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A85423 Dies Dominicus redivivus; or, The Lords Day enlivened or a treatise, as to discover the practical part of the evangelical Sabbath: so to recover the spiritual part of that pious practice to its primitive life: lamentably lost, in these last declining times. By Philip Goodvvin M.A. preacher of the Gospel, and pastour of the publike congregation at Watford in Hartford shire. Goodwin, Philip, d. 1699. 1654 (1654) Wing G1214; Thomason E1470_3; ESTC R208694 198,721 533

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this sin against God in Sabbath-abuse is abominable and inexcusable because we are charged only with one day weekly to be kept as holy unto the Lord. I remember Deut. 5. that Moses maketh mention of this as an Act of Gods great indulgence towards man and that having written the ten Commandments he added no more And should not we with obediential submission acknowledge the same concerning the Sabbath Upon the second consideration men may without uncharitablenesse be censured also as inexcusably regardlesse of their own soules good both in regard of grace and comfort here and hereafter who disrespect the Sabbath day which is the Market-day of the soul as worthy Mr. Rich. Rogers was wont to call it And that smart sentence which was misapplyed unto Christ for he strictly kept the Sabbath of the Lord his God may be applyed to that person who is a wilfull ordinary profaner of that holy time Joh 9.16 This man is nor of God because he keepeth not the Sabbath day According to a mans regard or disregard of the Sabbath is his respect or disrespect unto all the rest of Gods Commandements Here I might take occasion to bewail bitterly Englands wofull declinings both in matters of doctrine and practice concerning the Sabbath In former times no Reformed Church was so famous either for soundnesse in judgment or exactnesse in conversation in relation to the Lords Day But our Apostasie began to be Notorious when the Book for the allowing of sports on that day was promoted to gratifie the profane and Popish party then predominant in England And hereupon many both Bishops and others for alas how apt are men even Ministers among others to swim down the tide with them who bear rule appeared in the Pulpit and in the Presse to decry the moralitie and exact observation of the fourth Commandment Many worthy servants of Christ looked upon Germanies Warres as a fruit of this high provocation there and they have judged our late-yeares troubles an effect of the like profanation At this day notwithstanding our Covenanted Reformation how wofully is Gods Sabbath neglected every where and may we not say that the loosenesse of them who are Atheistically wicked is not so dangerous to poor England as the carnal liberty of such who pretend unto the highest pitch of sanctitie How many even amongst them under pretence of Gospel immunities and of observing every day as a spiritual Sabbath do both take and plead for that libertie on the Lords Day which old Puritans amongst whom the power of godlinesse shined gloriously did decry and abominate Many years since I heard this speech uttered with much affection from famous Mr. John Rogers Take away the Sabbath and Religion will soon wither And is not this too much verified amongst our selves in England at this day We have had and we have Acts Ordinances Orders for the better keeping of the Lords Day but who knoweth not that the life of the Law lyeth in the execution Proclamations and Papers will not pluck down profanenesse except they be strengthened by the vigorous actings of persons in power The Lord threateningly complaineth of the Priests in former times because they hid their eyes from the Sabbath Ezek. 22.26 The meaning of the complaint is judged to be either more generally their regardlesnesse thereof 〈◊〉 more particularly their not taking notice when and how and by whom profaned that they might by roproof seek redresse This I mention that we Ministers may mind our Duties in this regard more The Reverend Authour of this Usefull Treatise hath expressed vigorous affections with forcible arguments to awaken quicken and encourage people unto the better keeping of the Christian Sabbath And what considerations can be more commanding and conquering unto an ingenuous experienced Christian then those two hinted and handled from the Text which this godly man undertaketh and pursueth to good purpose in this present Treatise viz. 1. Christ whose Day the Sabbath is in a way of sanctified peculiarity 2. Spirituall joy with which the Lord is wont to crown the sanctifiers of this his holy Day The former usefull Works of this my worthy good friend have found so good acceptance amongst Gods people that I hope this piece for its own sake rather then for my poor Testimony will also be welcomed and improved I commend this savoury Treatise to thy serious perusal and thy self therein to the blessing of God Almighty I am Thy friend and servant in and for Jesus Christ Simeon Ashe August 7. 1654. THE Contents of the first Part. 1. HOw God from the Beginning before the Law ordained a set Day for Religious Duties pag. 6 2. How God after under the Law did more unfold and confirm the same pag. 7 3. Why Christ under the Gospel should have a set Day for his Service p. 10 4. Wherein the work of Redemption surpass'd the work of Creation p. 11 5. Wherefore the first Day of the week is called The Lords Day p. 15 6. What warrant for the change of the Sabbath from tke last to the first Day p. 34 7. Their Objections answered who oppose the Doctrine of the Lords Day p. 36 c. 8. Of the Lords-Day-Duties what they are and where to be perform'd p. 58 125 9. Their Objections answered who neglect the Duties of the Lords Day p. 65 c. 10. The Multitudes of sinners against the Lords Day discovered p. 20 c. 11. The Magnitude of their sin opened in several respects p. 83 c. 12. The sad Judgments to which Sabbath-breakers are subject p. 96 c. 13. Gods Delay of executing Judgment upon many that mis-spend his Day why p. 110 c. 14. What all are to do to help on due Sabbath-observance p. 120 c. 15. What especially some are to do that the Sabbath-Day may be duly observed p. 132 c. 16. The Necessary Use of the Sabbath To whom and for why p. 138 c. 17. The probable losse of the Lords Day when and wherefore p. 148 c. 18. How the Lords Day being removed may be long before its return p. 160 c. 19. How the Lords Day may remain amongst some as a sore curse p. 166. c. 20. How equal it is to observe one Day in seven holy to God p. 169 c. 21. The excellency of the Lords Day being well observed p. 179 c. 22. The commodity of well keeping this our Christian Sabbath p. 196 c. 23. The comforts of the Christian Sabbath well kept p. 214 24. Their Objections answered who cannot find the comfort and profit p. 225 c. 25. How the Lords Day in the worst times may be certainly and sweetly continued p. 244. THE CONTENTS of the second Part. 1. TO be in the Spirit on the Lords Day as S. John was what it is p. 259 2. Why some of Gods Servants are on the Lords Day in the Spirit p. 281 3. How any others of the servants of God may be in the
the holy Ghost Answered We know not whether there be any holy Ghost So aske many now adayes whether they have observed the Lords holy day they are ready to answer they know not whether there be any such holy day to be observed Time was a Book was set out to give liberties upon the Lords day men now take their liberties from the Lords day without any Book And they that do not are so listlesse and livelesse in the Lords-day-duties that I doubt if God should judicially deprive us of Sabbath-Seasons we should not thereof soon be sensible And so the time of Sabbath-returnes may likely be long Again if the Lord should lay such a Judgement upon the whole Land as the losse of Sabbaths 't is not probable people will presently make such a profitable use thereof As to prize them highly And to pray for them earnestly Highly God will have them prized God will raise Sabbath-esteems before he makes Sabbath-returns before God brings back his blessed Day as men shall feele the want so know the worth thereof and be of Davids mind One day in thy Courts is better then a thousand Psalme 84.10 vers Heartily God will have them prayed for Sabbath-Liberties Men shall be humble Petitioners for them before they be happy possessors of them 'T was one of the three things Latimur did so ordinarily and earnestly pray for in Queen Marys dayes That the Gospell might be restored to England once again once again c. That Sabbaths might be openly observed and Gods worship publikely performed Once again once again Which words he used to repeat with great vehemencie of spirit Others concurred in the same request and had from God a most gracious grant What are David desires and prayers Psalm 63.2 That I may see Lord thy power and thy glory so as I have seen thee in the Sanctuary And Psalm 42.4 When I remember these things I pour out my soul within me for I had gone with the multitude I went with them to the house of God with the voice of joy and praise with the multitude that kept holyday Should holy Sabbath-dayes cease some I doubt not but upon knees bended would beg their bringing back though the Major part would likely make little of it O that men would yet make much of Sabbath-Seasons lest such a time come when they would they cannot Time will be sayes our Saviour to his Disciples Luke 17.22 when ye shall desire to see one of the daies of the Son of man and shall not see it O if you might but have one Sabbath as in former times Luke 19.42 43. When he came near he beheld the City wept over it saying If thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy Day the things that belong to thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes The things with the day and the day with the things thereof are now past and gone Amos 8.11 Behold the dayes come saith the Lord I will send a famine in the Land not of bread but of hearing the Word And men shall wander from Sea to Sea and from the North to the East they shall run to and fro to seek the Word of the Lord and shall not find it O now now while it is called to day THE LORDS DAY before Sabbaths and Sermons cease though there should not come such a time over all the Land yet it may be upon particular places rain may fall on one City and not upon another Amos 4.7 Brighr beames of the Sun may shine on one field and the very next field under a dark shadow and over it a black cloud There shine Here rain O the clear light that hath shined upon the Lords Day and the sweet Sabbaths that have been kept in some Townes of England not long since but now Ichabod The glory is gone God knowes whose turn it may be next O let me beseech you of this place to look to the Lords Day be diligent hold fast God never takes away his Sabbaths till people are weary of them and willing to part with them 4. To a people the Lords Day may not be lost but last yet all lie under a curse They may be curs'd to the Sabbath The Sabbath may be curs'd to them The soules of men may be curs'd towards Sabbaths Never let fruit grow on this tree Never let Sabbath or Sermon do this people good No sooner had our Saviour curs'd the fig-tree but it withered at the roots May there not be found amongst us men and women that are most miserably withered Both branch And root Not onely the branch of their outward profession but also the root of their inward affection withered What shall we say of such Galatians who would now pluck out Paul's eyes that were once ready to pluck out their eyes for Paul Are not they withered Are not they under Gods dreadful curse For men to be curs'd in the trades they follow fields they possess is sad but to be curs'd in the Sabbaths they spend and curs'd in the Sermons they hear is worse For God to say to a Minister every time a Sabbath comes Go indeed to the Pulpit and preach to that people Hearing they shall hear but shall not understand seeing they shall see but not perceive For the heart of this People is waxed grosse their ears are dull of hearing their eyes have they closed Now make their hearts hard their eares deafe their eies blind that they may never be converted never healed but live and die under a Gospell-curse and their Soules sinking under a Sabbath-curse yea and so Sabbaths themselves may be cursed to the soules of men As men by their sins may pollute that day which otherwise is holy So God by his judgement may curse that day which otherwise is blessed and so Sabbath-mercy may be turned into a judgement as Moses Rod was turned into a Serpent It would have been ill for Israel if the brazen Serpent should have become a fiery Serpent that mortally to sting them that was made to heal them And will it not be ill for any if the Lords day which is a day of life shall become a day of death This saving day changed into a damning day 1 Sam. 12.17 We see 't was terrible when God turned a day of Harvest into a day of tempest and that time wherein they should have gathered their Wheat with the labour of their hands on earth God scattered it with thunder and hail from heaven And who would not fear such an effect for God to turn a day of Rest into a day of Wrath and therein not to blesse but thereby to blast mens hearts and hopes 'T is sweet for Saints when to them the very curses of men are blessed but 't is sad for sinners when to them the very blessings of God are cursed Mal. 2.2 I saith the Lord will send a curse upon you I will curse your blessings yea I nave cursed them already yet ye lay
Gods Saints are best brought together both In Body And Mind Christians being thus gathered upon the Lords Day lie in the readiest way for these high workings of the Spirit Act. 2.1 2. And when the day of Pentecost was fully come they were all with one accord in one place And suddenly c. Day of Pentecost This fiftieth day so the word imports it was the first day in the week Vid. Cypri de Spir. San 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the best affirm even our Lords Day They were all That is Basil de spi Sancto ca. 27. August de temp Ser. 251. all the eleven Apostles of Christ as is plainly expressed Act. 1.26 In one place In an upper Chamber at Jerusalem they were all Bodily gathered together With one accord Their minds were met as well as their bodies They were all in one house with one Heart waiting for the promises of the Lord. And suddenly there came That is with all speed the Spirit of God came down upon them so as never before for Manner and Measure The manner A sound from heaven as of a rushing mighty wind all about the house where they were sitting And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire and sat upon each of them The measure And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost and they spake with other tongues August Ser. 2 ad fratr in eremo as the Spirit gave them utterance The Spirit spake in them and they spake in the Spirit the wonderfull works of God The Spirit was poured in upon them and they poured it out in the Spirit Gods work was wonderfull and thus being upon the Lords Day gathered they found such spiritual fierings and fillings That evil spirit oft assaults the souls of Gods Saints when they are solitary single and severed Matth 4.1 But the good Spirit of God descends upon the soules of his servants met in their solemn assemblies One well observes that the dry bones which the Prophet saw Ezek. 37. the Spirit of God did not enliven them while they lay scattered in the field but when the bones came together bone to his bone then the Spirit of life came into them and they stood up upon their feet vers 7 8 9. Thus Gods servants when together they are upon the Sabbath assembled then these kindlings and comfortable quickenings come Yea though their hearts and thoughts were all the week more scattered about in the world yet they are better gathered in to the Lord upon the Sabbath-day And the souls of Gods people put into such a Sabbath-posture are most prompt and best prepared for comfortable converse with God in the Spirit And in the Spirit on the Lords day some actually are that so they may the better For present receive the mysteries of Faith and For future perform the duties of obedience Faith That the apprehensions of this may hereby be enlarged and man unto the Dimensions hereof may hereby be better enabled By being in the Spirit a Christian is made more able to reach out unto the lengths breadths heights depths of faith and by believing to find out and fetch in the vast Mysteries of God in the Gospel Gospel-truths vailed are hereby clearly revealed and closely received Hence St. John came to receive such close and clear revelations from God which he could never have reached had he not on the Lords day been in the Spirit His whole Book that is so mysterious to others Jerom. epist ad Paulin. things therein were perspicuous to him To him therefore several of the Ancients so apply that Ambros lib. 3. de Spir. Sancto cap. 21. August de civit Dei lib. 20. cap. 17. Revel 22.1 And he shewed me a pure river of water of life clear as Crystal proceedinding out of the Throne of God and of the Lamb. Things to him issued from God all pure and clear This made John the Baptist a greater Prophet then Esay or any other before him things intricate to others were explicate to him Now the Apostle could not have been capable of such clear discoveries had he not been first in the Spirit upon the Lords day Upon the Lords day being in the Spirit a Christian rides in the Chariot of faith triumphant from earth yea possibly as out of Hell into Heaven where he sees those glorious mysteries of mercie that concerns his souls comfort yea and what may be of singular concernment for the souls of others Obedience That the several conditions of this may be the better fulfilled Both in service And suffering Gods servants by being in the Spirit are abundantly fitted Both for Affliction And Action Act. 20.22 23 24. And now sayes the Apostle behold I go bound in the Spirit to Jerusalem not knowing the things that shall befall me there save that the holy Ghost witnesseth in every City saying that bonds and afflictions abide me But none of these things move me neither count I my life dear to my self so that I may finish my course with joy and the Ministery which I have received of the Lord to testifie the Gospel of the Grace of God O what a fixed frame of heart had the holy Apostle to honour God both By doing And dying He was bound in the Spirit The Spirit that is compared to winde did now upon the Apostle blow with such a full gale that he went as a ship full saile unto the Port God had appointed The spirit of this good man did not hang loose but was girt up to go thorow with the work whatever came The Spirit hemm'd it about loosened him from all that might any way hinder but so gathered up his heart for God and the Gospel as to further him in his way and work One telling a Martyr that it was hard to burn It is indeed said he for him that hath his soul li●ked to his body as a Theefs foot in his fetters but for him that hath his soul set above his body it is easie to burn Kindle fire I come Saviour Another having put one foot into the flame steps back saying The flesh shrinks and sayes On earth it is better to burn The Spirit sayes In heaven it is sweet to shine The flesh sayes wilt thou shorten thy life The Spirit sayes It is nothing nothing to life eternal The flesh sayes Wilt thou leave thy friends The Spirit sayes Christ and his Saints society is better c. And so in the power of the Spirit he flings himself into the fiercest flames And the souls of Gods Saints may expect such Spiritual supports in the dayes of their suffering who serving God have been in the Spirit on the Lords day The truth of all which some have sensibly found 2. That others of Gods Saints possibly may find their souls thus in the Spirit on the Lords day This proved By the properties of the Lords Spirit towards them and By the properties of their spirits towards the Lord. As for the Spirit of the
many thousands murthered But O how exceeding sad is this when people may come to the publike in peace pray in peace hear in peace depart in peace from Sabbath after Sabbath yet loiter at home on the Lords Day I wish empty seats make not way for empty pulpits and that quite forgetting Sabbaths be not the event of slighting Sermons To say nothing of such as desert our assemblies upon the groundlesse grounds of Separation what Atheisme begins to grow in the Land who le Parishes live as without God in the world scarce knowing when a Sabbath comes Help Lord. Now amongst such as sin against the Lords Day in respect of works thereupon to be done Divers things are objected Some against the condition of the work in the day And Some against the continuance of the day in the work The condition of this dayes work considered some object Because any thing of the day is required in publick Others Because so many things in the day are required Some say They can read good books and serve God at home when the Sabbath comes Answer 1. They can but 't is a question whether they will or no. Such as in their houses all the whole week do little or nothing in the worship of God are like to do no great matter at home when the Sabbath comes in the service of God As one well observes that commonly they who forget God in the time of their life do forget both God and themselves in the day of their death So they who neglect God in the week-time do ordinarily little regard God or the good of their souls upon the Sabbath-day Secondly The publike preaching of the Word is of more Soul-concernment on the Sabbath then any private reading at home if we consider Either the precept of God Or the Profit of man Both expresse in that of the Apostle 1 Pet. 2.2 As new-born babes desire the sincere milk of the Word that ye may grow thereby Sincere milk of the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sermon-milk warm milk from the Mothers brest is best to battle the babe Sodden milk hath not so much spirits therein nor the child that refreshing thereby * Revera fratres nubes sunt praedicatores c. August in Psal 35. Sermon-milk is the best food for spiritual growth Agustin compares the preaching of the Word to the raining of the clouds which more refreshes the corn then if pond-water should be poured out in pailes and buckets My doctrine shall drop as the rain and my speech shall distill as the dew Deut. 32.1 2. Slight not such Sabbath-showres nor misse upon the Lords Day the former or the latter rain Object On the Sabbath in publike I shall only hear another at home I my self can speak to God in prayer Answ In publike thou mayest not only hear but also pray even then when not one word thou speakest A man at home may speak many words yet make never a prayer and a Christian in the congregation may pray earnestly though he speaks never a word 'T is not the speaking of the tongue but the working of the heart that makes prayer * Non vocis magnitudine sed cordis magnanimitate clamandum est c. Clamabat populus et non audiebatur tacebat Moses et audiebatur ille Ambros in Psal 119. One observes how the Israelites when the Egyptian army was behind them and the Red-sea before them they lift up their voyces and cryed out to the Lord yet God did not regard this as a prayer Exod. 14.10 Moses he was silent not one word of prayer appears yet the Lord sayes to Moses Wherefore cryest thou unto me ver 15. Though his tongue was still his heart was hot in holy prayer Secondly he that will not upon the Lords Day hear Gods Word his private prayer is but unpleasing to God 'T is a saying of one of the Ancients God oft rejects his prayer in trouble who in the daies of his peace does despise Gods precepts Deus saepe ejus precem in perturbatione deserit qui precepta illius in tranquillitate contemnit Greg. Mor. li. 5. ca. 36. and so God does but abominate his prayer in private who will not hear upon the Sabbath-day Gods holy precepts in publike He that turnes away his ear from hearing the Law his prayer shall be an abomination Prov. 28.9 He must first hear God that will be heard of God Objection On the Sabbath in publike I may be put upon expence in contributing to some or other in want which by being at home I escape Answ 1. Charity to such as are in necessity is alwaies an excellent duty It makes a man to resemble God who hath never need to receive but is ever most free to give Jam. 1.5 2. For the duty of charity the most seasonable day is the Sabbath * Chryso in 1. Cor. 11. Homil. 43. Chrysostenme observes that the Sabbath is the day when God in his best bounty does most appear unto us and therefore for us to expresse our bounty to others the Sabbath is the fittest day 3. Though charitable duties are fit for every Sabbath yet such occasions are not constant Christians indeed upon those Lords Dayes when they are not communicating to they should be commiserating of such as suffer in the World when they are not in their contributions liberall they should be in their compassions lively In their thoughts they should go forth and look upon the burdens of their brethren remembring those that are in bonds as if bound with them Hebr. 13.3 Object Some Sabbath-work I am willing to do but so many works on the Sabbat be burdensome Answer 1. The more work the more wages The more good Sabbath-seed men sowe the more plentifull crops of comfort they shall r●ap both in earth and heaven God hath more Sabbath-mercies to vouchsafe then we duties to perform 2. As on this day men have much work So they have much help Scriptures Ministers Ordinances yea Angells yea God himself Father Son and Holy Ghost Our Lord is not like Pharaoh who required brick but withheld straw 3. The work indeed on the Lords Day is large but it is all excellent businesse that well becomes Kings yea and pions Princes have accounted it not onely their duty but their dignity not onely to see that others but themselves also in all holy duties do observe the Lords Day Zozom Eccl. hist si 1. ca. 8. History in the praise of Constantine reports much of this And the Scripture prophesies that Princes in Gospell-times should not abate but abound in Sabbath-day-duties And the burnt-offering that the Prince shall offer to the Lord in the Sabbath-day Exek 46.4 shall be six Lambs without blemish and a Ram without blemish This by type did signifie that in succeeding times the Service of God should be plentifully performed even by the highest of the people upon the Lords holy Day 4. Upon the Lords Day though of duties there be
Ephod and enquired of the Lord saying Shall I pursue after this Troop and shall I overtake them 1 Sam. 30. Thus Jehoshaphat before he would march with Ahab to Ramoth-Gilead he desires all the Prophets of God and God by the Prophet Micaiah might be consulted with Ahab transported with a false spirit presses onely Horse and away Let Micaiah say what he will To Ramoth-Gilead he must 2 Chron. 18. Whereas counsel given a good man takes and turnes his designes So David when he was with his men upon the march against the house of Nabal Abigail meets him and he stops upon her advice blessing God that he shed no blood 1 Sam. 25. Now an evil spirit having sprung a design at least seemingly good yet violently provokes and impetuously presses to prosecute men not considering or consulting except with such as are on the same mind No seeking to God except some prayer as a colour They first resolve their businesse and then go to prayer then ask counsel but if contrary come they cast off all Yea this spirit it drives and will rarely leave or let them have time to take advice Satan that evil spirit in the Serpent having upon Eves sight of the pleasant fruit begun to move gave her no time to seek God confer with her husband or consider the sad events onely eat she must So Judas the Divel suggesting a Booty to betray his Master he immediately goes out Joh. 13. rises from Supper even when the best dish was to come as the Learned conceive he never stayes to speak a word but away about his work He considers not what guilt of blood he should bring Matth. 27.3 Then Judas which betrayed him when he saw what was done he repented himself c. It seems he thought things would never have come to that That spirit which thus drives men in considerately precipitately c. 't is not the Spirit of God 4. A roving spirit that wheeles and whurries men obout is not the Spirit of God Men rove Psal 78.8 Esay 19.14 Jam. 1.6 7 8. Observe From what and In what There is a spirit that in moving makes men to rove viz. Ordinarily from the rules of Scripture And often from the rules of Reason Scripture-rules men rove from They will make Scripture go with them as far as ever they can and being they must go further they leave it They wrest and rack Scripture and stretch it as far as for their own advantage Thus that wicked spirit did with our dear Lord Matth. 4. Thus doe such unstable spirits in these last dayes 2 Pet. 3.16 They make holy Scriptures as their hired servants who when they will no further serve their design they turn them off Every good man moved and managed by Gods good Spirit sayes to Scripture as Ruth to Naomi Where thou goest I will go where thou stayest I will stay thy God shall be my God and thy people my people nothing but death shall part thee and me Sozomen reports of Constantine that whatever was pressed he would say Bring me the Book of God when things were disputed and various wayes urged he used still to stand up and call for Gods Book commanding all should there settle and none from thence swerve That spirit which in moving men makes them swerve and rove from Gods good Word is not the Spirit of God Yea beyond the rules of reason as well as Scripture men are made to rove through an ill-moving spirit Hence they roll and rove Both from using reason And from reason used They do not use that reason which might stay themselves From men of no reason the Apostle prays he may be delivered That we may be delivered from unreasonable men 2 Thess 3.2 Neither can that reason which others use stay them As they have not reason to rule themselves no more will they be ruled by reason Grounds of reason and strength of arguments will no more bound nor bind them then green wit hs could Samson The things in which an evil spirit moving makes men to rove are Both inward And outward Viz. In their opinions And affections In their discourses And courses Men of rolling spirits who hold many things yet hold to nothing Like those Arrians of whom Athanasius reports now they held one thing and anon another and never were at any certain stay Socrat. Scho. lib. 1. cap. 25. wandring Stars fixed to no Orb Meteors carried about with every gust as children tossed to and fro with every wind Ephes 4.14 They like and dislike cry up and cry down hot and cold ramble and rest at no point unstable in all their wayes Constantly inconstant men given to change See Seneca lib. de tranq and that love to wander as unsetled as the waves of the Sea Such Christians even Heathens condemn Such motions are not from the Spirit of God 5. A renting spirit that moves men to make divisions and fractions is not the Spirit of God The Spirit of God 't is All is uniting The Spirit of faith The Spirit of love The Spirit of patience By faith the Spirit unites and knits us up to God and by love the Spirit unites and knits us one unto another and by patience the Spirit unites and knits each one within himself And for want of the Spirit of God in these graces there are a multitude of sad severings For want of faith a man breaks and falls off from God For want of love a man breaks and falls off from his Brethren And for want of patience a man breaks in pieces and falls asunder within himself All evidences an evil spirit present and prevalent Mark 9. There is a man possessed with a spirit that did oft-times cast him into the water and into the fire and wheresoever it did take him it did tear him that he gnashed his teeth and foamed at the mouth O what a spirit does possesse such men as does cast them into that water whereby their love is quenched and into that fire whereby their wrath is kindled and so takes them as it tears them with impatiency infidelity and separation from Christian-society Sure such have not the Spirit of God Jude 19. These be they who separate themselves sensual having not the Spirit 'T is not the Spirit of God that hath moved some to separate themselves from our publick Assemblies Vid. Cameron de Eccles tract de Schism They having no good cause for it and There being many bad effects upon it No cause good If we in our assemblies are not separated from God they have no cause to separate from us Are we separate from God Is not the drift of our daily endeavours to draw men to God Is not this the bent of our businesse to bring men into obedience to God communions with God to set up God in hearts and houses Is it not the enjoyments of God after which we seek Is it not worshippings of God in Spirit truth after which we presse
you will think they doe God good service John 16.2 Rom. 11.3 Or if such places be not plucked down they abuse them to abominable worships When ye shall see the obomination of desolation stand in the holy place Math. 24.15 Instead of a preaching Ministery a wooden Idol 'T is said of the Egyptian Temples they are beautifull without but within ugly formes To have the places of our publike meetings filled with deformed faces and blaspheming voices Owles to dwell there and Satyres dance there Isay 13.22 23. Yea upon this losse followes not onely the desolating the places of publike worship that be in the Land but the desolating the Land it self wherein the places of publike worship be Levit 26.31 33. I will bring your Sanctuaries into desolation and I will not smell the savour of your sweet odours Yea I will make this whole Land desolate that your enemies shall be astonished thereat Then shall the Land enjoy her Sabbaths as long as it lies desolate The Land shall have Sabbaths of rest from plowing when Sabbaths of praying cease Now let us hence learn how lamentable the loss of the Lords Day would be I fear some are so profane that they think while Sabbaths are kept the losse is great August de civit Dei li. 6. ca. 11. Austin reports of that heathen Philosopher Seneca That he severely blamed the Jews for resting on the Seventh Day because thereby they lost the seventh part of their time Some I doubt that are called Christians that yet are of such a Paganish opinion that they think that time lost which is spent in the Service of God But this this is indeed that losse which the Lord help us to lay close to heart not to have the Service of God to spend Sabbath-time in and not to have Sabbath-time to spend in the Service of God To lose the Sabbath is not alone the losse of bare time but of blessed time time sanctified and set apart by a Divine Ordinance c. 3. The Lords Day lost in a land may be long before it be regained The way of Sabbaths once ceased may not soone if ever return as may evidently appeare in a double respect viz. Of God inflicting this losse and Of Men on whom this losse is inflicted 1. Because God does not make Sabbaths to cease in a sinfull Land but when there is great wrath in him stirred up and great wrath of him to be poured out 1. When God takes away his holy Sabbath from a people he is with great wrath provoked The Lord does not deprive a people of such precious priviledges as his holy times and things till he is very angry and exceedingly incensed so as that himself forsakes them Now great wrath in God as it is not suddenly raised so it is not presently appeased but it may remain long Zech. 1.12 2. When God takes away his holy Sabbath from a people he hath great wrath to execute The Lord hath caused the Sabbaths to be forgotten in Zion Lam. 2.6 This was when God had great anger against Zion and Zion was sadly covered with the anger of God How hath the Lord covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud in his anger Lam. 2.1 He hath thrown down in his wrath the strong holds of the daughter of Zion v. 2. He hath cut off in his fierce anger all the horne of Zion v. 3. He hath poured out upon Zion his fury like fire v. 4. c. Now when God hath much fury to bring forth and in the way of his judgments much work to do he takes time God in the wayes of his mercie goes swift because therein he moves with delight Micah 7.18 But as God is slow to execute wrath so he is slow in the wrath he executes Dolet Deus quoties cogitur esse ferox for herein he moves with a kind of grief Judg. 10.16 Lam. 3.33 2. Such men as suffer this sad punishment the cessation of Sabbaths 'T is long As before they come to a true sense of it So before they may make a good use of it Men are many times long before they are sensible Either of their sin which is the cause of punishment Or of the punishment that is the effect of their sin Commonly men that come under this Spiritual Judgement the deprival of the Lords holy day Either they are pleased with it Or they are stupid under it Some they please themselves in being Sabbath-free as we may see at present in some parts of the Nation Can it be believed that in England or Wales there should be Parishes wherein the people know not when the Sabbath comes neither do they enquire but are contented and account liberty from Gods Ordinance a great deliverance People are pleased when well-spent Sabbath dayes are down Because then they are gone who disturbed them and Because then they find others in place that flatter them Such as caused them some soul-disquiet are gone Revel 11. See how merry the world makes it when Gods witnesses are slain They that dwell upon earth shall make merry rejoyce and send gifts one to another because the two Prophets that tormented them are dead vers 10. Yea and then such as keep them in a carnal quiet and sinfull secure peace are present See the people of the Jewes when Moses was gone from amongst them and they got Aaron to be of their own minds and made them a golden Calf O what dancings and merry doings there was Exod. 32. It liked them well but it wrought them woe 'T was that which had a sad influence into all their after troubles Hence it grew a Proverb Non est poena supra Israelem in qua non est uncia vitult That there was no punishment upon Israel in which there was not an ounce of the goldden Calf Thus people when they can get such Ministers among them Sabbatum aurei vituli August as will help make them a Sabbath of the golden Calf as Austin calls it that they may huddle and slubber over a little service to God and passe the principal of the day in dancing feasting and Jovial meetings this is to their minds but 't will be misery in the end 'T will put a sting into every trouble on earth and torment in hell Others under this judgement of Sabbath-ceasing are sottish and brutish Abundance such there be now abroad in England where for want of a publike Ministery the Lords day it laid by and since that liberty hath been granted to some upon the Sabbath wholly to separate into private houses others have taken the advantage to live like Atheists and Epicures as if there were no Sabbath for God nor any God for a Sabbath Yea people are in such a posture that if the Lord should punish the Land with the losse of Sabbaths 't is not like soon to be laid to heart With many the Lords day is already lost in the Land As they that being asked whether they had received