On Thu, 7 Nov 2002 19:39:37   
 Joseph B. Reid wrote:
>Marcus wrote in USMA 23079:
>
>>  if the very first day of the week as far as the introduction of 
>>life in this planet is concerned DID take place on *the* day we now 
>>call Sunday, obviously noone anywhere can deny the fact that the 
>>*correct* order for them *historically* would forcefully HAVE to be 
>>Sunday, Monday, ..., Saturday!  ;-)
>>
>>Marcus
>
>
>Wrong,  Genesis 1:5 "And God called the light Day and the darkness he 
>called Night.  And the evening and the morning were the first day."
>
>Genesis 2:2 "And on the seventh day God ended his work which he had 
>made; and he rested on the seventh day from all his work which he had 
>made."
>...
?????  With all due respect, Joe, but are you going gaga or something?...  Where is 
the 'wrong' in what I wrote vis-a-vis the above texts?  They actually prove *exactly* 
what I wrote, i.e. that the 'first day' of the week (obviously 'day' meaning night and 
day, 24 hours!) was the 'first day of the week', a day which historically is called by 
English speaking nations as Sunday!

Likewise, historically, the 'seventh day' is the day English speaking people call 
Saturday!  There is undeniable historical proof of that!  Suffice it for one to 
compare how days of the week are called in several languages to see the obvious 
association!

Marcus


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