It depends on the particular Christian Church. (There is no damnation in Judaism.)
Most churches, however, believe that working on the Sabbath is not sin or if it is a sin, it's a minor one.
Jesus died clearly on what is called Good Friday, as the Jews would not do any form of work , or take the life of people on the cross on a sabbath.
No, it isn't lawful to fight on the Sabbath, let alone work then.
Well, that is a very simple question :). Look at the Bible, don't ask other people about what the Bible means when it says rest on the Seventh day, ask the Bible itself. Go to biblegateway.com and tipe in the word Sabbath, it will show you all the verses concerning the Sabbath and that way you can know how to keep the Sabbath, what you can do and what you can't do.
The Jews accused Jesus of violating the Sabbath's "no work" law.
Saturday is the Sabbath and the Jewish day of rest, no work is allowed to be done on the Sabbath.
Sabbath can be both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to a day of religious observance and abstinence from work, typically on Sundays for Christians and on Saturdays for Jews. As a verb, it means to keep the Sabbath or to rest from work on that day.
Damned Damned Damned was created in 1919-09.
According to the narrative in the Gospels, the Pharisees were bothered by Jesus healing (or performing work) on the Sabbath. Current Jewish Law, however, specifies that saving lives is a higher-order command than observing the Sabbath.
The people of the Hebrew faiyh celebrate the sabbath on Saturday , Muslims on Friday and Christians on Sunday. It is an awesome thing in Jerusalem to see differant store owners closed on their sabbath.
Briefly, part 1 means that only necessary "work" like feeding livestock or dealing with emergencies should be accomplished on the Sabbath; if it is work that can possibly be done beforehand or afterward, do that. Part 2 may be restated "Sabbath rest is to forward--or "promote"--not to hinder Sabbath worship.
It was illegal to work and engage in certain forms of recreation on the Sabbath in America's colonial period.
Yes.