This is the earliest use of the term Lord’s day to be found in the fathers. But it cannot be called a decisive testimony that Sunday was thus known at this date, inasmuch as every writer who precedes Dionysius calls it “first day of the week,” “eighth day,” or “Sunday,” but never once by this title; and Dionysius says nothing to indicate that Sunday was intended, or to show that he did not refer to that day which alone has the right to be called the Lord’s “holy day.” Isa. 58:13. We have found several express testimonies to the sacredness of the Sabbath in the writers already examined.
TESTIMONY OF MELITO, BISHOP OF SARDIS.
This father wrote about a. d. 177. We know little of this writer except the titles of his books, which Eusebius has preserved to us. One of these titles is this: “On the Lord’s Day.” But it should be remembered that down to this date no writer has called Sunday the Lord’s day; and that every one who certainly spoke of that day called it by some other name than Lord’s day. To say, therefore, as do first-day writers, that Melito wrote of Sunday, is to speak without just warrant. He uses τῆς κυριακῆς, “the Lord’s,” but does not join with it ἡμέρα, a “day,” as does John. He wrote of something pertaining to the Lord, but it is not certain that it was the Lord’s day. Moreover, Clement, who next uses this term, uses it in a mystical sense.
TESTIMONY OF THE HERETIC BARDESANES.
Bardesanes, the Syrian, flourished about a. d. 180. He belonged to the Gnostic sect of Valentinians, and abandoning them, “devised errors of his own.” In his “Book of the Laws of Countries,” he replies to the views of astrologers who assert that the stars govern men’s actions. He shows the folly of this by enumerating the peculiarities of different races and sects. In doing this, he speaks of the strictness with which the Jews kept the Sabbath. Of the new sect called Christians, which “Christ at his advent planted in every country,” he says:—
“On one day, the first of the week, we assemble ourselves together, and on the days of the readings we abstain from [taking] sustenance.”
This shows that the Gnostics used Sunday as the day for religious assemblies. Whether he recognized others besides Gnostics, as Christians, we cannot say. We find no allusion, however, to Sunday as a day of abstinence from labor, except so far as necessary for their meetings. What their days of fasting, which are here alluded to, were, cannot now be determined. It is also worthy of notice that this writer, who certainly speaks of Sunday, and this as late as a. d. 180, does not call it Lord’s day, nor give it any sacred title whatever, but speaks of it as “first day of the week.” No writer down to a. d. 180, who is known to speak of Sunday, calls it the Lord’s day.
CHAPTER VI.
Theophilus—Clement of Alexandria.