The Fourth on the Fifth
In 1926, the United States celebrated Independence Day on Monday, July 5. Why? Was there a national disaster, a day of mourning, stock market problems? No, as in 2010, July 4 fell on a Sunday that year. So respected was the Sabbath that the nation waited until Monday to celebrate its 150th birthday.
Speaking in Philadelphia, President Calvin Coolidge’s remarks were loaded with spiritual references. He called Independence Hall “hallowed ground” and the Liberty Bell a “sacred relic.” The 30th president said these national treasures had become “consecrated” and were the framework of a “spiritual event.” He also said, “The world looks upon them . . . as it looks upon the Holy Land. . . .”
Was this a shallow political appeal to the nation’s sense of civil religion? Certainly not. The president considered the Fourth of July to be a day to celebrate the spiritual principles proclaimed in the document that launched the country. “In its main features the Declaration of Independence is a great spiritual document,” Coolidge said. “It is a declaration not of material but of spiritual conceptions. Equality, liberty, popular sovereignty, the rights of man—these are not elements which we can see and touch. They are ideals. They have their source and their roots in the religious convictions.”
What about today? What would Coolidge think?
First, he would have been no fan of today’s progressives because he disapproved of “progress” defined as abandoning the Declaration’s principles. The taciturn leader said, “If all men are created equal, that is final. If they are endowed with inalienable rights, that is final. If governments derive their just powers from the governed, that is final. No advance, no progress can be made beyond these propositions.” Coolidge added, “Under a system of popular government there will always be those who will seek for political preferment by clamoring for reform. . . . There is far more danger of harm than there is hope of good in any radical changes.”
I think he would be concerned about the nation’s spiritual condition too. Although Coolidge recognized that European philosophers influenced the founding, he thought the nation’s pastors were a primary influence: “[W]hen we come to a contemplation of the immediate conception of the principles . . . which went into the Declaration of Independence we are not required to extend our search beyond our own shores. They are found in the texts, the sermons, and the writings of the early colonial clergy. . . . “These great truths were in the air that our people breathed.”
What about the air we breathe today? Although it may seem to be a meaningless indicator of our nation’s health, we just celebrated Independence Day on the Sabbath. Would Coolidge be concerned? After all, he and the nation waited until Monday to celebrate the country’s 150th birthday. “If we are to maintain the great heritage which has been bequeathed to us, we must be like-minded as the fathers who created it,” Coolidge said. “We must cultivate the reverence which they had for the things that are holy.”

















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back to top22 Comments to “The Fourth on the Fifth”
Thanks Lee, for a great reminder of where we have been and where we should be.
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Agreed.
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Agreed again! such a beautiful, and encouraging post. Thank you very much for the work in putting it together, Lee Wishing! Oh, that so many, many of us would be in prayer that at this time, in our day and age, that we will return to those principles again. It’s possible actually!
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Dear readers – no doubt the author of this is expecting comments and perhaps even some backlashes. well in this one occasion, I shall not disappointment. Brothers and sisters in Christ – I must ask: who decided and when that the first day of the week was to be the Christian sabbath? The last time I read the Holy Bible, it reminded me that my Saviour -Jesus Christ – kept the Holy Sabbath which in His time fell on the Seventh day, Apparently, and acoording to His holy word, it has not changed even today. The Sabbath falls on the seventh day! From even to even, which means from sundown Friday to sundown Saturday! The President may have had a christian walk, but according to the Holy Word of Scripture, his ladder of faith was leaned up against the wrong wall. Granted, God winks at the ignorance of man and will receive him right where he is and according to the light that he has received. Our God is a just and forgiving God. But after that, we are on our own, because of the path choose. Also, brothers and sisters – it is an error to state that the Sabbath is uniquely for the Jews – for the Sabbath was made for man and not man for the sabbath!
Also – please note what Rome claims regarding the Sabbath (and you will find that she is not shy about maiking this claim at all).
“Most Christians assume that Sunday is the biblically approved day of worship. The Roman Catholic Church protests that it transferred Christian worship from the biblical Sabbath (Saturday) to Sunday, and that to try to argue that the change was made in the Bible is both dishonest and a denial of Catholic authority. If Protestantism wants to base its teachings only on the Bible, it should worship on Saturday.
Over one hundred years ago the Catholic Mirror ran a series of articles discussing the right of the Protestant churches to worship on Sunday. The articles stressed that unless one was willing to accept the authority of the Catholic Church to designate the day of worship, the Christian should observe Saturday.
It is not difficult to find these articles and many others … read them, validate them for yourselves, then read your Bibles and decide for yourselves. The Bible and the Bible alone must be our guide, teacher! Isn’t this what Martin Luther himself discovered and gave up his life for?
We have so much knowledge then Luther did at our fingure tips – and yet we do not see! “My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge” saith the Lord. Hosea 4:6
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Wait, I’m confused. The Commandment directs us not to WORK on the 7th day. Is celebrating Independence work?
I think old silent Cal was just pioneering the three day weekend.
And when, pray tell, that year were Jews supposed to celebrate the 4th?
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Hebrews 4:9 gives us the real reason for the Sabbath–it pointed to Christ who is our Sabbath rest. We cease from our labors and trust in him to give us our salvation by faith.
Romans 14 goes on to tell us about keeping certain days. Of course, they were struggling with all the old ceremonial days, however the statement is quite clear about setting aside special days.
In Acts, they met on the first day of the week in celebration of our Lord’s rising from the grave.
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So, it goes back 2000 years.
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Coolidge gets a bad wrap. No wonder Reagan liked him so much
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It didn’t even cross my mind as a problem. The 4th must have fallen on a Sunday far more times than just in 1926 and 2010, anyway.
My pastor had a lovely sermon, we had a flag salute in church run by the Boy Scout group it sponsors, and mixed a couple of patriotic songs in. Actually, those patriotic songs often referenced and thanked God more than the normal songs do.
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Bill Wong,
You have to remember the Roman Catholic Church considers Peter their first pope. In other words, they take credit for all of church history up till the Reformation. Our basis for truth can’t be “doing it differently than the Catholics,” but doing it the way Scripture tells us. Since the early church met for worship the first day of the week, in honor of Christ’s resurrection, far more than Roman Catholic tradition is in play here. The question for Seventh-Day Adventists would thus have to be “What causes you to revert to the seventh day in spite of the choice of Jesus’ apostles to change the day of the week at the same time as they dropped the need for animal sacrifices and other aspects of Old Testament worship?” Even the fact of meeting weekly for worship was a new idea. The Old Testament didn’t have weekly worship services on the Sabbath; on what basis does anyone do so today?
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Good points, Cheryl. From the Resurrection on, the apostolic leaders that Jesus himself appointed to birth and grow His church moved the day of weekly worship to Sunday. Did Jesus do such a bad job of choosing the Apostles that we can’t trust this fact? (Said tongue in cheek.)
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Way to go WORLD — putting today’s news in historical perspective. I’m liking this. Keep up the good work.
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sister Cheryl D, et al: Please note …
Seventh Day Adventists (and our Jewish family) are not the only ones that (Remember) to keep the biblical Sabbath day holy: seek out any one that lives by the ‘Bible and the Bible alone”, and you will find one who is convicted to live as the the saints do. (Rev 14:12). The Sabbath is one of two cornerstones that were established at creation by Jesus Himself: the other ofcourse being Marriage.(remember?). Interestingly enough, note how these are being compromised/sacrificed/attacked today? Even Sunday sabbath keepers – do not keep the Sabbath, as a full day of rest, as the Bible defines. How can they? For it is not of God! Note: Rome smiles when her offsprings try to argue that she is not the founder of this error.
Note also that Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior, the Way, and He that made all things (Col 1:16-17; John 1:1-4, etc) specifically stated, “Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled” (Matt 5:16-18). Even Paul, who is so often quoted (and misquoted) also stressed this point in accordance with his Master’s teachings. (Romans 3:31). In fact, Paul continued to keep the Sabbath and so did all of the apostles and disciples. Test this: no one can prove that they did otherwise.
Consider this, Paul was a stickler for details, he was an extremely intellectual individual and would have made a fantastic legal rep even today: would he have let something like this go unattended? … without making specific mention of Jesus his Master changing the Sabbath? You will have many discussions about this, but no one will ever prove from the ‘Bible alone’ that the Sabbath was changed or that it can be kept on any other day as determined by man. QUESTION: as traditions go, isn’t this an event that is worth remembering? Especially seeing that it was made and hallowed by Jesus Himself? The Sabbth was made for man, and not, man for the Sabbath! It is a gift from God, who is to be honoured, respected and praised and obeyed. The Sabbath is a day specially picked and made holy by God himself for man, his creation.
President Coolidge thought the Sabbath to be so important that he deferred the celebration of that day to July 05, in 1926. Isn’t that interesting! It appears He saw the true value in the Sabbath, and with the light that he was given for the time, he led by example. The Bible which he read then is still the same today. It’s teachings have not changed but its truth is being revealed to all and it is reaching the four corners of the globe whilst America, deeply immersed in its own traditions, has fallen asleep. This what is sad: America celebrates everything so it seems, but what is necessary …
Spread the Gospel to the world is our Lord’s commission to his followers. Paul says to not be ashamed of the gospel of Christ (Romans 1: 16-17) and to be instant in our sharing (2 Tim 4: 1-4) for many will be turn away from the ‘truth…after their own lusts heaping unto themselves teachers, having itching ears; and shall be turned unto fables’ THIS IS THE EVENT THAT WE OUGHT TO BE REMEMBERING AND CELEBRATING. THE FINISHING OF THE WORK AND CELEBRATION OF THE ANTICIPATION OF JESUS’ SOON COMING.
Sadly, I believe,in reading the Bible that many of us will miss this event. Many will be asleepm when He comes … that’s Biblical!
God bless … and so long!
(apologies or taking up so much space)
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I know you’re convinced you’re right, Bill, and I used to believe as you do. But in taking a look at what God actually did in the early church rather than it what I believe he did based on my own interpretation and understanding (and if I trust the apostolic leadership Jesus instituted; which I do — I know many don’t), it’s very clear that the day of worship (what they began calling “The Lord’s Day”) became the first day of the week. Some call it “the eighth day.”
In the New Testament it does speak of the church coming together on the first day of the week; in the Didache (late first, early second country) it speaks of this Lord’s Day; in other early church writings as well; and at the Council of Nicaea (325 AD) Sunday was formally declared the day of worship for the Church. This is the same council that gave us the Nicene Creed, which sums up the Christian faith — and which isn’t called into question as to its veracity. How can we say they got one thing right, but were dead wrong on the other?
“The Lord’s Day” was the first day of the week and this is how the entire church lived and practiced their faith — across the board. There were no Seventh Day Adventists back then, or Messianic Jews, doing it differently. The church was one until the first great schism in 1054 AD — so for more than 1000 years, the first day of the week was the day of worship for Christians (specifically they came together on this day to participate in the Eucharist).
Because of this historical fact, I think the burden of proof would be on yourself to show when it switched away from being the first day of the week.
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Juliana, you’ve responded better than I could, so I won’t add anything. (I personally wish this point were a little clearer in Scripture, however! A statement of the connection between the Jewish Sabbath and the Lord’s day would have been nice, as would a clearer statement of what baptism means.)
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Cheryl, I have to apologize — I hadn’t read the comments completely through before posting (I did later), and I hadn’t realized you had already made the basic points I made in #14. [blushing].
I hear what you’re saying about things being mentioned more clearly in the Bible. I can think of numerous other topics (speaking in tongues, head coverings, tithing, etc). But if all these things and more were spelled out, it could be thousands of pages long! And like as not, many of us would still understand things differently than others, you know?
Have a good evening.
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AND *apologies* (again!) for relying on my transcription program to give me the right word when I typed an abbreviation — it should say “century” in #14, not country. Same consonants, no?
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brothers theh sabbath is and old testament, and is religious and follow cristh does not have anything to do with rules is by faith. In the new testament Jesús said if you lose a ship are you going to look for it or not because is saturday? My god thay are confused, follow christ is in the heart and no on the rules, is by faith inside our heart, theres is nothing that the humans do by themself to perfect themselfs. That is why our founders follow the mind of christ and no their own opinions, like the rest of the world.
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Cheryl, I read an interesting item in a book by St. Nikolai Velimirovich last night regarding the sabbath. He said that Christ himself worked on the Sabbath (Saturday) after he was crucified — he was in hell preaching to those there, working on their salvation. He rested the next day — Sunday. So in this act, the day of rest was changed from Saturday to Sunday by Christ himself (and followed by the early church).
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Except that Jesus didn’t “rest” on Sunday–He arose that day! That interpretation seems a little weak to me, but I think overall the biblical evidence of a change in day, meaning, etc. is quite clear. Surely most of the church has always thought so, so the burden of proof is on those who don’t think so. (BTW, I didn’t think you duplicated me earlier; we backed each other up.)
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It seems to me that a lot of time and energy has been spent on quotes and literal references to and from the Bible. Let us not forget that the original text of the Bible was Aramaic. It was then translated and printed in German. And finally cannonized by the Catholic church! In my humble opinion, if your religion is based solely on the written text, you my friends have missed the boat! The Bible is not a manifesto! It is a teaching tool! Meaning different things to different people. Direction should be taken from your personal relationship with God. He speaks to our hearts and always has. Please… this is not judgemental! That is reserved for the creator. This is only a viewpoint to consider! My God bless and keep you!
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From strictly Bibical teachings, the seventh day of the week is the only day blessed/made holy by God. With that said, there is no actual day set specifically set aside for worship as worship is to be done everyday. By preaching on the Sabbath, Jesus wasn’t breaking the law of God for as he himself said, he was fulfilling the law. From a Bibical perspective, is going to church wrong on Sunday? No. From a Bibical perspective, is shopping, conducting business, doing your job on Saturday forbidden? Yes. This is one of those things that people have to evaluate on their own though to decide if they are going to do what their faith requires or to do what they have learned through tradition and what is easier to do.
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