrates and people residing in cities rest." The Council of Laodicea (c. 363–364 AD) Canon 29 forbade Sabbath rest: "Christians must not judaize by resting on the Sabbath, but must work on that day." Text preserved in Henry Percival, ed., The Seven Ecumenical Councils, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, Vol. 14 (1900). Councils declared it abolished. Emperors made it illegal. Reformers rationalized the change. Theologians explained it away.
And still the commandment stands: "Remember."
The word testifies: God anticipated the attack before it came.
III. The Son
Jesus kept the seventh-day Sabbath.
"And he came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up: and, as his custom was, he went into the synagogue on the sabbath day, and stood up for to read."
"As his custom was." This was not a single visit or an occasional appearance. It was His custom, His regular practice, His way of life.
The apostles continued the same pattern. Paul went to the synagogue "as his manner was" (Acts 17:2), the same Greek word. Acts records Paul keeping Sabbath with Jews and Gentiles alike, in synagogues and by riversides. Eighty-four Sabbaths, and not a single Sunday gathering.
If Jesus had intended to change the day, He had three years of ministry to say so. He said nothing. If the apostles understood the resurrection changed the Sabbath, Acts would show them gathering on Sunday. It shows the opposite.
The Son testifies: No one has authority to change what Christ kept.
IV. The Hostile Witness
The Catholic Church admits everything, not under torture, not in secret, but openly, proudly, and in print. Chapter 3 documents the confessions in full. Cardinal Gibbons declared you cannot find "a single line" authorizing Sunday in Scripture. The Catholic Mirror stated the Church changed the day "by virtue of her divine mission." Father Enright proclaimed the Church abolished the Sabbath "by my divine power." They call Sunday their "mark of authority" over Scripture.
The hostile witness testifies against itself. When they say it is their mark, their words stand.
V. The Calendar
The weekly cycle has never been lost.
The question matters. If Saturday today is not the same day as Saturday in Jesus’s time, the Sabbath argument collapses.
It has not.
When Pope Gregory XIII reformed the calendar in 1582, he dropped ten days to correct astronomical drift. Thursday, October 4, 1582 was followed by Friday, October 15. Ten dates vanished, but the weekly cycle continued unbroken. Friday followed Thursday. Saturday followed Friday. The seven-day week was preserved.3 The Royal Observatory, Greenwich confirms the seven-day week has continued without interruption since ancient times. The Jewish community, which has kept continuous Sabbath records for over 3,000 years, provides independent verification. Saturday in 2025 is the same seventh day that Jesus kept in the first century.
Jews have kept the Sabbath for over three thousand years without interruption. If the weekly cycle had ever been lost, Judaism would have fractured over which day was authentic. It never did. Saturday today is the same day Jesus entered the synagogue "as his custom was."
The calendar testifies: The day was never lost. Only obedience was.
VI. The Blood
They died rather than worship on Sunday.
These are not theories or abstract arguments, but named witnesses with dates and methods of death.
- Moscow, 1503: The "Judaizers" executed (their specific Sabbath practices are debated, but they were condemned partly for adopting Jewish observances)
- Germany, 1529: Oswald Glait, Sabbatarian Anabaptist leader, martyred
- London, 1661: John James, Seventh-day Baptist pastor, hanged, drawn, and quartered
For 1,260 years, the Catholic Church pursued Sabbath-keepers across Europe: the Waldensians in the Alps,5 Catholic inquisitor Reinerius Saccho (d. 1259), a former Waldensian who converted to Catholicism and became a Dominican inquisitor, spending years hunting his former brethren, wrote that they "keep the Sabbath." See his Summa de Catharis et Leonistis. Robinson’s Ecclesiastical Researches (1792) documents that the Waldenses "maintained that the Sabbath was appointed by God." The testimony of hostile inquisitors is particularly significant. the Sabbatati in Germany, and the scattered remnant wherever they hid.
They could have recanted. They could have "just gone along" with Sunday worship and believed the Sabbath privately. They chose death instead.
Their blood cries from the ground.
The blood testifies: Truth worth dying for is truth worth living for.
For an interactive timeline of Sabbath-keepers through history, see https://theremnantthread.com/studies/sabbath-keepers.
VII. The Languages
In over one hundred languages, the name for the seventh day of the week is derived from "Sabbath":
- Spanish: sábado
- Italian: sabato
- Portuguese: sábado
- Russian: суббота (subbota)
- Polish: sobota
- Arabic: السبت (as-sabt)
- Hebrew: שַׁבָּת (Shabbat)
These languages span continents, religions, and millennia. The Sabbath terminology spread through trade routes, Scripture distribution, and cultural contact, derived ultimately from Hebrew. Spanish Catholics, Russian Orthodox, and Arabic-speaking Muslims each preserved the same ancient name for the seventh day: "Sabbath day." The persistence of this term across such diverse peoples testifies to the original pattern.
The languages testify: From apostolic scribes to modern speech, the faithful preserved what institutional churches abandoned.
For a complete multilingual reference across 100+ languages, see The Week Unchanged study.
The Testimony
Seven witnesses stand before you, offering seven testimonies and seven lines of evidence that invite examination.
The Stone: God wrote it Himself. No one has authority to unwrite it.
The Word: God said "Remember." He would not warn against forgetting something He planned to abolish.
The Son: Jesus kept it "as his custom was." No one has authority to change what Christ kept.
The Hostile Witness: The Catholic Church admits they changed it. Their own documents record the change.
The Calendar: The weekly cycle never broke. Saturday today is the same day Jesus kept.
The Blood: Martyrs died rather than comply. They understood something we have forgotten.
The Languages: Over one hundred languages call Saturday "Sabbath day." They all remember what the churches abandoned.
Seven witnesses testify from different angles: stone, Scripture, the Son’s example, hostile confession, unbroken calendar, martyrs' blood, and the silent testimony of language itself. None can be silenced. None have been.
What you do with their testimony is between you and the Father.