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Do Seventh-Day Adventists celebrate holidays?

The Seventh-day Adventist Church[a] is an Adventist Protestant Christian group that emphasizes Jesus Christ’s impending Second Coming and observes the Sabbath on Saturday, the seventh day of the week in both the Christian (Gregorian) and Hebrew calendars (advent).   The denomination was created in 1863 as a result of the mid-nineteenth-century Millerite movement in the…

The Seventh-day Adventist Church[a] is an Adventist Protestant Christian group that emphasizes Jesus Christ’s impending Second Coming and observes the Sabbath on Saturday, the seventh day of the week in both the Christian (Gregorian) and Hebrew calendars (advent).

 

The denomination was created in 1863 as a result of the mid-nineteenth-century Millerite movement in the United States. One of its co-founders was Ellen G. White, and the church still holds her various writings in high regard. The Seventh-day Adventist Church is the largest of numerous Adventist churches that formed during the Second Great Awakening in the 1840s from the Millerite movement in upstate New York.

Seventh-day Adventists diverge from mainstream Trinitarian Christian denominations in only four areas of belief. The Sabbath, the notion of the heavenly sanctuary, the status of Ellen White’s books, and their doctrines of the second coming and millennium are all discussed.

Do Seventh-day Adventists celebrate holidays?

What holidays do Seventh-Day Adventists celebrate? Adventists do not recognize Christmas or other religious festivals throughout the year as holy feasts instituted by God. Only the weekly Sabbath is considered sacrosanct by Adventists (from Friday sunset to Saturday sunset).

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