From Sabbath to Sunday: The Bacchiocchi Agenda
Which "Sabbath" Does He Truly Support?
From Sabbath to Sunday, Divine Rest for Human
Restlessness, The Sabbath in the New Testament, The Sabbath Under
Crossfire--these are some of the many books authored by Samuele
Bacchiocchi, the purported Seventh Day Adventist scholar, which have received
great accolades from many "Church of God" organizations for their apparent
defense of the seventh day Sabbath. A deeper examination of
his books though actually reveals his ecumenical concern--not concern
for the Scriptural Sabbath, but for a Sabbath--be it the last,
or the first day of the week.
The following quote is from Bacchiocchi, as posted on
his website "Biblical Perspectives" [bold face emphasis mine throughout
article ~bh]:
"I grew up as a Seventh-day Adventist
in Rome, Italy, a stone-throw from the Vatican wall in the days when considerable
hostility existed against religious minorities. I vividly remember the ridicule
and rejection I experienced, especially for honoring the Savior on the Sabbath.
For example, my classmates called me "Il Giudeo–the Jew," or "L'eretico-the
heretic" because I would not attend school on Saturday and would not play
soccer with them on that day.
These painful experiences instilled
within me the desire to know more about which is God's Holy Day and how should
it be observed by Christians today. As a teenager I would have never imagined
that the Lord would one day make it possible for me to research and publish
my dissertation at the most prestigious Jesuit University in the world, the
Pontifical Gregorian University, founded by Ignatius Loyola
[founder the Society of Jesus (the Jesuits)~bh]
himself, over 450 years ago.
The idea of attending the Gregoriana
was suggested to me by a beloved Catholic priest, Father Ravasio,
whom I came to know in Ethiopia where I was serving as a missionary. One
day I told him that I had been accepted at Yale for a doctoral program in
Church History. He replied: "Sam you are a Roman and should go to study at
the Gregoriana." How can I? I replied. Surely they will never accept a heretic
like me. "Don't say that!" he said. "After Vatican II you are no longer a
heretic. You are a separated brother. If you apply, you stand a good
chance to be accepted." I followed his advice.
Truly I can say that though I was
accepted as a "Separated Brother," I was treated as a real Christian brother.
I treasure the pleasant memories of the five years I spent at the Gregoriana.
The professor who directed my dissertation, Father Vincenzo Monachino,
S. J., [Society of Jesus--that is, he is a Jesuit ~bh]
is brilliant, godly and open minded.
At first he was reluctant to allow me to investigate the origin of Sundaykeeping,
because he had worked on the same subject for the previous two years with
a Jesuit priest C. S. Mosna, who also wrote his dissertation on the history
of Sunday during the first four centuries (STORIA DELLA DOMENICA --HISTORY
OF SUNDAY). When he noticed my keen interest he graciously approved my proposal
and spent many hours with me reexamining the Biblical and historical data.
It takes a great scholar to be willing to reconsider one's conclusions.
Prof. Monachino was such a scholar whom I will respect for the rest of
my life.
My dissertation FROM SABBATH TO
SUNDAY was first published in 1977 by the Pontifical Gregorian University
Press with the official Catholic imprimatur (approval). Since then
it has been reprinted 13 times in English and has been translated in a dozen
of languages. The French translation was done by two Belgian Benedictine
monks as a labor of love and published by a Catholic press in
Paris." [this info is quite similar to that which he included
in the book itself (p.5) ~bh]
"Since Dr. Bacchiocchi seems intent
on pushing his books based upon the fact that he has an imprimatur on one
of them [From Sabbath to Sunday
~bh], it is important to know what the word
imprimatur means. Simply stated, it means that there is nothing in
the book that is contrary to the teaching of the [Catholic
~bh] Church." (Ed Faulk, Usenet Catholic
Newsgroup message, December 15, 1997)
Merriam Webster's dictionary defines imprimatur
as follows:
" im*pri*ma*tur (noun) [New Latin, let it
be printed, from imprimere to print, from Latin, to imprint, impress -- more
at IMPRESS] First appeared 1640
1 a : a license to print or publish esp. by Roman Catholic
episcopal authority
b : approval of a publication under circumstances of official
censorship
2 a : SANCTION, APPROVAL
b : IMPRINT
c : a mark of approval or distinction "
One must ask themselves, if this book truly proves and
advocates Seventh Day Sabbath, why would it receive this Catholic
imprimatur, and yet further, why would Sunday keeping monks translate his
work "as a labor of love" if it disproved or went against what they stand
for? Recall the hatred that the Catholic Church has had for the Seventh
Day Sabbath throughout history.
Let us further examine this book:
"How can the pressing problem of
the secularization of the Lord's day be resolved?"
(Samuele Bacchiocchi, From Sabbath to Sunday,
back cover).
How can the "secularization" of a
secular day (Sunday) be seen as a "pressing problem" that needs be
"resolved"--especially by a professing Seventh Day Sabbath observer??
"Should Sunday be viewed as the
hour of worship rather than the holy day of rest to the Lord?"
(ibid, p.303).
Should it be viewed by anyone, especially one who claims
to be a 7th day Sabbatarian, as either one of these??
"To find the answer to these questions,
Dr. Samuele Bacchiocchi spent five years at the Pontifical Gregorian University
in Rome, examining the most ancient available documents. The results of this
investigation are presented in From Sabbath to Sunday."
(ibid, back cover)
Notice carefully the reason for this book:
"To find the answer to these questions..."
Which questions? One of them is "How can
the pressing problem of the secularization of the Lord's day be
resolved?"
This fact of seeking a Sabbath basis for Sunday as being
the purpose for his research and writing of From Sabbath to Sunday
is bore out further in the following quote:
"To accomplish a sound theological
reappraisal of Sunday it is necessary to investigate its Biblical basis and
its historical genesis. On the other hand, the many studies on this topic,
though excellent, have not given a fully satisfactory answer because of the
lack of consideration of some of those factors which in the Church of the
first centuries contributed to the concrete genesis and development of a
day of worship different than the Jewish Sabbath."
"On account of this, the new work
of Dr. Samuele Bacchiocchi is to be welcomed."
"We gladly mention that the thesis
that Bacchiocchi defends regarding the birth-place of Sunday worship: for
him this rose not in the primitive Church of Jerusalem, well-known for its
profound attachment to the Jewish religious traditions, but rather in the
Church of Rome."
"The event of Christ's resurrection
on that day, had naturally signifigance importance."
"The strict scientific orientation
of the work does not prevent the author from revealing his profound religious
and ecumenic concern. Conscious that the history of salvation knows not fractures
but continuity, he
[Bacchiocchi]
finds in the rediscovery of the religious values of the Biblical Sabbath,
a help to restore to the Lord's Day its ancient sacred character. This
is in reality the exhortation that already in the fourth century the bishops
addressed to the believers, namely to spend Sunday not in outings or watching
shows, but rather to sanctify it by assisting at the eucharistic celebration
and by doing acts of mercy (St. Ambrose, Exam. III, 1, 1.)."
"Rome, June 29th, 1977, VINCENZO
MONACHINO, S.J. Chairman of Church History Department, Pontifical Gregorian
University." (From Sabbath to Sunday, pp.7,8) [This
is from the "brilliant, godly and open minded" Jesuit which directed
Bacchiocchi's study and writing of this subject]
Some more on this, from Samuele himself:
"Many well-meaning Christians view Sunday observance
as the hour of worship rather than as the holy day of the Lord. Having fulfilled
their worship obligations, many will in good conscience spend the rest of
their Sunday time either engaged in making money or in seeking
pleasure." (ibid, p.10)
"Some people, concerned by this
widespread profanation of the Lord's day, are urging for a civil legislation
that would outlaw all activities not compatible with the spirit of Sunday.
To make such legislation agreeable even to non-Christians, sometimes appeal
is made to the pressing need of preserving natural resources. One day of
total rest for man and machines would help safeguard both our power resources
and the precarious environment. Social or ecological needs, however, while
they may encourage resting on Sunday, can hardly induce a worshipful
attitude." (ibid, p.10).
As noted above, Bacchiocchi is one of these very
people who are "concerned by this widespread profanation
of the Lord's day." He therefore makes these very appeals himself
in his book, Divine Rest For Human Restlessness, chapter VI, part
IV The Sabbath as Service to our Habitat, pp. 204-214 (ecological
appeal), and chapter VII Good News of Divine Rest for Human
Restlessness, pp. 217-226 (social appeal).
"Might not more hopeful results
be expected from educating our Christian communities to understand both the
Biblical meaning and experience of God's 'holy day'?" (From Sabbath
to Sunday, p.11) [Is this not exactly what the Jesuit Vincenzo
Monachino (quoted above) stated was Bacchiocchi's purpose for this investigation?
To provide understanding for how to keep Sunday from being "profaned"
by looking into the Scriptural Sabbath. Recall: "he
{Bacchiocchi} finds in the rediscovery
of the religious values of the Biblical Sabbath, a help to restore to the
Lord's Day its ancient sacred character."]
"In introducing our study we posed
several vital questions: What are the Biblical and historical reasons for
Sunday-keeping? Can Sunday be regarded as the legitimate replacement of the
Sabbath? Can the fourth commandment be rightly invoked to enjoin Sunday
observance? Should Sunday be viewed as the hour of worship rather than the
holy day of rest to the Lord? We stated at the outset that to answer these
questions, and solve the pressing problem of the widespread profanation of
Sunday, it is indispensable to ascertain both the Biblical basis and the
historical genesis of this festivity." (ibid, p.303)
"Our study has shown (we hope
persuasively) that the adoption of Sunday observance in place of the Sabbath
did not occur in the primitive Church of Jerusalem by virtue of the authority
of Christ or of the Apostles, but rather took place several decades later,
seemingly in the Church of Rome, solicited by external circumstances."
(ibid, p.309)
"On what ground then can Sunday
rest be defended? Mosna finds a 'fundamental reason' in the fact that the
Church 'influenced Constantine's decision to make Sunday a day of rest for
the whole empire, and this undoubtedly in order to give to the Lord's day
a preeminent place above the other days.' Therefore, Mosna argues that the
Church 'can claim the honor of having granted man a pause to his work every
seven days.' This explanation harmonizes well with the traditional claim
that Sunday observance 'is purely a creation of the Catholic Church.' But
if Sunday rest is an ecclesiastical-imperial institution, how can it be enjoined
upon Christians as a divine precept? What valid ground can this provide to
enable theologians to reassess the meaning and function of the Lord's day
for Christians today? One can hardly hope to cope with the widespread profanation
of the Lord's day, merely by invoking ecclesiastical authority without providing
an adequate theological rationale." (ibid, pp.312-313)
Samuele continues as such: "Should
we then conclude that Sunday is to be regarded as the hour of worship rather
then the holy day of rest to the Lord? Apparently it is toward this direction
that some Christian churches are moving." (ibid, p.313)
"To say the least, this interpretation
not only reduces the obligation of the Lord's day to the attendance of a
church service, but it even accomodates the social and recreational priorities
of modern Christians. Does this view of the Lord's day as the hour of worship
reflect correctly the Biblical teaching of the sanctification of the Sabbath,
accomplished by renouncing the utilitarian use of its time? Hardly so."
(ibid, pp 315-316).
"Does this proposal contribute to
solving or to compounding the problems associated with Sunday observance
in our time? Does not this provide Christians with a rational justification
for spending most of their Sunday time in either making money or in seeking
pleasure? Is this what Sunday observance is all about? To divorce worship
from rest, regarding the latter as non-essential to Sunday observance, it
means to misunderstand the meaning of the Biblical commandment which ordains
the consecration not of a weekly hour of worship but of a whole day of
interruption of work out of respect for God. Undoubtedly for some Christians
the reduction of Sunday observance to an hour of worship is unacceptable,
but our study has shown that both the historical genesis and the thelogical
basis of Sunday observance offer little help to encourage the consecration
of the total Sunday time to the Lord." (ibid, p.317)
"Is there a way out of this
predictament? The proposal which we are about to submit may at first appear
radical to some, but if it were accepted by Christians at large it could
indeed revitalize both the worship and the real content of the Lord's day.
Since our study has shown that Sunday observance lacks the Biblical authority
and the theological basis necessary to justify the total consecration of
its time to the Lord, we believe that such an objective can be more readily
acheived by educating our Christian communities to understand the Biblical
and apostolic meaning and obligation of the seventh-day Sabbath."
(ibid, p.318). [Please note that he is not suggesting
that all "Christians" begin to keep the seventh day Sabbath, but rather,
that they get educated as to the meaning and obligation of it, and apply
it to Sunday.]
"Sabbath observance in this cosmic
age can well be for modern man the fitting expression of a cosmic faith...a
faith that would treat the Lord's Day as God's holy day rather than as a
holiday." (ibid, p.321) [Again, the Sabbath observance
he is speaking of is NOT to occur on the seventh day, but rather on the "Lord's
Day" (i.e., sunday)].
The following are some "scholars' " comments on Samuele's
books. Please, when you read their words, take notice that they are Catholics:
"The warning has gone out, Sunday
is in trouble....In order to gain a much needed perspective on this issue,
a practical and worthwhile reading of FROM SABBATH TO SUNDAY is needed."
Thomas G. Simmons, Director
CATHOLIC DIVINE WORSHIP APOSTOLATE
Review, MODERN LITURGY MAGAZINE
"DIVINE REST FOR HUMAN RESTLESSNESS
invites every reader to a penetrating and suggestive analysis of the tradition
and significance of Sabbath keeping."
Most Reverend Cardinal Joseph L.
Bernardin ARCHBISHOP OF CHICAGO
Richard Nickels, of Giving and Sharing, & the Bible
Sabbath Association, gave the following review of Bacchiocchi's
God’s Festivals in Scripture and History :
"More than one intelligent, well-educated
Sabbath-keeper has mentioned to me that they think Samuele Bacchiocchi is
a Jesuit. They have presented no proof for this assertion, and as a result,
I place such accusations in the category of malicious gossip....Nevertheless,
there are a number of disturbing tendencies that have come to light with
the publication of Bacchiocchi's books on the Holy Days.
(1) He is more of a salesman than a scholar. The
shoddy work on his first book on the Holy Days is ample proof that he rushed
to make a commercial deadline, rather than carefully doing his research.
(2) Time and again, he says that the Bible alone doesn't
tell us much of how to keep the Holy Days, and thus he turns to church
tradition. Although he stops short of saying that church tradition is
above the Bible, by citing and supporting extra-Biblical customs, he elevates
these traditions above the Bible.
(3) He lauds and honors Catholic "fathers," even
well-known enemies of the true faith, such Origen, Jerome, and Augustine.
He acts as if Patrick of Ireland, Columba, Vigilantius Leo, and heroes of
the Sabbath-keeping Church of the East did not exist. I care little what
Catholic fathers said, but I would be interested in learning more of what
Sabbath-keeping church leaders said about the Holy Days.
(4) He liberally quotes from apocryphal sources,
as authoritative guides, that prescribe our Christian practices of today,
such as his support for a Passover vigil, so-called Lord's Supper, and
agape feast.
(5) At times he seems to be purposely ambiguous, even
contradictory. He sometimes takes stands on several sides of the same
issue, and rarely speaks plainly.
[Nickels notes many of such instances,
such as the following: "On page
169, Bacchiocchi agrees with Alfred Edersheim, Josephus, and Philo, on the
Sivan 6 date for Pentecost. Yet later on, on page 233, he agrees with a Sunday
Pentecost. He was either in a hurry to publish his book, or he purposely
straddled the
fence."]
(6) He ignores plain Bible commands, or minimizes
them, and instead concentrates on what men say about the Bible.
What is the common denominator of
these tendencies of Bacchiocchi? They are traits of the Jesuits! Jesuits
believe and practice that the end justifies the means. The Jesuit-led Council
of Trent, the touchstone for Catholic success over Protestantism, upheld
the Catholic dogma that tradition is above Scripture. Jesuit techniques include
the eradication of all history about 'heretics,' the ascendancy of the Apocrypha
and translations such as the Vulgate Bible, based on the corrupt Vaticanus
and Sinaiticus texts, supported by Origen and Jerome. The Catholic Church
in general, and Jesuits in particular, ignore plain Bible commands so as
to uphold their anti-Biblical traditions.
Rene Fulop-Miller says of the Jesuits,
'In actual fact, the Jesuit casuists [reasoners about what is right or wrong]
deal with two forms of permissible deception: that of 'amphibology' and that
of reservatio mentalis. 'Amphibology' is nothing else than the employment
of ambiguous terms calculated to mislead the questioner; 'mental reservation'
consists in answering a question, not with a direct lie, but in such a way
that the truth is partly suppressed, certain words being formulated mentally
but not expressed orally,' (cited in Facts of Faith, page
281[by Christian
Edwardson]). Dr. Bacchiocchi
is so steeped in the study of the Catholic Church early fathers that he cannot
help himself from thinking like them. Truly, you become what you read!...I
am not accusing him of being a Jesuit. But, I am
warning others to reject Bacchiocchi’s Jesuit tendencies.
After thoughtful consideration, we will not continue to
recommend his books on the Holy Days. We do, indeed, recommend books even
if we do not agree with the author on every point. But the tone of
Bacchiocchi’s books on the Holy Days, is, in my opinion, Catholic rather
than Biblical, and that is something that I will not support." (Richard
Nickels, Giving and Sharing newsletter review of Samuele Bacchiocchi's
God’s Festivals in Scripture and History)
From Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary :
"Jesuit ...1 : a member of the Roman Catholic Society of Jesus founded
by St. Ignatius Loyala in 1534 and devoted to missionary and educational
work 2 : one given to intrigue or equivocation"
"intrigue ... 1 : a secret scheme" "equivocate ... 1 : to use equivocal language especially with intent to deceive 2 : to avoid committing oneself in what one says- synonym see LIE" "equivocal ... 1 a : subject to two or more interpretations and usually used to mislead or confuse" J.I. Rodale, The Synomym Finder : "equivocate ... doubletalk ... talk out of both sides of one's mouth" William Lutz, Double-Speak : "Doublespeak is not a slip of the tongue, or language used out of ignorance, but is instead a very conscious use of language as a weapon or tool by those in power to achieve their ends at our expense." (p. xii) "Doublespeak enables speaker and listener, writer and reader, to hold two opposing ideas in their minds at the same time and believe in both of them." (p. 9) |
"Andrews University, the Seventh-Day
Adventist world headquarters where Samuele Bacchiocchi is a professor, has
been so heavily infiltrated with ecumenical theologians that its yearbook
has used illustrations of nuns, priests, and people giving the papal
sign." [John Osborne and Bob Trefz (independent
Seventh Day Adventists), Jesuit Agenda for the Seventh-Day Adventist
Church, video tape, 1992].
The above cited SDA minister, Bob Trefz, reportedly wrote
a letter to a Church of God member which stated: "I
know Bacchiocchi. He is doing the very work that one would expect from a
Jesuit. Of course he was trained at the highest Jesuit University in the
world...Bacchiocchi is best friends with the leaders of the Lord's Day
Alliance--the premier organization pushing for a National Sunday Law.
Bacchiocchi arranged for the Lord's Day Alliance to come to Andrews
University where the SDA theological seminary is located. We believe
he is pushing the Jesuit Agenda." [Bacchiocchi actually had
the head of the Lord's Day Alliance, Dr. James P. Wesberry, write the forward
to his book Rest For Human Restlessness--bh].
This man, Samuele Bacchiocchi, is supported by many "Church
of God" organizations, and defended by (including against allegations that
he is a Jesuit) Ron Dart of Christian Educational Ministries. You have just
read of the "fruits" of Bacchiocchi, whom Ron refers to as "one of the strongest
advocates of sincere Sabbath observance in the world." (Understanding
Deception, point 6, Ron Dart). Do you agree with him? Just
which "sabbath" is being advocated?
Author: Brian Hoeck
...
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