1. If Paul’s action of preaching to non-believers 84 times (as calculated) in the book of Acts on the sabbath makes him a sabbath-keeper, is a Seventh-day Adventist or Messianic pastor a Sunday-keeper if we invite him for 84 Sundays in a row to teach us about God’s Word?
2. Ellen G. White, who is considered “inspired” by Seventh-day Adventism (despite her heretical teachings), said that the Pope changed the sabbath in about 321 AD. Why do most Adventists today reject their “inspired” (false) prophet and say the change of the sabbath occurred in about 140 AD? If White was wrong about this, was she wrong when she “traveled to Heaven” and saw the 4th Commandment “glowing brighter” than all the rest?
3. If Sabbatarians reject White’s “inspired” (false) teaching, that Constantine changed the sabbath day to Sunday, why do they keep bringing Constantine up as proof?
4. Why has no Sabbatarian ever produced even one historical quote from the first few hundred years after Christ that says Christians kept the sabbath?
5. If the sabbath commandment (proven to be a ceremonial commandment) cannot change, because God cannot change (Mal 3:6), then what about all the other feast days and laws that changed (being
fulfilled; see Heb 7:12, e.g.)?
6. Why did God send the Jews into Babylonian captivity for breaking the sabbath, but never ever criticized any Gentiles for not keeping the sabbath?
7. Why did God often criticize the Gentiles via the prophets for numerous moral violations, but never condemned them for not keeping the sabbath?
8. If Christians worshiping on Sunday is equal to Sun worship, then is Adventists worshiping on Saturday equal to Saturn worship?
9. If Seventh-day Adventists want to deny that their official position is that worshiping on Sunday is “the mark of the beast”, do they realize that the “inspired” (false prophet) Ellen G. White, along with Uriah Smith, the Adventist Review and Leo Schreven (who conducts “Revelation seminars” today) all call it “the mark of the beast”?
10. Did you know that regardless of whether the Sadducees’ or Pharisees’ method of calculating Pentecost was used the year Christ died, both would calculate Pentecost in Acts 2:1 as the first day of the week? Did you also know that the official position of the Seventh-day Adventist church was that Pentecost in Acts 2:1 fell on a Sunday that year?