You are sort of correct, it wasn't the Catholic church but a Roman emperor and Asian clerics
On March 7, A.D. 321, Constantine the Great issued the first civil Sunday law, compelling all the people in the Roman Empire, except farmers, to rest on Sunday. This, with five other civil laws decreed by Constantine concerning Sunday, set the legal precedent for all civil Sunday legislation from that time to the present.
In the 4th century, the Council of Laodicea urged Christians to honor Sunday by abstaining from work on that day if at all possible, and prohibited them from abstaining from work on the Sabbath.
That may be the common notion today, but it goes against the New Testament.
There is clearly no New Testament evidence for a change of the Sabbath from Saturday, the seventh day of the week, to Sunday, the first day of the week. The change came after the days of Jesus and the apostles, so we must turn to history to see when and how this change came about.
The earliest authentic instance of Sunday observance by Christians occurred in Italy, in the middle of the 2nd century after Christ. For a long time after that, many Christians observed both days, while still others kept the seventh-day Sabbath only.
Thanks for mentioning that. What is your faith if you don't mind my asking? Someone else in this thread seems to think you're an atheist, would this be accurate?
You are sort of correct, it wasn't the Catholic church but a Roman emperor and Asian clerics
https://www.bibleinfo.com/en/questions/who-changed-the-sabbath
That may be the common notion today, but it goes against the New Testament.
https://www.bibleinfo.com/en/questions/who-changed-the-sabbath
Study also the council of Trent. Much evil came from it.
Thanks for mentioning that. What is your faith if you don't mind my asking? Someone else in this thread seems to think you're an atheist, would this be accurate?