Daily Bread, what is it with all these citations of apologists plainly contradicting basic facts that they could have easily educated themselves on by picking up their catechism or even the encyclopedia on the church's reasons for Sunday? You are STILL speaking of ROME stating things yet up till now have not provided a SINGLE reference of ROME doing what you are insisting it has done, citing claims contrary to evidence spanning 2,000 years. Honestly, this is quite tiresome! Peter so and so fighting protestants in a magazine is NOT "Rome" or "the Catholic Church". Their own catechisms and authoritative council teachings contradict them and these apologists clearly don't expect their opponents to have read these (or maybe they themselves are simply ignorant). You say this is your first time hearing a catholic state BASIC Catholic teachings? Read around the internet alone, Daily Bread. Just google "catholic" "sunday" "Sabbath", I found enough refutations and not a single opinion agreeing with you, so I am guessing that catholics recognize on the whole that those apologists you cite were foolishly harping on Adventist battles with other protestants in order to make their point...totally not an honest or prudent thing to do on their part.
Oh, getting tired now hearing what your own fellow Catholics preach?
I'll repeat myself. There are numerous documents detailing the change of the Sabbath by the Catholic church. I deliberately avoided them because you questioned their motives. That's why my quotes are from the horses mouth. But you question them too at too old in some cases. I even quoted two recent popes. You now want me to restrict myself to catechisms and encyclopedia. Let me comply with the quotes below.
"Written by the finger of God on two tables of stone, this Divine code (ten commandments) was received from the Almighty by Moses amid the thunders of Mount Sinai...Christ resumed these Commandments in the double precept of charity--love of God and of the neighbour; He proclaimed them as binding under the New Law in Matthew 19 and in the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5)....The (Catholic) Church, on the other hand, after changing the day of rest from the Jewish Sabbath, or seventh day of the week, to the first, made the Third Commandment refer to Sunday as the day to be kept holy as the Lord's Day....He (God) claims one day out of the seven as a memorial to Himself, and this must be kept holy..." The Catholic Encyclopedia, vol. 4, "The Ten Commandments", 1908 edition by Robert Appleton Company; and 1999 On-line edition by Kevin Knight, Imprimatur, John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04153a.htm"Question: How prove you that the church had power to command feasts and holydays?
"Answer: By the very act of changing the Sabbath into Sunday, which Protestants allow of; and therefore they fondly contradict themselves by keeping Sunday strictly, and breaking most other feasts commanded by the same church.
"Question: Have you any other way of proving that the church has power to institute festivals of precept?
"Answer: Had she not such power, she could not a done that in which all modern religionists agree with her; -she could not have substituted the observance of Sunday the first day of the week, for the observance of Saturday the seventh day of the week, a change for which there is no Scriptural authority." Stephen Keenan, A Doctrinal Catechism On the Obedience Due to the Church, 3rd edition, Chapter 2, p. 174 (Imprimatur, John Cardinal McCloskey, Archbishop of New York).
"Question - Which is the Sabbath day?
"Answer - Saturday is the Sabbath day.
"Question - Why do we observe Sunday instead of Saturday?
"Answer - We observe Sunday instead of Saturday because the Catholic Church, in the Council of Laodicea (A.D. 364), transferred the solemnity from Saturday to Sunday." Peter Geiermann, C.S.S.R., The Convert's Catechism of Catholic Doctrine, p. 50, 3rd edition, 1957.
"Some theologians have held that God likewise directly determined the Sunday as the day of worship in the New Law, that He Himself has explicitly substituted the Sunday for the Sabbath. But this theory is now entirely abandoned. It is now commonly held that God simply gave His Church the power to set aside whatever day or days she would deem suitable as Holy Days. The Church chose Sunday, the first day of the week, and in the course of time added other days as holy days." John Laux, A Course in Religion for Catholic High Schools and Academies, 1936 edition, vol. 1, p. 51.
{Allow me to throw this in because you have extensively educated us about canons}
"The authority of the church could therefore not be bound to the authority of the Scriptures, because the Church had changed...the Sabbath into Sunday, not by command of Christ, but by its own authority." Canon and Tradition, p. 263.
"It was the Catholic church which...has transferred this rest to Sunday in remembrance of the resurrection of our Lord. Therefore the observance of Sunday by the Protestants is an homage they pay, in spite of themselves, to the authority of the (Catholic) church." Monsignor Louis Segur, Plain Talk About the Protestantism of Today, p. 213.
All these quotes are hidden in the link. We'd have a problem if they came from non-Catholic sources and if they weren't so remarkably consistent on whodunnit, why, when and how.