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Sabbath History

Sabbath Observance Through the Centuries

A collection of historical quotations from every century
where the Sabbath was observed by Christians around the world.

History of Sabbath Observance by Coltheart in PDF format and The Chart of the Week by William Mead Jones, DD from Maranatha Media

Timeline of Sabbath History

The content of the following timeline is for general information only. Its primary value is in showing the chronological relationship between various individuals and events. The dating of many historical persons and events, particularly those earlier than 1000 BCE, is subject to ongoing debate and research. Most items on this timeline are directly related to the content of The Seventh Day television series. Others are included as points of reference.

DATES BCE (BC)

 
?
     
Creation Week
 
2450
     
The Flood (see Genesis 7)
 
1950
>
1775
 
Abraham keeps God's commandments, statutes, and laws (Genesis 26)
 
2000
     
Seven-day week in Sumerian civilization prior to this date
 
1450
     
The Exodus
 
1011
>
971
 
David rules Israel
 
626
>
586
 
Jeremiah, the prophet - years of ministry
 
620
>
530
 
Daniel, the prophet
 
605
>
536
 
Jewish nation in exile
 
600
     
Birth of Zoroastrianism in Persia
 
551
>
479
 
Confucius, Chinese wise man
 
500
     
Birth of Buddhism
 
445
     
Nehemiah returns to rebuild Jerusalem
 
331
     
Alexander the Great overthrows the Persian Empire
 
170
     
Antiochus IV persecutes Jews who won't give up their religion
 
30
     
Roman Emperor Octavian dedicates Egyptian obelisk to the sun god
 
4
     
Birth of Jesus
           
DATES CE (AD)
 
31
     
Crucifixion of Jesus
 
64
     
Nero burns Rome, persecutes Christians
 
70
     
Jerusalem destroyed by Roman army under Titus
 
79
     
Vesuvius erupts
 
115
     
Epistle of Barnabas written in Alexandria
 
120
     
Christians in Alexandria replace Sabbath observance with Sunday worship
 
135
     
Jerusalem destroyed again - Jewish religion banned
 
144
     
Marcion, first great "Christian" heretic
 
150
     
Justyn Martyr reports on Sunday observance in Rome
 
218
>
222
 
Elagabalus, emperor of Rome - brings Syrian sun worship to Rome
 
270
>
275
 
Aurelian, emperor of Rome - establishes sun worship as the state religion
 
284
>
305
 
Diocletian, emperor of Rome - worships the sun and persecutes Christians
 
306
>
337
 
Constantine emperor of Rome - first "Christian" emperor
 
313
     
Constantine legalizes Christian religion
 
314
>
335
 
Sylvester I is pope - promotes anti-Jewish Sabbath fast
 
321
     
Edict of Constantine - first law concerning Sunday observance
 
343
>
381
 
Council of Laodicea - condemns Sabbath observance
 
364
     
Ambrose (Bishop of Milan) - observes the Sabbath without fasting
 
389
>
461
 
Patrick - Celtic Christian missionary to Ireland
 
521
>
597
 
Columba - Celtic Christian missionary leader to Scotland
 
570
>
632
 
Muhammed, founder of Islam
 
590
>
604
 
Pope Gregory I (the Great) identifies Sabbath keepers with the anti-christ
 
692
     
Quinisext Council (Council in Trullo) - condemns the Sabbath fast
 
800
     
"Epistle of Jesus" arrives in Ireland - warns against desecration of Sunday
 
867
     
Patriarch Photius denounces Roman Catholic promotion of Sabbath fast
 
1054
     
Roman Catholic - Eastern Orthodox Schism
 
1070
     
Margaret becomes queen of Scotland - tries to reform Sunday observance there
 
1201
     
Eustace of Flay takes "Epistle of Jesus" to England to reform Sunday keeping
 
1231
     
Pope Gregory IX establishes the medieval Inquisition
 
1350
     
Strigolniks in Novogorod, Russia, observe the seventh-day Sabbath
 
1414
>
1418
 
Council of Constance - orders burning of John Hus
 
1428
     
John Wycliffe's bones dug up and burned
 
1431
     
Pope Eugenius IV
 
1431
>
1445
 
Council of Basel - condemns Sabbath keeping by Jewish converts
 
1435
     
Forced conversion of Jews in Spain
 
1435
     
Church council in Bergen, Norway, condemns Sabbath observance
 
1469
     
Marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella unites Aragon and Castille into one nation
 
1480
>
1502
 
Novgorod-Moscow reform movement - includes Sabbath observance
 
1478
     
Pope Sixtus IV authorizes Spanish Inquisition
 
1481
     
First "auto de fe" (public trial) of Spanish Inquisition
 
1482
     
Pope Sixtus IV protests against Spanish Inquisition
 
1492
     
Expulsion of Jews from Spain
 
1492
     
Christopher Columbus "discovers" America
 
1497
     
Forced conversion of Jews in Portugal
 
1497
>
1499
 
Vasco da Gama opens the sea route from Europe to India
 
1504
     
Ivan Kuritsin and other Russian reformers are burned in cages in Red Square
 
1517
     
Luther nails his 95 Theses to chapel door, thus starting the Reformation
 
1525
     
Anabaptist Movement begins
 
1529
     
Andreas Fischer, Anabaptist Sabbatarian preacher, miraculously survives hanging
 
1536
     
Portuguese Inquistion begins
 
1540
     
Andreas Fischer is murdered in Slovakia
 
1542
     
Francis Xavier, a Jesuit missionary, arrives in Goa
 
1544
     
Christian III of Denmark prohibits Sabbath keeping
 
1545
>
1563
 
Roman Catholic Council of Trent
 
1546
     
Oswald Glaidt, one-time proponent of the Sabbath, is executed in Vienna
 
1541
     
Christavao da Gama and 400 Portuguese come to the aid of the Ethiopian Emperor
 
1551
     
Russian Orthodox council authorizes Sabbath worship in Russian churches
 
1560
     
Branch of the Portuguese Inquistion is established in Goa
 
1560
     
Constantino Ponce de la Fuente dies in prison under the Spanish Inquisition
 
1617
     
John Traske, an early "Seventh Day Man," is arrested in London
 
1628
     
Theophilus Brabourne publishes first English book promoting seventh-day Sabbath
 
1622
     
Emperor Susenyos declares Ethiopia a Catholic country; civil war ensues
 
1650
     
Parliament orders burning of Ockford's book advocating the seventh-day Sabbath
 
1684
     
Charles Dellon publishes his Account of the Inquisition at Goa
 
1684
     
Francis Bamfield, prominent "Seventh Day Man," dies in his London prison cell
  1720       Conrad Beisel, Sabbath-keeping founder of Ephrata Cloister, arrives in Pennsylvania
  1722       Count Lugwig von Zinzendorf permits Moravian refugees to settle on his estate in eastern Germany
  1742       Count Zinzendorf proposes Sabbath observance to Moravian community in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
  1830 > 1895   Life of Maniilaq, the Eskimo prophet who learned about the seventh-day Sabbath from one he called "the Grandfather"
  1844       Millerite Adventists disappointed when Christ did not return during this year
  1844       A handful of Millerite Adventist preachers and lay people begin to observe the seventh-day Sabbath; this leads to the eventual establishment of the Seventh-day Adventist denomination
  1851 > 1864   Taiping Revolution in China; the Ten Commandments and observance of seventh-day Sabbath were at the heart of the movement
  1859       Charles Darwin's On the Origin of the Species published
  1888       Senator Henry Blair calls for a national Sunday law; his proposal never makes it out of committee for consideration by the US Congress
  1896       William Saunders Crowdy founds Church of God and Saints of Christ, a Sabbath-keeping denomination
  1900       Owkwa, Amerindian village chief, learns about Sabbath, monogamy, etc., from supernatural messenger
  1926       Herbert W. Amstrong accepts the seventh-day Sabbath as authentic biblical doctrine; goes on to found the Worldwide Church of God
  1986       Herbert W. Armstrong dies; new leaders of the Worldwide Church of God eventually renounce the seventh-day Sabbath
  1998       Pope John Paul II issues apostolic letter, Dies Domini, upholding essential nature of the Sabbath but claiming the Roman Catholic Church's authority for the Saturday-Sunday change

 

 

 
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