It is a question of
critical importance whether the Scriptures require members of a local
church to assemble to partake of the Lord’s Supper on the first day of
the week, or Sunday. If they do not, the frequency of church assemblies
then becomes a discretionary matter and churches may arbitrarily choose
other days and frequencies of assembly. Given the human tendency to
minimize religious obligations, such a conclusion would undoubtedly
threaten the vitality, if not the very existence, of churches.
The record of the
disciples at
Troas
gathering to “break bread” (Acts 20:7) is the only New Testament
text which makes a direct connection between Sunday and the Lord’s
Supper, and the fact that this information is given in an example has
presented difficulties. The challenge of examples, vis-ŕ-vis commands,
is knowing whether they represent obedience to a command or the exercise
of an option under generic authority.
Observing people
doing something does not necessarily reveal why they are doing it. For
instance, if a person just sees a child bringing his father a glass of
water, he does not know why. Perhaps the child is acting in response to
a directive from his father or perhaps strictly on his own initiative
out of kindness. On the other hand, if he hears the father direct his
son to bring him a glass of water, then he knows why the son acted.
Likewise, it is
important to know why Christians in the New Testament acted before
treating their conduct as something requiring imitation. Since New
Testament Christians are sometimes recorded as acting without a specific
command, reading about their conduct in the New Testament does not, in
and of itself, reveal whether they were acting in obedience to God’s
command applicable to other Christians. It must be allowed, in the
absence of other information, that, as is true of all Christians, they
may have been exercising a choice under God’s generic authority (cf.
“go,” Matt. 28:19).
Therefore, before
anyone can insist on using the example of the disciples in Troas
partaking of the Lord’s Supper on Sunday as a basis for requiring others
today to do likewise, he must have some information which makes a
compelling case that those disciples met on Sunday because they were
acting in response to a divine directive to do so. If this is why they
did so, this means that others today must do likewise. This conclusion
is based on the premise that what some New Testament Christians did in
obedience to a general command is equally applicable to all Christians,
and partaking of the Lord’s Supper is a general command applicable to
all Christians (1 Cor. 11:17-34).
To return to an
earlier point in this discussion, there is an important difference
between observing the random occurrences of daily life and reading the
examples recorded by New Testament writers, such as Luke. Daily
observations of events may occur randomly or uncontrollably, as far as
the observer can tell. This is to say that one’s observation of events
has no direct or discernible relation to the events themselves. When,
or why, something happens is in no way related to one’s observation of
it (assuming the actor does not know he is being observed and/or is not
responding to that fact). Events are independent of observation.
Again, whether one observes a son bringing his father a glass of water,
or does not, is not the reason the son brings his father a glass of
water (especially if the son does not know he is being observed).
On the other hand,
this is not the case with the record of events or observations. While
an observer may not be able to control independent events or whether he
sees them, he certainly can choose whether to record them, and if he
chooses to record them, it is presumable that he has some purpose in
doing so. If he could just as well leave the event unrecorded, then
there is no point in him making a record of it. This is especially true
in the case of New Testament writers, who were guided by the Holy
Spirit. The Scriptures should be approached with the presumption that
the Holy Spirit had a purpose in every word and event He had recorded in
them (2 Tim.
3:16,
17).
Therefore, to articulate the question in a way which more appropriately
reflects an appreciation of this important point is to ask, not why the
disciples in
Troas partook
of the Lord’s Supper on Sunday, but why Luke recorded that they did.
There are about ten
elements in Luke’s example of the disciples at Troas (Acts 20:6-16).
These include: (a) the disciples gathering to “break bread” on Sunday
(vs. 7), (b) the preacher speaking until midnight (vs. 7),
(c) meeting in an upper room (vs. 8), (d) many lamps in the
meeting place (vs. 8), (e) meeting at night (vss. 7,8,11), (f) an
open window with someone sitting on its sill (vs. 9), (g) the
preacher eating at the meeting place after speaking (vs. 11), (h)
brethren staying up all night (vs. 11), (i) the preacher taking a
walk after speaking or “go[ing] by land” to his next appointment
(vss. 13,14), and (j) the preacher leaving town after speaking
(vss. 7,11). It is important to note that it is possible to account
with information provided in the text for all of the elements of this
example recorded by Luke ─ except one!
The story line in
the paragraphs under consideration centers around the unusual event of
Paul raising a young man from the dead. Once this is recognized (along
with other information provided explicitly in the context), the purpose
for Luke recording the other elements of this example becomes clear,
since they relate directly to that fact. The reason why Luke recorded
that the disciples met in an upper, or third-floor, room at night in a
building with an open window and lamps and Paul speaking until midnight,
etc., can be traced all the way back to his inclusion of the story of
Eutychus falling out of the window and Paul raising him from the dead.
Why did Eutychus die? He fell out of a third-floor window. Why did he
fall out of a window? He was sitting on it and fell asleep. Why did he
fall asleep? Paul preached late into the night (hence, the lamps). Why
did he preach late into the night? He was intending to depart the next
day, was in a hurry to get to Jerusalem by Pentecost, and wanted to make
the most of his time with brethren he never expected to see again
(vss. 7, 16, 25).
This is enough
information to explain why Luke recorded the various elements of this
example, and it has nothing to do with the Holy Spirit in this way
instructing other Christians that they are to replicate them! Had the
Holy Spirit not wanted to include the story of Paul raising Eutychus
from the dead, it is presumable that He would not have seen any more
need to include the information about the circumstances under which the
disciples in
Troas met
than He did about the circumstances under which other disciples met.
Since the Holy Spirit obviously included the elements of this example
for another purpose than that of teaching Christians to replicate them,
there is no need for Christians to be concerned with doing so.
However, Paul’s
raising of Eutychus from the dead does not account for Luke recording
that the disciples at
Troas
met on the first day of the week. In other words, the fact that it was
Sunday night, as opposed to another night of the week has no direct
bearing on why Eutychus died. This is to say that, if all of the
elements of the story remained the same, except that it was any other
night of the week, the results (i.e., Eutychus being killed by a fall
from his seat in an open third-floor window of the meeting place) would
have been precisely the same. However, remove the nighttime meeting
(which necessitated many lamps), for instance, and Eutychus does not
have occasion to fall asleep on Paul’s sermon, fall out of the window to
his death, and be raised by Paul. On the other hand, Paul raising
Eutychus from the dead provides no basis for Luke observing that it was
Sunday when the disciples met to “break bread.”
Moreover, there is
strong positive evidence that the disciples at Troas met on Sunday
because they acted under direct divine command to do so. After all, if
God did not require churches to assemble on Sundays to partake of the
Lord’s Supper and, therefore, one day of the week is just as good as
another for this purpose, there would have been no point in Luke
recording this information!
Also, every time New
Testament writers name the day of the week when an event occurred, that
day is always clearly significant or relevant to the event. New
Testament writers specifically mention only three days of the week ─ the
day of preparation (Friday), the Sabbath (Saturday), and the first day
of the week (Sunday). Friday is significant because it explains that it
was almost the Sabbath and why, therefore, the thieves’ legs were broken
while they were on the cross and the women waited until Sunday to bring
spices to Jesus’ tomb (Lk. 23:54-56; Jn. 19:31). Saturday is
important because the Jews met in their synagogues and at other places
on that day for religious purposes, and Paul seized the occasion to
teach them (e.g., Acts
15:21;
16:13; 18:4).
Sunday is mentioned because it was the day on which Jesus rose from the
dead, the third day after His death, in fulfillment of His word
(Matt. 16:21; Lk. 24:1,6,7,21,46; Jn. 20:1,19). Without a single
exception, there is always a clearly discernible reason why the writers
of the New Testament recorded that something occurred on a particular
day of the week.
Yet, there is no way
to account for Luke recording that it was Sunday when the disciples at
Troas met to “break bread” unless they were acting under a divine
command to do so. If this information were part of an uninspired
account, this question might never have arisen, or if raised, then
dismissed as unworthy of attention. After all, uninspired writers make
mistakes and record frivolous details. However, what the Holy Spirit
chose to record by the hands of New Testament writers cannot be so
dismissed, unless one wishes to impugn the wisdom of God.
The example of the
disciples at
Troas
assembling on Sunday to partake of the Lord’s Supper, reinforced by
corroborative evidence, is the Lord’s way of directing other disciples
to do likewise. This is not a difficult inference to draw, and what
this example teaches should be sufficient to all except those with an
adversarial attitude. God’s word is not obscure, but it was written to
those who have an attitude receptive, and perceptive, of the truth.
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