The Seventh Day Part 4
Part four is broken into 8 sections. 1. Russian Reformation – This Sabbathkeeping movement reached the highest levels of Russian society and led to fiery executions in Moscow’s Red Square. 2. Sabbath vs. Sunday in Ethiopia – Jesuit missionaries succeeded in converting the Emperor to Roman Catholicism, but attempts to quash Sabbath observance resulted in civil war. 3. Inquisition – Civil and religious authorities united to root out “heresy.” 4. Purging the Church in Spain – Ferdinand and Isabella, the “Catholic Monarchs,” used the Spanish Inquisition to rid their church of Jewish heresies. 5. Portugal Exports the Inquisition – Inquisitors carried their campaign of religious persecution into the new territories of Portugal’s expanding empire. 6. Authority: Sola Scriptura? – Protestant Reformers insisted on the authority of the sacred Scriptures, while Catholic leaders defended their church’s stand on Tradition. 7. Anabaptists – Persecuted by Protestants and Catholics alike, these radical reformers stood for strict adherence to biblical teachings. Among them were new champions of the Sabbath. 8. The Seventh-day Men – While many Puritan preachers insisted on strict observance of Sunday, other prominent Englishmen called for a return to the Sabbath of the Ten Commandments.