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A03146 The history of the Sabbath In two bookes. By Pet. Heylyn. Heylyn, Peter, 1600-1662. 1636 (1636) STC 13274; ESTC S104023 323,918 504

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day meetings Non tamen numerum septennarium ita se morari ut ejus servituti ecclesias astringeret yet stood not he so much for the number of seven as to confine the Church unto it If Calvin elsewhere be of another minde and speake of keeping holy one day in seven as a matter necessary which some say he doth either they must accuse him of much inconstancy and forgetfulnesse or else interpret him In decalog with Ryvell as speaking of an ecclesiasticall custome not to be neglected non de necessitate legis divinae and not of any obligation layed upon us by the law of God Neither is he the onely one that hath so determined Simler hath sayd it more expressely Quod dies una cultui divine consecretur ex lege naturae est quod autom haec sit septima In Exod. 20. non octava nona aut decima juris est divini sed ceremonialis That one day should be set apart for Gods publicke worship is the law of nature but that this day should bee the seventh and not the eighth ninth or tenth was of divine appointment but as ceremoniall Loc. 55. Aretius also in his common pla●es distinguished betweene the substance of the Sabbath and the time thereof the substance of it which was rest and the workes of piety being in all times to continue tempus autem ut septimo die observetur hoe non fu●t necessarium in ecclesia Christi but for the time to keepe it on the seventh day alwayes that was not necessary in the Church of Christ. So also Frankisc Gomarus that great undertaker against Arminius Cap. 5. n. 8. in a booke written purposely de origine institutione Sabbati affirmes for certaine that it can neither be made good by the law of nature or text of Scripture or any solid argument drawne from thence unum è septem diebus ex vi praecepti quarti ad cultum dei necessario observandum that by the fourth Commandement one day in seven is of necessity to be dedicated to Gods service And Ryvet as profest an enemy of the Remonstrants In Exod. 20. p. 190. though for the antiquity of the Sabbath he differeth from the sayd Gomarus yet hee agreeth with him in this not onely making the observance of one day in seven to be meerely positive as in our first part we observed but layes it downe for the received opinion of most of the Reformed Divines unum ex septem diebus non esse necessari● eligendum ex vi praecepti ad sacros conventus celebrandos the very same with what Gomarus affirmed before In Examin Conc Tred So lastly for the Lutheran Churches Chemnitius makes it part of our Christian liberty quod nec ●int alligati nec debeant alligari ad certorum vel dierum vel temporum observationes opinione necessitatis in Novo Testamento c. That men are neither bound nor ought to bee unto the observation of any dayes or times as matters necessary under the Gospel of our Saviour though otherwise he account it for a barbarous folly not to observe that day with all due solemnitie which hath for so long time beene kept by the Church of God Therefore in his opinion also the keeping of one day in seven is neither any morall part of the fourth Commandement 〈…〉 or parcell of the law of nature As for the subtile shift of Amesius finding that keeping holy of one day in seven is positive indeed sed immutabilis plane institutionis but such a positive Law as is absolutely immutable doth as much oblige as those which in themselues are plainly naturall and morall it may then serve when there is nothing else to helpe us For that a positive law should be immutable in it selfe and in its owne nature be as universally binding as the morall law is such a peece of learning and of contradiction as never was put up to shew in these latter times But hee had learnt his ●●rry in England here and durst not broach it but by halues amongst the Hollanders 7 For the next Thesis that the Lords day is not founded on divine Commandement but the authoritie of the Church it is a point so universally resolved on as no one thing more and first we will begin with Caluin who tels us how it was not without good reason that those of old appointed the Lords Day as we call it to supply the place of the Iewish Sabbath 〈◊〉 l. 2. c. 8. ● 3. Non sine delectu daminicum quem vocamus diem veteres in locum sabbati subr●garunt as his words there are Where none I hope will think that hee would give our Saviour Christ or his Apostles such a short come off as to include them in the name of Veteres onely which makes it plaine that he conceived it not to be their appointment In Math. 12. Bucer resolues the point more cleerly communi christianorum consensu Dominicum diem publicis Ecclesie conventibus ac requieti publicae dicatu●● esse ipso statim Apostolorum tempore and saith that in the Apostles times the Lords day by the common consent of Christiau people was dedicated unto publick rest In 〈◊〉 and the assembli●s of the Church And Peter Martyr upon a question asked why the ●ld seventh day was not kept in the Christian Church makes answere that upon that day and on all the rest wee ought to rest from our owne works the works of sinne Sed quod is magis quam ille eligatur ad 〈◊〉 Deicultum libern● fui● Ecclesis per Christum ut 〈◊〉 consuleret quod ex re magis judicaret 〈◊〉 illa pessime judicavit c. That this was rather chose then that for Gods publick service that saith he Christ left totally unto the liberty of the Church to do therein what should seeme most expedient and that the Church did very well in that she did preferre the memory of the resurrection before the memory of the creation These two I have the rather thus joyned together as being sent for into England i● King Edwards time and placed by the Protectour in our Vniversities the better to establish 〈◊〉 at that time begun and doubt we not but that they taught the self same doctrine if at the least they touched at all upon that point with that now extant in their writings at the same time with the lived Bullinger Gu●ltor In Apoc. 1 two great learned men Of these the first informes us hunc 〈◊〉 loco sabbati in memoriam resurgentis Domini delegisse sibi Ecclesia● that in memoriall of our Saviours resurrection the Churches set apart this day in the Sabbaths steed whereon to hold their solemne and religious meeting● And after Sponte receper●●● Eccle●i● illam diem non legimus cam ullibi praeceptam that of their owne accord and by their own authoritie the Church made choice thereof for the use afore●aid In Act. Ap. 〈◊〉 131.
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. But this perhaps was onely in respect of Lectures or Expositions of the Scriptures such as were often used in the greater Citties where there was much people and but little businesse for I conceive not that they met every day in these times to receive the Sacraments Of Wednesday and of Friday it is plaine they did not to say any thing of the Saturday till the next Section Epl. 289. S. Basil names them all together 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is saith he a profitable and pious thing every day to communicate and to participate of the blessed body and blood of Christ our Saviour he having told us in plaine termes that Whosoever eateth his flesh and drinketh his blood hath eternall life We notwithstanding doe communicate but foure times weekely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. on the Lords day the Wednesday the Friday and the Saturday unlesse on any other dayes the memory of some Martyr be perhaps observed E●pos ●●d ●ath 11. 22. Epiphanius goeth a little further and he deriveth the Wednesdayes and the Fridayes Service even from the Apostles ranking them in the same Antiquity and grounding them upon the same authority that he doth the Sunday 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Onely it seemes the differenc● was that whereas formerly it had beene the custome not to administer the Sacrament on these two dayes being both of them fasting dayes and so accounted long before untill towards evening It had beene changed of late and they did celebrate in the mornings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as on the Lords day was accustomed Whether the meetings on these dayes were of such antiquity as Epiphanius saith they were I will not meddle Certaine it is that they were very antient in the Church of God as may appeare by that of Origen and Tertullian before remembred So that if wee consider eyther the preaching of the word the ministration of the Sacraments or the publicke Prayers the Sunday in the Easterne Churches had no great prerogative above other dayes especially above the Wednesday and the Friday save that the meetings were more solemne and the concourse of people greater than at other times as it is most likely The footesteps of this antient custome are yet to be observed in this Church of England by which it is appointed that no Wednesdayes and Fridayes weekely Can. 25. though they be not holy dayes the Minister at the accustomed houres of Service s●all resort to Church and say the Letanie prescribed in the Booke of Common prayer 5 As for the Saturday that retained its wounted credit in the Easterne Church little inferiour to the Lords day if not plainely equall not as a Sabbath thinke not so but as a day designed unto sacred meetings The Constitutions of the Apostles said to be writ by Clemens one of Saint Peters first successours in the Church of Rome appoint both dayes to be observed as solemne Festivalls both of them to be dayes of rest that so the servant might have time to repaire unto the Church for his education Lib 8. c. 3● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So the Constitution Not that they should denote them wholy unto rest from labour but onely those se● times of both which were appointed for the meetings of the Congregation Yet this had an exception too the Saturday before Easter day Lib. 5 cap. 19. whereupon Christ rested in the Grave being exempt from these assemblies and destinated onely unto griefe and fasting And though these constitutions in all likelihood were not writ by Clemens there being many things therein which could not be in use of a long time after yet ancient sure they were as being mentioned in Epiphanius De Scrip. Ecc. in Clemente and as the Cardinall confesseth à Graecis veteribus magni factos much made of by the ancient Graecians though not of such authoritie in the Church of Rome How their authoritie in this point is countenanced by Ignatius we have seene already and wee shall see the same more fully throughout all this Age. And first beginning with the Synod held in Laodicea Can 16. a towne of Phrygia Anno 314. there passed a Canon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 touching the reading of the Gospels with the other Scriptures upon the Saturday or Sabbath that in the time of Lent Canon 49. there should be no oblation made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but on the Saturday and the Lords day onely neither that any Festivall should be then observed in memory of any Martyrs Canon 51. but that their names onely should be commemorated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon the Lords day and the Sabbaths Nor was this onely the particular will of those two and thirty Prelates that there assembled it was the practise too of the Alexandrians S. Athanasius Patriarch there affirmes that they assembled on the Sabbath dayes not that they were infected any whit with Iudaisius which was farre from them H●mi● de Seme●te but that they came together on the Sabbath day to worship Iesus Christ the Lord of the Sabbath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Father hath it So for the Church of Millaine which as before I said in some certaine things followed the Churches of the East it seemes the Saturday was held in a farre esteeme and joyned together with the Sunday Crastino die Sabbato De Sacrament Lib 4. cap. 6. dominico de orationis ordine dicemus as S. Ambrose hath it And probablie his often mention of hesternus dies remembred in the former Section may have relation to the joynt observance of these two dayes and so may that which is reported then out of S. Chrysost. and S. Cyril Easterne Doctors both Hist. Eccles. Lib. 6. cap. 8. Sure I am Socrates counts both dayes for weekely Festivalls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and addes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that on them both the Congregation used to be assembled and the whole Liturgie performed Which plainely shewes that in the practise of those Churches they were both regarded both alike observed Gregory Nyssen speakes more home and unto the purpose Some of the people had neglected to come unto the Church upon the Saturday and on the Sunday he thus chides and rebukes them for it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 De Cast●g●tione c. with what face saith the Father wilt thou looke upon the Lords day which hast dishonoured the Sabbath knowest thou not that these dayes are sisters and that who ever doth despise the one doth affront the other Sisters indeed and so accounted in those Churches not onely in regard of the publicke meetings but in this also that they were both exempt from the Lenten Fast of which more annon In the meane time we may remember how Saturday i● by S. Basil made one of those foure times whereon the Christians of those parts did assemble weekely to receive the Sacrament as before wee noted And finally it is sayd
and their practice from these new conceptions And here I cannot chuse but note that whereas those who first did set on foot these Doctrines in all their other practises to subvert this Church did beare themselves continually on the authority of Calvin and the example of those Churches which came most neere unto the Plat-forme of Geneva in these their Sabbath-speculations they had not onely none to follow but they found Calvin and Geneva and those other Churches directly contrary unto them However in all other matters they cryed up Calvin and his writings making his Bookes the very Canon to which both Discipline and Doctrine was to be confirmed Hooker in ●i● Preface yet hic magister non tenetur here by his leave they would forsake him and leave him fairely to himselfe that they themselves might have the glory of a new invention For you my Brethren and beloved in our Lord and Saviour as I doe willingly beleeve that you have entertain'd these tenets upon misperswasion not out of any ill intentions to the Church your Mother and that it is an errour in your judgements onely not of your affections so upon that beliefe have I spared no paines as much as in me is to remove that errour and rectifie what is amisse in your opinion I hope you are not of those men Quos non persuadebis etiamsi persuaseris who either hate to be reformed or have so farre espoused a quarrell that neither truth nor reason can divorce them from it Nor would I gladly you should be of their resolutions Qui volunt id verum esse quod credunt nolunt id credere quod verum est who are more apt to thinke all true which themselves beleeve than be perswaded to beleeve such things as are true indeed In confidence whereof as I was first induced to compose this Historie so in continuance of those hopes I have presumed to addresse it to you to tender it to your perusall and to submit it to your censure that if you are not better furnished you may learne from hence that you have trusted more unto other men than you had just reason It is my chiefe endeavour as it is my prayer that possibly I may behold Ierusalem in prosperity all my life long Nor doubt I by the grace of God to reduce some of you at the least to such conformity with the practise of the Catholicke Church that even your hands may also labour in the advancement and promotion of that full prosp●rity which I so desire This that I may the better doe I shall present you as I said with the true Story of the Sabbath and therin lay before your eyes both what the Doctrine was and what the practise of all former times and how it stands in both respects with all Gods Churches at this present First for the Sabbath I shall shew you that it was not instituted by the Lord in Paradise nor naturally imprinted in the soule of man nor ever kept by any of the antient Fathers before Moses time and this not generally said and no more but so but proved particularly and successively in a continued descent of times and men Next that being given unto the Iewes by Moses it was not so observed or reckned of as any of the morall precepts but sometimes kept and sometimes not according as mens private businesses or the necessities of the state might give way unto it and finally was for ever abrogated with the other ce●emonies at the destruction of the Temple As for the Gentiles all this while it shall hereby appeare that they tooke no more notice of it except a little at the latter end of the Iewish State than to deride both it and all them that kept it Then for the Lords day that it was not instituted by our Saviour Christ commanded by the Apostles or ordained first by any other authority than the voluntary consecration of it by the Church to religious uses and being consecrated to those uses was not advanced to that esteeme which it now enjoyes but leisurely and by degrees partly by the Edicts of sec●lar Princes partly by Canons of particular Councels and finally by the Decretals of severall Popes and ●rders of inferiour Prelates and being so advanced is subject still as many Protestant Doctors say to the Authority of the Church to be retained or changed as the Church thinkes fit Finally that in all Ages heretofore and in all Churches at this present it neither was nor is esteemed of as a Sabbath day nor reckned of so neere a kin to the former Sabbath but that at all such leisure times as were not destinate by the Church to Gods publike service men might apply their mindes and bestow their thoughts either about their businesses or upon their pleasures such as are lawfull in themselves and not prohibited by those powers under which they lived Which shewed and manifestly proved unto you I doubt not but those paper-walls which have beene raised heretofore to defend these Doctrines how faire soever they may seeme to the outward eye and whatsoever colours have beene laid upon them will in the end appeare unto you to be but paper-walls indeed some beaten downe by the report onely of those many Canons which have successively beene mounted in the Church of God either to fortifie the Lords day which it selfe did institute or cast downe those Iewish fancies which some had laboured to restore Such passages as occurred concerning England I purposely ha●e deferred till the two last Chapters that you may looke upon the actions of our Ancestours with a cleerer eye both those who lived at the first planting of Religion and those who had so great an hand in the reforming of the same And yet not looke upon them only but by comparing your 〈◊〉 Doctrines with those which were delivered in the former times your severe practice with the innocent●libertie which they used amongst them you may the better see your errours and what strange incens● you have offered in the Church of God A way in which I have the rather made choise to wa●●e that by the practice of the Church in generall you may the better judge of those Texts of Scripture which seeme to you to speake in the behalfe of that new Divinitie which you have preached unto the people and by the practise of this Church particularly it may with greater case be shewed you that you did never sucke these Doctrines from your Mothers brests It is an observation a●● a ●ule in Law that custome is the best interpreter of a doubtfull statute and wee are lesson'd thereupon to cast our eyes in all such questionable matters unto the practice of the state in the selfe-same case De ligi● lo●ga consuet Si de interpretatione legis quaeritur imprimis inspiciendum est quo jure civitas retro in hujusmodi casibus usa fuit Consuedo enim optima interpretat ●o l●g●● est If you submit unto this rule and stand
daies by the Saxon Monarchs 4 Of publicke actions civill Ecclesiasticall mixt and military done on the Lords day under the first sixe Norman Kings 5 New Sabbath doctrines br●ached in England in King Johns reigne and the miraculous originall of the same 6 The prosecution of the former Story and ill successe therein of the undertakers 7 Restraine of worldly businesse on the Lords day and the other holy dayes admitted in these times in Scotland 8 Restraint of certaine servile workes on Sundayes holy dayes and the Wakes concluded in the Councell of Oxon under King Henry 3. 9 Husbandrie and legall processe prohibited on the Lords day first in the reigne of King Edward 3. 10 Se●●ing of Woollon the Lords day and the solemne Feasts forbidden first by the said King Edward as after Faires and Markets generally by King Henry 6. 11 The Cordwainers of London restrained from selling of their wares on the Lords day and some solemne feasts by King Edward the 4. and the repealing of that Law by King Henry the 8. 11 In what estate the Lords day stood both for the doctrine and the practise in the beginning of the Reigne of the said King Henry CHAP. VIII The Story of the Lords day from the reformation of Religion in this Kingdome till this present time 1 The Doctrine of the Lords day and the Sabbath deliuered by ● s●v●rall Martyrs conformably unto the judgement of the Protestants before remembred 2 The Lords day and the other holy dayes confessed by all this Kingdome in the Court of Parliament ●o have no other gr●●nd than the authoritie of the Church 3 The meaning and occasion of that clause in the Common-Prayer Booke Lord have mercy upon us c. repeated 〈…〉 end of the fourth Commandement 4 That by the Queenes Injunctions and the first Parliament of h●r reigne the Lords day was not meant for a Sabbath day 5 The doctrine in the Homilies delivered about the Lords day and the Sabbath 6 The 〈◊〉 and substance of that Homily and th●t it proves no Lords day Sabbath but the contrary 7 The first originall of 〈…〉 Sabbath●specula●ions in this Church of England by whom and for what cause invented 8 Strange and most monstrous Paradoxes preached on occasion of the former doctrines and other effects thereof 9 What care was taken of the Lords day in King James his Reigne the spreading of the former doctrines and of the Articles of Ireland 10 The Iewish Sabbath set on foot and of King Iames his Declaration about lawfull sports on the Lords day 11 What tracts were writ and published in that Princes Reigne in opposition of the Doctrines before remembred 12 In what estate the Lords day and the other holy dayes have stood in Scotland since the reformation of Religion in that Kingdome 13 Statutes about the Lords day made in the Reigne of our dread Soveraigne now being and the misconstruing of the same his Majestie reviveth and enlargeth the Declaration of King Iames. 14 An exhortation to obedience unto his Majesties most Christian purpose concludes this History An Advertisement to the Reader touching the Errata THat the Errata of this Booke are g●●wne unto so great a number is neither novum crime● nor in auditum We may with farre 〈…〉 complaine thereof than we can amend it yet for the present I have taken the best care I could although not to prevent yet to correct them Such as are me●●ely literall or no impediment to the sense are left unto the Readers care and ingenuity The rest th● Greeke alone excepted which both for accent and for letter hath beene exceeding much mistaken are here collected to thy ●and and are these th●t follow viz. PART 1. P. 8. l. 14 r. I deny not p. 9 l. 17 r. narratione p. 10 l. 34 r. posaiv●● p. 13. l. 10 r. Ames p. 16. l. 25. for which r. what p. 19. l. 4. r. wherein Bodinus p. 21 l. 2 r. multa p. 23 l. 17 r. palliate their p. 27 l. 29 del saith p. 3 r 1 32 r. S●bbatizasse p. 32 l. 22 r. which doth p. 37 r. present p. 57 l. 36 r. dictated p. 76 l. 31 r. notes it of every moneth p. 83 l. 13 r. weekes p. 94 l. 8 for one r. on the. p. 95 l. 34 r. against Marcion p. 104 in marg r. In ●●ta sua p. 114 l. ●8 r. dedicated p. 121 l. 26 r. Common-wealth p. 135 l 37 for the other r. those p. ●39 r. Iss●char p. 147 l. 3● yet was it not p. 161 l. 5 r. Tamuz p. 177 l. 5 r. Load PART 2. Epistle l. 2. r. part p. 12 l. 7 for as it is r. who as 〈◊〉 ls p. 13 l. 5 r. 〈◊〉 Christus p. 23 l. 9 del ancient p. 27 l. 37 r. from whom it seemes p. 47 l. 21 r. decretory ib. l. 25 r. neither for the. p. 49 l. 9 r. 〈◊〉 ib. 17 del Bu● p. 57 l. 5 r. the old use in p. 58 l. 5 for nor r. now ib. l. 34. r. instituted by ib. l. 35 r. in those p. 62 l. 13 r. as not to p. 66 l. 29. r. intituled p. 69. l. 1. for evill r. civill ib. 11 r. runnes ib. 19 20 for care many r. ceremony p. 71 del up p. 73 l. 22 r. on wednesdayes p. 74 l. 31 ● Iudaisme p. 75 l. 1 r. faire p. 76 l. 11. for Romish r. Iewish ib. l. 23 r. contrived ib. 34 for Two r. To. p. 82. l. 17 for or read on ib. 28 r. followers p. 88 l. 1 r. discreet behaviour p. 91 l. 10 for Easter r. Earth p. 101 l. 10 r. possessed ib. l. 23 r. fift Centurie p. 107 l. ● r. whereas tha● p. 112 l. 34 del that p. 116 l. 4 r. wholly p. 130 l. 31 for true r. it s true p. 144 l. 34 r Ovied● p. 147 l. 20 r. Chartres p. 175. l. 33 r. Ryve● p. 224 l. 13 r. envying p. 226 l. 9 for now in r. now at the first p. 230 l. 37 r. clause p. 253 r. on the lewes p. 255 l. 35 r. the Musicians head p. 258 l. 31 r. with as much violence p. 260 l. 4. for or r. on p. 263 l. 11. r. goe backe a little p. 265. l. 35. r. 560. THE HISTORY OF THE SABBATH THE FIRST BOOKE From the Creation of the World to the destruction of the Temple BY PET. HEYLYN EXOD. 31. 15 16. Wherefore the children of Israel shall keepe the Sabbath to observe the Sabbath throughout their generations it is a signe betweene mee and the children of Israel for ever LONDON Printed for Henry Seile and are to bee sold at the Signe of the Tygers-head in Saint Pauls Church-yard 1636. THE HISTORY OF THE SABBATH CHAP. I. That the SABBATH was not instituted in the beginning of the World 1 The entrance to the worke in hand 2 That those words Genes 2. And God blessed the seventh Day c. are there delivered as by way of anticipation 3 Anticipations in the Scripture confessed
either to grant the use of anticipation in the holy Scripture or else to run upon a tenet wherein they are not like to have any seconds I will instance onely in two particulars both Englishmen and both exceeding zealous in the present cause The first is Doctour Bound who first of all did set a foot these Sabbatarian speculations in the Church of England 2. Edit p. 10. wherewith the Church is still disquieted He determines thus I deny saith he but that the Scripture speaketh often of things as though they had been so before because they were so then when the things were written As when it is said of Abraham that hee remooved unto a Mountaine Eastward of Bethel whereas it was not called Bethel till above a hundred yeares after The like may be said of another place in the Booke of Iudges called Bochin c. yet in this place of Genesis it is not so And why not so in this as well as those Because saith he Moses entreateth there of the sanctification of the Sabbath not onely because it was so then when hee wrote that Booke but specially because it was so even from the Creation Which by his leave is not so much a reason of his opinion Medull● Th●ol l. 2 c. 15. ● 9. as a plain begging of the question The second Doctor Ames the first I take it that sowed Bounds doctrine of the Sabbath in the Netherlands Who saith expresly first and in generall termes hujusmodi prolepseos exemplum nullum in tota scriptura dari posse that no example of the like anticipation can be found in Scripture the contrary whereof is already proved After more warily and in particular de hujusmodi institutione Proleptica that no such institution is set down in Scripture by way of a Prolepsis or Anticipation either in that Book or in any other And herein as before I said he is not like to find any seconds We find it in the sixteenth of Exodus that thus Moses said This is the thing which the Lord commandeth Vers. 32. Fill an Omer of it of the Mannah to be kept for your generations that they may see the bread wherwith I have fed you in the Wildernesse when I brought you forth from the land of Egypt It followeth in the text that as the Lord commanded Moses Vers. 34. so Aaron laid it up before the testimony to be kept Here is an ordinance of Gods an institution of the Lords and this related in the same manner by anticipation as the former was Lyra upon the place affirmes expresly that it is spoken there per anticipationem and so doth Vatablus too in his Annotations on that Scripture But to make sure worke of it I must send Doctor Ames to schoole to Calvin who tels us on this text of Moses non contexuit Moses historiam suo ordine sed narrarem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 interposita melius confirmat c. Indeed it could not well be otherwise interpreted For how could Aaron lay up a pot of Mannah to be kept before the testimony when as yet there was neither Arke nor Tabernacle and so no testimony before which to keep it To bring this businesse to an end Moses hath told us in the place before remembred that the children of Israel did eat Mannah forty yeares Vers. 35. which is not otherwise true in that place and time in which he tells it but by the helpe and figure of anticipation And this Saint Austin noted in his questions upon Exodus Qu. 62. significat scriptura per Prolepsin i. e. hoc loco commemorando quod etiam postea factum est And lastly where Amesius sets it downe for certain that no man ever thought of an anticipation in this place of Moses Vers supra qui praejudicio aliquo de observatione diei Dominicae non prius fuit prius anticipatus who was not first possessed with some manifest prejudice against the sanctifying of the Lords day this cannot possibly be said against Tostatus who had no enemy to encounter nor no opinion to oppose and so no prejudice We cōclude then that for this passage of the Scripture we find not any thing unto the contrary but that it was set down in that place and time by a plain and meer anticipation and doth relate unto the time wherein Moses wrote And therefore no sufficient warrant to fetch the institution of the Sabbath from the first beginnings One onely thing I have to adde and that 's the reason which moved Moses to make this mention of the Sabbath even in the first beginning of the Booke of God and so long time before the institution of the same Which doubtlesse was the better to excite the Iewes to observe that day from which they seemed at first to be much averse and therefore were not onely to be minded of it by a Memento in the front of the Commandement but by an intimation of the equity and reason of it even in the entrance of Gods Book derived from Gods first resting on that day after all his works Theodoret hath so resolved it in his Questions on the Book of Genesis Qu 21. Maxime autem Iudaeis ista scribens necessario posuit hoc sanctisific avit eum● ut majore cultu prosequantur Sabbatum Hoc enim in legibus sanciendis inquit sex diebus creavit Deus c. 5 I say an intimation of the equitie and reason of it for that 's as much as can be gathered from that place though some have laboured what they could to make the sanctifying of the seventh day therein mentioned a precept given by God to our Father Adam touching the sanctifying of that day to his publicke worship Of this I shall not now say much because the practice will disprove it Onely I cannot but report the minde and judgement of Pererius a learned Iesuite Who amongst other reasons that he hath alleaged to prove the observation of the Sabbath not to have took beginning in the first infancy of the World makes this for one that generally the Fathers have agreed on this Deum non aliud imposuisse Adamo praeceptum omnino posit●●●um nisi illud de non edendo fructu arboris scientiae c. that God imposed no other Law on Adam then that of the forbidden fruit of the Tree of knowledge Of which since he hath instanced in none particularly I will make bold to lay before you some two or three that so out of the mouthes of two or three witnesses the truth hereof may be established And first we have Tertullian Adv. Iudaeos who resolves it thus Namque in principio mundi ipsi Adae Evae legem dedit c. In the beginning of the World the Lord commanded Adam and Eue that they should not eat of the fruit of the tree which is in the middle of the Garden Which Law saith he had been sufficient for their justification had it been observed For in
Northwards or as much extremely Southwards whose issue now are to be found as in part is known neere and within the Polar circles what Sabbath think we could they keep Some times a very long one sure and sometimes none indeed none at all taking a Sabbath as wee do for one day in seven For neere the Polar Circles as is plainly known the dayes are twenty foure houres in length Betweene the Circle and the Pole the day if so it may be called increaseth first by weeks and at last by moneths till in the end there is six moneths perpetuall day and as long a night No roome in those parts for a Sabbath But it is time to leave these speculations and return to practice 4 And first we will begin with Melchisedech King of Salem the Priest of the most high God Rex idem hominumque divumque sacerdos a type and figure of our Saviour whose Priest●ood still continueth in the holy Gospell With him the rather because it is most generally conceived that he was Sem the Sonne of Noah Of him it is affirmed by Iustin Martyr that hee was neither circumcised nor yet kept the Sabbath and yet most acceptable unto God Dial. cum Tryphone Adv. Iudaos 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tertullian also tels us of him Incircumcisum nec sabbatizantem ad sacerdotium Dei allectum esse and puts him also in his chalenge as one whom none amongst the Iews could ever prove to have kept the Sabbath Eusebius yet more fully then either of them Dem. l. 1. c. 6. Moses saith he brings in Melchisedech Priest of the most high God neither being circumcised nor anointed with the holy Oyle as was afterwards commanded in the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no not so much as knowing that there was a Sabbath and ignorant altogether of those Ordinances which were imposed upon the Iewes and living most agreeably unto the Gospell Somewhat to that purpose also doth occurre Cap. 8. in his seventh de praeparation● Melchi●edec whosoever he was gave meeting unto Abraham about the yeare of the World 2118 and if we may suppose him to be Sem as I think we may hee lived till Isaac was fifty yeares of age which was long after this famous enterview Now what these Fathers say of Sem if Sem at least was he whom the Scriptures call Melchisedech the same almost is said of his great grand-child Heber he being named by Epipha●ius for one of those who lived according to the faith of the Christian Church wherein no Sabbath was observed in that Fathers time And here we will take Lot in too although a little before his time as one of the Posterity of Heber that when we come to Abraham wee may keepe our selves within his Family Him Iustin Martyr and Iren●●s both in the places formerly remembred make to be one of those which without Circumcision the Sabbath were acceptable to the Lord and by him justified And so Tertullian that sine legis observatione Sabbath and Circumcision and the like de Sodomorum i●cendio liberatus est Therfore nor Lo● nor Heber nor Mel●hisedech ever kept the Sabbath 5 For Abraham next the Father of the Faithfull with whom the Covenant was made and Circumcision as a seale annexed unto it The Scripture is exceeding copious in setting downe his life and actions as also of the lives and actions of his Sonne and Nephewes their fli●tings and removes their Sacrifices formes of Praye● and whatsoever else was signall in the whole course of their 〈◊〉 but yet no mention of the Sabbath Though such a memorable thing as sanctifying of a constant day unto the Lord might probably have beene omitted in the former Patriar●es of whom there is but li●tle left save their 〈…〉 into the story to make way for him yet it is strange that in a punctuall and particular relation of his life and piety there should not be one Item to point out the Sabbath had it been observed This is enough to make one thinke there was no such matter Et quod non invenis usquam esse putes nusquam in the Poets language I grant indeed that Abraham kept the Christian Sabbath in righteousnesse and holinesse serving the Lord his God all the dayes of his life and so did Isaac and Iacob Sanctificate diem Sabbati saith the Prophet Ieremiah to the Iewes i. e. ut omne tempus vitae nostrae in sanctificatione ducamus sicut fecerunt patres nostri Abraham Isaac Iacob In Hier. 17. as Saint Hierome glosseth it Our venerable Bede also hath affirmed as much In Luc. 19 that Abraham kept indeed the spirituall Sabbath quo semper à servili i. e. noxia vacabat actione whereby he alwayes rested from the servile works of sinne but that he kept or sanctified any other Sabbath the Christian Fathers deny unanimously In Dial. cu● Tryphone Iustin the Martyr numbring up the most of those before remembred concludes that they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were justified without the Sabbath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so was Abraham after them and all his children untill Moses And whereas Trypho had exacted a necessary keeping of the Law Sabbaths New-moones and Circumcision the M●●tyr makes reply that Abraham Isaac Iacob Iob and all the other Patriarkes both before and after them untill Moses time yea and their wives Sarah Rebecca Rach●l Lea and all the rest of religious women unto Moses mother 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 neither kept any of them all nor had commandement so to do till Circumcision wa● enjoyned to Abraham and his Posterity Lib. 4. 30. So Irenaeus that Abraham sin● Circumcis●one observatione sabbatorum credide● D●o without or Circumcision or the Sabbath did beleeve in God which was imputed to him for righteousnes And where the Iews objected in defence of their ancient Ceremonies that Abraham had been circumcised Adv Iudaeos Tertullian makes reply sed ante placuit Deo quam circumcideretur nec tamen sabbatizavit that hee was acceptable unto God before his being circumcised and yet he never kept the ●abbath See more unto this purpose in Eusebius de Demonstr l. 1. c. 6. de praeparat l. 7. c. 8. where Isaac and Iacob are remembred too as al●o Epiphanius adv haeres l. 1. n. 5. 6 Thus farre the ancient Christian Writers have declared of Abraham that hee kept no Sabbath and this in conference with the Iew and in Bookes against them Which doubtlesse they had never done had there beene any possibility for the Iewes to have proved the contrary Some of the Iewes indeed not being willing thus to lose their Father Abraham have said and written too that he kept the Sabbath as they do and for a proofe thereof they ground themselves on that of Genesis because that Abraham obeyed my voyce 26. 5. and kept my charge my Commandements my statutes and my laws The Iewes conclude from hence as Mercer and Tostatus tell us upon the text
should withdraw himself from his daily labour Some were commanded to employ themselves in the publick structures others in bringing in materialls for such mighty buildings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Antiqu. Iud. lib. 2. c. 5. never enjoying any rest either night or day that in the end they were e●en spent and tired with continuall travaile Iosep●● go●● a little further and tels us this that the Egyptians did not onely tire the Israelites with continuall labour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but that the Israelites endevoured to performe more then was expected Assuredly in such a wofull state as this they had nor leave nor leisure to observe the Sabbath Apud Ry●at in Decalog And lastly Rabbi Maimony makes the matter yet more absolute who saith it for a truth that when they were in Egypt neque quiescere vel sabbatum agere potuerunt they neither could have time to rest nor to keepe the Sabbath seeing they were not then at their owne disposing So he ad Deut. 5. 15. 9 Indeed it easily may be beleeved that the people kept no Sabbath in the Land of Egypt seeing they could not be permitted in all that time of their abode there to offer sa●rifice which was the easier duty of the two and would lesse have tooke them from their labours Those that accused the Israelites to have been wanton lazy and I know not what because they did desire to spend one onely day in religious Exercises what would they not have done had they desisted every seventh day from the works imposed upon them Doubtlesse they had beene carried to the house of Correction if not worse handled I say in all that time they were not permitted to offer sacrifice in that Country and therefore when they purposed to escape from thence Exod. 8. they made a suite to Pharaoh that he would suffer them to go three dayes journey into the wildernesse to offer sacrifice there to the Lord their God Rather then so Pharaoh was willing to permit them for that once to sacrifice unto the Lord in the land of Egypt and what said Moses thereunto It is not meet saith he so to doe For we shall sacrifice the abhomination of the Egyptians to the Lord our God before their eyes and they will stone us 〈◊〉 26. His reason was because the Gods of the Egyptians were Buls and Rammes and Sheep and Oxen as Lyra notes upon that place talia verò animalia ab Hebraeis erant immola●da quod non permisissent Aegypti● in terra sua And certainly the Egyptians would not endure to see their Gods knocked down before their faces If any then demand wherein the Piety and Religion of Gods people did consist especially wee must needs answere that it was in the integrity and hon●sty of their conversation and that they worshipped God onely in the spirit and truth Adv. haeres l. 1. h●● ● Nothing to make it knowne that they were Gods people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but onely that they feared the Lord and were circumcised as Epiphanius hath resolved it nothing but that they did acknowledge one onely God exercised themselves in justice in modesty in patience and long suffering both towards one another and amongst the Egyptians framing their lives agreeably to the will of God and the law of nature Therefore we may conclude with safety that hitherto no Sabbath had been kept in all the World from the creation of our first Father Adam to this very time which was above 2500. yeares no nor commanded to be kept amongst them in their generations 10 I say there was none kept no nor none commanded for had it been cōmanded sure it had been kept It was not all the pride of Pharaoh or subtle tyranny of his subjects that could have made them violate that sacred day had it bin commended to them from the Lord. The miseries which they after suffered under Antiochus rather then that they would prophane the Sabbath and those calamities which they chose to fall upon them by the hands of the Romans rather then make resistance upon that day when lawfully they might have done it are proofes sufficient that neither force nor feare could now have wrought upon them not to keepe the same had such a duty been commanded Questionlesse Ioseph for his part that did preferre a lothsome prison before the unchast imbraces of his Masters wife would no lesse carefully have kept the Sabbath then he did his chastity had there been any Sabbath then to have been observed either as dedicated by nature or prescribed by Law And certainly either the Sabbath was not reckoned all this while a● any part or branch of the Law of nature or else it findes hard measure in the Booke of God that there should be particular proofes how punctually the rest of the morall Law was observed and practised amongst the Patriarches and not one word or Item that concernes the observation of the Sabbath Now that the whole Law was written in the hearts of the Fathers and that they had some knowledge of all the other Commandements and did live accordingly the Scripture doth sufficiently declare unto us First for the first * Gen. 17. 1. I am God all-sufficient walke before me and be thou perfect So said God to Abraham Then Iacobs going up from * 25 2. Bethel to clense his house from Idolatry is proofe enough that they were acquainted with the second The pious care they had not to take the Name of the Lord their God in vaine appeares at full in the religious making of their Oath●s * 2● 27 c. Abraham with Abimelech and * 31. 51. Iacob with Laban Next for the fifth Comman●ement what duties children owe their parents the practice of * 24 67 Isaac and * 28. 〈◊〉 Iacob doth declare abundantly in being ruled by them in the choice of their wives and readily obeying all their directions So for the sin of murder the history of Iacobs * 34 26 30 children and the grieved Fathers curse upon them for the slaughter of the Sichemites together with Gods precept given to * 9. 6. Noah against shedding bloud shew us that both it was forbidden and condemned being done The * 39 8. continency of Ioseph before remembred and the punishment threatned to * 70. ● Abimelech for keeping Sarah Abraham● wife the * 31. ●0 quarrelling of Laban for his stolne Idols and * 44. 4. Iosephs pursuite after his brethren for the silver cup that was suppo●ed to be purloyned are 〈◊〉 sufficient that adultery and theft were 〈◊〉 unlawf●●l And last of all Abi●elech● reprehension of * ●0 9. Abraham and * ●6 ●0 Isaa● for bearing false witnesse in the deniall of their wives shew plainly that they had the knowledge of that Law also The like may also be affi●med of their 〈…〉 the wives and good● or ●ny thing th●t was their Neighbours For though the history cannot tell us
in the sixteenth of Exod. v. 27. And therefore stood the more in need not onely of a watch-word or Memento even in the very front of the Law it selfe but of some sharper course to stirre up their memory Therefore this execution was the more reqvisite at this instant aswell because the Iewes by reason of their long abode in a place of continual servile toyle could not be suddainly drawne unto contrary offices without some strong impression of terrour as also because nothing is ●ore needfull then with extremity to punish the first transgressours of those Lawes that do require a more exact observation for the times to come What time this Tragedy was acted is not known for certain By Torniellus it is placed in the yeare 2548. of the Worlds Creation which was some foure yeares after the Law was given More then this is not extant in the Scripture touching the keeping of the Sabbath all the life of Moses What was done after we shall see in the land of Promise 3 In the mean time it is most proper to this place to take a little notice of those severall duties wherein the sanctifying of the Sabbath did consist especially that we may know the better what we are to looke for at the peoples hands when wee bring them thither Two things the Lord commanded in his holy Scripture that concern the Sabbath the keeping holy of the same one in relation to the people the other in reference to the Priest In re●erence to the people he comma●ded onely rest from labour that they should doe no manner of worke and that 's contained expresly in the Law it selfe In reference to the Priest Numb 28. he commanded sacrifice that on the Sabbath day over and above the daily sacrifice there should be offered to the Lord two Lambes of an yeare old without blemish one in the morning and the other in the evening as also to prepare first and then place the Shewbread being twelue loaves one for every Tribe continually before the Lorde●very Sabbath day These severall references so divided the Priest might do his part without the people and contrary the people doe their part without the Priest Of any Sabbath duties which were to be performed betweene them wherein the Priest and people were to joyne together the Scriptures are directly silent As for these severall duties that of the Priest the Shew-bread and the sacrifice was not in practice till they came to the Land of Canaan and then though the Priest offered for the people yet he did not with them So that for forty yeares together all the life of Moses the sanctifying of the Sabbath did consist onely for ought we finde in a bodily rest a ceasing from the works of their weekly labours and afterwards in that and in the sacrifices which the Priest made for them Which as they seeme to be the greater of the two so was there nothing at all therein in which the people were to doe no not so much except some few as to be spectatours the sacrifices being offered onely in the Tabernacle as in the Temple after when they had a Temple the people being scattered over all th● Country in their Townes and Villages Of any reading of the Law or exposition of the same unto the people or publicke forme of prayers to be presented to the Lord in the Congregation wee finde no footstep now nor a long time after None in the time of Moses for hee had hardly perfected the Law before his death the booke of De●teronomy being dedicated by him a very little before God tooke him None in a long time after no not till Nehemiahs dayes as wee shall see hereafter in that place and time The resting of the people was the thing commanded in imitation of Gods rest when his works were finished that as hee rested from the works which hee had created so they might al●o rest in memoriall of it But the employment of this rest to parti●ular purposes either of contemplation or dev●tion than not declared unto us in the Word of God but left at large either unto the libertie of the people or the Authoritie of the Church Now what the people did how they imployed this rest of theirs that Philo tels us in his third Booke of the life of Moses Moses saith hee ordained that since the World was finished on the seventh day all of his Common-wealth following therein the course of nature should spend the seventh day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Festivall delights resting therein from all their works yet not to spend it as some do in laughter childish sports or as the Romans did their time of publick Feastings in beholding the activity either of the Iester or common Dancers but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and a little after 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the study of true philosophy and in the contemplation of the workes of nature And in another place De Dec●log He did command saith he that as in other things so in this also they should imitate the Lord their God working six dayes and resting on the seventh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and spending it in meditation of the works of nature as before is said And not so only but that upon that day they should consider of their actions in the weeke before if happily they had offended against the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. that so they might correct what was done amisse and be the better armed to offend no more So in his booke de mundi opificio he affirmes the ●ame that they implyed that day in divine Philosophy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even for the bettering of their manners and reckoning with their consciences That thus the Iewes did spend the day or some part thereof is very probable and wee may take it well enough upon Philo's word but that they spent it thus by the direction or command of Moses is not so easily proved as it is affirmed though for my part I willingly durst assent unto it For be it Moses so appointed yet this concernes onely the behaviour of particular persons and reflects nothing upon the publick duties in the Congregation 4 It 's true that Philo tels us in a booke not extant how Moses also did ordaine these publick meetings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ap. Euseb. Praepar l. 8 7. What then did Moses order to be done on the Sabbath day He did appoint saith he that we should meet all in some place together and there set down with modesty and a generall silence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to heare the Law that none plead ignorance of the same Which custome we continue sti●l harkening with wonderfull silence to the Law of God unlesse perhaps we give some joyfull acclamation at the hearing of it some of the Priests if any present or otherwise some of the Elders reading the Law and then expounding it unto us till the night come on Which done the people are dismissed full of divine
fell the Temple of the Iews and with it all the ceremonies of the Law of Moses Demonst. l. 1. c. 6 Since when according as Eusebius tells us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. It is not lawfull for that people either to sacrifice according to the law or to build a Temple or erect an Altar to consecrate their Priests or anoint their Kings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or finally to hold their solemne assemblies or any of their Festivals ordained by Moses 8 For that the sabbath was to end with other legall ceremonies is by this apparant first that it was an institute of Mosos and secondlly an institute peculiar to the Iewish Nation both which we have alredy proved and therefore was to end with the law of Moses and the state of Iewrie Fathers there be good store which affirme as much some of the which shall be produced to expresse themselves that we may see what they conceived of the abrogation of the Sabbath And first for Iustin Martyr it is his chiefe scope and purpose in his conference with Trypho Dial. cum Tryp●on to make it manifest and unquestionable that as there was no use of circumcision before Abrahams time nor of the Sabbath untill Moses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●o neither is there any use of them at this present time that as it tooke beginning then so it was now to have an end T●rtullian in his argument against the Marci●●●●es draws out this conclusion Adv. Marc. l 2. Ad ●empus praesentis cause nec●ssitatem convaluisse non ad perpetui temporis observationem that God ordained the Sabbath upon spe●iall reasons and as the times did then require not that it should continue alwayes Hom. de Sab. circum S. Atha●●si●s thus discourseth When God saith he had finished the first creation he did betake himselfe to rest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. and therefore those of that creation did celebrate their Sabbath on the seventh day But the accomplishment of the new-creature hath no end at all and therefore God still worketh as the Gospell teacheth Hence is it that we keepe no Sabbath as the antients did expecting an eternall Sabbath which shall have no end That of S. Ambrose Synagoga diem observat ecclesia immortalitatem comes most neare to this Epist. 72. l. 9. But he that speakes most fully to this point is the great S. Austin what he saith shall be delivered under three severall heads First that the Sabbath is quite abrogated Tempore gratiae revelatae observatio illa Sabbati quae unius di●i vacatione figurabatur ablata est ab observatione fidelium The keeping of the Sabbath is taken utterly away in this time of Grace De Gen. ad lit l. 4. c. 13. See the like ad Boni●ac l. 3. Tom. 7. contr Faust. Man l. 6. c. 4. Qu. ex N. Test 69. Secondly that the Sabbath was not kept in the Church of Christ In illis decem praeceptis excepta sabbati observatione dicatur mihi quid non sit observandum a Christiano de sp lit c. 14. What is there saith the Father in all the Decalogue except the keeping of the sabbath which is not punctually to be observed of every Christian. More of the like occurres ●e Genesi contr Manich. l. 1. c 22. contr Adimant ca 2. Qu. in Exod. l. 2 qu. 173. And thirdly that it i● not lawfull for a Christian to observe the sabbath De V●● 〈◊〉 c. 3. For speaking of the law how it was a p●edagogue to bring us unto the knowledge of Christ he addes that in those institutes and ordinances Quibus Christianis uti fas non est quale est sab●atum circumcisio sacrificia c. which are not lawfull to be used by any Christian such as are the sabbath circumcision sacrifices and such other things many great mysteries were contained And in another place Quisquis diem illum observat sicut litera fonat D● Sp. l. ● c. 14. carnaliter sapit Sapere autem secundum carnem mors est He that doth literally keepe the sabbath savours of the flesh but to savour of the flesh is death Therefore no sabbath to bee kept by the sonnes of life 9 No Sabbath to be kept at all We affirme not so We know there is a Christian Sabbath a Sabbath figured out unto us in the fourth Commandement which every Christian man must keepe that doth desire to enter into the rest of God This is that Sabbath which the Proph●t Isaiah hath commended to us Blessed is the man that keepeth the sabbath from polluting it Quid autem sabbatum est quod praecipit observandum c. What sabbath is it saith S. Hierome that is here commanded The following words saith he will informe us that keeping our hands from doing evill This is the sabbath here commanded Si bona faciens quiescat a malis if doing what is good we do rest from sinne Nor was this his conceit alone the later writers of expound it The Prophet in this place saith Ryvet In D●●●log thus prophecies of the Chruch of Christ Blessed is the man that keepeth the sabbath from polluting it and keepeth his hands from doing any evill Vbi custodire sabbatum in Ecclesia Christiana est custodire manus suo● à malo And in these words saith he to keepe a sabbath in a Christian Church is onely to preserue our hands from doing evill The like spirituall sabbath doth the man of God prescribe unto us in the 58. Chapter of his booke If thou turne away thy foot from the sabbath Verse ●3 14. from doing thy pleasure on my holy day c. not doing thine owne way nor finding thine owne pleasure nor speaking thine owne words then shalt thou delight thy selfe in the Lord and I will cause thee to ride upon the high places of the earth c. What saith S. Hierome unto this It must be understood saith he spiritually Ali●quin si haec tantum prohibentur in sabbato In lo●●m ergo in aliis sex diebus tribuit ur nobis libertas delinque●di For otherwise if those things above remembred are prohibited onely on the sabbaths then were it lawfull for us on the other dayes to follow our owne sinfull courses speake our owne idle words and pursue our owne voluptuous pleasures which were most foolish to imagine And so saith Ryvet too for the moderne writers Perpetuam ab omnibus operibus nostris vitiosis cessationem c. In Decalog That everlasting rest from all sinfull works which is begun in this life here and finished in the life to come is signified and represented by those words of Isaiah ca. 58. They therefore much mistake these Texts and the meaning of them who grounding thereupon forbid all manner of recreations and lawfull pleasures on their supposed sabbath day as being utterly prohibited by Gods holy Prophet M ●●mon ap Ai●s in Ex 20. The Iews did thus
strictest time of the Pharisaicall rigours was accounted lawfull Indeed the maruaile is the lesse that they are so uncharitable to poore Brut● creatures when as they take such little pitty upon themselves Crantzi●● reports a story of a Iew of Magdeburg who falling on the Saturday into a Prioy would not be taken out because it was the Sabbath day and that the Bishop gave command that there hee should continue on the Sunday also so that betweene both the poore Iew was poysoned with the very stinke The like our Annals do relate of a Iew of Tewkesbury whose story being cast into three riming Verses according to the Poetry of those times I have here presented and translated Dialog●ewise as they first made it Tende manus Solomon ut te de stercore tollam Sabbata nostra colo de stercore surgere nolo Sabbata nostra quidem Solomon celebrabis ibidem Friend Solomon thy hands up-reare And from the jakes I will thee beare Our Sabbath I so highly prize That from the place I will not rise Then Solomon without more adoe Our Sabbath thou shalt keepe there too For the continuance of their sabbath as they begin it early on the day before so they prolong it on the day till late at night And this they do in pitie to the souls in Hell w●o all the while the Sabbath lasteth have free leave to play For as they tell us silly wretches upon the Eve before the Sabbath it is proclaimed in Hell that every one may goe his way and take his pleasure and when the Sabbath is concluded they are recalled againe to the house of torments I am ashamed to meddle longer in these trifles these dreames and dotages of infatuated men given over to a reprobate sense Nor had I stood so long upon them but that in this Anatomie of the Iewish follies I might let some amongst us see into what dangers they are falling For there are some indeed too many who taking this for granted which they cannot proove that the Lords Day succeeds into the place and rights of the Iewish sabbath and is to be observed by vertue of the fourth Commandement have trenched too neere upon the Rabbins in binding men to nice and scrupulous observances which neither we nor our Fore-fathers were ever able to endure But with what warrant they have made a sabbath day in the Christian Church where there was never any knowne in all times before or upon what authoritie they have presumed to lay heavy burthens upon the consciences of poore men which are free in Christ wee shall the better see by tracing downe the story from our Saviours time unto the times in which wee live But I will here set down and rest beseeching God who enabled me thus farre to guide me onwards to the end Tu qui principio medium medio adjice finem THE HISTORY OF THE SABBATH The second Book From the first preaching of the Gospell to these present times By Pet. Heylyn COLOSS. 2. 16 17. Let no man judge you in meate or in drinke or in respect of an holy day or of the new Moone or of the SABBATH dayes which are a shadow of things to come but the body is of Christ. LONDON Printed by Thomas Harper for Henry Seyle at the Tygers head in Saint Pauls Church-yard 1636. To the Christian Reader ANd such I hope to meet with in this point especially which treating of the affaires of the Christian Church cannot but be displeasing unto t●em which are not Christianly affected Our former Book wee destinated to the Iewish part of this enquiry wherein though long it was before we found it yet at the last we found a Sabbath A Sabbath which began with that state and Church and ended also when they were no longer to be called a Nation but a dispersed and scattered ruine of what once they were In that which followeth our enquirie must be more diffused of the same latitude with the Church a Church not limited and confined to some Tribes and Kindreds but generally spreading over all the world We may affirme it of the Gospel what Florus somtimes said of the state of Rome Ita late per orbem terrarum arma circumtulit ut quires ejus legunt non unius populi sed generis humani facta discunt The historie of the Church and of the World are of like extent So that the search herein as unto me it was more painf●ll in the doing so unto thee will it be more pleasing being done because of that varietie which it will afford thee And this Part wee have called the History of the Sabbath too although the institution of the Lords Day and entertainment of the same in all times and Ages since that insti●ution be the chiefe thing whereof it treateth For being it is said by some that the Lords Day succeeded by the Lords appointment into the place and rights of the Iewish Sabbath so to be ca●●ed and so to be observed as the Sabbath was this booke was wholy to b● spent in the search thereof whether in all or any Ages of the Church either such doctrine had bin preached or such practice pressed upon the conscience of Gods people And search indeed we did with all care and diligence to see if wee could finde a Sabbath in any evidence of Scripture or writings of the holy Fathers or Edicts of Emperours or Decrees of Councels or finally in any of the publick Acts Monuments of the Christian Church But after serverall searches made upon the alias and the pluries wee still returne Non est inventus and thereupon resolve in the Poets language Et quod invenis usquam esse putes nusquam that which is no where to be found may very strongly be concluded not to be at all Buxdorfius in the 11. Chapter of his Synagoga Iudaica out of Antonius Margarita tels us of the Iews quod die sabbatino praeter animam consu●tam praediti sunt alia that on the Sabbath day they have an extraordinary soule infused into them which doth enlarge their hearts and rowze up their spirits Vt Sabbatum multo honorabilius peragere possint that they may celebrate the Sabbath with the greater honour And though this sabbatarie soule may by a Pythagoricall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seeme to have transmigrated from the Iewes into the bodies of some Christians in these later dayes yet I am apt to give my selfe good hopes that by presenting to their view the constant practise of Gods Church in all times before and the consent of all Gods Churches at this present they may be dispossessed thereof without great difficulty It is but anima superflua as Buxdorfius cals it and may be better spared then kept because superfluous However I shall easily perswade my selfe that by this generall representation of the estate and practise of the Church of Christ I may confirme the wavering in a right perswasion and assure such as are already well affected by shewing them the
to be no ordinance of the Lords that he exacteth no such duty from us and that it is an ecclesiasticall exhortation onely and no more but so And if no more but so it were too great an undertaking to bring all nations of the world to yeeld unto the prescript of a private and particular Canon made onely for a private and particular cause and if no more but so it concludes no Sabbath 8 Yet notwithstanding these restraints from worke and labour the Church did never so resolve it that any worke was in it selfe unlawfull on the Lords day though to advance Gods publicke service it was thought good that men should bee restrained from some kinde of worke that so they might the better attend their prayers and follow their devotions It s true these centuries the fifth and sixth were fully bent to give the Lords day all fit honour not onely in prohibiting unlawfull pleasures but in commanding a forbearance of some lawfull business● such as they sound to yeeld most hinderance to religious duties Yea and some workes of pietie they affixt unto it for its greater honour The Prisoners in the common Gaoles had formerly beene kept in too strictly It was commanded by Honorius and Theodosius at that time Emperous Anno 412. that they should be permitted omnibus diebus dominicis every Lords day to walke abroade with a guard upon them as well to crave the charity of well disposed persons as to repaire unto the Bathes for the refreshing of their bodies Nor did he onely so command it but set a mulct of 20 pound in gold on all such publicke ministers as should disobey the Bishops of the Church being trusted to see it done Where note that going to the Bathes on the Lords day was not thought unlawfull though it required no question corporall labours for had it beene so thought as some thought it afterwards the Prelates of the Church would not have taken it upon them to see the Emperours will fulfilled and the law obeyed A second honour affixt in these Ages to the Lords day is that it was conceived the most proper day for giving holy Orders in the Church of God and a law made by Leo then Pope of Rome and generally since taken up in the Westerne Church that they should bee conferred upon no day else There had beene some regard of Sunday in the times before and so much Leo doth acknowledge Quod ergo a patribus nostris propensiore cura novimus servatum esse Epl. decret 81. a vobis quoque volumus custodiri ut non passim diebus omnibus sacerdotalis ordinatio celebretur But that which was before a voluntary Act is by him made necessary and a law given to all the Churches under his obedience Vt his qui consecrandi sunt nunquam benedictiones nisi in die resurrectionis dominicae tribuantur that ordinations should bee celebrated on the Lords day onely And certainely he gives good reason why it should be so except in extraordinarie and emergent cases wherein the law admits of a dispensation For on that day saith he The holy Ghost descended upon the Apostles and thereby gave us as it were this celestiall rule that on that day alone we should con●erre spirituall orders in quo ●ollata sunt omnia dona gratiarum in which the Lord conferred upon his Church all spirituall graces Nay that this busines might be done with the more solemnity and preparation it was appointed that those men who were to be invested with holy Orders should continue fasting from the Eve before that spending all that time in prayer and humbling of themselves before the Lord they might be better ●itted to receive his Graces For much about these times the service of the Lords day was enlarged and multiplyed the Evenings of the day being honoured with religious meetings as the Mornings formerly Yea and the Eves before were reckoned as a part or parcell of the Lords day following Cui a vespere sabbati initium constat ascribi as the same Decretall informes us The 251 Sermon de tempore ascribed unto Saint A●stine doth affirme as much but we are not sure that it is his Note that this Leo entred on the chaire of Rome Anno 440 of our Saviours birth and did continue in the same full 20 years within which space of time he set out this decretall but in what yeare particularly that I cannot finde 10 I say that now the Evenings of the Lords day began to have the honour of religious meetings for ab initio non fuit sic it was not so from the beginning Nor had it beene so now but that almost all sorts of people were restrained from worke aswell by the Imperiall Edicts as by the constitutions of particular Churches by meanes where of the afternoone was left at large to bee disposed of for the best increase of Christian Pietie Nor probably had the Church conceived it necessary had not the admiration which was then generally had of the Monasticke kinde of life facilitated the way unto it For whereas they had bound themselves to set houres of prayer Epitaphium Paul● matr Mane hora tertia sexta nona vespere noctis medio at three of the clocke in the morning at sixe at nine and after in the evening and at midnight as S. Hierome tells us the people generally became much affected with their strict devotions and seemed not unwilling to conforme unto them as farre at least as might consist with their vocations upon this willingnesse of the people the service of the Church became more frequent then before and was performed thrice every day in the greater Churches where there were many Priests and Deacons to attend the same namely at sixe and nine before noone and at sometime appointed in the evening for the afternoone accordingly as now wee use it in our Cathedrall and Collegiate Churches But in inferiour townes and pettit villages where possibly the people could not every day attend so often it was conceived sufficient that they should have the morning and the evening prayer sung or sayd them that such as would might come to Church for their devotions and so it is by the appointment of the Rubricke in ou● Common Prayer Booke Onely the Sundayes and the holy● dayes were to be honoured with two severall meetings in the morning the one at sixe of the Clocke which simply was the morning service the other at nine for the administration of the holy Sacrament and Preaching of the Word to the congregation This did occasion the distinction of the first and second Service as we call them still though now by reason of the peoples sloth and backwardnesse in comming to the Church of God they are in most places joyn'd together So whereas those of the monasticke life did use to solemnize the Eve or Vigils of the Lords day and of other festivals with the peculiar and preparatory service to the day it selfe that profitable and pious custome
fitting every legall festivall with some that were observed in the Christian Church laying this ground that ours succeeded in the place of theirs 〈…〉 qu. 103 Art 3. ad 4● Sabbatum mutatur in diem d●minicum similiter alijs solennitatibus veteris legis novae solennitates succedunt as his words there are Vpon which ground of his the doctrines now remembed were no question raised and howsoever other men might thinke all dayes alike in themselves considered yet those of Rome will have some holier than the rest even by a naturall and inherent holinesse 4 And in this state things stood both for the doctrine and the practise untill such time as men began to looke into the errours and abuses in the Church of Rome with a more serious eye then before they did the Canonists being no lesse nice in the point of practise then were the Schoolemen and the rest exhorbitant in the point of doctrine Whose niceties especially in matter of restraint In Exod. 12. we have most fully represented to us by ●ostatus one that had runne through all the parts of learning at that time on foote and was as well studied in the Canon as in the Schooles He then determineth of it thus ●tinerando pro negotijs p●ccatum esse mortale c. Q● 25. Hee that doth travaile on the holy dayes for in that generall name the Lords day and the other festivalls are comprehended about worldly businesse commits mortall sinne as also if he Trade or Traffick in the place wherein he liveth But this hath two exceptions or reservations First if the businesse by him done bee but small and light quae quictem Sabbati non impediunt such as are no great hinderance to the Sabbaths rest and secondly nisi hoc sit in causa pia unlesse it were on some devou● and pious purpose To reade unto or teach a man to deale in actions of the Law Qu. 26. or determine suites or to cast accounts si quis doceret ut lucretur if it be done for hire or for present gaine become servile workes and are forbidden Otherwise if one doe it gratis Qu. 27. If a Musitian waite upon a Gentleman to recreate his minde with Musicke and that they are agreed on a certaine wages or that hee be hired onely for a present turn● he sinnes in case hee play or sing unto him on the holy dayes but not if his reward be doubtfull Qu. 28. and depends onely upon the bounty of the parties who enjoy his musicke A Cook that on the holy dayes is hired to make a feast or to d●esse a dinner doth commit mortall sinne sed non pro toto mense aut anno but not if he be hired by the moneth or by the yeare Meat may be dressed upon the Lords day Qu. 29. or the other holy dayes but to wash dishes on those dayes was esteemed unlawfull et differi in diem alteram and was to bee def●rred till another day Qu 32. Lawyers that doe their clients businesse for their wonted fee were not to draw their bills or frame their answers or peruse their evidences on the holy dayes Secus si causam agerent pro miserabilibus personis c. But it was otherwise if they dealt for poore indigent people such as did sue in forma pauperis as we call it or in the causes of a Church or hospitall in which the Popes had pleased to grant a dispensation A man that travailed on the holy dayes Qu. 34. to any speciall shrine or Saint did commit no sinne Si autem in redeundo peccatum est mortale but if he did the like in his comming backe Qu. 35. he then sinned mortally In any place where formerly it had beene the custome neither to draw water nor to sweepe the house but to have those things ready on the day before the custome was to bee observed where no such custome is there they may bee done Actions of a long continuance if they were delightfull or if one played three or foure houres together on a Musicall instrument were not unlawfull on the holy dayes yet possibly they might be sinfull ut si quis hoc ageret ex lascivia as if one played onely out of wantonnesse Qu 36. or otherwise were so intent upon his musicke that he went not to Masse ●rtificers which worke on the holy dayes for their owne profit onely are in mortall sinne unlesse the worke be very small quia modicum non facit solennitat●m dissolui because a little thing dishonours not the Festival De minimis non curat lex as our saying is Contrary Butchers Vintners Bakers Coster-mongers sinned not in selling their commodities because more profit doth redound to the Common wealth which cannot be without such commodities than to them that ●ell yet this extended not to Drapers Shoomakers or the like because there is not such a present necessity for cloathes as meate Yet where the custome was that Butchers did not sell on the holy dayes but specially not upon the Lords day that commendable custome was to be observed though in those places also it was permitted to the Butcher that on those dayes at some convenient times thereof hee might make ready what was to be sold on the morrow after as kill and skinne his bestiall which were fit for sale in case he could not doe it with so much convenience non ita congrue at another time Qu. 3● To write out or transcribe a booke though for a mans owne private use was esteemed unlawfull except it were exceeding small because this put no difference betweene the holy dayes and the other yet was it not unlawfull neither in case the Argument were spirituall nor for a preacher to write out his sermons or for a Student to provide his lecture for the day following Windmils were suffered to be used on the holy dayes Q● 3● not Watermils because the first required lesse labour and attendance than the other did This is the reason in Tostatus though I can see no reason in it the passage of the water being once let runne being of more certainty and continuance then the changeable blowing of the winde But to proceed Ferry-men were not to transport port such men in their boates or wherries as did begin their journey on an holy day Qu. 39. unlesse they went to M●sse or on such occasions but such as had begunne their journey and now were in pursuite thereof might be ferried over quia forte carebunt victu because they may perhaps want victuals if they doe not passe To repaire Churches on the Lords day and the other holy dayes Qu. 41. was accounted lawfull in case the workemen did it gratis and that the Church were poore not able to hire workemen on the other dayes not if the Church were rich and in case to doe it Qu 42 So also to build bridges repaire the walls of Townes and Castles or other publicke edifices
on those dayes was not held unlawfull si instent hostes in case the enemie bee at hand though otherwise not to be done where no danger was These are the speciall points observed and published by Tostatus And these I have the rather exactly noted partly that wee may see in what estate the Lords day and the other holy dayes were in the Church of Rome what time the reformation of religion was first ●et on foote but principally to let others see how neere they come in their new fancies and devises unto the nicetie● of those men whom they most abhorre 5 Thus stood it as before I sayd both for the doctrine and the practise till men began to looke into the errors and abuses in the Roman Church with a more serious eye than before they did and at first sight they found what little pleased them in this particular Their doctrine pleased them not in making one day holier than another not onely in relation to the use made of them but to a naturall and inherent holiness● wherewith they thought they were invested Nor did their practise please much more in that they had imposed so many burdens of restraint upon the consciences of Gods people and thereby made that day a punishment which was intended for the ease of the labouring man Against the doctrine of these men and the whole practise of that Church Calvin declares himselfe in his booke of Institutions And therewith taxeth those of Rome l. 2 cap. 8. p. 34. qui Iudaica opinione populum superioribus seculis imbuerunt who in the times before possessed the peoples mindes with so much Iudaisme that they had changed the day indeed as indishonour of the Iew but otherwise retained the former sanctity thereof which needes must bee saith he if there remaine with us as the Papists taught the same opinion of the mysteries and various significations of dayes and times which the Iewes once had And certainely saith hee we see what dangerous effects have followed on so false a doctrine those which adhere to their instructions having exceedingly out gone the Iewes crassa carnalique Sabbatismi superstitione in their grosse and carnall superstitions about the Sabbath Beza his Scholler and Acates sings the selfe same song In Apocal. 1. v. 10. that howsoever the assemblies of the Lords day were of Apostolicall and divine tradition sic tamen ut Iudaica cessatio ab omni opere non observaretur quoniam hoc plane fuisset judaismum non abol●re sed tantum quod ad diem attinet immutare yet so that there was no cessation from worke required as was observed among the Iewes For that saith he had not so much abolished Iudaisme as put it off and changed it to another day And then he addes that this cessation was first brought in by Constantine and afterwards confirmed with more and more restraints by the following Emperours by meanes of which it came to passe that that which first was done for a good intent viz. that men being free from their worldly businesses might wholely give themselves to hearing of the Word of God in merum Iudaismum degenerarit degenerated at the last into downe-right Iudaisme So for the Lutheran Churches Chemnitius chalengeth the Romanists of superstition quasi dominicae diei reliquis diebus festis per se peculiar●s quaedam insit sanctitas because they taught the people that the holy dayes considered onely in themselves had a native sanctitie And howsoever for his part hee thinke it requisite that men should be restrained from all such workes as may bee any hinderance unto the sanctifying of the day yet he accounts it but a part of the Iewish leaven nimis scrupulose diebus festis prohibere operas externas quae vel quando non impediunt publicum ministerium so scrupulously to prohibit such externall Actions which are at all no hindrance to Gods publicke service and mans Sabbath duties In Mat. 12. Bucer goes further yet and doth not onely call it a superstition but an apostasie from Christ to thinke that working on the Lords day in it selfe considered is a sinnefull thing Si existimetur operari in eo die per se esse peccatum superstitio gratiae Christi qui ab elementis mundi nos suo sanguine liberavit negatio est as his owne words are Then addes that he did very well approve of the Lords day meetings si eximatur è cordibus hominum opinio necessitatis if men were once dispossessed of these opinions that the day was necessary to be kept that it was holier in it selfe then the other dayes and that to worke upon that day in it selfe was sinnefull Lastly the Churches of the Switzers professe in their Confession that in the keeping of the Lords day they give not the least hint to any Iewish superstitions Neque enim alteram diem altera sanctiorem esse credimns Cap. 24. nec otium deo per se probari existimamus For neither as they sayd doe we conceive one day to be more holy than another or thinke that rest from labour in it selfe considered is any way pleasing unto God By which we plainely may perceive what is the judgement of Protestant Churches in the present point 6 Indeede it is not to be thought that they could otherwise resolve and determine of it considering what their doctrine is of the day it selfe how different they make it from a Sabbath day which doctrine that wee may perceive with the greater ease we will consider it in three propositions in which most agree 1. That the keeping holy one day of seven is not the Morall part of the fourth Commandement or to be reckoned as a part of the law of ●ature 2. That the Lords day is not founded on Divine Commandement but onely on the authority of the Church and 3. That the Church hath still authority to change the day and to transferre it to some other First for the first it seemes that some of Rome considering the restraints before remembred and the new doctrine thence arising about the naturall and inherent holinesse which one day had above another had altered what was formerly delivered amongst the Schoolemen and made the keeping of one day in seven to bee the Morall part of the fourth Commandement This Calvin chargeth them withall that they had taught the people in the former times In stit l. 2. cap. 8. 11. 34. that whatsoever was ceremoniall in the fourth Commandement which was the keeping of the Iewes seventh day had beene long since abrogated remanere vero quod morale est nempe unius diei observationem in hebdomade but that the morall part thereof which was the keeping of one day in seven did continue still With what else is it as before was sayd then in dishonour of the Iewes to change the day and to affixe as great a sanctity thereunto as the Iewes ever did And for his owne part he professeth that howsoever he approved of the Lords
profestis diebus hoe fiat secus si hoc fiat ex causa honesta intentione non corrupta à persona cui talia non sunt prohibita With which determination I conclude this Chapter CHAP. VIII The story of the Lords-day from the reformation of Religion in this Kingdome till this present time 1 The doctrine of the Sabbath and the Lords day delivered by three severall Martyrs conformably to the iudgement of the Protestants before remembred 2 The Lords day and the other holy dayes confessed by all this Kingdome in the Court of Parliament to have no other ground then the authority of the Church 3 The meaning and occasion of that clause in the Common prayer booke Lord have mercy upon us c. repeated at the end of the fourth Commandment 4 That by the Queenes Inj●nctions and the first Parliament of her reigne the Lords day was not meant for a Sabbath day 5 The doctrine in the Homilies deli●ered about the Lords day and the Sabbath 6 The summe and substance of that Homily and that it makes not any thing for a Lords day Sabbath 7 The first originall of the New Sabbath Speculations in this Church of England by whom and for what cause invented 8 Strange and most monstrous Paradoxes preached on occasion of the former doctrines and of the other effects thereof 9 What care was taken of the Lords day in King Iames his reigne the sp●eading of the doctrines and of the Articles of Ireland 10 The Iewish Sabbath set on foote and of King Iames his declaration abou● lawfull sports on the Lords day 11 What tracts were writte and published in that Princes time in opposition to the doctrines before remembred 12 In what estate the Lords day and the other holy dayes have stood in Scotland since the reformation of Religion in that Kingdome 13 Statutes about the Lords day made by our present Soveraigne and the misconstruing of the same His Majesty reviveth and enlargeth the declaration of King Iames. 14 An exhortation to obedience unto his Majesties most Christian purpose concludes this History 1 THVS are wee safely come to these present times the times of reformation wherein what ever had beene taught or done in the former dayes was publickely brought unto the test and if not well approved of layed aside either as unprofitable or plainely hurtfull So dealt the Reformatours of the Church of England as with other things with that which wee have now in hand the Lords day and the other holy dayes keeping the dayes as many of them as were thought convenient for the advancement of true godlinesse and increase of piety but paring off those superstitious conceits and matters of opinion which had beene enterteined about them But first before wee come to this wee will by way of preparation lay downe the iudgements of some men in the present point men of good quality in their times and such as were content to bee made a sacrifice in the Common cause Of these I shall take notice of three particularly according to to the severall times in the which they lived And first wee will beginne with Master Fryth who suffered in the yeere 1533 who in his declaration of Baptisme thus declares himselfe P. 96. Our forefathers saith hee which were in the beginning of the Church did abrogate the Sabbath to the intent that men might have an ensample of Christian liberty c. Howbeit because it was necessary that a day should be reserved in which the people should come together to heare the word of God they ordayned insteed of the Sabbath which was Saturday the next day following which is Sunday And although they might have kept the Saturday with the Iew as a thing indifferent yet they did much better Some three yeeres after him anno 1536 being the 28 of Henry the eight suffered Master Tyndall who in his answer to Sir Thomas More hath resolved it thus Pag. 287. As for the Sabbath we be Lords over the Sabbath and may yet change it into Munday or into any other day as wee see neede or may make every tenth day holy day onely If we see cause why Neither was there any cause to change it from the Saturday but to put a difference betweene us and the Iewes neither need wee any holy day at all if the people might bee taught without it Last of all Bishop Hooper sometimes Bishop of Gloucester who suffered in Queene Maries reigne doth in a treatise by him written on the ten Commandements and printed in the yeere 1550 goe the selfe same way Pag 103. Wee may not thinke saith hee that God gave any more holinesse to the Sabbath then to the other dayes For if yee consider Friday Saturday or Sunday in as much as they be dayes and the worke of God the one is no more ●oly then the other but that day is alwayes most holy in the which we most apply and give our selves unto holy works To that end did hee sanctify the Sabbath day not that wee should give our selves to illenesse or such Ethnicall pastime as is now used amongst Ethnicall people but being free that day from the travailles of this world wee might consider the works and benefits of God with thankesgiving heare the word of God honour him and feare him then to learne who and where bee the poore of Christ that want our helpe Thus they and they amongst them have resolved on these foure conclusions First ●hat one day is no more holy then another the Sunday then the Saturday or the Friday further than they are set apart for holy uses Secondly that the Lords day hath no institution from divine authority but was ordained by our fore fathers in the beginning of the Church that so the people might have a Day to come together and heare Gods Word thirdly that still the Church hath power to change the day from Sunday unto Monday or what day shee will And lastly that one day in seven is not the Morall part of the fourth Commandement for M. Tyndall faith expressely that by the Church of God each tenth day onely may be kept holy if wee see cause why So that the mervaile is the greater that any man should now affirme as some men have done that they are willing to lay downe both their Lives and Livings in maintenance of those contrary Opinions which in these latter dayes have been taken up 2 Now that which was affirmed by them in their particulars was not long afterwards made good by the generall Bodie of this Church and State the King the Lords Spirituall and Temporall and all the Commons met in Parliament 5. 6. Edw. 6. cap. 3. anno the fift and sixt of King Edward the sixt where to the honour of Almighty God it was thus enacted For as much as men bee not at all times so mindfull to laud and praise God so readie to resort to heare Gods Holy Word and to come to the holy Communion
c. as their bounden dutie doth require therefore to call men to remembrance of their dutie and to helpe their infinnitie it hath beene wholesomely provided that there should be some certaine times and dayes appointed wherein the Christians should cease from all kind of labour and apply themselves only and wholly unto the aforesaid holy works properly pertaining to true Religion c. Which workes as they may well be called Gods Service so the times especially appointed for the same are called holy dayes Not for the matter or the nature either of the time or day c. for so all dayes and times are of like holinesse but for the nature and condition of such holy workes c. whereunto such times and dayes are sanctified and hallowed that is to say separated from all prophane uses and dedicated not unto any Saint or Creature but onely unto God and his true worship Neither is it to bée thought that there is any certaine time or definite number of dayes prescribed in holy Scripture but the appointment both of the time and also of the number of dayes is left by the authoritie of Gods Word unto the libertie of Christs Church to bée determined and assigned orderly in every Countrey by the discretion of the Rulers and Ministers thereof as they shall iudge most expedient to the true setting forth of Gods glorie and edification of their people Nor is it to be thought that all this Preamble was made in reference to the holy dayes or Saints dayes onely whose being left to the authoritie of the Church was never questioned but in relation to the Lords Day also as by the Act it selfe doth at full appeare for so it followeth in the Act Bee it therefore enacted c. That all the dayes hereafter mentioned shall bee kept and commanded to be kept holy dayes and non● other that is to say all Sundayes in the yeere the Feasts of the Circumcision of our Lord Iesus Christ of the Epiphanie of the Purification with all the rest now kept and there named particularly and that none other day shall be kept and commanded to bee kept holy day and to abstaine from lawfull bodily labour Nay which is more there is a further Clause in the selfe-same Act which plainly shewes that they had no such thought of the Lords day as that it was a Sabbath or so to bee ob●erved as the Sabbath was and therefore did provide it and enact by the authoritie aforesaid That it shall be lawfull to every Husbandman Labourer Fisherman and to all and every other person and persons of what estate degree or condition he or they be upon the holy dayes aforesaid in Harvest or at any other times in the yeere when necessitie shall so require to labour ●ide fish or worke any kind of worke at their free-wills and pleasure any thing in this Act unto the contrary notwithstanding This is the totall of this Act which if examined well as it ought to bee will yeeld us all those propositions or conclusions before remembred which we collected from the writings of those three particular Martyrs Nor is it to be said that it is repealed and of no authoritie Repealed indeed it was in the first yeere of Queene Mary and stood repealed in Law though otherwise in use and practice all the long Reigne of Queene El●zabeth but in the first yeere of King Iames was revived againe Note here that in the selfe-same Parliament the Common Prayer-Book● now in use being reviewed by many godly Prelates was confirmed and authorized wherein so much of the said Act as doth concerne the names and number of the holy dayes is expressed and as it were incorporate into the same Which makes it manifest that in the purpose of the Church the Sunday was no otherwise esteemed of than another holy day 3 This Statute as before wee said was made in anno 5. 6. of Edward the sixt And in that very Parliament as before wee said the Common prayer-Prayer-Booke was confirmed which still remaines in use amongst us save that there was an alteration or addition of certaine Lessons to be used on every Sunday of the yéere 1. Eliz. cap. 2. the forme of the Letanie altered and corrected and two Sentences added in the deliverie of the Sacrament unto the Communicants Now in this Common Prayer-Booke thus confirmed in the fift and sixt yeeres of King Edward the sixt Cap. 1. it pleased those that had the altering and revising of it that the Commandements which were not in the former Liturgie allowed of in the second of the said Kings Reigne should now be added and accounted as a part of this the people being willed to say after the end of each Commandement Lord hav● mercie upon us and incline our hearts to keepe this Law Which being used accordingly as well upon the hearing of the fourth Commandement as of any others hath given some men a colour to perswade themselves that certainely it was the meaning of the Church that wee should keepe a Sabbath still though the day be changed and that wee are obliged to doe it by the fourth Commandement Assuredly they who so conclude conclude against the meaning of the Booke and of them that made it Against the meaning of the Booke for if the Booke had so intended that that ej●culation was to be understood in a literall sence according as the words are layd downe in terminis it then must be the meaning of the Booke that wee should pray unto the Lord to keepe the Sabbath of the Iewes even the seventh day precisely from the Worlds Creation and keepe it in the selfe-same manner as the Iewes once did which no man I presume will say was the meaning of it For of the changing of the day there is nothing said nor nothing intimated but the whole Law laid downe in terminis as the Lord delivered it Against the meaning also of them that made it for they that made the Booke and reviewed it afterwards and caused these Passages and Prayers to be added to it Cranmer Archbishop of Canterbury Ridley Bishop of London and certaine others of the Prelates then and there assembled were the same men by whose advice and counsaile the Act before remembred about keeping holy dayes was in the selfe-same Parliament drawne up and perfected And is it possible wee should conceive so ill of those reverend persons as that they would erect a Sabbath in the one Act and beat it downe so totally in the other to tell us in the Service-Booke that wee are bound to keepe a Sabbath and that the time and day of Gods publike worship is either pointed out in the fourth Commandement or otherwise ordained by D●vine Authoritie and in the selfe-same breath to tell us that there is neither certaine time nor definite number of dayes prescribed in Scripture but all this left unto the libertie of the Church I say as formerly I said it is impossible wee should thinke so ill of such
the weeke where in the people should come together and have in remembrance his wonderfull benefits and to render him thankes for them as apperteineth to loving kinde and obedient people This example and Commandement of God the godly Christian people beganne to follow immediatly after the Ascension of our Lord Christ and beganne to choose them a standing day of the weeke to come together in yet not the seaventh day which the Iewes kept but the Lords day the day of the Lords resurrection the day after the seaventh day which is the first day of the weeke c. Sithence which time Gods people hath alwayes in all Ages without any gainsaying used to come together on the Sunday to celebrate and honour the Lords blessed Name and carefully to keep that day in holy rest and quietnesse both man and woman childe servant and stranger So farre the Homilie and this is all thereof which is doctrinall The residue consists in reprehension of two sorts of men one of the which if they had any businesse to doe though there were no extreme neede would not spare the Sunday but used all dayes alike the holy dayes and worke-dayes all as one the other so consumed the day in gluttony and drunkennesse and such fleshly filthinesse that as it is there said the Lord was more dishonoured and the Devill better served on the Sunday then upon all the dayes in the weeke besides 6 This saith the Homily and this hath often beene alleaged as well to prove a Lords day Sabbath to bee allowed of by the doctrine of the Church of England as at this present time to iustifie the disobedience of those men who have refused to publish the Princes pleasure in point of recreations But this if well examined will as little helpe them as Lord have mercy upon us in the Common Prayer booke For first it is here said that there is no more of the fourth Commandement to bee retained and kept of good Christian people then whatsoeuer is found in it appertaining to the law of Nature But wee have proved before that there is nothing in the fourth Commandement of the law of Nature but that some time be set apart for Gods publick service the precept so farre forth as it enjoynes one day in seaven or the seaventh day precisely from the worlds creation being avowed for ceremoniall by all kinde of writers Secondly it is said not that the Lords day was enjoyned by Divine authority either by Christ himselfe or his Apostles but chosen for a standing day to come together in by godly Christian people immediately after the Ascension of our Lord Christ If chose by them then not enjoyned by the Apostles if not till after the Ascension of our Saviour Christ then not at all by him commanded Thirdly whereas they chose themselves a standing day in the weeke to come together in they did not this by any obligation layed upon them by the fourth Commandement but onely by a voluntary following of Gods example and the analogie or equity of Gods Commandement which was they doe not say which is that hee would have amongst the ●ewes a solemne time and standing day in the weeke wherein the people should have in remembrance his wonderfull benefits and render thanks to him for the same For it is said that this example and commandement of God the godly Christian people beganne to follow after Christs ascension so that it seemes they might have chosen whether they would have followed them or not Fourthly when they had chose this day which wee now observe for their publicke meetings they did not thinke themselves obliged by the fourth Commandement to forbeare worke and labour in time of great necessity or to the precife keeping of the same after the manner of the Iewes both which they must have done had they conceived the keeping of one day in seaven to be the morall part of the fourth Commandement and to oblige us now no les●e then it did them formerly as some men have taught us Now whereas some have drawne from hence these two Conclusions First that according to this Homilie we ought to keepe one day in ●eaven by the fourth Command●ment and secondly that we must spend it wholy in religious exercises I would faine know how those conclusions can be raised from the former premisses It 's true the Homilie hath told us that by the fourth Commandment we ought to have a time as one day in the weeke wherein wee ought to rest from our needfull works Where note that there it is not said that by the fourth Commandement wee ought to have one day in the weeke which is plaine and peremtory but that wee ought to have a time as one day in the weeke which was plainely arbitrary A time wee ought to have by the fourth Commandement as being that part of 〈◊〉 which perteines to the law of Nature but for the next words as one day in the weeke they are not there layd downe as imposed on us by the law but onely instanced in as setled at that time in the Church of God So where it is affirmed in another place that Gods will and commandement was to have a solemne time and standing day in the weeke wee grant indeed that so it was and that the Godly Christian people in the Primitive times were easily induced to give God no lesse then what hee formerly commanded But had the meaning of the Homilie beene this that wee were bound to have a standing day in the weeke by the fourth Commandement they would have plainely said it is Gods will and pleasure that it should bee so and not have told us what it was in the times before It s true the Homilie hath told us that wee should rest our selves on Sunday from our common businesse and also give our selves wholie to heavenly exercises of Gods true religion and service Where note it is not said that wee should spend the day wholly in heavenly exercises for then there were no time allowed us to eate and drinke which are meere naturall employments but that wee give our selves wholly that is our whole selves body and soule to that performance of those heavenly exercises which are required of us in the way of true religion and Gods publike service It is accounted as wee have formerly made plaine In Exod. 20. qu. 11. to bee the ceremoniall part of the fourth Commandement quod fiat semel in qualib●t hebd●mada quod fiat in una die tota ista observatio quod per totam diem abstineatur ab operibus servilibus first the determining of the day to bee one in seven next that this one day wholly be so employed and last of all that all that day there bee an absolute cessation from all servi●e workes Therfore the spending wholly of one day in seven being ceremoniall comes not within the compasse of the Homilie which would have no more of the fourth Commandement to bee kept amongst us then
stand or fall by the statute of King Edward the sixt before remembred A Canon of an excellent composition For by enjoyning godly and sober conversation and diligent repaire to Church to heare the Word of God and receive the Sacrament they stopped the course of that prophanenesse which formerly had beene complained of and by their ranking of the holy dayes in equall place and height with Sunday and limiting the celebration of the same unto the Orders in that case prescribed by the Church of England shewed plainely their dislike of those Sabbath doctrines which had beene latelie set on foote to the dishonour of the Church and diminution of her authoritie in destinating other dayes to the service of God than their new Saint Sabbath Yet did not this the Churches care either so satisfie their desires or restraine the follies of those men who had embraced the new Sabbath doct●ines but that they still went ●orwards to advance that businesse which was now made a part of the common cause no booke being published by that partie either by way of Catechisme or Comment on the ten Commandements or morall pietie or systematicall divinity of all which these last times have produced too many wherein the Sabbath was not pressed upon the consciences of Gods people● with violence as formerly with authority upon the ●ewes And hereunto they were incouraged a great deale the rather because in Ireland what time his Majesties Commissioners were employed about the setling of that Church Anno 1615. there passed an Article which much confirmed them in their Courses and hath beene often since alleaged to justifie both them and their proceedings The article is this Ar● 56. The first day of the weeke which is the Lords day is whollie to bee dedicated to the service of God and therefore wee are bound therein to rest from our common and daily businesse and to bestow that leysure upon holy exercises both private and publicke What moved his Majesties Commissioners to this strict austeritie that I cannot say but sure I am that till that time the Lords day never had attained such credit as to bee thought an Article of the Faith though of some mens fancies Nor was it like to bee of long continuance it was so violently followed the whole booke being now called in and in the place thereof the Articles of the Church of England confirmed by Parliament in that Kingdome Anno 1634. 10 Nor was this all the fruit neither of such dangerous doctrines that the Lords day was growne into the reputation of the Iewish Sabbath but some that built on their foundations and ploughed with no other then their heifers endeavoured to bring backe againe the Iewish Sabbath as that which is expressely mentioned in the fourth Commandement and abrogate the Lords day for altogether as having no foundation in it nor warrant by it Of these one Thraske declared himselfe for such in King Iames his time and therewithall tooke up another Iewish doctrine about meates and drinkes as in the time of our dreade Soveraigne now being Theophilus Braborne grounding himselfe on the so much applauded doctrine of the morality of the Sabbath maintained that the Iewish Sabbath ought to bee observed and wrot a large booke in defence thereof which came into the world 1632. For which their I●wish doctrines the first received his censure in the Starre-Chamber and what became of him I know not the other had his doome in the High-Commission and hath since altered his opinion being misguided onely by the principles of some noted men to which hee thought hee might have trusted Of these I have here spoke together because the ground of their opinions so far as it concerned the Sabbath 〈◊〉 the very same they onely making the conclusions which of necessitie must follow from the former premisses iust as the Brownists did before when they abhominated the Communion of the Church of England or the Puritan principles But to proceede This of it selfe had beene sufficient to bring all to ruine but this was not all Not only Iudaisme did beginne but Popery tooke great occasion of increase by the precisenesse of some Magistrates and Ministers in severall places of this Kingdome in hindring people from their recreations on the Sunday the Papists in this Realme being thereby perswaded that no honest mirth or recreation was tolerable in our religion Which being noted by King Iames K. Iames De●●arat in his progresse through Lancashire it pleased his Majestie to set out his Declaration May 24. Anno 1618. the Court being then at Greenewich to this effect that for his good peoples lawfull recreations his pleasure was that after the end of divine service they should not be disturbed letted or discouraged from any lawfull recreations such as dancing either men or women Archery for men leaping vaulting or any other such harmelesse recreations nor from having of Ma●-games Whitsun-Ales or Morrice-dances and setting up of May-poles or other sports therewith used so as the same bee had in due and convenient time without impediment or let of divine service and that women should have leave to carrie rushes to the Church for the decoring of it according to their old custome withall prohibiting all unlawfull Games to bee used on the Sundayes onely as beare-baiting bull-baiting enterludes and at all times in the meaner sort of people by law prohibited bowling A Declaration which occasioned much noyse and clamour and many scandalls spreade abroade as if these Counsells had been put into that Princes head by some great Prelates which were then of most power about him But in that point they might have satisfied themselves that this was no Court-doctrine no newdivinity which that learned Prince had beene taught in England He had declared himselfe before when he was King of the Scots onely to the selfe-same purpose as may appeare in his Basilicon Doron published anno 1598. This was the first Blow in effect which had beene given in all his time to the new Lords-Day-Sabbath then so much applauded 11 For howsoever as I said those who had entertained these Sabbatarian Principles spared neither care nor paines to advance the businesse by being instant in season and out of season by publike Writings private Preachings and clandestine insinuations or whatsoever other meanes might tend to the promotion of this Catholike cause yet finde wee none that did oppose it in a publike way though there were many that disliked it Onely one M. Loe of the Church of Exeter declared himselfe in his Effigiatio veri Sabbatismi ann● 1606. to be of different judgement from them and did lay downe indeed the truest and most justifiable Doctrine of the Sabbath of any Writer in that time But being written in the Latine Tongue it came not to the peoples hands many of those which understood it never meaning to let the people know the Contents thereof And whereas in the yeere 1603. at the Commencement held in Cambridge this Thesis or Proposition Dies Domi●●cus
nititur Verbo Dei was publikely maintained by a Doctor there and by the then Vice-Chancellour so determined neither the following Doctors ●here or any in the other Universitie that I can heare of did ever put up any Antithesis in opposition thereunto At last some foure yeeres after his Majesties Declaration before remembred anno 1622. Doctor Prideaux his Majesties Professour for the Universitie of Oxon. did in the publike Act declare his judgement in this point de S●bbato which afterwards in the yeere 1625. he published to the World with his other Lectures Now in this Speech or Determination hee did thus resolve it First That the Sabbath was not instituted in the first Creation of the World nor ever kept by any of the ancient Patriarkes who lived before the Law of Moses therefore no Morall and perpetuall Precept as the others are Sect. 2. Secondly That the sanctifying of one day in seven is ceremoniall onely and obliged the Iewes not Morall to oblige us Christians to the like observance Sect. 3. 4. Thirdly That the Lords day is founded onely on the Authoritie of the Church guided therein by the practice of the Apostles not on the fourth 〈◊〉 which in the 7. Section he e●tituleth a Scandalous Doctrine nor any other authoritie in holy Scripture Sect. 6. 7. Fourthly That the Church hath still authoritie to change the day though such authoritie be not ●it to be put in practise S●ct 7. Fifthly Th●● in the celebration of it there is no such cessation from the workes of labour required of us as was exacted of the Iewes but that wee lawfully may dresse Meat proportionable unto every mans estate and doe such other things as be no hinderance to the publike Service appointed for the day Sect. 8. Sixtly That on the Lords day all R●creations whatsoever are to be allowed which honestly may refresh the spirits and encrease mutuall love and neighbourhood amongst us and that the Names whereby the Iewes did use to call their Festivals whereof the Sabbath was the chiefe were borrowed from an Hebrew word which signifies to Dance and to make merry or rejoyce And lastly that it app●rtaine● to the Christian Magistrate to order and appoint what ●astime● on the Lords day are to be permitted and what prohibited not unto every private person much lesse to every ●an● rash Zeale as his owne words are who out of a schismaticall 〈◊〉 debarring men from lawfull Pastimes doth encline to I●daisme Sect. 8. This was the summe and substance of his resolution then which as it gave content unto the sounder and the better part of the Assembly so it did infinitely stomacke and displease the greater numbers such as were formerly possessed with the other Doctrines though they were wiser than to make it a publike Quarrell Onely it pleased M. Bifeild of Surrey in his Reply to a Disco●rse of M. Brerewoods of Gresham Colledge anno 1631. to taxe the Doctor as a spreader of wicked Doctrine and much to marvell with himselfe how either he durst be so bold to say P. 161. or having said it could be suffered to put it forth viz. That to establish the Lords day on the fourth Commandement were to encline too ●uch to Iudaisme This the said M. Bifeild thinkes to be a foule aspersion on this fa●ous Church But in so thinking I conceive that he consulted more his owne opinion and his private interest than any publike maintenance of the Churches cause which was not injured by the Doctor but defended rather But to proceed or rather to goe a little About a yeere before the Doctor thus declared his judgement one Thom. Broad of Gloucestershire ●ad published something in this kind wherein to speake my minde thereof he rather shewed that he disliked those Sabbath Doctrines than durst disprove them And before either M. Br●rewood whom before I named had writ a learned Treatise about the Sabbath on a particular occasion therein mentioned but published it was not till after both anno 1629. Adde here to joyne them all together that in the Schooles at Oxon anno 1628. it was maintained by Doctor Robinson now Arch●eacon of Gloucester viz. Ludos Recreationis gratia in die Dominico non esse prohibitos Divina Lege That Recreations on the Lords day were not at all prohibited by the Word of God 12 As for our neighbour Church of Scotland as they proceeded not at first with that mature deliberation in the reforming of that Church which had beene here observed with us so did they runne upon a Course of Reformation which after was thought fitting to be reformed The Queene was young and absen● in the Court of France the Regent was a desolate Widow a Stranger to that Nation and not well obeyed So that the people there possessed by Cnoxe and other of their Teachers tooke the cause in hand and went that way which came most neere ●nto Geneva where this Cnoxe had lived Among the first things wherewithall they were offe●ded were the D●nsreis and in the yeere 1592 the Act of the Queene Regent granting licence to keepe the said two feasts was by them repealed Yet finde wee by the Bishop of Brechin in his discourse of the Proceedings at the Synod of 〈◊〉 that notwithstanding all the Acts Civill and Ecclesiasticke made against the superstitious observation and prophane abuse of Zule day the people could never bee induced to labour on that day and wheresoever Divine service was done that day as in townes which have alwaies morning and evening Prayers they were perceived to resort in greater numbers on that day then on any other to the Church As for King Iames of happie memorie hee did not onely keepe the said great festivalls from his youth as there is said but wished them to bee kept by all his subjects yet without abuse and in his Basilicon Doron published Anno 1598 thus declares himselfe that without superstition playes and lawfull games may bee used in May and good cheere at Christmasse Now on the other side as they had quite put downe those daies which had beene dedicated by the Church to religious meetings so they appointed others of their owne authoritie For in their booke of ●●scipline before remembred it was thus decreed viz. That in every notable towne a day besides the Sunday should bee appointed weekely for Sermons that during the time of Sermon the day should bee kept free from all exercise of labour as well by the master as by the Servant as also that every day in the said great townes there be either Sermon or Prayers with reading of the Scriptures So that it seemeth they onely were ●fraid of the name of holy dayes and were contented well inough with the thing it selfe As for the Lords day in that Kingdome I finde not that it had attained unto the name or nature of a Sabbath day untill that doctrine had beene set on foote amongst us in England For in the booke of discipline set out as formerly was said in