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What Should the Church Teach Disciples to Observe?

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Should Christmas, Easter, Lent, Pentecost, and other traditional Holy Days be observed in the corporate worship of the church? What about other Christian traditions that have developed during the history of the church? Where do we go to decide?

Christ in his parting words to the disciples instructed his disciples to make disciples and to teach 'them to observe all things that I have commanded you.' This means that in our teaching, the church is not to teach less than Christ commanded, but it also means we are not to teach men to observe more than we find in Christ's word. We are not to go into all the world and teach the traditions that we have made up, regardless of how old they are or how helpful we think they might be.

For hundreds of years, most of the churches tracing their decent from the Second Reformation in England & Scotland (Presbyterian, Congregationalist, Baptist) held to this principle, and as a result, Holy Days like Christmas were not observed in American Presbyterian, Baptist, and Congregationalist churches. This changed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. But was the change biblically warranted?

Please Note: This Sermon was not preached as an attack on the practice of those churches that do observe Christmas and Easter, rather it is a biblical explanation and defense of our own practice of non-observance.

PS: To access the paper on Holy Days mentioned in the sermon, click on the link below -

12705121141
38:03
Dec 4, 2005
Sunday - AM
Matthew 28:16-20
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